defm14a
UNITED STATES
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
Washington, D.C. 20549
SCHEDULE 14A
PROXY STATEMENT PURSUANT TO SECTION 14(a) OF THE
SECURITIES
EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934
Filed by the
Registrant þ
Filed by a Party other than the
Registrant o
Check the appropriate box:
o Preliminary
Proxy Statement
o Confidential,
for use of the Commission Only (as permitted by
Rule 14a-6(e)(2))
þ Definitive
Proxy Statement
o Definitive
Additional Materials
o Soliciting
Material Under
Rule 14a-12
Cardiogenesis Corporation
(Name of Registrant as Specified in
its Charter)
Payment of Filing Fee (Check the appropriate box):
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No fee required.
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Fee computed on table below per Exchange Act
Rules 14a-6(i)(1)
and 0-11
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(1)
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Title of each class of securities to which transaction
applies:
Cardiogenesis Corporation common shares, no par value
(Common Shares)
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(2)
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Aggregate number of securities to which transaction applies:
52,425,784 Common Shares
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(3)
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Per unit price or other underlying value of transaction computed
pursuant to Exchange Act Rule 0-11 (set forth the amount on
which the filing fee is calculated and state how it was
determined):
The proposed maximum aggregate value of the transaction for
purposes of calculating the filing fee is $12,003,250.33. The
filing fee was based upon (A) 26,265,318 shares of our
common stock (including shares of unvested restricted stock)
owned by persons other than CryoLife, Inc. or CL Falcon, Inc.
and outstanding on May 4, 2011, multiplied by $0.457 per
share, plus (B) 2,142,440 options to acquire common stock
with an exercise price below $0.457 multiplied by $0.457 per
share minus such exercise price (which amount equals
$434,199.88) (the Total Consideration). The
filing fee equals the product of 0.0001161 multiplied by the
Total Consideration.
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(4)
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Proposed maximum aggregate value of transaction:
$12,437,450.21
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(5)
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Total fee paid:
$1,443.99
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Fee paid previously with preliminary materials.
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Check box if any part of the fee is offset as provided by
Exchange Act
Rule 0-11(a)(2)
and identify the filing for which the offsetting fee was paid
previously. Identify the previous filing by registration
statement number, or the form or schedule and the date of its
filing.
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(1)
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Amount Previously Paid: $2,891.15
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(2)
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Form, Schedule or Registration proxy No: Schedule TO
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(3)
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Filing party: CryoLife, Inc. and CL Falcon, Inc.
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(4)
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Date Filed: April 5, 2011
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CARDIOGENESIS
CORPORATION
11 Musick
Irvine, CA 92618
(949) 420-1800
May 6,
2011
Dear Shareholders:
You are cordially invited to attend a special meeting of
shareholders (the Special Meeting) of
Cardiogenesis Corporation, a California corporation
(Cardiogenesis, we,
us or our) to be held on
Monday, May 16, 2011 at 8:30 a.m., Pacific Time, at
Cardiogenesis principal offices, 11 Musick, Irvine,
California 92618.
On March 28, 2011, we entered into an Agreement and Plan of
Merger with CryoLife, Inc. (CryoLife) and CL
Falcon, Inc. (Merger Sub), a wholly-owned
subsidiary of CryoLife, which we subsequently amended and
restated on April 14, 2011, (as amended and restated, the
Merger Agreement). At the Special Meeting, we
will ask you to approve and adopt the Merger Agreement. The
Merger is the second and final step of the acquisition of
Cardiogenesis by CryoLife. The first step was a tender offer by
Merger Sub for 49.9% of the outstanding common shares of
Cardiogenesis at a price of $0.457 per share, which was
completed on May 2, 2011. The second, and final, step of
CryoLifes acquisition of us consists of the merger of
Merger Sub with and into Cardiogenesis pursuant to the Merger
Agreement (the Merger). As a result of the
Merger, Cardiogenesis will become a wholly-owned subsidiary of
CryoLife.
If the Merger is completed, you will be entitled to receive
$0.457 in cash, without interest thereon and less any required
withholding taxes, for each share of Cardiogenesis common stock
you own.
Our board of directors unanimously approved the Merger Agreement
and the Merger and related transactions and unanimously
determined that the Merger is advisable and fair to, and in the
best interests of Cardiogenesis shareholders. Our board of
directors unanimously recommends that you vote FOR
the proposal to approve and adopt the Merger Agreement.
The Merger cannot be completed unless shareholders holding at
least a majority of the outstanding common shares on the record
date approve and adopt the Merger Agreement. Your vote is
very important. Whether or not you plan to attend the
Special Meeting, please complete, date, sign and return, as
promptly as possible, the enclosed proxy card in the
accompanying prepaid reply envelope. If you attend the Special
Meeting and vote in person, your vote by ballot will revoke any
proxy previously submitted. The failure to vote your shares
of our common stock will have the same effect as a vote
AGAINST approval of the proposal to adopt the Merger
Agreement.
If your shares of our common stock are held in street
name by your bank, brokerage firm or other nominee, your
bank, brokerage firm or other nominee will be unable to voter
your shares of our common stock without instructions from you.
You should instruct your bank, brokerage firm or other nominee
to vote your shares of our common stock in accordance with the
procedures provided by your bank, brokerage firm or other
nominee. The failure to instruct your bank, brokerage firm or
other nominee to vote your shares of our common stock
FOR approval of the proposal to adopt the Merger
Agreement will have the same effect as voting
AGAINST the proposal to adopt the Merger
Agreement.
The accompanying proxy statement provides you with detailed
information about the Special Meeting, the Merger Agreement and
the Merger. A copy of the Merger Agreement is attached as
Annex A to the proxy statement. We encourage you to
read the accompanying proxy statement in its entirety because it
explains the proposed Merger, the documents related to the
Merger and other related matters.
Whether or not you plan to attend the Special Meeting, please
take the time to submit a proxy by following the instructions on
your proxy card as soon as possible. If your shares of our
common stock are held in an account at a broker, dealer,
commercial bank, trust company or other nominee, you should
instruct your broker, dealer, commercial bank, trust company or
other nominee how to vote in accordance with the voting
instruction form furnished by your broker, dealer, commercial
bank, trust company or other nominee.
On behalf of our board of directors and management of
Cardiogenesis, we thank you for your support.
Best Regards,
Paul McCormick
Executive Chairman
This transaction has not been approved or disapproved by the
Securities and Exchange Commission or any state securities
commission. Neither the Securities and Exchange Commission nor
any state securities commission has passed upon the merits or
fairness of this transaction or upon the adequacy or accuracy of
the information contained in this proxy statement. Any
representation to the contrary is a criminal offense.
The accompanying proxy statement is dated May 5, 2011 and
is first being mailed to shareholders on or about May 6,
2011.
CARDIOGENESIS
CORPORATION
11 Musick
Irvine, CA 92618
(949) 420-1800
NOTICE OF
SPECIAL MEETING OF SHAREHOLDERS
To Be Held May 16, 2011
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the Special Meeting of Shareholders
(the Special Meeting) of Cardiogenesis
Corporation, a California corporation, will be held on Monday,
May 16, 2011 at 8:30 a.m. Pacific Time at our
principal executive offices, located at 11 Musick, Irvine,
California, 92618 for the following purposes:
(1) To approve and adopt the Agreement and Plan of Merger,
dated as of March 28, 2011, and as amended and restated on
April 14, 2011 (as amended and restated, the
Merger Agreement) by and among Cardiogenesis
Corporation, a California corporation
(Cardiogenesis, we,
us or our), CryoLife,
Inc., a Florida corporation (CryoLife), and
CL Falcon, Inc., a Florida corporation and a wholly-owned
subsidiary of CryoLife (Merger Sub).
(2) To consider and vote on a proposal to adjourn the
Special Meeting, if necessary or appropriate, to do so.
(3) To transact any other business as may properly come
before the Special Meeting or any reconvened meeting after any
adjournment or postponement of the Special Meeting.
For more information about the Merger and the other transactions
contemplated by the Merger Agreement, please review the
accompanying proxy statement and the Merger Agreement attached
as Annex A.
Our board of directors has fixed the close of business of
May 4, 2011 as the record date for the determination of
shareholders entitled to notice of and to vote and this Special
Meeting and at any adjournment or postponement thereof. For ten
days prior to the Special Meeting, a complete list of
shareholders entitled to vote at the Special Meeting will be
available for examination by any shareholder, for any purpose
relating to the Special Meeting, during ordinary business hours
at our principal offices located at 11 Musick, Irvine,
California, 92618.
Please submit your proxy or voting instructions as soon as
possible to make sure that your shares are represented and voted
at the Special Meeting, whether or not you plan to attend the
Special Meeting. Whether you attend the Special Meeting or not,
you may revoke a proxy at any time before it is voted by filing
with our corporate secretary a duly executed revocation of
proxy, by properly submitting a proxy by mail with a later date
or by appearing at the Special Meeting and voting in person. You
may revoke a proxy by any of these methods, regardless of the
method used to deliver your previous proxy. Attendance at the
Special Meeting without voting will not itself revoke a proxy.
If your shares are held in an account at a broker, dealer,
commercial bank, trust company or other nominee, you must
contact your broker, dealer, commercial bank, trust company or
other nominee to revoke your proxy.
Cardiogenesis shareholders who do not vote in favor of approval
and adoption of the Merger Agreement will have the right to seek
appraisal and the fair value of their shares but only if they
perfect their dissenters rights by complying with the
required procedures under California law. See Approval of
the Merger Agreement Dissenters Rights
beginning on page 42 of the accompanying proxy statement.
After careful consideration, our board of directors has
unanimously determined that the Merger is advisable, fair to and
in the best interests of the shareholders of Cardiogenesis, and
approved the Merger Agreement, the Merger and other transaction
contemplated by the Merger Agreement. Accordingly,
Cardiogenesis board of
directors recommends that you vote FOR approval
of the proposal to adopt the Merger Agreement and
FOR approval of the proposal to adjourn the Special
Meeting, if necessary.
All shareholders are cordially invited to attend the Special
Meeting.
YOUR VOTE IS VERY IMPORTANT TO US WHETHER OR NOT YOU PLAN TO
ATTEND THE MEETING IN PERSON. SHAREHOLDERS ARE URGED TO VOTE
THEIR SHARES PROMPTLY BY MAIL, INTERNET, OR TELEPHONE AS
INSTRUCTED ON THE ENCLOSED PROXY CARD OR VOTING
INSTRUCTION CARD. PROXIES FORWARDED BY OR FOR BROKERS OR
FIDUCIARIES SHOULD BE RETURNED AS REQUESTED BY THEM.
By Order of Our Board of Directors,
Paul McCormick
Executive Chairman
Irvine, California
May 5, 2011
SUMMARY
VOTING INSTRUCTIONS
Ensure that your shares of Cardiogenesis common stock can be
voted at the Special Meeting by submitting your proxy or
contacting your broker, dealer, commercial bank, trust company
or other nominee.
If your shares of Cardiogenesis common stock are
registered in the name of a broker, dealer, commercial bank,
trust company or other nominee: check the voting
instruction card forwarded by your broker, dealer, commercial
bank, trust company or other nominee to see which voting options
are available or contact your broker, dealer, commercial bank,
trust company or other nominee in order to obtain directions as
to how to ensure that your shares of our common stock are voted
in favor of the proposals at the Special Meeting.
If your shares of Cardiogenesis common stock are
registered in your name: submit your proxy as soon as
possible by telephone, via the Internet, or signing, dating and
returning the enclosed proxy card in the enclosed postage-paid
envelope, so that your shares of our common stock can be voted
in favor of the proposals at the Special Meeting.
Instructions regarding telephone and Internet voting are
included on the proxy card.
For additional questions about the Merger, assistance in
submitting proxies or voting shares of Cardiogenesis common
stock, or to request additional copies of the proxy statement or
the enclosed proxy card, please contact William R. Abbott, our
Chief Financial Officer, at 11 Musick, Irvine, California,
92618, or via telephone at
(949) 420-1800.
TABLE OF
CONTENTS
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ii
CARDIOGENESIS
CORPORATION
11 Musick
Irvine, CA 92618
(949) 420-1800
PROXY
STATEMENT
This proxy statement contains information related to a Special
Meeting of shareholders of Cardiogenesis Corporation, a
California corporation, or Cardiogenesis, we, us or our, to be
held on Monday, May 16, 2011, at 8:30 a.m., Pacific
Time, at Cardiogenesis principal executive offices, 11
Musick, Irvine, CA 92618 and at any adjournments or
postponements thereof. We are furnishing this proxy statement to
shareholders of Cardiogenesis as part of the solicitation of
proxies by Cardiogenesis board of directors for use at the
Special Meeting. This proxy statement is dated May 5, 2011
and is first being mailed to shareholders on or about
May 6, 2011.
SUMMARY
TERM SHEET
This summary highlights selected information in this proxy
statement and may not contain all the information about the
Merger that is important to you. We have included page
references in parentheses to direct you to more complete
descriptions of the topics presented in this summary term sheet.
You should carefully read this proxy statement in its entirety,
including the annexes and the other documents to which we have
referred you, for a more complete understanding of the matters
being considered at the Special Meeting.
Parties
to the Merger
Cardiogenesis
Corporation
11 Musick,
Irvine, CA 92618
(949) 420-1800
We are a California corporation and we develop and market
surgical products for the treatment of refractory angina in
patients with chronic cardiac ischemia caused by coronary artery
disease, or CAD, which remains a leading cause of death for
persons over the age of 65. Our products are used to create
transmural laser channels into the myocardium, commonly referred
to as transmyocardial revascularization, or TMR, which has
proven effective in reducing symptoms in patients with
refractory angina compared to optimal medical management. We are
also currently developing proprietary catheter-based systems for
the delivery of biologics, such as stem cells, as an adjunctive
therapy. Our PHOENIX Combination Delivery
Systemtm,
for which we have received an Investigational Device Exemption,
or IDE, is the first device developed for this purpose.
CryoLife,
Inc.
1655 Roberts Boulevard, NW
Kennesaw, GA 30144
Incorporated in Florida in 1984, CryoLife, Inc., which we refer
to as CryoLife, is a leader in the processing and distribution
of implantable living human tissues for use in cardiac and
vascular surgeries throughout the U.S. and Canada.
CryoLifes CryoValve
®
SG pulmonary heart valve, processed using CryoLifes
proprietary SynerGraft
®
technology, has FDA 510(k) clearance for the replacement of
diseased, damaged, malformed, or malfunctioning native or
prosthetic pulmonary valves. CryoLifes
CryoPatch®
SG pulmonary cardiac patch has FDA 510(k) clearance for the
repair or reconstruction of the right ventricular outflow tract
(RVOT), which is a surgery commonly performed in children with
congenital heart defects, such as Tetralogy of Fallot, Truncus
Arteriosus, and Pulmonary Atresia. CryoPatch SG is distributed
in three anatomic configurations: pulmonary hemi-artery,
pulmonary trunk, and pulmonary branch. CryoLifes
BioGlue®
Surgical Adhesive is FDA approved as an adjunct to
sutures and staples for use in adult patients in open surgical
repair of large vessels. BioGlue is also CE marked in the
European Community and approved in Canada and Australia for use
in soft tissue repair and was recently approved in Japan for use
in the repair of aortic dissections. CryoLifes
BioFoamtm
Surgical Matrix is CE marked in the European Community for use
as an adjunct in the sealing of abdominal parenchymal tissues
(liver and spleen) when cessation of bleeding by ligature or
other conventional methods is ineffective or impractical.
CryoLife also distributes
PerClot®,
an absorbable powder hemostat that has CE Mark designation
allowing commercial distribution into the European Community.
PerClot is also distributed in other countries outside of the
European Community.
CL
Falcon, Inc.
1655 Roberts Boulevard, NW
Kennesaw, GA 30144
CL Falcon, Inc., which we refer to as Merger Sub, is a Florida
corporation and a wholly-owned subsidiary of CryoLife that was
formed by CryoLife solely for the purpose of facilitating the
acquisition of Cardiogenesis. To date, Merger Sub has not
carried on any activities other than those related to its
formation and completing the transaction contemplated by the
Merger Agreement. Merger Sub currently owns
23,221,166 shares of our common stock, representing
approximately 49.9% of our outstanding shares of common stock.
Upon consummation of the proposed Merger, Merger Sub will merge
with and into Cardiogenesis and will cease to exist with
Cardiogenesis continuing as the surviving corporation and a
wholly-owned subsidiary of CryoLife.
Overview
of the Transaction
(page 14)
Cardiogenesis, CryoLife and Merger Sub entered into the Merger
Agreement on March 28, 2011, and subsequently amended and
restated the Merger Agreement on April 14, 2011. In the
Merger Agreement, CryoLife agreed to acquire Cardiogenesis
through a two-step process. The first step was a tender offer by
Merger Sub for 49.9% of the outstanding shares of our common
stock at a price of $0.457 per share, net to the seller in cash
without interest thereon and less any applicable withholding
tax, which was completed on May 2, 2011 and resulted in
Merger Sub acquiring 49.9% of the outstanding shares of our
common stock. The second step is a merger of Merger Sub with and
into Cardiogenesis, with Cardiogenesis surviving as a
wholly-owned subsidiary of CryoLife. The following will occur in
connection with the Merger:
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each outstanding common share issued and outstanding immediately
prior to the effective time of the Merger (other than shares of
our common stock held by us, CryoLife, or Merger Sub, or by any
direct or indirect wholly-owned subsidiary of CryoLife, Merger
Sub or Cardiogenesis or held by shareholders who are entitled to
demand and properly demand and perfect appraisal of such shares
of our common stock pursuant to, and who comply in all material
respects with,
Sections 1300-1313
of the California General Corporation Law (which shall be
treated as described under Dissenters Rights
beginning on page 41)) will by virtue of the Merger, and
without action by the holder thereof, be canceled and converted
into the right to receive $0.457 per common share;
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all shares of our common stock so converted will, by virtue of
the Merger, be canceled, and each holder of a certificate
representing any shares of Cardiogenesis common stock will cease
to have any rights with respect thereto, except the right to
receive the $0.457 per share upon surrender of such certificate;
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all shares of our common stock held in the treasury of
Cardiogenesis or owned, directly or indirectly, by CryoLife,
Merger Sub or any wholly-owned Subsidiary of Cardiogenesis
immediately prior to the effective time shall be canceled and
shall cease to exist, and no consideration shall be delivered in
exchange therefore; and
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each outstanding common share of Merger Sub will be converted
into one fully paid and non-assessable share of common stock, no
par value, of the surviving corporation.
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2
Following and as a result of the Merger:
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Cardiogenesis shareholders (other than CryoLife and its
affiliates) will no longer have any interest in, and no longer
be shareholders of, Cardiogenesis, and will not participate in
any future earnings or growth;
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our shares of common stock will no longer be quoted on the
OTCQB; and
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the registration of shares of our common stock under the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended, will be terminated.
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The
Special Meeting
(page 11)
The Special Meeting will be held on Monday, May 16, 2011 at
8:30 a.m. Pacific Time at Cardiogenesis principal
executive offices, 11 Musick, Irvine, California 92618. At the
Special Meeting, you will be asked to, among other things,
approve and adopt the Merger Agreement. Please see the section
of this proxy statement captioned Questions and Answers
About the Special Meeting and the Merger beginning on
page 7 for additional information on the Special Meeting,
including how to vote your shares of our common stock.
Shareholders
Entitled to Vote
(page 11)
You may vote at the Special Meeting if you owned shares of our
common stock at the close of business on May 4, 2011, the
record date for the Special Meeting. On that date, there were
46,564,910 shares of our common stock outstanding and
entitled to vote. Approval and adoption of the Merger Agreement
requires the affirmative vote of the holders of at least a
majority of the shares of our common stock outstanding and
entitled to vote at the Special Meeting. Merger Sub owns 49.9%
of the shares of our common stock as a result of the tender
offer made pursuant to the Merger Agreement and will vote such
shares in favor of approving and adopting the Merger Agreement.
Vote
Required to Approve and Adopt the Merger Agreement
(page 12)
You may vote at the special meeting if you owned shares of our
common stock at the close of business on May 4, 2011, the
record date for the special meeting. On that date, there were
46,564,910 shares of our common stock outstanding and
entitled to vote. You may cast one vote for each Cardiogenesis
common share that you owned on that date. Approval and adoption
of the Merger Agreement requires the affirmative vote of the
holders of at least a majority of the shares of our common stock
outstanding and entitled to vote at the special meeting.
CryoLife, either directly or indirectly through Merger Sub, owns
49.9% of the shares of our common stock as a result of the
tender offer made pursuant to the Merger Agreement and will vote
such shares in favor of approving and adopting the Merger
Agreement. These shares, together with shares held by the
parties to the Support Agreement constitute a majority of the
shares of Cardiogenesis common stock outstanding; as a result,
we believe that approval of the Merger by Cardiogenesis
shareholders is assured. See Support Agreement at
page 60.
Payment
for Common Shares
(page 50)
Computershare Inc. has been appointed as the Paying Agent to
coordinate the payment of the Merger consideration to our
shareholders. The Paying Agent will send written instructions
for surrendering your Cardiogenesis common share certificates,
if your shares of our common stock are certificated, and
obtaining the Merger consideration after we have completed the
Merger. Do not return your stock certificates with your proxy
card and do not forward your stock certificates to the Paying
Agent prior to receipt of the written instructions. If you hold
uncertificated shares of our common stock (i.e., you hold your
shares in book entry form), you will receive your cash
consideration once you send in your letter of transmittal and
any other documents requested in the Paying Agents
instructions.
3
Our Share
Price
(page 64)
The shares of our common stock are currently quoted on the OTCQB
under the symbol CGCP.PK. On March 28, 2011,
the trading day prior to announcement of the signing of the
Merger Agreement, the last sale price per common share was
$0.32. The $0.457 per share to be paid for each Cardiogenesis
common share in the Merger represents a premium of approximately
43% to the closing price on March 28, 2011. On May 5,
2011, the last trading day before the mailing of this proxy
statement, the closing price per share was $0.45.
Recommendation
of Our Board of Directors; Reasons for Recommending the Approval
and Adoption of the Merger Agreement
(page 20)
On March 22, 2011, our board of directors (all of whom were
unaffiliated with CryoLife at the time) unanimously determined
that the Merger Agreement and the transactions contemplated
thereby, including the tender offer and the Merger, are
advisable and in the best interests of and are fair to
Cardiogenesis and its shareholders and approved the Merger
Agreement and the transactions contemplated thereby, including
the tender offer and the Merger. Accordingly, our board of
directors recommends that our shareholders vote
FOR approval and adoption of the Merger
Agreement.
In adopting the Merger Agreement and making the determination to
recommend that the Merger Agreement be approved and adopted,
Cardiogenesis board of directors consulted with
Cardiogenesis management, as well as its financial and
legal advisors, and considered a number of factors that the
board members believed supported their decision. In particular,
Cardiogenesis board of directors reviewed the possible
alternatives to an acquisition by CryoLife and perceived risks
of those alternatives, the range of potential benefits to
shareholders of these alternatives and the timing and the
likelihood of accomplishing the goals of such alternatives, and
concluded that none of these alternatives were reasonably likely
to present superior opportunities for Cardiogenesis to create
greater value for shareholders, taking into account risks to the
successful completion of a transaction as well as business,
competitive, industry and market risks.
Background
of the Merger
(pages 14 and 20)
For a description of the events leading to the adoption of the
Merger Agreement by our board of directors, you should refer to
Approval of the Merger Agreement Background of
the Merger and Recommendation of Our Board of
Directors; Reasons for Recommending the Approval of the Merger
Agreement.
Opinion
of Our Financial Advisor
(page 24)
B. Riley & Co., LLC, or B. Riley, on March 22, 2011 as
updated and confirmed in writing on March 28, 2011,
rendered its oral opinion to our board of directors to the
effect that, as of such dates, the $0.457 per share to be
received by Cardiogenesis shareholders pursuant to the Merger
Agreement was fair, from a financial point of view, to such
shareholders.
The full text of the written opinion of B. Riley is attached to
this proxy statement as Annex B. We encourage you to
read this opinion carefully in its entirety for a complete
description of the procedures followed, assumptions made,
matters considered, qualifications and limitations on review
undertaken and other matters considered by B. Riley in
preparing its opinion. The opinion is directed to our board of
directors and only addresses the fairness from a financial point
of view of the per share consideration to be received by
shareholders pursuant to the Merger and does not address any
other aspect or implication of the transactions or any other
agreement, arrangement or understanding entered into in
connection with the Merger Agreement, including, without
limitation, the support agreement, which we refer to as the
Support Agreement.
B. Riley acted as a financial advisor to Cardiogenesis in
connection with the tender offer and the Merger and will receive
an estimated fee of approximately $192,000 from Cardiogenesis,
of which approximately $146,000 is
4
contingent upon the consummation of the tender offer and the
Merger. B. Riley also received a fee of $100,000 for rendering
its written opinion. The written opinion fee was not contingent
upon the consummation of the tender offer and the Merger or the
conclusions reached in B. Rileys written opinion.
Cardiogenesis has also agreed to indemnify B. Riley against
certain liabilities and reimburse B. Riley for certain expenses
in connection with its services. The written opinion has been
approved by the Fairness Opinion Committee of B. Riley. In the
ordinary course of its business, B. Riley and its affiliates may
actively trade securities of Cardiogenesis and CryoLife for its
own account or the account of its customers and, accordingly,
may at any time hold a long or short position in such
securities. B. Riley may also, in the future, provide investment
banking and financial advisory services to Cardiogenesis or
CryoLife or entities that are affiliated with Cardiogenesis or
CryoLife, for which B. Riley would expect to receive
compensation.
Financing
of the Tender Offer and the Merger
(page 33)
Consummation of the Merger and the other transactions
contemplated by the Merger Agreement are not conditioned upon
CryoLife or Merger Sub obtaining any financing. As of the date
of this proxy statement, CryoLife has sufficient funds to
complete the Merger.
Interests
of Cardiogenesis Directors and Executive Officers in the
Merger
(page 34)
Members of our board of directors and our executive officers may
have interests in the transactions contemplated by the Merger
Agreement that differ from, or are in addition to, those of our
other shareholders. For example:
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as of March 25, 2011, Cardiogenesis directors and
executive officers owned in the aggregate 911,561 shares of
our common stock (excluding shares of our common stock issuable
upon the exercise of options to purchase shares of our common
stock and unvested shares of restricted stock);
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as of March 25, 2011, Cardiogenesis directors and
executive officers held options to purchase
1,939,384 shares of our common stock in the aggregate, with
exercise prices ranging from $0.13 to $2.57 per share. At the
effective time of the Merger, each holder of an option will be
entitled to receive an amount equal to the excess, if any, of
$0.457, without interest, over the exercise price per share of
such option, less any required withholding taxes.
Cardiogenesis directors and executive officers will
receive an aggregate of approximately $289,599 as a result of
the option payments;
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as of March 25, 2011, Cardiogenesis executive
officers held 365,318 shares of restricted stock subject to
vesting. Pursuant to the terms of the Merger agreement, each
share of restricted stock held by Cardiogenesis executive
officers vested in full immediately prior to the date of the
successful completion of the tender offer, which we refer to as
the Acceptance Date. Thereafter, immediately prior to the
effective time of the Merger, such shares of our common stock
will convert into the right to receive $0.457 per share;
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if the Merger is consummated, our current officers may receive
severance payments up to the following amounts:
Mr. Lanigan, $241,875; Mr. McCormick, $37,272; and
Mr. Abbott, $215,000, as described in the section
Summary of Aggregate Proceeds that May be Received by
Cardiogenesis Directors and Executive Officers
beginning on page 41;
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our current and former directors and officers will continue to
be indemnified and will have the benefit of liability insurance
until six years after the effective time of the Merger;
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in connection with the execution of the Merger Agreement, our
directors and executive officers entered into the Support
Agreement, pursuant to which such directors and executive
officers agreed to tender their 911,561 shares of our
common stock and 365,318 shares of restricted stock, for a
total of 1,276,879 shares, into the tender offer at the
request of CryoLife and to vote such shares, if any remain, in
favor of the Merger;
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if the Merger is consummated, any shareholder derivative claims
that are currently pending or that could be brought against the
directors and officers of Cardiogenesis by current shareholders
would likely be extinguished; and
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CryoLife has agreed to a two-year employment agreement with
Richard Lanigan. Certain of our other officers may receive
employment agreements from CryoLife for employment, on an
as-needed basis, after the consummation of the Merger.
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Conditions
to the Merger
(page 59)
We are working to complete the Merger as soon as possible. The
Merger is subject to the satisfaction of several conditions,
including the conditions described immediately below. As such,
we cannot predict the exact time of the Mergers completion.
The completion of the Merger depends on satisfaction of the
conditions below:
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the Merger Agreement must have been approved and adopted by the
affirmative vote of at least a majority of the votes entitled to
be cast by the holders of the outstanding shares of our common
stock; and
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no judgment, ruling, order, writ, injunction or decree issued by
a court of competent jurisdiction or any statute, law,
ordinance, rule or regulation or other legal restraint or
prohibition of any governmental authority shall be in effect
that would make the Merger illegal or otherwise prevent the
consummation thereof provided that the party seeking to assert
this condition shall have used those efforts required under the
Merger Agreement to resist, lift or resolve such judgment,
ruling, order, writ, injunction or decree, statute, law,
ordinance, rule or regulation or other legal restraint or
prohibition.
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Where legally permissible, a party may waive a condition to its
obligation to complete the Merger even though that condition has
not been satisfied, although the shareholder approval condition
cannot be waived. None of Cardiogenesis, CryoLife or Merger Sub,
however, has any intention to waive any condition as of the date
of this proxy statement.
Dissenters
Rights
(pages 42 and C-1)
If the Merger is consummated, persons who are then shareholders
will have certain rights under California law to dissent and
demand appraisal of, and payment in cash of the fair value of,
their shares of our common stock. Any shares of our common stock
held by a person who demands appraisal of such shares and who
complies with the applicable provisions of California law shall
not be converted into the right to receive Merger consideration.
Such dissenters rights, if the statutory procedures were
complied with, will lead to a judicial determination of the fair
value (excluding any element of value arising from the
accomplishment or expectation of the Merger) required to be paid
in cash to such dissenting shareholders for their shares of our
common stock. The value so determined could be more or less
than, or the same as, the purchase price per share pursuant to
the tender offer or the consideration per share to be paid in
the Merger.
You should read Approval of the Merger
Agreement Dissenters Rights beginning on
page 42 for a more complete discussion of the
dissenters rights in relation to the Merger as well as
Annex C which contains a full text of the applicable
California statutes.
6
QUESTIONS
AND ANSWERS ABOUT THE SPECIAL MEETING AND THE MERGER
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Q:
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What
matters will be voted on at the Special Meeting?
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A: |
You will be voting on the following:
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To consider and vote on a proposal to approve and adopt the
Merger Agreement. The Merger is the second and final step of the
acquisition of Cardiogenesis by CryoLife. The first step was a
tender offer by Merger Sub for 49.9% of the outstanding shares
of our common stock at a price of $0.457 per share, net to the
seller in cash without interest thereon and less any withholding
taxes, which was completed on May 2, 2011 and resulted in
Merger Sub acquiring 49.9% of our outstanding common stock.
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To consider and vote on a proposal to adjourn the Special
Meeting, if necessary or appropriate, to do so.
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Q:
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As a
shareholder, what will I receive in the Merger?
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A: |
You will be entitled to receive $0.457 in cash, without interest
thereon and less any applicable withholding tax, for each
Cardiogenesis common share that you own immediately prior to the
effective time of the Merger as described in the Merger
Agreement. For example, if you own 100 shares of
Cardiogenesis common stock, you will receive $45.70 in cash in
exchange for your shares of common stock, without interest and
less any applicable withholding taxes. You will not own any
shares of the capital stock in the surviving corporation.
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Q:
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When and
where is the Special Meeting of our shareholders?
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A: |
The Special Meeting of shareholders will be held on Monday,
May 16, 2011, at 8:30 a.m., Pacific Time, at
Cardiogenesis principal executive offices, 11 Musick,
Irvine, California 92618.
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Q:
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What vote
of our shareholders is required to approve and adopt the Merger
Agreement?
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A: |
For us to complete the Merger, shareholders holding at least a
majority of the shares of our common stock outstanding at the
close of business on the record date must vote
FOR the proposal to approve and adopt the
Merger Agreement. As a result of the tender offer, CryoLife
beneficially owns a total of approximately 49.9% of the
outstanding shares of our common stock as a result of the tender
offer made pursuant to the Merger Agreement and will cause
Merger Sub to vote all such shares in favor of approving and
adopting the Merger Agreement. The shares held by CryoLife,
together with the shares subject to the Support Agreement,
represent a majority of our outstanding shares, so we believe
that shareholder approval is assured.
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Q:
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Who can
attend and vote at the Special Meeting?
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A: |
All shareholders of record as of the close of business on May 4,
2011, the record date for the Special Meeting, are entitled to
receive notice of and to attend and vote at the Special Meeting,
or any postponement or adjournment thereof. If you wish to
attend the Special Meeting and your shares are held in an
account at a broker, dealer, commercial bank, trust company or
other nominee (i.e., in street name), you will need
to bring a copy of your voting instruction card or statement
reflecting your share ownership as of the record date.
Street name holders who wish to vote at the Special
Meeting will need to obtain a proxy from the broker, dealer,
commercial bank, trust company or other nominee that holds their
shares of our common stock. Seating will be limited at the
Special Meeting. Shareholders of record will be verified against
an official list available in the registration area at the
meeting. We reserve the right to deny admittance to anyone who
cannot adequately show proof of share ownership as of the record
date.
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Q:
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When will
the shareholders list be available for
examination?
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A: |
A complete list of the shareholders of record as of the record
date will be available for examination by shareholders of record
beginning on May 6, 2011 at the Companys headquarters
and will continue to be available through and during the Special
Meeting.
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Q:
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How does
our board of directors recommend that I vote?
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A: |
Our board of directors unanimously recommends that our
shareholders vote FOR the proposal to approve
and adopt the Merger Agreement.
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Q:
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Am I
entitled to exercise dissenters rights instead of
receiving the Merger consideration for my shares?
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A: |
Yes. Cardiogenesis shareholders who do not vote in favor of
approval and adoption of the Merger Agreement will have the
right to seek appraisal and the fair value of their shares if
the Merger closes but only if they perfect their
dissenters rights by complying with the required
procedures under the California General Corporation Law, or
CGCL. See Approval of the Merger Agreement
Dissenters Rights beginning on page 42 of the
accompanying proxy statement. For the full text of
Sections 1300-1313
of the CGCL, please see Annex C hereto.
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Q:
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How do I
cast my vote if I am a holder of record?
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A: |
If you were a holder of record on May 4, 2011, you may vote
in person at the Special Meeting or by submitting a proxy for
the Special Meeting. You can submit your proxy by completing,
signing, dating and returning the enclosed proxy card in the
accompanying pre-addressed, postage paid envelope. Holders of
record may also vote by telephone or the Internet by following
the instructions on the proxy card.
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If you
properly transmit your proxy, but do not indicate how you want
to vote, your proxy will be voted FOR the approval
and adoption of the Merger Agreement.
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Q:
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How do I
cast my vote if my Cardiogenesis shares are held in street
name by my broker, dealer, commercial bank, trust company
or other nominee?
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A: |
If you hold your shares in street name, which means
your shares of our common stock are held of record on
May 4, 2011 by a broker, dealer, commercial bank, trust
company or other nominee, you must provide the record holder of
your shares of our common stock with instructions on how to vote
your shares of our common stock in accordance with the voting
directions provided by your broker, dealer, commercial bank,
trust company or other nominee. If you do not provide your
broker, dealer, commercial bank, trust company or other nominee
with instructions on how to vote your shares, your shares of our
common stock will not be voted, which will have the same effect
as voting AGAINST the approval and adoption of the
Merger Agreement. Please refer to the voting instruction
card used by your broker, dealer, commercial bank, trust company
or other nominee to see if you may submit voting instructions
using the Internet or telephone.
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Q:
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What will
happen if I abstain from voting or fail to vote on the proposal
to approve and adopt the Merger Agreement?
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A: |
If you abstain from voting, fail to cast your vote in person or
by proxy or fail to give voting instructions to your broker,
dealer, commercial bank, trust company or other nominee, it will
have the same effect as a vote AGAINST
approval and adoption of the Merger Agreement.
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Q:
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Can I
change my vote after I have delivered my proxy?
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A: |
Yes. If you are a record holder, you can change your vote at any
time before your proxy is voted at the Special Meeting by
properly delivering a later-dated proxy either by mail, the
Internet, or telephone, or attending the Special Meeting in
person and voting. You also may revoke your proxy by delivering
a notice of revocation to Cardiogenesis corporate
secretary prior to the vote at the Special Meeting. If your
shares are held in street name, you must contact your broker,
dealer, commercial bank, trust company or other nominee to
revoke your proxy.
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Q:
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What
should I do if I receive more than one set of voting
materials?
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A. |
You may receive more than one set of voting materials, including
multiple copies of this proxy statement or multiple proxy or
voting instruction cards. For example, if you hold your shares
of our common stock in more than one brokerage account, you will
receive a separate voting instruction card for each brokerage
account in which you hold shares of our common stock. If you are
a holder of record and your shares of our common stock are
registered in more than one name, you will receive more than one
proxy card. Please submit each proxy and voting instruction
card that you receive.
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Q:
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If I am a
holder of certificated Cardiogenesis common shares, should I
send in my share certificates now?
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A: |
No. Promptly after the Merger is completed, each holder of
record as of the time of the Merger will be sent a letter of
transmittal and written instructions for exchanging their share
certificates for the Merger consideration. These instructions
will tell you how and where to send in your certificates for
your cash consideration. You will receive your cash payment
after the Paying Agent receives your share certificates, your
letter of transmittal and any other documents requested in the
instructions. Please do not send certificates with your proxy.
Holders of uncertificated shares of our common stock (i.e.,
holders whose shares are held in book entry) will receive their
cash consideration after the paying agent receives their letter
of transmittal and any other documents requested in the Paying
Agents instructions.
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Q:
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When is
the Merger expected to be completed?
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A: |
We are working to complete the Merger as quickly as possible. We
cannot, however, predict the exact timing of the Merger. In
order to complete the Merger, we must obtain shareholder
approval and the other closing conditions under the Merger
Agreement must be satisfied or waived.
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Q:
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Who can
help answer my questions?
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A: |
If you have any questions about the Merger or how to submit your
proxy, or if you need additional copies of this proxy statement
or the enclosed proxy card, you should contact William R.
Abbott, our Chief Financial Officer, at 11 Musick, Irvine,
California, 92618, or via telephone at
(949) 420-1800.
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9
CAUTIONARY
STATEMENT CONCERNING FORWARD-LOOKING INFORMATION
This proxy statement, and the documents to which we refer you in
this proxy statement, as well as information included in oral
statements or other written statements made or to be made by us,
contain statements that, in our opinion, may constitute
forward-looking statements that are not historical
facts.
Cardiogenesis has identified some of these forward-looking
statements with words like believe, may,
could, would, might,
possible, potential, will,
should, expect, intend,
plan, anticipate, estimate,
approximate outlook or
continue or the negative of these words, other terms
of similar meaning or the use of future dates. Forward-looking
statements in this proxy statement include without limitation
statements regarding the anticipated timing of filings and
approvals relating to the Merger; statements regarding the
expected timing of the completion of the Merger; statements
regarding the ability to complete the Merger considering the
various closing conditions; statements regarding expected tax
treatment for the Merger; any statements of expectation or
belief; and any statements of assumptions underlying any of the
foregoing. Investors and security holders are cautioned not to
place undue reliance on these forward-looking statements. Actual
results could differ materially from those currently anticipated
due to a number of risks and uncertainties. Risks and
uncertainties that could cause results to differ from
expectations include: uncertainties as to the timing of the
Merger; uncertainties as to how many of Cardiogenesis
shareholders will vote their shares of our common stock in favor
of the Merger; the risk that competing offers will be made; the
possibility that various closing conditions for the transactions
contemplated by the Merger Agreement may not be satisfied or
waived, including that a governmental entity may prohibit, delay
or refuse to grant approval for the consummation of such
transactions; the effects of disruption from the transactions
contemplated by the Merger Agreement making it more difficult to
maintain relationships with employees, customers, vendors and
other business partners; the risk that shareholder litigation in
connection with the Merger may result in significant costs of
defense, indemnification and liability or otherwise delay or
prevent the Merger; other business effects, including the
effects of industry, economic or political conditions outside of
Cardiogenesis control; transaction costs; actual or
contingent liabilities; and other risks and uncertainties
discussed in Cardiogenesis filings with the SEC, including
the Risk Factors sections of Cardiogenesis
most recent annual report on
Form 10-K
and subsequent quarterly reports on
Form 10-Q,
as well as the Risk Factors set forth in the Offer to Purchase
previously mailed to Cardiogenesis shareholders.
Copies of Cardiogenesis filings with the
U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, or the SEC, may be
obtained at the Investors section of
Cardiogenesis website at
http://www.cardiogenesis.com
under the caption SEC Filings. Cardiogenesis does
not undertake any obligation to update any forward-looking
statements as a result of new information, future developments
or otherwise, except as expressly required by law. All
forward-looking statements in this proxy statement are qualified
in their entirety by this cautionary statement.
10
THE
CARDIOGNESIS SPECIAL MEETING
We are furnishing this proxy statement to Cardiogenesis
shareholders as part of the solicitation of proxies by the
Cardiogenesis board of directors for use at the Special
Meeting.
Date,
Time and Place
We will hold the Special Meeting on Monday, May 16, 2011,
at 8:30 a.m., Pacific Time, at Cardiogenesis
principal executive offices, 11 Musick, Irvine, California
92618. Seating will be limited to shareholders. Admission to the
Special Meeting will be on a first-come, first-served basis.
Purpose
of the Special Meeting
The Special Meeting is being held for the following purposes:
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to approve and adopt the Merger Agreement (see Approval of
the Merger Agreement beginning on page 14);
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to consider and vote on a proposal to adjourn the Special
Meeting, if necessary or appropriate to do so; and
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to transact any other business that is properly brought before
the Special Meeting or any reconvened meeting after any
adjournment or postponement of the Special Meeting.
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Recommendation
of Our Board of Directors
Cardiogenesis board of directors unanimously recommends
that our shareholders vote FOR the approval
and adoption of the Merger Agreement, and, if necessary,
FOR an adjournment of the Special Meeting.
Record
Date; Shareholders Entitled to Vote; Quorum
Only holders of record of shares of our common stock at the
close of business on May 4, 2011, the record date, are entitled
to notice of and to vote at the Special Meeting. On the record
date, 46,564,910 shares of our common stock were issued and
outstanding and held by 191 holders of record. Holders of record
of shares of our common stock on the record date are entitled to
one vote per common share at the Special Meeting on each
proposal. For ten days prior to the Special Meeting, a complete
list of shareholders entitled to vote at the Special Meeting
will be available for examination by any shareholder, for any
purpose relating to the Special Meeting, during ordinary
business hours at our principal offices located at 11 Musick,
Irvine, California 92618.
A quorum is necessary to hold a valid Special Meeting. A quorum
will be present at the Special Meeting if the holders of a
majority of shares of our common stock outstanding and entitled
to vote on the record date are present, in person or by proxy.
Voting
Procedures
Voting
by Proxy or in Person at the Special Meeting
Holders of record can ensure that their shares of our common
stock are voted at the Special Meeting by completing, signing,
dating and delivering the enclosed proxy card in the enclosed
postage-paid envelope. Submitting by this method will not affect
your right to attend the Special Meeting and to vote in person.
If you plan to attend the Special Meeting and wish to vote in
person, you will be given a ballot at the Special Meeting.
Please note, however, that if your shares of our common stock
are held in street name by a broker, dealer,
commercial bank, trust company or other nominee and you wish to
vote at the Special Meeting, you must bring to the Special
Meeting a proxy from the record holder of the shares of our
common stock authorizing you to vote at the Special Meeting.
Electronic
Voting
Our holders of record and many shareholders who hold their
common shares through a broker, dealer, commercial bank, trust
company or other nominee will have the option to submit their
proxy cards or voting
11
instruction cards electronically by telephone or the Internet.
Please note that there are separate arrangements for using the
telephone depending on whether your common shares are registered
in our records in your name or in the name of a broker, dealer,
commercial bank, trust company or other nominee. Some brokers,
dealers, commercial banks, trust companies or other nominees may
also allow voting through the Internet. If you hold your common
shares through a broker, bank or other nominee, you should check
your voting instruction card forwarded by your broker, dealer,
commercial bank, trust company or other nominee to see which
options are available.
Abstentions
When an eligible voter attends the Special Meeting but decides
not to vote, his or her decision not to vote is called an
abstention. Properly executed proxy cards that are
marked abstain or withhold authority on
any proposal will be treated as abstentions for that proposal.
Abstention shares will have the same effect as votes AGAINST
a proposal if the minimum vote required for approval of the
proposal is a majority of (i) the shares present and
entitled to vote, or (ii) all shares outstanding and
entitled to vote.
Broker
Non-Votes
Broker non-votes occur when shares held by a broker for a
beneficial owner are not voted with respect to a particular
proposal because (i) the broker does not receive voting
instructions from the beneficial owner, and (ii) the broker
lacks discretionary authority to vote the shares. Broker
non-votes will not be treated as shares present and entitled to
vote for purposes of any matter requiring the affirmative vote
of a majority or other proportion of the shares present and
entitled to vote (even though the same shares may be considered
present for quorum purposes and may be entitled to vote on other
matters). Thus, a broker non-vote will have the same effect as a
vote AGAINST a proposal the passage of which requires an
affirmative vote of the holders of a majority of the outstanding
shares entitled to vote on such proposal. The inspector of
elections appointed for the Special Meeting will determine
whether a quorum is present, and will tabulate affirmative and
negative votes, abstentions and broker non-votes.
Vote
Required
Approval
of the Merger Agreement
The approval and adoption of the Merger Agreement by our
shareholders requires the affirmative vote of the holders of at
least a majority of the shares of our common stock present in
person or represented by proxy and entitled to vote at the
Special Meeting as of the record date, either in person or by
proxy. Merger Sub already owns 49.9% of the shares of our common
stock as a result of the tender offer made pursuant to the
Merger Agreement and will vote such shares for the approval and
adoption of the Merger Agreement. The shares held by CryoLife,
together with the shares subject to the Support Agreement,
represent a majority of our outstanding shares, so we believe
that shareholder approval is assured. Abstentions and broker
non-votes will have the same effect as a vote AGAINST the
proposal to adopt the Merger Agreement.
Approval
of the Adjournment of the Special Meeting
If necessary, the approval of an adjournment to the Special
Meeting requires the affirmative vote of the holders of at least
a majority of the shares of our common stock outstanding and
entitled to vote at the Special Meeting as of the record date,
either in person or by proxy. Merger Sub already owns 49.9% of
the shares of our common stock as a result of the tender offer
made pursuant to the Merger Agreement and will vote such shares
for an approval of the adjournment of the Special Meeting. The
shares held by CryoLife, together with the shares subject to the
Support Agreement, represent a majority of our outstanding
shares, so we believe that shareholder approval is assured.
Abstentions will have the same effect as a vote AGAINST
the proposal to approve any adjournment. Broker non-votes
will not be relevant to the outcome.
Revocation
of Proxies
Submitting a proxy on the enclosed form does not preclude a
shareholder from voting in person at the Special Meeting. A
shareholder of record may revoke a proxy at any time before it
is voted by filing with our corporate secretary a duly executed
revocation of proxy, by properly submitting a proxy by mail, the
Internet or telephone with
12
a later date or by appearing at the Special Meeting and voting
in person. A shareholder of record may revoke a proxy by any of
these methods, regardless of the method used to deliver the
shareholders previous proxy. Attendance at the Special
Meeting without voting will not itself revoke a proxy. If the
shares of our common stock you own are held in street name, you
must contact your broker, dealer, commercial bank, trust company
or other nominee to revoke your proxy.
Solicitation
of Proxies
Cardiogenesis directors, officers and employees may
solicit proxies by personal interview, mail,
e-mail,
telephone, facsimile or other means of communication. These
persons will not be paid additional remuneration for their
efforts. Cardiogenesis will also request brokers and other
fiduciaries to forward proxy solicitation material to the
beneficial owners of shares of Cardiogenesis common stock that
the brokers and fiduciaries hold of record. Upon request,
Cardiogenesis will reimburse them for their reasonable
out-of-pocket
expenses. The expense of the solicitation of proxies will be
borne by Cardiogenesis.
Assistance
If you need assistance in completing your proxy card or have
questions regarding the Special Meeting, please contact William
R. Abbott, our Chief Financial Officer, at
(949) 420-1800
or at 11 Musick, Irvine, California, 92618.
13
APPROVAL
OF THE MERGER AGREEMENT
The following is a description of the material aspects of the
Merger. While we believe that the following description covers
the material terms of the Merger, the description may not
contain all of the information that is important to you. We
encourage you to read carefully this entire document, including
the Merger Agreement attached to this proxy statement as
Annex A, for a more complete understanding of the
Merger. The following description is subject to, and is
qualified in its entirety by reference to, the Merger
Agreement.
Overview
of the Transaction
Cardiogenesis, CryoLife and Merger Sub entered into the Merger
Agreement on March 28, 2011 and amended and restated the
Merger Agreement on April 14, 2011. In the Merger
Agreement, CryoLife agreed to acquire Cardiogenesis through a
two-step process. The first step was a tender offer by Merger
Sub for 49.9% of the outstanding shares of our common stock at a
price of $0.457 per share, net to the seller in cash without
interest thereon and less any applicable withholding tax, which
was completed on May 2, 2011, resulting in Merger Sub
acquiring 49.9% of our outstanding common stock. The second step
is a Merger of Merger Sub with and into Cardiogenesis, with
Cardiogenesis surviving as a wholly-owned subsidiary of
CryoLife. The following will occur in connection with the Merger:
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each outstanding common share issued and outstanding immediately
prior to the effective time of the Merger (other than shares of
our common stock held by us, CryoLife or Merger Sub, or by any
direct or indirect wholly-owned subsidiary of CryoLife, Merger
Sub or Cardiogenesis or held by shareholders who are entitled to
demand and properly demand and perfect appraisal of such shares
of our common stock pursuant to, and who comply in all material
respects with,
Sections 1300-1313
of the California General Corporation Law (which shall be
treated as described under Dissenters Rights
beginning on page 42)) will by virtue of the Merger, and
without action by the holder thereof, be canceled and converted
into the right to receive $0.457 per common share;
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all shares of our common stock so converted will, by virtue of
the Merger be canceled, and each holder of a certificate
representing any shares of Cardiogenesis common stock shall
cease to have any rights with respect thereto, except the right
to receive the $0.457 per share upon surrender of such
certificate;
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all shares of our common stock held in the treasury of
Cardiogenesis or owned, directly or indirectly, by CryoLife,
Merger Sub or any wholly-owned subsidiary of Cardiogenesis
immediately prior to the effective time of the Merger shall be
canceled and shall cease to exist, and no consideration shall be
delivered in exchange therefore; and
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each outstanding common share of Merger Sub will be converted
into one fully paid and nonassessable share of common stock, no
par value, of the surviving corporation.
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Following and as a result of the Merger:
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Cardiogenesis shareholders (other than CryoLife and its
affiliates) will no longer have any interest in, and no longer
be shareholders of, Cardiogenesis, and will not participate in
any of our future earnings or growth;
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our shares of common stock will no longer be quoted on the
OTCQB; and
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the registration of the shares of our common stock under the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended, will be terminated.
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Management
and Board of Directors of the Surviving Corporation
The directors and officers of Merger Sub immediately prior to
the effective time will be the initial directors and officers of
the surviving corporation.
Background
of the Merger
The following chronology summarizes the key meetings,
conversations and events that led to the signing of the Merger
Agreement. This chronology covers only key events leading up to
the Merger Agreement and does not
14
purport to catalogue every communication between representatives
of Cardiogenesis, CryoLife, Merger Sub and other parties.
As part of the ongoing evaluation of Cardiogenesis
business, Cardiogenesis board and our senior management
regularly review and assess opportunities to achieve long-term
strategic goals and to maximize shareholder value, including
potential opportunities for business combinations, acquisitions,
dispositions, internal restructurings and other strategic
alternatives. In July 2009, Cardiogenesis board discussed
potential strategies capable of supporting Cardiogenesis
future prospects while maximizing shareholder value. The
strategies included (i) identifying privately-held
companies with synergistic technologies with Cardiogenesis
products with which a merger would provide a partial liquidity
event for the shareholders of the private company while
Cardiogenesis could acquire a pathway to regain a listing on a
national exchange, (ii) a merger of equals with a candidate
focused on regenerative medicine in which Cardiogenesis would
represent the combined companys cardiovascular
application, (iii) a sale of Cardiogenesis, and (iv) a
financing transaction to provide Cardiogenesis with adequate
resources to fund its research and development initiatives,
increase product sales and to regain a listing on a national
exchange. Although our board of directors did not determine that
Cardiogenesis was for sale at such time, our board authorized
Paul McCormick, Cardiogenesis Executive Chairman, to
proceed with contacting those potential candidates who met the
criteria described above.
Based on his extensive industry experience, Mr. McCormick
identified the companies that would possibly satisfy the
criteria discussed with our board of directors. In addition,
Mr. McCormick had several informal discussions with
representatives of investment banks that had experience in the
medical device industry regarding alternative strategies,
including the possibility of raising equity or debt capital
under current market conditions, and identities of companies
that might be interested in a strategic transaction with
Cardiogenesis. Cardiogenesis did not engage a financial advisor
at that time. Between July 2009 and July 2010,
Mr. McCormick participated in multiple discussions with 23
strategic and financial parties to ascertain their potential
interest in a transaction with Cardiogenesis. This resulted in
Cardiogenesis presenting a summary of its publicly available
information to 14 parties and entering into non-disclosure
agreements with three parties, including CryoLife, to further
discuss a potential transaction.
On October 6, 2009, Cardiogenesis entered into the 2009 NDA
and the management of CryoLife attended a meeting with
Cardiogenesis senior management to gain better
understanding of Cardiogenesis business. Attending for
CryoLife were Steven G. Anderson, Chief Executive Officer, D.
Ashley Lee, Chief Operating Officer and Chief Financial Officer,
Gerald B. Seery, Senior Vice President of Sales and Marketing,
Scott B. Capps, Vice President of Clinical Research, Timothy M.
Neja, Vice President of Laboratory Operations and William F.
Northrup III, MD, Vice President of Physician Relations and
Education, and for Cardiogenesis were Messrs. McCormick and
Lanigan.
On October 16, 2009, Mr. Lee called Mr. McCormick
to provide feedback on the October 14, 2009 meeting.
Mr. Lee indicated that while CryoLife had interest in a
transaction with Cardiogenesis, it had other opportunities that
were of a higher priority at that time to CryoLife.
Of the 23 strategic and financial parties approached between
July 2009 and July 2010, one candidate other than CryoLife
expressed preliminary interest in discussing a potential
transaction with Cardiogenesis. Company A expressed an interest
in exploring a potential merger transaction with Cardiogenesis.
During the summer and fall of 2010, Mr. McCormick had
several in-person meetings and engaged in intermittent
discussions with, and provided requested information to,
representatives of Company A.
On August 12, 2010, Mr. Lee contacted
Mr. McCormick to express CryoLifes renewed interest
in evaluating a potential acquisition of Cardiogenesis, and
requested additional information about Cardiogenesis
business. On August 24, 2010, Cardiogenesis senior
management met with representatives of Company A to discuss the
scope and process of conducting due diligence. In addition,
Cardiogenesis was presented with information about Company
As current business and technology and the potential
strategic advantages of a transaction between Cardiogenesis and
Company A. Senior management of Company A provided
Mr. McCormick with an outline of the process they believed
would be required to complete a transaction with Cardiogenesis
in a timely manner.
15
On September 13, 2010, at a regularly scheduled meeting of
our board of directors, Mr. McCormick updated our board of
directors on discussions with Company A. A representative of
K&L Gates LLP, which we refer to as K&L Gates,
Cardiogenesis outside counsel, counseled our board of
directors on its fiduciary duties in connection with a potential
strategic transaction and outlined the process our board of
directors should implement to properly evaluate a potential
offer, including the retention of a financial advisor. In order
to be in a better position to properly evaluate a potential
transaction, our board of directors instructed
Cardiogenesis senior management to interview and retain an
investment bank to act as Cardiogenesis financial advisor.
In mid-September 2010, Mr. McCormick began discussions with
representatives of Company A regarding the terms of a
non-binding letter of intent which would set forth the general
business terms of a proposed strategic transaction.
Mr. McCormick continued to negotiate the terms of a
potential transaction with Company A through October. Company
As verbal proposals involved a merger of equals
transaction, but no formal offer was presented to Cardiogenesis.
Mr. McCormick continued to interview investment banks as
possible financial advisors.
On September 15, 2010, Mr. Lee held a telephone
conference with Mr. McCormick to continue gathering
information regarding Cardiogenesis business as CryoLife
evaluated the potential acquisition of Cardiogenesis.
On September 29, 2010, Cardiogenesis entered into the 2010
NDA.
On October 1, 2010, Messrs. Anderson, Lee, Capps,
Seery and David Fronk, Vice President, Regulatory Affairs and
Quality Assurance, of CryoLife and Messrs. McCormick and
Lanigan of Cardiogenesis held a telephone conference to continue
CryoLifes evaluation of the potential acquisition and to
gain more insight into Cardiogenesis business.
On October 6 and 7, 2010, members of CryoLifes management,
with the assistance of Cardiogenesis management,
participated in customer calls to discuss Cardiogenesis
products.
On October 13, 2010, Mr. Lee had a telephone
conference with Mr. McCormick to continue discussions about
Cardiogenesis financial and operating performance and
gather further information to aid in the evaluation of
Cardiogenesis business. Mr. McCormick notified
Mr. Lee that he was in discussions with Company A and
expected to receive a draft letter of intent shortly that would
include an exclusivity provision in the event CryoLife was
interested in making a formal proposal.
On October 20, 2010, representatives of Piper
Jaffray & Co., which we refer to as Piper Jaffray,
financial advisor to CryoLife, sent a letter, on behalf of
CryoLife, to Mr. McCormick which set forth the terms of a
proposed strategic transaction. This indication of interest
expressed CryoLifes preliminary interest in exploring a
potential transaction involving Cardiogenesis at a range of
between $0.36 and $0.40 per Share; was non-binding in nature and
could be withdrawn or modified by CryoLife at any time, and was
subject to due diligence conducted by CryoLife.
Mr. McCormick discussed the indication of interest with a
representative of K&L Gates. Mr. McCormick also had
separate informal discussions with members of our board of
directors regarding the indication of interest.
On October 22, 2010, Mr. Lee received a call from
Mr. McCormick indicating that he did not think the proposal
represented fair value based on revenues in comparable deals and
did not believe the tender offer would be of interest to our
board of directors. Mr. Lee indicated to Mr. McCormick
that a portion of the consideration could be paid in
CryoLifes stock, which CryoLife believed was undervalued.
Mr. Lee suggested that senior management of CryoLife meet
with our board of directors to provide more detail regarding
CryoLifes business. Our board of directors agreed to a
meeting with CryoLifes senior management and
CryoLifes financial advisor, Piper Jaffray.
Our board of directors decided not to contact other potential
purchasers at that time, since CryoLifes proposal was only
preliminary, the range of consideration in the proposal to move
forward with a transaction and our board of directors had not
otherwise determined that Cardiogenesis was for sale. Our board
of directors was also concerned with the potential risks of
contacting other parties at that time, including market
communication risk and risks of disruption to its relationships
with its stakeholders. However, Mr. McCormick continued to
have discussions with representatives of Company A regarding a
potential transaction.
Cardiogenesis entered into an engagement letter with B. Riley,
dated November 7, 2010, to act as Cardiogenesis
financial advisor in connection with evaluating potential
transactions. Our board of directors selected B. Riley based on
its experience and reputation with respect to business
combination transactions, as well as its
16
familiarity with Cardiogenesis business, products and
pipeline. B. Riley had not been engaged to provide financial
advisory services to Cardiogenesis in at least the prior three
years. Following our board of directors decision to engage
B. Riley, neither Cardiogenesis nor CryoLife held discussions
with B. Riley regarding possible future engagements of B. Riley
following this engagement by our board of directors. B. Riley
immediately assisted Cardiogenesis in reviewing the indication
of interest received from CryoLife and the status of the
negotiations with Company A. In order to efficiently manage the
process of reviewing potential proposals from third parties, our
board of directors authorized Cardiogenesis senior
management to review, analyze, and negotiate proposals from
third parties, but no definitive steps relating to any such
proposal could be made without the approval of our board of
directors.
On November 9, 2010, CryoLifes senior management met
in-person with our board of directors at the offices of K&L
Gates to discuss the transaction proposed by the indication of
interest and to provide information regarding CryoLifes
current business and technology. Representatives from Piper
Jaffray, B. Riley and K&L Gates were present at the
meeting. Following the departure of CryoLifes senior
management, representatives of B. Riley provided our board of
directors a valuation overview of Cardiogenesis and metrics to
consider when evaluating the alternatives presented by CryoLife
and Company A. Our board of directors requested B. Riley to
provide a more detailed valuation analysis of Cardiogenesis for
our board of directors to consider. Our board of directors also
engaged in extensive discussion regarding the benefits and risks
of receiving stock consideration from either CryoLife or Company
A.
On November 12, 2010, representatives of B. Riley contacted
representatives of Piper Jaffray to indicate that Cardiogenesis
may be interested in discussing a possible transaction with
CryoLife, but would need review a financial analysis of
Cardiogenesis by B. Riley to better understand CryoLifes
offer.
On November 18, 2010, at a regular meeting of our board of
directors, B. Riley made a presentation that analyzed the
results and effect of a potential transaction with either
CryoLife or Company A. B. Riley also presented to our board of
directors information regarding Cardiogenesis current
valuation. A representative from K&L Gates also attended
the meeting. After considering, among other things, B.
Rileys analysis, our board of directors concluded that,
while the proposed price range in CryoLifes preliminary
offer was insufficient, there was a potential opportunity to
generate higher value through engaging in negotiations with
CryoLife. Following this meeting, our board of directors
instructed B. Riley to propose a counter-offer to
CryoLifes previous indication of interest including the
issuance of CryoLifes stock as part of the consideration,
increasing the value of the total consideration to $0.50 per
Share and requesting a go-shop period to allow
Cardiogenesis to solicit competing bids after announcement of a
transaction.
Between November 18, 2010 and late November,
Mr. McCormick continued to negotiate with each of CryoLife
and Company A. In late November, 2010, representatives of B.
Riley approached 18 strategic partners, many of whom had already
been previously contacted by Mr. McCormick, in order to
gauge their interest in a potential transaction with
Cardiogenesis. However, other than Company A, there was no
additional interest in a potential transaction from any of the
parties contacted. Company A sent a draft proposal to
Cardiogenesis regarding a merger of equals transaction. However,
our board of directors believed that a transaction with Company
A was not desirable due to the impending delisting of Company A
from its national securities exchange, Company As
uncertain capital resources and the integration risks of the
combined company.
On November 26, 2010, representatives of B. Riley contacted
representatives of Piper Jaffray to indicate that Cardiogenesis
was interested in a potential transaction with CryoLife, but
that the terms of the indication of interest would be
insufficient. Representatives of B. Riley indicated
Cardiogenesis may be interested in a transaction in which the
consideration would be all stock and the consideration for each
Share would be valued at $0.50.
On November 29, 2010, Cardiogenesis received a letter of
intent from Piper Jaffray on behalf of CryoLife. Among other
terms revised by CryoLife, the letter of intent proposed merger
consideration consisting of both cash and stock consideration.
CryoLifes letter of intent also increased the
consideration for each Share to $0.50, required a
$1 million termination fee, did not allow our board of
directors to have a go-shop period to solicit higher
bids for a transaction, and required both parties to enter into
a thirty-day
exclusivity period whereby Cardiogenesis would be required to
break off discussions with all other parties to allow for due
diligence and the negotiation of a definitive Merger Agreement.
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On December 3, 2010, our board of directors held a special
meeting to discuss the letter of intent from CryoLife.
Representatives from K&L Gates and B. Riley also
participated in the meeting. K&L Gates reviewed the legal
terms of the letter of intent as well as discussed with our
board of directors their fiduciary duties owed to
Cardiogenesis shareholders under applicable state law when
considering the proposed transaction. B. Riley then reviewed
with our board of directors the discussions to date with
CryoLife and the terms of the letter of intent. B. Riley
then presented an update regarding the status of discussions
with Company A. Our board of directors then extensively
discussed, among other things, the prospects for Cardiogenesis
remaining as an independent company, and whether a possible sale
of Cardiogenesis would maximize value for Cardiogenesis
shareholders. B. Riley was instructed to communicate to Piper
Jaffray that our board of directors requested a
45-day
go-shop provision.
On December 4, 2010, Mr. Lee notified
Mr. McCormick that CryoLife was willing to agree to a
20 day go-shop provision, but the break up fee after the
20 day go-shop expired would increase to $1.5 million.
CryoLife provided a letter of intent reflecting those additional
terms.
On December 6, 2010, at a special meeting, our board of
directors continued its review and discussion of CryoLifes
letter of intent. Our board of directors considered the positive
and negative factors and risks in connection with the proposed
transaction, as discussed in the section entitled
Recommendation of Our Board of Directors; Reasons for
Recommending the Approval of the Merger Agreement
beginning on page 20. K&L Gates reviewed our board of
directors fiduciary duties owed to Cardiogenesis
shareholders under applicable state law. Following such review
and discussion, our board of directors authorized
Mr. McCormick to execute the revised letter of intent and
move forward with finalizing due diligence and preparing a
definitive Merger Agreement. Cardiogenesis subsequently informed
Company A that, as a result of the 30 day exclusivity
period contained in the letter of intent, it was prohibited from
engaging in further discussions with Company A due to
contractual requirements.
On December 14, 2010, CryoLife commenced its confirmatory
due diligence review of Cardiogenesis, including access to
Cardiogenesis online data room.
In December 2010, CryoLife continued its due diligence efforts.
On December 22, 2010, Cardiogenesis received a first draft
of the Merger Agreement from Arnall Golden Gregory, LLP, which
we refer to as AGG, CryoLifes outside counsel. K&L
Gates immediately began to negotiate the Merger Agreement with
AGG.
Several due diligence meetings between members of the management
teams of Cardiogenesis and CryoLife were held from October 2010
through March 2011. These meetings covered numerous business,
regulatory, legal and financial topics. The due diligence
process also included telephonic due diligence discussions
between Cardiogenesis and CryoLifes respective
management and outside financial, legal and accounting advisors,
and in-person due diligence review sessions,
on-site due
diligence visits to Cardiogenesis facilities and access to
Cardiogenesis on-line data room containing financial,
operational, regulatory, intellectual property, human resource,
legal and other information concerning Cardiogenesis.
On January 4, 2011, Piper Jaffray informed B. Riley that,
based upon the results of CryoLifes due diligence,
CryoLife desired to revise the terms of its letter of intent.
CryoLife now proposed, on a non-binding basis, an offer of
either $0.50 per Share in all-cash consideration, or $0.45 per
Share in an unspecified combination of cash and common stock of
CryoLife. Cardiogenesis rejected such offer, which resulted in
CryoLife submitting a new letter of intent on January 5,
2011 of either $0.50 per Share in all-cash consideration, or
$0.47 per Share in 60% cash and 40% in common stock of CryoLife.
Our board of directors continued to discuss and review the
revised proposal with the assistance of K&L Gates and B.
Riley. On January 10, 2011, our board of directors
unanimously agreed to accept the all-cash consideration offer of
$0.50 per Share.
CryoLife continued its due diligence efforts through January and
February 2011. During March 2011, CryoLife informed
Cardiogenesis that, based on the completion of its final
diligence review, it was willing to pay $0.45 per Share in the
transaction. On March 4, 2011, our board of directors met
to review the open issues identified from the diligence review
and the revised offer. Mr. McCormick and B. Riley continued
negotiating with CryoLife throughout March while K&L Gates
and AGG continued their negotiation of the terms of the Merger
Agreement.
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On March 21, 2011, CryoLife responded to the negotiation
efforts with a final, all-cash offer of $0.457 per share,
subject to our board of directors approval. On
March 22, 2011, our board of directors met to consider the
proposed transaction at the price of $0.457 per share.
Representatives of K&L Gates and B. Riley also attended the
meeting. Representatives of B. Riley reviewed with our board of
directors its financial analysis of the proposed transaction.
Representatives of K&L Gates reviewed with our board of
directors the current status and terms of the proposed Merger
Agreement including the mechanics of the
Top-Up
Option, CryoLife and Cardiogenesis respective termination
rights, CryoLifes match rights, the Support Agreement, and
the two-tier termination fee, as well as the fiduciary duties of
directors in connection with their consideration of the
transaction. Our board of directors discussed positive and
negative factors relating to the proposed transaction, including
the terms of the
Top-Up
Option, as well as the prospects of Cardiogenesis if it remained
independent, including potential challenges, the timing and
likelihood of accomplishing performance goals associated with
success as an independent company, and the shareholders
ability to gain or lose from Cardiogenesis future
prospects as an independent company versus their ability to
receive cash for their shares of our common stock in the
proposed transaction. Representatives of B. Riley made a
financial presentation and rendered to our board of directors
its oral opinion on March 22, 2011 and confirmed by
delivery of a written opinion, dated the same day, which opinion
was subsequently updated on March 28, 2011 and confirmed by
delivery of a written opinion, dated March 28, 2011, to the
effect that the $0.457 per Share in cash to be paid to the
holders of the shares of our common stock pursuant to the Merger
Agreement was fair, from a financial point of view, to such
holders as discussed in the section entitled Opinion of
Our Financial Advisor beginning on page 24. B.
Rileys written opinion, dated March 22, 2011 is
attached hereto as Annex B and is incorporated by
reference herein.
Between March 21, 2011 and March 28, 2011,
representatives of K&L Gates and AGG finalized the Merger
Agreement and the other definitive transaction agreements.
Our board of directors considered whether Cardiogenesis should
spend additional time negotiating with CryoLife in an attempt to
gain improved transaction terms and whether Cardiogenesis should
seek negotiations with other potential acquirers, but believed
that CryoLife would be unlikely to improve its price or other
transaction terms and would be unlikely to keep its offer open
while Cardiogenesis sought to solicit other parties, and that
any delay would jeopardize the possibility of closing a
transaction. In addition, as our board of directors had
previously determined in the negotiations leading up to
execution of the letter of intent, any attempt to solicit other
potential acquirers would likely result in CryoLife withdrawing
its proposal, and our board of directors believed that there may
be no likely strategic acquirer of Cardiogenesis at this time
who would offer a higher price than CryoLife. Our board of
directors also considered that, if there were any other
potential acquirers that would offer a higher price, the
termination provisions in both the Merger Agreement and Support
Agreement would enable such a superior transaction to be
successfully pursued. Our board of directors believed that any
continuation or expansion of the negotiation process at this
time would provide a further distraction to Cardiogenesis
senior management from running the business and would risk the
confidentiality of the process as more parties potentially
became involved over a longer period of time, which could result
in disruption to Cardiogenesis relationships with
employees, customers, vendors, distributors and others and
require early disclosure of negotiations in the marketplace,
which in turn could jeopardize Cardiogenesis bargaining
position in any such negotiations.
After consideration of all of the factors discussed at this
meeting and prior meetings, and the advice of its legal and
financial advisors, our board of directors considered whether to
accept CryoLifes offer and enter into the Merger Agreement
at this time or to remain an independent company.
Cardiogenesis senior management and Cardiogenesis
financial and legal advisors answered questions from the members
of our board of directors. B. Riley rendered an oral
opinion to our board of directors, which was updated and
confirmed in writing on March 28, 2011, to the effect that,
based upon and subject to the matters described in the opinion,
the consideration to be received by Cardiogenesis
shareholders in the tender offer and related Merger was fair
from a financial point of view. Following further discussion,
our board of directors voted unanimously to approve and adopt
the Merger Agreement with CryoLife and recommend that
Cardiogenesis shareholders accept the tender offer.
On March 28, 2011, subsequent to the close of trading on
the OTCQB and NYSE, CryoLife, Merger Sub and Cardiogenesis
executed the Merger Agreement. Concurrently,
Messrs. McCormick, Lanigan and Abbott and
Cardiogenesis directors who together held approximately
2.7% of the outstanding shares of our common stock
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entered into the Support Agreement, by which they agreed to
tender all of their shares of our common stock into the tender
offer and/or
vote them in favor of the Merger, subject to the terms and
conditions set forth in such agreement.
On March 29, 2011, before the opening of trading on the
OTCQB and NYSE, Cardiogenesis and CryoLife issued a joint press
release announcing the execution of the Merger Agreement.
Also beginning on March 29, 2011, the day following the
execution of the Merger Agreement, at the direction of our board
of directors and under the supervision of Cardiogenesis
senior management, representatives of B. Riley began the
process of contacting parties to determine whether they might be
interested in pursuing a transaction that would be superior to
the proposed transaction with CryoLife.
On April 5, 2011, CryoLife and Merger Sub commenced the
tender offer, which had an initial expiration date of
May 2, 2011.
On April 14, 2011, subsequent to the close of trading on
the OTCQB and NYSE, we executed the Amended and Restated Merger
Agreement with CryoLife.
On April 15, 2011, we and CryoLife announced the Amended
and Restated Merger Agreement and the proposed transaction with
a joint press release before the opening of trading on the OTCQB
and NYSE. The amendment reduced the number of shares subject to
the tender offer to 49.9% of our outstanding shares of common
stock, and also reduced the minimum condition to forty-nine and
nine tenths percent (49.9%) of the then issued and outstanding
shares.
As of April 18, 2011, none of the parties contacted during
the go-shop process, on behalf of Cardiogenesis and at the
direction of our board of directors, had submitted an
acquisition proposal for Cardiogenesis, and there can be no
assurance that such efforts will result in an alternative
transaction being proposed or in a definitive agreement for such
a transaction being entered into. We do not intend to announce
further developments with respect to the solicitation process
until our board of directors has made a decision regarding an
alternative proposal, if any. On May 3, 2011, Merger Sub
accepted for payment 23,221,166 shares of our common stock
that were validly tendered into, and not withdrawn from the
tender offer.
The portions of the history of the transaction set forth above
that relate solely to CryoLife are based on statements made by
CryoLife in the Offer to Purchase and Schedule TO, and have
not been independently verified by Cardiogenesis.
Recommendation
of Our Board of Directors; Reasons for Recommending the Approval
of the Merger Agreement
Our
Board of Directors Recommendation
At a special meeting of our board of directors convened on
March 22, 2011, our board of directors (all of whom were
unaffiliated with CryoLife or Merger Sub at that time)
unanimously adopted and declared advisable the Merger Agreement,
the tender offer and the Merger and unanimously determined that
the Merger is in the best interests of Cardiogenesis and its
shareholders. Accordingly, our board of directors recommends
that our shareholders vote FOR approval and
adoption of the Merger Agreement.
Reasons
for the Recommendation of Cardiogenesis Board
In evaluating the Merger Agreement and the other transactions
contemplated thereby, including the tender offer and the Merger,
our board of directors consulted with Cardiogenesis senior
management and legal counsel and financial advisor, and
considered a number of positive and negative factors in
recommending that all shareholders vote for the approval and
adoption of the Merger Agreement:
Cardiogenesis
Operating and Financial Condition; Prospects of
Cardiogenesis
Our board of directors considered the current and historical
financial condition, results of operations, and business of
Cardiogenesis, as well as Cardiogenesis financial plan and
prospects, if it were to remain an independent company. Our
board of directors evaluated Cardiogenesis financial plan,
including the execution
20
risks and uncertainties, and the potential impact on the trading
price of the shares of our common stock (which is not feasible
to quantify in a definitive manner), if Cardiogenesis were to
execute or fail to execute upon its financial plan. In
particular, our board of directors considered the probability
that Cardiogenesis would have to obtain additional debt or
equity financing to complete its clinical trials for its PHOENIX
Combination Delivery System and the potential difficulty in
obtaining any financing. Our board of directors also considered
the difficulty in expanding the market for transmyocardial
revascularization with Cardiogenesis limited resources,
and the fact that Cardiogenesis would need to seek additional
capital resources to operate and grow its existing business as
an independent company.
Available
Alternatives; Results of Discussions with Third
Parties
Our board of directors considered the possible alternatives to
the acquisition by CryoLife and perceived risks of those
alternatives, the range of potential benefits to shareholders of
these alternatives and the timing and the likelihood of
accomplishing the goals of such alternatives, as well as our
board of directors assessment that none of these
alternatives were reasonably likely to present superior
opportunities for Cardiogenesis to create greater value for
shareholders, taking into account risks to the successful
completion of a transaction as well as regulatory, business,
competitive, industry and market risks. Our board of directors
also considered the results of the process that it had
conducted, with the assistance of Cardiogenesis management
and its financial and legal advisors, to evaluate strategic
alternatives and the results of discussions with third parties
regarding business combination and change of control
transactions. Our board of directors considered the risk of
CryoLife terminating its bid for Cardiogenesis. Our board of
directors considered the indication of interest in a merger
transaction expressed by Company A, including the investigation
and diligence Company A had completed and the execution and
business risks of any transaction with Company A.
Financial
Market Conditions; Historical Trading Prices
Our board of directors considered the current regional, national
and international economic climate and the conditions of the
financial markets. Specifically, our board of directors
considered the fact that our shares of our common stock were not
quoted on a national securities exchange and there was limited
trading volume, which they believed made achieving a successful
financing transaction more difficult. Our board of directors
considered historical market prices, volatility and trading
information with respect to our shares of our common stock,
including the fact that the tender offer represented a premium
of approximately 52.3% over the closing price per share of our
common stock on March 21, 2011, the last full trading day
prior to the date of the meeting of our board of directors to
consider and approve the Merger Agreement.
Opinion
of the Cardiogenesis Financial Advisor
Our board of directors considered the written opinion of B.
Riley delivered on March 22, 2011 and updated and confirmed
in writing on March 28, 2011, to our board of directors as
to the fairness, from a financial point of view and as of such
date, of the tender offer price to be paid to shareholders
pursuant to the Merger Agreement, as more fully described in the
section entitled Opinion of Our Financial Advisor
beginning on page 24.
Cash
Consideration; Certainty of Value
Our board of directors considered the form of consideration to
be paid to the shareholders in the tender offer and the Merger
and the certainty of the value of cash consideration compared to
stock or other forms of consideration, as well as the fact that
CryoLifes proposal was not subject to obtaining any
outside financing. Our board of directors considered the
business reputation of CryoLife and its management and the
substantial financial resources of CryoLife and, by extension,
Merger Sub, which our board of directors believed supported the
conclusion that a transaction with CryoLife and Merger Sub could
be completed relatively quickly and in an orderly manner.
21
Terms of
the Merger Agreement
Our board of directors considered provisions of the Merger
Agreement, including the respective representations and
warranties (as qualified by information in confidential
disclosure schedules provided by Cardiogenesis in connection
with the signing of the Merger Agreement, which modify, qualify
and create exceptions to the representations and warranties and
allocate risk between Cardiogenesis, CryoLife, and Merger Sub,
rather than establishing matters of fact, and, accordingly, may
not constitute the actual state of facts about Cardiogenesis,
CryoLife, or Merger Sub) and covenants and termination rights of
the parties and termination fees payable by Cardiogenesis,
including without limitation:
(1) Cash Tender Offer. The tender offer and the
Merger provided for a prompt cash tender offer for 49.9% of the
shares of our common stock to be followed by a Merger for the
same consideration, thereby enabling shareholders, in an
expeditious time frame, to obtain the benefits of the
transaction in exchange for their shares of our common stock.
(2) No Financing Condition. CryoLifes
obligations under the Merger Agreement are not subject to any
financing condition, CryoLifes representations in the
Merger Agreement that it has and will have sufficient funds
available to it to consummate the tender offer and the Merger
and CryoLifes financial strength.
(3) Go Shop Provisions. The provisions in the Merger
Agreement that provided Cardiogenesis, for a period of twenty
days from the execution of the Merger Agreement, which we refer
to as the Go-Shop Period, the ability to initiate, solicit and
encourage alternative acquisition proposals from third parties
and to provide non-public information and to and engage in
discussion or negotiations with third parties with respect to
alternative acquisition proposals.
(4) Ability to Respond to Certain Unsolicited Takeover
Proposals. The provisions in the Merger Agreement that
provided for the ability of our board of directors, after the
expiration of the Go-Shop Period, which we refer to as the
No-Shop Period Start Date, in furtherance of the exercise of its
fiduciary duties under California law, to engage in negotiations
or discussions with any third party that had made a bona fide,
written takeover proposal that our board of directors believed
in good faith was reasonably likely to lead to a Superior
Proposal (as defined in Section 6.2(h)(iv) of the Merger
Agreement) and to furnish to such third party non-public
information relating to Cardiogenesis pursuant to a
confidentiality agreement that contained confidentiality
provisions that were no less favorable to Cardiogenesis than
those contained in the confidentiality agreement entered into
with CryoLife.
(5) Change of Recommendation; Fiduciary Termination
Right. In the event Cardiogenesis receives a takeover
proposal that constitutes a Superior Proposal, our board of
directors has the right, prior to the acceptance of the shares
of our common stock in the tender offer by Merger Sub, to fail
to make, withdraw or modify in a manner adverse to CryoLife its
approval or recommendation to its shareholders of the tender
offer or declaration of advisability of the Merger Agreement,
the tender offer, or the Merger. However, our board of directors
could not make such an adverse recommendation change in response
to a takeover proposal received from a third party unless
Cardiogenesis gave CryoLife five business days after delivery of
such notice to propose revisions to the terms of the Merger
Agreement (or make another proposal) and if CryoLife proposed to
revise the terms of the Merger Agreement or make another
proposal, Cardiogenesis, during such period, negotiated in good
faith with CryoLife with respect to such proposed revisions or
other proposal (with any material changes to an acquisition
proposal requiring a new notice and a new one business day
period for negotiations). Our board of directors had the ability
to terminate the Merger Agreement to accept a Superior Proposal
if (i) our board of directors determined in good faith,
after consultation with outside legal counsel, that the failure
to take such action was inconsistent with its fiduciary duties,
(ii) Cardiogenesis complied with requirements set forth in
the prior sentence and (iii) Cardiogenesis paid CryoLife
the applicable termination fees of $1 million or
$1.5 million.
(6) Conditions to Consummation of the Tender Offer and
the Merger; Likelihood of Closing. The reasonable likelihood
of the consummation of the transactions contemplated by the
Merger Agreement and the fact that Merger Subs and
CryoLifes obligations to purchase shares of our common
stock in the tender offer and to close the Merger are subject to
limited conditions.
22
Failure
to Close; Public Announcement
Our board of directors considered the possibility that the
transactions contemplated by the Merger Agreement may not be
consummated, and the effect of a public announcement of the
Merger Agreement, including effects on Cardiogenesis
sales, operating results, stock price and employee retention.
Termination
Fee
The Merger Agreement provides for a two tiered termination fee.
If the termination fee becomes payable as a result of
Cardiogenesis terminating the Merger Agreement in order to enter
into a definitive acquisition agreement with respect to a
Superior Proposal that is entered into prior to the No-Shop
Period Start Date, the amount of the termination fee will be
$1 million. If the termination fee becomes payable in other
circumstances, the amount of the termination fee will be
$1.5 million. Our board of directors considered that these
provisions in the Merger Agreement could have had the effect of
deterring third parties who might have been interested in
exploring an acquisition of Cardiogenesis but was of the view
that the payment of the termination fee was comparable to
termination fees in transactions of a similar size, was
reasonable and would not likely deter competing bids. In
addition, our board of directors recognized that the provisions
in the Merger Agreement relating to termination fees and
non-solicitation of acquisition proposals were insisted upon by
CryoLife as a condition to entering into the Merger Agreement
and that the termination fee would not likely be required to be
paid unless Cardiogenesis entered into, or intended to enter
into, a definitive agreement with respect to a Superior Proposal.
Support
Agreement
Our board of directors considered the fact that CryoLife
required each executive officer and all members of our board of
directors, who together owned approximately 2.7% of the
outstanding shares of our common stock as of March 25,
2011, to enter into the Support Agreement, pursuant to which
such persons were required to (i) tender in the tender
offer, and not withdraw, 100% of the shares of our common stock
owned by them, if so requested by CryoLife, (ii) vote 100%
of the shares of our common stock owned by them in favor of the
adoption of the Merger Agreement and to approve the Merger in
the event shareholder approval is required to consummate the
Merger pursuant to Section 1201 of the CGCL and against any
competing transactions, (iii) appoint CryoLife as a proxy
to vote 100% of the shares of our common stock owned by them in
connection with the Merger Agreement, and (iv) not
otherwise transfer the share of our common stock. Our board of
directors further considered that the Support Agreement and the
obligations of such shareholders thereunder would terminate in
the event the Merger Agreement was terminated. Our board of
directors also considered whether the terms of the Support
Agreement could limit our board of directors ability to
consider, recommend or accept a competing bid and create a
barrier to potential competing offers and concluded that it did
not because the Support Agreement terminated upon termination of
the Merger Agreement, including a termination arising in
connection with Cardiogenesis acceptance of a Superior
Proposal.
The foregoing discussion of information and factors considered
and given weight by our board of directors is not intended to be
exhaustive, but is believed to include all of the material
factors considered by our board of directors. In view of the
variety of factors considered in connection with its evaluation
of the tender offer and the Merger, our board of directors did
not find it practicable to, and did not, quantify or otherwise
assign relative weights to the specific factors considered in
reaching its determinations and recommendations. In addition,
individual members of our board of directors may have given
different weights to different factors.
Our board of directors determined that the factors described
above under Cardiogenesis Operating and Financial
Condition; Prospects of Cardiogenesis,
Available Alternatives; Results of Discussions with
Third Parties, Financial Market Conditions;
Historical Trading Prices, Opinion of
Cardiogenesis Financial Advisor, Cash
Consideration; Certainty of Value, and Terms
of the Merger Agreement are reasons in support of our
board of directors decision to recommend that all
shareholders accept the tender offer and tender their shares of
our common stock pursuant to the tender offer and vote to
approve and adopt the Merger Agreement. Our board of directors
considered the other factors described above as neutral or
negative and concluded that the reasons for recommending that
all shareholders accept the tender offer and tender their shares
of our common stock pursuant to the tender offer and vote to
approve and adopt the Merger Agreement outweighed the neutral
and negative factors.
23
In arriving at their respective recommendations, our directors
were aware of the interests of Cardiogenesis executive
officers and directors as described in more detail throughout
this proxy statement.
Opinion
of Our Financial Advisor
Pursuant to an engagement letter dated November 7, 2010,
Cardiogenesis retained B. Riley to deliver its opinion, which we
refer to as the Opinion, as to the fairness, from a financial
point of view, of the consideration to be received by the
holders of the shares of our common stock in the tender offer
and the Merger, which we sometimes refer to together as the
Transaction. At a meeting of our board of directors on
March 22, 2011, B. Riley delivered its oral Opinion to our
board of directors which was confirmed in a written Opinion,
dated the same day, (subsequently such Opinion was updated as of
March 28, 2011 and confirmed in a written opinion dated
March 28, 2011) that based upon and subject to the
assumptions, procedures, considerations and limitations set
forth in the written opinion and based upon such other factors
as B. Riley considered relevant, that the consideration (as
defined below) to be paid in connection with the tender offer
and the Merger is fair, from a financial point of view, to the
holders of the shares of our common stock as of the date of the
Opinion.
The full text of the written Opinion of B. Riley, dated
March 22, 2011, which sets forth, among other things, the
assumptions made, procedures followed, matters considered and
limitations on the scope of the review undertaken by B. Riley in
rendering its opinion, is attached as Annex B to this Proxy
Statement and is incorporated by reference herein. The Opinion
addresses only the fairness, from a financial point of view as
of the date of the Opinion, of the consideration to be paid
pursuant to the Merger Agreement to the holders of the shares of
our common stock. B. Rileys Opinion was directed solely to
our board of directors in connection with its consideration of
the Transaction and was not intended to be, and does not
constitute, a recommendation to any shareholder as to how such
holders should act, vote or tender their shares of our common
stock in regards to the Transaction.
In connection with rendering the Opinion described above and
performing its financial analyses, B. Riley, among other things
performed the following:
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|
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|
|
Reviewed and analyzed certain historical and projected financial
information for Cardiogenesis;
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Interviewed Cardiogenesis management and discussed
Cardiogenesis operations, financial conditions, future
prospects and business plans;
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Reviewed Cardiogenesis audited financial statements for
the three fiscal years ended December 31, 2009, and the
unaudited financial results for the fiscal year ended
December 31, 2010;
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Reviewed CryoLifes audited financial statements for the
four fiscal tears ended December 31, 2010;
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Reviewed certain internal financial statements and forecasts
prepared by Cardiogenesis management and also reviewed
other financial and operating data concerning Cardiogenesis,
which we refer to as the Projections. With respect to the
Projections, upon advice of Cardiogenesis, B. Riley assumed that
such projections were reasonably prepared on a basis reflecting
the best currently available estimates and judgments of
Cardiogenesis management as to the future financial
performance of Cardiogenesis;
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Reviewed the final Merger Agreement, dated March 28, 2011;
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Reviewed certain publicly available financial data, stock market
performance data and trading multiples of companies which it
deemed general comparable to Cardiogenesis;
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Performed a discounted cash flow analysis based on future
projected cash flows for Cardiogenesis prepared by management;
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Performed a series of commonly used and widely accepted analyses
relating to determining a fair value for the transactions of the
type and profile of the present transaction;
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Reviewed the current and historical reported prices and trading
activity of the shares;
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24
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Reviewed historical ratios, valuation multiples and other
financial data for the shares of our common stock and compared
them to certain publicly traded companies which B. Riley deemed
generally comparable to Cardiogenesis;
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Reviewed the financial terms, to the extent publicly available,
of certain comparable merger and acquisition transactions that
B. Riley deemed relevant; and
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Reviewed the premiums paid with respect to selected recent
acquisitions of publicly traded companies of similar size to
Cardiogenesis.
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In addition, B. Riley conducted such other financial studies,
analyses and investigations and evaluated such other information
as it deemed necessary in arriving at its opinion.
The following is a summary of the material financial analyses
performed by B. Riley in connection with the preparation of its
Opinion, which was reviewed with, and verbally delivered to, our
board of directors at a meeting held on March 22, 2011 and
confirmed in a written opinion, dated the same day, and which
was updated on March 28, 2011 and confirmed in a written
opinion dated March 28, 2011. The preparation of analyses
and a fairness opinion is a complex analytic process involving
numerous determinations as to the most appropriate and relevant
methods of financial analysis and the application of those
methods to the particular circumstances. Therefore, this summary
does not purport to be a complete description of all of the
analyses performed by B. Riley.
This summary includes financial information and tables, which
must be read and considered as a whole with other information
discussed or presented in order to fully understand the
financial analyses presented by B. Riley. The tables alone do
not constitute a complete summary of the financial position of
Cardiogenesis or of the analyses performed. The order in which
these analyses are presented below, and the results of those
analyses, should not be taken as any indication of the relative
importance or weight given to these analyses by B. Riley or our
board of directors. Except as otherwise noted, the following
quantitative information, to the extent that it is based on
market data, as it existed on or before March 28, 2011,
does not necessarily reflect current market conditions.
Transaction
Overview
In performing its analysis, B. Riley noted that
Cardiogenesis shareholders would receive a cash
consideration of approximately $21.7 million, at a price
per share of $0.457. For purposes of its analyses, B. Riley
calculated (i) Cardiogenesis equity value implied by
the Transaction to be approximately $21.7 million, based on
approximately 47,588,457 shares of our common stock and
common stock equivalents outstanding, consisting of options,
warrants, and shares of restricted stock, calculated using the
treasury stock method and the tender offer price, and
(ii) Cardiogenesis enterprise value, or EV (for the
purposes of this analysis, implied EV equates to implied equity
value, plus debt, less cash) to be approximately
$20.5 million.
Analysis
of Cardiogenesis
Historical
Trading Analysis.
B. Riley reviewed the historical closing prices and trading
volumes for the shares of our common stock for the last three
years, in order to provide background information on the prices
at which the shares of our common stock have historically
traded. The following table summarizes these historical closing
prices relative to the implied value of the tender offer price
for the shares of our common stock.
From January 1, 2008 to March 28, 2011,
Cardiogenesis closing stock price has been reported within
a range of $0.11 to $0.42.
25
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Price Per Share
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Offer Price implied value
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$
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0.4570
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Closing price on March 28, 2011
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$
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0.32
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1-month
volume weighted average price prior to March 28, 2011
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$
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0.294
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3-month
volume weighted average price prior to March 28, 2011
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$
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0.281
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6-month
volume weighted average price prior to March 28, 2011
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$
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0.266
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1-year
volume weighted average price prior to March 28, 2011
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$
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0.272
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3-year high
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$
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0.40
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3-year low
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$
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0.11
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Selected
Public Companies Analysis.
B. Riley reviewed selected historical financial data of
Cardiogenesis and estimated financial data prepared by
Cardiogenesis management as its internal forecast for
calendar year 2011 and compared them to corresponding financial
data, where applicable, for public companies in the medical
device industry with a primary focus on vascular and cardiology
surgical products, as is the case for Cardiogenesis.
Additionally, B. Riley selected public companies with a similar
industry segment focus and financial profile. B. Riley selected
companies based on information obtained from SEC filings, public
company disclosures, press releases, industry and popular press
reports, databases, professional judgment and other sources and
by applying the following general criteria:
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companies with last twelve months, or LTM, revenue of greater
than $5 million and less than $500 million;
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companies with EVs greater than $5 million and less than
$1 billion; and
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companies with positive revenue growth for projected 2011.
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Based on these criteria, B. Riley identified and analyzed the
following selected companies:
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Merit Medical Systems, Inc.
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AngioDynamics, Inc.
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Vascular Solutions Inc.
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AtriCure, Inc.
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CryoLife, Inc.
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The Spectranetics Corporation
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LeMaitre Vascular
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Cardica, Inc.
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For the selected public companies analysis, B. Riley compared:
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Valuation multiples derived from the tender offer prices
enterprise value and Cardiogenesis corresponding LTM and
projected 2011 revenue; and
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Valuation multiples for the selected public companies derived
from enterprise values on March 28, 2011 and corresponding
LTM and projected 2011 revenue.
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Due to Cardiogenesis negative EBITDA (calculated
throughout as earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and
amortization and stock-based compensation) for the LTM and
projected calendar 2011, B. Riley could not analyze comparable
EV / EBITDA valuation multiples.
26
Selected
Vascular and Cardiology Public Companies.
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Selected Public Companies
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Cardiogenesis(1)
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High Quartile(2)
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Adjusted Mean(3)
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Median
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Low Quartile(2)
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EV to LTM revenue(4)(5)
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1.8
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x
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2.3
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x
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1.8
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x
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1.8
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x
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1.2
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x
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EV to projected 2011 revenue(6)
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1.4
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x
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1.9
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x
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1.5
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x
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1.5
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x
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1.0
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x
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(1) |
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Based on the tender offer price to be received. |
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(2) |
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High and low observations represent the upper (75th percentile)
and lower (25th percentile) quartiles of the range, respectively. |
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(3) |
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Adjusted mean excludes high and low observations. |
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(4) |
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Enterprise Value (EV) = equity market capitalization plus
interest bearing debt less cash. |
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(5) |
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Revenues for Cardiogenesis LTM reflect calendar year
ending December 31, 2010. |
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(6) |
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Projected calendar 2011 revenue for Cardiogenesis was based on
the estimates of Cardiogenesis management. Projected
calendar 2011 revenue for the selected public companies was
based on Wall Street research or consensus estimates. |
The selected public companies analysis showed that, based on the
estimates and assumptions used in the analysis, the implied
valuation multiples of Cardiogenesis were within or above the
range of valuation multiples of the selected public companies
when comparing the ratio of EV to LTM revenue and projected 2011
revenue.
No company utilized in the selected public companies analysis is
identical to Cardiogenesis. B. Riley did not weigh the results
of any selected public company more than the others, due to the
fact that the target companies have different business, size or
growth and profitability characteristics than Cardiogenesis.
In evaluating and selecting the public companies, B. Riley made
judgments and assumptions with regard to industry performance,
general business, economic, market and financial conditions and
other matters.
Selected
M&A Transaction Analysis
B. Riley reviewed merger and acquisition transactions
involving target companies in the medical device industry with a
primary focus on vascular and cardiology products that it deemed
comparable to Cardiogenesis. B. Riley selected the merger
and acquisition transactions in order to provide a comparison of
targets with a similar industry focus and financial profile. B.
Riley selected these transactions based on information obtained
by searching SEC filings, public company disclosures, press
releases, industry and popular press reports, databases,
professional judgment and other sources and by applying the
following criteria:
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transactions involving target companies in the medical device
industry with a primary focus on vascular and cardiology
products;
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transactions that were announced since January 1, 2009;
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targets with LTM revenue of greater than $5 million and
less than $250 million; and
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targets with transaction EVs greater than $5 million and
less than $250 million.
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27
Based on the foregoing, the following transactions were selected:
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Target
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Acquiror
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Angiotech Vascular Graft Business
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LeMaitre Vascular
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Biotel
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CardioNet
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PLC Medical TMR Unit
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Novadaq Technologies
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Cardiac Science
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Opto Circuits
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Initios Medical
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Bracco Imaging
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Gish Biomedical
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Sorin
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CardioPolymers
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Lonestar Heart
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LightLab Imaging
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St. Jude Medical
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FlowCardia
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CR Bard
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Sorin Group Angel and ActivAT Assets
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Cytomedix
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Sawtooth Labs
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Avinger
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Unomedical
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Paul Hartmann
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CHF Solutions
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Gambro
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Anthem Cardiac Management Unit
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Sorin
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Brivant Limited
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Lake Region Medical
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CardioDynamics Intl
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SonoSite
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Starion Instruments Corporation
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Microline Surgical, Inc.
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Evaheart Medical
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Asahi Kasei Corporation
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Datascope EVH Unit
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Sorin
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FlowMedica
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AngioDynamics
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B. Riley calculated the ratio of EV to historical LTM
revenue, as available, for each transaction. B. Riley then
compared the results of these calculations with similar
calculations for Cardiogenesis based on the implied value of the
tender offer price.
Due to Cardiogenesis negative EBITDA in calendar 2010 and
projected calendar 2011, B. Riley did not consider it meaningful
to analyze comparable EV / EBITDA valuation multiples.
Selected
Vascular and Cardiology M&A Transactions.
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Selected M&A Transaction
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Cardiogenesis(1)
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High(2)
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Adjusted Mean(3)
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Median
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Low(2)
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EV to LTM revenue(4)
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1.8
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x
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1.1
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x
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0.8
|
x
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0.8
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x
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0.5x
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|
|
(1) |
|
Based on the tender offer price. |
|
(2) |
|
High and low observations represent the upper (75th percentile)
and lower (25th percentile) quartiles of the range, respectively. |
|
(3) |
|
Adjusted mean excludes high and low observations. |
|
(4) |
|
Revenues for Cardiogenesis LTM reflect calendar year
ending December 31, 2010. |
The selected vascular and cardiology transactions analysis
showed that, based on the estimates and assumptions used in the
analysis, the implied valuation multiples of Cardiogenesis based
on the tender offer price were within or above the range of
valuation multiples of the selected transactions when comparing
the ratio of EV to historical LTM revenue.
A selected M&A transactions analysis generates an implied
value of a company based on publicly available financial terms
of selected change of control transactions involving companies
that share certain characteristics with the company being
valued. However, no company or transaction utilized in the
selected M&A transactions analysis is identical to
Cardiogenesis or the tender offer and the Merger, respectively.
28
B. Riley did not weigh the results of any selected
transactions more than the others, due to the fact that the
target companies have different business, size or growth and
profitability characteristics than Cardiogenesis.
Premiums
Paid Analysis
B. Riley reviewed publicly available information for
selected completed or pending M&A transactions to determine
the premiums paid in the transactions over recent trading prices
of the target companies prior to announcement of the
transaction. B. Riley selected these transactions from various
database services and proprietary market information, the
Securities Data Corporation database, if B. Riley determined the
target was a public medical device company based upon SIC codes
and professional judgment, and applied, among others, the
following criteria:
|
|
|
|
|
M&A transactions featuring the acquisition of a medical
device company;
|
|
|
|
M&A transactions announced between January 1, 2005 and
January 1, 2011;
|
|
|
|
M&A transactions between a public company target and an
acquirer seeking to purchase over 85% of shares;
|
|
|
|
For M&A transactions with multiple bids, premiums were
calculated using the final bid;
|
|
|
|
Enterprise value greater than $20 million and less than
$1 billion; and
|
|
|
|
No negative premiums for
1-day,
1-week and
1-month
premiums.
|
The table below shows a comparison of premiums paid in these
transactions to the premium that would be paid to
Cardiogenesis shareholders based on the tender offer price.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Selected Premiums Paid
|
|
|
Cardiogenesis(1)
|
|
High
|
|
Mean
|
|
Median
|
|
Low
|
|
Premium 1 day prior(2)
|
|
|
43
|
%
|
|
|
272
|
%
|
|
|
55
|
%
|
|
|
35
|
%
|
|
|
4
|
%
|
Premium 1 week prior(3)
|
|
|
53
|
%
|
|
|
322
|
%
|
|
|
60
|
%
|
|
|
38
|
%
|
|
|
5
|
%
|
Premium 1 month prior(4)
|
|
|
63
|
%
|
|
|
308
|
%
|
|
|
62
|
%
|
|
|
41
|
%
|
|
|
11
|
%
|
|
|
|
(1) |
|
Based on the tender offer price to be received. |
|
(2) |
|
Based on closing price per share of $0.32 on March 28, 2011. |
|
(3) |
|
Based on closing price per share of $0.30 on March 21, 2011. |
|
(4) |
|
Based on closing price per share of $0.28 on February 28,
2011. |
This premiums paid analysis showed that, based on the estimates
and assumptions used in the analysis, the premiums paid over the
market prices at the reference dates for the shares implied by
the tender offer price are within the range of premiums paid in
the selected M&A transactions.
Discounted
Cash Flow Analysis
Using a discounted cash flows analysis, B. Riley calculated an
estimated range of theoretical values for Cardiogenesis based on
the net present value of (i) projected free cash flows from
January 1, 2011 to December 31, 2015, discounted back
to January 1, 2011, based on management projections, and
(ii) a terminal value at calendar year end 2015 based upon
a terminal growth rate, discounted back to January 1, 2011.
The discounted cash flows were calculated using a single set of
projections, updated for calendar 2010 results, as provided by
Cardiogenesis management. The free cash flows for each
year were calculated from the management projections as: EBIT
less taxes (39.5% through 2015), plus depreciation and
amortization, plus stock-based compensation, less capital
expenditures, less the change in net working capital.
B. Riley calculated the range of net present values for
each period from 2011 through 2015 based on discount rates
ranging from 21.9% to 26.8%. The discount rate range reflects
90% and 110% of the weighted average cost of capital, or WACC,
for Cardiogenesis, determined using a WACC analysis performed by
B. Riley. B. Riley calculated the cost of equity used in the
weighted average cost of capital analysis by summing a risk-free
rate, a beta adjusted equity risk premium, and a size premium
based on the implied equity value of Cardiogenesis. B. Riley
29
calculated terminal values using a terminal growth rate ranging
from 8% to 12% applied to projected calendar year 2015 net
free cash flow, and discounted back to January 1, 2011. The
terminal growth rate range of 8% to 12% was based on
managements estimate of 10%. This analysis resulted in
implied per share values of the shares of our common stock
ranging from a low of $0.20 per share of our common stock to a
high of $0.42 per share of our common stock. B. Riley observed
that the tender offer price was within the range of values
derived from this analysis.
Miscellaneous
The summary set forth above does not contain a complete
description of the analyses performed by B. Riley, but does
summarize the material analyses performed by B. Riley in
rendering its Opinion. The preparation of a fairness opinion is
a complex process and is not necessarily susceptible to partial
analysis or summary description. B. Riley believes that its
analyses and the summary set forth above must be considered as a
whole and that selecting portions of its analyses or of the
summary, without considering the analyses as a whole or all of
the factors included in its analyses, would create an incomplete
view of the processes underlying the analyses set forth in the
Opinion. In arriving at its Opinion, B. Riley considered the
results of all of its analyses and did not attribute any
particular weight to any factor or analysis. Instead, B. Riley
made its determination as to fairness on the basis of its
experience and financial judgment after considering the results
of all of its analyses. The fact that any specific analysis has
been referred to in the summary above is not meant to indicate
that this analysis was given greater weight than any other
analysis. In addition, the ranges of valuations resulting from
any particular analysis described above should not be taken to
be B. Rileys view of the actual value of the shares of our
common stock.
None of the selected companies or transactions used in the
analyses above is directly comparable to Cardiogenesis or the
tender offer and the Merger and the other transactions
contemplated by the Merger Agreement. Accordingly, an analysis
of the results of the comparisons is not purely mathematical;
rather, it involves complex considerations and judgments
concerning differences in historical and projected financial and
operating characteristics of the selected companies and target
companies in the selected transactions and other factors that
could affect the public trading value or transaction value of
the companies involved.
B. Riley performed its analyses solely for purposes of
providing its Opinion to our board of directors. In performing
its analyses, B. Riley made numerous assumptions with respect to
industry performance, general business and economic conditions
and other matters. Certain of the analyses performed by B. Riley
are based upon forecasts of future results furnished to B. Riley
by Cardiogenesis management, which are not necessarily
indicative of actual future results and may be significantly
more or less favorable than actual future results. These
forecasts are inherently subject to uncertainty because, among
other things, they are based upon numerous factors or events
beyond the control of the parties or their respective advisors.
B. Riley does not assume responsibility if future results are
materially different from forecasted results.
B. Rileys Opinion was one of many factors taken into
consideration by our board of directors in making the
determination to approve the Merger Agreement and recommend that
Cardiogenesis shareholders tender their shares of our
common stock in connection with the tender offer. The above
summary does not purport to be a complete description of the
analyses performed by B. Riley in connection with the opinion
and is qualified in its entirety by reference to the written
opinion of B. Riley attached as Annex B hereto.
B. Riley relied upon and assumed, without assuming
liability or responsibility for independent verification, the
accuracy and completeness of all information that was publicly
available or was furnished, or otherwise made available, to B.
Riley or discussed with or reviewed by B. Riley. For the purpose
of B. Rileys Opinion, B. Riley assumed that with respect
to financial forecasts, estimates and other forward-looking
information reviewed by B. Riley, that such information was
reasonably prepared based on assumptions reflecting the best
currently available estimates and judgments of the management of
Cardiogenesis as to the expected future results of operations
and financial condition of Cardiogenesis to which such financial
forecasts, estimates and other forward-looking information
relate. B. Riley expressed no opinion as to any such financial
forecasts, estimates or forward-looking information or the
assumptions on which they were based.
B. Riley undertook no independent analysis of any pending
or threatened litigation, regulatory action, possible unasserted
claims or other contingent liabilities, to which Cardiogenesis
was a party or may be subject, and made no
30
assumption concerning, and therefore did not consider, the
possible assertion of claims, outcomes or damages arising out of
any such matters.
B. Rileys Opinion was necessarily based upon the
information available to it and facts and circumstances as they
existed at the time it rendered its Opinion and were subject to
evaluation on the date of its opinion. Events occurring after
the date of its Opinion could materially affect the assumptions
used in preparing its opinion. B. Riley expresses no opinion as
to the price at which the shares of our common stock may trade
following announcement of the Merger or at any future time. B.
Riley did not undertake to reaffirm or revise its Opinion or
otherwise comment upon any events occurring after the date of
its Opinion and does not have any obligation to update, revise
or reaffirm its Opinion.
B. Rileys opinion addressed solely the fairness, from
a financial point of view, to holders of the shares of our
common stock of the tender offer price, as set forth in the
Merger Agreement, to be paid by Merger Sub and did not address
any other terms or agreement relating to the tender offer,
Merger or any other terms of the Merger Agreement. B. Riley was
not requested to opine as to, and its opinion does not address,
the underlying business decision to proceed with the tender
offer or effect the Merger.
Information
About B. Riley
As a part of its investment banking business, B. Riley
and/or its
predecessor has been regularly engaged in the valuation of
businesses and their securities in connection with mergers and
acquisitions, underwritings, secondary distributions of listed
and unlisted securities, private placements, and valuations for
corporate and other purposes since 1984. Our board of directors
selected B. Riley to be its financial advisor and render its
fairness opinion in connection with the transactions
contemplated by the Merger Agreement on the basis of such
experience and its familiarity with Cardiogenesis.
B. Riley acted as a financial advisor to Cardiogenesis in
connection with the tender offer and the Merger and will receive
an estimated fee of approximately $192,000 from Cardiogenesis,
of which approximately $146,000 is contingent upon the
consummation of the tender offer and the Merger. B. Riley also
received a fee of $100,000 for rendering its Opinion. The
Opinion fee was not contingent upon the consummation of the
tender offer and the Merger or the conclusions reached in B.
Rileys Opinion. Cardiogenesis has also agreed to indemnify
B. Riley against certain liabilities and reimburse B. Riley for
certain expenses in connection with its services. The Opinion
has been approved by the Fairness Opinion Committee of B.
Riley & Co., LLC. In the ordinary course of its
business, B. Riley and its affiliates may actively trade
securities of Cardiogenesis and CryoLife for its own account or
the account of its customers and, accordingly, may at any time
hold a long or short position in such securities. B. Riley
may also, in the future, provide investment banking and
financial advisory services to Cardiogenesis or CryoLife or
entities that are affiliated with Cardiogenesis or CryoLife, for
which B. Riley would expect to receive compensation.
Consistent with applicable legal and regulatory requirements, B.
Riley has adopted policies and procedures to establish and
maintain the independence of B. Rileys research Department
and Personnel. As a result, B. Rileys research analysts
may hold opinions, make statements or investment recommendations
and/or
publish research reports with respect to Cardiogenesis and the
Merger and other participants in the Merger (including CryoLife)
that differ from the opinions of B. Rileys investment
banking personnel.
Prospective
Financial Information
Cardiogenesis does not as a matter of course make public
projections as to future performance, earnings or other results
beyond the current fiscal year due to the unpredictability of
the underlying assumptions and estimates. However, as described
under the heading Opinion of Our Financial Advisor
beginning on page 24, Cardiogenesis provided to B. Riley
for use in connection with the rendering of its Opinion to our
board of directors and performing its related financial
analysis, Cardiogenesis managements internal
non-public four-year financial forecasts regarding
Cardiogenesis anticipated future operations, which we
refer to as the Projections. Cardiogenesis management also
provided the Projections to our board of directors and to
CryoLife in connection with its due diligence review. CryoLife
has informed Cardiogenesis that it did not rely on these
Projections in any material respect in its analysis of the
transaction.
31
The Projections were prepared by, and are the responsibility of,
Cardiogenesis management. The Projections were not
prepared with a view toward public disclosure, and, accordingly,
they do not necessarily comply with published guidelines of the
SEC, the guidelines established by the American Institute of
Certified Public Accountants for preparation and presentation of
financial forecasts, or generally accepted accounting
principles. Windes & McClaughry Accountancy
Corporation, Cardiogenesis independent registered public
accounting firm, has not audited, reviewed, compiled or
performed any procedures with respect to the Projections and
does not express an opinion or any form of assurance related
thereto. Cardiogenesis has included below a summary of the
Projections to give its shareholders access to certain
non-public information because such information was considered
by B. Riley for purposes of rendering its opinion and was also
provided to our board of directors and CryoLife. The summary of
the Projections below is not being included in this proxy
statement to influence a Cardiogenesis shareholders
decision whether to vote for or against the Merger and the
Merger Agreement.
The Projections, while presented with numerical specificity,
necessarily were based on numerous variables and assumptions
that are inherently uncertain and many of which are beyond the
control of Cardiogenesis management. Because the
Projections cover multiple years, by their nature, they become
subject to greater uncertainty with each successive year. The
assumptions upon which the Projections were based necessarily
involve judgments with respect to, among other things, future
economic, competitive and regulatory conditions and financial
market conditions, all of which are difficult or impossible to
predict accurately and many of which are beyond
Cardiogenesis control. The Projections also reflect
assumptions as to certain business decisions that are subject to
change.
Important factors that may affect actual results and result in
the Projections not being achieved include, but are not limited
to, the following: any inability by Cardiogenesis to sustain
profitable operations or obtain additional financing on
favorable terms if and when needed; any failure to obtain
required regulatory approvals; failure of the medical community
to expand its acceptance of transmyocardial revascularization
procedures; possible adverse governmental rulings or
regulations, including any FDA regulations or rulings;
Cardiogenesis ability to comply with international and
domestic regulatory requirements; the impact of healthcare
policy laws, regulations and reforms upon Cardiogenesis
industry; possible adverse Medicare or other third-party
reimbursement policies or adverse changes in those policies; any
inability by Cardiogenesis to ship product on a timely basis;
Cardiogenesis ability to manage its growth; the effects of
recent disruptions in global credit and equity markets and other
adverse economic developments that could adversely affect the
market for our products or our ability to raise needed
financing; actions by our competitors; and Cardiogenesis
ability to protect its intellectual property. Other factors that
could cause Cardiogenesis actual results to differ
materially are discussed in the Risk Factors section
of Cardiogenesis Annual Report on
Form 10-K
for the year ended December 31, 2010 and
Cardiogenesis other filings with the SEC. Cardiogenesis
disclaims any obligation to update any forward-looking
statements as a result of developments occurring after the date
of this statement. In addition, the Projections may be affected
by Cardiogenesis ability to achieve strategic goals,
objectives and targets over the applicable period. This
information constitutes forward-looking statements
and actual results may differ materially and adversely from
them. See Cautionary Statement Regarding Forward-Looking
Information on page 10.
Accordingly, there can be no assurance that the Projections will
be realized, and actual results may vary materially from those
shown. The inclusion of the Projections in this proxy statement
should not be regarded as an indication that Cardiogenesis or
any of its affiliates, advisors or representatives considered or
consider the Projections to be predictive of actual future
events, and the Projections should not be relied upon as such.
Neither Cardiogenesis nor any of its affiliates, advisors,
officers, directors or representatives can give any assurance
that actual results will not differ from the Projections, and
none of them undertakes any obligation to update or otherwise
revise or reconcile the Projections to reflect circumstances
existing after the date the Projections were generated or to
reflect the occurrence of future events even in the event that
any or all of the assumptions underlying the Projections are
shown to be in error, but Cardiogenesis will amend the
Projections provided in this proxy statement and promptly
disseminate revised information in the event that the existing
disclosure materially changes. Neither Cardiogenesis nor any of
its affiliates, advisors, officers, directors or representatives
has made or makes any representation to any Cardiogenesis
shareholder or other person regarding the ultimate performance
of Cardiogenesis compared to the information contained in the
Projections or that the Projections will be achieved.
Cardiogenesis has made no representation to CryoLife or Merger
Sub, in the Merger Agreement or otherwise, concerning the
Projections.
32
In light of the foregoing factors and the uncertainties inherent
in the Projections, Cardiogenesis shareholders are
cautioned not to place undue, if any, reliance on the
Projections.
The following is a description of the Projections provided to B.
Riley, our board of directors, and CryoLife:
Projected
Financial Information
(dollar amounts are in thousands; all amounts are
approximate)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
2011
|
|
2012
|
|
2013
|
|
2014
|
|
Revenue
|
|
$
|
14,431
|
|
|
$
|
16,031
|
|
|
$
|
17,794
|
|
|
$
|
20,108
|
|
Gross Profit
|
|
$
|
12,251
|
|
|
$
|
13,659
|
|
|
$
|
15,240
|
|
|
$
|
17,284
|
|
Gross Margin
|
|
|
84.9
|
%
|
|
|
85.2
|
%
|
|
|
85.6
|
%
|
|
|
86.0
|
%
|
Operating Expenses
|
|
$
|
13,577
|
|
|
$
|
14,233
|
|
|
$
|
12,796
|
|
|
$
|
12,323
|
|
Net Income
|
|
$
|
(1,355
|
)
|
|
$
|
(603
|
)
|
|
$
|
2,415
|
|
|
$
|
4,932
|
|
Adjusted EBITDA(1)
|
|
$
|
(828
|
)
|
|
$
|
(178
|
)
|
|
$
|
2,951
|
|
|
$
|
5,468
|
|
|
|
|
(1) |
|
Defined as net income before interest income, interest expense,
provision for income tax, depreciation, amortization and
expenses associated with stock based compensation. |
The Projections include non-GAAP financial measures, including
Adjusted EBITDA. Adjusted EBITDA means earnings before interest
income, interest expense, provision for taxes, depreciation and
amortization and expenses associated with stock-based
compensation. Cardiogenesis believes that Adjusted EBITDA
provides important information about the operating trends of
Cardiogenesis. Cardiogenesis uses Adjusted EBITDA to evaluate
performance of its business operations. These non-GAAP measures
are not in accordance with, or an alternative for, measures
prepared in accordance with GAAP and may be different from
similarly titled measures used by other companies. Adjusted
EBITDA is not based on any comprehensive set of accounting rules
or principles. Non-GAAP measures have limitations in that they
do not reflect all of the amounts associated with
Cardiogenesis results of operations as determined in
accordance with GAAP. These measures should only be used to
evaluate Cardiogenesis results of operations in
conjunction with the corresponding GAAP measures.
Set forth below is a reconciliation of Adjusted EBITDA to the
most comparable GAAP financial measure based on the Projections,
Net Income. This reconciliation was not provided to CryoLife in
connection with its due diligence review or to B. Riley.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Adjusted EBITDA Reconciliation
|
|
2011
|
|
2012
|
|
2013
|
|
2014
|
|
Net Income
|
|
$
|
(1,355
|
)
|
|
$
|
(603
|
)
|
|
$
|
2,415
|
|
|
$
|
4,932
|
|
Plus Income Tax
|
|
$
|
25
|
|
|
$
|
25
|
|
|
$
|
25
|
|
|
$
|
25
|
|
Plus Depreciation Expense
|
|
$
|
280
|
|
|
$
|
170
|
|
|
$
|
281
|
|
|
$
|
281
|
|
Plus Stock Based Compensation
|
|
$
|
218
|
|
|
$
|
226
|
|
|
$
|
226
|
|
|
$
|
226
|
|
Plus Interest Expense, net
|
|
$
|
4
|
|
|
$
|
4
|
|
|
$
|
4
|
|
|
$
|
4
|
|
Adjusted EBITDA
|
|
$
|
(828
|
)
|
|
$
|
(178
|
)
|
|
$
|
2,951
|
|
|
$
|
5,468
|
|
Financing
of the Tender Offer and Merger
CryoLife will provide Merger Sub with sufficient funds to pay
for all shares of our common stock to be acquired in the Merger.
The total amount of funds necessary to pay all Merger
consideration and customary fees and expenses in connection with
the Merger Agreement and the transactions contemplated therein,
including the tender offer, is estimated to be approximately
$24.9 million, which will be used to pay shareholders of
Cardiogenesis and holders of Cardiogenesis other
equity-based interests. CryoLife has advised us that it expects
to provide funds for these payments to Merger Sub, either as a
capital contribution or as an intercompany loan. CryoLife will
obtain such funds from cash on hand. CryoLife and Merger Sub do
not have any alternative financing plans or arrangements. The
consummation of the Merger is not conditioned upon any financing
arrangements.
33
Interests
of Cardiogenesis Directors and Executive Officers in the
Merger
In considering the recommendation of our board of directors to
vote for the proposal to approve and adopt the Merger Agreement,
shareholders should be aware that Cardiogenesis executive
officers and directors have agreements or arrangements that may
provide them with interests that may differ from, or be in
addition to, those of shareholders generally. Our board of
directors was aware of these interests and considered them,
among other matters, in determining the recommendation set forth
in this proxy statement.
Consideration
Payable Pursuant to the Merger
As of March 25, 2011, Cardiogenesis directors and
executive officers (and affiliates and affiliated investment
entities) owned in the aggregate 911,561 shares of our
common stock (excluding shares of our common stock issuable upon
the exercise of options to purchase common stock and the vesting
of restricted stock). The beneficial ownership of each director
and executive officer as of March 25, 2011 is further
described in this proxy statement under the heading
Securities Ownership of Certain Beneficial Owners and
Management beginning on page 61.
Effect
of the Merger Agreement on Options and Restricted
Stock
Options
As of March 25, 2011, Cardiogenesis directors and
executive officers held options to purchase
2,077,634 shares of our common stock in the aggregate, with
exercise prices ranging from $0.13 to $2.57 per share. The
Merger Agreement provides that any outstanding option to acquire
shares of our common stock, whether vested or unvested, shall
vest and become fully exercisable immediately prior to the
effective time of the Merger in accordance with the terms and
conditions of the applicable stock plan under which such option
was granted and the applicable stock option agreement for such
option. At the effective time of the Merger, each holder of an
option will be entitled to receive an amount equal to the
excess, if any, of the Merger consideration, without interest,
over the exercise price per share of such option, less any
required withholding taxes. If the exercise price per share of
any option equals or exceeds $0.457, such amount shall be zero.
34
The table below sets forth information regarding the options
held by Cardiogenesis directors and executive officers as
of March 25, 2011 with an exercise price per share less
than $0.457.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Number of
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Securities
|
|
Option
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Underlying
|
|
Exercise
|
|
Aggregate
|
|
|
|
|
Cardiogenesis Stock
|
|
Price
|
|
Proceeds
|
|
Total
|
Name
|
|
Options (#)
|
|
($)
|
|
($)
|
|
($)
|
|
Paul McCormick
|
|
|
22,500
|
|
|
|
0.33
|
|
|
|
2,857.50
|
|
|
|
23,660
|
|
|
|
|
7,500
|
|
|
|
0.29
|
|
|
|
1,252.50
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
50,000
|
|
|
|
0.22
|
|
|
|
11,850
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
100,000
|
|
|
|
0.38
|
|
|
|
7,700
|
|
|
|
|
|
William Abbott
|
|
|
100,000
|
|
|
|
0.49
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
72,925
|
|
|
|
|
100,000
|
|
|
|
0.30
|
|
|
|
15,700
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
175,000
|
|
|
|
0.13
|
|
|
|
57,225
|
|
|
|
|
|
Richard Lanigan
|
|
|
11,806
|
|
|
|
2.57
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
123,539.35
|
|
|
|
|
13,194
|
|
|
|
2.57
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
13,890
|
|
|
|
1.01
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
21,336
|
|
|
|
4.50
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
22,917
|
|
|
|
0.91
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
14,583
|
|
|
|
0.91
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
11,110
|
|
|
|
1.01
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
74,332
|
|
|
|
0.32
|
|
|
|
10,183.48
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
58,802
|
|
|
|
0.32
|
|
|
|
8,055.87
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
83,333
|
|
|
|
0.70
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
16,667
|
|
|
|
0.70
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
50,000
|
|
|
|
1.03
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
75,000
|
|
|
|
0.54
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
100,000
|
|
|
|
0.50
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
150,000
|
|
|
|
0.30
|
|
|
|
23,550
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
250,000
|
|
|
|
0.13
|
|
|
|
81,750
|
|
|
|
|
|
Raymond Cohen
|
|
|
22,500
|
|
|
|
0.18
|
|
|
|
6,232.5
|
|
|
|
10,082.50
|
|
|
|
|
50,000
|
|
|
|
0.38
|
|
|
|
3,850
|
|
|
|
|
|
Marvin Slepian
|
|
|
22,500
|
|
|
|
0.80
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
18,505
|
|
|
|
|
7,500
|
|
|
|
0.59
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
7,500
|
|
|
|
0.59
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
7,500
|
|
|
|
0.25
|
|
|
|
1,552.50
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
7,500
|
|
|
|
0.29
|
|
|
|
1,252.50
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
50,000
|
|
|
|
0.22
|
|
|
|
11,850
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
50,000
|
|
|
|
0.38
|
|
|
|
3,850
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
100,000
|
|
|
|
0.59
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Gregory Waller
|
|
|
22,500
|
|
|
|
0.30
|
|
|
|
3,532.50
|
|
|
|
20,485
|
|
|
|
|
7,500
|
|
|
|
0.29
|
|
|
|
1,252.50
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
50,000
|
|
|
|
0.22
|
|
|
|
11,850
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
50,000
|
|
|
|
0.38
|
|
|
|
3,850
|
|
|
|
|
|
Ann Sabahat
|
|
|
22,500
|
|
|
|
0.28
|
|
|
|
3982.5
|
|
|
|
19,682.50
|
|
|
|
|
50,000
|
|
|
|
0.22
|
|
|
|
11,850
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
50,000
|
|
|
|
0.38
|
|
|
|
3,850
|
|
|
|
|
|
35
Restricted
Stock
As of May 4, 2011, Cardiogenesis executive officers
and directors held, in the aggregate, 308,519 shares of
restricted stock. Each share of restricted stock outstanding
immediately prior to the purchase of the shares of our common
stock pursuant to the tender offer, which we refer to as the
Acceptance Time, will fully vest immediately prior to the
Acceptance Time pursuant to the terms of the Merger Agreement.
Thereafter, immediately prior to the effective time of the
Merger, such shares will convert into the right to receive the
Merger consideration.
The table below sets forth information regarding the shares of
restricted stock held by Cardiogenesis directors and
executive officers as of May 4, 2011.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Aggregate
|
|
|
Restricted Shares
|
|
Proceeds
|
Name
|
|
(#)
|
|
($)
|
|
Paul McCormick
|
|
|
250,000
|
|
|
|
114,250.00
|
|
William Abbott
|
|
|
26,154
|
|
|
|
11,952.38
|
|
Richard Lanigan
|
|
|
32,365
|
|
|
|
14,790.81
|
|
Raymond Cohen
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Marvin Slepian
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Gregory Waller
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Ann Sabahat
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Employment
Agreements between Cardiogenesis and its Executive
Officers
Employment
Agreement with Mr. McCormick
On June 24, 2009, our board of directors appointed Paul
McCormick, a member of our board of directors, to serve as the
Executive Chairman of our board of directors and principal
executive officer of Cardiogenesis effective July 1, 2009,
pursuant to an employment agreement. Under the terms of the
employment agreement, Mr. McCormick is entitled to an
annual base salary of $250,000, provided that he devotes at
least 75% of his time to his duties and responsibilities as
Executive Chairman under the employment agreement. On
May 17, 2010, Mr. McCormicks employment
agreement was amended to reduce his base salary to $200,000.
Mr. McCormick is entitled to receive certain benefits which
will include, at a minimum, medical insurance for
Mr. McCormick and his spouse, as well as no less than three
weeks paid vacation per year. In addition, Mr. McCormick
will also be reimbursed for all reasonable expenses incurred by
him in respect of his services to us. The employment agreement
has an initial term of one year, which term will be
automatically renewed for successive additional one year
periods, unless terminated upon 30 days written notice by
either Mr. McCormick or us.
In the event of a termination for cause, as defined
below, or in the event of a resignation without good
reason, as defined below (other than in connection with a
change of control or corporate
transaction, as such terms are defined below),
Mr. McCormick is only entitled to receive any accrued but
unpaid base salary and benefits through the date of termination.
In the event of a termination by us without cause or
by Mr. McCormick with good reason, or in the
event of a termination by us in connection with a change
of control or a corporate transaction,
Mr. McCormick is entitled to receive (i) the remainder
of his then current base salary for the remainder of the then
current term and (ii) any payments for unused vacation and
reimbursement expenses, which are due, accrued or payable at the
date of Mr. McCormicks termination.
Under Mr. McCormicks employment agreement, the
following terms have the following meanings:
Cause means:
|
|
|
|
|
willful misconduct by Mr. McCormick causing material harm
to us or repeated failure by him to follow the reasonable
directives of our board of directors (or a designated committee
thereof), but only if, in either case, Mr. McCormick shall
not have discontinued such misconduct or failure within thirty
(30) days after receiving written notice from us describing
the misconduct or failure and stating that we will consider the
continuation of such misconduct or failure as cause for
termination of the agreement;
|
36
|
|
|
|
|
any material act or omission by Mr. McCormick involving
gross negligence in the performance of his duties to, or
material deviation from any of the policies or directives of
Cardiogenesis, other than a deviation taken in good faith by
Mr. McCormick for our benefit;
|
|
|
|
any illegal act by Mr. McCormick which materially and
adversely affects the business of Cardiogenesis, provided that
we may suspend Mr. McCormick with pay while any allegation
of such illegal act is investigated; or
|
|
|
|
any felony committed by Mr. McCormick, as evidenced by
conviction thereof, provided that we may suspend
Mr. McCormick with pay while any allegation of such
felonious act is investigated.
|
Good Reason means:
|
|
|
|
|
without Mr. McCormicks prior written consent, a
reduction in his then current base salary;
|
|
|
|
without Mr. McCormicks prior written consent, the
assignment to him of duties substantially and materially
inconsistent with the position and nature of his employment as
set forth in the employment agreement; or
|
|
|
|
without Mr. McCormicks prior written consent, a
relocation of his place of employment outside of Orange County,
California.
|
Change of Control means a change in ownership or
control of Cardiogenesis effected through the acquisition,
directly or indirectly, by any person or related group of
persons (other than Cardiogenesis or a person that directly or
indirectly controls, is controlled by, or is under common
control with, Cardiogenesis), of beneficial ownership (within
the meaning of
Rule 13d-3
of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended) of
securities possessing more than fifty percent (50%) of the total
combined voting power of our outstanding securities pursuant to
a tender or exchange offer made directly to our shareholders
which our board of directors does not recommend such
shareholders to accept.
Corporate Transaction means either of the following
shareholder-approved transactions to which we are a party:
|
|
|
|
|
Merger or consolidation in which securities possessing more than
fifty percent (50%) of the total combined voting power of our
outstanding securities are transferred to a person or persons
different from the persons holding those securities immediately
prior to such transaction; or
|
|
|
|
the sale, transfer or other disposition of all or substantially
all of our assets in complete liquidation or our dissolution.
|
The employment agreement also provides that all outstanding
options will accelerate and become exercisable in full and all
rights of repurchase with respect to restricted stock (if any)
shall terminate in the event of a change of control or a
corporate transaction. Mr. McCormicks employment
agreement replaces the consulting agreement he previously
entered into with us, which was simultaneously terminated.
Also on June 24, 2009, in connection with
Mr. McCormicks appointment to Executive Chairman, the
board of directors granted him 300,000 shares of restricted
stock under our Stock Option Plan. The restrictions on
Mr. McCormicks shares of restricted stock will lapse
in equal installments upon the first and second anniversaries of
the date of grant.
Employment
Agreement with Mr. Lanigan
On July 30, 2007, we entered into a written employment
agreement with Mr. Lanigan. On June 24, 2009, we
entered into an amendment to that employment agreement, pursuant
to which we and Mr. Lanigan agreed to: (i) change his
position from President to Executive Vice President, Marketing,
and (ii) change his annual base salary to $225,000, which
represented a decrease of $22,500 per year.
Pursuant to the terms of Mr. Lanigans employment
agreement, as amended, we agreed to set his annual discretionary
target bonus at 30% of his base salary (both of which reflected
his base salary and target bonus then in effect). In addition,
the agreement provided that Mr. Lanigans benefits
were to remain unchanged and include, at a minimum, medical
insurance (including prescription drug benefits) for
Mr. Lanigan and his spouse, as well as no
37
less than three weeks of paid vacation per year. On
January 7, 2010, our board of directors set
Mr. Lanigans maximum discretionary target bonus for
fiscal year 2010 to 30% of his base salary, or $67,500.
Our employment agreement with Mr. Lanigan also provides for
certain payments following the termination of his employment
with us. In the event we terminate Mr. Lanigans
employment with us for Cause, or in the event of a
resignation without Good Reason (other than in
connection with a Change of Control or Corporate Transaction, as
described above), we are obligated to pay Mr. Lanigan only
his accrued but unpaid base salary and benefits through the date
of termination. In the event we terminate his employment without
Cause or Mr. Lanigan terminates his employment
with us for Good Reason, we are obligated to pay
Mr. Lanigan the following:
|
|
|
|
|
accrued but unpaid salary and benefits through the date of
termination;
|
|
|
|
a severance payment in an amount equal to six months of his
then-current base salary;
|
|
|
|
a prorated payment equal to the target bonus amount for which he
would be eligible for the year in which such resignation or
termination occurred, and
|
|
|
|
continuation of certain insurance benefits for six months.
|
In addition, to the extent not already vested, all options to
purchase shares of our common stock and restricted stock shall
vest by six additional months.
In the event we terminate Mr. Lanigans employment in
connection with a Change of Control or a
Corporate Transaction or Mr. Lanigan terminates
his employment with us following a Change in Control or
Corporate Transaction under certain circumstances, we are
obligated to pay Mr. Lanigan the following:
|
|
|
|
|
accrued but unpaid salary and benefits through the date of
termination;
|
|
|
|
a severance payment in an amount equal to 12 months of his
then-current base salary;
|
|
|
|
payment equal to the target bonus amount for which he would be
eligible for the year in which such resignation or termination
occurred; and
|
|
|
|
continuation of certain insurance benefits for 12 months.
|
In addition, to the extent not already vested, all options to
purchase shares of our common stock and restricted stock shall
vest in full.
The definitions of Cause, Good Reason,
Change of Control and Corporate
Transaction are substantially the same as those summarized
above under the section entitled Employment Agreement with
Mr. McCormick.
Employment
Agreement with Mr. Abbott
On July 30, 2007, we entered into an employment agreement
with Mr. Abbott. The terms of our employment agreement with
Mr. Abbott are substantially the same as the terms of our
agreement with Mr. Lanigan, discussed above, provided,
however, that the initial base salary to be paid to
Mr. Abbott upon execution of his agreement with us was
$200,000 per year.
Arrangements
between Executive Officers and CryoLife or Merger
Sub
Management
Retention Agreements
CryoLife has agreed to employ Mr. Abbott after the Merger
for a transition period. Mr. Abbott is expected to be
employed until September 30, 2011 pursuant to his current
employment agreement, and will remain eligible to receive the
severance benefits described above.
CryoLife has agreed to employ Mr. Lanigan after the Merger
under an employment agreement with an initial term of two years.
During his employment in 2011, Mr. Lanigan will be paid an
annual salary of $225,000, and will receive a commission of
1.25% of sales of Cardiogenesis products during 2011 after the
closing of the Merger. He will also receive the 2011 bonus under
his Cardiogenesis employment agreement, pro-rated for the
portion of the
38
year from January 1 until the day of the closing of the Merger.
He will also receive a relocation allowance to move to Atlanta,
and the customary benefits received by CryoLifes officers
related to that relocation. The relocation package will be
CryoLifes standard executive relocation policy but there
will be allowance for up to 150 days of temporary living
expenses. Upon closing of the Merger, he will also receive
10,000 shares of CryoLifes restricted stock which
will vest on the third anniversary of the grant date, and 25,000
CryoLife stock options which will vest one-third per year
beginning on the first anniversary of the agreement, all
pursuant to CryoLifes standard forms of grant agreement.
Mr. Lanigans employment agreement will provide for
severance payments of one year salary plus bonus if
Mr. Lanigan is terminated without cause or if
Mr. Lanigan terminates the agreement for good reason which
includes an assignment of duties materially inconsistent with
his position, authority, duties or responsibilities or any
action by CryoLife which results in a material diminution in his
position, authority, duties or responsibilities. In order to
obtain this employment package, Mr. Lanigan will be
required to waive the severance benefits described above. The
terms of Mr. Lanigans employment are subject to
approval by CryoLifes compensation committee and the
execution of a definitive agreement.
Support
Agreement
Concurrently with the execution of the Merger Agreement,
Messrs. McCormick, Lanigan, Abbott and the members of our
board of directors entered into a Support Agreement with
CryoLife, pursuant to which they have agreed to tender, at the
request of CryoLife, an aggregate of 1,276,859 shares of
our common stock, which represent approximately 2.7% of the
outstanding shares of our common stock as of April 5, 2011.
The Support Agreement also requires such shareholders to take
certain other actions in connection with the Merger Agreement,
including voting in favor of matters contemplated by the Merger
Agreement if a meeting of Cardiogenesis shareholders is
called:
|
|
|
|
|
in favor of the Merger, the execution and delivery by
Cardiogenesis of the Merger Agreement, the adoption and approval
of the Merger Agreement and the terms thereof and each of the
other matters necessary for consummation of the Merger and the
other transactions contemplated by the Merger Agreement (whether
or not recommended by our board of directors);
|
|
|
|
against any acquisition proposal, any recapitalization,
reorganization, liquidation, dissolution, amalgamation, merger,
sale of assets or other business combination between
Cardiogenesis and any other person (other than the Merger), any
other action that could reasonably be expected to impede,
interfere with, delay, postpone or adversely affect the Merger
or any of the transactions contemplated by the Merger Agreement
or the Support Agreement or any transaction that results in a
breach in any material respect of any covenant, representation
or warranty or other obligation or agreement of Cardiogenesis or
any of its subsidiaries under the Merger Agreement, and any
change in the present capitalization or dividend policy of
Cardiogenesis or any amendment or other change to
Cardiogenesis articles of incorporation or bylaws, except
if approved by CryoLife; and
|
|
|
|
prior to the termination date and at any time after the
acceptance date, in favor of all necessary and desirable actions
to cause the election (and maintenance) of the CryoLife
designees to our board of directors pursuant to the terms of the
Merger Agreement (and, unless requested by CryoLife, against the
removal of any of the CryoLife designees from our board of
directors).
|
The Support Agreement will terminate upon the earliest to occur
of the following: (i) the effective time of the merger,
(ii) written notice of termination of the Support Agreement
to the parties thereto, (iii) August 31, 2011,
(iv) the termination of the Merger Agreement by its terms,
(v) the date CryoLife or Merger Sub terminates, withdraws,
or abandons the tender offer (without making a new tender
offer), (vi) the date on which the tender offer or a new
offer is revised (except in the context of CryoLifes
matching right) to (A) reduce the cash
consideration payable in the tender offer, (B) change the
form of consideration payable, (C) reduce the number of
shares of our common stock to be purchased by Merger Sub,
(D) waive or amend the minimum condition or certain other
conditions to the consummation of the tender offer, (E) add
to the conditions to the consummation of the tender offer,
(F) extend the expiration date beyond August 31, 2011,
or (G) otherwise amend, modify, or supplement any
conditions to the consummation of the tender offer or any term
of the tender offer set forth in the Merger Agreement
39
in a manner adverse to the holders of shares of our common
stock, or (vii) the date on which a third party acquires
more than 50% of Cardiogenesis outstanding voting
securities on a fully diluted basis.
Indemnification
of Directors and Officers
Cardiogenesis is organized under the laws of the State of
California. Section 204(10) of the CGCL permits a
corporation to include in its charter documents, and in
agreements between the corporation and its directors and
officers, provisions expanding the scope of indemnification
beyond that specifically provided by current law.
Cardiogenesis articles of incorporation provides for the
indemnification of Cardiogenesis directors to the fullest
extent permissible under the CGCL. Consequently, no director
will be personally liable to Cardiogenesis or its shareholders
for monetary damages for any breach of fiduciary duties as a
director, except liability for:
|
|
|
|
|
any act or omission not in good faith or which involves
intentional misconduct or a knowing and culpable violation of
law;
|
|
|
|
acts or omissions that a director believes to be contrary to the
best interests of the corporation r its shareholders or that
involve the absence of good faith on the part of the director;
|
|
|
|
any transaction from which a director derived and improper
personal benefit;
|
|
|
|
acts or omissions that show a reckless disregard for the
directors duty to the corporation or its shareholders in
circumstances in which the director was aware, or should have
been aware, in the ordinary course of performing a
directors duties, of a risk of serious injury to the
corporation or its shareholders;
|
|
|
|
acts or omissions that constitute an unexcused pattern of
inattention that amounts to an abdication of the directors
duty to the corporation or its shareholders; or
|
|
|
|
distributions, loans and guaranties under Section 316 of
the CGCL.
|
In addition, Cardiogenesis bylaws provide that
Cardiogenesis is required to indemnify its directors, officers,
employees and agents, in each case to the fullest extent
permitted by the CGCL. Cardiogenesis bylaws also provide
that Cardiogenesis shall advance expenses incurred by a
director, officer, employee or certain agents in advance of the
final disposition of any action or proceeding, and permit
Cardiogenesis to secure insurance on behalf of any officer,
director, employee or other agent for any liability arising out
of his or her actions in that capacity regardless of whether
Cardiogenesis would otherwise be permitted to indemnify him or
her under the provisions of the CGCL.
Cardiogenesis has entered into agreements to indemnify its
directors, officers and other employees as determined by our
board of directors. These agreements generally provide for
indemnification for related expenses including, among other
things, attorneys fees, judgments, fines and settlement
amounts incurred by any of these individuals in any action or
proceeding. Cardiogenesis also maintains directors and
officers liability insurance that insures its directors
and officers against certain losses and insures Cardiogenesis
with respect to its obligations to indemnify its directors and
officers.
The Merger Agreement provides that CryoLife and the surviving
corporation will honor and fulfill in all respects the
indemnification obligations of Cardiogenesis, including the
advancement of expenses incurred in the defense of any action or
suit, incurred prior to the effective time of the Merger.
Furthermore, until the sixth anniversary of the effective time
of the Merger, CryoLife will maintain in effect directors
and officers liability insurance with benefits and
coverage levels that are no less favorable than
Cardiogenesis existing policies in respect of acts or
omissions occurring at or prior to the effective time of the
Merger, provided that in satisfying such obligations, CryoLife
and Cardiogenesis will not be obligated to pay annual premiums
in excess of 150% of the amount paid by Cardiogenesis for
coverage for its last full fiscal year. If the annual premiums
of such insurance coverage exceed such amount, CryoLife and the
surviving corporation will obtain a policy with the greatest
coverage available for a cost not exceeding the 150% amount.
40
Summary
of Aggregate Proceeds that May be Received by
Cardiogenesis Directors and Executive
Officers
The table below sets forth information regarding the aggregate
proceeds that may be received by each of Cardiogenesis
directors and executive officers in connection with the tender
offer and the Merger. Such amounts are described in further
detail above under Consideration Payable Pursuant to
the Merger, Effect of the Merger Agreement on
Options and Restricted Stock, Arrangements
Between Executive Officers and CryoLife or Merger Sub,
and Employment Agreements between Cardiogenesis and its
Executive Officers. The table below sets forth, as of
March 28, 2011, the day Cardiogenesis entered into the
Merger Agreement, the amounts payable to each of
Cardiogenesis executive officers and each member of our
board of directors if each such person (1) tendered all of
the shares of our common stock that each person own for the
tender offer price (assuming no exercise of outstanding
options), (2) received remuneration for the cash-out of
options at the time of the Merger, and (3) in the case of
our executive officers, were terminated without cause in
connection with the Merger.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Stock Options
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Accelerated vesting of
|
|
|
|
Value of
|
|
|
|
|
Unrestricted Shares
|
|
restricted stock
|
|
|
|
shares
|
|
|
|
|
Owned
|
|
Number of
|
|
Value of
|
|
|
|
subject to
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Number
|
|
|
|
shares of
|
|
shares of
|
|
Number
|
|
Options
|
|
|
|
|
Severance
|
|
of
|
|
|
|
restricted
|
|
restricted
|
|
of in-the-
|
|
(less
|
|
|
|
|
Payments
|
|
Shares
|
|
Value of
|
|
stock
|
|
stock
|
|
money
|
|
exercise
|
|
|
Executive Officer
|
|
(1)
|
|
Owned
|
|
shares
|
|
owned
|
|
tendered
|
|
Options
|
|
price)
|
|
Total
|
|
Richard P. Lanigan
|
|
$
|
241,875
|
(2)
|
|
|
199,580
|
(4)
|
|
$
|
91,208
|
|
|
|
32,365
|
|
|
$
|
14,791
|
|
|
|
533,134
|
|
|
$
|
123,539
|
|
|
$
|
471,413
|
|
Paul J. McCormick
|
|
$
|
37,272
|
|
|
|
728,926
|
(3)
|
|
$
|
333,119
|
|
|
|
250,000
|
|
|
$
|
114,250
|
|
|
|
180,000
|
|
|
$
|
23,660
|
|
|
$
|
508,301
|
|
William R. Abbott
|
|
$
|
215,000
|
|
|
|
39,884
|
|
|
$
|
18,227
|
|
|
|
26,154
|
|
|
$
|
11,952
|
|
|
|
275,000
|
|
|
$
|
72,925
|
|
|
$
|
325,104
|
|
Raymond W. Cohen
|
|
|
N/A
|
|
|
|
N/A
|
|
|
|
N/A
|
|
|
|
N/A
|
|
|
|
N/A
|
|
|
|
72,500
|
|
|
$
|
10,802.50
|
|
|
$
|
10,802.50
|
|
Ann T. Sabahat
|
|
|
N/A
|
|
|
|
N/A
|
|
|
|
N/A
|
|
|
|
N/A
|
|
|
|
N/A
|
|
|
|
122,500
|
|
|
$
|
19,682.50
|
|
|
$
|
19,682.50
|
|
Marvin J. Slepian
|
|
|
N/A
|
|
|
|
N/A
|
|
|
|
N/A
|
|
|
|
N/A
|
|
|
|
N/A
|
|
|
|
115,000
|
|
|
$
|
18,505
|
|
|
$
|
18,505
|
|
Gregory D. Waller
|
|
|
N/A
|
|
|
|
N/A
|
|
|
|
N/A
|
|
|
|
N/A
|
|
|
|
N/A
|
|
|
|
130,000
|
|
|
$
|
20,485
|
|
|
$
|
20,485
|
|
|
|
|
(1) |
|
Reflects the estimated value as of March 28, 2011, of
severance payments due upon termination to which each Executive
Officer may be entitled under the terms of his applicable
Employment Agreement. |
|
(2) |
|
Assumes that Mr. Lanigan will not enter into the proposed
employment agreement with CryoLife described above which would
require Mr. Lanigan to waive his right to severance
payments. |
|
(3) |
|
All of Mr. McCormicks shares were acquired in
open-market transactions. |
|
(4) |
|
83,765 of Mr. Lanigans shares were acquired in
open-market transactions. |
Dividends
Pursuant to the Merger Agreement, we are prohibited from
declaring any dividends following execution of the Merger
Agreement on March 28, 2011.
Determination
of the Merger Consideration
The Merger consideration was determined through
arms-length negotiations between Cardiogenesis and
CryoLife.
Regulatory
Matters
In connection with the Merger, we are required to make certain
filings with, and comply with certain laws of, various federal
and state governmental agencies, including the following:
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|
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filing the certificate of Merger with the Secretary of State of
the State of California in accordance with the CGCL after the
approval and adoption of the Merger Agreement by our
shareholders; and
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|
|
|
complying with U.S. federal securities laws.
|
41
Person/Assets,
Retained, Employed, Compensated Or Used
B. Riley
Pursuant to an engagement letter dated November 7, 2010,
Cardiogenesis retained B. Riley to deliver its opinion, which is
referred to as the Opinion, as to the fairness, from a financial
point of view, of the consideration to be received by the
holders of the shares of our common stock in the tender offer
and the Merger, which are sometimes referred together as the
Transaction. At a meeting of our board of directors on
March 22, 2011, B. Riley delivered its oral opinion to our
board of directors which was confirmed in a written opinion,
dated the same day, subsequently such opinion was updated as of
March 28, 2011 and confirmed in a written opinion dated
March 28, 2011, that based upon and subject to the
assumptions, procedures, considerations and limitations set
forth in the written opinion and based upon such other factors
as B. Riley considered relevant, that the consideration (as
defined below) to be paid in connection with the tender offer
and the Merger is fair, from a financial point of view, to the
holders of the shares of our common stock as of the date of the
Opinion.
Dissenters
Rights
The following is a summary of Chapter 13 of the California
General Corporation Law, which we refer to as the CGCL, which
sets forth the procedures for our shareholders to dissent from
the Merger and to demand statutory dissenters rights under
the CGCL. Shares of our common stock held by shareholders who
have perfected their dissenters rights in accordance with
Chapter 13 of the CGCL and have not withdrawn their demands
or otherwise lost their rights are referred to in this summary
as dissenting shares. This summary does not purport to be a
complete statement of the provisions of California law relating
to the rights of our shareholders to an appraisal of the value
of their shares and is qualified in its entirety by reference to
Chapter 13 of the CGCL, the full text of which is attached
as Annex C hereto. Please note, failure to follow
the procedures required by the CGCL could result in the loss of
dissenters rights.
Under Sections 181 and 1201 of the CGCL, the Merger
constitutes a reorganization. Chapter 13 of the
CGCL provides dissenters rights for shareholders
dissenting from reorganizations in certain circumstances. While
there are generally no dissenters rights in connection
with securities listed on national securities exchanges,
Cardiogenesis common stock is quoted on the OTCQB, which
is not a national securities exchange, and therefore, our
shareholders will be entitled to dissent from the Merger and
seek appraisal for their shares of Cardiogenesis common stock if
they follow the procedures required by the CGCL.
For a Cardiogenesis shareholder to exercise dissenters
rights as to any shares of Cardiogenesis common stock in
connection with the Merger, the shareholder must not vote in
favor of the Merger and must make a written demand to
Cardiogenesis that it purchase the shares at their fair market
value. Thus, if a shareholder wishes to dissent, any proxy card
submitted must be marked to be either voted
AGAINST or ABSTAIN. If the
shareholder returns the proxy card without voting instructions,
while his or her shares will have the same effect as a vote
AGAINST approval and adoption of the Merger
Agreement, the return of a proxy card without voting
instructions will cause the shareholder to lose his or her
dissenters rights. A shareholder who returns the proxy
card with voting instructions FOR the
approval and adoption of the Merger Agreement will cause the
shareholder to lose his or her dissenters rights.
The shareholders written demand must:
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|
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|
|
be made by the record holder of the shares; thus, a beneficial
owner of our stock that is registered in the record ownership of
another person (such as a broker or nominee) should instruct the
record holder to follow the procedures for perfecting
dissenters rights if the beneficial owner wants to dissent
with respect to any or all of those shares;
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|
|
|
be mailed or otherwise directed to Cardiogenesis Corporation,
attention Corporate Secretary, 11 Musick, Irvine, CA, 92618;
|
|
|
|
be received not later than 30 days after notice of the
approval of the Merger is mailed to shareholders who did not
vote in favor of the Merger (as described below);
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42
|
|
|
|
|
specify the shareholders name and mailing address and the
number and class of shares held of record that the shareholder
demands that we purchase;
|
|
|
|
state that the shareholder is demanding purchase of the shares
and payment of their fair market value (Chapter 13 of the
CGCL states that the fair market value, for this purpose, is
determined as of the day before the announcement of
the proposed Merger, which in this case was March 28,
2011); and
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|
|
|
state the price that the shareholder claims to be the fair
market value of the shares (this statement will constitute an
offer by the shareholder to sell the shares to us at that price).
|
In addition, within 30 days after notice of the approval of
the Merger is mailed to shareholders, the shareholder must also
submit to us or our transfer agent, for endorsement as
dissenting shares, the stock certificates representing the
Cardiogenesis shares as to which the shareholder is exercising
dissenters rights. A holder of dissenting shares may not
withdraw a demand for payment unless we consent to the
withdrawal.
Simply failing to vote for or against, or voting against, the
proposed Merger will not be sufficient to constitute the demand
described above.
If the Merger is approved by our shareholders, we will have
10 days after the approval to send to those shareholders
who did not vote in favor of the Merger and who could
potentially exercise dissenters rights in accordance with
the CGCL, a written notice of such approval accompanied by:
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|
|
|
|
a copy of Chapter 13 of the CGCL;
|
|
|
|
a statement of the price we determine to represent the fair
market value of the dissenting shares (this statement will
constitute an offer by us to purchase any dissenting shares at
the stated amount if the Merger closes and unless the shares
lose their status as dissenting shares); and
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|
|
|
a brief description of the procedures to be followed if a
shareholder desires to exercise dissenters rights.
|
If Cardiogenesis and a dissenting shareholder agree that the
shares are dissenting shares and agree on the price of the
shares, the dissenting shareholder is entitled to receive the
agreed-upon
price with interest from the date of such agreement. The
applicable interest rate will be the rate then set by law for
the accrual of interest on judgments for money. Payment for the
dissenting shares must be made within 30 days after the
later of the date of that agreement or the date on which all
statutory and contractual conditions to the Merger are
satisfied. Payments are also conditioned on the surrender to us
of the certificates representing the dissenting shares.
If we deny that shares are dissenting shares or the shareholder
fails to agree with us as to the fair market value of the
shares, then, within six months after the notice of approval is
mailed, any shareholder demanding purchase of such shares as
dissenting shares or any interested corporation may file a
complaint in the superior court in the proper California county
requesting a determination as to whether the shares are
dissenting shares or as to the fair market value of the
holders shares, or both, or may intervene in any action
pending on such a complaint. If the complaint is not filed or
intervention in a pending action is not made within the
specified six-month period, the dissenters rights are
lost. The court will first determine any issues as to the status
of the dissenting shares. If the fair market value of the
dissenting shares is at issue, the court will determine, or will
appoint one or more impartial appraisers to determine, such fair
market value.
If the court appoints an appraiser or appraisers, they will
proceed to determine the fair market value per share. Within the
time fixed by the court, the appraisers, or a majority of the
appraisers, will make and file a report in the office of the
clerk of the court. Thereafter, on the motion of any party, the
report is submitted to the court and considered on such evidence
as the court considers relevant. If the court finds the report
reasonable, the court may confirm it.
If the single appraiser or a majority of the appraisers fails to
make and file a report within 10 days after the date of
their appointment or within such further time as the court
allows, or if the court does not confirm the report, the court
will determine the fair market value of the dissenting shares.
Subject to Section 1306 of Chapter 13 of the CGCL,
judgment is rendered against the corporation for payment of an
amount equal to the fair market value of each dissenting share
multiplied by the number of dissenting shares that any
dissenting shareholder who is a party,
43
or who has intervened, is entitled to require the corporation to
purchase, with interest at the legal rate from the date on which
the judgment is entered.
The costs of the action, including reasonable compensation to
the appraisers to be fixed by the court, is assessed or
apportioned as the court considers equitable. However, if the
price determined by the court is more than the price offered by
the corporation, the corporation pays the costs (including, in
the discretion of the court, attorneys fees, fees of
expert witnesses and interest at the legal rate on judgments
from the date the shareholder made the demand and submitted
shares for endorsement if the price determined by the court is
more than 125% of the price offered by the corporation).
Except as expressly limited by Chapter 13, holders of
dissenting shares continue to have all of the rights and
privileges incident to their shares until the fair market value
of their shares is agreed upon or determined.
Dissenting shares lose their status as dissenting shares, and
dissenting shareholders cease to be entitled to require
Cardiogenesis to purchase their shares, if:
|
|
|
|
|
the Merger is abandoned;
|
|
|
|
the shares are transferred before they are submitted to
Cardiogenesis for the required endorsement;
|
|
|
|
the dissenting shareholder and Cardiogenesis do not agree on the
status of the shares as dissenting shares or do not agree on the
purchase price, but neither Cardiogenesis nor the shareholder
files a complaint or intervenes in a pending action within six
months after we mail a notice that our shareholders have
approved the Merger; or
|
|
|
|
with our consent, the holder delivers to us a written withdrawal
of such holders demand for purchase of the shares.
|
To the extent that the provisions of Chapter 5 of the CGCL
(which places conditions on the power of a California
corporation to make distributions to its shareholders) prevent
the payment to any holders of dissenting shares of the fair
market value of the dissenting shares, the dissenting
shareholders will become creditors of the corporation for the
amount that they otherwise would have received in the repurchase
of their dissenting shares, plus interest at the legal rate on
judgments until the date of payment, but subordinate to all
other creditors of the corporation in any liquidation
proceeding, with the debt to be payable when permissible under
the provisions of Chapter 5 of the CGCL.
For U.S. federal income tax purposes, shareholders who
receive cash for their shares of our stock pursuant to the
exercise of dissenters rights will generally recognize
taxable gain or loss. Each holder should consult its own tax
advisor as to the particular tax consequences of the exercise of
dissenters rights to such holder.
CHAPTER 13 OF THE CGCL PROVIDES THAT THE VALUE OF OUR
COMMON STOCK FOR PURPOSES OF THE EXERCISE OF DISSENTERS
RIGHTS IS THE FAIR MARKET VALUE ON THE DAY PRIOR TO
ANNOUNCEMENT OF THE TRANSACTION. AS A RESULT, THE BOARD INTENDS
TO FIX THE VALUE FOR PURPOSES OF ANY SHAREHOLDER EXERCISING
DISSENTERS RIGHTS AT $0.32 PER SHARE, THE PRICE OF OUR
COMMON STOCK ON MARCH 28, 2011, AND AN AMOUNT SUBSTANTIALLY LESS
THAN THE MERGER CONSIDERATION.
Material
United States Federal Income Tax Consequences
The following is a summary of certain material U.S. federal
income tax consequences to holders of shares of our common stock
upon the exchange of such shares for cash pursuant to the
Merger. This summary does not purport to be a comprehensive
description of all of the tax consequences that may be relevant
to a decision to dispose of shares of our common stock in the
Merger, including tax considerations that arise from rules of
general application to all taxpayers or to certain classes of
investors or that are generally assumed to be known by
investors. This summary is based on the Internal Revenue Code of
1986, as amended, which we refer to as the Code, Treasury
regulations, administrative rulings and court decisions, all as
in effect as of the date hereof and all of which are subject to
differing interpretations
and/or
change at any time (possibly with retroactive effect). In
addition, this summary is not a complete description of all the
tax consequences of the Merger and, in particular, may not
address
44
U.S. federal income tax considerations to holders of shares
of our common stock subject to special treatment under
U.S. federal income tax law (including, for example,
financial institutions, dealers in securities or currencies,
traders that mark to market, holders who hold their shares of
our common stock as part of a hedge, straddle or conversion
transaction, insurance companies, tax-exempt entities and
holders who obtained their shares of our common stock by
exercising options or warrants). In addition, this summary does
not discuss any consequences to holders of options or warrants
to purchase shares of our common stock or any aspect of state,
local or foreign tax law that may be applicable to any holder of
shares of our common stock, or any U.S. federal tax
considerations other than U.S. federal income tax
considerations. This summary assumes that holders own shares of
our common stock as capital assets. No ruling from the Internal
Revenue Service and no tax opinion of counsel has been or will
be sought with respect to any of the tax matters discussed
herein.
We urge holders of shares of our common stock to consult
their own tax advisors with respect to the specific tax
consequences to them in connection with the Merger in light of
their own particular circumstances, including the tax
consequences under state, local, foreign and other tax laws.
U.S.
Holders
Except as otherwise set forth below, the following discussion is
limited to the U.S. federal income tax consequences
relevant to a beneficial owner of shares of our common stock
that is a citizen or resident of the United States, a domestic
corporation (or any other entity or arrangement treated as a
domestic corporation for U.S. federal income tax purposes),
any estate (the income of which is subject to U.S., federal
income taxation regardless of its source), and any trust if
(i) a court within the United States is able to exercise
primary supervision over the administration of the trust, and
(ii) one or more U.S. persons have the authority to
control all substantial decisions of the trust, which we refer
to as a U.S. Holder.
If a partnership (including any entity or arrangement treated as
a partnership for U.S. federal income tax purposes) holds
shares of our common stock, the tax treatment of a holder that
is a partner in the partnership generally will depend upon the
status of the partner and the activities of the partnership.
Such holders should consult their own tax advisors regarding the
tax consequences of exchanging the shares of our common stock
pursuant to the tender offer or pursuant to the Merger.
Payments
with Respect to Shares of Our Common Stock
The exchange of shares of our common stock for cash pursuant to
the Merger will be a taxable transaction for U.S. federal
income tax purposes, and a U.S. Holder who receives cash
for shares of our common stock pursuant to the Merger will
recognize gain or loss, if any, equal to the difference between
the amount of cash received and the holders adjusted tax
basis in the shares of our common stock gain or loss must be
determined separately for each block of shares (i.e., shares
acquired at the same cost in a single transaction) exchanged for
cash in the merger. Such gain or loss will be capital gain or
loss, and will be long-term capital gain or loss if such
U.S. Holders holding period for the shares of our
common stock is more than one year at the time of the exchange
of such holders shares of our common stock for cash.
Long-term capital gains recognized by an individual holder
generally are subject to tax at a lower rate than short-term
capital gains or ordinary income. There are limitations on the
deductibility of capital losses.
Backup
Withholding Tax and Information Reporting
Payments made with respect to shares of our common stock
exchanged for cash in the Merger will be subject to information
reporting and potential U.S. federal backup withholding tax
(currently at a rate of 28 percent). To avoid such backup
withholding, a U.S. holder should provide the exchange
agent or other applicable person a properly completed
Form W-9
(or appropriate substitute form), signed under penalties of
perjury, including such holders current Taxpayer
Identification Number, or TIN, and other
certifications.
Certain U.S. holders are exempt from these backup
withholding and reporting requirements. Exempt holders who are
not subject to backup withholding should indicate their exempt
status on a
Form W-9
by entering their correct TIN, marking the appropriate box and
signing and dating the
W-9 in the
space provided.
45
Backup withholding is not an additional tax. Any amounts
withheld under the backup withholding rules will be allowed as a
refund or a credit against a United States holders United
States federal income tax liability provided the required
information is timely furnished to the IRS.
Non-U.S.
Holders
The following is a summary of certain U.S. federal income
tax consequences that will apply to you if you are a
Non-U.S. Holder
of shares of our common stock. The term
Non-U.S. Holder
means a beneficial owner, other than a partnership, of shares of
our common stock that is not a U.S. Holder.
Non-U.S. Holders
should consult their own tax advisors to determine the specific
U.S. federal, state, local and foreign tax consequences
that may be relevant to them.
Payments
with Respect to Shares of Our Common Stock
Payments made to a
Non-U.S. Holder
with respect to shares of our common stock exchanged for cash
pursuant to the Merger generally will be exempt from
U.S. federal income tax, unless:
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|
|
|
(a)
|
the gain on shares of our common stock, if any, is effectively
connected with the conduct by the
Non-U.S. Holder
of a trade or business in the United States (and, if certain
income tax treaties apply, is attributable to the
Non-U.S. Holders
permanent establishment or fixed base in the United States) (in
which event (i) the
Non-U.S. Holder
will be subject to U.S. federal income tax as described
under U.S. Holders, but such
Non-U.S. Holder
should provide a
Form W-8ECI
instead of a
Form W-9,
and (ii) if the
Non-U.S. Holder
is a corporation, it may be subject to branch profits tax on
such gain at a 30 percent rate (or such lower rate as may
be specified under an applicable income tax treaty));
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|
|
|
|
(b)
|
the
Non-U.S. Holder
is an individual who was present in the United States for
183 days or more in the taxable year and certain other
conditions are met (in such event the
Non-U.S. Holder
will be subject to tax at a flat rate of 30 percent (or
such lower rate as may be specified under an applicable income
tax treaty) on the gain from the exchange of the shares of our
common stock net of applicable U.S. losses from sales or
exchanges of other capital assets recognized during the year); or
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|
|
|
|
(c)
|
the
Non-U.S. Holder
is an individual subject to tax pursuant to U.S. tax rules
applicable to certain expatriates.
|
Backup
Withholding Tax and Information Reporting
In general, if you are a
Non-U.S. Holder
you will not be subject to backup withholding and information
reporting with respect to a payment made with respect to shares
of our common stock exchanged for cash in the Merger if you have
provided the Depositary with an IRS
Form W-8BEN
(or a
Form W-8ECI
if your gain is effectively connected with the conduct of a
U.S. trade or business). If shares are held through a
foreign partnership or other flow-through entity, certain
documentation requirements also apply to the partnership or
other flow-through entity.
Deregistration
of Cardiogenesis Shares of Common Stock
If the Merger is completed, shares of our common stock will be
no longer be quoted on the OTCQB and will be deregistered under
the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended, and the shares
of our common stock will no longer be publicly traded.
Litigation
Relating to the Merger
On April 7, 2011, two plaintiffs filed purported class
actions against Cardiogenesis, its directors, and CryoLife and
Merger Sub, in connection with the proposed tender offer and
Merger. These suits were filed in California Superior Court for
Orange County and allege that the defendants breached
and/or aided
and abetted the breach of their fiduciary duties to
Cardiogenesis by seeking to sell Cardiogenesis through an
allegedly unfair process and for an unfair price and on unfair
terms. The suits seek various equitable relief that would delay
or enjoin the Merger
46
based on allegations regarding the process by which offers or
potential offers were evaluated by Cardiogenesis, as well as
fees and expenses of the plaintiffs attorneys and experts.
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|
|
|
|
|
|
Court
|
|
Filing Date
|
|
Case Name
|
|
Case Number
|
|
Superior Court of California, County of Orange
|
|
April 7, 2011
|
|
Patrick J. Grace vs. Paul McCormick
|
|
30-2011-00464472-CU-SL-CXC
|
Superior Court of California, County of Orange
|
|
April 7, 2011
|
|
Marion William Habiak vs. Cardiogenesis Corporation
|
|
30-2011-00464844-CU-SL-CXC
|
Cardiogenesis believes the allegations in the lawsuits are
without merit, and intends to defend the actions vigorously. The
absence of an injunction or court order preventing the
consummation of the transaction is a condition to
CryoLifes obligation to complete the Merger pursuant to
the Merger Agreement.
47
THE
MERGER AGREEMENT
This section describes the material terms of the Merger
Agreement. The description in this section and elsewhere in this
proxy statement is qualified in its entirety by reference to the
complete text of the Merger Agreement, a copy of which is
attached as Annex A and is incorporated by reference
into this proxy statement. This summary does not purport to be
complete and may not contain all of the information about the
Merger Agreement that is important to you. We encourage you to
read the Merger Agreement carefully and in its entirety. This
section is not intended to provide you with any factual
information about us. Such information can be found elsewhere in
this proxy statement and in the public filings we make with the
SEC, as described in the section entitled, Where You Can
Find More Information, beginning on page 65.
Explanatory
Note Regarding the Merger Agreement
The Merger Agreement is included to provide you with information
regarding its terms. Factual disclosures about Cardiogenesis
contained in this proxy statement or in Cardiogenesis
public reports filed with the SEC may supplement, update or
modify the factual disclosures about Cardiogenesis contained in
the Merger Agreement. The representations, warranties and
covenants made in the Merger Agreement by Cardiogenesis,
CryoLife and Merger Sub were qualified and subject to important
limitations agreed to by Cardiogenesis, CryoLife and Merger Sub
in connection with negotiating the terms of the Merger
Agreement. In particular, in your review of the representations
and warranties contained in the Merger Agreement and described
in this summary, it is important to bear in mind that the
representations and warranties were negotiated with the
principal purposes of establishing the circumstances in which a
party to the Merger Agreement may have the right not to
consummate the merger if the representations and warranties of
the other party prove to be untrue due to a change in
circumstance or otherwise, and allocating risk between the
parties to the Merger Agreement, rather than establishing
matters as facts. The representations and warranties may also be
subject to a contractual standard of materiality different from
those generally applicable to shareholders and reports and
documents filed with the SEC and in some cases were qualified by
the matters contained in the disclosure schedule that
Cardiogenesis delivered in connection with the Merger Agreement,
which disclosures were not reflected in the Merger Agreement.
Moreover, information concerning the subject matter of the
representations and warranties, which do not purport to be
accurate as of the date of this proxy statement, may have
changed since the date of the Merger Agreement and subsequent
developments or new information qualifying a representation or
warranty may have been included in this proxy statement.
Effects
of the Merger; Directors and Officers; Certificate of
Incorporation; Bylaws
The Merger Agreement provides for the merger of Merger Sub with
and into Cardiogenesis upon the terms, and subject to the
conditions, set forth in the Merger Agreement. As the surviving
corporation, Cardiogenesis will continue to exist following the
merger.
The board of directors of the surviving corporation will, from
and after the effective time of the Merger, consist of the
directors of Merger Sub until their successors have been duly
elected or appointed and qualified or until their earlier death,
resignation or removal in accordance with the certificate of
incorporation and bylaws of the surviving corporation. The
officers of Cardiogenesis immediately prior to the effective
time of the Merger will, from and after the effective time of
the Merger, be the officers of the surviving corporation until
their successors have been duly elected or appointed and
qualified or until their earlier death, resignation or removal
in accordance with the certificate of incorporation and bylaws
of the surviving corporation.
The articles of incorporation of the surviving corporation will
be in the form of the certificate of incorporation attached as
an exhibit to the Merger Agreement, until amended in accordance
with its terms or by applicable law. The by-laws of Merger Sub
as in effect immediately prior to the effective time of the
Merger will be the by-laws of the surviving corporation, until
amended in accordance with its terms or by applicable law.
Following the completion of the Merger, Cardiogenesis
common stock will no longer be quoted on the OTCQB and will be
deregistered under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as
amended, and to cease to be publicly traded.
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Terms of
the Merger Agreement
The following is a summary of certain provisions of the Merger
Agreement. This summary does not purport to be complete and is
qualified in its entirety by reference to the full text of the
Merger Agreement, a copy of which is attached hereto as
Annex A, which is incorporated herein by reference.
Copies of the Merger Agreement, and any other filings that we
make with the SEC with respect to the tender offer or the
merger, may be obtained in the manner set forth in Where
You Can Find More Information beginning on page 65.
Shareholders and other interested parties should read the Merger
Agreement for a more complete description of the provisions
summarized below.
The Tender Offer. On April 5, 2011,
Merger Sub commenced the tender offer for 49.9% of the
outstanding shares of our common stock at a price of $0.457 per
share, net to the seller in cash without interest thereon and
less any required withholding taxes. As a result of the tender
offer, Merger Sub acquired a total of 23,221,166 shares, or
49.9% of the outstanding Cardiogenesis shares.
Recommendation. Cardiogenesis has represented
in the Merger Agreement that our board of directors has, at a
meeting duly called and held, duly adopted resolutions for which
all directors present voted in favor of (i) determining
that the terms of the Merger Agreement, the tender offer, the
Merger and the other transactions contemplated thereby are fair
to and in the best interests of Cardiogenesis
shareholders, (ii) approved and declared advisable the
Merger Agreement and the transactions contemplated thereby,
including the tender offer and the Merger, (iii) directed
that the Merger Agreement be submitted to Cardiogenesis
shareholders for adoption and approval (unless the Merger is
consummated in accordance with the provisions of
Californias short-form merger statute and
(iv) resolved to recommend that Cardiogenesis
shareholders accept the tender offer, tender their shares of our
common stock pursuant to the tender offer and vote in favor of
the adoption and approval of the Merger Agreement and the
transactions contemplated thereby, including the tender offer
and the Merger (if required by applicable law). We refer to the
recommendation in clause (iv) above as the Recommendation.
The Merger; Closing; Effective Time. The
Merger Agreement provides that, after satisfaction or waiver of
certain conditions, Merger Sub will be merged with and into
Cardiogenesis and Cardiogenesis will be the surviving
corporation. The closing date of the Merger will occur on a date
to be specified by the parties to the Merger Agreement, which
shall be no later than the second business day after
satisfaction or waiver of all of the conditions to the Merger
(other than any such conditions which by their nature cannot be
satisfied until the closing) set forth in the Merger Agreement
(or such other date as the parties to the Merger Agreement may
agree), which conditions are described below in Conditions
to the Merger beginning on page 59. The Merger will
be completed and become effective when the certificates of
merger are filed with the Secretary of State of Florida and the
Secretary of State of California.
Charter, Bylaws, Directors, and Officers. At
the effective time of the Merger, the articles of incorporation
of Cardiogenesis will be amended to conform to Exhibit C of
the Merger Agreement. Also at the effective time of the Merger,
the bylaws of Cardiogenesis will be amended to read as the
bylaws of Merger Sub as in effect immediately prior to the
effective time of the Merger, except that such bylaws will be
amended to reflect that the name of the surviving corporation
will be Cardiogenesis Corporation. The directors of
Merger Sub immediately prior to the effective time of the Merger
will be the initial directors of the surviving corporation and
the officers of Cardiogenesis immediately prior to the effective
time of the Merger will be the initial officers of the surviving
corporation.
Appointment of Directors. CryoLife has the
right under the Merger Agreement to appoint designees to our
board of directors following the tender offers conclusion.
Conversion of Shares of Our Common Stock. Each
common share issued and outstanding immediately prior to the
effective time of the Merger (other than shares of our common
stock held by us, CryoLife, or Merger Sub, or by any direct or
indirect wholly-owned subsidiary of CryoLife, Merger Sub or
Cardiogenesis, in each case immediately prior to the effective
time of the Merger and any shares of our common stock that are
issued and outstanding immediately prior to the effective time
of the Merger and held by a Cardiogenesis shareholder who is
entitled to demand and properly demands appraisal of such shares
of common stock pursuant to, and who complies in all material
respects with,
Sections 1300-1313
of the CGCL, which is attached hereto as Annex C,
will, by virtue of the Merger and without any action on the part
of CryoLife, Merger Sub, Cardiogenesis or the holder, be
cancelled
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and converted at the effective time of the Merger into the right
to receive the Merger consideration, without interest thereon
and less any required withholding tax. At the effective time of
the Merger, each common share of Cardiogenesis owned by
CryoLife, Merger Sub or any wholly-owned subsidiary of CryoLife
or Cardiogenesis and shares of our common stock held by
Cardiogenesis in treasury will be cancelled, and no payment or
distribution will be made with respect to such shares of our
common stock. At the effective time of the Merger, each share of
Merger Sub common stock issued and outstanding immediately prior
to the effective time of the Merger will, by virtue of the
Merger and without any action on the part of the holder thereof,
be converted into one share of common stock of the surviving
corporation.
Payment for Shares of Our Common Stock in the
Merger. CryoLife will deposit with Computershare
Inc., as Paying Agent for the Merger, for the benefit of the
holders of shares of our common stock, sufficient funds to pay
the aggregate Merger consideration in an payment fund. After the
Merger is completed, you will have the right to receive $0.457
per common share, but you will no longer have any rights as a
Cardiogenesis shareholder. You will receive the Merger
consideration in exchange for your shares of our common stock in
accordance with the instructions that will be contained in the
letter of transmittal that will be sent to you shortly after
completion of the Merger. If your shares of our common stock are
held in street name by your broker, dealer,
commercial bank, trust company or other nominee, you will
receive instructions from your broker, dealer, commercial bank,
trust company or other nominee as to how to surrender your
street name shares of our common stock and receive
cash for those shares. If your shares of our common stock are
held in book-entry form, you will receive instructions from the
paying agent as to how to surrender your book-entry
shares and receive cash for those shares.
Any portion of the payment fund (including the proceeds of any
investments thereof) that remains unclaimed for one year after
the effective time of the Merger will be delivered to CryoLife.
Holders of shares outstanding before the effective time of the
Merger will thereafter be entitled to look only to CryoLife for
payment of any claims for Merger consideration to which they may
be entitled (after giving effect to any required withholding
tax). None of the surviving corporation, CryoLife, the Paying
Agent or any other person will be liable to any person in
respect of any Merger consideration delivered to a public
official pursuant to any applicable abandoned property, escheat
or similar laws.
Transfer of Shares of Our Common Stock. After
the effective time of the Merger, there will be no transfers on
our share transfer books of shares of our common stock
outstanding immediately prior to the effective time of the
Merger. If, after the effective time of the Merger, any
certificate for our shares of our common stock is presented to
the surviving corporation, CryoLife or the Paying Agent for
transfer, it will be cancelled and exchanged for the per share
Merger consideration, multiplied by the number of shares
represented by the certificate.
Representations
and Warranties
The Merger Agreement contains representations and warranties of
Cardiogenesis, CryoLife and Merger Sub, to each other, as to,
among other things:
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the corporate organization, existence and power of each party
and its subsidiaries;
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the authority of each party to enter into the Merger Agreement
and make it valid and binding;
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no contravention by the execution, delivery and performance of
the Merger Agreement of:
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the organizational documents of each party and its subsidiaries,
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applicable law, or
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specified agreements, instruments and obligations;
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required governmental approvals; and
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compliance with law.
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The Merger Agreement contains additional representations and
warranties of Cardiogenesis to CryoLife as to, among other
things:
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the capitalization of Cardiogenesis;
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the conduct of its business in the ordinary course;
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the completeness and accuracy of Cardiogenesis filings
with the SEC and financial statements;
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the absence of material undisclosed liabilities;
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the absence of changes in its business;
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legal proceedings;
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compliance of Cardiogenesis products with FDA marketing
and other requirements;
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employee benefit plans and related matters;
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certain labor matters;
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environmental liabilities;
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tax matters;
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material contracts;
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the shareholder vote that may be required to approve the Merger;
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insurance policies;
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tangible and real properties;
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intellectual property;
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product and service warranties;
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accounts receivable and inventories;
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anti-takeover laws, regulations, or rights plans;
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related party transactions; and
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fees payable to and the opinion of the financial advisor to
Cardiogenesis.
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The Merger Agreement contains additional representations and
warranties of CryoLife to Cardiogenesis as to, among other
things:
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CryoLifes ownership of the common stock of Merger Sub;
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the availability of funds to complete the transaction;
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the completeness and accuracy of all disclosure documents and
information supplied for inclusion in any disclosure documents
by each party in connection with the transaction;
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the required vote or consent of CryoLife, as sole shareholder of
Merger Sub, to approve the Merger Agreement and the transactions
contemplated thereby; and
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fees of the financial advisor of CryoLife.
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The representations and warranties given in the Merger Agreement
will not survive the Merger. The assertions embodied in the
representations and warranties are qualified by information in
confidential disclosure schedules that Cardiogenesis has
provided to CryoLife in connection with signing the Merger
Agreement. While neither CryoLife nor Cardiogenesis believes
that the disclosure schedules contain information that the
securities laws require to be publicly disclosed, the disclosure
schedules do contain information that modifies, qualifies and
creates exceptions to the representations and warranties of the
parties.
These representations, warranties and covenants were made only
for the purpose of the Merger Agreement and solely for the
benefit of the parties to the Merger Agreement as of specific
dates, and may be subject to important limitations and
qualifications (including exceptions thereto set forth in a
disclosure letter or CryoLifes or Cardiogenesis
public filings with the SEC) agreed to by the contracting
parties and may not be complete.
51
Furthermore, these representations, warranties and covenants may
have been made for the purposes of allocating contractual risk
between the parties to the Merger Agreement instead of
establishing these matters as facts, and may or may not have
been accurate as of any specific date and do not purport to be
accurate as of the date of this offer to purchase. Accordingly,
Cardiogenesis shareholders should not rely upon the descriptions
of representations, warranties and covenants contained in this
offer to purchase or the actual representations, warranties and
covenants contained in the Merger Agreement as statements of
factual information.
Treatment
of Equity Awards
The Merger Agreement provides that the Cardiogenesis board of
directors shall take such action so that, at the effective time
of the Merger, and without any action on the part of any holder
of any outstanding option, whether vested or unvested,
exercisable or unexercisable, each option that is outstanding
and unexercised immediately prior thereto shall be cancelled and
each holder of an option will be entitled to receive an amount
equal to the excess, if any, of the Merger consideration,
without interest, over the exercise price per common share of
such option, less any required withholding taxes. If the
exercise price per share of any option equals or exceeds the
Merger consideration, such amount shall be zero.
The Merger Agreement further provides that the Cardiogenesis
board or directors shall take such action so that, at the
Acceptance Date, each share of restricted stock that is
outstanding under any Stock Plan, whether or not then vested or
earned, shall without any action on the part of the holder
thereof, immediately prior to the Acceptance Date shall fully
vest and shall thereafter be eligible to be converted into the
right to receive the Merger consideration.
Go-Shop,
Solicitation, Alternative Transactions
The Merger Agreement provided that, for a period of 20 days
after the signing of the Merger Agreement, Cardiogenesis could
initiate, solicit and encourage, whether publicly or otherwise,
alternative acquisition proposals, and enter into, engage in,
and maintain discussions or negotiations with respect to
acquisition proposals (or inquiries, proposals or offers or
other efforts or attempts that may reasonably be expected to
lead to an acquisition proposal) or otherwise cooperate with or
assist or participate in, or facilitate any such inquiries,
proposals, offers, efforts, attempts, discussions or
negotiations. This is referred to as a go shop
period, and it ended on April 18, 2011 (the No Shop
Period Start Date). As of such date, none of the parties
contacted during the go-shop process, on behalf of Cardiogenesis
and at the direction of our board of directors, had submitted an
acquisition proposal for Cardiogenesis, and there can be no
assurance that such efforts will result in an alternative
transaction being proposed or in a definitive agreement for such
a transaction being entered into. We do not intend to announce
further developments with respect to the solicitation process
until our board of directors has made a decision regarding an
alternative proposal, if any. After the No Shop Period Start
Date, the Merger Agreement has a no-shop provision
which prohibits Cardiogenesis from soliciting any additional
offers or proposals, subject to limited exceptions described
below.
Under the terms of the no-shop provision of the Merger
Agreement, subject to certain exceptions described below,
Cardiogenesis has agreed that it will not, and that it will not
permit or authorize any of its subsidiaries or any director,
officer, employee, investment banker, financial advisor,
attorney, accountant or other advisor, agent or representative
(collectively, the representatives) to, directly or
indirectly:
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solicit, initiate or knowingly facilitate or encourage any
inquiries regarding, or the making of, any proposal or offer
that constitutes an acquisition proposal;
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engage in, continue or otherwise participate in any discussions
or negotiations regarding, or furnish to any other person any
non-public information in connection with or for the purpose of
encouraging or facilitating, an acquisition proposal; or
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enter into any letter of intent, agreement or agreement in
principle with respect to an acquisition proposal.
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In addition, Cardiogenesis has agreed that it will cease and
terminate, and that it will direct each of its subsidiaries and
the representatives of Cardiogenesis and its subsidiaries to
immediately cease and cause to be
52
terminated, all existing discussions or negotiations with any
person previously conducted with respect to any acquisition
proposal.
Notwithstanding the foregoing, if at any time on or after the
No-Shop Period Start Date and prior to obtaining the approval of
the Cardiogenesis shareholders of the Merger, Cardiogenesis or
any of its representatives receives a written acquisition
proposal that was made or renewed on or after the No-Shop Period
Start Date and did not result from any breach of
Cardiogenesis obligations under the Merger Agreement,
(i) Cardiogenesis and its representatives may contact the
person(s) making the acquisition proposal to clarify its terms
and conditions and (ii) if the Board of Directors of
Cardiogenesis determines in good faith, after consultation with
independent financial advisors and outside legal counsel, that
the acquisition proposal constitutes or could reasonably be
expected to lead to a superior proposal, then Cardiogenesis and
its representatives may do the following:
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furnish information (including non-public information) with
respect to Cardiogenesis to the person(s) making the acquisition
proposal, provided such person(s) have signed a confidentiality
agreement and that Cardiogenesis shall promptly provide to
CryoLife any material non-public information that is provided to
such person(s) that was not previously provided to
CryoLife; and
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engage in or otherwise participate in discussions or
negotiations with person(s) making an acquisition proposal.
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From and after the No-Shop Period Start Date, Cardiogenesis will
provide to CryoLife within 48 hours a written summary of
the material terms of any acquisition proposal (including any
financing commitments relating thereto).
Following the No-Shop Period Start Date, Cardiogenesis will keep
CryoLife reasonably informed of any material developments,
discussions or negotiations regarding any acquisition proposal
on a prompt basis and upon the request of CryoLife shall apprise
CryoLife of the status of each acquisition proposal.
Cardiogenesis agrees that it and its subsidiaries will not enter
into any confidentiality agreement with any person after
March 28, 2011 that prohibits Cardiogenesis from providing
any information to CryoLife.
Except as expressly permitted by the Merger Agreement, the board
of directors of Cardiogenesis will not:
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make an adverse recommendation change, which means
the following:
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fail to recommend to its shareholders that they approve the
Merger Agreement (the Board Recommendation) or fail
to include the Board Recommendation in the
Schedule 14D-9,
the proxy statement or related filings;
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change, qualify, withhold, withdraw or modify, or publicly
propose to change, qualify, withhold, withdraw or modify, in a
manner adverse to CryoLife, the Board Recommendation;
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take any formal action or make any recommendation or public
statement in connection with a tender offer or exchange offer
(other than the tender offer by CryoLife) other than a
recommendation against such offer or a customary stop,
look and listen communication pursuant to applicable
securities laws; or
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adopt, approve or recommend, or publicly propose to approve or
recommend to the shareholders an acquisition proposal.
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authorize, cause or permit Cardiogenesis or any of its
subsidiaries to enter into any letter of intent, agreement or
agreement in principle with respect to any acquisition proposal
(each, a Company Acquisition Agreement); or
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terminate the Merger Agreement in order to concurrently enter
into a Company Acquisition Agreement.
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Notwithstanding anything to the contrary set forth in the Merger
Agreement, prior to the time the Cardiogenesis shareholders
approve the Merger Agreement, but not after, the board of
directors of Cardiogenesis may:
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make an Adverse Recommendation Change, enter into a Company
Acquisition Agreement with respect to an acquisition proposal
not solicited in violation of the Merger Agreement or terminate
the Merger Agreement in order to concurrently enter into a
Company Acquisition Agreement if the board of directors
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of Cardiogenesis has determined in good faith, after
consultation with its financial advisor and outside legal
counsel, that failure to take such action could be inconsistent
with the directors fiduciary duties under applicable law
and the acquisition proposal constitutes a superior proposal, so
long as:
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Cardiogenesis has given CryoLife at least five business
days prior written notice of its intention to take such
action (which notice shall include unredacted copies of the
superior proposal and related transaction and financing
documents and a written summary of the material terms of any
superior proposal);
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Cardiogenesis has negotiated with CryoLife during such notice
period, to the extent CryoLife wishes to negotiate, to enable
CryoLife to propose revisions to the terms of the Merger
Agreement such that it would cause such superior proposal to no
longer constitute a superior proposal;
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following the end of such notice period, the board of directors
of Cardiogenesis shall have considered in good faith any
proposed revisions to the Merger Agreement proposed in writing
by CryoLife in a manner that would form a binding contract if
accepted by Cardiogenesis, and shall have determined that the
superior proposal would continue to constitute a superior
proposal if such revisions were to be given effect;
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in the event of any material change to the material terms of
such superior proposal, Cardiogenesis shall, in each case, have
delivered to CryoLife an additional notice consistent with that
described above and the notice period shall have recommenced,
except that the notice period shall be at least one business day;
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Cardiogenesis has complied in all material respects with its
obligations in the non-solicitation sections of the Merger
Agreement; and
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any termination of the Merger Agreement in connection with the
foregoing is in accordance with the termination provisions of
the Merger Agreement, and Cardiogenesis pays CryoLife the
applicable Termination Fee (described below) prior to or
concurrently with such termination; or
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change, qualify, withhold, withdraw or modify, or publicly
propose to change, qualify, withhold, withdraw or modify, in a
manner adverse to CryoLife, its recommendation that the
Cardiogenesis shareholders approve the Merger Agreement if it
has determined in good faith, after consultation with
Cardiogenesis financial advisor and outside legal counsel,
that failure to take such action could be inconsistent with the
directors fiduciary duties under applicable law (other
than in response to a superior proposal, which is described
above) and prior to taking such action:
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the board of directors of Cardiogenesis has given CryoLife at
least five business days prior written notice of its
intention to take such action and a description of the reasons
for taking such action,
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Cardiogenesis has negotiated, and has caused its representatives
to negotiate, in good faith with CryoLife during such notice
period, to the extent CryoLife wishes to negotiate, to enable
CryoLife to revise the terms of the Merger Agreement in a manner
that would obviate the need for taking such action, and
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following the end of such notice period, the board of directors
of Cardiogenesis shall have considered in good faith any
revisions to the Merger Agreement proposed in writing by
CryoLife in a manner that would form a binding contract if
accepted by Cardiogenesis, and shall have determined in good
faith, after consultation with Cardiogenesis financial
advisor and outside legal counsel, that failure to change its
recommendation could be inconsistent with the directors
fiduciary duties under applicable law.
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Nothing in the Merger Agreement prohibits Cardiogenesis from
taking and disclosing to the Cardiogenesis shareholders a
position contemplated by
Rule 14e-2(a),
Rule 14d-9
or Item 1012(a) of
Regulation M-A
promulgated under the Exchange Act or making any disclosure to
the Cardiogenesis shareholders that is required by applicable
law.
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As used in this proxy statement:
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acquisition proposal means any inquiry, proposal or
offer from any person or entity or group (other than CryoLife
and its subsidiaries) relating to, in a single transaction or
series of related transactions, any of the following:
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acquisition of assets of Cardiogenesis equal to 20% or more of
Cardiogenesis consolidated assets or to which 20% or more
of Cardiogenesis revenues or earnings on a consolidated
basis are attributable,
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acquisition of 20% or more of the outstanding shares of
Cardiogenesis common stock,
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tender offer or exchange offer that if consummated would result
in any person or entity beneficially owning 20% or more of the
outstanding shares of Cardiogenesis common stock,
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merger, consolidation, share exchange, business combination,
recapitalization, liquidation, dissolution or similar
transaction involving Cardiogenesis, or
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any combination of the foregoing types of transactions if the
sum of the percentage of consolidated assets, consolidated
revenues or earnings and Cardiogenesis common stock involved is
20% or more; in each case, other than the Offer and the Merger.
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superior proposal means any bona fide written
acquisition proposal that the board of directors of
Cardiogenesis has determined, after consultation with
Cardiogenesis outside legal counsel and financial advisor,
in its good faith judgment is reasonably likely to be
consummated in accordance with its terms, taking into account
all legal, regulatory and financial aspects (including certainty
of closing) of the proposal and the person or entity making the
proposal, and if consummated, would result in a transaction more
favorable to the shareholders of Cardiogenesis (solely in their
capacity as such) from a financial point of view than the
transaction contemplated by the Merger Agreement (including any
revisions to the terms of the Merger Agreement proposed by
CryoLife in response to such proposal or otherwise); provided
that for purposes of the definition of superior
proposal the references to 20% in the
definition of acquisition proposal shall be deemed to be
references to 50%.
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Termination;
Termination Fee
Following the Acceptance Date, no party to the Merger Agreement
may terminate the Merger Agreement. CryoLife only is required to
consummate the Merger if the shareholders of Cardiogenesis
approve the Merger and no temporary restraining orders,
preliminary or permanent injunctions or other judgments, orders
or decrees have been issued by any court of competent
jurisdiction or other legal restraint or prohibition shall be in
effect, and no law has been enacted, entered, promulgated,
enforced or deemed applicable by any governmental entity that,
in any case, prohibits or makes illegal the consummation of the
Merger. In addition, Cardiogenesis must have obtained, or
CryoLife has otherwise waived the requirement to obtain, all
required consents from third parties.
Termination
Fees and Expenses
Following the Acceptance Date, if CryoLife is unable to
consummate the Merger, then no party to the Merger Agreement is
required to pay a termination fee or any expense to any other
party to the Merger Agreement.
Subject to certain exceptions, all fees and expenses incurred in
connection with the Merger Agreement, the tender offer, the
Merger, and the other transactions contemplated by the Merger
Agreement will be paid by the party incurring such fees or
expenses, whether or not the tender offer or the Merger is
consummated, except that the expenses incurred in connection
with the filing, printing and mailing of the Offer to Purchase
and other documents related to the tender offer, the
Schedule 14D-9
and the proxy statement, and all filing and other fees paid to
the SEC, in each case in connection with the Merger (other than
attorneys fees, accountants fees and related
expenses), will be borne by CryoLife. Any fees and expenses
incurred in connection with the Merger Agreement, the tender
offer, the Merger and the other transactions contemplated by the
Merger Agreement incurred by a Cardiogenesis shareholder (such
as fees and expenses of separate counsel to such shareholder)
will be borne by such shareholder.
55
Conduct
of Business
Cardiogenesis has agreed, unless CryoLifes prior written
consent is obtained or expressly contemplated by the Merger
Agreement, that from the date of the Merger Agreement until the
effective date of the Merger or the date on which CryoLife
appoints a majority of our board of directors, if earlier, it
will, and it will cause each of its subsidiaries to do the
following:
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conduct its business in the ordinary course consistent with past
practice;
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use commercially reasonable efforts to preserve intact its
present business organization;
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use commercially reasonable efforts to keep available the
services of its present officers, employees and consultants;
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use commercially reasonable efforts to preserve its goodwill and
its relationships with customers, suppliers, licensors,
licensees, distributors and others having business dealings with
it; and
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use commercially reasonable efforts to maintain its assets,
rights and properties in good repair and condition, normal wear
and tear excepted.
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Except as expressly contemplated by the Merger Agreement or as
required by law, Cardiogenesis has further agreed that without
the prior written consent of CryoLife, it and each of its
subsidiaries will not, among other things:
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amend their respective organizational documents;
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declare, set aside or pay any dividends, except for dividends
payable by a Cardiogenesis subsidiary to its parent;
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purchase, redeem or otherwise acquire equity interests of
Cardiogenesis or its subsidiaries or any options, warrants, or
rights to acquire any such shares or other equity interests;
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split, combine, or reclassify any of its equity interests or
issue or authorize the issuance of any other securities in
respect of, in lieu of or in substitution for shares of its
equity interests;
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issue any shares of its capital stock or any rights, warrants or
options to acquire shares of its capital stock or other equity
interests, subject to certain exceptions, other than the
issuance of shares upon the exercise of options outstanding on
March 28, 2011 in accordance with their terms as in effect
on such date;
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acquire any equity interest in, any division or business of, or
a substantial portion of the assets of, any other person;
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dispose of or encumber material assets, other than in the
ordinary course of business consistent with past practice;
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adopt a plan of complete or partial liquidation, dissolution,
restructuring, capitalization or other reorganization;
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incur any indebtedness, issue or sell any debt securities, make
any loans, advances or capital contributions to or investments
in any other person, or become responsible for the obligations
of any other person, with certain exceptions, enter into any
keep well or other agreement to maintain any
financial statement condition of another person other than
Cardiogenesis or a subsidiary of Cardiogenesis, or amend any
contract to effect any such transactions;
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incur or commit to incur any capital expenditure or
authorization or commitment with respect thereto that
individually is in excess of $10,000, or in the aggregate are in
excess of $20,000, except as provided in the Merger Agreement;
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settle, pay, satisfy or discharge any claim other than in the
ordinary course of business consistent with past practice,
cancel any material indebtedness or waive any right of material
value;
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enter into any material contract, or amend or modify any
material contract, except in the ordinary course of business
consistent with past practice;
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56
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commence any action, suit, or other proceeding or compromise,
settle or agree to settle any material action, suit, or other
proceeding, including any action, suit, or other proceeding
relating to the Merger Agreement or the transactions
contemplated thereby;
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change its financial or tax accounting methods, except as
required by changes in GAAP or by applicable law, or revalue any
of its assets;
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settle any material liability for taxes, amend any material tax
return, enter into any material contract with or request any
material ruling from any governmental entity relating to taxes,
change any material tax election, take any material position on
a tax return inconsistent with a position taken on a tax return
previously filed, take any other action to materially impair any
tax asset reflected in Cardiogenesis SEC filings filed
most recently prior to the date thereof, extend or waive any
statute of limitations with respect to taxes, or surrender any
claim for a material refund of taxes;
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change its fiscal or tax year;
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grant any director, officer, employee or independent contractor
any increase in compensation, bonus or other benefits, except in
the ordinary course of business consistent with past practice in
the compensation of employees that are not officers, grant any
director, officer, employee or independent contractor any
severance, change in control or termination pay, pay any benefit
or grant or amend any award except as required to comply with
any contracts in effect as of the date of the Merger Agreement;
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enter into any collective bargaining agreement or other labor
union contract, take any action to accelerate the vesting or
payment of any compensation or benefit under any plan or other
contract, adopt any new employee benefit plan or arrangement or
amend, modify or terminate any existing plan, in each case for
the benefit of any director, officer, employee or independent
contractor, other than as required by applicable law or in the
ordinary course of business consistent with past practice;
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fail to keep in force insurance policies or replacement or
revised provisions regarding insurance coverage with respect to
the assets, operations and activities of Cardiogenesis and its
subsidiaries substantially equivalent to those currently in
effect;
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renew or enter into any non-compete, exclusivity,
non-solicitation or similar agreement that would restrict or
limit, in any material respect, the operations of Cardiogenesis
or any of its subsidiaries;
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waive any material benefits of, or agree to modify in any
adverse respect, or fail to enforce, or consent to any matter
with respect to which its consent is required under, any
confidentiality, standstill or similar agreement to which
Cardiogenesis or any of its subsidiaries is a party;
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enter into any new line of business outside of its existing
business;
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enter into any new lease or amend the terms of any existing
lease of real property that would require payments over the
remaining term of such lease in excess of $10,000;
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knowingly violate or knowingly fail to perform any obligation or
duty imposed upon it by any applicable material federal, state
or local law, rule, regulation, guideline or ordinance;
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create or form any subsidiary or make any other investment in
another person;
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modify the standard warranty terms for products sold by
Cardiogenesis or amend or modify any product warranties in
effect as of the date hereof in any manner that is adverse to
Cardiogenesis;
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allow any of Cardiogenesis or its subsidiaries trade
secrets or other confidential information relating to
Cardiogenesis or its subsidiaries existing products
or products currently under development to be disclosed, or
allow any of Cardiogenesis or its subsidiaries
intellectual property rights relating to Cardiogenesis or
its subsidiaries existing products or products currently
under development to be abandoned, or otherwise to lapse or
become unavailable to Cardiogenesis or its subsidiaries on the
same terms and conditions as such rights were available to
Cardiogenesis and its subsidiaries as of the date of the Merger
Agreement;
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57
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enter into any distribution agreements not terminable by
Cardiogenesis or its subsidiaries on 60 days notice without
penalty, enter into any commitment to any person to enter into
any license, distributorship, or sales agreement that by its
terms would purport to relate to any of the products of CryoLife
or its affiliates or sell, license or otherwise dispose of any
intellectual property other than sales of its products and other
non-exclusive licenses that are in the ordinary course of
business and consistent with past practices, enter into any
sales agency agreements or grant most favored nation
pricing to any person;
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enter into, amend or terminate any contract, agreement,
commitment or arrangement with any affiliated person;
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fail to make in a timely manner any filings with the SEC
required under the Securities Act or the Exchange Act or the
rules and regulations promulgated thereunder (except as
permitted by
Rule 12b-25); or
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knowingly take any action (or omit to take any action) if such
action (or omission) could reasonably be expected to result in
certain conditions to the tender offer or Merger not being
satisfied.
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Cardiogenesis has agreed that it shall use commercially
reasonable efforts to:
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maintain its material assets and properties in the ordinary
course of business in the manner historically maintained,
reasonable wear and tear, damage by fire and other casualty
excepted;
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promptly repair, restore or replace all material assets and
properties in the ordinary course of business consistent with
past practice;
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upon any damage, destruction or loss to any of its material
assets or properties, apply any and all insurance proceeds, if
any, received with respect thereto to the prompt repair,
replacement and restoration thereof as reasonably necessary for
the operation of Cardiogenesis business;
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comply in all material respects with all applicable laws;
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take all actions necessary to be in compliance in all material
respects with all material contracts and to maintain the
effectiveness of all its permits;
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notify CryoLife in writing (within two business days) of the
commencement of any action, suit, claim or investigation by or
against Cardiogenesis, provided that this obligation is not
modified by the use of Cardiogenesis commercially
reasonable efforts;
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if CryoLife gives Cardiogenesis written notice not less than 10
business days prior to the closing date of the Merger, take all
necessary corporate action to terminate Cardiogenesis
401(k) plan effective as of the date immediately prior to the
closing date of the Merger, but contingent on the closing of the
Merger;
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provide CryoLife evidence that Cardiogenesis has satisfied its
obligations with respect to the options in accordance with the
Merger Agreement; and
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pay accounts payable and pursue collection of its accounts
receivable in the ordinary course of business, consistent with
past practices.
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Filings
and Other Actions
The Merger Agreement provides that, subject to its terms and
conditions, each of Cardiogenesis, Merger Sub and CryoLife will
use its reasonable best efforts to take, or cause to be taken,
all actions and to do, or cause to be done, all things
necessary, proper or advisable under applicable laws and
regulations to consummate the tender offer, the Merger and the
other transactions contemplated by the Merger Agreement,
including (i) obtaining all consents, approvals,
authorizations and actions or nonactions required for or in
connection with the consummation by the parties of the tender
offer, the Merger and the other transactions, (ii) the
taking of all steps as may be necessary to obtain an approval or
waiver from, or to avoid an action or proceeding by, a
governmental authority, (iii) the obtaining of all
necessary consents from third parties, (iv) contesting and
resisting of any action, including any administrative or
judicial action, and seeking to have vacated, lifted, reversed
or overturned, any judgment (whether temporary, preliminary or
permanent) that restricts, prevents or prohibits the
consummation of the tender
58
offer, the Merger or the other transactions and (v) the
execution and delivery of any additional instruments necessary
to consummate the transactions and to fully carry out the
purposes of the Merger Agreement.
Directors
The Merger Agreement requires that until the effective time of
the Merger, our board of directors maintain at least three
independent directors.
Indemnification
and Insurance of Our Directors and Officers
In the Merger Agreement, CryoLife and Merger Sub have agreed
that the articles of incorporation and bylaws of the surviving
corporation in the Merger will contain provisions no less
favorable with respect to indemnification and exculpation from
liabilities of the present and former directors, officers and
employees of Cardiogenesis than those in effect as of the date
of the Merger Agreement.
The Merger Agreement further provides that Cardiogenesis shall
maintain its officers and directors liability
insurance policies, in effect on the date of the Merger
Agreement, but only to the extent related to actions or
omissions prior to the effective time of the Merger.
Cardiogenesis may cause coverage to be extended by obtaining a
six-year tail policy on terms and conditions no less
advantageous than Cardiogenesis current insurance to
satisfy this obligation. Under the terms of the Merger
Agreement, such insurance coverage is required to be maintained
only to the extent that the coverage can be maintained at an
aggregate cost of not greater than 150 percent of the
current annual premium for Cardiogenesis directors
and officers liability insurance policies.
Conditions
to the Merger
The obligations of the parties to complete the Merger are
subject to the satisfaction or waiver of the following mutual
conditions:
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the valid tender of no more than 49.9% of the issued and
outstanding shares of our common stock prior to the expiration
date of the tender offer made by Merger Sub, we refer to this
threshold as the minimum condition;
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the Merger Agreement must have been approved and adopted by the
affirmative vote of at least a majority of the votes entitled to
be cast by the holders of the outstanding shares of our common
stock;
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no judgment, ruling, order, writ, injunction or decree issued by
a court of competent jurisdiction or any statute, law,
ordinance, rule or regulation or other legal restraint or
prohibition of any governmental authority shall be in effect
that would make the Merger illegal or otherwise prevent the
consummation thereof provided that the party seeking to assert
this condition shall have used those efforts required under the
Merger Agreement to resist, lift or resolve such judgment,
ruling, order, writ, injunction or decree, statute, law,
ordinance, rule or regulation or other legal restraint or
prohibition; and
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no temporary restraining order, preliminary or permanent
injunction or other judgment or order issued by any court or
agency of competent jurisdiction or other law, rule, legal
restraint or prohibition is in effect preventing, restraining or
rendering illegal the consummation of the Merger.
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Modification
or Amendment
The Merger Agreement may be amended by the parties, by an
instrument in writing signed on behalf of each of the parties,
at any time (subject, in the case of Cardiogenesis, to an
amendment requiring the approval of the Independent Directors
(as defined in the Merger Agreement)) before or after approval
of the Merger Agreement and the transactions by
Cardiogenesis board of directors, but after adoption of
the Merger Agreement by Cardiogenesis shareholders, no amendment
may be made for which the CGCL requires the further approval of
Cardiogenesis shareholders without such further approval.
Support
Agreement
In order to induce CryoLife to enter into the Merger Agreement,
Paul McCormick, the Executive Chairman of Cardiogenesis, Richard
P. Lanigan, the Executive Vice President, Marketing of
Cardiogenesis, and William R.
59
Abbott, the Senior Vice President, Chief Financial Officer,
Secretary and Treasurer of Cardiogenesis, and each member of our
board of directors (holding an aggregate of approximately 2.7%
of the outstanding shares of Cardiogenesis common stock as of
April 5, 2011) entered into the Support Agreement with
CryoLife.
Pursuant to the Support Agreement, such persons have agreed, in
their capacity as shareholders, to tender into the tender offer,
but only if requested in writing by CryoLife, prior to the
termination date of the Support Agreement and except as
otherwise described below, their shares of Cardiogenesis common
stock (including any shares obtained upon any exercise of
options). As of the Acceptance Date, CryoLife has not requested
that such persons tender their shares of our common stock
(including shares obtained upon exercise of options) and none of
such persons has tendered their shares of our common stock
(including shares obtained upon exercise of options).
Also pursuant to the Support Agreement, such persons have
agreed, in their capacity as shareholders, to vote such shares
at any meeting of the shareholders of Cardiogenesis or in
connection with any written consent of the shareholders of
Cardiogenesis (including the Special Meeting):
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in favor of the Merger, the execution and delivery by
Cardiogenesis of the Merger Agreement, the adoption and approval
of the Merger Agreement and the terms thereof and each of the
other matters necessary for consummation of the Merger and the
other transactions contemplated by the Merger Agreement (whether
or not recommended by our board of directors); and
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against any acquisition proposal, any recapitalization,
reorganization, liquidation, dissolution, amalgamation, merger,
sale of assets or other business combination between
Cardiogenesis and any other person (other than the Merger), any
other action that could reasonably be expected to impede,
interfere with, delay, postpone or adversely affect the Merger
or any of the transactions contemplated by the Merger Agreement
or the Support Agreement or any transaction that results in a
breach in any material respect of any covenant, representation
or warranty or other obligation or agreement of Cardiogenesis or
any of its subsidiaries under the Merger Agreement, and any
change in the present capitalization or dividend policy of
Cardiogenesis or any amendment or other change to
Cardiogenesis articles of incorporation or bylaws, except
if approved by CryoLife.
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Each shareholder who is party to the Support Agreement also
agreed that prior to the termination date of the Support
Agreement such shareholder will not:
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take any action or fail to take any action, or cause
Cardiogenesis or any other representative of Cardiogenesis to
take any action or fail to take any action, that would
constitute, or be reasonably likely to result in, a breach of
Cardiogenesis covenants and agreements under the
non-solicitation provisions of the Merger Agreement; or
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(i) tender into any tender or exchange offer (other than
the tender offer), (ii) sell (constructively or otherwise),
transfer, pledge, hypothecate, grant, encumber, assign or
otherwise dispose of, or enter into any contract, option,
agreement or other arrangement or understanding with respect to
the transfer of any of such shareholders shares of
Cardiogenesis stock or beneficial ownership or voting power
thereof or therein (including by operation of law),
(iii) grant any proxies or powers of attorney, deposit any
shares of Cardiogenesis stock into a voting trust or enter into
a voting agreement with respect to any shares of Cardiogenesis
stock or (iv) knowingly take any action that would make any
representation or warranty of such shareholder contained in the
Support Agreement untrue or incorrect, in any material respect,
or have the effect of preventing or disabling such shareholder
from performing its obligations thereunder.
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The Support Agreement requires each signing shareholder, within
five business days of the commencement of the tender offer, to
deliver to the exchange agent properly completed letters of
election and transmittal, stock certificates for any
Cardiogenesis shares held in certificated form, and any other
documents required to be delivered pursuant to the terms of the
tender offer, and to instruct the broker who holds any such
shares to promptly tender the shares pursuant to the tender
offer.
The Support Agreement will terminate automatically upon the
earliest to occur of the following: (i) the effective time
of the Merger, (ii) written notice of termination of the
Support Agreement is delivered by CryoLife to the shareholders,
(iii) August 31, 2011, (iv) the termination of
the Merger Agreement in accordance with its terms,
60
(v) the date CryoLife or Merger Sub terminates, withdraws,
or abandons the tender offer, (vi) the date on which the
tender offer is revised (except in the context of
CryoLifes matching right) for (A) a
reduction of the cash consideration in the Merger,
(B) subject to the terms of the Merger Agreement, a change
in the form of consideration payable in the tender offer,
(C) subject to the terms of the Merger Agreement, a
reduction in the number of shares to be purchased by Merger Sub
in the tender offer, (D) subject to the terms of the Merger
Agreement, a waiver or amendment of the Minimum Condition,
(E) any addition to the conditions to the tender offer or
imposition of any other conditions to the tender offer,
(F) the extension of the expiration date of the tender
offer, except as required or allowed by the Merger Agreement,
(G) other amendment, modification, or addition of a
supplemental condition to the tender offer or any term of the
tender offer in a manner adverse to the holders of the shares of
Cardiogenesis common stock, or, or (vii) the date on which
a third party acquires more than 50% of Cardiogenesis
outstanding voting securities on a fully diluted basis.
61
SECURITIES
OWNERSHIP OF CERTAIN BENEFICIAL OWNERS AND MANAGEMENT
The table below sets forth information known to us regarding the
beneficial ownership of our common stock as of May 4, 2011, the
Record Date, by each of the following:
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each person known to us to be the beneficial owner of more than
5% of our outstanding common stock;
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each named executive officer;
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each of our directors; and
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all executive officers and directors as a group.
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Shares of Common Stock
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Beneficially Owned(1)
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Percentage
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Name and Address of Beneficial Owner(2)
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Number
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Ownership(3)
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5% Shareholders:
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CryoLife, Inc.(4)
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23,221,166
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49.9
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%
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Non-Employee Directors:
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Raymond W. Cohen(5)
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65,000
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*
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Ann T. Sabahat(6)
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122,500
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*
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Marvin J. Slepian, M.D.(7)
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252,500
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*
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Gregory D. Waller(8)
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130,000
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*
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Named Executive Officers:
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Paul J. McCormick(9)
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1,158,926
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2.5
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%
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Richard P. Lanigan(10)
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1,096,973
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2.3
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%
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William R. Abbott(11)
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402,149
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*
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All directors and executive officers as a group
(7 persons)(12)
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3,228,048
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6.6
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%
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* |
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Less than 1%. |
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(1) |
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Except as otherwise indicated and subject to applicable
community property and similar laws, the table assumes that each
named owner has the sole voting and investment power with
respect to such owners shares (other than shares subject
to options). Shares of our common stock subject to options
currently exercisable or exercisable within 60 days of
May 4, 2011 are deemed outstanding for purposes of
computing the beneficial ownership by the person holding such
options, but are not deemed outstanding for purposes of
computing the percentage beneficially owned by any other person. |
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(2) |
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Unless otherwise indicated, the principal address of each of the
shareholders above is Cardiogenesis Corporation, 11 Musick,
Irvine, California, 92618. |
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(3) |
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Percentage ownership is based on 46,564,910 shares of our
common stock outstanding as of March 25, 2011. |
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(4) |
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This figure represents the shares beneficially owned by
CryoLife, including 23,221,166 shares owned by Merger Sub
in connection with the tender offer. The business address of
CryoLife is 1655 Roberts Boulevard, NW, Kennesaw, Georgia 30144. |
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(5) |
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Consists of shares of our common stock subject to stock options
that are exercisable within 60 days of May 4, 2011. |
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(6) |
|
Consists of shares of our common stock subject to stock options
that are exercisable within 60 days of May 4, 2011. |
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(7) |
|
Consists of shares of our common stock subject to stock options
that are exercisable within 60 days of May 4, 2011. |
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(8) |
|
Consists of shares of our common stock subject to stock options
that are exercisable within 60 days of May 4, 2011. |
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(9) |
|
Includes 180,000 shares of our common stock subject to
stock options that are exercisable within 60 days of
May 4, 2011. |
62
|
|
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(10) |
|
Includes 865,078 shares of our common stock subject to
stock options that are exercisable within 60 days of
May 4, 2011. |
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(11) |
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Includes 336,111 shares of our common stock subject to
stock options that are exercisable within 60 days of
May 4, 2011. |
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(12) |
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Represents shares of our common stock beneficially owned by all
directors, named executive officers, and our other executive
officers as of May 4, 2011, as a group. Includes
1,951,189 shares of our common stock subject to options
that are exercisable within 60 days of May 4, 2011. |
63
MARKET
PRICE OF CARDIOGENESIS COMMON SHARES
Shares of our common stock are currently quoted on the OTCQB
under the symbol CGCP.PK. The following table sets
forth the high and low sales prices per common share quoted on
the OTCQB for the periods indicated.
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Price Range of
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|
|
Common Stock
|
2009
|
|
High
|
|
Low
|
|
First Quarter
|
|
$
|
0.34
|
|
|
$
|
0.08
|
|
Second Quarter
|
|
$
|
0.24
|
|
|
$
|
0.16
|
|
Third Quarter
|
|
$
|
0.22
|
|
|
$
|
0.15
|
|
Fourth Quarter
|
|
$
|
0.25
|
|
|
$
|
0.13
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
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|
2010
|
|
High
|
|
Low
|
|
First Quarter
|
|
$
|
0.38
|
|
|
$
|
0.19
|
|
Second Quarter
|
|
$
|
0.41
|
|
|
$
|
0.21
|
|
Third Quarter
|
|
$
|
0.38
|
|
|
$
|
0.20
|
|
Fourth quarter
|
|
$
|
0.28
|
|
|
$
|
0.22
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
2011
|
|
High
|
|
Low
|
|
First Quarter
|
|
$
|
0.45
|
|
|
$
|
0.24
|
|
Second Quarter
|
|
$
|
0.48
|
|
|
$
|
0.45
|
(1)
|
Dividends
Cardiogenesis has never paid
dividends. Pursuant to the Merger Agreement, we
are prohibited from declaring any dividends following execution
of the Merger Agreement on March 28, 2011. Accordingly,
we do not expect to declare or pay any dividends prior to the
Merger.
On March 28, 2011, the last full trading day prior to the
public announcement of the terms of the tender offer and the
Merger, the reported closing sales price per common share on the
OTCQB was $0.32 per share. The $0.457 per share to be paid for
each Cardiogenesis common share in the Merger represents a
premium of approximately 42.8% to the closing price on
March 28, 2011. You are encouraged to obtain current market
quotations for the shares of our common stock in connection with
voting your shares.
As of May 4, 2011, there were approximately 191 record holders
of shares of our common stock.
64
OTHER
MATTERS
As of the date of this proxy statement, our board of directors
knows of no other matters which may be presented for
consideration at the Special Meeting. However, if any other
matter is presented properly for consideration and action at the
Special Meeting or any adjournment or postponement thereof, it
is intended that the proxies will be voted with respect thereto
in accordance with the best judgment and in the discretion of
the proxy holders.
WHERE YOU
CAN FIND MORE INFORMATION
We file annual, quarterly and current reports, proxy statements
and other information with the SEC. You may read and copy this
information at the SECs public reference room,
Room 1580, 100 F Street, N.E.,
Washington, D.C. 20549. You may obtain information on the
operation of the Public Reference Room by calling the SEC at
1-800-SEC-0330.
The SEC also maintains an Internet website, located at
www.sec.gov, that contains reports, proxy statements and other
information regarding companies and individuals that file
electronically with the SEC.
Statements contained in this proxy statement, or in any document
incorporated by reference in this proxy statement regarding the
contents of any contract or other document, are not necessarily
complete and each such statement is qualified in its entirety by
reference to that contract or other document filed as an exhibit
with the SEC. The SEC allows us to incorporate by
reference into this proxy statement documents we file with
the SEC. This means that we can disclose important information
to you by referring you to those documents. The information
incorporated by reference is considered to be a part of this
proxy statement, and later information that we file with the SEC
will update and supersede that information. We incorporate by
reference the documents listed below and any documents filed by
us pursuant to Section 13(a), 13(c), 14 or 15(d) of the
Exchange Act after the date of this proxy statement and before
the date of the Special Meeting.
|
|
|
|
|
Annual Report on
Form 10-K
for the fiscal year ended December 31, 2010 (filed with the
SEC on March 21, 2011);
|
|
|
|
Form 10-K/A
(filed with the SEC on April 29, 2011); and
|
|
|
|
Current Reports on
Form 8-K
(filed with the SEC on March 29, 2011, April 15, 2011,
and April 18, 2011).
|
Notwithstanding the foregoing, information furnished under
Items 2.02 and 7.01 of any Current Report on
Form 8-K,
including the related exhibits, is not incorporated by reference
into this proxy statement.
Any person, including any beneficial owner, to whom this proxy
statement is delivered may request copies of proxy statements
and any of the documents incorporated by reference in this
document or other information concerning us, without charge, by
written or telephonic request directed to Investor Relations
Department, Cardiogenesis Corporation, 11 Musick, Irvine,
California 92618, telephone number
(949) 420-1800
or from the SEC through the SEC website at the address provided
above. Documents incorporated by reference are available without
charge, excluding any exhibits to those documents unless the
exhibit is specifically incorporated by reference into those
documents.
You should rely only on the information contained in this
proxy statement. We have not authorized anyone to provide you
with information that is different from what is contained in
this proxy statement. Therefore, if anyone does give you
information of this sort, you should not rely on it. If you are
in a jurisdiction where the solicitation of proxies is unlawful,
or if you are a person to whom it is unlawful to direct these
types of activities, then the offer presented in this proxy
statement does not extend to you. You should not assume that the
information contained in this proxy statement is accurate as of
any date other than the date of this proxy statement, unless the
information specifically indicates that another date applies.
The mailing of this proxy statement to our shareholders does not
create any implication to the contrary.
65
Annex A
EXECUTION
VERSION
AMENDED
AND RESTATED
AGREEMENT AND PLAN OF MERGER
among
CRYOLIFE, INC.,
CL FALCON, INC.
and
CARDIOGENESIS CORPORATION
Dated as of April 14, 2011
A-1
TABLE OF
CONTENTS
|
|
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Page
|
|
ARTICLE I THE OFFER
|
|
|
A-10
|
|
Section 1.1 The Offer
|
|
|
A-10
|
|
Section 1.2 Offer Documents
|
|
|
A-11
|
|
Section 1.3 Company Actions
|
|
|
A-11
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|
Section 1.4 Directors
|
|
|
A-12
|
|
Section 1.5 [Intentionally Omitted]
|
|
|
A-13
|
|
Section 1.6 [Intentionally Omitted]
|
|
|
A-13
|
|
ARTICLE II THE MERGER
|
|
|
A-13
|
|
Section 2.1 The Merger
|
|
|
A-13
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|
Section 2.2 Closing
|
|
|
A-13
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|
Section 2.3 Effective Time
|
|
|
A-13
|
|
Section 2.4 Effects of the Merger
|
|
|
A-14
|
|
Section 2.5 Articles of Incorporation; Bylaws
|
|
|
A-14
|
|
Section 2.6 Directors
|
|
|
A-14
|
|
Section 2.7 Officers
|
|
|
A-14
|
|
ARTICLE III EFFECT ON THE CAPITAL STOCK OF THE CONSTITUENT
CORPORATIONS; EXCHANGE OF CERTIFICATES
|
|
|
A-14
|
|
Section 3.1 Conversion of Capital Stock
|
|
|
A-14
|
|
Section 3.2 Treatment of Warrants, Options and Other
Equity-Based Awards
|
|
|
A-15
|
|
Section 3.3 Exchange and Payment
|
|
|
A-15
|
|
Section 3.4 Withholding Rights
|
|
|
A-17
|
|
Section 3.5 Dissenting Shares
|
|
|
A-17
|
|
ARTICLE IV REPRESENTATIONS AND WARRANTIES OF THE COMPANY
|
|
|
A-17
|
|
Section 4.1 Organization, Standing and Power
|
|
|
A-18
|
|
Section 4.2 Capital Stock
|
|
|
A-19
|
|
Section 4.3 Subsidiaries
|
|
|
A-20
|
|
Section 4.4 Authority
|
|
|
A-20
|
|
Section 4.5 No Conflict; Consents and Approvals
|
|
|
A-20
|
|
Section 4.6 SEC Reports; Financial Statements
|
|
|
A-21
|
|
Section 4.7 No Undisclosed Liabilities
|
|
|
A-23
|
|
Section 4.8 Certain Information
|
|
|
A-23
|
|
Section 4.9 Absence of Certain Changes or Events
|
|
|
A-23
|
|
Section 4.10 Litigation
|
|
|
A-23
|
|
Section 4.11 Compliance with Laws and Permits
|
|
|
A-24
|
|
Section 4.12 Benefit Plans
|
|
|
A-26
|
|
Section 4.13 Labor and Employment Matters
|
|
|
A-27
|
|
Section 4.14 Environmental Matters
|
|
|
A-28
|
|
Section 4.15 Taxes
|
|
|
A-29
|
|
Section 4.16 Contracts
|
|
|
A-31
|
|
Section 4.17 Insurance
|
|
|
A-32
|
|
Section 4.18 Properties
|
|
|
A-32
|
|
Section 4.19 Intellectual Property
|
|
|
A-33
|
|
Section 4.20 Products
|
|
|
A-35
|
|
A-2
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Page
|
|
Section 4.21 Accounts Receivable
|
|
|
A-35
|
|
Section 4.22 Inventories
|
|
|
A-36
|
|
Section 4.23 State Takeover Statutes
|
|
|
A-36
|
|
Section 4.24 No Rights Plan
|
|
|
A-36
|
|
Section 4.25 Related Party Transactions
|
|
|
A-36
|
|
Section 4.26 Brokers
|
|
|
A-36
|
|
Section 4.27 Opinion of Financial Advisor
|
|
|
A-36
|
|
Section 4.28 Exclusivity of Representations and Warranties
|
|
|
A-37
|
|
ARTICLE V REPRESENTATIONS AND WARRANTIES OF PARENT AND
MERGER SUB
|
|
|
A-37
|
|
Section 5.1 Organization, Standing and Power
|
|
|
A-37
|
|
Section 5.2 Authority
|
|
|
A-37
|
|
Section 5.3 No Conflict; Consents and Approvals
|
|
|
A-38
|
|
Section 5.4 Certain Information
|
|
|
A-38
|
|
Section 5.5 Merger Sub
|
|
|
A-38
|
|
Section 5.6 Financing
|
|
|
A-39
|
|
Section 5.7 Vote/Approval Required
|
|
|
A-39
|
|
Section 5.8 Ownership of Shares
|
|
|
A-39
|
|
Section 5.9 Brokers
|
|
|
A-39
|
|
Section 5.10 Exclusivity of Representations and Warranties
|
|
|
A-39
|
|
ARTICLE VI COVENANTS
|
|
|
A-39
|
|
Section 6.1 Conduct of Business
|
|
|
A-39
|
|
Section 6.2 No Solicitation
|
|
|
A-43
|
|
Section 6.3 Preparation of Proxy Statement; Stockholders
Meeting
|
|
|
A-46
|
|
Section 6.4 Access to Information; Confidentiality
|
|
|
A-47
|
|
Section 6.5 Reasonable Best Efforts
|
|
|
A-48
|
|
Section 6.6 Takeover Laws
|
|
|
A-49
|
|
Section 6.7 Notification of Certain Matters
|
|
|
A-49
|
|
Section 6.8 Indemnification, Exculpation and Insurance
|
|
|
A-49
|
|
Section 6.9 Public Announcements
|
|
|
A-50
|
|
Section 6.10 Section 16 Matters
|
|
|
A-51
|
|
Section 6.11 Exchange Act Delisting
|
|
|
A-51
|
|
Section 6.12
Rule 14d-10
Matters
|
|
|
A-51
|
|
Section 6.13 Further Assurances
|
|
|
A-51
|
|
ARTICLE VII CONDITIONS PRECEDENT
|
|
|
A-52
|
|
Section 7.1 Conditions to Each Partys Obligation to Effect
the Merger
|
|
|
A-52
|
|
ARTICLE VIII TERMINATION, AMENDMENT AND WAIVER
|
|
|
A-52
|
|
Section 8.1 Termination
|
|
|
A-52
|
|
Section 8.2 Effect of Termination
|
|
|
A-53
|
|
Section 8.3 Fees and Expenses
|
|
|
A-53
|
|
Section 8.4 Amendment or Supplement
|
|
|
A-54
|
|
Section 8.5 Extension of Time; Waiver
|
|
|
A-55
|
|
Section 8.6 Effect of Termination on Offer
|
|
|
A-55
|
|
A-3
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Page
|
|
ARTICLE IX GENERAL PROVISIONS
|
|
|
A-55
|
|
Section 9.1 Nonsurvival of Representations and Warranties
|
|
|
A-55
|
|
Section 9.2 Notices
|
|
|
A-55
|
|
Section 9.3 Certain Definitions
|
|
|
A-56
|
|
Section 9.4 Interpretation
|
|
|
A-57
|
|
Section 9.5 Entire Agreement
|
|
|
A-57
|
|
Section 9.6 No Third Party Beneficiaries
|
|
|
A-57
|
|
Section 9.7 Governing Law
|
|
|
A-57
|
|
Section 9.8 Submission to Jurisdiction
|
|
|
A-57
|
|
Section 9.9 Assignment; Successors
|
|
|
A-58
|
|
Section 9.10 Enforcement
|
|
|
A-58
|
|
Section 9.11 Currency
|
|
|
A-58
|
|
Section 9.12 Severability
|
|
|
A-58
|
|
Section 9.13 Waiver of Jury Trial
|
|
|
A-58
|
|
Section 9.14 Counterparts
|
|
|
A-58
|
|
Section 9.15 Facsimile Signature
|
|
|
A-59
|
|
Section 9.16 No Presumption Against Drafting Party
|
|
|
A-59
|
|
Section 9.17 Performance Guaranty
|
|
|
A-59
|
|
Section 9.18 Original Agreement Superseded
|
|
|
A-59
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Exhibit A
|
|
Form of Support Agreement
|
|
|
A-62
|
|
Exhibit B
|
|
Conditions to the Offer
|
|
|
A-73
|
|
Exhibit C
|
|
Articles of Incorporation
|
|
|
A-75
|
|
Exhibit D
|
|
Bylaws
|
|
|
A-78
|
|
A-4
INDEX OF
DEFINED TERMS
|
|
|
Definition
|
|
Location
|
|
401(k) Plan
|
|
6.1(a)(ii)(G)
|
510(k)s
|
|
4.11(c)
|
Acceptance Date
|
|
1.1(e)
|
Acceptable Confidentiality Agreement
|
|
6.2(h)(i)
|
Acquisition Proposal
|
|
6.2(h)(ii)
|
Action
|
|
4.10
|
Adverse Recommendation Change
|
|
6.2(e)
|
Affiliate
|
|
9.3(a)
|
Affiliate Transaction
|
|
4.25
|
Agreement
|
|
Preamble
|
Arrangements
|
|
6.12
|
Board Observer
|
|
1.4(b)
|
Book-Entry Shares
|
|
3.3(b)
|
Business Day
|
|
9.3(b)
|
California Secretary of State
|
|
2.3
|
Certificate of Merger
|
|
2.3
|
Certificates
|
|
3.3(b)
|
CGCL
|
|
2.1
|
Change of Recommendation
|
|
6.2(f)
|
Closing
|
|
2.2
|
Closing Date
|
|
2.2
|
Code
|
|
3.4
|
Company
|
|
Preamble
|
Company Acquisition Agreement
|
|
6.2(e)
|
Company Benefit Agreement
|
|
9.3(c)
|
Company Board
|
|
Recitals
|
Company Board Recommendation
|
|
6.2(e)
|
Company Bylaws
|
|
4.1(b)
|
Company Charter
|
|
4.1(b)
|
Company Copyright
|
|
4.19(b)
|
Company Disclosure Letter
|
|
Article IV
|
Company IP
|
|
4.19(b)
|
Company Marks
|
|
4.19(b)
|
Company Patents
|
|
4.19(b)
|
Company Plans
|
|
4.12(a)
|
Company Preferred Stock
|
|
4.2(a)
|
Company SEC Documents
|
|
4.6(a)
|
Company Stock Awards
|
|
4.2(c)
|
Company Stock Option
|
|
3.2(b)
|
Company Stock Plans
|
|
3.2(b)
|
Company Stockholder Approval
|
|
4.4(a)
|
Company Stockholders Meeting
|
|
6.3(b)
|
Compensation Committee
|
|
6.12
|
A-5
|
|
|
Definition
|
|
Location
|
|
Confidentiality Agreement
|
|
6.4
|
Conflict Minerals
|
|
4.14(j)
|
Contract
|
|
4.5(a)
|
Control
|
|
9.3(d)
|
Copyrights
|
|
4.19(a)
|
Covered Securityholders
|
|
6.12
|
Dissenting Shares
|
|
3.5
|
Effective Time
|
|
2.3
|
Employment Compensation Agreement
|
|
6.12
|
Environmental Law
|
|
4.14(a)
|
Environmental Permit
|
|
4.14(a)
|
ERISA
|
|
4.12(a)
|
ERISA Affiliate
|
|
4.12(c)
|
ERISA Affiliate Plan
|
|
4.12(c)
|
ESPP
|
|
3.2(e)
|
Exchange Act
|
|
1.1(a)
|
Exchange Fund
|
|
3.3(a)
|
Excluded Party
|
|
6.2(h)(iii)
|
Expiration Date
|
|
1.1(c)
|
FDA
|
|
4.11(b)
|
FDA Laws
|
|
4.11(b)
|
Financial Advisor
|
|
4.26
|
Florida Act
|
|
2.1
|
Florida Certificate of Merger
|
|
2.3
|
Florida Secretary of State
|
|
2.3
|
Foreign Drug Laws
|
|
4.11(b)
|
GAAP
|
|
4.6(b)
|
Governmental Entity
|
|
4.5(b)
|
Hazardous Substances
|
|
4.14(a)
|
Indebtedness
|
|
6.1(a)(i)(G)
|
Independent Directors
|
|
1.4(d)
|
Initial Expiration Date
|
|
1.1(c)
|
Intellectual Property
|
|
4.19(a)
|
IRS
|
|
4.12(a)
|
Knowledge
|
|
9.3(e)
|
Law
|
|
4.5(a)
|
Leased Real Property
|
|
4.18(b)
|
Liability
|
|
9.3(f)
|
Liens
|
|
4.2(b)
|
Marks
|
|
4.19(a)
|
Material
|
|
9.3(g)
|
Material Adverse Effect
|
|
4.1(a)
|
Material Contracts
|
|
4.16(a)
|
Merger
|
|
Recitals
|
A-6
|
|
|
Definition
|
|
Location
|
|
Merger Agreement
|
|
Exhibit B
|
Merger Consideration
|
|
3.1(a)
|
Merger Sub
|
|
Preamble
|
Minimum Condition
|
|
Exhibit B
|
No-Shop Period Start Date
|
|
6.2(b)
|
NYSE
|
|
1.1(c)(ii)
|
OFAC
|
|
4.11(f)
|
Offer
|
|
Recitals
|
Offer Amount
|
|
1.1(e)
|
Offer Conditions
|
|
1.1(b)
|
Offer Consideration
|
|
1.1(a)
|
Offer Documents
|
|
1.2
|
Original Agreement
|
|
Recitals
|
Original Offer
|
|
Recitals
|
Outside Date
|
|
1.1(c)(i)(B)
|
Owned Real Property
|
|
4.18(b)
|
Parent
|
|
Preamble
|
Parent Material Adverse Effect
|
|
5.1
|
Patents
|
|
4.19(a)
|
Paying Agent
|
|
3.3(a)
|
PBGC
|
|
4.12(c)
|
Permits
|
|
4.11(a)
|
Permitted Liens
|
|
4.18(a)
|
Person
|
|
9.3(h)
|
PMAs
|
|
4.11(c)
|
Proper Delivery
|
|
3.3(b)
|
Proxy Statement
|
|
4.8
|
Related Party
|
|
4.25
|
Representatives
|
|
6.2(a)
|
Restricted Stock
|
|
3.2(c)
|
Rights Plan
|
|
4.24
|
Sarbanes-Oxley Act
|
|
4.6(a)
|
Schedule 14D-9
|
|
1.3(b)
|
Schedule TO
|
|
1.2
|
Securities Act
|
|
4.5(b)
|
SEC
|
|
1.1(c)(ii)
|
Shares
|
|
Recitals
|
SSA
|
|
4.11(a)
|
Stockholders
|
|
9.3(i)
|
Subsidiary
|
|
9.3(j)
|
Superior Proposal
|
|
6.2(h)(iv)
|
Support Agreement
|
|
Recitals
|
Surviving Corporation
|
|
2.1
|
Takeover Laws
|
|
4.23
|
A-7
|
|
|
Definition
|
|
Location
|
|
Tax
|
|
9.3(k)
|
Tax Proceedings
|
|
4.15(e)
|
Tax Return
|
|
9.3(l)
|
Termination Fee
|
|
8.3(b)(iii)
|
Trade Secrets
|
|
4.19(a)
|
VEBA
|
|
4.12(e)(iii)
|
Warrant
|
|
3.2(a)
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Warrant Holder
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3.2(a)
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Worker Safety Laws
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4.13(e)
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A-8
AMENDED
AND RESTATED
AGREEMENT AND PLAN OF MERGER
AMENDED AND RESTATED AGREEMENT AND PLAN OF MERGER (this
Agreement), dated as of April 14, 2011,
among CryoLife, Inc., a Florida corporation
(Parent), CL Falcon, Inc., a Florida
corporation and a wholly owned Subsidiary of Parent
(Merger Sub), and Cardiogenesis Corporation,
a California corporation (the Company).
RECITALS
WHEREAS, the parties hereto executed that certain Agreement and
Plan of Merger dated as of March 28, 2011 (the
Original Agreement);
WHEREAS, pursuant to the Original Agreement, Merger Sub would
commence an offer to purchase all of the outstanding shares of
common stock, no par value per share, of the Company
(Shares) for the consideration and on the
terms and subject to the conditions set forth therein (the
Original Offer);
WHEREAS, the parties desire to amend and restate the Original
Agreement in order to modify the terms of the Original Offer
such that Merger Sub would offer to purchase only 49.9% of the
outstanding Shares (the Offer), rather than
all of the outstanding Shares, and make certain other changes
related thereto;
WHEREAS, each Share accepted by Merger Sub in accordance with
the terms of the Offer will be exchanged for the Offer
Consideration, subject to and in accordance with the provisions
set forth herein;
WHEREAS, the parties intend that, following the consummation of
the Offer, Merger Sub shall be merged with and into the Company,
with the Company being the surviving corporation in such merger,
on the terms and subject to the conditions set forth herein (the
Merger), and each Share that is issued and
outstanding immediately prior to the Effective Time (other than
each such Share that is owned by Parent, Merger Sub or any of
their respective wholly owned Subsidiaries immediately prior to
the Effective Time and each Share that is held in the treasury
of the Company or owned by the Company or any of its wholly
owned Subsidiaries immediately prior to the Effective Time and
any Dissenting Shares) will be canceled and converted into the
right to receive the Merger Consideration, subject to and in
accordance with the provisions set forth herein;
WHEREAS, the Boards of Directors of Parent and Merger Sub have
each (i) unanimously approved this Agreement and the
Original Agreement, (ii) approved the execution, delivery
and performance of this Agreement and the Original Agreement and
(iii) declared it advisable for Parent and Merger Sub,
respectively, to enter into this Agreement and the Original
Agreement;
WHEREAS, the Board of Directors of the Company (the
Company Board) has (i) determined that
it is in the best interests of the Company and its Stockholders,
and declared it advisable, to enter into this Agreement and the
Original Agreement, (ii) approved the execution, delivery
and performance by the Company of this Agreement and the
Original Agreement and the consummation of the transactions
contemplated thereby, including the Offer and the Merger and
(iii) resolved and agreed, subject to the terms and
conditions set forth herein, to recommend that the Stockholders
accept the Offer, tender their Shares pursuant to the Offer,
approve the Merger and adopt this Agreement (if required by
applicable Law);
WHEREAS, concurrently with the execution and delivery of the
Original Agreement, and as a condition and inducement to
Parents willingness to enter into the Original Agreement,
each of the members of the Company Board and the executive
officers of the Company have entered into an agreement in the
form of Exhibit A hereto (the Support
Agreement) pursuant to which each such Person has
agreed, subject to the terms and conditions set forth therein
and herein, among other things, to tender the Shares held by
such Person in the Offer, at Parents direction, and to
vote in favor of, or sign a written consent of the Stockholders
approving, the Merger; and
WHEREAS, Parent, Merger Sub and the Company desire to make
certain representations, warranties, covenants and agreements in
connection with the Offer and the Merger and also to prescribe
certain conditions to the Offer and the Merger as specified
herein.
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AGREEMENT
NOW, THEREFORE, in consideration of the premises, and of the
representations, warranties, covenants and agreements contained
herein, and intending to be legally bound hereby, Parent, Merger
Sub and the Company hereby amend and restate the Original
Agreement in its entirety and for all purposes as follows:
ARTICLE I
THE OFFER
Section 1.1 The Offer.
(a) The parties acknowledge and agree that on April 5,
2011, Merger Sub commenced (within the meaning of
Rule 14d-2
under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended (including
the rules and regulations promulgated thereunder, the
Exchange Act)) the Offer. In the Offer, each
Share accepted by Merger Sub in accordance with the terms and
subject to the conditions of the Offer shall be exchanged for
the right to receive $0.457 in cash, without interest (such
amount for each Share, the Offer
Consideration), subject to the other provisions of
this Section 1.1.
(b) The obligations of Merger Sub, and of Parent to cause
Merger Sub, to accept for payment and pay for any Shares
tendered pursuant to the Offer shall be subject only to
(i) the satisfaction of the Minimum Condition, as defined
on Exhibit B hereto and (ii) the satisfaction
or waiver by Merger Sub of the other conditions set forth in
Exhibit B (such conditions, together with the
Minimum Condition, the Offer Conditions) and
the terms and conditions hereof. Parent and Merger Sub expressly
reserve the right, in their sole discretion, to waive any Offer
Condition or to modify the terms or conditions of the Offer
consistent with the terms of this Agreement, except that,
without the prior written consent of the Company, neither Parent
nor Merger Sub shall, except pursuant to
Section 6.2(e), (A) reduce the Offer
Consideration, (B) change the form of consideration payable
in the Offer, (C) reduce the number of Shares to be
purchased by Merger Sub in the Offer, (D) waive or amend
the Minimum Condition, (E) add to the Offer Conditions or
impose any other conditions to the Offer, (F) extend the
expiration of the Offer except as required or permitted by
Section 1.1(c), (G) otherwise amend, modify or
supplement any Offer Condition or any term of the Offer set
forth in this Agreement in a manner adverse to the holders of
Shares or (H) abandon or terminate the Offer, except as
provided in Article VIII hereof. Notwithstanding the
foregoing, Parent may amend the Offer without violation of the
foregoing limitations and without the prior written consent of
the Company in connection with its match right set
forth in Section 6.2(e) in order to cause the Offer
to comply with its requirements thereunder, provided that
such match
right-to-adjust
shall not apply to Section 1.1(b)(D) and shall apply
to Section 1.1(b)(G) only to the extent that the
revised Offer, taken as a whole (as opposed to any individual
term), has not been revised in a manner adverse to the holders
of Shares.
(c) The Offer shall expire on May 2, 2011 (the
Initial Expiration Date), except as may
otherwise be required by applicable Law; provided,
however, that Merger Sub shall, and Parent shall cause it
to (in each case unless Parent or the Company has terminated
this Agreement pursuant to Article VIII), extend the
Offer (i) if at the Initial Expiration Date or any
subsequent scheduled expiration date of the Offer (together with
the Initial Expiration Date, the Expiration
Date) any of the Offer Conditions shall not have been
satisfied or waived, for one or more successive periods of up to
ten (10) Business Days per extension (or any longer period
as may be reasonably requested by Parent and approved in advance
in writing by the Company) until the earlier to occur of
(A) the date such Offer Conditions are satisfied or waived
or (B) August 31, 2011 (the Outside
Date), or (ii) for any period required by any
rule, regulation, interpretation or position of the Securities
and Exchange Commission (the SEC) or the
staff thereof or the rules of the New York Stock Exchange (the
NYSE) or any applicable Law.
(d) [Intentionally Omitted].
(e) Subject to the terms of the Offer and this Agreement
and the satisfaction or waiver by Merger Sub of all of the Offer
Conditions, Merger Sub will irrevocably accept for payment and
pay for all Shares validly tendered and not validly withdrawn
pursuant to the Offer promptly after the expiration date thereof
(as the same may be extended or required to be extended, in each
case in accordance with the terms of Section 1.1)
(the date on which the first of such Shares are accepted for
payment under the Offer, the Acceptance
Date); provided, however, that in the
event the number of Shares validly tendered and not validly
withdrawn pursuant to the Offer exceeds an amount equal to
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forty-nine and nine-tenths percent (49.9%) of the Shares then
outstanding (the Offer Amount), Merger Sub
will purchase, on a pro rata basis based on the Shares actually
deposited in the Offer by each holder of any such Shares, Shares
representing the Offer Amount; provided, further,
that notwithstanding any other provision of this Agreement, in
the event Merger Sub purchases a number of Shares equal to the
Offer Amount pursuant to and in accordance with this
Section 1.1(e), then at all times prior to the
termination of this Agreement, the Company shall take no action
whatsoever (including the redemption of any Shares) without the
prior written consent of Parent and Merger Sub that would have
the effect of increasing the percentage of direct or indirect
ownership of Shares by Parent and its controlled Affiliates,
including Merger Sub, in excess of forty-nine and nine-tenths
percent (49.9%).
(f) Parent shall cause to be provided to Merger Sub all of
the funds necessary to purchase any Shares that Merger Sub
becomes obligated to purchase pursuant to the Offer, and shall
cause Merger Sub to perform, on a timely basis, all of Merger
Subs obligations under this Agreement with respect to
consummation of the Offer and the Merger and payment or issuance
of consideration contemplated by this Agreement in respect
thereof.
Section 1.2 Offer Documents. On April 5, 2011,
Parent and Merger Sub filed with the SEC a Tender Offer
Statement on Schedule TO
(Schedule TO) with respect to the Offer,
which contained an offer to purchase and a related letter of
transmittal and other ancillary documents (such Schedule TO
and the documents included therein pursuant to which the Offer
was made, together with any supplements or amendments thereto,
the Offer Documents). The Company shall
promptly furnish to Parent and Merger Sub all information
concerning the Company required by the Exchange Act to be set
forth in the Offer Documents. Each of Parent, Merger Sub and the
Company shall promptly correct any information supplied by it
for inclusion or incorporation by reference in the Offer
Documents if and to the extent that such information shall have
become false or misleading in any material respect, and each of
Parent and Merger Sub shall take all steps necessary to amend or
supplement the Offer Documents and to cause the Offer Documents
as so amended or supplemented to be filed with the SEC and
disseminated to the Stockholders, in each case as and to the
extent required by applicable Laws. Parent and Merger Sub shall
promptly notify the Company upon the receipt of any comments
from the SEC, or any request from the SEC for amendments or
supplements, to the Offer Documents, and shall provide the
Company with copies of all correspondence between them and their
Representatives, on the one hand, and the SEC, on the other
hand, and shall use its reasonable best efforts to give the
Company the opportunity to participate in any substantive
telephonic communications with the staff of the SEC related
thereto. Prior to the filing of any amendment or supplement to
the Offer Documents with the SEC or dissemination thereof to the
shareholders of the Company, or responding to any comments of
the SEC with respect to the Offer Documents, Parent and Merger
Sub shall provide the Company a reasonable opportunity to review
and comment on such Offer Documents or response (including the
proposed final version thereof), and Parent and Merger Sub shall
give reasonable consideration to any such comments.
Section 1.3 Company Actions.
(a) The Company hereby consents to the Offer and to the
inclusion in the Offer Documents of the recommendation of the
Company Board described in Section 4.4(b) (as long
as no Adverse Recommendation Change has occurred prior to the
filing of such Offer Document and provided that in the event of
an Adverse Recommendation Change, Parent and Merger Sub shall
file such amendment to the Offer Documents as may be necessary
so that any of such Offer Documents would not include any
misstatement of a material fact or omit to state any material
fact necessary to make the statements therein, in light of the
circumstances under which they were made, not misleading).
(b) The parties acknowledge and agree that on April 5,
2011, the Company filed with the SEC a
Solicitation/Recommendation Statement on
Schedule 14D-9
(such
Schedule 14D-9,
together with any amendments or supplements thereto, the
Schedule 14D-9)
containing, subject to the Company Boards right to make an
Adverse Recommendation Change in accordance with
Section 6.2(e), the recommendation of the Company
Board described in Section 4.4(b), and caused the
Schedule 14D-9
to be disseminated to the Stockholders (concurrently with and in
the same mailing envelope as the Offer Documents) as required by
Rule 14d-9
under the Exchange Act. Each of the Company, Parent and Merger
Sub agrees promptly to correct any information provided by it
for use in the
Schedule 14D-9
if and to the extent that such information shall have become
false or misleading in any material respect, and the Company
further agrees to take all steps necessary to cause the
Schedule 14D-9
as so corrected to be filed with the SEC and to be disseminated
to the Stockholders, in each case, as and to the extent required
by
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applicable federal securities Laws. As long as no Adverse
Recommendation Change has occurred in accordance with
Section 6.2(e) prior to the filing of any amendment
to such
Schedule 14D-9,
Parent, Merger Sub and their counsel shall be given a reasonable
opportunity to review and comment on such amendment to
Schedule 14D-9
prior to the filing thereof with the SEC and the Company shall
give due consideration to all reasonable additions, deletions or
changes suggested thereto by Parent, Merger Sub and their
counsel. In addition, the Company agrees to provide Parent,
Merger Sub and their counsel any comments, whether written or
oral, that the Company or its counsel may receive from the SEC
or its staff with respect to the
Schedule 14D-9
promptly after the receipt of such comments, and any written or
oral responses thereto. Parent, Merger Sub and their counsel
shall be given a reasonable opportunity to review and comment
upon such responses and the Company shall give due consideration
to all reasonable additions, deletions or changes suggested
thereto by Parent, Merger Sub and their counsel.
(c) In connection with the Offer, the Company shall cause
its transfer agent promptly to furnish Parent and Merger Sub
with mailing labels, security position listings, any
non-objecting beneficial owner lists and any available listings
or computer files containing the names and addresses of the
record holders of Shares as of the most recent practicable date
and shall furnish Parent and Merger Sub with such additional
available information (including, but not limited to, periodic
updates of such information) and such other assistance as
Parent, Merger Sub or their agents may reasonably request in
communicating the Offer to the record and beneficial holders of
Shares. Except for such steps as are necessary to disseminate
the Offer Documents and any other documents necessary to
consummate the Offer and the Merger, Parent and Merger Sub shall
hold in confidence, subject to the terms of the Confidentiality
Agreement except as further limited herein, the information
contained in any such labels, listings and files, shall use such
information only in connection with the Offer and the Merger and
if this Agreement shall be terminated shall promptly deliver to
the Company or order the destruction of the original and all
copies of such information.
Section 1.4 Directors.
(a) Subject to compliance with applicable Law and the
Company Charter and Company Bylaws, promptly upon the payment by
Merger Sub for Shares pursuant to the consummation of the Offer,
and from time to time thereafter, Parent shall be entitled to
designate such number of directors, rounded up to the next whole
number, on the Company Board as is equal to the product of the
total number of directors on the Company Board (including the
directors elected pursuant to this sentence) multiplied by the
percentage that the aggregate number of Shares beneficially
owned by Parent or its Affiliates at such time (including Shares
so accepted for payment) bears to the total number of Shares
then outstanding on a fully-diluted basis. In furtherance
thereof, promptly upon the payment by Merger Sub for Shares
pursuant to the Offer the Company shall, upon request of Parent,
promptly take all actions necessary to cause Parents
designees to be so elected or appointed, including, without
limitation, increasing the size of its Board of Directors
and/or
seeking the resignations of one or more incumbent directors. At
such time, the Company shall, upon request of Parent, also
promptly take all actions necessary to cause individuals
designated by Parent to constitute at least the same percentage
(rounded up to the next whole number) as is on the Company Board
of (i) each committee of the Company Board, (ii) each
board of directors (or similar body) of each Subsidiary of the
Company and (iii) each committee (or similar body) of each
such board.
(b) Subject to compliance with applicable Law and the
Company Charter and Company Bylaws, promptly upon the payment by
Merger Sub for Shares pursuant to the consummation of the Offer,
and from time to time thereafter, Parent shall be entitled to
designate up to two individuals (each, a Board
Observer) to attend all meetings of the Company Board
and all committees thereof (whether in person, telephonic or
other). Each Board Observer will be provided, concurrently with
the members of the Company Board and in the same manner, all
notices, information and materials provided to the Company Board.
(c) The Companys obligations to appoint Parents
designees to the Company Board pursuant to
Section 1.4(a) shall be subject to
Section 14(f) of the Exchange Act and
Rule 14f-1
thereunder. Subject to applicable Law, the Company shall
promptly take all actions required pursuant to
Section 14(f) and Rule
14f-1 in
order to fulfill its obligations under this
Section 1.4, including mailing to the Stockholders
together with the
Schedule 14D-9
the information required under Section 14(f) and
Rule 14f-1
as is necessary to enable Parents designees to be elected
or appointed to the Company Board. Parent shall supply to the
Company any information with respect to itself and its officers,
directors and Affiliates to the extent required by
Section 14(f) and
Rule 14f-1.
The provisions of this
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Section 1.4 are in addition to and shall not limit
any rights that Parent, Merger Sub or any of their Affiliates
may have as a holder or beneficial owner of Shares as a matter
of applicable Law with respect to the election of directors or
otherwise.
(d) In the event that Parents designees are elected
or appointed to the Company Board pursuant to this
Section 1.4 then, until the Effective Time, the
Company shall use commercially reasonable efforts to cause the
Company Board to maintain at least three directors who are
members of the Company Board on the date of the Original
Agreement and who are independent for purposes of
Rule 10A-3
under the Exchange Act (the Independent
Directors); provided, however, that if
the number of Independent Directors is reduced below three for
any reason, the remaining Independent Director(s) shall be
entitled to nominate an individual or individuals to fill such
vacancy who shall be deemed to be Independent Directors for
purposes of this Agreement or, if no Independent Directors then
remain, the other directors shall designate three individuals to
fill such vacancies who are independent for purposes of
Rule 10A-3
under the Exchange Act, and such individuals shall be deemed to
be Independent Directors for purposes of this Agreement. The
Company and the Company Board shall promptly take all action as
may be necessary to comply with their obligations under this
Section 1.4(d). Notwithstanding anything in this
Agreement to the contrary, from and after the time, if any, that
Parents designees pursuant to this Section 1.4
constitute a majority of the Company Board and prior to the
Effective Time, subject to the terms hereof, any amendment or
termination of this Agreement by the Company, any extension by
the Company of the time for the performance of any of the
obligations or other acts of Parent or Merger Sub or waiver of
any of the Companys rights hereunder, will require the
concurrence of a majority of the Independent Directors (or in
the case where there are two or fewer Independent Directors, the
concurrence of one Independent Director) if such amendment,
termination, extension or waiver would reasonably be expected to
have an adverse effect on any holders of Shares other than
Parent or Merger Sub. The Independent Directors shall have the
authority to retain outside legal counsel (which may include
current outside legal counsel of the Company) at the reasonable
expense of the Company for the purpose of fulfilling their
obligations under this Agreement and shall have the authority,
after the Acceptance Date, to institute any action on behalf of
the Company to enforce the performance of the Agreement in
accordance with its terms.
Section 1.5 [Intentionally Omitted].
Section 1.6 [Intentionally Omitted].
ARTICLE II
THE MERGER
Section 2.1 The Merger. Upon the terms and subject
to the conditions set forth in this Agreement and in accordance
with the California General Corporation Law (the
CGCL) and the Florida Business Corporation
Act (the Florida Act), at the Effective Time,
Merger Sub shall be merged with and into the Company. Following
the Merger, the separate corporate existence of Merger Sub shall
cease, and the Company shall continue as the surviving
corporation in the Merger (the Surviving
Corporation).
Section 2.2 Closing. The closing of the Merger (the
Closing) shall take place at 10:00 a.m.,
Eastern time, on the second (2nd) Business Day following the
satisfaction or, to the extent permitted by applicable Law,
waiver of the conditions set forth in Article VII
(other than those conditions that by their terms are to be
satisfied at the Closing, but subject to the satisfaction or, to
the extent permitted by applicable Law, waiver of those
conditions), at the offices of Arnall Golden Gregory LLP at 171
17th Street NW, Suite 2100, Atlanta, Georgia 30363, unless
another date, time or place is agreed to in writing by Parent
and the Company. The date on which the Closing occurs is
referred to in this Agreement as the Closing
Date.
Section 2.3 Effective Time. Upon the terms and
subject to the provisions of this Agreement, as soon as
practicable on the Closing Date, the parties shall file
(a) a certificate of merger with the Secretary of State of
the State of Florida (the Florida Secretary of
State) executed in accordance with the relevant
provisions of the Florida Act (the Florida Certificate
of Merger), (b) a certificate of merger with the
Secretary of State of the State of California (the
California Secretary of State) executed in
accordance with the relevant provisions of the CGCL ((a) and
(b), collectively, the Certificates of Merger
and each individually, a Certificate of
Merger) and (c) as soon as practicable on or
after the Closing Date, shall make any and all other filings or
recordings required under the
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Florida Act and the CGCL. The Merger shall become effective at
such time as specified in the Certificates of Merger (the time
the Merger becomes effective being the Effective
Time).
Section 2.4 Effects of the Merger. The Merger shall
have the effects set forth in this Agreement and in the relevant
provisions of the Florida Act and the CGCL. Without limiting the
generality of the foregoing, and subject thereto, at the
Effective Time, all the property, rights, privileges, powers and
franchises of the Company and Merger Sub shall vest in the
Surviving Corporation, and all debts, liabilities and duties of
the Company and Merger Sub shall become the debts, liabilities
and duties of the Surviving Corporation.
Section 2.5 Articles of Incorporation; Bylaws.
(a) At the Effective Time, the articles of incorporation of
the Company shall be amended and restated in substantially the
form set forth in Exhibit C and, as so amended,
shall be the articles of incorporation of the Surviving
Corporation until thereafter amended in accordance with its
terms and as provided by applicable Law.
(b) At the Effective Time, the bylaws of the Company shall
be amended and restated in substantially the form set forth in
Exhibit D, and, as so amended, shall be the bylaws
of the Surviving Corporation until thereafter amended in
accordance with their terms and as provided by applicable Law.
Section 2.6 Directors. The directors of Merger Sub
immediately prior to the Effective Time shall be the directors
of the Surviving Corporation until the earlier of their
resignation or removal or until their respective successors are
duly elected and qualified.
Section 2.7 Officers. The officers of Merger Sub
immediately prior to the Effective Time shall be the officers of
the Surviving Corporation until the earlier of their resignation
or removal or until their respective successors are duly elected
and qualified.
ARTICLE III
EFFECT ON THE CAPITAL STOCK OF THE
CONSTITUENT CORPORATIONS; EXCHANGE OF CERTIFICATES
Section 3.1 Conversion of Capital Stock. At the
Effective Time, by virtue of the Merger and without any action
on the part of the Company, Parent, Merger Sub or the holders of
any shares of capital stock of the Company, Parent or Merger Sub:
(a) Each Share issued and outstanding immediately prior to
the Effective Time (other than Shares to be canceled in
accordance with Section 3.1(b) and any Dissenting
Shares) shall thereupon be converted automatically into and
shall thereafter represent the right to receive $0.457 in cash,
without interest (the Merger Consideration).
As of the Effective Time, all such Shares shall no longer be
outstanding and shall automatically be cancelled and shall cease
to exist, and shall thereafter only represent the right to
receive the Merger Consideration to be issued or paid in
accordance with Section 3.3, without interest.
(b) Each Share held in the treasury of the Company or
owned, directly or indirectly, by Parent, Merger Sub or any
wholly owned Subsidiary of the Company immediately prior to the
Effective Time shall automatically be canceled and shall cease
to exist, and no consideration shall be delivered in exchange
therefor.
(c) Each share of common stock, par value $0.01 per share,
of Merger Sub issued and outstanding immediately prior to the
Effective Time shall be converted into and become one validly
issued, fully paid and non-assessable share of common stock, no
par value per share, of the Surviving Corporation.
(d) If at any time during the period between the date of
the Original Agreement and the Effective Time, any change in the
outstanding shares of capital stock of the Company, or
securities convertible into or exchangeable into or exercisable
for shares of such capital stock, shall occur as a result of any
reclassification, recapitalization, stock split (including a
reverse stock split) or subdivision or combination, exchange or
readjustment of shares, or any stock dividend or stock
distribution with a record date during such period (excluding,
in each case, normal quarterly cash dividends), merger or other
similar transaction, the Merger Consideration shall be equitably
adjusted, without duplication, to reflect such change;
provided, that nothing in this Section 3.1(d)
shall be construed to permit the Company to take any action with
respect to its securities that is prohibited by the terms of
this Agreement.
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Section 3.2 Treatment of Warrants, Options and Other
Equity-Based Awards.
(a) Following the date of the Original Agreement,
(i) the Company shall provide written notice of the pending
Merger to the holder (the Warrant Holder) of
that certain Common Stock Purchase Warrant dated
October 26, 2004 (the Warrant), in
accordance with the terms thereof, and (ii) as soon as
reasonably practicable following the Effective Time, provided
that the Warrant Holder has not earlier exercised the Warrant in
full, Parent shall issue a replacement warrant to the Warrant
Holder providing identical terms to the Warrant except that such
replacement warrant shall be exercisable into the amount of
Merger Consideration to which the Warrant Holder would have been
entitled if the Warrant Holder had exercised the Warrant
immediately prior to the consummation of the Merger.
(b) At the Effective Time, each option (each, a
Company Stock Option) to purchase Shares
granted under the Cardiogenesis Corporation Director Stock
Option Plan
and/or the
Cardiogenesis Corporation Stock Option Plan (collectively, the
Company Stock Plans), whether vested or
unvested, that is outstanding immediately prior to the Effective
Time shall be cancelled and, in exchange therefor, the Surviving
Corporation shall pay to each former holder of any such
cancelled Company Stock Option as soon as practicable following
the Effective Time by a special payroll payment an amount in
cash (without interest, and subject to deduction for any
required withholding Tax) equal to the product of (i) the
excess of the Merger Consideration over the exercise price per
Share under such Company Stock Option and (ii) the number
of Shares subject to such Company Stock Option; provided,
that if the exercise price per Share of any such Company Stock
Option is equal to or greater than the Merger Consideration,
such Company Stock Option shall be canceled without any cash
payment being made in respect thereof; provided further
that Parent may, in its sole discretion, cause the Paying
Agent, on behalf of the Surviving Corporation, to make the
payments described in this Section 3.2(b) rather
than the Surviving Corporation. The Company shall, prior to the
Acceptance Date, take all requisite action necessary to amend
the Company Stock Plans to permit the cancellation and exchange
of the Company Stock Options contemplated by this
Section 3.2(b).
(c) Each share of restricted stock acquired pursuant to a
stock purchase right under the Cardiogenesis Corporation Stock
Option Plan (Restricted Stock) that is not
fully vested and that is outstanding immediately prior to the
Acceptance Date shall automatically become fully vested
immediately prior to the Acceptance Date, but subject to the
occurrence of the Acceptance Date, pursuant to the terms of the
Restricted Stock Purchase Agreement evidencing such Restricted
Stock without any action on the part of the Company, Parent,
Merger Sub or the holders of any such share of Restricted Stock.
The Company shall, prior to the Acceptance Date, take all
requisite action, if any, necessary to accelerate the vesting of
all outstanding Restricted Stock as contemplated by the
preceding sentence.
(d) The Company shall take all actions necessary to ensure
that, as of the Effective Time, (i) the Company Stock Plans
shall terminate and (ii) no holder of a Company Stock
Option or any participant in any Company Stock Plan or any other
employee incentive or benefit plan, program or arrangement or
any non-employee director plan maintained by the Company shall
have any rights to acquire, or other rights in respect of, the
capital stock of the Company, the Surviving Corporation or any
of their Subsidiaries, except the right to receive the payment
contemplated by Section 3.2(b) upon exercise thereof.
(e) With respect to the 1996 Employee Stock Purchase Plan
of Cardiogenesis Corporation, as amended (as so amended, the
ESPP), the Company shall not commence any new
Offering Periods (as defined in the ESPP) under the ESPP on or
after the date of the Original Agreement.
Section 3.3 Exchange and Payment.
(a) Prior to the Effective Time, Parent and Merger Sub
shall enter into an agreement with a bank or trust company
designated by Parent and reasonably acceptable to the Company
(the Paying Agent). On the day of (and
immediately following) the Effective Time, Parent or Merger Sub
shall deposit (or cause to be deposited) with the Paying Agent,
in trust for the benefit of holders of Shares, an amount of cash
sufficient to deliver to holders of Shares the Merger
Consideration to which they are entitled pursuant to
Section 3.1. Any cash deposited with the Paying
Agent shall hereinafter be referred to as the Exchange
Fund. The Exchange Fund shall not be used for any
purpose other than to fund payments due pursuant to
Section 3.1(a), except as provided in this
Agreement. Parent shall pay all fees and expenses of the Paying
Agent.
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(b) As soon as reasonably practicable after the Effective
Time, but in any event no later than the third
(3rd)
Business Day thereafter, the Surviving Corporation shall cause
the Paying Agent to mail to each holder of record of an
outstanding certificate or outstanding certificates
(Certificates) and to each holder of
uncertificated Shares represented by book entry
(Book-Entry Shares) that immediately prior to
the Effective Time represented outstanding Shares that were
converted into the right to receive the Merger Consideration
with respect thereto pursuant to Section 3.1(a),
(i) a form of letter of transmittal (which shall specify
that delivery shall be effected, and risk of loss and title to
the Certificates held by such Person shall pass, only upon
proper delivery of the Certificates to the Paying Agent, and
which letter shall be in customary form and contain such other
provisions as Parent or the Paying Agent may reasonably specify)
and (ii) instructions for use in effecting the surrender of
such Certificates or Book-Entry Shares in exchange for the
Merger Consideration payable with respect thereto pursuant to
Section 3.1(a). Upon surrender of a Certificate to
the Paying Agent, together with such letter of transmittal (or,
in the case of a Book-Entry Share, upon delivery of such letter
of transmittal), duly completed and validly executed in
accordance with the instructions thereto, and such other
documents as the Paying Agent may reasonably require (a
Proper Delivery), the holder of such
Certificate or Book-Entry Share shall be entitled to receive in
exchange therefor the Merger Consideration that such holder is
entitled to receive pursuant to Section 3.1(a) in
respect of the Shares represented by such Certificate or
Book-Entry Share and the Certificate so surrendered shall
forthwith be canceled. No interest will be paid or accrued on
any Merger Consideration payable in respect of Certificates or
Book-Entry Shares. Payment of Merger Consideration shall be made
as promptly as practicable after the date of Proper Delivery of
the applicable Certificate or Book-Entry Share.
(c) If payment of the Merger Consideration is to be made to
a Person other than the Person in whose name the surrendered
Certificate or Book-Entry Share is registered, it shall be a
condition of payment that such Certificate so surrendered shall
be properly endorsed or shall be otherwise in proper form for
transfer or such Book-Entry Share shall be properly transferred
and that the Person requesting such payment shall have paid any
transfer and other Taxes required by reason of the payment of
the Merger Consideration to a Person other than the registered
holder of the Certificate or Book-Entry Share surrendered or
shall have established to the satisfaction of Parent that such
tax either has been paid or is not applicable.
(d) Until surrendered as contemplated by this
Section 3.3, each Certificate or Book-Entry Share
shall be deemed at any time after the Effective Time to
represent only the right to receive the Merger Consideration
payable in respect of Shares theretofore represented by such
Certificate or Book-Entry Shares, as applicable, pursuant to
Section 3.1(a), without any interest thereon.
(e) All Merger Consideration delivered upon the surrender
for exchange of Certificates or Book-Entry Shares in accordance
with the terms of this Article III shall be deemed
to have been paid in full satisfaction of all rights pertaining
to the Shares formerly represented by such Certificates or
Book-Entry Shares. At the Effective Time, the stock transfer
books of the Company shall be closed and there shall be no
further registration of transfers on the stock transfer books of
the Surviving Corporation of the Shares that were outstanding
immediately prior to the Effective Time. If, after the Effective
Time, Certificates are presented to the Surviving Corporation or
the Paying Agent for transfer or transfer is sought for
Book-Entry Shares, such Certificates or Book-Entry Shares shall
be canceled and exchanged as provided in this
Article III, subject to applicable Law in the case
of Dissenting Shares.
(f) The Paying Agent shall invest any cash included in the
Exchange Fund as directed by Parent, on a daily basis. Any
interest or other income resulting from such investments shall
be paid to Parent, upon demand.
(g) Any portion of the Exchange Fund (and any interest or
other income earned thereon) that remains undistributed to the
holders of Certificates or Book-Entry Shares one (1) year
after the Effective Time shall be delivered to Parent, upon
demand, and any holders of Certificates or Book-Entry Shares who
have not theretofore complied with this Article III
shall thereafter look only to the Surviving Corporation (subject
to abandoned property, escheat or other similar Laws), as
general creditors thereof, for payment of the Merger
Consideration with respect to Shares formerly represented by
such Certificate or Book-Entry Share, without interest.
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(h) None of Parent, the Surviving Corporation, the Paying
Agent or any other Person shall be liable to any Person in
respect of cash from the Exchange Fund properly delivered to a
public official pursuant to any applicable abandoned property,
escheat or similar Law.
(i) If any Certificate shall have been lost, stolen or
destroyed, upon the making of an affidavit, in form and
substance required by the Paying Agent (or, if no such affidavit
is required by the Paying Agent, in form and substance
reasonably acceptable to Parent), of that fact by the Person
claiming such Certificate to be lost, stolen or destroyed and,
if required by Parent or the Paying Agent, the posting by such
Person of a bond in such amount as Parent or the Paying Agent
may determine is reasonably necessary as indemnity against any
claim that may be made against it or the Surviving Corporation
with respect to such Certificate, the Paying Agent will deliver
in exchange for such lost, stolen or destroyed Certificate the
Merger Consideration payable in respect thereof pursuant to this
Agreement.
(j) Any portion of the Merger Consideration made available
to the Paying Agent pursuant to Section 3.3(a) to
pay for Shares for which appraisal rights have been perfected as
described in Section 3.5 shall be returned to
Parent, upon demand.
Section 3.4 Withholding Rights. Parent, Merger Sub,
the Surviving Corporation and the Paying Agent shall be entitled
to deduct and withhold from the consideration otherwise payable
to any holder of Shares, Company Stock Options or otherwise
pursuant to this Agreement such amounts as Parent, the Surviving
Corporation or the Paying Agent is required to deduct and
withhold with respect to the making of such payment under the
Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended (the
Code), or any provision of state, local or
foreign tax Law. To the extent that amounts are so withheld and
paid over to the appropriate taxing authority by Parent, the
Surviving Corporation or the Paying Agent, such withheld amounts
shall be treated for all purposes of this Agreement as having
been paid to the Person in respect of which such deduction and
withholding was made.
Section 3.5 Dissenting Shares. Notwithstanding
anything in this Agreement to the contrary, Shares issued and
outstanding immediately prior to the Effective Time that are
held by any holder who has not voted in favor of the Merger and
who is entitled to demand and properly demands appraisal of such
Shares pursuant to Section 1300 of the CGCL
(Dissenting Shares) shall not be converted
into the right to receive the Merger Consideration, unless and
until such holder shall have failed to perfect, or shall have
effectively withdrawn or lost, such holders right to
appraisal under the CGCL. Dissenting Shares shall be treated in
accordance with Chapter 13 of the CGCL. If any such holder
fails to perfect or withdraws or loses any such right to
appraisal, each such Share of such holder shall thereupon be
converted into and become exchangeable only for the right to
receive, as of the later of the Effective Time and the time that
such right to appraisal has been irrevocably lost, withdrawn or
expired, the Merger Consideration in accordance with
Section 3.1(a). The Company shall serve prompt
notice to Parent of any demands for appraisal of any Shares,
attempted withdrawals of such notices or demands and any other
instruments received by the Company relating to rights to
appraisal, and Parent shall have the right to participate in all
negotiations and proceedings with respect to such demands. The
Company shall not, without the prior written consent of Parent,
make any payment with respect to, settle or offer to settle, or
approve any withdrawal of any such demands.
ARTICLE IV
REPRESENTATIONS AND WARRANTIES OF THE COMPANY
Except as set forth in the corresponding section or subsection
of the disclosure letter delivered by the Company to Parent
prior to the execution of the Original Agreement (the
Company Disclosure Letter) (it being agreed
that disclosure of any information in a particular section or
subsection of the Company Disclosure Letter shall be deemed
disclosure with respect to any other section or subsection of
this Agreement to which the relevance of such information is
readily apparent on its face or where specifically
cross-referenced), each representation and warranty in this
Article IV is not qualified in any way whatsoever,
and is made and given with the intention of inducing Parent
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and Merger Sub to enter into this Agreement. Subject to the
foregoing, the Company represents and warrants to Parent and
Merger Sub as follows:
Section 4.1 Organization, Standing and Power.
(a) Each of the Company and its Subsidiaries (i) is an
entity duly organized, validly existing and in good standing
under the Laws of the jurisdiction of its organization,
(ii) has all requisite corporate or similar power and
authority to own, lease and operate its properties and to carry
on its business as now being conducted and (iii) is duly
qualified or licensed to do business and is in good standing in
each jurisdiction in which the nature of its business or the
ownership, leasing or operation of its properties makes such
qualification or licensing necessary, except in the case of
clause (iii), where the failure to be so qualified or licensed
or in good standing, individually or in the aggregate, has not
had and would not reasonably be expected to have a Material
Adverse Effect. For purposes of this Agreement,
Material Adverse Effect means (x) any
event, change, circumstance, occurrence, effect or state of
facts that (A) is or would reasonably be expected to be
materially adverse to the business, assets, liabilities,
condition (financial or otherwise) or results of operations of
the Company and its Subsidiaries, taken as a whole, or
(B) materially impairs the ability of the Company to
comply, or prevents the Company from complying, with its
material obligations with respect to the consummation of the
Offer or the Merger or would reasonably be expected to do so;
provided, however, that, Material Adverse Effect
shall not include any event, change, circumstance, occurrence,
effect or state of facts to the extent expressly set forth in
the Company Disclosure Letter or arising out of or attributable
to any of the following, either alone or in combination
(1) generally affecting the industry in which the Company
operates, or the economy or the financial or securities markets
in the United States, including effects on such industry,
economy or markets resulting from any regulatory or political
conditions or developments in general, (2) any outbreak or
escalation of hostilities or declared or undeclared acts of war
or terrorism, weather, natural disasters or other force majeure
events, (3) reflecting or resulting from changes in any Law
or GAAP or interpretations thereof, (4) the announcement of
the execution of the Original Agreement or the pendency of the
Offer or the Merger or any other transactions contemplated by
this Agreement, (5) any actions taken, or failure to take
action, to which Parent or Merger Sub has expressly consented or
requested, (6) compliance with the terms of, or the taking
of any action required by, this Agreement, or the failure to
take any action prohibited by this Agreement, (7) any
stockholder litigation arising directly out of allegations of a
breach of fiduciary duty relating to this Agreement (but
excluding any such litigation arising out of or relating to any
agreement with or between Stockholders other than the Support
Agreement), (8) any failure by the Company or its
Subsidiaries to meet any internal or external budgets,
projections, forecasts or predictions of financial performance,
or (9) a change in the market price or trading volume of
the Shares, in and of itself; provided, that, with
respect to clauses (1), (2) and (3), the impact of such
event, change, circumstances, occurrence, effect or state of
facts is not disproportionately adverse (relative to other
industry participants of comparable size to the Company) to the
Company and its Subsidiaries, taken as a whole, and
provided, further, that with respect to
clauses (8) and (9), the facts and circumstances giving
rise to or contributing to such change may be taken into account
in determining whether there has been a Material Adverse Effect;
or (y) any violation, or series of violations, before or
after the date of the Original Agreement by the Company or any
of its Subsidiaries (or any violation, or series of violations,
for which the Company or any of its Subsidiaries could be
liable) of any FDA Law, Foreign Drug Law, or Law covered by
Sections 4.11(d) through 4.11(g) for which
the remedy, or remedies in the case of a series of violations,
when aggregated together, would reasonably be expected to have a
material adverse effect on the business of Parent or its
Subsidiaries (only to the extent such effect results solely from
the Companys violation(s), and not including any portion
of such effect resulting from any act or omission of Parent or
its Subsidiaries), that has not been disclosed in the Company
Disclosure Letter prior to the date of the Original Agreement.
(b) The Company has previously delivered or made available
to Parent true and complete copies of the Companys
articles of incorporation (the Company
Charter) and bylaws (the Company
Bylaws), in each case as amended to the date of the
Original Agreement, and each as so delivered is in full force
and effect. The Company is not in violation of any provision of
the Company Charter or Company Bylaws. The Company has made
available to Parent true and complete copies of the minutes of
all meetings of the Stockholders, the Company Board and each
committee of the Company Board held since January 1, 2007,
except that any minutes of meetings related to other bidders in
connection with any potential sale of the Company or any of its
material assets or otherwise related to deliberations by the
Company Board with respect to the consideration of strategic
alternatives during the twelve (12) months prior to the
date of the Original Agreement shall be provided in redacted
form to exclude only such financially sensitive information as
is directly related to such other bidders or deliberations, as
applicable.
A-18
Section 4.2 Capital Stock.
(a) The authorized capital stock of the Company consists of
75,000,000 Shares and 5,000,000 shares of preferred
stock, no par value per share (the Company Preferred
Stock). As of the close of business on March 25,
2011, (i) 46,638,421 Shares (excluding treasury
shares) were issued and outstanding, (ii) no Shares were
held by the Company in its treasury, (iii) no shares of
Company Preferred Stock were issued and outstanding and no
shares of Company Preferred Stock were held by the Company in
its treasury, (iv) 7,041,775 Shares were reserved for
issuance pursuant to Company Stock Plans (of which
3,146,940 Shares were subject to outstanding Company Stock
Options, (v) 2,640,000 Shares were reserved for
issuance pursuant to the Warrant and (vi) 423 shares
were subject to purchase pursuant to the ESPP. There is no
Offering Period under the ESPP ongoing as of the date of the
Original Agreement. All the outstanding shares of capital stock
of the Company are, and all shares reserved for issuance as
noted in clauses (iv) and (v) above will be, when
issued in accordance with the terms thereof, duly authorized,
validly issued, fully paid and nonassessable and not subject to
any preemptive rights. Neither the Company nor any of its
Subsidiaries has outstanding any bonds, debentures, notes or
other obligations having the right to vote (or convertible into,
or exchangeable or exercisable for, securities having the right
to vote) with the stockholders of the Company or such Subsidiary
on any matter. Except as set forth above in this
Section 4.2(a) and except for changes since
March 25, 2011 resulting from the exercise of Company Stock
Options described in Section 4.2(c) or as expressly
permitted by Section 6.1, there are no outstanding
(A) shares of capital stock or other voting securities or
equity interests of the Company, (B) securities of the
Company or any of its Subsidiaries convertible into or
exchangeable or exercisable for shares of capital stock of the
Company or other voting securities or equity interests of the
Company or any of its Subsidiaries, (C) stock appreciation
rights, phantom stock rights, performance units,
interests in or rights to the ownership or earnings of the
Company or any of its Subsidiaries or other equity equivalent or
equity-based award or right, (D) subscriptions, options,
warrants, calls, commitments, Contracts or other rights to
acquire from the Company or any of its Subsidiaries, or
obligations of the Company or any of its Subsidiaries to issue,
any shares of capital stock of the Company or any of its
Subsidiaries, voting securities, equity interests or securities
convertible into or exchangeable or exercisable for capital
stock or other voting securities or equity interests of the
Company or any of its Subsidiaries or rights or interests
described in clause (C), or (E) obligations of the Company
or any of its Subsidiaries to repurchase, redeem or otherwise
acquire any such securities or to issue, grant, deliver or sell,
or cause to be issued, granted, delivered or sold, any such
securities.
(b) No shares of capital stock of the Company are owned by
any Subsidiary of the Company. All the outstanding shares of
capital stock or other voting securities or equity interests of
each Subsidiary of the Company have been duly authorized and
validly issued, are fully paid, nonassessable and not subject to
any preemptive rights. All of the shares of capital stock or
other voting securities or equity interests of each such
Subsidiary are owned, directly or indirectly, by the Company,
free and clear of all pledges, claims, liens, charges, options,
rights of first refusal, encumbrances and security interests of
any kind or nature whatsoever (including any limitation on
voting, sale, transfer or other disposition or exercise of any
other attribute of ownership) (collectively,
Liens). There are no stockholder agreements,
voting trusts or other agreements or understandings to which the
Company or any of its Subsidiaries is a party or on file with
the Company with respect to the holding, voting, registration,
redemption, repurchase or disposition of, or that restricts the
transfer of, any capital stock or other equity interest of the
Company or any of its Subsidiaries (except for the withholding
of shares in connection with Taxes payable in respect of the
exercise of Company Stock Options and the issuance of Shares in
connection with the vesting of restricted stock units,
performance stock units, restricted stock unit rights or other
awards granted under the Company Plans).
(c) Section 4.2(c) of the Company Disclosure
Letter sets forth a true and complete list of all holders, as of
March 25, 2011, of outstanding Company Stock Options or
other rights to purchase or receive Shares or similar rights
granted under the Company Stock Plans or otherwise
(collectively, Company Stock Awards),
indicating as applicable, with respect to each Company Stock
Award then outstanding, the type of award granted, the number of
Shares subject to such Company Stock Award, the name of the plan
under which such Company Stock Award was granted, the date of
grant, exercise or purchase price, vesting schedule, payment
schedule (if different from the vesting schedule) and expiration
thereof, and whether (and to what extent) the vesting of such
Company Stock Award will be accelerated or otherwise adjusted in
any way or any other terms will be triggered or otherwise
adjusted in any way by the consummation of the transactions
contemplated by this Agreement or by the termination of
employment or engagement or change in position of any holder
thereof following or in connection with the
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Merger. Each Company Stock Option intended to qualify as an
incentive stock option under Section 422 of the
Code so qualifies and the exercise price of each other Company
Stock Option is no less than the fair market value of a Share as
determined on the date of grant of such Company Stock Option,
and no Company Stock Option is subject to Section 409A of
the Code. No Company Stock Options that are outstanding have
been granted other than pursuant to the Company Stock Plans. The
Company has made available to Parent true and complete copies of
all Company Stock Plans and the forms of all stock option
agreements evidencing outstanding Company Stock Options.
Section 4.3 Subsidiaries. Section 4.3 of
the Company Disclosure Letter sets forth a true and complete
list of each Subsidiary of the Company, including its
jurisdiction of incorporation or formation. Except for the
capital stock of, or other equity or voting interests in, its
Subsidiaries, and except as set forth in Section 4.3
of the Company Disclosure Letter, the Company does not own,
directly or indirectly, any equity, membership interest,
partnership interest, joint venture interest, or other equity or
voting interest in, or any interest convertible into,
exercisable or exchangeable for any of the foregoing, nor is it
under any current or prospective obligation to form or
participate in, provide funds to, make any loan, capital
contribution, guarantee, credit enhancement or other investment
in, or assume any liability or obligation of, any Person.
Section 4.4 Authority.
(a) The Company has all necessary corporate power and
authority to execute, deliver and perform its obligations under
this Agreement and to consummate the transactions contemplated
hereby. The execution, delivery and performance of this
Agreement by the Company and the consummation by the Company of
the transactions contemplated hereby have been duly authorized
by all necessary corporate action on the part of the Company and
no other corporate proceedings on the part of the Company are
necessary to approve this Agreement or to consummate the
transactions contemplated hereby, subject, in the case of the
consummation of the Merger and if required by applicable Law, to
the adoption and approval of this Agreement by the holders of at
least a majority in combined voting power of the outstanding
Shares (the Company Stockholder Approval).
This Agreement has been duly executed and delivered by the
Company and, assuming the due authorization, execution and
delivery by Parent and Merger Sub, constitutes a valid and
binding obligation of the Company, enforceable against the
Company in accordance with its terms (except to the extent that
enforceability may be limited by applicable bankruptcy,
insolvency, moratorium, reorganization or similar Laws affecting
the enforcement of creditors rights generally or by
general principles of equity, and further limited by laws
relating to the availability of specific performance, injunctive
relief or other equitable remedies).
(b) The Company Board, at a meeting duly called and held,
duly adopted resolutions for which all directors present voted
in favor of (i) determining that the terms of the Original
Agreement, this Agreement, the Offer, the Merger and the other
transactions contemplated hereby are fair to and in the best
interests of the Stockholders, (ii) approving and declaring
advisable the Original Agreement, this Agreement and the
transactions contemplated hereby, including the Offer and the
Merger, (iii) directing that the Original Agreement and
this Agreement be submitted to the stockholders of the Company
for adoption and approval and (iv) resolving to recommend
that the Stockholders accept the Offer, tender their Shares
pursuant to the Offer and vote in favor of the adoption and
approval of this Agreement and the transactions contemplated
hereby, including the Offer and the Merger (if required by
applicable Law), which resolutions have not been subsequently
rescinded, modified or withdrawn in any way, except as may be
permitted by Section 6.2. The Company is providing
to Parent concurrently herewith true and complete copies of the
resolutions described herein.
(c) The Company Stockholder Approval is the only vote of
the holders of any class or series of the Companys capital
stock or other securities required in connection with the
consummation of the Merger. No vote of the holders of any other
class or series of the Companys capital stock or other
securities is required in connection with the consummation of
any of the transactions contemplated hereby to be consummated by
the Company other than the Merger.
Section 4.5 No Conflict; Consents and Approvals.
(a) The execution, delivery and performance of this
Agreement by the Company does not, and (assuming that all
consents, approvals, authorizations and other actions described
in Section 4.5 of the Company Disclosure Letter
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have been obtained and all filings and obligations described in
Section 4.5 of the Company Disclosure Letter have
been made and any waiting periods thereunder have terminated or
expired) the consummation of the Offer and the Merger and
compliance by the Company with the provisions hereof will not,
conflict with, or result in any violation or breach of, or
default (with or without notice or lapse of time, or both)
under, or give rise to a right of, or result in, termination,
cancellation, modification or acceleration of any obligation or
to the loss of a benefit under, or result in the creation of any
Lien in or upon any of the properties, assets or rights of the
Company or any of its Subsidiaries under, or give rise to any
increased, additional, accelerated or guaranteed rights or
entitlements under, or require any consent, waiver or approval
of any Person pursuant to, any provision of (i) the Company
Charter or Company Bylaws, or the certificate of incorporation
or bylaws (or similar organizational documents) of any
Subsidiary of the Company, (ii) any bond, debenture, note,
mortgage, indenture, guarantee, license, lease, purchase or sale
order or other contract, agreement or other obligation binding
on the Company and its Subsidiaries or any of their respective
assets, whether oral or written (each, including all amendments
thereto, a Contract) to which the Company or
any of its Subsidiaries is a party or by which the Company or
any of its Subsidiaries or any of their respective properties or
assets may be bound or (iii) subject to the governmental
filings and other matters referred to in
Section 4.5(b), any federal, state, local or foreign
law (including common law, FDA Laws, and Foreign Drug Laws),
statute, ordinance, rule, code, regulation, order, judgment,
injunction, decree or other legally enforceable requirement
(Law) applicable to the Company or any of its
Subsidiaries or by which the Company or any of its Subsidiaries
or any of their respective properties or assets may be bound,
except in the case of clauses (ii) and (iii), as,
individually or in the aggregate, has not had and would not
reasonably be expected to have a Material Adverse Effect.
(b) No consent, approval, order or authorization of, or
registration, declaration, filing with or notice to, any
federal, state, local or foreign government or subdivision
thereof or any other governmental, administrative, judicial,
arbitral, legislative, executive, regulatory or self-regulatory
authority, instrumentality, agency, commission or body (each, a
Governmental Entity) is required by or with
respect to the Company or any of its Subsidiaries in connection
with the execution, delivery and performance of this Agreement
by the Company or the consummation by the Company of the Offer
and the Merger or compliance with the provisions hereof, except
for (i) such filings and reports as may be required
pursuant to the applicable requirements of the Securities Act of
1933, as amended (the Securities Act), the
Exchange Act and any other applicable state or federal
securities, takeover and blue sky laws,
(ii) the filing of the Certificates of Merger with the
Florida Secretary of State, as required by the Florida Act, and
the California Secretary of State, as required by the CGCL,
respectively, and (iii) such other consents, approvals,
orders, authorizations, registrations, declarations, filings or
notices the failure of which to be obtained or made,
individually or in the aggregate, have not had and would not
reasonably be expected to have a Material Adverse Effect.
Section 4.6 SEC Reports; Financial Statements.
(a) The Company has filed with or furnished to the SEC on a
timely basis true and complete copies of all forms, reports,
schedules, statements and other documents filed or required to
be filed or furnished by the Company with the SEC since
January 1, 2008 (all such documents, together with all
exhibits and schedules thereto and all information incorporated
therein by reference, the Company SEC
Documents). As of their respective filing dates
(or, if amended or superseded by a filing prior to the date of
the Original Agreement, then on the date of such filing), the
Company SEC Documents complied in all material respects with the
applicable requirements of the Securities Act, the Exchange Act
and the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002 (the Sarbanes-Oxley
Act), as in effect on the date such forms, reports and
documents were filed, as the case may be, including, in each
case, the rules and regulations promulgated thereunder, and none
of the Company SEC Documents contained any untrue statement of a
material fact or omitted to state a material fact required to be
stated therein or necessary in order to make the statements
therein, in light of the circumstances under which they were
made, not misleading.
(b) The financial statements (including the related notes
thereto) included (or incorporated by reference) in the Company
SEC Documents (i) have been prepared in all material
respects in accordance with generally accepted accounting
principles (GAAP) (except as may be indicated
in the notes thereto and, in the case of unaudited statements,
as permitted by the rules and regulations of the SEC applicable
to Quarterly Reports on
Form 10-Q)
applied on a consistent basis during the periods involved
(except as may be indicated in the notes thereto),
(ii) comply as to form in all material respects with
applicable accounting requirements and the published rules and
regulations of the SEC with respect thereto and
(iii) fairly present in all material respects the
consolidated financial
A-21
position of the Company and its Subsidiaries as of the dates
thereof and their respective consolidated results of operations
and cash flows for the periods then ended (except as may be
indicated in the notes thereto and subject, in the case of
unaudited statements, to normal and recurring year-end audit
adjustments that were not, or are not expected to be, material
in amount), all in accordance with GAAP and the applicable rules
and regulations promulgated by the SEC. Since December 31,
2010, except as disclosed in the Company SEC Reports filed prior
to the date of the Original Agreement, the Company has not made
any change in the accounting practices or policies applied in
the preparation of its financial statements, except as required
by GAAP, SEC rule or policy or applicable Law. The books and
records of the Company and its Subsidiaries have been, and are
being, maintained in all material respects in accordance with
GAAP (to the extent applicable) and any other applicable legal
and accounting requirements and reflect only actual transactions.
(c) The Company has established and maintains a system of
internal control over financial reporting (as defined in
Rules 13a-15(f)
and
15d-15(f)
under the Exchange Act) that provides reasonable assurance
regarding the reliability of financial reporting and the
preparation of financial statements for external purposes in
accordance with GAAP and includes policies and procedures that:
(i) provide for the maintenance of records that in
reasonable detail accurately and fairly reflect the transactions
and dispositions of the assets of the Company; (ii) provide
reasonable assurance that transactions are recorded as necessary
to permit preparation of the Companys financial statements
in accordance with GAAP, and that receipts and expenditures of
the Company are being made only in accordance with
authorizations of management and directors of the Company; and
(iii) provide reasonable assurance regarding prevention or
timely detection of unauthorized acquisition, use or disposition
of the Companys assets that could have a material effect
on its financial statements.
(d) The Company has established and maintains disclosure
controls and procedures (as defined in
Rules 13a-15(e)
and
15d-15(e)
under the Exchange Act). Such disclosure controls and procedures
are designed to ensure that information relating to the Company,
including its consolidated Subsidiaries, required to be
disclosed in the Companys periodic and current reports
under the Exchange Act, is made known to the Companys
chief executive officer and its chief financial officer by
others within those entities to allow timely decisions regarding
required disclosures as required under the Exchange Act. The
chief executive officer and chief financial officer of the
Company have evaluated the effectiveness of the Companys
disclosure controls and procedures and, to the extent required
by applicable Law, presented in any applicable Company SEC
Document that is a report on
Form 10-K
or
Form 10-Q,
or any amendment thereto, its conclusions about the
effectiveness of the disclosure controls and procedures as of
the end of the period covered by such report or amendment based
on such evaluation.
(e) Since January 1, 2007, (i) neither the
Company nor any of its Subsidiaries nor, to the knowledge of the
Company, any director, officer, employee, auditor, accountant or
representative of the Company or any of its Subsidiaries has
received or otherwise had or obtained knowledge of any
complaint, allegation, assertion or claim, whether written or
oral, regarding the accounting or auditing practices,
procedures, methodologies or methods of the Company or any of
its Subsidiaries or their respective internal accounting
controls, including any complaint, allegation, assertion or
claim that the Company or any of its Subsidiaries has engaged in
questionable accounting or auditing practices, and (ii) no
attorney representing the Company or any of its Subsidiaries,
whether or not employed by the Company or any of its
Subsidiaries, has reported evidence of a violation of securities
Laws, breach of fiduciary duty or similar violation by the
Company or any of its Subsidiaries or any of their respective
officers, directors, employees or agents to the Company Board or
any committee thereof or to any director or officer of the
Company or any of its Subsidiaries.
(f) As of the date of the Original Agreement, there are no
outstanding or unresolved comments in the comment letters
received from the SEC staff with respect to the Company SEC
Documents. To the knowledge of the Company, none of the Company
SEC Documents is subject to ongoing review or outstanding SEC
comment or investigation. The Company has made available to
Parent true, correct and complete copies of all written
correspondence between the SEC, on the one hand, and the Company
and any of its Subsidiaries, on the other hand, occurring since
January 1, 2007.
(g) Except as set forth in Section 4.6(g) of
the Company Disclosure Letter and except as disclosed in the
Company SEC Documents, neither the Company nor any of its
Subsidiaries is a party to, or has any commitment to become a
party to, any joint venture, off balance sheet partnership or
any similar Contract (including any Contract
A-22
or arrangement relating to any transaction or relationship
between or among the Company and any of its Subsidiaries, on the
one hand, and any unconsolidated Affiliate, including any
structured finance, special purpose or limited purpose entity or
Person, on the other hand), or any off balance sheet
arrangements (as defined in Item 303(a) of
Regulation S-K
under the Exchange Act) that, individually or in the aggregate,
exceeds $10,000.
(h) No Subsidiary of the Company is subject to the
reporting requirements of Sections 13 or 15(d) of the
Exchange Act.
Section 4.7 No Undisclosed Liabilities. Except to
the extent disclosed in the Company SEC Documents filed after
the date of the Companys annual report on
Form 10-K
for the fiscal year ended December 31, 2010 and before the
date of the Original Agreement, neither the Company nor any of
its Subsidiaries has any liabilities or obligations of any
nature, whether accrued, absolute, contingent or otherwise,
known or unknown, whether due, or to become due that are
required to be recorded or reflected on a balance sheet under
GAAP, except for (i) liabilities and obligations under this
Agreement or in connection with the transactions contemplated
hereby and (ii) liabilities and obligations incurred in the
ordinary course of business consistent with past practice.
Section 4.8 Certain Information. Neither the
Schedule 14D-9
nor the Proxy Statement will, at the respective times they are
first filed with the SEC, amended or supplemented or first
published, sent or given to the Stockholders and, in the case of
the Proxy Statement, at the time of the Company
Stockholders Meeting, contain any untrue statement of a
material fact or omit to state any material fact required to be
stated therein or necessary to make the statements therein, in
light of the circumstances under which they are made, not
misleading. The
Schedule 14D-9
and the Proxy Statement will comply as to form in all material
respects with the provisions of the Exchange Act. None of the
information supplied or to be supplied by or on behalf of the
Company specifically for inclusion or incorporation by reference
in any of the Offer Documents will, at the respective times they
are first filed with the SEC, amended or supplemented or first
published, sent or given to the Stockholders, contain any untrue
statement of a material fact or omit to state any material fact
required to be stated therein or necessary to make the
statements therein, in light of the circumstances under which
they are made, not misleading. Notwithstanding the foregoing,
the Company makes no representation or warranty with respect to
statements included or incorporated by reference in the
Schedule 14D-9
or the Proxy Statement based on information supplied by or on
behalf of Parent or Merger Sub specifically for inclusion or
incorporation by reference therein. For purposes of this
Agreement, the letter to the Stockholders, notice of meeting,
proxy statement and form of proxy and any other soliciting
material, or the information statement, as the case may be, to
be distributed to the Stockholders in connection with the Merger
(including any amendments or supplements) and any schedules
required to be filed with the SEC in connection therewith are
collectively referred to as the Proxy
Statement.
Section 4.9 Absence of Certain Changes or Events.
Except as and to the extent disclosed in the Company SEC
Documents filed after the date of the Companys annual
report on
Form 10-K
for the fiscal year ended December 31, 2010 and before the
date of the Original Agreement, since December 31, 2010 and
through the date of the Original Agreement and as set forth in
Section 4.9 of the Company Disclosure Letter:
(a) the Company and its Subsidiaries have conducted their
businesses only in the ordinary course consistent with past
practice; (b) there has not been any change, event or
development or prospective change, event or development that,
individually or in the aggregate, has had or would reasonably be
expected to have a Material Adverse Effect; (c) neither the
Company nor any of its Subsidiaries has suffered any loss,
damage, destruction or other casualty affecting any of its
material properties or material assets, whether or not covered
by insurance; and (d) none of the Company or any of its
Subsidiaries has taken any action since January 1, 2011
that, if taken after the date of the Original Agreement, would
constitute a breach of any of the covenants set forth in
Section 6.1.
Section 4.10 Litigation. There is no action, suit,
claim, arbitration, investigation, inquiry, grievance or other
proceeding (each, an Action) (or basis
therefor) pending or, to the knowledge of the Company,
threatened against or affecting the Company or any of its
Subsidiaries, any of their respective properties or assets and
there is no filed litigation against any present or former
officer, director or employee of the Company or any of its
Subsidiaries in such individuals capacity as such. Neither
the Company nor any of its Subsidiaries nor any of their
respective properties or assets is subject to any outstanding
judgment, order, injunction, rule or decree of any Governmental
Entity. There is no Action pending or, to the knowledge of the
Company, threatened seeking to prevent, hinder, modify, delay or
challenge the transactions contemplated by this Agreement.
A-23
Section 4.11 Compliance with Laws and Permits.
(a) The Company and each of its Subsidiaries have in effect
all material permits, licenses, variances, exemptions,
authorizations, operating certificates, franchises, orders and
approvals of all Governmental Entities (collectively,
Permits) necessary for them to own, lease or
operate their properties and assets and to carry on their
businesses and operations as now conducted, and no suspension,
cancellation or other lapse of any such Permit is pending by or
at the behest of any Governmental Entity, or to the
Companys knowledge, threatened. All of such Permits shall
remain in full force and effect after the Offer and the Merger.
Since January 1, 2007, neither the Company nor any of its
Subsidiaries has been in violation of (i) any Permits or
(ii) except as has not had and would not reasonably be
expected to have, individually or in the aggregate, a Material
Adverse Effect, any applicable Law not explicitly covered in
Section 4.11(b) through 4.11(g), including
any consumer protection, equal opportunity, customs, patient
confidentiality, health care industry regulation and third-party
reimbursement laws including under any federal or state health
care program, including but not limited to any Federal Health
Care Program as defined in Section 1128B(f) of the
U.S. Federal Social Security Act (together with all
regulations promulgated thereunder, the SSA),
and any similar Laws of any other jurisdiction. Since
January 1, 2007, none of the Company or any of its
Subsidiaries has received a notice or other written
communication alleging or relating to a possible violation of
any Law applicable to their businesses, operations, properties
or assets or from a Governmental Entity seeking to investigate
any such possible violation. The Company is not subject to any
continuing liabilities, obligations or other consequences of any
nature relating to any noncompliance by the Company with any
Laws which occurred prior to January 1, 2007.
(b) Neither the Company nor any of its Subsidiaries is
subject to any consent decree from any Governmental Entity.
Neither the Company nor any of its Subsidiaries has received any
warning letter from the U.S Food and Drug Administration
(FDA) or equivalent action from any
comparable
non-U.S. Governmental
Entity since January 1, 2007. Neither the Company nor any
of its Subsidiaries has received any communication from any
regulatory agency or been notified since January 1, 2007
that any product approval is withdrawn or modified or that such
an action is under consideration. Without limiting the
foregoing, the Company and each of its Subsidiaries is in
compliance, in all material respects, with all current
applicable statutes, rules, regulations, guidelines, policies or
orders administered or issued by the FDA (FDA
Laws) or comparable foreign Governmental Entity
(Foreign Drug Laws) including the FDAs
Quality System Regulation, 21 C.F.R. Part 820. The
Company does not have knowledge of any facts which furnish any
reasonable basis for any
Form FDA-483
observations or regulatory or warning letters from the FDA,
Section 305 notices, or other similar communications from
the FDA or comparable foreign entity. Since January 1,
2007, there have been no recalls, detentions, withdrawals,
seizures, or termination or suspension of manufacturing
requested or threatened relating to the Companys or its
Subsidiaries products, and no field notifications, field
corrections or alerts.
(c) The Companys and its Subsidiaries products,
where required, are being marketed in all material respects
under valid pre market notifications under Section 510(k)
of the Federal Food, Drug and Cosmetic Act, 21 U.S.C.
§ 360(k), and 21 C.F.R. Part 807, Subpart E
(510(k)s) or pre-market approval
applications approved by the FDA in accordance with
21 U.S.C. § 360(e) and 21 C.F.R.
Part 814 (PMAs). All 510(k)s
and PMAs for the Companys and its Subsidiaries
products are exclusively owned by the Company or one of its
Subsidiaries, and to the knowledge of the Company, the FDA is
not considering limiting, suspending, or revoking any such
510(k)s or PMAs or changing the marketing
classification or labeling of any such products. To the
Companys knowledge, there is no false information or
significant omission in any product application or
product-related submission to the FDA or comparable foreign
Governmental Entity. The Company and its Subsidiaries have
obtained all necessary regulatory approvals from any foreign
regulatory agencies related to the products distributed and sold
by the Company, and the Company has not received any notice that
any Governmental Entity seeks any additional conditions on the
distribution or sale of products in a jurisdiction covered by a
regulatory approval. To the Companys knowledge, any third
party that is a manufacturer, contractor, or agent for the
Company or its Subsidiaries is in compliance with all Permits
and regulatory approvals from the FDA or comparable Governmental
Entity insofar as they pertain to the manufacture of product
components or products for the Company or its Subsidiaries.
(d) Neither the Company nor any Subsidiary, nor the
officers, directors, managing employees or agents (as those
terms are defined in 42 C.F.R. § 1001.1001) of
the Company or any Subsidiary: (i) have engaged in any
A-24
activities which are material violations of, or are cause for
civil penalties or mandatory or permissive exclusion under, any
federal or state health care Law or any
non-U.S. Law
of comparable scope, including but not limited to any Federal
Health Care Program under Sections 1128, 1128A, 1128B,
1128C, or 1877 of SSA, the federal TRICARE statute
(10 U.S.C. § 1071 et seq.), the False
Claims Act of 1863 (31 U.S.C. § 3729 et
seq.), the False Statements Accountability Act
(18 U.S.C. § 1001), the Program Fraud Civil
Remedies Act of 1986 (31 U.S.C. § 3801 et
seq.), 18 U.S.C. § 287, the anti-fraud and
related provisions of the Health Insurance Portability and
Accountability Act of 1996 (e.g., 18 U.S.C.
§§ 1035 and 1347), or related federal, state or
local statutes, or any
non-U.S. Law
of comparable scope, including knowingly and willfully offering,
paying, soliciting or receiving any remuneration (interpreted
broadly to include anything of value), directly or indirectly,
overtly or covertly, in cash or in kind in return for, or to
induce, the purchase, lease, or order, or the arranging for or
recommending of the purchase, lease or order, of any item or
service for which payment may be made in whole or in part under
any such program; (ii) have had a civil monetary penalty
assessed against them under Section 1128A of SSA;
(iii) have been excluded from participation or debarred
under any federal or state health care program (including any
Federal Health Care Program), or any comparable
non-U.S. program;
(iv) have been convicted (as defined in 42 C.F.R.
§ 1001.2) of any of the categories of offenses
described in Sections 1128(a) or 1128(b)(1), (b)(2), or
(b)(3) of SSA or any
non-U.S. Law
of comparable scope; or (v) have failed to comply in any
material respect with any state Law regarding disclosure of
physician payments (commonly known as Sunshine Laws, which, for
illustration purposes only, but without limiting the scope of
this provision, are similar in subject matter to
Section 1128G of the SSA).
(e) Neither the Company nor any of its Subsidiaries (nor,
to the knowledge of the Company, any of their respective
directors, executives, representatives, agents or employees)
(i) has used or is using any corporate funds for any
illegal contributions, gifts, entertainment or other unlawful
expenses relating to political activity, (ii) has used or
is using any corporate funds for any direct or indirect unlawful
payments to any foreign or domestic governmental officials or
employees, (iii) has violated or is violating any provision
of the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act of 1977, (iv) has
established or maintained, or is maintaining, any unlawful fund
of corporate monies or other properties or (v) has made any
bribe, unlawful rebate, payoff, influence payment, kickback or
other unlawful payment of any nature.
(f) The Company and each of its Subsidiaries have conducted
their export transactions in accordance in all material respects
with applicable provisions of U.S. export Laws (including
the International Traffic in Arms Regulations, the Export
Administration Regulations and the regulations administered by
the Department of Treasury, Office of Foreign Assets Control
(OFAC)), and other export Laws of the
countries where it conducts business, and neither the Company
nor any of its Subsidiaries has received any notices of
noncompliance, complaints or warnings with respect to its
compliance with export Laws. Without limiting the foregoing:
(i) the Company and each of its Subsidiaries have obtained
all material export licenses and other approvals required for
their exports of products and technologies from the
U.S. and other countries where it conducts business;
(ii) the Company and each of its Subsidiaries are in
compliance in all material respects with the terms of such
applicable export licenses or other approvals;
(iii) there are no pending or, to the knowledge of the
Company, threatened claims against the Company or any of its
Subsidiaries with respect to such export licenses or other
approvals; and
(iv) the Company and its Subsidiaries have in place
adequate controls and systems to ensure compliance in all
material respects with applicable Laws pertaining to import and
export control in each of the jurisdictions in which the Company
and its Subsidiaries currently does or in the past has done
business, either directly or indirectly.
(g) Neither the Company nor any of its Subsidiaries,
employees or management appears on the Specially Designated
Nationals and Blocked Persons List published by OFAC, or is
otherwise a person with which any U.S. person is prohibited
from dealing under the laws of the United States. Neither the
Company nor any of its Subsidiaries does business or conducts
any transactions with the governments of, or persons within, any
country under economic sanctions administered and enforced by
OFAC.
A-25
Section 4.12 Benefit Plans.
(a) The Company has provided to Parent a true and complete
list of each employee benefit plan (within the
meaning of Section 3(3) of the Employee Retirement Income
Security Act of 1974, as amended (ERISA)),
and all stock purchase, stock option, severance, employment,
change-in-control,
fringe benefit, bonus, incentive, deferred compensation and all
other employee benefit plans, agreements, programs, policies or
other arrangements, whether or not subject to ERISA (including
any funding mechanism therefor now in effect or required in the
future as a result of the transactions contemplated by this
Agreement or otherwise), whether formal or informal, written,
legally binding or not, that is currently in effect, was
maintained since December 31, 2004 or which has been
approved before the date of the Original Agreement but is not
yet effective, for the benefit of (i) directors or
employees of the Company or any other persons performing
services for the Company, (ii) former directors or
employees of the Company or any other persons formerly
performing services for the Company, or (iii) beneficiaries
of anyone described in (i) or (ii). All such plans,
agreements, programs, policies and arrangements shall be
collectively referred to as the Company
Plans. With respect to each Company Plan, the Company
has furnished or made available to Parent a current, accurate
and complete copy thereof and, to the extent applicable:
(i) any related trust agreement or other funding
instrument, (ii) the most recent determination letter of
the Internal Revenue Service (the IRS), if
applicable, (iii) any summary plan description with each
summary of material modifications thereto, if any, employee
handbooks and other written communications (or a description of
any oral communications) by the Company or its Subsidiaries to
their employees concerning the extent of the benefits provided
under a Company Plan and (iv) for the three (3) most
recent years (A) Forms 5500, 941 and 1041 and attached
schedules, (B) audited financial statements, and
(C) actuarial valuation reports.
(b) Each Company Plan intended to be qualified under
Section 401(a) of the Code has received a favorable
determination, advisory
and/or
opinion letter, as applicable, from the IRS that it is so
qualified and, to the knowledge of the Company, nothing has
occurred since the date of such letter that would reasonably be
expected to cause the loss of such qualified status of such
Company Plan or cause the imposition of any penalty or Tax
liability.
(c) The Company is not liable for, and the Company will not
be liable for, any liability of any ERISA
Affiliate (hereby defined to include any trade or
business, whether or not incorporated, other than the Company,
which has employees who are or have been at any date of
determination occurring within the preceding six (6) years,
treated pursuant to Section 4001(a)(14) of ERISA
and/or
Section 414 of the Code as employees of a single employer
which includes the Company) including predecessors thereof) with
regard to any Company Plan maintained, sponsored or contributed
to by an ERISA Affiliate (if a like definition of Company Plan
were applicable to the ERISA Affiliate in the same manner as it
applies to the Company) (each such Company Plan for an ERISA
Affiliate being an ERISA Affiliate Plan),
including, without limitation: (i) withdrawal liability
arising under Title IV, Subtitle E, Part 1 of ERISA;
(ii) liabilities to the Pension Benefit Guaranty
Corporation (PBGC); (iii) liabilities
under Section 412 of the Code or Section 302(a)(2) of
ERISA; (iv) liabilities resulting from the failure on the
part of the Company, any ERISA Affiliate, each Company Plan or
each Company Plan sponsor or
administrator (within the meaning of
Section 3(16) of ERISA) to comply in all respects with the
applicable requirements of Section 4980B of the Code and
Section 601 et seq. of ERISA; or
(v) liabilities resulting from an ERISA Affiliate
Plans failure to satisfy the reporting and disclosure
requirements of ERISA and the Code.
(d) Neither the Company nor any ERISA Affiliate has ever
maintained or contributed to a multiemployer plan (as defined in
Section 3(37) of ERISA).
(e) With respect to the Company Plans, except as disclosed
in the Company SEC Documents or in Section 4.12 of
the Company Disclosure Letter:
(i) each Company Plan has been established and administered
in accordance with its terms and in material compliance with the
applicable provisions of ERISA and the Code, and no reportable
event, as defined in Section 4043 of ERISA, no prohibited
transaction, as described in Section 406 of ERISA or
Section 4975 of the Code, or accumulated funding
deficiency, as defined in Section 302 of ERISA and 412 of
the Code, has occurred with respect to any Company Plan, and all
contributions required to be made under the terms of any Company
Plan have been timely made;
A-26
(ii) to the knowledge of the Company, there is no Action
(including any investigation, audit or other administrative
proceeding) by the Department of Labor, the PBGC, the IRS or any
other Governmental Entity or by any plan participant or
beneficiary pending, threatened in writing, or relating to the
Company Plans, any fiduciaries thereof with respect to their
duties to the Company Plans or the assets of any of the trusts
under any of the Company Plans (other than routine claims for
benefits) nor, to the knowledge of the Company, are there facts
or circumstances that exist that could reasonably give rise to
any such Actions; and
(iii) if a Company Plan purports to be a voluntary
employees beneficiary association
(VEBA), a request for a determination letter
for the VEBA has been submitted to and approved by the IRS that
the VEBA is exempt from federal income tax under
Section 501(c)(9) of the Code, and nothing has occurred or
is expected to occur that caused or could cause the loss of such
qualification or exemption or the imposition of any tax,
interest or penalty with respect thereto.
(f) Neither the Company nor any ERISA Affiliate has any
obligation to contribute to or provide benefits pursuant to, and
has no other liability of any kind with respect to, (i) a
multiple employer welfare arrangement (MEWA) (within
the meaning of Section 3(40) of ERISA), or (ii) a
plan maintained by more than one employer (within
the meaning of Section 413(c) of the Code).
(g) None of the Company Plans provide for payment of a
benefit, the increase of a benefit amount, the payment of a
contingent benefit or the acceleration of the payment or vesting
of a benefit determined or occasioned, in whole or in part, by
reason of the execution of this Agreement or the consummation of
the transactions contemplated hereby. No amount or benefit that
could be received by any disqualified individual (as
defined in Treasury
Regulation Section 1.280G-1)
with respect to the Company or any Subsidiary in connection with
the transactions contemplated by this Agreement (alone or in
combination with any other event, and whether pursuant to a
Company Plan or otherwise) could be characterized as an
excess parachute payment (as defined in
Section 280G(b)(1) of the Code).
(h) No Company Plan provides for post-employment welfare
benefits except to the extent required by Section 4980B of
the Code or applicable state Law.
(i) Each Company Plan that is subject to Section 409A
of the Code has complied in form and operation with the
requirements of Section 409A of the Code. No individual is
entitled to any
gross-up,
make-whole or other additional payment from the Company or any
of its Subsidiaries in respect of any Tax (including federal,
state, local or foreign income, excise or other Taxes (including
Taxes imposed under Section 409A and 4999 of the Code)) or
interest or penalty related thereto.
(j) Each Company Plan that is subject to
Section 1862(b)(1) of the SSA has been operated in
compliance with the secondary payor requirements of
Section 1862 thereof.
Section 4.13 Labor and Employment Matters.
(a) The Company and its Subsidiaries are and have been in
compliance with all applicable Laws relating to labor and
employment, including those relating to wages, hours, collective
bargaining, unemployment compensation, workers
compensation, equal employment opportunity, age and disability
discrimination, immigration control, employee classification,
information privacy and security, payment and withholding of
taxes and continuation coverage with respect to group health
plans. As of the date of the Original Agreement, there is not
pending or, to the knowledge of the Company, threatened, any
labor dispute, work stoppage, labor strike or lockout against
the Company or any of its Subsidiaries by employees.
(b) No employee of the Company or any of its Subsidiaries
is covered by an effective or pending collective bargaining
agreement or similar labor agreement. To the knowledge of the
Company, there has not been any activity on behalf of any labor
organization or employee group to organize any such employees.
There are no (i) unfair labor practice charges or
complaints against the Company or any of its Subsidiaries
pending before the National Labor Relations Board or any other
labor relations tribunal or authority and to the knowledge of
the Company no such representations, claims or petitions are
threatened, (ii) representation claims or petitions pending
before the National Labor Relations Board or any other labor
relations tribunal or authority or (iii) grievances or
pending
A-27
arbitration proceedings against the Company or any of its
Subsidiaries that arose out of or under any collective
bargaining agreement.
(c) Except for such incorrect classifications as would not
reasonably be expected to result in a liability of more than
$20,000 in the aggregate, all individuals who are performing
consulting or other services for the Company or any Subsidiary
of the Company are or were correctly classified by the Company
as either independent contractors or
employees as the case may be. All employees of the
Company and any Subsidiary of the Company have been correctly
classified as exempt or non-exempt under
the Fair Labor Standards Act.
(d) Prior to the date of the Original Agreement, the
Company has delivered to Parent a true, correct and complete
list of the name of each officer, employee and independent
contractor of the Company and each Subsidiary thereof as of
March 25, 2011, together with such persons position
or function, annual base salary or wages and any incentives or
bonus arrangement with respect to such person.
(e) The properties, assets and operations of the Company
and its Subsidiaries have been in compliance in all material
respects with all applicable federal, state, local and foreign
laws, rules and regulations, orders, decrees, judgments, permits
and licenses relating to public and worker health and safety
(collectively, Worker Safety Laws). With
respect to such properties, assets and operations, including any
previously owned, leased or operated properties, assets or
operations, there are no past, present or reasonably anticipated
future events, conditions, circumstances, activities, practices,
incidents, actions or plans of the Company or any of its
Subsidiaries that may interfere with or prevent compliance or
continued compliance with applicable Worker Safety Laws.
Section 4.14 Environmental Matters.
(a) For purposes of this Agreement, the following terms
shall have the following meanings: (i) Hazardous
Substances means (A) petroleum and petroleum
products, by-products or breakdown products, radioactive
materials, asbestos-containing materials and polychlorinated
biphenyls, and (B) any other chemicals, materials or
substances regulated as toxic or hazardous or as a pollutant,
contaminant or waste under any applicable Environmental Law;
(ii) Environmental Law means any
applicable Law relating to pollution or protection of the
environment, human health or safety or the use, handling,
transportation, treatment, storage, disposal, release or
discharge of Hazardous Substances; and
(iii) Environmental Permit means any
permit, approval, identification number, license or other
authorization required under any applicable Environmental Law.
(b) The Company and its Subsidiaries are and have been in
compliance in all material respects with all applicable
Environmental Laws, have obtained all Environmental Permits and
are in compliance in all material respects with their
requirements, and have resolved all past non-compliance with
Environmental Laws and Environmental Permits without any
pending, on-going or future obligation, cost or liability.
(c) Neither the Company nor any of its Subsidiaries has
(i) placed, held, located, released, transported or
disposed of any Hazardous Substances on, under, from or at any
of their respective properties or any other properties other
than in compliance with applicable Law, (ii) any knowledge
of the presence of any Hazardous Substances on, under, emanating
from, or at any of their respective properties or any other
property but arising from the Companys or any of its
Subsidiaries current or former properties or operations
other than in compliance with applicable Law, or (iii) any
knowledge, nor has it received any written notice (A) of
any violation of or liability under any Environmental Laws,
(B) of the institution or pendency of any suit, action,
claim, proceeding or investigation by any Governmental Entity or
any third party in connection with any such violation or
liability, (C) requiring the investigation of, response to
or remediation of Hazardous Substances at or arising from any of
the Companys or any of its Subsidiaries current or
former properties or operations or any other properties,
(D) alleging noncompliance by the Company or any of its
Subsidiaries with the terms of any Environmental Permit in any
manner reasonably likely to require significant expenditures or
to result in liability, or (E) demanding payment for
response to or remediation of Hazardous Substances at or arising
from any of the Companys or any of its Subsidiaries
current or former properties or operations or any other
properties, except in each case as has not had and would not
reasonably be expected to have a Material Adverse Effect.
(d) No Environmental Law imposes any obligation upon the
Company or any of its Subsidiaries arising out of or as a
condition to any transaction contemplated by this Agreement,
including any requirement to modify or to transfer any permit or
license, any requirement to file any notice or other submission
with any Governmental Entity,
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the placement of any notice, acknowledgment or covenant in any
land records, or the modification of or provision of notice
under any agreement, consent order or consent decree.
(e) There are no environmental assessments or audit reports
or other similar studies or analyses in the possession or
control of the Company or any of its Subsidiaries relating to
any real property currently or formerly owned, leased or
occupied by the Company or any of its Subsidiaries that have not
been made available to Parent and which disclose a condition
that has had or would reasonably be expected to have a Material
Adverse Effect.
(f) Neither the Company nor any of its Subsidiaries has
exposed any employee or third party to any Hazardous Substances
or condition that has subjected or may subject the Company to
liability under any Environmental Law, except as has not had and
would not reasonably be expected to have a Material Adverse
Effect.
(g) No underground storage tanks, asbestos-containing
material, or polychlorinated biphenyls have ever been located on
property or properties presently or formerly owned or operated
by the Company or any of its Subsidiaries, except as has not had
and would not reasonably be expected to have a Material Adverse
Effect.
(h) Neither the Company nor any of its Subsidiaries has
agreed to assume, undertake or provide indemnification for any
material liability of any other person under any Environmental
Law, including any obligation for corrective or remedial action.
(i) Neither the Company nor any of its Subsidiaries has
received written notice that it is required to make any material
capital or other expenditures to comply with any Environmental
Law nor is there, to the Companys knowledge, any
reasonable basis on which any Governmental Entity could take
action that would require such material capital or other
expenditures.
(j) No Conflict Minerals are necessary to the functionality
or production of or are used in the production of any product
manufactured or contracted to be manufactured by the Company
during the last three (3) years, or currently proposed to
be manufactured by the Company or on its behalf in the future.
For purposes hereof, Conflict Minerals means:
(i) columbite-tantalite (coltan), cassiterite, gold,
wolframite, or their derivatives, which originate in the
Democratic Republic of the Congo or a country that shares an
internationally recognized border with the Democratic Republic
of the Congo; or (ii) any other mineral or its derivatives
determined by the Secretary of State of the United States to be
financing conflict in the Democratic Republic of the Congo or a
country that shares an internationally recognized border with
the Democratic Republic of the Congo.
Section 4.15 Taxes.
(a) The Company and each of its Subsidiaries have prepared
and timely filed all material Tax Returns required to be filed
and all Tax Returns filed by the Company and its Subsidiaries
are true, correct and complete in all material respects. For
purposes of this Section 4.15, references to the
Company
and/or its
Subsidiaries include predecessors to the Company and its
Subsidiaries. The Company has made available to Parent copies of
all federal income and other material Tax Returns filed by the
Company and its Subsidiaries since January 1, 2007.
(b) All material Taxes due and owing by the Company and
each of its Subsidiaries (whether or not shown on any Tax
Returns) have timely been paid, or have been timely withheld and
remitted (if applicable), to the appropriate Governmental
Entity, except for those Taxes being contested in good faith and
or which adequate reserves have been established in the Company
financial statements.
(c) All material Taxes that have accrued but are not yet
payable have been reserved for in accordance with GAAP
(including FIN 48, Accounting for Uncertainty in Income
Taxes) in the Companys financial statements included in
the Company SEC Documents, or have been incurred in the ordinary
course of business since the date of the Company SEC Documents
filed most recently in amounts consistent with prior periods.
(d) Neither the Company nor any of its Subsidiaries has
executed any waiver of any statute of limitations on or extended
the period for the assessment or collection of any Tax that is
still in effect.
(e) Neither the Company nor any of its Subsidiaries has
received notice of any proposed or threatened Tax proceeding,
examination, investigation, audit or administrative or judicial
proceeding (collectively, the Tax
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Proceedings) against, or with respect to any Taxes
of, the Company or any of its Subsidiaries, and no such Tax
Proceedings are currently pending.
(f) As of the date of the Original Agreement, neither the
Company nor any of its Subsidiaries is a party to any closing
agreement pursuant to Section 7121 of the Code or any
predecessor provision thereof, or any similar provision of
state, local, or foreign Law that would reasonably be expected
to have a Material Adverse Affect following the Merger.
(g) Each of the Company and its Subsidiaries has disclosed
on its Tax Returns all positions taken therein that could give
rise to a substantial understatement of federal income Tax
within the meaning of Section 6662 of the Code or any
similar provision of state, local, or foreign Law.
(h) No claim has been made by any Governmental Entity in a
jurisdiction where either the Company or any of its Subsidiaries
has not filed Tax Returns indicating that the Company or such
Subsidiary is or may be subject to any taxation by such
jurisdiction.
(i) Neither the Company nor any of its Subsidiaries has
agreed or is required to make any adjustments pursuant to
Section 481(a) of the Code for any taxable period (or
portion thereof) ending after the Closing Date or any similar
provision of state, local or foreign Law by reason of a change
in accounting method made for any taxable period (or portion
thereof) ending on or prior to the Closing Date, nor is any
application pending with any Governmental Entity requesting
permission for any change in accounting method.
(j) Other than in the ordinary course of business,
consistent with past practice, neither the Company nor any of
its Subsidiaries will be required to include any material item
of income in, or exclude any material item of deduction from,
U.S. taxable income for any taxable period (or portion
thereof) ending after the Closing Date as a result of any
transaction that occurred prior to the Merger, including
(i) any installment sale or open transaction disposition
made on or prior to the Closing Date, (ii) any prepaid
amount received on or prior to the Closing Date, or
(iii) any election made or contemplated to be made on any
Tax Return.
(k) There are no material Liens on the assets of the
Company or any of its Subsidiaries relating to or attributable
to Taxes, other than Permitted Liens.
(l) The Company is not a United States real property
holding corporation within the meaning of
Section 897(c)(2) of the Code, nor has it been a
United States real property holding corporation
within the meaning of Section 897(c)(2) of the Code during
the applicable period specified in Section 897(c)(1)(A)(i)
of the Code.
(m) There are no material deferred intercompany
transactions within the meaning of Treasury
Regulation Section 1.1502-13(b)(1)
with respect to which the Company or any of its Subsidiaries
would be required to include any item of income or gain in, or
exclude any item of deduction or loss from, taxable income for
any taxable period (or portion thereof) ending on or after the
Closing Date. There are no material excess loss
accounts within the meaning of Treasury
Regulation Section 1.1502-19(a)(2)
with respect to any Subsidiaries of the Companies. There are no
material items of income that will be required to be recognized
by the Company or any of its Subsidiaries as a result of the
Merger.
(n) Neither the Company nor any of its Subsidiaries
(i) is a party to a Contract (other than a Contract entered
into in the ordinary course of business with vendors, customers
and lessors) that provides for Tax indemnity or Tax sharing, or
for the payment of any portion of a Tax (or pay any amount
calculated with reference to any portion of a Tax) of any other
Person, or (ii) has any Liability for Taxes of any Person
(other than the Company or any of its Subsidiaries) under
Treasury
Regulation Section 1.1502-6
(or any similar provision of state, local or foreign Law), as a
transferee or successor. Neither the Company nor any of its
Subsidiaries has been a member of a combined, consolidated,
unitary or similar group for Tax purposes, other than any such
group of which the Company was at all times the common parent
corporation.
(o) Neither the Company nor any of its Subsidiaries has
constituted either a distributing corporation or a
controlled corporation in a distribution of stock
intended to qualify for tax-free treatment under
Section 355 of the Code (x) in the two (2) years
prior to the date of the Original Agreement or (y) in a
distribution which would
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otherwise constitute part of a plan or series
of related transactions (within the meaning of
Section 355(e) of the Code and regulations thereunder) in
conjunction with the Merger.
(p) Neither the Company nor any of its Subsidiaries has
participated (i) in a transaction that is the same as or
substantially similar to one of the types of transactions that
the IRS has determined to be a tax avoidance transaction and
identified by notice, regulation, or other form of published
guidance as a listed transaction, as set forth in Treasury
Regulation Section 1.6011-4(b)(1)
or, (ii) to the knowledge of the Company, in a reportable
transaction (other than a listed transaction), as set forth in
Treasury
Regulation Section 1.6011-4(b).
(q) Neither the Company nor any of its Subsidiaries has
requested or received a formal ruling or entered into an
agreement with the IRS or any other taxing authority that would
be reasonably likely to have a Material Adverse Affect after the
Closing Date.
(r) The Company and its Subsidiaries are and have been in
compliance in all material respects with the applicable transfer
pricing laws and regulations, including the execution and
maintenance of contemporaneous documentation substantiating
transfer pricing practices of the Company and its Subsidiaries.
(s) No Subsidiary of the Company is a controlled
foreign corporation as defined in the Code. Neither the
Company nor any of its Subsidiaries owns an interest in any
entity treated as a passive foreign investment
company as defined in the Code.
Section 4.16 Contracts.
(a) Section 4.16(a) of the Company Disclosure
Letter lists all of the Material Contracts to which the Company
or any of its Subsidiaries is a party or by which any of their
respective properties or assets is bound. All copies of Material
Contracts made available to Parent are true and complete copies
of such Contracts. Material Contracts means
any of the following contracts, agreements or arrangements
(other than purchase or sales orders entered into in the
ordinary course), whether written or oral, currently in effect
and binding:
(i) any Contract that would be required to be filed by the
Company as a material contract pursuant to
Item 601(b)(10) of
Regulation S-K
under the Securities Act or disclosed by the Company on a
Current Report on
Form 8-K;
(ii) any Contract that limits the ability of the Company or
any of its Subsidiaries (or, following the consummation of the
transactions contemplated by this Agreement, would limit the
ability of Parent or any of its Subsidiaries, including the
Surviving Corporation) to compete in any line of business or
with any Person or in any geographic area, or that restricts the
right of the Company and its Subsidiaries (or, following the
consummation of the transactions contemplated by this Agreement,
would limit the ability of Parent or any of its Subsidiaries,
including the Surviving Corporation) to sell to or purchase from
any Person or to hire any Person, or that grants the other party
or any third Person most favored nation status or
any similar type of favored discount rights;
(iii) any Contract with respect to the formation, creation,
operation, management or control of a joint venture,
partnership, limited liability or other similar agreement or
arrangement;
(iv) any Contract relating to Indebtedness;
(v) any Contract involving the acquisition or disposition,
directly or indirectly (by merger or otherwise), of assets or
capital stock or other equity interests for aggregate
consideration (in one or a series of transactions) under such
Contract of $20,000 or more (other than acquisitions or
dispositions of inventory in the ordinary course of business
consistent with past practice);
(vi) any Contract that by its terms calls for aggregate
payment or receipt by the Company and its Subsidiaries under
such Contract of more than $20,000 over the remaining term of
such Contract;
(vii) any Contract pursuant to which the Company or any of
its Subsidiaries has continuing indemnification (other than
product warranties or real estate lease indemnities in the
ordinary course of business consistent with past practice),
guarantee, earn-out or other contingent payment
obligations, in each case that could result in payments in
excess of $20,000;
A-31
(viii) any Contract that is a license agreement that is
material to the business of the Company and its Subsidiaries,
taken as a whole, pursuant to which the Company or any of its
Subsidiaries grants or is granted a license under any
Intellectual Property, other than license agreements for
off-the-shelf
software that is generally commercially available and is
licensed in object code form solely for internal use purposes;
(ix) any Contract that provides for any material
confidentiality, standstill or similar obligations on the
Company or its Subsidiaries, except for such Contracts entered
into in the ordinary course of business consistent with past
practice;
(x) any Contract that obligates the Company or any of its
Subsidiaries to make any capital commitment, loan or expenditure
in an amount in excess of $20,000;
(xi) any Contract between the Company or any of its
Subsidiaries, on the one hand, and any Affiliate thereof other
than any Subsidiary of the Company of more than $20,000;
(xii) any Contract with brokers, franchisees, distributors
or dealers;
(xiii) any agreements with group purchasing organizations
(GPOs) or integrated delivery networks (IDNs);
(xiv) any agreement with the Veterans Administration or
Federal Supply Administration; or
(xv) any Contract with any Governmental Entity that
involves amounts in excess of $20,000.
Section 4.16(a) of the Company Disclosure Letter
identifies any Material Contract that requires consent to or
otherwise contains a provision relating to a change of
control, or that would or would reasonably be expected to
prevent, delay or impair the consummation of the transactions
contemplated by this Agreement.
(b) (i) Each Material Contract is valid and binding on
the Company and any of its Subsidiaries to the extent such
Subsidiary is a party thereto, as applicable, and to the
knowledge of the Company, each other party thereto, and is in
full force and effect and enforceable in accordance with its
terms (except to the extent that enforceability may be limited
by applicable bankruptcy, insolvency, moratorium, reorganization
or similar Laws affecting the enforcement of creditors
rights generally or by general principles of equity, and further
limited by laws relating to the availability of specific
performance, injunctive relief or other equitable remedies); and
(ii) there is no default under any Material Contract by the
Company or any of its Subsidiaries or, to the knowledge of the
Company, any other party thereto, and no event or condition has
occurred that constitutes, or, after notice or lapse of time or
both, would constitute, a default on the part of the Company or
any of its Subsidiaries or, to the knowledge of the Company, any
other party thereto under any such Material Contract, nor has
the Company or any of its Subsidiaries received any notice of
any such default, event or condition. The Company has made
available to Parent true and complete copies of all Material
Contracts, including any amendments thereto.
Section 4.17 Insurance. Section 4.17 of
the Company Disclosure Letter sets forth, as of the date of the
Original Agreement, a true and complete list of all insurance
policies issued in favor of the Company or any of its
Subsidiaries, or pursuant to which the Company or any of its
Subsidiaries is a named insured or otherwise a beneficiary, as
well as any historic occurrence-based policies still in force.
With respect to each such insurance policy, (a) such policy
is, to the knowledge of the Company, in full force and effect
and all premiums due thereon have been paid, and
(b) neither the Company nor any of its Subsidiaries is in
breach or default, or has taken any action or failed to take any
action which (with or without notice or lapse of time, or both)
would constitute such a breach or default, or would permit
cancellation or termination of, any such policy. No notice of
cancellation or termination has been received with respect to
any such policy.
Section 4.18 Properties.
(a) The Company or one of its Subsidiaries has good and
valid title to, or in the case of leased property and leased
tangible assets, a valid leasehold interest in, all of its
assets constituting personal property (excluding, for purposes
of this sentence, assets held under leases), free and clear of
all Liens other than (i) statutory ad valorem and real
estate and other Liens for current taxes and assessments not yet
past due or the amount or validity of which is being contested
in good faith by appropriate proceedings,
(ii) mechanics, workmens, repairmens,
landlords, warehousemens, carriers or similar
Liens arising in the ordinary course of business of the Company
or such
A-32
Subsidiary consistent with past practice (iii) encumbrances
on real property in the nature of zoning restrictions,
easements, rights of way, encroachments, restrictive covenants,
and other similar rights or restrictions that were not incurred
in connection with the borrowing of money or the obtaining of
advances or credit and that do not, individually or in the
aggregate, impair present business operations at such
properties, (iv) existing Liens disclosed in the
Companys consolidated balance sheet as at
December 31, 2010 (or the notes thereto) included in the
Company SEC Documents; and (v) any such matters of record,
Liens and other imperfections of title that do not, individually
or in the aggregate, impair the continued ownership, use and
operation of the assets to which they relate in the business of
the Company and its Subsidiaries as currently conducted
(Permitted Liens).
(b) Section 4.18(b) of the Company Disclosure
Letter sets forth a true and complete list of all real property
owned by the Company or any of its Subsidiaries (Owned
Real Property) and all property leased for the benefit
of the Company or any of its Subsidiaries (Leased Real
Property). Each of the Company and its Subsidiaries
has (i) good and marketable title in fee simple to all
Owned Real Property and (ii) good leasehold title to all
Leased Real Property, in each case, free and clear of all Liens
except Permitted Liens. No parcel of Owned Real Property or
Leased Real Property is subject to any governmental decree or
order to be sold or is being condemned, expropriated or
otherwise taken by any public authority with or without payment
of compensation therefor, nor, to the knowledge of the Company,
has any such condemnation, expropriation or taking been
proposed. All leases of Leased Real Property and all amendments
and modifications thereto are in full force and effect, and
there exists no default under any such lease by the Company, any
of its Subsidiaries or any other party thereto, nor any event
which, with notice or lapse of time or both, would constitute a
default thereunder by the Company, any of its Subsidiaries or
any other party thereto, except as, individually or in the
aggregate, has not had and would not reasonably be expected to
have a Material Adverse Effect. Assuming all consents, approvals
and authorizations listed in Section 4.5 of the
Company Disclosure Letter relating to any Leased Real Property
have been obtained, all leases of Leased Real Property shall
remain valid and binding in accordance with their terms
following the Effective Time.
(c) There are no contractual or legal restrictions that
preclude or materially restrict the ability to use any Owned
Real Property or, to the knowledge of the Company, Leased Real
Property by the Company or any of its Subsidiaries for the
current or contemplated use of such real property. To the
knowledge of the Company, there are no material latent defects
or material adverse physical conditions affecting the Owned Real
Property or Leased Real Property. All plants, warehouses,
distribution centers, structures and other buildings on the
Owned Real Property or Leased Real Property are adequately
maintained in all material respects and are in good operating
condition and repair for the requirements of the business of the
Company and its Subsidiaries as currently conducted.
(d) Each of the Company and its Subsidiaries has complied
with the terms of all leases to which it is a party, and all
such leases are in full force and effect, except for any such
noncompliance or failure to be in full force and effect that,
individually or in the aggregate, has not had and would not
reasonably be expected to have a Material Adverse Effect. Each
of the Company and its Subsidiaries enjoys peaceful and
undisturbed possession under all such leases, except for any
such failure to do so that, individually or in the aggregate,
has not had and would not reasonably be expected to have a
Material Adverse Effect.
This Section 4.18 does not relate to intellectual
property, which is the subject of Section 4.19.
Section 4.19 Intellectual Property.
(a) As used herein, the term Intellectual
Property means all intellectual property rights
arising under the laws of the United States or any other
jurisdiction, including the following: (i) trade names,
trademarks and service marks (registered and unregistered),
domain names, trade dress and similar rights and applications to
register any of the foregoing (collectively,
Marks); (ii) patents and patent
applications and rights in respect of utility models or
industrial designs and invention disclosures (collectively,
Patents); (iii) copyrights, materials
subject to copyright protection, and registrations and
applications therefor (collectively,
Copyrights); and (iv) know-how,
inventions, discoveries, methods, processes, technical data,
specifications, research and development information,
technology, data bases and other proprietary or confidential
information, including customer lists, in each case that derives
economic value (actual or potential) from not being generally
known to other persons who can obtain economic
A-33
value from its disclosure, but excluding any Copyrights or
Patents that cover or protect any of the foregoing
(collectively, Trade Secrets).
(b) Section 4.19(b)(1) of the Company
Disclosure Letter sets forth an accurate and complete list of
all Marks owned by or licensed to the Company or any of its
Subsidiaries, which list indicates any registered Marks that are
licensed to the Company or its Subsidiaries but which are not
being used in the current conduct of the Companys or its
Subsidiaries businesses (collectively, Company
Marks), Section 4.19(b)(2) of the Company
Disclosure Letter sets forth an accurate and complete list of
all Patents owned by or licensed to the Company or any of its
Subsidiaries, which list indicates any registered Patents that
are licensed to the Company or its Subsidiaries but which are
not being used in the current conduct of the Companys or
its Subsidiaries businesses (collectively,
Company Patents) and
Section 4.19(b)(3) of the Company Disclosure Letter
sets forth an accurate and complete list of all registered
Copyrights owned by or exclusively licensed to the Company or
any of its Subsidiaries, which list indicates any registered
Copyrights that are licensed to the Company or its Subsidiaries
but which are not being used in the current conduct of the
Companys or its Subsidiaries businesses
(collectively, Company Copyrights and,
together with the Company Marks and the Company Patents,
Company IP). No Company IP owned by the
Company or any of its Subsidiaries or, to knowledge of the
Company, exclusively licensed to the Company or any of its
Subsidiaries has been or is now involved in any interference,
reissue, reexamination, opposition, nullity or cancellation
proceeding and, to the knowledge of the Company, no such action
is or has been threatened with respect to any of the Company IP.
The Company IP owned by the Company or any of its Subsidiaries
or, to knowledge of the Company, exclusively licensed to the
Company or any of its Subsidiaries is subsisting. To the
knowledge of the Company, the Company IP (excluding any pending
applications included in the Company IP) is valid and
enforceable and, except as set forth on
Section 4.19(b)(4) of the Company Disclosure Letter,
no written or, to the knowledge of the Company, oral notice or
claim challenging the validity or enforceability or alleging the
misuse of any of the Company IP has been received by the Company
or any of its Subsidiaries. To the knowledge of the Company,
neither the Company nor any of its Subsidiaries has taken any
action or failed to take any action that would reasonably be
expected to result in the abandonment, cancellation, forfeiture,
relinquishment, invalidation or unenforceability of any of the
Company IP, and all filing, examination, issuance, post
registration and maintenance fees, annuities and the like that
have come due and are required to maintain, preserve or renew
any of the Company IP owned by the Company or any of its
Subsidiaries or, to knowledge of the Company, exclusively
licensed to the Company or any of its Subsidiaries have been
timely paid. Except as set forth on
Section 4.19(b)(5) of the Company Disclosure Letter,
with respect to the Company IP owned by the Company or any of
its Subsidiaries, and to the knowledge of the Company with
respect to the Company IP exclusively licensed to the Company or
any of its Subsidiaries, there are no filings, payments or other
actions that were required to have been or are required to be
made or taken by March 25, 2011, including the payment of
any registration, maintenance or renewal fees or the filing of
any responses to office actions, documents, applications or
certificates, for the purposes of complying with legal
requirements to obtain, maintain, preserve or renew any Company
IP.
(c) The Company and its Subsidiaries have taken
commercially reasonable steps to protect their rights in the
Intellectual Property owned by the Company or its Subsidiaries
and maintain the confidentiality of all of the Trade Secrets of
the Company or its Subsidiaries. All current or former
employees, consultants and contractors who have participated in
the creation of any Intellectual Property that is used by or
that is intended to be used by the Company or its Subsidiaries
have entered into proprietary information, confidentiality and
assignment agreements (which have previously been provided to
Parent).
(d) The Company or its Subsidiaries own, or possess
adequate licenses or other valid rights to use, all of the
Intellectual Property that is necessary for the conduct of the
Companys and its Subsidiaries businesses. None of
the Intellectual Property owned by or, to the knowledge of the
Company, licensed to, the Company or its Subsidiaries is subject
to any outstanding order, judgment, or stipulation restricting
the use or exploitation thereof by the Company or its
Subsidiaries.
(e) The execution, delivery and performance by the Company
of this Agreement, and the consummation of the transactions
contemplated hereby, will not result in the loss or impairment
of, or give rise to any right of any third party to terminate or
re-price or otherwise modify any of the Companys or any of
its Subsidiaries rights or obligations under any Material
Contract as defined in Section 4.16(a)(viii) of this
Agreement. The rights licensed under each agreement granting to
the Company or any of its Subsidiaries, as the case may be, any
material right or
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license under or with respect to any Intellectual Property owned
by a third party shall be exercisable by the Surviving
Corporation or such Subsidiary, respectively, on and immediately
after the Closing to the same extent as by the Company or such
Subsidiary prior to the Closing. Neither the Company nor any of
its Subsidiaries has granted to any third party any rights under
any Intellectual Property owned by the Company or its
Subsidiaries. All milestones and other conditions set forth in
any license agreements under which Intellectual Property is
licensed to the Company or any of its Subsidiaries that are
required to be satisfied in order for the Company or such
Subsidiary to retain any rights granted under such agreements
have been timely satisfied and all such exclusive or
non-exclusive rights remain in full force and effect.
(f) The Company or one or more of its Subsidiaries owns
exclusively all right, title and interest to the Company IP
(other than Company IP licensed to the Company or any of its
Subsidiaries) and all other Intellectual Property purportedly
owned by the Company or any of its Subsidiaries, free and clear
of all Liens other than Permitted Liens, and neither the Company
nor any of its Subsidiaries has received any written or, to the
knowledge of the Company, oral notice or claim challenging the
Companys or such Subsidiarys ownership of any of
such Intellectual Property. To the knowledge of the Company, no
loss, impairment or expiration of any Intellectual Property
rights used in the Companys and the Subsidiaries
business as currently conducted is pending or threatened.
(g) To the knowledge of the Company, the conduct of the
Companys and the Subsidiaries business as currently
conducted, including the use or other exploitation of the
Intellectual Property owned by the Company or any of its
Subsidiaries, has not infringed, misappropriated, diluted or
violated, and does not infringe, misappropriate, dilute or
violate any Intellectual Property of any third party or
constitute unfair competition or unfair trade practices under
the laws of any jurisdiction, and neither the Company nor any of
its Subsidiaries has received any written or, to the knowledge
of the Company, oral notice or claim asserting or suggesting
that any such infringement, misappropriation, violation,
dilution, unfair competition or unfair trade practice has
occurred, nor, to the knowledge of the Company, is there any
reasonable basis therefor. To the knowledge of the Company,
(i) no third party is misappropriating or infringing any
Intellectual Property owned by or exclusively licensed to the
Company or its Subsidiaries and (ii) no current or former
employee or consultant of the Company nor any third party has
made any unauthorized disclosure of any Trade Secrets of the
Company or its Subsidiaries.
(h) To the knowledge of the Company, at no time during the
conception of or reduction to practice of any Intellectual
Property owned by the Company or any of its Subsidiaries was any
developer, inventor or other contributor to such Intellectual
Property operating under any grants from any Governmental Entity
or private source, performing research sponsored by any
Governmental Entity or private source or subject to any
employment agreement or invention assignment or nondisclosure
agreement or other obligation with any third party, in each case
that would impair or limit the Companys or any of its
Subsidiaries rights in such Intellectual Property. To the
knowledge of the Company, there exist no inventions by current
or former employees or consultants of the Company or any of its
Subsidiaries made or otherwise conceived prior to their
beginning employment or consultation with the Company or such
Subsidiary that have been or are intended to be incorporated
into any of the Companys Intellectual Property or
products, other than any such inventions that have been validly
and irrevocably assigned or licensed to the Company by written
agreement.
(i) To the knowledge of the Company, there has been no
prior use of any Company Mark adopted by the Company or any of
its Subsidiaries by any third party that would confer upon such
third party superior rights in such Company Mark.
Section 4.20 Products. Since January 1, 2007,
neither the Company nor any of its Subsidiaries, nor, to the
knowledge of the Company any distributor of the Company or any
of its Subsidiaries, has received a claim for or based upon
breach of product or service warranty or guaranty or similar
claim, strict liability in tort, negligent design of product,
negligent provision of services or any other allegation of
liability, including or arising from the materials, design,
testing, manufacture, packaging, labeling (including
instructions for use), or sale of its products or from the
provision of services, in each case that would not result in
material liability to the Company and its Subsidiaries in excess
of the warranty reserve reflected on the Companys balance
sheet as of December 31, 2010.
Section 4.21 Accounts Receivable. All of the
accounts and notes receivable of the Company and its
Subsidiaries set forth on the books and records of the Company
and its Subsidiaries (net of the applicable reserves
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reflected on the books and records of the Company and its
Subsidiaries and in the Companys financial statements)
(i) represent sales actually made or transactions actually
effected in the ordinary course of business for goods or
services delivered or rendered to unaffiliated customers in bona
fide arms length transactions, and (ii) constitute
valid claims.
Section 4.22 Inventories. To the knowledge of the
Company, all inventories of the Company and its Subsidiaries
consist of items of merchantable quality and quantity usable or
saleable (free of any material defect or deficiency) in the
ordinary course of business, are saleable at the price
customarily charged by the Company and its Subsidiaries
therefor, conform to the specifications established therefor,
and have been manufactured in accordance with applicable
regulatory requirements. The quantities of all inventories,
materials, and supplies of the Company and its Subsidiaries (net
of the obsolescence reserves therefor shown in the
Companys financial statements and determined in the
ordinary course of business consistent with past practice) are
not obsolete, damaged, slow-moving, defective, or excessive, and
are reasonable and balanced in the circumstances of the Company
and its Subsidiaries.
Section 4.23 State Takeover Statutes. Except as set
forth on Section 4.23 of the Company Disclosure
Letter, no moratorium, fair price,
business combination, control share
acquisition or similar provision of any state statutory
anti-takeover Law (collectively, Takeover
Laws) applies to this Agreement, the Offer or the
Merger.
Section 4.24 No Rights Plan. Except as set forth on
Section 4.24 of the Company Disclosure Letter, there
is no stockholder rights plan, poison pill
anti-takeover plan or other similar device in effect to which
the Company is a party or is otherwise bound (any such plan, a
Rights Plan). Prior to the date of the
Original Agreement, the Company has caused all Rights Plans, if
any, to be amended such that (a) Parent and Merger Sub are
excluded from the definition of Acquiring Person and
(b) neither the Offer nor the Merger will trigger the
distribution or exercisability of any rights granted thereunder.
Section 4.25 Related Party Transactions. No present
director, executive officer, stockholder owning five percent
(5%) or more of the Companys Shares, or Affiliate of the
Company or any of its Subsidiaries, nor, to the knowledge of the
Company, or any of such Persons Affiliates or immediate
family members (each of the foregoing, a Related
Party), is a party to any Contract with or binding
upon the Company or any of its Subsidiaries or any of their
respective properties or assets or has any interest in any Owned
Real Property or has engaged in any transaction with any of the
foregoing within the last twelve (12) months or that has
continuing obligations, in each case, that is of a type that
would be required to be disclosed in the Company SEC Documents
pursuant to Item 404 of
Regulation S-K,
and, to the knowledge of the Company, no former director or
officer is party to any such Contract that was not entered into
on an arms-length basis (an Affiliate
Transaction) that has not been so disclosed. To the
knowledge of the Company, no Related Party of the Company or any
of its Subsidiaries owns, directly or indirectly, on an
individual or joint basis, any material interest in, or serves
as an officer or director or in another similar capacity of, any
supplier or other independent contractor of the Company or any
of its Subsidiaries, or any organization which has a Contract
with the Company or any of its Subsidiaries.
Section 4.26 Brokers. No broker, investment banker,
financial advisor or other Person, other than B.
Riley & Co., LLC (the Financial
Advisor), the fees and expenses of which will be paid
by the Company, is entitled to any brokers, finders,
financial advisors or other similar fee or commission in
connection with the transactions contemplated by this Agreement
based upon arrangements made by or on behalf of the Company or
any of its Affiliates. The Company has furnished to Parent a
true and complete copy of any Contract between the Company and
the Financial Advisor pursuant to which the Financial Advisor
could be entitled to any payment from the Company relating to
the transactions contemplated hereby. Section 4.26
of the Company Disclosure Letter sets forth (a) all
transaction fees and expenses (whether payable to financial
advisory, legal, accounting or other providers) that include a
success fee or other premium or additional fee due as a result
of execution and delivery of this Agreement or consummation of
the transactions contemplated hereby.
Section 4.27 Opinion of Financial Advisor. The
Company has received the opinion of the Financial Advisor, dated
the date of the Original Agreement, to the effect that, subject
to the assumptions, qualifications and other matters set forth
therein, as of such date, the consideration to be received by
the holders of Shares (other than as set forth in such opinion)
pursuant to this Agreement, is fair, from a financial point of
view, to such holders of Shares, other than Parent and Merger
Sub, a signed true and complete copy of which opinion has been
provided to Parent.
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Section 4.28 Exclusivity of Representations and
Warranties. Neither the Company nor any of its Affiliates or
representatives is making any representation or warranty on
behalf of the Company of any kind or nature whatsoever, oral or
written, express or implied (including, but not limited to, any
relating to financial condition, results of operations,
prospects, assets or liabilities of the Company and its
Subsidiaries), except as expressly set forth in
Article IV of this Agreement (as qualified by the
introductory paragraph to Article IV), and the
Company hereby disclaims any and all such other representations
and warranties. Without limiting the express representations and
warranties in this Article IV (including any
representations and warranties regarding documents delivered or
made available to Parent), and without limiting the broad nature
of the disclaimer set forth in the prior sentence, no
representation or warranty is being made as a result of the
Company making available to Parent and Merger Sub or any of
their Affiliates any management presentations, information,
documents, projections, forecasts and other material in a
data room or otherwise.
ARTICLE V
REPRESENTATIONS AND WARRANTIES OF
PARENT AND MERGER SUB
Each representation and warranty in this Article V
is made and given with the intention of inducing the Company to
enter into this Agreement. Parent and the Merger Sub each
jointly and severally represent and warrant to the Company as
follows:
Section 5.1 Organization, Standing and Power. Each
of Parent and Merger Sub (a) is a corporation duly
organized, validly existing and in good standing under the Laws
of the jurisdiction of its incorporation and (b) has the
requisite corporate power and authority to own, lease and
operate its properties and to carry on its business as now being
conducted, except as, individually or in the aggregate, has not
had and would not reasonably be expected to have a Parent
Material Adverse Effect. For purposes of this Agreement,
Parent Material Adverse Effect means any
event, change, circumstance, occurrence, effect or state of
facts that materially impairs the ability of Parent and Merger
Sub to consummate, or prevents or materially delays, the Offer,
the Merger or any of the other transactions contemplated by this
Agreement or would reasonably be expected to do so;
provided, however, that, Parent Material Adverse
Effect shall not include any event, change, circumstance,
occurrence, effect or state of facts to the extent arising out
of or attributable to any of the following, either alone or in
combination (1) generally affecting the industry in which
Parent operates, or the economy or the financial or securities
markets in the United States, including effects on such
industry, economy or markets resulting from any regulatory or
political conditions or developments in general, (2) any
outbreak or escalation of hostilities or declared or undeclared
acts of war or terrorism, weather, natural disasters or other
force majeure events, (3) reflecting or resulting from
changes in any Law or GAAP or interpretations thereof,
(4) the announcement of the execution of the Original
Agreement or the pendency of the Offer or the Merger or any
other transactions contemplated by this Agreement,
(5) compliance with the terms of, or the taking of any
action required by, this Agreement, or the failure to take any
action prohibited by this Agreement, or (6) any failure by
Parent or its Subsidiaries to meet any internal or external
budgets, projections, forecasts or predictions of financial
performance.
Section 5.2 Authority. Each of Parent and Merger Sub
has all requisite corporate power and authority to execute,
deliver and perform its obligations under this Agreement and to
consummate the transactions contemplated hereby. The execution,
delivery and performance of this Agreement by Parent and Merger
Sub and the consummation by Parent and Merger Sub of the
transactions contemplated hereby have been duly authorized by
all necessary corporate action on the part of Parent and Merger
Sub and no other corporate proceedings on the part of Parent or
Merger Sub are necessary to approve this Agreement or to
consummate the transactions contemplated hereby. This Agreement
has been duly executed and delivered by Parent and Merger Sub
and, assuming the due authorization, execution and delivery by
the Company, constitutes a valid and binding obligation of each
of Parent and Merger Sub, enforceable against each of Parent and
Merger Sub in accordance with its terms (except to the extent
that enforceability may be limited by applicable bankruptcy,
insolvency, moratorium, reorganization or similar Laws affecting
the enforcement of creditors rights generally or by
general principles of equity).
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Section 5.3 No Conflict; Consents and Approvals.
(a) The execution, delivery and performance of this
Agreement by each of Parent and Merger Sub does not, and,
assuming that all consents, approvals, authorizations and other
actions described in this Section 5.3 have been
obtained and all filings and obligations described in this
Section 5.3 have been made, the consummation of the
Offer and the Merger and compliance by each of Parent and Merger
Sub with the provisions hereof will not, conflict with, or
result in any violation or breach of, or default (with or
without notice or lapse of time, or both) under, or give rise to
a right of, or result in, termination, cancellation,
modification or acceleration of any obligation or to the loss of
a material benefit under, or result in the creation of any Lien
in or upon any of the properties, assets or rights of Parent or
Merger Sub under, or give rise to any increased, additional,
accelerated or guaranteed rights or entitlements under, or
require any consent, waiver or approval of any Person pursuant
to, any provision of (i) the certificate of incorporation
or bylaws of Parent or Merger Sub, each as amended to date,
(ii) any material Contract to which Parent or Merger Sub is
a party by which Parent, Merger Sub or any of their respective
properties or assets may be bound or (iii) subject to the
governmental filings and other matters referred to in
Section 5.3(b), any material Law or any rule or
regulation of the NYSE applicable to Parent or Merger Sub or by
which Parent, Merger Sub or any of their respective properties
or assets may be bound.
(b) No consent, approval, order or authorization of, or
registration, declaration, filing with or notice to, any
Governmental Entity is required by or with respect to Parent or
Merger Sub in connection with the execution, delivery and
performance of this Agreement by Parent and Merger Sub or the
consummation by Parent and Merger Sub of the Merger and the
other transactions contemplated hereby or compliance with the
provisions hereof, except for (i) such filings and reports
as required pursuant to the applicable requirements of the
Securities Act, the Exchange Act and any other applicable state
or federal securities, takeover and blue sky laws,
(ii) the filing of the Florida Certificate of Merger with
the Florida Secretary of State as required by the Florida Act,
(iii) any filings required under the rules and regulations
of the NYSE, (iv) such filings and consents as may be
required under any environmental, health or safety law or
regulation pertaining to any notification, disclosure or
required approval triggered by the Merger or by the transactions
contemplated by this Agreement, and (v) such other
consents, approvals, orders, authorizations, registrations,
declarations, filings or notices the failure of which to be
obtained or made, individually or in the aggregate, have not had
and would not reasonably be expected to have a Parent Material
Adverse Effect.
Section 5.4 Certain Information. The Offer Documents
will not, at the times they are first filed with the SEC,
amended or supplemented or first published, sent or given to the
Stockholders, contain any untrue statement of a material fact or
omit to state any material fact required to be stated therein or
necessary to make the statements therein, in light of the
circumstances under which they are made, not misleading. The
Offer Documents will, at the times they are first filed with the
SEC, at the times they are amended or supplemented and as of as
of the date first published, sent or given to the Stockholders,
comply as to form in all material respects with the provisions
of the Exchange Act. Notwithstanding the foregoing, neither
Parent nor Merger Sub makes any representation or warranty with
respect to statements included or incorporated by reference in
the Offer Documents based on information supplied by or on
behalf of the Company, any of its Subsidiaries or Affiliates
specifically for inclusion or incorporation by reference
therein. None of the information supplied or to be supplied by
or on behalf of Parent or Merger Sub specifically for inclusion
in the
Schedule 14D-9
or the Proxy Statement will, at the respective times they are
first published, sent or given to the Stockholders and, in the
case of the Proxy Statement, at the time of the Company
Stockholders Meeting, contain any untrue statement of a
material fact or omit to state any material fact required to be
stated therein or necessary to make the statements therein, in
light of the circumstances under which they are made, not
misleading. Notwithstanding the foregoing, neither Parent nor
Merger Sub makes any representation or warranty with respect to
statements included or incorporated by reference in the
Schedule 14D-9
or the Proxy Statement based on information supplied by or on
behalf of Company specifically for inclusion or incorporation by
reference therein.
Section 5.5 Merger Sub. All of the issued and
outstanding capital stock of Merger Sub is owned directly by
Parent.
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Section 5.6 Financing. Parent and Merger Sub will
have, as of the respective dates of consummation of the Offer
and the Merger, sufficient funds to consummate the Offer and the
Merger on the terms and subject to the conditions set forth
herein.
Section 5.7 Vote/Approval Required. No vote or
consent of the holders of any class or series of capital stock
of Parent is necessary to approve this Agreement or the Merger
or the other transactions contemplated hereby. The vote or
consent of Parent as the sole shareholder of Merger Sub (which
shall have occurred prior to the Effective Time) is the only
vote or consent of the holders of any class or series of capital
stock of Merger Sub necessary to approve this Agreement, the
Offer and the Merger.
Section 5.8 Ownership of Shares. Except as
previously disclosed to the Company, neither Parent nor Merger
Sub or any of their Subsidiaries beneficially owns any Shares as
of the date of the Original Agreement.
Section 5.9 Brokers. No broker, investment banker,
financial advisor or other Person, other than Piper
Jaffray & Co., the fees and expenses of which will be
paid by Parent, is entitled to any brokers, finders,
financial advisors or other similar fee or commission in
connection with the transactions contemplated by this Agreement
based upon arrangements made by or on behalf of Parent or any of
its Affiliates.
Section 5.10 Exclusivity of Representations and
Warranties. None of Parent, Merger Sub, nor any of their
Affiliates or representatives is making any representation or
warranty to the Company on behalf of Parent or Merger Sub of any
kind or nature whatsoever, oral or written, express or implied
(including, but not limited to, any relating to financial
condition, results of operations, prospects, assets or
liabilities of Parent and its Subsidiaries), except as expressly
set forth in Article V of this Agreement, and Parent
and Merger Sub hereby disclaim any and all such other
representations and warranties to the Company. Without limiting
the express representations and warranties in this
Article V, and without limiting the broad nature of
the disclaimer set forth in the prior sentence, no
representation or warranty is being made as a result of
Parents making available to the Company or any of its
Affiliates, Stockholders or Representatives any management
presentations, information, documents, projections, forecasts
and other material in a data room or otherwise.
Nothing in this Section 5.10 is intended to mitigate
Parents obligations under applicable securities Laws.
ARTICLE VI
COVENANTS
Section 6.1 Conduct of Business.
(a) During the period from the date of the Original
Agreement to the Effective Time, except as consented to in
writing in advance by Parent (which consent shall not be
unreasonably withheld, conditioned or delayed, except as
otherwise set forth in Section 6.1(a)(i) below) or
as otherwise specifically required by this Agreement, the
Company shall, and shall cause each of its Subsidiaries to,
carry on its business in the ordinary course consistent with
past practice and use commercially reasonable efforts to
preserve intact its business organization, preserve its assets,
rights and properties in good repair and condition (normal wear
and tear excepted), keep available the services of its current
officers, employees and consultants and preserve its goodwill
and its relationships with customers, suppliers, licensors,
licensees, distributors and others having business dealings with
it. In addition to and without limiting the generality of the
foregoing, during the period from the date of the Original
Agreement to the Effective Time:
(i) Except (x) as set forth in
Section 6.1(a) of the Company Disclosure Letter,
(y) as specifically required or permitted by this Agreement
or (z) as required by applicable Law, the Company shall
not, and shall not permit any of its Subsidiaries, without
Parents prior written consent (which consent shall not be
unreasonably withheld, conditioned or delayed, except that
Parent may withhold its consent in its sole discretion with
respect to the matters covered by
Sections 6.1(i)(A), (B), (C),
(D), (F), (G) or (Y)(1)), to:
(A) (1) declare, set aside or pay any dividends on, or
make any other distributions (whether in cash, stock or
property) in respect of, any of its capital stock or other
equity interests, except for dividends by a wholly owned
Subsidiary of the Company to its parent that does not trigger
material Tax liability, (2) purchase, redeem or otherwise
acquire shares of capital stock or other equity interests of the
Company
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or its Subsidiaries or any options, warrants, or rights to
acquire any such shares or other equity interests (except for
the withholding of shares in connection with Taxes payable in
respect of the exercise of Company Stock Options and the
issuance of Shares in connection with the vesting of restricted
stock units, performance stock units, restricted stock unit
rights or other awards granted under the Company Plans) or
(3) split, combine, reclassify or otherwise amend the terms
of any of its capital stock or other equity interests or issue
or authorize the issuance of any other securities in respect of,
in lieu of or in substitution for shares of its capital stock or
other equity interests;
(B) issue, deliver, sell, grant, pledge or otherwise
encumber or subject to any Lien any shares of its capital stock
or other equity interests or any securities convertible into, or
exchangeable for, or any rights, warrants or options to acquire,
any such shares or other equity interests, or any stock
appreciation rights, phantom stock rights,
performance units, rights to receive shares of capital stock of
the Company on a deferred basis or other rights linked to the
value of Shares (other than the issuance of Shares pursuant to
Contracts as in effect on the date of the Original Agreement and
set forth on Section 6.1(a) of the Company
Disclosure Letter or upon the exercise of the Warrant or the
Company Stock Options outstanding on March 25, 2011 in
accordance with their terms as in effect on such date);
(C) amend, authorize or otherwise change its certificate of
incorporation or by-laws (or similar organizational documents);
(D) directly or indirectly acquire or agree to acquire
(1) by merging or consolidating with, purchasing a
substantial equity interest in or a substantial portion of the
assets of, making an investment in or loan or capital
contribution to or in any other manner, any corporation,
partnership, association or other business organization or
division thereof or (2) any assets that are otherwise
material to the Company and its Subsidiaries, other than
inventory acquired in the ordinary course of business consistent
with past practice;
(E) transfer, lease, pledge, sell, abandon, mortgage or
otherwise encumber or subject to any Lien or otherwise dispose
in whole or in part of any of its material properties, assets or
rights or any interest therein, except in the ordinary course of
business consistent with past practice;
(F) adopt or enter into a plan of complete or partial
liquidation, dissolution, restructuring, capitalization or other
reorganization;
(G) (1) incur, create, assume or otherwise become
liable for, or repay or prepay, any indebtedness for borrowed
money, any obligations under conditional or installment sale
Contracts or other retention Contracts relating to purchased
property, any capital lease obligations or any guarantee or any
such indebtedness of any other Person, issue or sell any debt
securities, options, warrants, calls or other rights to acquire
any debt securities of the Company or any of its Subsidiaries,
guarantee any debt securities of any other Person, enter into
any keep well or other agreement to maintain any
financial statement condition of any other Person or enter into
any arrangement having the economic effect of any of the
foregoing (collectively, Indebtedness), or
amend, modify or refinance any Indebtedness or (2) make any
loans, advances or capital contributions to, or investments in,
any other Person, other than the Company or any direct or
indirect wholly owned Subsidiary of the Company;
(H) except as set forth in the capital expenditure budget
set forth in Section 6.1(a)(i)(H) of the Company
Disclosure Letter, incur or commit to incur any capital
expenditure or authorization or commitment with respect thereto
that individually is in excess of $10,000, or in the aggregate
are in excess of $20,000;
(I) except as required by Law or judgment of a court of
competent jurisdiction, (1) pay, discharge, settle or
satisfy any claims, liabilities or obligations (whether
absolute, accrued, asserted or unasserted, contingent or
otherwise), other than the payment, discharge or satisfaction in
the ordinary course of business consistent with past practice or
as required by their terms as in effect on the date of the
Original Agreement of claims, liabilities or obligations
reflected or reserved against in the most recent audited
financial statements (or the notes thereto) of the Company and
its Subsidiaries included in the Company SEC Documents (for
amounts not in excess of such reserves) or incurred since the
date of such financial
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statements in the ordinary course of business consistent with
past practice, (2) cancel any material indebtedness or
(3) waive, release, grant or transfer any right of material
value;
(J) except in the ordinary course of business consistent
with past practice, (1) materially modify, amend,
terminate, cancel or extend any Material Contract or
(2) enter into any Contract that if in effect on the date
of the Original Agreement would be a Material Contract;
(K) commence any Action (other than an Action as a result
of an Action commenced against the Company or any of its
Subsidiaries), or compromise, settle or agree to settle any
material Action (including any Action relating to this Agreement
or the transactions contemplated hereby);
(L) change its financial or tax accounting methods,
principles or practices, except insofar as may have been
required by a change in GAAP or applicable Law, or revalue any
of its material assets;
(M) settle or compromise any material liability for Taxes,
amend any material Tax Return, enter into any material Contract
with or request any material ruling from any Governmental Entity
relating to Taxes, make, change or revoke any material Tax
election, change any method of accounting for Tax purposes, take
any material position on a Tax Return inconsistent with a
position taken on a Tax Return previously filed, take any other
action to materially impair (other than through actual
utilization or in the ordinary course of business consistent
with past practice or as expressly contemplated by this
Agreement) any tax asset reflected in the Company SEC Documents
filed most recently prior to the date of the Original Agreement,
extend or waive any statute of limitations with respect to
Taxes, or surrender any claim for a material refund of Taxes,
except, in each case, as required under applicable Law;
(N) change its fiscal or tax year;
(O) (1) grant any current or former director, officer,
employee or independent contractor any increase in compensation,
bonus or other benefits, or any such grant of any type of
compensation or benefits to any current or former director,
officer, employee or independent contractor not previously
receiving or entitled to receive such type of compensation or
benefit, or pay any bonus of any kind or amount to any current
or former director, officer, employee or independent contractor
(except for increases in the ordinary course of business
consistent with past practice), (2) grant or pay to any
current or former director, officer, employee or independent
contractor any severance, change in control or termination pay,
or modifications thereto or increases therein, except as
required by Contracts in effect on the date of the Original
Agreement, (3) pay any benefit or grant or amend any award
(including in respect of stock options, stock appreciation
rights, performance units, restricted stock or other stock-based
or stock-related awards or the removal or modification of any
restrictions in any Company Plan or awards made thereunder)
except as required to comply with any applicable Law or any
Company Plan in effect as of the date of the Original Agreement,
(4) adopt or enter into any collective bargaining agreement
or other labor union contract, (5) take any action to
accelerate the vesting or payment of any compensation or benefit
under any Company Plan or other Contract, or (6) adopt any
new employee benefit plan or arrangement or amend, modify or
terminate any existing Company Plan, in each case for the
benefit of any current or former director, officer, employee or
independent contractor, other than as required by applicable Law
or in the ordinary course of business consistent with past
practice in a manner that does not increase benefits to
officers, except that such limitation with respect to officers
shall not apply to changes to or adoptions of a Company Plan
that provide benefits to all employees on a substantially
similar basis, is adopted in the ordinary course of business
consistent with past practice, and does not provide for
severance or for payments that become payable as a result of the
Offer or the Merger; provided, however, that the
foregoing provisions of clause (6) shall not apply to any
at will offer letters or employment agreements (not
containing severance obligations or other guaranteed payments)
with non-officer employees hired in the ordinary course of
business consistent with past practice after the date of the
Original Agreement;
(P) fail to keep in force insurance policies or replacement
or revised provisions regarding insurance coverage with respect
to the assets, operations and activities of the Company and its
Subsidiaries substantially equivalent to those currently in
effect;
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(Q) renew or enter into any non-compete, exclusivity,
non-solicitation or similar agreement that would restrict or
limit, in any material respect, the operations of the Company or
any of its Subsidiaries;
(R) waive any material benefits of, or agree to modify in
any adverse respect, or fail to enforce, or consent to any
matter with respect to which its consent is required under, any
confidentiality, standstill or similar agreement to which the
Company or any of its Subsidiaries is a party;
(S) enter into any new line of business outside of its
existing business;
(T) enter into any new lease or amend the terms of any
existing lease of real property that would require payments over
the remaining term of such lease in excess of $10,000;
(U) knowingly violate or knowingly fail to perform any
obligation or duty imposed upon it by any applicable material
federal, state or local law, rule, regulation, guideline or
ordinance;
(V) create or form any Subsidiary or make any other
investment in another Person (other than short term investments
for the purpose of cash management or as otherwise permitted in
subsection (G));
(W) modify the standard warranty terms for products sold by
the Company or amend or modify any product warranties in effect
as of the date of the Original Agreement in any manner that is
adverse to the Company;
(X) (1) consent to the disclosure of any of the
Companys or its Subsidiaries Trade Secrets or other
confidential information relating to the Companys or its
Subsidiaries existing products or products currently under
development and other material Trade Secrets to be disclosed
(other than under appropriate non-disclosure agreements and
other than publication of patent applications through
prosecution); or (2) allow any of the Companys or its
Subsidiaries Intellectual Property rights relating to the
Companys or its Subsidiaries existing products or
products currently under development to be abandoned, or
otherwise to lapse or become unavailable to the Company or its
Subsidiaries on the same terms and conditions as such rights
were available to the Company and its Subsidiaries as of the
date of the Original Agreement;
(Y) (1) enter into any distribution agreements not
terminable by the Company or its Subsidiaries on sixty
(60) days notice without penalty, enter into any commitment
to any Person to enter into any license, distributorship, or
sales agreement that by its terms would purport to relate to any
of the products of Parent or its Affiliates or sell, license,
transfer or otherwise dispose of any Intellectual Property other
than sales of its products and other non-exclusive licenses that
are in the ordinary course of business and consistent with past
practices; (2) enter into any sales agency agreements; or
(3) grant most favored nation pricing to any
Person;
(Z) enter into or amend any contract, agreement, commitment
or arrangement with any Affiliated Person;
(AA) fail to make in a timely manner any filings with the
SEC required under the Securities Act or the Exchange Act or the
rules and regulations promulgated thereunder (except as
permitted by
Rule 12b-25
promulgated under the Exchange Act); or
(BB) knowingly take any action (or omit to take any action)
if such action (or omission) could reasonably be expected to
result in any of the Offer Conditions or any condition to the
Merger set forth in Article VII not being satisfied.
(ii) The Company shall use commercially reasonable efforts
to:
(A) maintain its material assets and properties in the
ordinary course of business in the manner historically
maintained, reasonable wear and tear, damage by fire and other
casualty excepted;
(B) promptly repair, restore or replace all material assets
and properties in the ordinary course of business consistent
with past practice;
A-42
(C) upon any damage, destruction or loss to any of its
material assets or properties, apply any and all insurance
proceeds, if any, received with respect thereto to the prompt
repair, replacement and restoration thereof as reasonably
necessary for the operation of the Companys business;
(D) comply in all material respects with all applicable
Laws;
(E) take all actions necessary to be in compliance in all
material respects with all Material Contracts and to maintain
the effectiveness of all Permits;
(F) notify Parent in writing of the commencement of any
action, suit, claim or investigation by or against the Company,
promptly (but in no event later than two (2) Business Days)
after the Company becomes aware of such commencement,
provided, that notwithstanding the foregoing, the
Companys obligations pursuant to this clause (F)
shall not qualified by the use of commercially reasonable
efforts;
(G) if Parent gives the Company written notice not less
than ten (10) Business Days prior to the Closing Date, take
all necessary corporate action to terminate the Companys
401(k) plan (the 401(k) Plan) effective as of
the date immediately prior to the Closing Date, but contingent
on the Closing. If Parent provides such notice to the Company,
the Company shall provide Parent with evidence that the Company
Board has adopted resolutions to terminate the 401(k) Plan,
effective as of the date immediately preceding the Closing Date,
but contingent on the Closing;
(H) provide Parent evidence that the Company has satisfied
its obligations with respect to the Company Stock Options in
accordance with Sections 3.2(b) and (d); and
(I) pay accounts payable and pursue collection of its
accounts receivable in the ordinary course of business,
consistent with past practices.
(b) Nothing contained in this Agreement shall give Parent,
directly or indirectly, the right to control or direct the
Companys or its Subsidiaries operations prior to
purchase of the Shares pursuant to the Offer, and nothing
contained in this Agreement shall give the Company, directly or
indirectly, the right to control or direct Parents or its
Subsidiaries operations prior to the Effective Time;
provided, that nothing contained in this
Section 6.1(b) shall be deemed to mitigate
Parents consent rights as set forth in this
Section 6.1.
Section 6.2 No Solicitation.
(a) Notwithstanding any other provision of this Agreement
to the contrary, during the period beginning on the date of the
Original Agreement and continuing until 11:59 p.m., Eastern
time, on April 17, 2011, the Company and any of its
Subsidiaries and their respective officers, directors,
employees, consultants, agents, financial advisors, attorneys,
accountants, other advisors, Affiliates and other
representatives (collectively,
Representatives) shall have the right to
directly or indirectly: (i) initiate, solicit and
encourage, whether publicly or otherwise, Acquisition Proposals
(or inquiries, proposals or offers or other efforts or attempts
that may reasonably be expected to lead to an Acquisition
Proposal), including by way of providing access to non-public
information pursuant to (but only pursuant to) one or more
Acceptable Confidentiality Agreements; provided, that the
Company shall promptly (and in any event within forty-eight
(48) hours) provide to Parent any material non-public
information concerning the Company or any of its Subsidiaries
that is provided to any Person given such access which was not
previously provided to Parent or its Representatives; and
(ii) enter into, engage in, and maintain discussions or
negotiations with respect to Acquisition Proposals (or
inquiries, proposals or offers or other efforts or attempts that
may reasonably be expected to lead to an Acquisition Proposal)
or otherwise cooperate with or assist or participate in, or
facilitate any such inquiries, proposals, offers, efforts,
attempts, discussions or negotiations.
(b) Except as permitted by this Section 6.2 and
except as may relate to any Excluded Party (for as long as such
Person or group is an Excluded Party), the Company shall and
shall cause each of its Subsidiaries and Representatives to
(i) from 12:00 a.m., Eastern time, on April 18,
2011 (the No-Shop Period Start Date),
immediately cease any solicitation, encouragement, discussions
or negotiations with any Persons that may be ongoing with
respect to an Acquisition Proposal and (ii) from the
No-Shop Period Start Date until the Effective Time or, if
earlier, the termination of this Agreement in accordance with
Article VIII, not, directly or indirectly,
(A) solicit, initiate or knowingly facilitate or encourage
(including by way of furnishing non-public information) any
inquiries regarding, or the making of any proposal or offer that
constitutes, or could reasonably be expected to lead to, an
Acquisition
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Proposal, (B) engage in, continue or otherwise participate
in any discussions or negotiations regarding, or furnish to any
other Person any non-public information in connection with or
for the purpose of encouraging or facilitating, an
Acquisition Proposal or (C) enter into any letter of
intent, agreement or agreement in principle with respect to an
Acquisition Proposal. No later than two (2) Business Days
after the No-Shop Period Start Date, the Company shall notify
Parent in writing of the identity of each Person that submitted
an Acquisition Proposal prior to the No-Shop Period Start Date.
Notwithstanding the commencement of the obligations of the
Company under this Section 6.2(b) on the No-Shop
Period Start Date, the parties agree that the Company may
continue to engage in the activities described in
clause (i) and/or (ii) of Section 6.2(a)
with respect to each Excluded Party (for as long as any such
Person or group is an Excluded Party) on and after the No-Shop
Period Start Date until the earlier of the time (A) the
Company Stockholder Approval is obtained and (B) it ceases
to be an Excluded Party, including with respect to any amended
or revised proposal submitted by such Excluded Party on or after
the No-Shop Period Start Date; provided that to the
extent set forth therein, the provisions of
Section 6.2(e) shall apply; and provided,
further, that with respect to any Excluded Party, the
Company shall promptly provide to Parent a written summary of
the material terms of any such Acquisition Proposal (including
any financing commitments).
(c) Notwithstanding anything to the contrary contained in
Section 6.2(b) or any other provisions of this
Agreement, if at any time on or after the No-Shop Period Start
Date and prior to obtaining the Company Stockholder Approval,
the Company or any of its Representatives receives a written
Acquisition Proposal from any Person or group of Persons, which
Acquisition Proposal was made by an Excluded Party or which
Acquisition Proposal was made or renewed on or after the No-Shop
Period Start Date and did not result from any breach of this
Section 6.2, (i) the Company and its
Representatives may contact such Person or group of Persons to
clarify the terms and conditions thereof and (ii) if the
Company Board determines in good faith, after consultation with
independent financial advisors and outside legal counsel, that
such Acquisition Proposal constitutes or could reasonably be
expected to lead to a Superior Proposal, then the Company and
its Representatives may (x) furnish, pursuant to an
Acceptable Confidentiality Agreement, information (including
non-public information) with respect to the Company and its
Subsidiaries to the Person or group of Persons who has made such
Acquisition Proposal; provided that the Company shall
promptly (and in any event within forty eight (48) hours)
provide to Parent any material non-public information concerning
the Company or any of its Subsidiaries that is provided to any
Person given such access which was not previously provided to
Parent or its Representatives and (y) engage in or
otherwise participate in discussions or negotiations with the
Person or group of Persons making such Acquisition Proposal.
From and after the No-Shop Period Start Date, the Company shall
promptly (and in any event within forty eight (48) hours)
provide to Parent a written summary of the material terms of any
such Acquisition Proposal (including any financing commitments
relating thereto).
(d) Following the No-Shop Period Start Date, the Company
shall keep Parent reasonably informed of any material
developments, discussions or negotiations regarding any
Acquisition Proposal (whether made before or after the No-Shop
Period Start Date) on a prompt basis (and in any event within
forty eight (48) hours) and upon the request of Parent
shall apprise Parent of the status of such Acquisition Proposal.
The Company agrees that it and its Subsidiaries will not enter
into any confidentiality agreement with any Person subsequent to
the date of the Original Agreement which prohibits the Company
from providing any information to Parent in accordance with this
Section 6.2.
(e) Except as expressly permitted by this
Section 6.2(e) or Section 6.2(f), the
Company Board shall not (i)(A) fail to recommend to its
stockholders that the Company Stockholder Approval be given (the
Company Board Recommendation) or fail to
include the Company Board Recommendation in the Proxy Statement,
the
Schedule 14D-9
or related filings, (B) change, qualify, withhold, withdraw
or modify, or publicly propose to change, qualify, withhold,
withdraw or modify, in a manner adverse to Parent, the Company
Board Recommendation, (C) take any formal action or make
any recommendation or public statement in connection with a
tender offer or exchange offer (other than the Offer) other than
a recommendation against such offer or a customary stop,
look and listen communication by the Board of Directors of
the Company pursuant to
Rule 14d-9(f)
of the Exchange Act or (D) adopt, approve or recommend, or
publicly propose to approve or recommend to the Stockholders an
Acquisition Proposal (actions described in this clause (i)
being referred to as an Adverse Recommendation
Change), (ii) authorize, cause or permit the
Company or any of its Subsidiaries to enter into any letter of
intent, agreement or agreement in principle with respect to any
Acquisition Proposal (other than an Acceptable Confidentiality
A-44
Agreement) (each, a Company Acquisition
Agreement) or (iii) take any action pursuant to
Section 8.1(d)(ii). Notwithstanding
anything to the contrary set forth in this Agreement, prior to
the time the Company Stockholder Approval is obtained, but not
after, the Company Board may make an Adverse Recommendation
Change, enter into a Company Acquisition Agreement with respect
to an Acquisition Proposal not solicited in violation of this
Section 6.2 or take any action pursuant to
Section 8.1(d)(ii) if the Company Board has
determined in good faith, after consultation with its financial
advisor and outside legal counsel, (x) that failure to take
such action could be inconsistent with the directors
fiduciary duties under applicable Law and (y) that such
Acquisition Proposal constitutes a Superior Proposal;
provided, however, that (1) the Company has
given Parent at least five (5) Business Days prior
written notice of its intention to take such action (which
notice shall include an unredacted copy of the Superior
Proposal, an unredacted copy of the relevant proposed
transaction agreements and a copy of any financing commitments
relating thereto and a written summary of the material terms of
any Superior Proposal not made in writing, including any
financing commitments relating thereto), (2) the Company
has negotiated, and has caused its Representatives to negotiate,
with Parent during such notice period, to the extent Parent
wishes to negotiate, to enable Parent to propose revisions to
the terms of this Agreement such that it would cause such
Superior Proposal to no longer constitute a Superior Proposal,
(3) following the end of such notice period, the Company
Board shall have considered in good faith any proposed revisions
to this Agreement proposed in writing by Parent in a manner that
would form a binding contract if accepted by the Company, and
shall have determined that the Superior Proposal would continue
to constitute a Superior Proposal if such revisions were to be
given effect, and (4) in the event of any material change
to the material terms of such Superior Proposal, the Company
shall, in each case, have delivered to Parent an additional
notice consistent with that described in clause (1) above
and the notice period shall have recommenced, except that the
notice period shall be at least (1) one business day
(rather than the five (5) Business Days otherwise
contemplated by clause (1) above); and provided,
further, that the Company has complied in all material
respects with its obligations under this Section 6.2
and provided, further, that any purported
termination of this Agreement pursuant to this sentence shall be
void and of no force and effect, unless the Company termination
is in accordance with Section 8.1 and, to the extent
required under the terms of this Agreement, the Company pays
Parent the applicable Termination Fee in accordance with
Section 8.3 prior to or concurrently with such
termination.
(f) Notwithstanding anything to the contrary herein, prior
to the time the Company Stockholder Approval is obtained, but
not after, the Company Board may change, qualify, withhold,
withdraw or modify, or publicly propose to change, qualify,
withhold, withdraw or modify, in a manner adverse to Parent, the
Company Board Recommendation (Change of
Recommendation) if the Board of Directors of the
Company has determined in good faith, after consultation with
its financial advisor and outside legal counsel, that failure to
take such action could be inconsistent with the directors
fiduciary duties under applicable Law; provided,
however, that such action shall not be in response to a
Superior Proposal (which is addressed under
Section 6.2(e)) and prior to taking such action,
(x) the Board of Directors of the Company has given Parent
at least five (5) Business Days prior written notice
of its intention to take such action and a description of the
reasons for taking such action, (y) the Company has
negotiated, and has caused its Representatives to negotiate,
with Parent during such notice period, to the extent Parent
wishes to negotiate, to enable Parent to revise the terms of
this Agreement in such a manner that would obviate the need for
taking such action, and (z) following the end of such
notice period, the Company Board shall have considered in good
faith any revisions to this Agreement proposed in writing by
Parent in a manner that would form a binding contract if
accepted by the Company, and shall have determined in good
faith, after consultation with its financial advisor and outside
legal counsel, that failure to effect a Change of Recommendation
could be inconsistent with the directors fiduciary duties
under applicable Law.
(g) Nothing in this Section 6.2 or elsewhere in
this Agreement shall prohibit the Company from (i) taking
and disclosing to the Stockholders a position contemplated by
Rule 14e-2(a),
Rule 14d-9
or Item 1012(a) of
Regulation M-A
promulgated under the Exchange Act or (ii) making any
disclosure to the stockholders of the Company that is required
by applicable Law; provided that making such disclosure
shall not in any way limit or modify the effect, if any, that
any such action has under Section 6.2.
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(h) For purposes of this Agreement:
(i) Acceptable Confidentiality Agreement
means any customary confidentiality agreement that contains
provisions that are no less favorable in the aggregate to the
Company than those contained in the Confidentiality Agreement.
(ii) Acquisition Proposal shall mean any
inquiry, proposal or offer from any Person (other than Parent
and its Subsidiaries) or group, within the meaning
of Section 13(d) of the Exchange Act, relating to, in a
single transaction or series of related transactions, any
(A) acquisition of assets of the Company and its
Subsidiaries equal to 20% or more of the Companys
consolidated assets or to which 20% or more of the
Companys revenues or earnings on a consolidated basis are
attributable, (B) acquisition of 20% or more of the
outstanding Shares, (C) tender offer or exchange offer that
if consummated would result in any Person beneficially owning
20% or more of the outstanding Shares, (D) merger,
consolidation, share exchange, business combination,
recapitalization, liquidation, dissolution or similar
transaction involving the Company or (E) any combination of
the foregoing types of transactions if the sum of the percentage
of consolidated assets, consolidated revenues or earnings and
Company Common Stock involved is 20% or more; in each case,
other than the Offer and the Merger.
(iii) Excluded Party means any Person,
group of Persons or group that includes any Person (so long as
such Person, together with all other members of such group, if
any, who were members of such group or another group that
included such Person immediately prior to the No-Shop Period
Start Date, represent at least 50% of the equity financing of
such group at all times following the No-Shop Period Start Date
and prior to the termination of this Agreement) from whom the
Company or any of its Representatives has received, after the
execution of this Agreement and prior to the No-Shop Period
Start Date, an Acquisition Proposal that the Company Board
determines, in good faith, prior to or as of the No-Shop Period
Start Date and after consultation with its financial advisor and
outside legal counsel, constitutes or could reasonably be
expected to lead to a Superior Proposal; provided,
however, that, notwithstanding anything to the contrary
contained herein, such Person or group shall cease to be an
Excluded Party as of the No-Shop Period Start Date unless, prior
to the No-Shop Period Start Date, the Company or any of its
Representatives received from such Person or group an
Acquisition Proposal that the Company Board determined, in good
faith, prior to or as of the
No-Shop
Period Start Date and after consultation with its financial
advisor and outside legal counsel, constituted a Superior
Proposal; and provided, further, that any such
Person or group shall cease to be an Excluded Party at any time
such Person or group ceases to be actively pursuing efforts to
acquire the Company.
(iv) Superior Proposal shall mean any
bona fide written Acquisition Proposal that the Company Board
has determined, after consultation with its outside legal
counsel and financial advisor, in its good faith judgment is
reasonably likely to be consummated in accordance with its
terms, taking into account all legal, regulatory and financial
aspects (including certainty of closing) of the proposal and the
Person making the proposal, and if consummated, would result in
a transaction more favorable to the Stockholders (solely in
their capacity as such) from a financial point of view than the
transaction contemplated by this Agreement (including any
revisions to the terms of this Agreement proposed by Parent in
response to such proposal or otherwise); provided that for
purposes of the definition of Superior Proposal, the
references to 20% in the definition of Acquisition
Proposal shall be deemed to be references to 50%.
Section 6.3 Preparation of Proxy Statement;
Stockholders Meeting.
(a) The parties acknowledge that on April 12, 2011,
the Company prepared and filed with the SEC a preliminary Proxy
Statement. Each of the Company and Parent shall furnish all
information concerning such Person to the other as may be
reasonably requested in connection with the preparation, filing
and distribution of the Proxy Statement. The Company shall
promptly notify Parent upon the receipt of any comments from the
SEC or any request from the SEC for amendments or supplements to
the Proxy Statement and shall provide Parent with copies of all
correspondence between it and its Representatives, on the one
hand, and the SEC, on the other hand, with respect to the Proxy
Statement. Each of the Company and Parent shall use reasonable
best efforts to respond as promptly as practicable to any
comments of the SEC with respect to the Proxy Statement.
Notwithstanding the foregoing, prior to filing or mailing the
Proxy Statement (or any amendment or supplement thereto) or
responding to any comments of the SEC with respect thereto, the
Company (i) shall provide Parent an opportunity to review
and
A-46
comment on such document or response (including the proposed
final version of such document or response or any amendment to
any such document) and (ii) shall include in such document
or response all comments reasonably proposed by Parent. If, at
any time prior to the Company Stockholders Meeting, any
information relating to the Company, Parent or any of their
respective Affiliates, officers or directors should be
discovered by the Company or Parent which should be set forth in
an amendment or supplement to the Proxy Statement, so that the
Proxy Statement does not contain any untrue statement of a
material fact or omit to state any material fact required to be
stated therein or necessary in order to make the statements
therein, in light of the circumstances under which they are
made, not misleading, the party that discovers such information
shall promptly notify the other parties hereto, and an
appropriate amendment or supplement describing such information
shall be filed with the SEC and, to the extent required by
applicable Law or reasonably requested by the other party, and
disseminated to the shareholders of the Company.
(b) As soon as reasonably practicable prior to, but in no
event later than five (5) Business Days after, the date on
which the preliminary Proxy Statement is filed with the SEC, the
Company shall establish a record date (which will be one
(1) Business Day after the anticipated Expiration Date of
the Offer), and as soon as practicable after the closing of the
Offer, duly call and give notice of a meeting of its
shareholders (the Company Stockholders
Meeting) and cause the definitive Proxy Statement to
be mailed to the Stockholders as promptly as reasonably
practicable, each for the purpose of obtaining the Company
Stockholder Approval. The Company shall duly convene and hold
the Company Stockholders Meeting as promptly as reasonably
practicable after the mailing of the Proxy Statement;
provided, however, that in no event shall such
meeting be held later than fifteen (15) calendar days
following the date that the Offer is closed. The notice of such
Company Stockholders Meeting shall state that a resolution
to approve this Agreement will be considered at the Company
Stockholders Meeting. The Company Board shall recommend to
the Stockholders that they approve this Agreement, and shall
include such recommendation in the Proxy Statement. Parent may
require the Company to, and if so required the Company shall,
adjourn or postpone the Company Stockholders Meeting one
time (for a period of not more than thirty (30) calendar
days but not past two (2) Business Days prior to the
Expiration Date), unless prior to such adjournment the Company
shall have received an aggregate number of proxies voting for
the adoption of this Agreement and the transactions contemplated
hereby (including the Merger), which have not been withdrawn,
such that the conditions in Section 7.1 will be
satisfied at such meeting. Once the Company has established a
record date for the Company Stockholders Meeting, the
Company shall not change such record date or establish a
different record date for the Company Stockholders Meeting
without the prior written consent of Parent, unless required to
do so by applicable Law or the Company Bylaws. Unless the
Company Board shall have effected an Adverse Recommendation
Change in accordance with Section 6.2(e), the
Company shall use reasonable best efforts to solicit proxies in
favor of the adoption of this Agreement and shall ensure that
all proxies solicited in connection with the Company
Stockholders Meeting are solicited in compliance with all
applicable Laws. Unless this Agreement is validly terminated in
accordance with Article VIII, the Company shall
submit this Agreement to its shareholders at the Company
Stockholders Meeting even if the Company Board shall have
effected an Adverse Recommendation Change or proposed or
announced any intention to do so. The Company shall, upon the
reasonable request of Parent, advise Parent not more than on a
daily basis on each of the last ten (10) Business Days
prior to the date of the Company Stockholders Meeting as
to the aggregate tally of proxies received by the Company with
respect to the Company Stockholder Approval. At the Company
Stockholders Meeting, if any, Parent agrees to cause all
Shares acquired pursuant to the Offer and all other Shares owned
by Parent or any Subsidiary of Parent to be voted in favor of
the Merger.
Section 6.4 Access to Information; Confidentiality.
The Company shall, and shall cause each of its Subsidiaries to,
afford to Parent, Merger Sub and their respective
Representatives reasonable access during normal business hours,
during the period prior to the Effective Time or the termination
of this Agreement in accordance with its terms, to all their
respective properties, assets, books, contracts, commitments,
personnel and records and, during such period, the Company
shall, and shall cause each of its Subsidiaries to, furnish
promptly to Parent: (a) a copy of each report, schedule,
registration statement and other document filed or received by
it during such period pursuant to the requirements of federal or
state securities laws; and (b) all other information
concerning its business, properties and personnel as Parent or
Merger Sub may reasonably request (including Tax Returns filed
and those in preparation and the workpapers of its auditors);
provided, however, that the foregoing shall not
require the Company to disclose any information to the extent
such disclosure would (i) contravene applicable Law,
(ii) breach or cause a
A-47
default under any confidentiality agreement with any third party
entered into prior to the date of the Original Agreement that
relate to any discussions regarding transactions of a nature
similar to the transactions contemplated hereby (provided that
disclosures required pursuant to Section 6.2 with
respect to a party to any such confidentiality agreement or any
proposals they may make shall not be limited by this
Section 6.4), or (iii) constitute a waiver of
the attorney-client privilege held by the Company or any of its
Subsidiaries. All such information shall be held confidential in
accordance with the terms of that certain CryoLife, Inc. Mutual
Confidential Disclosure Agreement between Parent and the Company
dated as of September 29, 2010 (the
Confidentiality Agreement); provided,
further, that following the date on which the Merger is
approved, the parties agree that any information request by
Parent, Merger Sub or their respective Representatives pursuant
to this Section 6.4 shall be deemed to be reasonable
for purposes of clause (b) above. No investigation pursuant
to this Section 6.4 or information provided, made
available or delivered to Parent pursuant to this Agreement
shall affect any of the representations, warranties, covenants,
rights or remedies, or the conditions to the obligations of, the
parties hereunder.
Section 6.5 Reasonable Best Efforts.
(a) Upon the terms and subject to the conditions set forth
in this Agreement, each of the parties agrees to use reasonable
best efforts to take, or cause to be taken, all actions that are
necessary, proper or advisable to consummate and make effective,
in the most expeditious manner practicable, the Offer, the
Merger and the other transactions contemplated by this
Agreement, including using reasonable best efforts to accomplish
the following: (i) obtain all required consents, approvals
or waivers from, or participation in other discussions or
negotiations with, third parties, including as required under
any Material Contract, (ii) obtain all necessary actions or
nonactions, waivers, consents, approvals, orders and
authorizations from Governmental Entities, make all necessary
registrations, declarations and filings and take all steps as
may be necessary to obtain an approval or waiver from, or to
avoid any Action by, any Governmental Entity,
(iii) vigorously resist and contest any Action, including
administrative or judicial Action, and seek to have vacated,
lifted, reversed or overturned any decree, judgment, injunction
or other order (whether temporary, preliminary or permanent)
that is in effect and that could restrict, prevent or prohibit
consummation of the transactions contemplated hereby, including,
without limitation, by vigorously pursuing all avenues of
administrative and judicial appeal, and (iv) execute and
deliver any additional instruments necessary to consummate the
transactions contemplated hereby and fully to carry out the
purposes of this Agreement; provided, however,
that neither the Company nor any of its Subsidiaries shall
commit to the payment of any material fee, penalty or other
consideration or make any other material concession, waiver or
amendment under any Contract in connection with obtaining any
consent without the prior written consent of Parent. Each of the
parties hereto shall furnish to each other party such necessary
information and reasonable assistance as such other party may
reasonably request in connection with the foregoing. Subject to
applicable Law relating to the exchange of information, Parent
and the Company shall have the right to review in advance, and
to the extent practicable each shall consult with the other in
connection with, all of the information relating to Parent or
the Company, as the case may be, and any of their respective
Subsidiaries, that appears in any filing made with, or written
materials submitted to, any third party
and/or any
Governmental Entity in connection with the Offer, the Merger and
the other transactions contemplated by this Agreement. In
exercising the foregoing rights, each of Parent and the Company
shall act reasonably and as promptly as practicable. Subject to
applicable Law and the instructions of any Governmental Entity,
the Company and Parent shall keep each other reasonably apprised
of the status of matters relating to the completion of the
transactions contemplated hereby, including promptly furnishing
the other with copies of notices or other written communications
received by the Company or Parent, as the case may be, or any of
their respective Subsidiaries, from any Governmental Entity
and/or third
party with respect to such transactions, and, to the extent
practicable under the circumstances, shall provide the other
party and its counsel with the opportunity to participate in any
meeting with any Governmental Entity in respect of any filing,
investigation or other inquiry in connection with the
transactions contemplated hereby.
(b) Notwithstanding any other provision of this Agreement
to the contrary, in no event shall Parent or any of its
Affiliates be required to (i) agree or proffer to divest or
hold separate (in a trust or otherwise), or take any other
action with respect to, any of the assets or businesses of
Parent or any of its Affiliates or, assuming the consummation of
the Merger, the Surviving Corporation or any of its Affiliates,
(ii) agree or proffer to limit in any manner whatsoever or
not to exercise any rights of ownership of any securities
(including the Shares) or (iii) enter into any agreement
that in any way limits the ownership or operation of any
business of Parent, the
A-48
Company, the Surviving Corporation or any of their respective
Affiliates, in each case if such action would be material to the
business and financial condition of Parent and its Subsidiaries
(including the Company) taken as a whole after consummation of
the Offer and the Merger.
Section 6.6 Takeover Laws. The Company and the
Company Board shall (i) take no intentional action to cause
any Takeover Law to become applicable to this Agreement, the
Offer, the Merger or any of the other transactions contemplated
hereby and (ii) if any Takeover Law is or becomes
applicable to this Agreement, the Offer, the Merger or any of
the other transactions contemplated hereby, use reasonable best
efforts to take all action necessary to ensure that the Offer,
the Merger and the other transactions contemplated hereby may be
consummated as promptly as practicable on the terms contemplated
by this Agreement and otherwise to minimize the effect of such
Takeover Law with respect to this Agreement, the Offer, the
Merger and the other transactions contemplated hereby.
Section 6.7 Notification of Certain Matters. The
Company and Parent shall promptly notify each other of
(a) any notice or other communication received by such
party from any Governmental Entity in connection with the Offer,
the Merger or the other transactions contemplated hereby or from
any Person alleging that the consent of such Person is or may be
required in connection with the Offer, the Merger or the other
transactions contemplated hereby, (b) any other notice or
communication from any Governmental Entity in connection with
the transactions contemplated hereby, or (c) any Action
commenced or, to such partys knowledge, threatened in
writing against, relating to or involving or otherwise affecting
such party or any of its Subsidiaries which relates to the
Offer, the Merger or the other transactions contemplated hereby.
Section 6.8 Indemnification, Exculpation and
Insurance.
(a) Without limiting any additional rights that any current
or former officer or director may have under the Company Charter
or Company Bylaws as in effect on the date of the Original
Agreement, from the Effective Time through the sixth (6th)
anniversary of the date on which the Effective Time occurs, the
Surviving Corporation shall indemnify and hold harmless each
current (as of the Effective Time) and each former officer and
director of the Company from and against any and all loss and
liability suffered and expenses (including attorneys
fees), judgments, fines and amounts paid in settlement
reasonably incurred by such person in connection with any
Action, whether civil, criminal, administrative or
investigative, arising out of or pertaining to the fact that the
indemnified Person is or was an officer, director, employee or
fiduciary of the Company or any of its Subsidiaries at or prior
to the Effective Time, whether asserted or claimed prior to, at
or after the Effective Time, to the fullest extent that the
Company would be permitted under applicable Law and required or
permitted under the Company Charter or Company Bylaws (or, as
relevant, those of the applicable Subsidiary of the Company) as
at the date of the Original Agreement. In the event of any such
Action, each indemnified Person shall be entitled to advancement
of expenses incurred in the defense of any Action from the
Surviving Corporation to the fullest extent that the Company
would be permitted under applicable Law and the Company Charter
or Company Bylaws as at the date of the Original Agreement.
Notwithstanding anything to the contrary herein (but subject to
any superior rights contained in the Company Charter or Company
Bylaws (or, as relevant, those of the applicable Subsidiary of
the Company) or applicable indemnification agreements to which
the Company or its Subsidiaries, as applicable, is a party),
prior to making any payment or advance in respect of the
indemnification obligations set forth in this
Section 6.8, the Person who is requesting such
advance shall provide a written affirmation by such Person of a
good faith belief that the criteria for indemnification set
forth under applicable Law have been satisfied and a written
undertaking by such Person to repay all amounts so paid or
reimbursed by the Surviving Corporation, if it is ultimately
determined that the criteria for indemnification have not been
satisfied in connection with any threatened, pending, or
completed civil, criminal, administrative, arbitration or
investigative proceeding to which such Person is, or is
threatened to be, made a party by reason of the former or
present official capacity of such Person. No such indemnified
Person shall settle, compromise or consent to the entry of any
judgment in any threatened or actual Action for which
indemnification could be sought by such indemnified Person
hereunder unless Parent consents in writing to such settlement,
compromise or consent (which consent shall not be unreasonably
withheld, conditioned or delayed). Surviving Corporation agrees
to continue and not to repeal or modify, and agree to include,
to the extent permitted by applicable Law, in the charter
documents for the Surviving Corporation, exculpatory provisions
currently existing in the Company Charter (or their substantial
equivalent) eliminating personal liability for the
Companys directors to the extent permissible under the
CGCL.
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(b) For a period of six (6) years after the Effective
Time, Parent shall cause to be maintained in effect the
Companys current directors and officers
liability insurance covering each Person currently covered by
the Companys directors and officers liability
insurance policies (correct and complete copies of which have
been heretofore made available to Parent) for acts or omissions
occurring prior to the Effective Time; provided, that
Parent may (i) substitute thereof policies of an insurance
company the material terms of which, including coverage and
amount, are no less favorable in any material respect to such
directors and officers than the Companys existing policies
as of the date of the Original Agreement or (ii) request
that the Company obtain such extended reporting coverage under
its existing insurance programs (to be effective as of the
Effective Time); and provided, further, that in no
event shall Parent or the Company be required to pay aggregate
premiums for insurance under this Section 6.8(b) in
excess of 150% of the amount of the aggregate premiums paid by
the Company for policy year
2009-2010
for such purpose (which policy year
2009-2010
premiums are hereby represented and warranted by the Company to
be as set forth in Section 6.8(b) of the Company
Disclosure Letter), it being understood that Parent shall
nevertheless be obligated to provide such coverage as may be
obtained for such 150% amount.
(c) In the event that Parent, the Surviving Corporation or
any of their successors or assigns shall (i) consolidate
with or merge into any other Person and shall not be the
continuing or surviving corporation or entity of such
consolidation or merger or (ii) transfer all or
substantially all its properties and assets to any Person, then,
and in each such case, Parent shall cause proper provision to be
made so that the successor and assign of Parent or the Surviving
Corporation assumes the obligations set forth in this
Section 6.8.
(d) It is the intent that, with respect to all advancement
and indemnification obligations under this
Section 6.8, the Surviving Corporation shall be the
indemnitor of first resort with respect to any advancement,
reimbursement or indemnification obligations relative to any
director or officer of the Company who may also be covered by
insurance maintained by a Stockholder at or prior to the
Effective Time. Without limiting the right of recovery against
such director or officer if it shall be ultimately determined
that he or she is not entitled to be indemnified, neither Parent
nor the Surviving Corporation shall have any right to seek
contribution, indemnity or other reimbursement for any of its
obligations under this Section 6.8 from any such
Stockholder or its insurers.
(e) The provisions of this Section 6.8 shall
survive consummation of the Merger and are intended to be for
the benefit of, and will be enforceable by, each indemnified
Person, his or her heirs and his or her legal representatives,
and each such Person shall be an intended third party
beneficiary of the provisions of this Section 6.8.
Section 6.9 Public Announcements.
(a) Each of Parent and Merger Sub, on the one hand, and the
Company, on the other hand, shall consult with each other before
issuing, and give each other a reasonable opportunity to review
and comment upon, any press release or other public statements
(including announcements to the employees of the Company and its
Subsidiaries) with respect to this Agreement, the Offer, the
Merger and the other transactions contemplated hereby and shall
not issue any such press release or make any public announcement
(including announcements to the employees of the Company and its
Subsidiaries) without the prior consent of the other party,
which consent shall not be unreasonably withheld, conditioned or
delayed, except as may be required by applicable Law, court
process or by obligations pursuant to any listing agreement with
any national securities exchange or national securities
quotation system; provided, that Parent or the Company
may include disclosures relating to this Agreement, the Offer,
the Merger and the transactions contemplated herein in its
respective periodic filings with the SEC without seeking consent
from, or consulting with, the other party, so long as such
disclosures are not inconsistent with the information contained
in previous press releases, public disclosures or public
statements made jointly by Parent and the Company (or made
individually by the Company or Parent, if previously consented
to by the other party); provided, further, that
each of Parent and the Company may make any public statement in
response to specific questions by the press, analysts, investors
or those attending industry conferences or financial analyst
conference calls, so long as such statements are not
inconsistent with the information contained in previous press
releases, public disclosures or public statements made jointly
by Parent and the Company (or individually by a party, if
previously consented to by the other party); provided,
finally, that the Company shall not be required to
provide Parent any such opportunity to review or comment in
connection with the receipt and existence of an Acquisition
Proposal and matters related thereto or an Adverse
Recommendation Change or other communications contemplated by
Section 6.2(e).
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(b) Before any written communications related to the Offer
of any party hereto or any of their respective
participants (as defined in Rule 165 of the
Securities Act) are (i) disseminated to any investor,
analyst, member of the media, employee, client, customer or
other third-party or otherwise made accessible on the website of
such party or any such participant, as applicable (whether in
written, video or oral form via webcast, hyperlink or
otherwise), or (ii) used by any executive officer, key
employee or advisor of such party or any such participant, as
applicable, as a script in discussions or meetings with any such
third parties, Parent or the Company, as the case may be, shall
(or shall cause any such participant to) cooperate in good faith
with respect to any such written communications related to the
Offer for purposes of, among other things, determining whether
that communication constitutes tender offer material
that is required to be filed by
Rule 14d-2
or
Rule 14d-6
of the Exchange Act, as applicable, or a prospectus required to
be filed pursuant to Rule 424 or 425 of the Securities Act.
Each party shall (or shall cause any such participant to) give
reasonable and good faith consideration to any comments made by
the other such party or parties and their counsel on any such
written communications related to the Offer. For purposes of the
foregoing, written communications related to the Offer shall
include, with respect to any Person, any document or other
written communication prepared by or on behalf of that Person,
or any document or other material or information posted or made
accessible on the website of that Person (whether in written,
video or oral form via webcast, hyperlink or otherwise).
Section 6.10 Section 16 Matters. Prior to the
Effective Time, the Company Board shall take all such steps as
may be necessary or appropriate to cause the transactions
contemplated by this Agreement, including any dispositions of
Shares (including derivative securities with respect to such
Shares) resulting from the transactions contemplated by this
Agreement by each individual who is or will be subject to the
reporting requirements of Section 16(a) of the Exchange Act
with respect to the Company, to be exempt under
Rule 16b-3
promulgated under the Exchange Act.
Section 6.11 Exchange Act Delisting. Prior to the
Effective Time, the Company shall cooperate with Parent and
Merger Sub and use reasonable best efforts to take, or cause to
be taken, all actions, and do or cause to be done all things,
reasonably necessary, proper or advisable on its part under
applicable Law and the rules and policies of the SEC to cause
the deregistration of the Shares under the Exchange Act as
promptly as practicable after the Effective Time.
Section 6.12
Rule 14d-10
Matters. All amounts payable to holders of Shares and other
securities of the Company (the Covered
Securityholders) pursuant to the Company Plans and the
Company Benefit Agreements (collectively, the
Arrangements) (i) are being paid or
granted as compensation for past services performed, future
services to be performed or future services to be refrained from
performing by the Covered Securityholders (and matters
incidental thereto) and (ii) are not calculated based on
the number of Shares tendered or to be tendered into the Offer
by the applicable Covered Securityholder. The Company Board has
determined that each member of the Compensation Committee of the
Company Board (the Compensation Committee) is
an Independent Director in accordance with the
requirements of
Rule 14d-10(d)(2)
under the Exchange Act. The Compensation Committee (A) at a
meeting duly called and held at which all members of the
Compensation Committee were present, duly and unanimously
adopted resolutions approving as an employment
compensation, severance or other employee benefit
arrangement within the meaning of
Rule 14d-10(d)(1)
under the Exchange Act (an Employment Compensation
Arrangement) (1) each Company Stock Plan,
(2) the treatment of the Company Stock Options and
Restricted Stock in accordance with the terms set forth in this
Agreement, the applicable Company Stock Plan and any applicable
Company Plans and Company Benefit Agreements, (3) the terms
of Section 3.2(b) of this Agreement and
(4) each other Company Plan and Company Benefit Agreement,
which resolutions have not been rescinded, modified or withdrawn
in any way, and (B) has taken all other actions necessary
to satisfy the requirements of the non-exclusive safe harbor
under
Rule 14d-10(d)(2)
under the Exchange Act with respect to the foregoing
arrangements.
Section 6.13 Further Assurances. Each party hereby
agrees to perform any further acts and to execute and deliver
any documents or instruments that may be reasonably necessary to
carry out the provisions of this Agreement.
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ARTICLE VII
CONDITIONS PRECEDENT
Section 7.1 Conditions to Each Partys Obligation
to Effect the Merger. The obligation of each party to effect
the Merger is subject to the satisfaction at or prior to the
Effective Time of the following conditions:
(a) Stockholder Approval. The Company Stockholder
Approval shall have been obtained.
(b) No Injunctions or Legal Restraints; Illegality.
No temporary restraining order, preliminary or permanent
injunction or other judgment, order or decree issued by any
court of competent jurisdiction or other legal restraint or
prohibition shall be in effect, and no Law shall have been
enacted, entered, promulgated, enforced or deemed applicable by
any Governmental Entity that, in any case, prohibits or makes
illegal the consummation of the Merger.
(c) Purchase of Shares in the Offer. Merger Sub
shall have purchased all Shares validly tendered (and not
withdrawn) pursuant to the Offer (up to the Offer Amount) in
accordance with the terms hereof.
(d) Consents. The Company shall have obtained the
consent to the transactions contemplated herein of each Person
set forth in Section 7.1(d) of the Company
Disclosure Letter and shall have provided evidence to Parent of
each such consent, in form and substance satisfactory to Parent.
ARTICLE VIII
TERMINATION, AMENDMENT AND WAIVER
Section 8.1 Termination. This Agreement may be
terminated and the Offer and the Merger may be abandoned at any
time prior to the Acceptance Date (with any termination by
Parent also being an effective termination by Merger Sub):
(a) by mutual written consent of Parent and the Company;
(b) by either Parent or the Company if any court of
competent jurisdiction or other Governmental Entity shall have
issued a judgment, order, injunction, rule or decree, or taken
any other action restraining, enjoining or otherwise prohibiting
the Offer or the Merger and such judgment, order, injunction,
rule, decree or other action shall have become final and
nonappealable; provided, that the party seeking to
terminate this Agreement pursuant to this
Section 8.1(b) shall have used its reasonable best
efforts to contest, appeal and remove such judgment, order,
injunction, rule, decree, ruling or other action in accordance
with Section 6.5; or
(c) by Parent, at any time prior to the Acceptance Date:
(i) if the Company shall have breached or failed to perform
any of its representations, warranties, covenants or agreements
set forth in this Agreement (other than with respect to a breach
of Section 6.2 or 6.3(b), as to which
Section 8.1(c)(ii) will apply), or if any
representation or warranty of the Company shall have become
untrue, in each case which breach or failure to perform or to be
true, individually or in the aggregate (A) would result in
the failure of an Offer Condition or of any of the conditions
set forth in Article VII and (B) cannot be or,
to the extent curable by the Company, has not been cured by the
earlier of (1) the Outside Date and (2) thirty
(30) days after the giving of written notice to the Company
of such breach or failure; provided, that Parent shall
not have the right to terminate this Agreement pursuant to this
Section 8.1(c)(i) if it is then in material breach
of this Agreement;
(ii) if (A) the Company Board (or any committee
thereof) effects an Adverse Recommendation Change, (B) the
Company or the Company Board (or any committee thereof) shall
approve or recommend, or cause or permit the Company to enter
into, a Company Acquisition Agreement relating to an Acquisition
Proposal, (C) the Company shall have breached any of its
obligations under Section 6.2 or 6.3(b) or
(D) the Company or the Company Board (or any committee
thereof) shall formally resolve or publicly authorize or
publicly propose to take any of the foregoing actions; or
(iii) if (A) Merger Sub shall not have accepted for
payment and paid for Shares pursuant to the Offer on or before
the Outside Date, (B) the Offer shall have expired or been
terminated in accordance with its terms without Merger Sub
having purchased any Shares pursuant thereto, or (C) Merger
Sub shall have failed to
A-52
commence the Offer within thirty (30) days after the date
of the Original Agreement; provided, that Parent shall
not have the right to terminate this Agreement pursuant to this
Section 8.1(c)(iii) if such failure to accept for
payment and pay for Shares, to purchase Shares or to commence
the Offer is due to Parents or Merger Subs breach of
this Agreement.
(d) by the Company, at any time prior to the Acceptance
Date:
(i) if Parent or Merger Sub shall have breached or failed
to perform any of its representations, warranties, covenants or
agreements set forth in this Agreement, or if any representation
or warranty of Parent or Merger Sub shall have become untrue, in
each case which breach or failure to perform or to be true,
individually or in the aggregate (A) has had or would
reasonably be expected to have a Parent Material Adverse Effect
and (B) cannot be or, to the extent curable by Parent or
Merger Sub, has not been cured by the earlier of (1) the
Outside Date and (2) thirty (30) days after the giving
of written notice to Parent of such breach or failure;
provided, that the Company shall not have the right to
terminate this Agreement pursuant to this
Section 8.1(d)(i) if it is then in material breach
of any of its covenants or agreements set forth in this
Agreement;
(ii) in order to concurrently enter into a Company
Acquisition Agreement that constitutes a Superior Proposal, if
(A) the Company has complied in all material respects with
the requirements of Section 6.2 and (B) prior
to or concurrently with such termination, the Company pays the
fee due under Section 8.3.
(iii) if (A) Merger Sub shall not have accepted for
payment and paid for Shares pursuant to the Offer on or before
the Outside Date, (B) the Offer shall have expired or been
terminated in accordance with its terms without Merger Sub
having purchased any Shares pursuant thereto, or (C) Merger
Sub shall have failed to commence the Offer within thirty
(30) days after the date of the Original Agreement;
provided, that the Company shall not have the right to
terminate this Agreement pursuant to this
Section 8.1(d)(iii) if such failure to accept for
payment and pay for Shares, to purchase Shares or to commence
the Offer is due to the Companys breach of this Agreement.
The party desiring to terminate this Agreement pursuant to this
Section 8.1 (other than pursuant to
Section 8.1(a)) shall give written notice of such
termination to the other party.
Section 8.2 Effect of Termination. In the event of
termination of this Agreement, this Agreement shall forthwith
become void and have no effect, without any liability or
obligation on the part of Parent, Merger Sub or the Company,
except that the Confidentiality Agreement and the provisions of
Section 4.26 (Brokers), Section 6.9
(Public Announcements), this Section 8.2,
Section 8.3 (Fees and Expenses),
Section 9.2 (Notices), Section 9.5
(Entire Agreement), Section 9.6 (No Third Party
Beneficiaries), Section 9.7 (Governing Law),
Section 9.8 (Submission to Jurisdiction),
Section 9.9 (Assignment; Successors),
Section 9.10 (Enforcement), Section 9.12
(Severability), Section 9.13 (Waiver of Jury Trial)
and Section 9.16 (No Presumption Against Drafting
Party) shall survive the termination hereof; provided,
however, that no such termination shall relieve any party
hereto from any liability or damages resulting from a willful
and material breach prior to such termination of any of its
representations or warranties set forth in this Agreement or
from a material breach prior to such termination of any of its
covenants or agreements set forth in this Agreement.
Section 8.3 Fees and Expenses.
(a) Except as otherwise provided in this
Section 8.3, all fees and expenses incurred in
connection with this Agreement, the Offer, the Merger and the
other transactions contemplated hereby shall be paid by the
party incurring such fees or expenses, whether or not the Offer
or the Merger is consummated, except that the expenses incurred
in connection with the filing, printing and mailing of the Offer
Documents, the
Schedule 14D-9
and the Proxy Statement, and all filing and other fees paid to
the SEC, in each case in connection with the Merger (other than
attorneys fees, accountants fees and related
expenses), shall be borne by Parent. For the avoidance of doubt,
any fees and expenses incurred in connection with this
Agreement, the Offer, the Merger and the other transactions
contemplated hereby incurred by a Stockholder (such as fees and
expenses of separate counsel to such Stockholder) shall be borne
by such Stockholder.
A-53
(b) In the event that:
(i) (A) an Acquisition Proposal (whether or not
conditional) or intention to make an Acquisition Proposal
(whether or not conditional) shall have been made directly to
the Stockholders, otherwise publicly disclosed or otherwise
publicly communicated to senior management of the Company or the
Company Board, (B) this Agreement is thereafter terminated
by Parent pursuant to Section 8.1(c)(i) or
8.1(c)(iii) or by the Company pursuant to
Section 8.1(d)(iii) (unless, in the case of a
termination pursuant to Section 8.1(c)(iii) or
Section 8.1(d)(iii), immediately prior to such
termination a number of Shares satisfying the Minimum Condition
shall have been tendered into the Offer and not withdrawn) and
(C) within twelve (12) months after the date of such
termination, the Company enters into an agreement in respect of
any Acquisition Proposal and such transaction is subsequently
consummated (whether consummated before or after such
12-month
period), or recommends or submits an Acquisition Proposal to its
Stockholders for adoption and such transaction is subsequently
consummated (whether consummated before or after such
12-month
period), or a transaction in respect of an Acquisition Proposal
is consummated within such
12-month
period, which, in each case, need not be the same Acquisition
Proposal that shall have been made, publicly disclosed or
communicated prior to termination hereof (provided, that
for purposes of this clause (C), each reference to
20% in the definition of Acquisition
Proposal shall be deemed to be a reference to
50%); or
(ii) this Agreement is terminated by Parent pursuant to
Section 8.1(c)(ii); or
(iii) this Agreement is terminated by the Company pursuant
to Section 8.1(d)(ii);
then, in any such event, the Company shall pay to Parent the
Termination Fee, it being understood that in no event shall the
Company be required to pay the Termination Fee on more than one
occasion. As used herein, Termination Fee
shall mean a cash amount equal to $1,500,000, except that in the
event that this Agreement is terminated by the Company pursuant
to Section 8.1(d)(ii) prior to the No-Shop Period
Start Date, the Termination Fee shall mean a
cash amount equal to $1,000,000.
(c) Payment of the Termination Fee shall be made by wire
transfer of same day funds to the account or accounts designated
by Parent (i) on the consummation of, any transaction
contemplated by an Acquisition Proposal, as applicable, in the
case of a Termination Fee payable pursuant to Section
8.3(b)(i), (ii) as promptly as reasonably practicable
after termination (and, in any event, within two
(2) Business Days thereof), in the case of termination by
Parent pursuant to Section 8.1(c)(ii) or
(iii) simultaneously with or prior to, and as a condition
to the effectiveness of, termination by the Company pursuant to
Section 8.1(d)(ii). Each of Parent and Merger Sub
acknowledges and agrees that in the event that Parent is
entitled to receive either the Termination Fee pursuant to this
Agreement, the right of Parent to receive such amount shall
constitute each of Parents and Merger Subs sole and
exclusive remedy for money damages for any termination of this
Agreement; provided, that nothing in the foregoing
sentence shall constitute a waiver of Parents or Merger
Subs right to seek specific performance in accordance with
Section 9.10 of this Agreement (nor shall any such
action for specific performance prejudice Parents or
Merger Subs right to receive the Termination Fee if such
action does not result in consummation of the Offer, the Merger
and the other transactions contemplated by this Agreement) but
in no event shall Parent be entitled to receive both the
Termination Fee and an award of specific performance.
(d) The Company acknowledges that the agreements contained
in this Section 8.3 are an integral part of the
transactions contemplated by this Agreement, and that, without
these agreements, Parent and Merger Sub would not enter into
this Agreement; accordingly, if the Company fails promptly to
pay any amounts due pursuant to this Section 8.3,
and, in order to obtain such payment, Parent commences a suit
that results in a judgment against the Company for the amounts
set forth in this Section 8.3, the Company shall pay
to Parent its costs and expenses (including reasonable
attorneys fees and expenses) in connection with such suit,
together with interest on the amounts due pursuant to this
Section 8.3 from the date such payment was required
to be made until the date of payment at the prime lending rate
as published in The Wall Street Journal in effect on the
date such payment was required to be made.
Section 8.4 Amendment or Supplement. This Agreement
may be amended, modified or supplemented by the parties by
action taken or authorized by their respective Boards of
Directors at any time prior to the Effective Time, whether
before or after the Company Stockholder Approval has been
obtained; provided, however, that (a) after
Merger Sub has accepted for payment and paid for Shares pursuant
to the Offer, no amendment may be made which
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decreases the Merger Consideration and (b) after the
Company Stockholder Approval has been obtained, no amendment may
be made that pursuant to applicable Law requires further
approval or adoption by the Stockholders without such further
approval or adoption. This Agreement may not be amended,
modified or supplemented in any manner, whether by course of
conduct or otherwise, except by an instrument in writing
specifically designated as an amendment hereto, signed on behalf
of each of the parties in interest at the time of the amendment.
Section 8.5 Extension of Time; Waiver. At any time
prior to the Effective Time, the parties may, by action taken or
authorized by their respective Boards of Directors, to the
extent permitted by applicable Law, (a) extend the time for
the performance of any of the obligations or acts of the other
parties, (b) waive any inaccuracies in the representations
and warranties of the other parties set forth in this Agreement
or any document delivered pursuant hereto or (c) subject to
applicable Law, waive compliance with any of the agreements or
conditions of the other parties contained herein;
provided, however, that after the Company
Stockholder Approval has been obtained, no waiver may be made
that pursuant to applicable Law requires further approval or
adoption by the Stockholders without such further approval or
adoption. Any agreement on the part of a party to any such
waiver shall be valid only if set forth in a written instrument
executed and delivered by a duly authorized officer on behalf of
such party. No failure or delay of any party in exercising any
right or remedy hereunder shall operate as a waiver thereof, nor
shall any single or partial exercise of any such right or power,
or any abandonment or discontinuance of steps to enforce such
right or power, or any course of conduct, preclude any other or
further exercise thereof or the exercise of any other right or
power. The rights and remedies of the parties hereunder are
cumulative and are not exclusive of any rights or remedies which
they would otherwise have hereunder.
Section 8.6 Effect of Termination on Offer. In the
event that this Agreement is terminated pursuant to
Section 8.1(c)(ii) or 8.1(d)(ii) and Merger Sub
elects not to terminate the Offer, Merger Sub shall, and Parent
shall cause Merger Sub to, promptly amend the Offer to disclose
that such Offer is no longer pursuant to this Agreement. Any
Offer so amended and continued after the termination of this
Agreement shall not be subject to any terms or conditions of
this Agreement (and Parent and Merger Sub shall not be subject
to any standstill agreement previously entered into). In the
event that this Agreement is terminated pursuant to any
subsection of Section 8.1 other than 8.1(c)(ii)
or 8.1(d)(ii), then as promptly as practicable after such
termination, Merger Sub shall, and Parent shall cause Merger Sub
to, terminate the Offer. Nothing in this Section 8.6
shall be construed as a standstill or restriction that would
limit Parent or any of its Subsidiaries from acquiring capital
stock of the Company by any means at any time after termination
of this Agreement and (in the case of the preceding sentence,
termination of the Offer).
ARTICLE IX
GENERAL PROVISIONS
Section 9.1 Nonsurvival of Representations and
Warranties. None of the representations, warranties,
covenants or agreements in this Agreement or in any instrument
delivered pursuant to this Agreement shall survive the Effective
Time, other than those covenants or agreements of the parties
which by their terms apply, or are to be performed in whole or
in part, after the Effective Time.
Section 9.2 Notices. All notices and other
communications hereunder shall be in writing and shall be deemed
duly given (a) on the date of delivery if delivered
personally, (b) on the first (1st) Business Day following
the date of dispatch if delivered utilizing a
next-day
service by a recognized
next-day
courier or (c) on the earlier of confirmed receipt or the
fifth (5th) Business Day following the date of mailing if
delivered by registered or certified mail, return receipt
requested, postage prepaid. All notices hereunder shall be
delivered to the addresses set forth below, or pursuant to such
other instructions as may be designated in writing by the party
to receive such notice:
(i) if to Parent, Merger Sub or the Surviving Corporation,
to:
CryoLife, Inc.
1655 Roberts Boulevard N.W.
Kennesaw, GA 30144
Attn: Chief Financial Officer
And
Attn: General Counsel
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with a copy (which shall not constitute notice) to:
Arnall Golden Gregory LLP
171 17th Street NW, Suite 2100
Atlanta, GA 30363
Attention: B. Joseph Alley, Jr.
(ii) if to the Company, to:
Cardiogenesis Corporation
11 Musick
Irvine, CA 92618
Attention: Executive Chairman
with a copy (which shall not constitute notice) to:
K&L Gates LLP
1900 Main Street, Suite 600
Irvine, CA
92614-7319
Attention: Michael Hedge
Section 9.3 Certain Definitions. For purposes of
this Agreement:
(a) Affiliate of any Person means any
other Person that directly or indirectly, through one or more
intermediaries, controls, is controlled by, or is under common
control with, such first Person;
(b) Business Day has the meaning given
to such term in
Rule 14d-1(g)
under the Exchange Act;
(c) Company Benefit Agreement means any
material employment, consulting, bonus, incentive or deferred
compensation, equity or equity-based compensation, severance,
change in control, retention, termination or similar contract
between the Company or any of its Subsidiaries, on the one hand,
and any officer, director, employee, contractor or agent of the
Company or any of its Subsidiaries, on the other hand.
(d) control (including the terms
controlled, controlled by
and under common control with) means the
possession, directly or indirectly, of the power to direct or
cause the direction of the management and policies of a Person,
whether through the ownership of voting securities, by contract
or otherwise;
(e) knowledge of any party means the
actual knowledge of any executive officer and the knowledge that
any such person would be reasonably expected to obtain after
making the same inquiry that a reasonably prudent business
person in the ordinary and usual course of the performance of
his or her responsibilities would make. For purposes of
determining the knowledge of the Company, the knowledge (as
defined herein) of the following executive officers of the
Company shall be considered: Paul J. McCormick, William R.
Abbott and Richard P. Lanigan.
(f) Liability means any liability,
indebtedness, obligation or commitment of any kind (whether
accrued, absolute, contingent, matured, unmatured or otherwise
and whether or not required to be recorded or reflected on a
balance sheet under GAAP);
(g) material or other similar qualifier
regarding materiality, material respects or the like, when used
in connection with any activity, compliance, item, matter or
circumstance relating to a Person, means material to the
Person, its direct or indirect parent, and their Subsidiaries,
taken as a whole.
(h) Person means an individual,
corporation, partnership, limited liability company,
association, trust or other entity or organization, including
any Governmental Entity;
(i) Stockholders means the stockholders
of the Company;
(j) Subsidiary means, with respect to
any Person, any other Person of which stock or other equity
interests having ordinary voting power to elect more than 50% of
the board of directors or other governing body are owned,
directly or indirectly, by such first Person;
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(k) Tax means (i) any and all
federal, provincial, state, local, foreign and other taxes,
including net income, gross income, gross receipts, capital
gains, alternative, minimum, sales, consumption, use, social
services, goods and services, value added, harmonized sales, ad
valorem, transfer, franchise, profits, registration, license,
lease, service, service use, withholding, payroll, wage,
employment, unemployment, pension, health insurance, excise,
severance, stamp, occupation, premium, property, windfall
profits, environmental, customs, duties or other taxes, fees,
assessments, social security contributions or charges of any
kind whatsoever, together with any interest and any penalties,
additions to tax or additional amounts with respect thereto;
(ii) any liability for payment of amounts described in
clause (i) whether as a result of transferee liability, of
being a member of any group of entities for any period or
otherwise through operation of law; and (iii) any liability
for the payment of amounts described in clauses (i) or
(ii) as a result of any tax sharing, tax indemnity or tax
allocation agreement or any other express or implied agreement
to indemnify any other Person; and
(l) Tax Return means any return
(including any information return), report, statement,
declaration, estimate, schedule, notice, notification, form,
election, certificate or other document or information, and any
amendment or supplement to any of the foregoing, in each case
required or permitted to be filed, submitted, delivered or
transmitted to a taxing authority of a Governmental Entity with
respect to Taxes.
Section 9.4 Interpretation. When a reference is made
in this Agreement to a Section, Article, Schedule or Exhibit
such reference shall be to a Section, Article, Schedule or
Exhibit of this Agreement unless otherwise indicated. The table
of contents and headings contained in this Agreement or in any
Exhibit are for convenience of reference purposes only and shall
not affect in any way the meaning or interpretation of this
Agreement. All words used in this Agreement will be construed to
be of such gender or number as the circumstances require. Any
capitalized terms used in any Exhibit but not otherwise defined
therein shall have the meaning set forth in this Agreement. All
Exhibits annexed hereto or referred to herein are hereby
incorporated in and made a part of this Agreement as if set
forth herein. The word including and words of
similar import when used in this Agreement will mean
including, without limitation, unless otherwise
specified.
Section 9.5 Entire Agreement. This Agreement
(including the Exhibit and Schedules hereto), the Company
Disclosure Letter, the Support Agreements, and the
Confidentiality Agreement constitute the entire agreement, and
supersede all prior written agreements, arrangements,
communications and understandings and all prior and
contemporaneous oral agreements, arrangements, communications
and understandings among the parties with respect to the subject
matter hereof and thereof.
Section 9.6 No Third Party Beneficiaries. Except as
provided in Section 6.8, nothing in this Agreement,
express or implied, is intended to or shall confer upon any
Person other than the parties and their respective successors
and permitted assigns any legal or equitable right, benefit or
remedy of any nature under or by reason of this Agreement. The
representations and warranties in this Agreement are the product
of negotiations among the parties hereto and are for the sole
benefit of the parties hereto. In some instances, the
representations and warranties in this Agreement may represent
an allocation among the parties hereto of risks associated with
particular matters regardless of the knowledge of any of the
parties hereto. Consequently, Persons (other than the parties
hereto) may not rely upon the representations and warranties in
this Agreement as characterizations of actual facts or
circumstances as of the date of the Original Agreement or as of
any other date.
Section 9.7 Governing Law. This Agreement and all
disputes or controversies arising out of or relating to this
Agreement or the transactions contemplated hereby shall be
governed by, and construed in accordance with, the internal Laws
of the State of Florida, without regard to the Laws of any other
jurisdiction that might be applied because of the conflicts of
Laws principles of the State of Florida.
Section 9.8 Submission to Jurisdiction. Each of the
parties irrevocably agrees that any legal action or proceeding
arising out of or relating to this Agreement brought by any
party or its Affiliates against any other party or its
Affiliates shall be brought and determined in the Federal or
state courts with jurisdiction over all or part of Leon County,
Florida, provided that if jurisdiction is not then
available in such courts, then any such legal action or
proceeding may be brought in any federal court located in the
State of Florida or any other Florida state court. Each of the
parties hereby irrevocably submits to the jurisdiction of the
aforesaid courts for itself and with respect to its property,
generally and unconditionally, with regard to any such action or
proceeding arising out of or relating to this Agreement and the
transactions contemplated hereby. Each of the parties agrees not
to commence any action,
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suit or proceeding relating thereto except in the courts
described above in Florida, other than actions in any court of
competent jurisdiction to enforce any judgment, decree or award
rendered by any such court in Florida as described herein. Each
of the parties further agrees that notice as provided herein
shall constitute sufficient service of process and the parties
further waive any argument that such service is insufficient.
Each of the parties hereby irrevocably and unconditionally
waives, and agrees not to assert, by way of motion or as a
defense, counterclaim or otherwise, in any action or proceeding
arising out of or relating to this Agreement or the transactions
contemplated hereby, (a) any claim that it is not
personally subject to the jurisdiction of the courts in Florida
as described herein for any reason, (b) that it or its
property is exempt or immune from jurisdiction of any such court
or from any legal process commenced in such courts (whether
through service of notice, attachment prior to judgment,
attachment in aid of execution of judgment, execution of
judgment or otherwise) and (c) that (i) the suit,
action or proceeding in any such court is brought in an
inconvenient forum, (ii) the venue of such suit, action or
proceeding is improper or (iii) this Agreement, or the
subject matter hereof, may not be enforced in or by such courts.
Section 9.9 Assignment; Successors. Neither this
Agreement nor any of the rights, interests or obligations under
this Agreement may be assigned or delegated, in whole or in
part, by operation of law or otherwise, by any party without the
prior written consent of the other parties, and any such
assignment without such prior written consent shall be null and
void; provided, however, that each of Parent and
Merger Sub may assign, in its sole discretion, any or all of its
rights, interests and obligations under this Agreement to
(a) Parent or any of its Affiliates at any time, in which
case all references herein to Parent or Merger Sub shall be
deemed references to such other Affiliate, except that all
representations and warranties made herein with respect to
Parent or Merger Sub as of the date of the Original Agreement
shall be deemed to be representations and warranties made with
respect to such other Affiliate as of the date of such
assignment or (b) after the Effective Time, to any Person;
provided, further, that no such assignment shall
relieve Parent or Merger Sub of any of their obligations
hereunder. Subject to the preceding sentence, this Agreement
will be binding upon, inure to the benefit of, and be
enforceable by, the parties and their respective successors and
assigns.
Section 9.10 Enforcement. The parties agree that
irreparable damage would occur in the event that any of the
provisions of this Agreement were not performed in accordance
with their specific terms or were otherwise breached.
Accordingly, each of the parties shall be entitled to specific
performance of the terms hereof, including an injunction or
injunctions to prevent breaches of this Agreement and to enforce
specifically the terms and provisions of this Agreement in the
Federal or state courts with jurisdiction over all or part of
Leon County, Florida, provided that if jurisdiction is
not then available in such courts, then in any federal court
located in the State of Florida or any other Florida state
court, this being in addition to any other remedy to which such
party is entitled at law or in equity. Each of the parties
hereby further waives (a) any defense in any action for
specific performance that a remedy at law would be adequate and
(b) any requirement under any law to post security as a
prerequisite to obtaining equitable relief.
Section 9.11 Currency. All references to
dollars or $ or US$ in this
Agreement refer to United States dollars, which is the currency
used for all purposes in this Agreement.
Section 9.12 Severability. Whenever possible, each
provision or portion of any provision of this Agreement shall be
interpreted in such manner as to be effective and valid under
applicable Law, but if any provision or portion of any provision
of this Agreement is held to be invalid, illegal or
unenforceable in any respect under any applicable Law or rule in
any jurisdiction, such invalidity, illegality or
unenforceability shall not affect any other provision or portion
of any provision in such jurisdiction, and this Agreement shall
be reformed, construed and enforced in such jurisdiction as if
such invalid, illegal or unenforceable provision or portion of
any provision had never been contained herein.
Section 9.13 Waiver of Jury Trial. EACH OF THE
PARTIES TO THIS AGREEMENT HEREBY IRREVOCABLY WAIVES ALL RIGHT TO
A TRIAL BY JURY IN ANY ACTION, PROCEEDING OR COUNTERCLAIM
ARISING OUT OF OR RELATING TO THIS AGREEMENT OR THE TRANSACTIONS
CONTEMPLATED HEREBY.
Section 9.14 Counterparts. This Agreement may be
executed in two or more counterparts, all of which shall be
considered one and the same instrument and shall become
effective when one or more counterparts have been signed by each
of the parties and delivered to the other parties.
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Section 9.15 Facsimile Signature. This Agreement may
be executed by facsimile signature and a facsimile signature
shall constitute an original for all purposes.
Section 9.16 No Presumption Against Drafting Party.
Each of Parent, Merger Sub and the Company acknowledges that
each party to this Agreement has been represented by counsel in
connection with this Agreement and the transactions contemplated
by this Agreement. Accordingly, any rule of law or any legal
decision that would require interpretation of any claimed
ambiguities in this Agreement against the drafting party has no
application and is expressly waived.
Section 9.17 Performance Guaranty. Parent
unconditionally and irrevocably agrees to take all action
necessary to cause Merger Sub or the Surviving Corporation, as
applicable, to perform all of its respective agreements,
covenants and obligations under this Agreement with respect to
consummation of the Offer and the Merger and payment or issuance
of consideration pursuant to this Agreement in respect thereof.
Parent unconditionally guarantees to the Company the full and
complete performance by Merger Sub or the Surviving Corporation,
as applicable, of its respective obligations under this
Agreement with respect to consummation of the Offer and the
Merger and payment or issuance of consideration pursuant to this
Agreement in respect thereof and shall be liable for any breach
of any such obligation of Merger Sub or the Surviving
Corporation, as applicable, under this Agreement. This is a
guarantee of payment and performance and not collectability.
Section 9.18 Original Agreement Superseded. The
Original Agreement has been amended and restated in its entirety
by this Agreement, and the Original Agreement will be of no
further force or effect after the date hereof.
[The
remainder of this page is intentionally left blank.]
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IN WITNESS WHEREOF, the parties have caused this Agreement to be
executed as of the date first written above by their respective
officers thereunto duly authorized.
PARENT:
CRYOLIFE, INC.
Name: D. Ashley Lee
Title: Exec. V.P., COO and CFO
MERGER SUB:
CL FALCON, INC.
Name: D. Ashley Lee
Title: Vice President, Finance,
Treasurer
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COMPANY:
CARDIOGENESIS CORPORATION
Name: Paul McCormick
Title: Executive Chairman
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Exhibit A
FORM OF
SUPPORT AGREEMENT
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EXECUTION
VERSION
SUPPORT
AGREEMENT
This SUPPORT AGREEMENT (this Agreement), is
entered into as of March 28, 2011, by and among CryoLife,
Inc., a Florida corporation (Parent), and the
executive officers
and/or
directors of Cardiogenesis Corporation, a California corporation
(the Company), listed on Schedule A
hereto (each, a Stockholder and,
collectively, the Stockholders).
RECITALS
WHEREAS, concurrently herewith, Parent, CL Falcon, Inc., a
Florida corporation and a wholly owned subsidiary of Parent
(Merger Sub), and the Company are entering
into an Agreement and Plan of Merger (the Merger
Agreement) (capitalized terms used but not defined in
this Agreement shall have the meanings ascribed to them in the
Merger Agreement), which provides for, among other things, a
tender offer (as such offer may be amended from time to time in
a manner not prohibited by Section 1.1(b) of the Merger
Agreement, the Offer) to be made by Merger
Sub of cash for all of the issued and outstanding shares of
common stock, no par value per share, of the Company (the
Shares), followed by the merger of Merger Sub
with and into the Company, with the Company continuing as the
surviving corporation in the merger (the
Merger), all on the terms and subject to the
terms and conditions set forth in the Merger Agreement;
WHEREAS, each Stockholder is the record or beneficial
owner (within the meaning of
Rule 13d-3
under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended) of Shares
as set forth on Schedule A hereto (with respect to
each Stockholder, the Owned Shares; the Owned
Shares and any additional Shares or other voting securities of
the Company of which such Stockholder acquires record and
beneficial ownership after the date of the Original Agreement,
including, without limitation, by purchase, as a result of a
stock dividend, stock split, recapitalization, combination,
reclassification, exchange or change of such shares, or upon
exercise or conversion of any securities, such
Stockholders Covered Shares);
WHEREAS, in addition to being a record or beneficial owner of
Owned Shares, each Stockholder is a member of the Board of
Directors of the Company
and/or an
executive officer of the Company;
WHEREAS, in order to induce Parent and Merger Sub to enter into
the Merger Agreement and to proceed with the transactions
contemplated thereby, including the Merger, Parent and the
Stockholders are entering into this Agreement; and
WHEREAS, the Stockholders acknowledge that Parent and Merger Sub
are entering into the Merger Agreement in reliance on the
representations, warranties, covenants and other agreements of
the Stockholders set forth in this Agreement and would not enter
into the Merger Agreement if any Stockholder did not enter into
this Agreement.
AGREEMENT
NOW, THEREFORE, in consideration of the foregoing and the mutual
covenants and agreements herein contained, and intending to be
legally bound hereby, Parent and the Stockholders hereby agree
as follows:
1. Agreement to Tender.
(a) Prior to the Termination Date (as defined herein), if
requested in writing by Parent, but in no event prior to such
written request, each Stockholder hereby severally agrees to
tender, or cause to be tendered, pursuant to and in accordance
with the terms of the Offer, such Stockholders Covered
Shares (other than unexercised options, warrants, and other
rights to acquire Shares and other than any Shares as to which
the Stockholder does not have the power to dispose of or direct
the disposition of such Shares, or has such power only in a
fiduciary capacity for the benefit of Persons other than those
who are parties to this Agreement), and agrees that it will not
withdraw or permit the withdrawal of such Shares from the Offer.
Within three (3) Business Days after receipt of the written
request of Parent, but in no event prior to receipt of such
written request, each Stockholder will: (i) deliver to the
Exchange Agent designated in the Offer (A) a properly
completed letter of election and transmittal with respect to
such
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Stockholders Covered Shares complying with the terms of
the Offer, (B) if and to the extent such Covered Shares are
held in certificated form, the certificates representing the
Covered Shares, and (C) all other documents or instruments
required to be delivered pursuant to the terms of the Offer;
and/or
(ii) instruct its broker or such other Person who is the
holder of any of such Stockholders Covered Shares to
promptly tender such Shares in the Offer pursuant to and in
accordance with the terms and conditions of the Offer.
(b) Each Stockholder acknowledges and agrees that Merger
Subs obligation to accept for payment Shares tendered in
the Offer, including any Shares tendered by any Stockholder, is
subject to the terms and conditions of the Merger Agreement and
the Offer.
2. Agreement to Vote.
(a) Prior to the Termination Date and regardless of whether
such Stockholder tenders any Covered Shares pursuant to
Section 1, each Stockholder irrevocably and unconditionally
agrees that it shall at any meeting of the stockholders of the
Company (whether annual or special and whether or not an
adjourned or postponed meeting), however called, or in
connection with any written consent of stockholders of the
Company (x) when a meeting is held, appear at such meeting
or otherwise cause such Stockholders Covered Shares to be
counted as present thereat for the purpose of establishing a
quorum, and respond to each request by the Company for written
consent, if any, and (y) vote (or consent), or cause to be
voted at such meeting (or validly execute and return and cause
such consent to be granted with respect to), all of such
Stockholders Covered Shares (i) in favor of the
Merger, the execution and delivery by the Company of the Merger
Agreement, adoption and approval of the Merger Agreement and the
terms thereof and any other matters necessary for consummation
of the Merger and the other transactions contemplated in the
Merger Agreement (whether or not recommended by the Company
Board), and (ii) against (A) any Acquisition Proposal,
(B) any proposal for any recapitalization, reorganization,
liquidation, dissolution, amalgamation, merger, sale of assets
or other business combination between the Company and any other
Person (other than the Merger), (C) any other action that
could reasonably be expected to impede, interfere with, delay,
postpone or adversely affect the Merger or any of the
transactions contemplated by the Merger Agreement or this
Agreement or any transaction that results in a breach in any
material respect of any covenant, representation or warranty or
other obligation or agreement of the Company or any of its
Subsidiaries under the Merger Agreement, and (D) any change
in the present capitalization or dividend policy of the Company
or any amendment or other change to the Companys
certificate of incorporation or bylaws, except if approved by
Parent.
(b) Prior to the Termination Date and at any time after the
Acceptance Date, each Stockholder irrevocably and
unconditionally agrees that it shall at any meeting of the
stockholders of the Company (whether annual or special and
whether or not an adjourned or postponed meeting), however
called, or in connection with any written consent of
stockholders of the Company (x) when a meeting is held,
appear at such meeting or otherwise cause such
Stockholders Covered Shares to be counted as present
thereat for the purpose of establishing a quorum, and respond to
each request by the Company for written consent, if any, and
(y) vote (or consent), or cause to be voted at such meeting
(or validly execute and return and cause such consent to be
granted with respect to), all of such Stockholders Covered
Shares (i) in favor of all necessary and desirable actions
to cause the election (and maintenance) of the Parent designees
to the Companys Board of Directors (the Parent
Directors) pursuant to Section 1.4 of the Merger
Agreement, and (ii) against, unless requested by Parent,
the removal of any of the Parent Directors.
3. Grant of Irrevocable Proxy; Appointment of Proxy.
(a) EACH STOCKHOLDER HEREBY GRANTS TO, AND APPOINTS,
PARENT, THE EXECUTIVE OFFICERS OF PARENT, AND ANY OTHER DESIGNEE
OF PARENT, EACH OF THEM INDIVIDUALLY, SUCH STOCKHOLDERS
IRREVOCABLE (UNTIL THE TERMINATION DATE) PROXY AND
ATTORNEY-IN-FACT
(WITH FULL POWER OF SUBSTITUTION) TO TENDER ON BEHALF OF THE
STOCKHOLDER THE COVERED SHARES IF SUCH STOCKHOLDER FAILS TO
TENDER SUCH COVERED SHARES WITHIN THREE (3) BUSINESS
DAYS AFTER THE RECEIPT OF A WRITTEN REQUEST FROM PARENT TO DO
SO, AND TO VOTE THE COVERED SHARES AS INDICATED IN
SECTION 2. EACH STOCKHOLDER INTENDS THIS PROXY TO BE
IRREVOCABLE (UNTIL THE TERMINATION DATE) AND COUPLED WITH AN
INTEREST AND WILL TAKE SUCH FURTHER ACTION OR EXECUTE SUCH OTHER
INSTRUMENTS AS MAY BE NECESSARY TO EFFECTUATE THE INTENT OF THIS
PROXY AND
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HEREBY REVOKES ANY PROXY PREVIOUSLY GRANTED BY SUCH STOCKHOLDER
WITH RESPECT TO THE COVERED SHARES (THE STOCKHOLDER REPRESENTING
TO THE COMPANY THAT ANY SUCH PROXY IS NOT IRREVOCABLE).
(b) The proxy granted in this Section 3 shall
automatically expire upon the Termination Date of this Agreement.
4. No Inconsistent Agreements. Each Stockholder
(severally and not jointly) hereby covenants and agrees that,
except as contemplated by this Agreement, such Stockholder
(a) has not entered into, and shall not enter into at any
time prior to the Termination Date, any voting agreement or
voting trust with respect to any of such Stockholders
Covered Shares and (b) has not granted, and shall not grant
at any time prior to the Termination Date, a proxy or power of
attorney with respect to any of such Stockholders Covered
Shares, in either case, which is inconsistent with such
Stockholders obligations pursuant to this Agreement.
5. Termination; Amendments to Offer.
(a) This Agreement shall terminate automatically upon the
earliest to occur of (i) the Effective Time,
(ii) written notice of termination of this Agreement is
delivered by Parent to the Stockholders, (iii) the Outside
Date, (iv) the termination of the Merger Agreement in
accordance with its terms, (v) the date on which Parent or
Merger Sub terminates, withdraws, or abandons the Offer,
(vi) the date on which the Offer is revised in a manner
that violates the limitations set forth in Section 5(b), or
(vii) the date on which a Person (other than Parent or
Merger Sub) acquires more than 50% of the Companys
outstanding voting securities on a fully-diluted basis (such
earliest date being referred to herein as the
Termination Date); provided, that the
provisions set forth in Sections 14 to 27 shall survive the
termination of this Agreement; provided further, that any
liability incurred by any party hereto as a result of a material
breach of a term or condition of this Agreement prior to such
termination shall survive the termination of this Agreement.
(b) Notwithstanding anything to the contrary herein, no
amendment to the Offer in accordance with the Merger Agreement
shall release any Covered Shares from this Agreement prior to
the Termination Date otherwise determined in accordance with
Section 5(a) unless such amendment (x) is made without
the written consent of the Company pursuant to
Section 1.1(b) of the Merger Agreement, and (y) except
if made pursuant to Section 6.2(e) of the Merger Agreement
to the extent set forth below, (i) reduces the Offer
Consideration, (ii) changes the form of consideration
payable, (iii) reduces the number of Shares to be purchased
by Merger Sub, (iv) waives or amends the Minimum Condition,
(v) adds to the Offer Conditions or imposes any other
conditions, (vi) extends the expiration date beyond the
Outside Date, or (vii) otherwise amends, modifies or
supplements any Offer Condition or any term of the Offer set
forth in the Merger Agreement in a manner adverse to the holders
of Shares. Parent may amend the Offer without violation of the
foregoing limitations and without releasing the Covered Shares
in connection with its match right set forth in
Section 6.2(e) of the Merger Agreement in order to cause
the Offer to comply with its bona fide proposal(s) pursuant to
Section 6.2(e), provided that such match
right-to-adjust
shall not apply to Section 5(b)(iv) above and shall apply
to Section 5(b)(vii) above only to the extent that the
revised Offer, taken as a whole (as opposed to any individual
term), has not been revised in a manner adverse to the holders
of Shares. Any amendment that is not permitted pursuant to the
foregoing shall entitle a Stockholder to terminate this
Agreement pursuant to Section 5(a)(vi).
6. Representations and Warranties of Stockholders. Each
Stockholder, as to itself (severally and not jointly), hereby
represents and warrants to Parent as follows:
(a) Such Stockholder is the record and beneficial owner of,
and has good and valid title to, the Owned Shares set forth
opposite its name on Schedule A hereto, free and
clear of Liens except as created by this Agreement, the terms of
the Company charter and bylaws, or applicable federal and state
securities laws. Such Stockholder has sole voting power, sole
power of disposition, sole power to demand appraisal rights and
sole power to agree to all of the matters set forth in this
Agreement applicable to such Stockholder, in each case with
respect to all of those Owned Shares set forth opposite its name
on Schedule A hereto, with no limitations,
qualifications or restrictions on such rights, subject to
applicable federal and state securities laws and the terms of
this Agreement. As of the date hereof, other than such
Stockholders Owned Shares, such Stockholder does not own
beneficially or of record any Shares or other voting securities
of the Company or any interest therein. Such Stockholders
Owned Shares are not subject to
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any voting trust agreement or other Contract to which such
Stockholder is a party restricting or otherwise relating to the
voting or Transfer of such Owned Shares. Such Stockholder has
not appointed or granted any proxy or power of attorney that is
still in effect with respect to any Owned Shares, except as
contemplated by this Agreement.
(b) Each Stockholder has full legal power and capacity to
execute and deliver this Agreement and to perform such
Stockholders obligations hereunder. This Agreement has
been duly and validly executed and delivered by such Stockholder
and, assuming due authorization, execution and delivery by
Parent, constitutes a legal, valid and binding obligation of
such Stockholder, enforceable against such Stockholder in
accordance with its terms, except as enforcement may be limited
by applicable bankruptcy, insolvency, reorganization, moratorium
or similar laws affecting creditors rights generally and
by general principles of equity (regardless of whether
considered in a proceeding in equity or at law). If such
Stockholder is married, and any of the Covered Shares of such
Stockholder constitute community property or otherwise need
spousal or other approval for this Agreement to be legal, valid
and binding, this Agreement has been duly and validly executed
and delivered by such Stockholders spouse and, assuming
due authorization, execution and delivery by Parent, constitutes
a legal, valid and binding obligation of such Stockholders
spouse, enforceable against such Stockholders spouse in
accordance with its terms, except as enforcement may be limited
by applicable bankruptcy, insolvency, reorganization, moratorium
or similar laws affecting creditors rights generally and
by general principles of equity (regardless of whether
considered in a proceeding in equity or at law).
(c) Except for the applicable requirements of the Exchange
Act, (i) no filing with, and no permit, authorization,
consent or approval of, any Governmental Entity is necessary on
the part of such Stockholder for the execution, delivery and
performance of this Agreement by such Stockholder or the
consummation by such Stockholder of the transactions
contemplated hereby and (ii) neither the execution,
delivery or performance of this Agreement by such Stockholder
nor the consummation by such Stockholder of the transactions
contemplated hereby nor compliance by such Stockholder with any
of the provisions hereof shall (A) conflict with or
violate, any provision of the organizational documents of any
such Stockholder which is an entity, (B) result in any
breach or violation of, or constitute a default (or an event
which, with notice or lapse of time or both, would become a
default) under, or give to others any rights of termination,
amendment, acceleration or cancellation of, or result in the
creation of a Lien on such property or asset of such Stockholder
pursuant to, any Contract to which such Stockholder is a party
or by which such Stockholder or any property or asset of such
Stockholder is bound or affected or (C) violate any order,
writ, injunction, decree, statute, rule or regulation applicable
to such Stockholder or any of such Stockholders properties
or assets except, in the case of clause (B) or (C), for
breaches, violations or defaults that would not, individually or
in the aggregate, materially impair the ability of such
Stockholder to perform its obligations hereunder.
(d) There is no action, suit, investigation, complaint or
other proceeding pending against such Stockholder or, to the
knowledge of such Stockholder, threatened against such
Stockholder or that restricts or prohibits (or, if successful,
would restrict or prohibit) the exercise by Parent of its rights
under this Agreement or the performance by such Stockholder of
its obligations under this Agreement.
(e) Such Stockholder understands and acknowledges that
Parent is entering into the Merger Agreement in reliance upon
such Stockholders execution and delivery of this Agreement
and the representations and warranties of such Stockholder
contained herein.
7. Certain Covenants of Stockholder. Each Stockholder,
for itself (severally and not jointly), hereby covenants and
agrees as follows:
(a) Prior to the Termination Date, such Stockholder will
not take any action or fail to take any action, or cause the
Company or any other Representative to take any action or fail
to take any action, that would constitute, or be reasonably
likely to result in, a breach of the Companys covenants
and agreements under Section 6.2 of the Merger Agreement.
(b) Prior to the Termination Date, such Stockholder shall
not (i) tender into any tender or exchange offer,
(ii) sell (constructively or otherwise), transfer, pledge,
hypothecate, grant, encumber, assign or otherwise dispose of
(collectively Transfer), or enter into any
contract, option, agreement or other arrangement or
understanding with respect to the Transfer of any of the Covered
Shares or beneficial ownership or voting power thereof or
therein
A-66
(including by operation of law), (iii) grant any proxies or
powers of attorney, deposit any Covered Shares into a voting
trust or enter into a voting agreement with respect to any
Covered Shares or (iv) knowingly take any action that would
make any representation or warranty of such Stockholder
contained herein untrue or incorrect, in any material respect,
or have the effect of preventing or disabling such Stockholder
from performing its obligations under this Agreement. Any
Transfer in violation of this provision shall be void. Such
Stockholder hereby authorizes and requests the Company to notify
the Companys transfer agent that there is a stop transfer
order with respect to all of such Stockholders Covered
Shares and that this Agreement places limits on the voting of
the Covered Shares. If so requested by Parent, such Stockholder
agrees that the certificates representing Covered Shares shall
bear a legend stating that they are subject to this Agreement
and to the irrevocable proxy granted in Section 3(a).
Notwithstanding anything to the contrary in this Agreement, the
Stockholder may Transfer any or all of the Covered Shares, in
accordance with applicable Law, to such Stockholders
spouse, ancestors, descendants or any trust controlled by the
Stockholder for any of their benefit, and with respect to any
Stockholder that is not a natural Person, to such
Stockholders Affiliates; provided, that prior to
and as a condition to the effectiveness of such Transfer, each
Person to whom any of such Covered Shares or any interest in any
of such Covered Shares is or may be Transferred shall have
executed and delivered to Parent a counterpart of this Agreement
pursuant to which such Person shall be bound by all of the terms
and provisions of this Agreement as if it had been the
Stockholder originally party hereto, and shall have agreed in
writing with Parent to hold such Covered Shares or interest in
such Covered Shares subject to all of the terms and provisions
of this Agreement.
(c) Prior to the Termination Date, such Stockholder shall
promptly notify Parent of the number of any new Shares or other
voting securities of the Company with respect to which
beneficial ownership is acquired by such Stockholder, including,
without limitation, by purchase, as a result of a stock
dividend, stock split, recapitalization, combination,
reclassification, exchange or change of such shares, or upon
exercise or conversion of any securities of the Company, if any,
after the date hereof. Any such Shares or other voting
securities of the Company shall automatically become subject to
the terms of this Agreement, and Schedule A shall be
adjusted accordingly.
8. Stockholder Capacity. This Agreement is being
entered into by each Stockholder solely in its capacity as a
stockholder of the Company, and not in such Stockholders
capacity as a director or officer of the Company, as applicable,
and nothing in this Agreement shall restrict or limit the
ability of any Stockholder who is a director or officer of the
Company to take any action in his or her capacity as a director
or officer of the Company.
9. No Ownership Interest. Nothing in this Agreement
shall be deemed to vest in Parent or any of its Affiliates any
direct or indirect ownership of or with respect to any Covered
Shares. Beyond what is expressly provided in this Agreement, all
ownership and economic benefits of and relating to the Covered
Shares shall remain vested in and belong to the Stockholders,
and neither Parent nor any of its Affiliates shall have any
authority to direct any of the Stockholders in the voting or
disposition of any of the Covered Shares.
10. Waiver of Appraisal Rights. Each Stockholder
hereby waives any rights of appraisal or rights to dissent from
the Merger that such Stockholder may have under applicable Law.
11. Disclosure. Each Stockholder hereby authorizes
Parent and the Company to publish and disclose in any
announcement or disclosure required by the SEC or the New York
Stock Exchange and in the TO Statement and Proxy Statement such
Stockholders identity and ownership of such
Stockholders Covered Shares and the nature of such
Stockholders obligations under this Agreement; provided
that the Stockholders shall have a reasonable opportunity to
review and comment on any such announcement or disclosure prior
to its publication, filing or disclosure.
12. Further Assurances. From time to time, at the
request of Parent and without further consideration, each
Stockholder shall take such further action as may reasonably be
necessary or desirable to consummate and make effective the
transactions contemplated by this Agreement.
13. Non-Survival of Representations and Warranties.
None of the representations and warranties of the
Stockholders contained herein shall survive the Termination Date.
14. Amendment and Modification. This Agreement may
not be amended, modified or supplemented in any manner, whether
by course of conduct or otherwise, except by an instrument in
writing signed on behalf of each party and otherwise as
expressly set forth herein.
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15. Waiver. No failure or delay of any party in
exercising any right or remedy hereunder shall operate as a
waiver thereof, nor shall any single or partial exercise of any
such right or power, or any abandonment or discontinuance of
steps to enforce such right or power, or any course of conduct,
preclude any other or further exercise thereof or the exercise
of any other right or power. The rights and remedies of the
parties hereunder are cumulative and are not exclusive of any
rights or remedies which they would otherwise have hereunder.
Any agreement on the part of a party to any such waiver shall be
valid only if set forth in a written instrument executed and
delivered by such party.
16. Notices. All notices and other communications
hereunder shall be in writing and shall be deemed duly given
(a) on the date of delivery if delivered personally, or if
by facsimile, upon written confirmation of receipt by facsimile,
(b) on the first (1st) Business Day following the date of
dispatch if delivered utilizing a
next-day
service by a recognized
next-day
courier or (c) on the earlier of confirmed receipt or the
fifth (5th) Business Day following the date of mailing if
delivered by registered or certified mail, return receipt
requested, postage prepaid. All notices hereunder shall be
delivered to the addresses set forth below, or pursuant to such
other instructions as may be designated in writing by the party
to receive such notice:
(i) If to a Stockholder, to the address set forth opposite
such Stockholders name on Schedule A hereto.
(ii) If to Parent:
CryoLife, Inc.
1655 Roberts Boulevard N.W.
Kennesaw, GA 30144
Attn: Chief Financial Officer
And
Attn: General Counsel
with a copy (which shall not constitute notice) to:
Arnall Golden Gregory LLP
171 17th Street NW, Suite 2100
Atlanta, GA 30363
Attention: B. Joseph Alley, Jr.
17. Entire Agreement. This Agreement and the Merger
Agreement constitute the entire agreement, and supersede all
prior written agreements, arrangements, communications and
understandings and all prior and contemporaneous oral
agreements, arrangements, communications and understandings
between the parties with respect to the subject matter hereof
and thereof.
18. No Third-Party Beneficiaries. Nothing in this
Agreement, express or implied, is intended to or shall confer
upon any Person other than the parties and their respective
successors and permitted assigns any legal or equitable right,
benefit or remedy of any nature under or by reason of this
Agreement.
19. Governing Law. This Agreement and all disputes
or controversies arising out of or relating to this Agreement or
the transactions contemplated hereby shall be governed by, and
construed in accordance with, the internal laws of the State of
Florida, without regard to the laws of any other jurisdiction
that might be applied because of the conflicts of Laws
principles of the State of Florida.
20. Submission to Jurisdiction. Each of the parties
irrevocably agrees that any legal action or proceeding arising
out of or relating to this Agreement brought by any party or its
Affiliates against any other party or its Affiliates shall be
brought and determined in the Federal or state courts with
jurisdiction over all or part of Leon County, Florida,
provided that if jurisdiction is not then available in
such courts, then any such legal action or proceeding may be
brought in any federal court located in the State of Florida or
any other Florida state court. Each of the parties hereby
irrevocably submits to the jurisdiction of the aforesaid courts
for itself and with respect to its property, generally and
unconditionally, with regard to any such action or proceeding
arising out of or relating to this Agreement and the
transactions contemplated hereby. Each of the parties agrees not
to commence any action, suit or proceeding relating thereto
except in the courts described above in Florida, other than
actions in any court of competent jurisdiction to enforce any
judgment, decree or award rendered by any such court in Florida
as described
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herein. Each of the parties further agrees that notice as
provided herein shall constitute sufficient service of process
and the parties further waive any argument that such service is
insufficient. Each of the parties hereby irrevocably and
unconditionally waives, and agrees not to assert, by way of
motion or as a defense, counterclaim or otherwise, in any action
or proceeding arising out of or relating to this Agreement or
the transactions contemplated hereby, (a) any claim that it
is not personally subject to the jurisdiction of the courts in
Florida as described herein for any reason, (b) that it or
its property is exempt or immune from jurisdiction of any such
court or from any legal process commenced in such courts
(whether through service of notice, attachment prior to
judgment, attachment in aid of execution of judgment, execution
of judgment or otherwise) and (c) that (i) the suit,
action or proceeding in any such court is brought in an
inconvenient forum, (ii) the venue of such suit, action or
proceeding is improper or (iii) this Agreement, or the
subject matter hereof, may not be enforced in or by such courts.
21. Assignment; Successors. Neither this Agreement
nor any of the rights, interests or obligations under this
Agreement may be assigned or delegated, in whole or in part, by
operation of law or otherwise, by either party without the prior
written consent of the other party, and any such assignment
without such prior written consent shall be null and void;
provided, however, that Parent may assign all or
any of its rights and obligations hereunder to any direct or
indirect Subsidiary of Parent; provided further, that no
assignment shall limit the assignors obligations
hereunder. Subject to the preceding sentence, this Agreement
will be binding upon, inure to the benefit of, and be
enforceable by, the parties and their respective successors and
assigns.
22. Enforcement. The parties agree that irreparable
damage would occur in the event that any of the provisions of
this Agreement were not performed in accordance with their
specific terms or were otherwise breached. Accordingly, each of
the parties shall be entitled to specific performance of the
terms hereof, including an injunction or injunctions to prevent
breaches of this Agreement and to enforce specifically the terms
and provisions of this Agreement in the Federal or state courts
with jurisdiction over all or part of Leon County, Florida,
provided that if jurisdiction is not then available in
such courts, then in any federal court located in the State of
Florida or any other Florida state court, this being in addition
to any other remedy to which such party is entitled at law or in
equity. Each of the parties hereby further waives (a) any
defense in any action for specific performance that a remedy at
law would be adequate and (b) any requirement under any law
to post security as a prerequisite to obtaining equitable relief.
23. Severability. Whenever possible, each provision
or portion of any provision of this Agreement shall be
interpreted in such manner as to be effective and valid under
applicable Law, but if any provision or portion of any provision
of this Agreement is held to be invalid, illegal or
unenforceable in any respect under any applicable Law or rule in
any jurisdiction, such invalidity, illegality or
unenforceability shall not affect any other provision or portion
of any provision in such jurisdiction, and this Agreement shall
be reformed, construed and enforced in such jurisdiction as if
such invalid, illegal or unenforceable provision or portion of
any provision had never been contained herein.
24. Waiver of Jury Trial. EACH OF THE PARTIES TO
THIS AGREEMENT HEREBY IRREVOCABLY WAIVES ALL RIGHT TO A TRIAL BY
JURY IN ANY ACTION, PROCEEDING OR COUNTERCLAIM ARISING OUT OF OR
RELATING TO THIS AGREEMENT OR THE TRANSACTIONS CONTEMPLATED
HEREBY.
25. Counterparts. This Agreement may be executed in
two or more counterparts, all of which shall be considered one
and the same instrument and shall become effective when one or
more counterparts have been signed by each of the parties and
delivered to the other party; provided, however,
that if any of the Stockholders fail for any reason to execute
this Agreement, then this Agreement shall become effective as to
the other Stockholders who execute this Agreement.
26. Confidentiality. Each Stockholder agrees,
(i) except as required by Law or legal process,
(ii) as reasonably necessary or appropriate to defend,
maintain, initiate or respond to any Action (whether by a
Governmental Entity or other Person) or (iii) as to any
communications among the Stockholders, the parties to the Merger
Agreement or their respective accountants, attorneys, investment
bankers and agents (to the extent they are providing services in
connection with the Offer and the Merger) (a) to hold any
non-public information regarding this Agreement and the Merger
in strict confidence and (b) not to divulge any such
non-public information to any third Person.
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27. No Presumption Against Drafting Party. Each of
the parties to this Agreement acknowledges that it has been
represented by counsel in connection with this Agreement and the
transactions contemplated by this Agreement. Accordingly, any
rule of law or any legal decision that would require
interpretation of any claimed ambiguities in this Agreement
against the drafting party has no application and is expressly
waived.
28. Several Obligations of Stockholders. The
covenants, agreements, representations, warranties and
obligations of the respective Stockholders hereunder are their
respective several (and not joint) covenants, agreements,
representations, warranties and obligations, and no Stockholder
shall have any responsibility or liability for any of the
covenants, agreements, representations, warranties and
obligations of any other Stockholder.
[The
remainder of this page is intentionally left blank.]
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IN WITNESS WHEREOF, Parent and the Stockholders have caused to
be executed or executed this Agreement as of the date first
written above.
PARENT:
CRYOLIFE, INC.
Name:
STOCKHOLDERS:
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Schedule A
Schedule
of Stockholders
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Stockholder
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Address
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Shares
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Exhibit B
CONDITIONS
TO THE OFFER
Notwithstanding any other term of the Offer or the Merger
Agreement, Merger Sub shall not be required to accept for
payment or, subject to any applicable rules and regulations of
the SEC, including
Rule 14e-1(c)
under the Exchange Act (relating to Merger Subs obligation
to pay for or return tendered Shares promptly after the
termination or withdrawal of the Offer), to pay for any Shares
tendered pursuant to the Offer and, subject to the terms of the
Merger Agreement, may delay the acceptance for payment of or
payment for Shares or may terminate or amend the Offer, if:
(a) prior to the expiration of the Offer, there shall not
have been validly tendered and not withdrawn a number of Shares
(excluding Shares tendered by guaranteed delivery for which the
underlying Shares have not been received) that, together with
the Shares, if any, then owned by Parent or any of its
Subsidiaries, would represent no more than forty-nine and
nine-tenths percent (49.9%) of the outstanding Shares on the
date of purchase (which means, as of any time, the number of
Shares outstanding, together with all Shares that the Company
would be required to issue pursuant to the conversion or
exercise of all options, rights and securities convertible into
or exercisable for Shares or otherwise) (the Minimum
Condition).
(b) at any time on or after the date of the Original
Agreement and before or at the time of the acceptance of such
Shares for payment or the payment therefor, any of the following
conditions shall exist:
(i) there shall be pending any Action by any Governmental
Entity, that seeks, to (A) make illegal or otherwise
prohibit the consummation of the Offer or the Merger or
(B) prohibit or materially limit the ownership, operation
or control by the Company, Parent or any of their respective
Subsidiaries of any material portion of the business or assets
of the Company, Parent or any of their respective Subsidiaries,
or to compel the Company, Parent or any of their respective
Subsidiaries to dispose of or hold separate any material portion
of the business or assets of the Company, Parent or any of their
respective Subsidiaries, which would be material in the context
of the value of the Company and its Subsidiaries taken as a
whole, to Parent upon consummation of the Offer and the Merger,
or to Parent and its Subsidiaries taken as a whole, or
(C) impose material limitations on the ability of Parent to
acquire or hold, or exercise full rights of ownership of, any
Shares (or shares of capital stock of the Surviving
Corporation), including the right to vote the Shares purchased
or owned by them on all matters properly presented to
stockholders of the Company;
(ii) since the date of the Original Agreement, there shall
be enacted, entered, promulgated any Law by any Governmental
Entity that would, directly or indirectly, result in any of the
consequences referred to in clauses (A) through (C) of
paragraph (b)(i) above;
(iii) since the date of the Original Agreement, there shall
have occurred any event, change, circumstance, occurrence,
effect or state of facts that, individually on in the aggregate,
has had or would reasonably be expected to have a Material
Adverse Effect;
(iv) (A) the Company shall have breached or failed to
comply in any material respect with any of its obligations,
covenants or agreements under the Merger Agreement required to
be performed prior to the expiration of the Offer that has not
been cured prior to the date for acceptance and payment of the
Shares, (B) (1) the representations and warranties of the
Company set forth in Section 4.2(a),
Section 4.4, the last sentence of
Section 4.6(a), the first sentence of
Section 4.6(b), and the last sentence of
Section 4.24 shall not be true and correct as of the
date of the Original Agreement or as of the time for acceptance
of and payment for the Shares in the Offer as if made as of the
time of such determination (except to the extent such
representations and warranties expressly relate to an earlier
date, in which case as of such earlier date), provided,
that the representations made in Section 4.2(a)
shall be deemed to be true and correct if such representation
does not contain more than a de minimis accuracy; or
(2) any of the remaining representations and warranties of
the Company set forth in the Merger Agreement shall not be true
and correct as of the date of the Original Agreement or as of
the time for acceptance and payment of the Shares as if made as
of the time of such determination (except to the extent such
representations and warranties expressly relate to an earlier
date, in which case as of such earlier date), except for
inaccuracies of such representations or warranties the
circumstances giving rise to which, individually or in the
aggregate, have not had and would not reasonably
A-73
be expected to have a Material Adverse Effect (it being
understood that, for purposes of determining the accuracy of
such representations and warranties, all materiality and
Material Adverse Effect qualifications and
exceptions contained in such representations and warranties
shall be disregarded), or (C) Parent and Merger Sub shall
have failed to receive a certificate of an executive officer of
the Company, dated as of the scheduled expiration date of the
Offer, to the effect set forth in the foregoing clauses (A)
and (B) and such failure to be so true and correct has not
been cured prior to the date for acceptance and payment of the
Shares; or
(v) the Merger Agreement shall have been terminated in
accordance with its terms or shall have been amended in
accordance with its terms to provide for such termination.
The foregoing conditions are for the sole benefit of Merger Sub
and Parent and may be asserted by Merger Sub or Parent
regardless of the circumstances giving rise to any such
condition, in whole or in part at any applicable time or from
time to time in their sole discretion prior to the expiration of
the Offer, except that the conditions relating to receipt of any
approvals from any Governmental Entity may be asserted at any
time prior to the acceptance for payment of Shares, and all
conditions (except for the Minimum Condition and the conditions
in clauses (b) or (c) of this Exhibit B)
may be waived by Parent or Merger Sub in their sole discretion
in whole or in part at any applicable time or from time to time,
in each case subject to the terms and conditions of the Merger
Agreement and the applicable rules and regulations of the SEC.
The failure of Parent or Merger Sub at any time to exercise any
of the foregoing rights shall not be deemed a waiver of any such
right and each such right shall be deemed an ongoing right that
may be asserted at any time and from time to time.
Capitalized terms used in this Exhibit B and not
otherwise defined shall have the respective meanings assigned
thereto in the Merger Agreement to which this
Exhibit B is attached (the Merger
Agreement).
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Exhibit C
FORM OF
ARTICLES OF INCORPORATION
A-75
RESTATED
ARTICLES OF INCORPORATION
OF
CARDIOGENESIS
CORPORATION
The undersigned certify that:
1. They are the President and the Secretary, respectively,
of Cardiogenesis Corporation, a California corporation.
2. The Articles of Incorporation of this corporation are
amended and restated to read as follows:
ARTICLE I
The name of this corporation is Cardiogenesis Corporation.
ARTICLE II
The purpose of this corporation is to engage in any lawful act
or activity for which a corporation may be organized under the
General Corporation Law of California other than the banking
business, the trust company business, or the practice of a
profession permitted to be incorporated by the California
Corporations Code.
ARTICLE III
This corporation is authorized to issue only one class of
shares, and the total number of shares that this corporation is
authorized to issue is 10,000, no par value.
ARTICLE IV
Section 1. The liability of the directors of this
corporation for monetary damages shall be eliminated to the
fullest extent permissible under California law.
Section 2. This corporation is authorized to provide
indemnification of agents (as defined in Section 317 of the
California Corporations Code) through bylaw provisions,
agreements with the agents, vote of shareholders or
disinterested directors, or otherwise, in excess of the
indemnification otherwise permitted by Section 317 of the
California Corporations Code, subject only to the limits set
forth in Section 204 of the California Corporations Code
with respect to actions for breach of duty to this corporation
or its shareholders. This corporation is further authorized to
provide insurance for agents as set forth in Section 317 of
the California Corporations Code, provided that, in cases where
this corporation owns all or a portion of the shares of the
company issuing the insurance policy, the company
and/or the
policy must meet one of the two sets of conditions set forth in
Section 317, as amended.
Section 3. Any repeal or modification of the foregoing
provisions of this Article IV by the shareholders of this
corporation shall not adversely affect any right or protection
of an agent of this corporation existing at the time of such
repeal or modification.
3. The foregoing amendment and restatement of Articles of
Incorporation has been duly approved by the board of directors.
4. The foregoing amendment and restatement of Articles of
Incorporation has been duly approved by the required vote of
shareholders in accordance with Section 902, California
Corporations Code. The total number of outstanding shares of
this corporation is
[ ].
The number of shares voting in favor of the amendment equaled or
exceeded the vote required. The percentage vote required was
more than 50%.
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We further declare under penalty of perjury under the laws of
the State of California that the matters set forth in this
certificate are true and correct of our own knowledge.
DATE: ,
2011
Name: Steven G. Anderson
Title: President
Name: Suzanne K. Gabbert
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Exhibit D
FORM OF
BYLAWS
A-78
SECOND
AMENDED AND RESTATED BYLAWS
OF
CARDIOGENESIS
CORPORATION
a
California corporation
A-79
TABLE OF
CONTENTS
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Page
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ARTICLE 1 CERTAIN DEFINITIONS
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ARTICLE 2 OFFICES
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Section 2.1 Principal Executive Office
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Section 2.2 Other Offices
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ARTICLE 3 MEETINGS OF SHAREHOLDERS
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Section 3.1 Place of Meetings
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Section 3.2 Annual Meeting
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Section 3.3 Notice of Annual Meeting
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Section 3.4 Special Meetings
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Section 3.5 Annual or Special Meeting by Electronic
Communication
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Section 3.6 Notice of Special Meetings
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Section 3.7 Quorum
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Section 3.8 Adjourned Meeting and Notice
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Section 3.9 Record Date
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Section 3.10 Voting
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Section 3.11 Proxies
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Section 3.12 Validation of Defectively Called or
Noticed Meetings
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Section 3.13 Action Without Meeting
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Section 3.14 Inspectors of Election
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ARTICLE 4 BOARD
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Section 4.1 Powers; Approval of Loans to Officers
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Section 4.2 Number and Qualification of Directors
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Section 4.3 Election and Term of Office
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Section 4.4 Vacancies
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Section 4.5 Time and Place of Meetings
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Section 4.6 Notice of Special Meetings
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Section 4.7 Action at a Meeting: Quorum and Required
Vote
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Section 4.8 Action Without a Meeting
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Section 4.9 Adjourned Meeting and Notice
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Section 4.10 Fees and Compensation
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Section 4.11 Appointment of Executive and Other
Committees
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ARTICLE 5 OFFICERS
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Section 5.1 Officers
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Section 5.2 The Chairman of the Board
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Section 5.3 The President
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Section 5.4 Vice Presidents
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Section 5.5 The Secretary
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Section 5.6 Treasurer
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ARTICLE 6 EXECUTION OF CORPORATE INSTRUMENTS,
RATIFICATION, AND VOTING OF STOCKS OWNED BY THE CORPORATION
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Section 6.1 Execution of Corporate Instruments
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Section 6.2 Ratification by Shareholders
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Section 6.3 Voting of Stocks Owned by the Corporation
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ARTICLE 7 ANNUAL AND OTHER REPORTS
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Section 7.1 Reports to Shareholders
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Section 7.2 Report of Shareholder Vote
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Section 7.3 Reports to the Secretary of State
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ARTICLE 8 SHARES OF STOCK
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Section 8.1 Stock Certificates
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Section 8.2 Uncertificated Shares
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ARTICLE 9 INSPECTION OF CORPORATE RECORDS
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Section 9.1 General Records
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Section 9.2 Inspection of Bylaws
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ARTICLE 10 INDEMNIFICATION OF OFFICERS, DIRECTORS,
EMPLOYEES AND AGENTS
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Section 10.1 Right to Indemnification
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Section 10.2 Authority to Advance Expenses
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Section 10.3 Right of Claimant to Bring Suit
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Section 10.4 Provisions Nonexclusive
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Section 10.5 Authority to Insure
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Section 10.6 Survival of Rights
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Section 10.7 Settlement of Claims
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Section 10.8 Effect of Amendment
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Section 10.9 Subrogation
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Section 10.10 No Duplication of Payments
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ARTICLE 11 AMENDMENTS
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Section 11.1 Power of Shareholders
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Section 11.2 Power of Directors
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ARTICLE 1
CERTAIN DEFINITIONS
The term Board shall mean the
Corporations Board of Directors.
The phrase electronic transmission by the
corporation shall mean a communication
(a) delivered by (1) facsimile telecommunication or
electronic mail when directed to the facsimile number or
electronic mail address, respectively, for that recipient on
record with the corporation, (2) posting on an electronic
message board or network which the corporation has designated
for those communications, together with a separate notice to the
recipient of the posting, which transmission shall be validly
delivered upon the later of the posting or delivery of the
separate notice thereof, or (3) other means of electronic
communication, (b) to a recipient who has provided an
unrevoked consent to the use of those means of transmission for
communications under or pursuant to this code and (c) that
creates a record that is capable of retention, retrieval and
review, and that may thereafter be rendered into clearly legible
tangible form.
Nevertheless, an electronic transmission by a corporation to an
individual shareholder or director recipient is not authorized
unless, in addition to satisfying the requirements above, the
corporation also satisfies the following requirements:
(A) prior to giving consent, the recipient is provided with
a clear and conspicuous statement that describes:
(i) the recipients right to withdraw the consent and
any conditions, consequences, or fees in the event of such
withdrawal;
(ii) whether the consent applies only to a particular
communication between the corporation and the recipient or to
identified categories of communications or all categories of
communications by and to the corporation;
(iii) procedures for withdrawing consent;
(iv) procedures for updating the recipients contact
information for electronic transmissions; and
(iv) how, after the consent, the recipient may obtain a
paper copy of a record or other communication sent by means of
electronic transmission, and whether any fee will be charged for
such copy and any other terms and conditions applicable to the
receipt such paper copy;
(B) the recipient
(i) prior to consenting, is provided with a statement of
the hardware and software requirements for access to and
retention of the records sent by electronic
transmission; and
(ii) consents electronically, or confirms his or her
consent electronically, in a manner that reasonably demonstrates
that the recipient can access information in the electronic form
that will be used to provide the information that is the subject
of the consent; and
(C) if after the recipients consent a change occurs
in the hardware or software requirements needed to access or
retain the records sent by electronic transmission, the
corporation shall provide the recipient with a statement of the
revised hardware and software requirements for access to and
retention of the records sent by electronic transmission, offer
the recipient the right to withdraw consent without the
imposition of any fees for such withdrawal and without the
imposition of any condition or consequence that was not
disclosed previously; and shall again comply with paragraph
(B) above.
The phrase electronic transmission to the
corporation shall mean a communication
(a) delivered by (1) facsimile telecommunication or
electronic mail when directed to the facsimile number or
electronic mail address, respectively, which the corporation has
provided from time to time to shareholders or members and
directors for sending communications to the corporation,
(2) posting on an electronic message board or network which
the corporation has designated for those communications, and
which transmission shall be validly delivered upon the posting,
or (3) other means of electronic communication (b) as
to which the corporation has placed in effect reasonable
measures to verify that the sender is the shareholder or member
(in person or by proxy) or director
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purporting to send the transmission, and (c) that creates a
record that is capable of retention, retrieval, and review, and
that may thereafter be rendered into clearly legible tangible
form.
The term proxy shall mean a written
authorization signed or an electronic transmission authorized by
a shareholder or the shareholders attorney-in-fact giving
another person or persons power to vote with respect to the
shares of such shareholder.
The term writing shall include any form of
recorded message capable of comprehension by ordinary visual
means, including, but not limited to, electronic transmissions
to and from the corporation.
ARTICLE 2
OFFICES
Section 2.1 Principal Executive Office.
The principal executive office of the corporation is hereby
fixed and located at: 1655 Roberts Blvd., NW, Kennesaw, Georgia
30144. The Board is hereby granted full power and authority to
change said principal executive office from one location to
another. Any such change shall be noted by the Secretary in a
schedule attached hereto, or this Section 2.1 may be
amended to state the new location.
Section 2.2 Other Offices.
Other business offices may at any time be established at any
place or places specified by the Board.
ARTICLE 3
MEETINGS OF SHAREHOLDERS
Section 3.1 Place of Meetings.
All meetings of shareholders shall be held at the principal
executive office of the corporation or at any other place within
or without the State of California specified by the Board, or,
to the extent permitted by Section 3.5, by
electronic communication.
Section 3.2 Annual Meeting.
The annual meeting of the shareholders, for the purpose of
election of directors and for such other business as may
lawfully come before it, shall be held on such date and at such
time as may be designated from time to time by the Board. At the
annual meeting directors shall be elected, reports of the
affairs of the corporation shall be considered, and any other
business may be transacted that is within the power of the
shareholders.
Section 3.3 Notice of Annual Meeting.
(a) Written notice of each annual meeting shall be given to
each shareholder entitled to vote, either personally, by
electronic transmission by the corporation, or by first-class
mail, or, if the corporation has outstanding shares held of
record by 500 or more persons (determined in accordance with
Section 605 of the California Corporations Code) on the
record date for the meeting, by third-class mail, or by other
means of written communication, charges prepaid, addressed to
such shareholder at the shareholders address appearing on
the books of the corporation or given by such shareholder to the
corporation for the purpose of notice.
(b) If any notice or report addressed to the shareholder at
the address of such shareholder appearing on the books of the
corporation is returned to the corporation by the United States
Postal Service marked to indicate that the United States Postal
Service is unable to deliver the notice or report to the
shareholder at such address, all future notices or reports shall
be deemed to have been duly given without further mailing if the
same shall be available for the shareholder upon written demand
of the shareholder at the principal executive office of the
corporation for a period of one year from the date of the giving
of the notice or report to all other shareholders. If a
shareholder gives no address, notice shall be deemed to have
been given to such shareholder if addressed to the shareholder
at the place where the principal executive office of the
corporation is situated, or if published at least once in some
newspaper of general circulation in the county in which said
principal executive office is located.
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(c) Notice given by electronic transmission by the
corporation shall be valid only if such notice complies with the
procedures set forth in such definition and as long as neither
of the following has occurred: (1) the corporation is
unable to deliver two consecutive notices to the shareholder by
that means; or (2) the inability to so deliver the notices
to the shareholder becomes known to the secretary, any assistant
secretary, the transfer agent, or other person responsible for
the giving of the notice. If the circumstances described in
either clauses (1) or (2) above occurs with respect to
a shareholder, the corporation shall again obtain the consent of
such shareholder as required by the definition of
electronic transmission by the corporation set forth
above prior to utilizing electronic transmission by the
corporation to provide notices of shareholders meetings to such
shareholder.
(d) All such notices shall be given to each shareholder
entitled thereto not less than 10 days (or, if sent by
third-class mail, 30 days) nor more than 60 days
before each annual meeting. Any such notice shall be deemed to
have been given at the time when delivered personally, sent by
electronic transmission by the corporation, or deposited in the
mail or sent by other means of written communication. An
affidavit of mailing or electronic transmission of any such
notice in accordance with the foregoing provisions, executed by
the Secretary, Assistant Secretary or any transfer agent of the
corporation, shall be prima facie evidence of the giving
of the notice.
Such notice shall specify:
(1) the place (unless the meeting is to be conducted solely
by electronic transmission by and to the corporation pursuant to
Section 3.5), the date, and the hour of such meeting;
(2) if the meeting is to be conducted in whole or in part
by means of electronic communication by and to the corporation,
(i) the means of electronic transmission by and to the
corporation or electronic video screen communication, if any, by
which shareholders may participate in that meeting and
(ii) notice that absent the valid consent of all of the
shareholders of the corporation for the utilization of
electronic transmission by and to the corporation as required by
such definitions, the meeting shall include a physical location;
(3) those matters that the Board, at the time of the
mailing of the notice, intends to present for action by the
shareholders (but, subject to the provisions of
subsection (4) below, any proper matter may be presented at
the meeting for such action);
(4) if directors are to be elected, the names of nominees
intended at the time of the notice to be presented by the Board
for election;
(5) the general nature of a proposal, if any, to take
action with respect to approval of (i) a contract or other
transaction with an interested director, (ii) amendment of
the Articles of Incorporation, (iii) a reorganization of
the corporation as defined in Section 181 of the California
Corporations Code, (iv) voluntary dissolution of the
corporation, or (v) a distribution in dissolution other
than in accordance with the rights of outstanding preferred
shares, if any; and
(6) such other matters, if any, as may be expressly
required by statute.
Section 3.4 Special Meetings.
Special meetings of the shareholders for any purpose or purposes
whatsoever may be called at any time by the Chairman of the
Board (if there be such an officer appointed), by the President,
by the Board, or by one or more shareholders entitled to cast
not less than 10% of the votes at the meeting.
Section 3.5 Annual or Special Meeting by Electronic
Communication.
A meeting of the shareholders may be conducted, in whole or in
part, by electronic transmission by and to the corporation or by
electronic video screen communication (a) if the
corporation implements measures to provide shareholders (in
person or by proxy) an opportunity to participate in the meeting
and to vote on matters submitted to the shareholders, including
an opportunity to read or hear the proceedings of the meeting
concurrently with those proceedings, and (b) if any
shareholder votes or takes other action at the meeting by means
of electronic transmission to the corporation or electronic
video screen communication, a record of that vote or action is
maintained by the corporation. If authorized by the Board in its
sole discretion, and subject to the statutory requirements of
shareholder consent then in effect and those guidelines and
procedures as the Board may adopt, shareholders not physically
present in person or by proxy at a meeting of shareholders may,
by electronic
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transmission by and to the corporation or by electronic video
screen communication, participate in a meeting of shareholders,
be deemed present in person or by proxy, and vote at a meeting
of shareholders whether that meeting is to be held at a
designated place or in whole or in part by means of electronic
transmission by and to the corporation or by electronic video
screen communication, in accordance with this
Section 3.5. A shareholders participation in a
meeting of the shareholders by electronic communication by and
to the corporation is predicated upon the consent of such
shareholder to electronic communication by the corporation.
Unless all of the shareholders have consented to the use of
electronic transmission by and to the corporation for the
purposes of a shareholders meeting (or to the use of such
transmissions for such meetings generally) a shareholders
meeting shall include a physical location determined in
accordance with Section 3.1.
Section 3.6 Notice of Special Meetings.
Upon request in writing that a special meeting of shareholders
be called for any proper purpose, directed to the Chairman of
the Board (if there be such an officer appointed), President,
Vice President or Secretary by any person (other than the Board)
entitled to call a special meeting of shareholders, the officer
forthwith shall cause notice to be given to the shareholders
entitled to vote that a meeting will be held at a time requested
by the person or persons calling the meeting, not less than 35
nor more than 60 days after the receipt of the request.
Except in special cases where other express provision is made by
statute, notice of any special meeting of shareholders shall be
given in the same manner as for annual meetings of shareholders.
In addition to the matters required by
Section 3.3(d)(1) and, if applicable,
Section 3.3(d)(2) through
Section 3.3(d)(6) of these Bylaws, notice of any
special meeting shall specify the general nature of the business
to be transacted, and no other business may be transacted at
such meeting.
Section 3.7 Quorum.
The presence in person or by proxy of persons entitled to vote a
majority of the voting shares at any meeting shall constitute a
quorum for the transaction of business. If a quorum is present,
the affirmative vote of a majority of the shares represented and
voting at the meeting (which shares voting affirmatively also
constitute at least a majority of the required quorum) shall be
the act of the shareholders, unless the vote of a different
number or voting by classes is required by the California
Corporations Code, the Articles of Incorporation or these
Bylaws. Any meeting of shareholders, whether or not a quorum is
present, may be adjourned from time to time by the vote of the
holders of a majority of the shares present in person or
represented by proxy thereat and entitled to vote, but in the
absence of a quorum no other business may be transacted at such
meeting, except that the shareholders present or represented by
proxy at a duly called or held meeting, at which a quorum is
present, may continue to transact business until adjournment,
notwithstanding the withdrawal of enough shareholders to leave
less than a quorum, if any action taken (other than adjournment)
is approved by at least a majority of the shares required to
constitute a quorum, or if required by the California
Corporations Code or the Articles of Incorporation, the vote of
a greater number or voting by classes.
Section 3.8 Adjourned Meeting and Notice.
When any shareholders meeting, either annual or special,
is adjourned for more than 45 days, or if after adjournment
a new record date is fixed for the adjourned meeting, notice of
the adjourned meeting shall be given as in the case of an
original meeting. Except as provided above, it shall not be
necessary to give any notice of the time and place of the
adjourned meeting (or the means of electronic transmission by
and to the corporation or electronic video screen communication,
if any, by which the shareholders may participate), or of the
business to be transacted thereat, other than by announcement of
the time and place thereof at the meeting at which such
adjournment is taken.
Section 3.9 Record Date.
(a) The Board may fix a time in the future as a record date
for the determination of the shareholders entitled to notice of
and to vote at any meeting of shareholders or entitled to give
consent to corporate action in writing without a meeting, to
receive any report, to receive any dividend or other
distribution, or allotment of any rights, or to exercise rights
in respect of any other lawful action. The record date so fixed
shall be not more than 60 days nor less than 10 days
prior to the date of such meeting, nor more than 60 days
prior to any other action. A determination of shareholders of
record entitled to notice of or to vote at a meeting of
shareholders shall apply to any adjournment of the meeting
unless the Board fixes a new record date for the adjourned
meeting, but the Board shall fix a new record
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date if the meeting is adjourned for more than 45 days from
the date set for the original meeting. When a record date is so
fixed, only shareholders of record at the close of business on
that date are entitled to notice of and to vote at any such
meeting, to give consent without a meeting, to receive any
report, to receive the dividend, distribution, or allotment of
rights, or to exercise the rights, as the case may be,
notwithstanding any transfer of any shares on the books of the
corporation after the record date, except as otherwise provided
in the Articles of Incorporation or these Bylaws.
(b) If no record date is fixed:
(1) The record date for determining shareholders entitled
to notice of or to vote at a meeting of shareholders shall be at
the close of business on the business day next preceding the day
on which notice is given or, if notice is waived, at the close
of business on the business day preceding the day on which the
meeting is held.
(2) The record date for determining shareholders entitled
to give consent to corporate action in writing without a
meeting, when no prior action by the Board has been taken, shall
be the day on which the first written consent is given.
(3) The record date for determining shareholders for any
other purpose shall be at the close of business on the day on
which the Board adopts the resolution relating thereto, or the
60th day prior to the date of such other action, whichever
is later.
Section 3.10 Voting.
(a) Except as may be otherwise provided in the Articles of
Incorporation, each outstanding share, regardless of class,
shall be entitled to one vote on each matter submitted to a vote
of shareholders. Any holders of shares entitled to vote on any
matter may vote part of the shares in favor of the proposal and
refrain from voting the remaining shares or vote them against
the proposal, other than elections to office, but, if the
shareholder fails to specify the number of shares such
shareholder is voting affirmatively, it will be conclusively
presumed that the shareholders approving vote is with
respect to all shares such shareholder is entitled to vote.
(b) Subject to the provisions of Sections 702 through
704 of the California Corporations Code (relating to voting of
shares held by a fiduciary, receiver, pledgee, or minor, in the
name of a corporation, or in joint ownership), persons in whose
names shares entitled to vote stand on the stock records of the
corporation at the close of business on the record date shall be
entitled to vote at the meeting of shareholders. Such vote may
be live by voice or by ballot; provided that all elections for
directors must be by ballot upon demand made by a shareholder at
any election and before the voting begins. Shares of this
corporation owned by a corporation more than 25% of the voting
power of which is owned directly by this corporation, or
indirectly through one or more majority-owned subsidiaries of
this corporation, shall not be entitled to vote on any matter.
(c) In an uncontested election, only candidates for
directors receiving the affirmative vote of a majority of the
shares represented and voting at a duly held meeting at which a
quorum is present (which shares voting affirmatively also
constitute at least a majority of the required quorum) or by the
written consent of the shareholders, in accordance with
Section 603(d) of the California Corporations Code, shall
be elected. For purposes of this subsection (c), an
uncontested election means an election of
directors in which, at the expiration of the time fixed by the
Board that is not more than 14 days before notice is given
of the meeting at which the election is to occur, the number of
candidates for election does not exceed the number of directors
to be elected by the shareholders at that election.
(d) The candidates for directors receiving the highest
number of affirmative votes of shares entitled to be voted for
them, up to the number of directors to be elected by such
shares, shall be elected and votes against a director and votes
withheld shall have no legal effect.
Section 3.11 Proxies.
(a) Every person entitled to vote shares (including voting
by written consent) may authorize another person or other
persons to act by proxy with respect to such shares. For
purposes of this Section 3.11,
signed means the placing of the
shareholders name or other authorization on the proxy
(whether by manual signature, typewriting, telegraphic, or
electronic transmission or otherwise) by the shareholder or the
shareholders attorney-in-fact. A
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proxy may be transmitted by an oral telephone transmission if it
is submitted with information from which it may be determined
that the proxy was authorized by the shareholder, or his or her
attorney-in-fact. Any proxy duly executed is not revoked and
continues in full force and effect until (1) a written
instrument revoking it is filed with the Secretary of the
corporation prior to the vote pursuant thereto, (2) a
subsequent proxy executed by the person executing the prior
proxy is presented to the meeting, (3) the person executing
the proxy attends the meeting and votes in person, or
(4) written notice of the death or incapacity of the maker
of such proxy is received by the corporation before the vote
pursuant thereto is counted; provided that no such proxy shall
be valid after the expiration of 11 months from the date of
its execution, unless otherwise provided in the proxy.
Notwithstanding the foregoing sentence, a proxy that states that
it is irrevocable, is irrevocable for the period specified
therein to the extent permitted by Sections 705(e) and
705(f) of the California Corporations Code. The dates contained
on the forms of proxy presumptively determine the order of
execution, regardless of the postmark dates on the envelopes in
which they are mailed.
(b) As long as no outstanding class of securities of the
corporation is registered under Section 12 of the
Securities Exchange Act, as amended, or is not exempted from
such registration by Section 12(g)(2) of such Act, any form
of proxy or written consent distributed to 10 or more
shareholders of the corporation when outstanding shares of the
corporation are held of record by 100 or more persons shall
afford an opportunity on the proxy or form of written consent to
specify a choice between approval and disapproval of each matter
or group of related matters intended to be acted upon at the
meeting for which the proxy is solicited or by such written
consent, other than elections to office, and shall provide,
subject to reasonable specified conditions, that where the
person solicited specifies a choice with respect to any such
matter the shares will be voted in accordance therewith. In any
election of directors, any form of proxy in which the directors
to be voted upon are named therein as candidates and which is
marked by a shareholder withhold or otherwise marked
in a manner indicating that the authority to vote for the
election of directors is withheld shall not be voted for the
election of a director.
Section 3.12 Validation of Defectively Called or Noticed
Meetings.
The transactions of any meeting of shareholders, however called
and noticed, and wherever held, are as valid as though had at a
meeting duly held after regular call and notice, if a quorum is
present either in person or by proxy, and if, either before or
after the meeting, each of the persons entitled to vote, not
present in person or by proxy, provides a waiver of notice or
consent to the holding of the meeting or approval of the minutes
thereof in writing. All such waivers, consents and approvals
shall be filed with the corporate records or made a part of the
minutes of the meeting. Attendance of a person at a meeting
shall constitute a waiver of notice of and presence at such
meeting, except when the person objects, at the beginning of the
meeting, to the transaction of any business because the meeting
is not lawfully called or convened and except that attendance at
a meeting is not a waiver of any right to object to the
consideration of matters required by these Bylaws or by the
California Corporations Code to be included in the notice if
such objection is expressly made at the meeting. Neither the
business to be transacted at nor the purpose of any regular or
special meeting of shareholders need be specified in any written
waiver of notice, consent to the holding of the meeting or
approval of the minutes thereof, unless otherwise provided in
the Articles of Incorporation or these Bylaws, or unless the
meeting involves one or more matters specified in
Section 3.3(d)(4) of these Bylaws.
Section 3.13 Action Without Meeting.
(a) Directors may be elected without a meeting by a consent
in writing, setting forth the action so taken, signed by all of
the persons who would be entitled to vote for the election of
directors, provided that, without notice except as hereinafter
set forth, a director may be elected at any time to fill a
vacancy not filled by the directors (other than a vacancy
created by removal of a director) by the written consent of
persons holding a majority of the outstanding shares entitled to
vote for the election of directors.
Any other action that may be taken at a meeting of the
shareholders, may be taken without a meeting, and without prior
notice except as hereinafter set forth, if a consent in writing,
setting forth the action so taken, is signed by the holders of
outstanding shares having not less than the minimum number of
votes that would be necessary to authorize or take such action
at a meeting at which all shares entitled to vote thereon were
present and voted.
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(b) Unless the consents of all shareholders entitled to
vote have been solicited in writing:
(1) notice of any proposed shareholder approval of
(i) a contract or other transaction with an interested
director, (ii) indemnification of an agent of the
corporation, (iii) a reorganization of the corporation as
defined in Section 181 of the California Corporations Code,
or (iv) a distribution in dissolution other than in
accordance with the rights of outstanding preferred shares, if
any, without a meeting by less than unanimous written consent,
shall be given at least 10 days before the consummation of
the action authorized by such approval in accordance with
Section 3.3 of these Bylaws; and
(2) prompt notice shall be given of the taking of any other
corporate action approved by shareholders without a meeting by
less than unanimous written consent to those shareholders
entitled to vote who have not consented in writing. Such notices
shall be given in the manner provided in Section 3.3
of these Bylaws.
Any shareholder giving a written consent, or the
shareholders proxyholders, or a transferee of the shares
or a personal representative of the shareholder or their
respective proxyholders, may revoke the consent personally or by
proxy by a writing received by the corporation prior to the time
that written consents of the number of shares required to
authorize the proposed action have been filed with the Secretary
of the corporation, but may not do so thereafter. Such
revocation is effective upon its receipt by the Secretary of the
corporation.
Section 3.14 Inspectors of Election.
(a) In advance of any meeting of shareholders, the Board
may appoint inspectors of election to act at the meeting and any
adjournment thereof. If inspectors of election are not so
appointed, or if any persons so appointed fail to appear or
refuse to act, the chair of any such meeting may, and on the
request of any shareholder or the holder of such
shareholders proxy shall, appoint inspectors of election
(or persons to replace those who so fail or refuse) at the
meeting. The number of inspectors shall be either one or three.
If inspectors are appointed at a meeting on the request of one
or more shareholders or holders of proxies, the majority of
shares represented in person or by proxy shall determine whether
one inspector or three inspectors are to be appointed.
(b) The inspectors of election shall determine the number
of shares outstanding and the voting power of each, the shares
represented at the meeting, the existence of a quorum and the
authenticity, validity and effect of proxies; receive votes,
ballots or consents; hear and determine all challenges and
questions in any way arising in connection with the right to
vote; count and tabulate all votes or consents; determine when
the polls shall close; determine the result; and do such acts as
may be proper to conduct the election or vote with fairness to
all shareholders.
(c) The inspectors of election shall perform their duties
impartially, in good faith, to the best of their ability and as
expeditiously as is practical. If there are three inspectors of
election, the decision, act or certificate of a majority is
effective in all respects as the decision, act or certificate of
all. Any report or certificate made by the inspectors of
election is prima facie evidence of the facts stated
therein.
ARTICLE 4
BOARD
Section 4.1 Powers; Approval of Loans to Officers.
(a) Subject to the provisions of the California
Corporations Code and any limitations in the Articles of
Incorporation relating to action required to be approved by the
shareholders or by the outstanding shares, the business and
affairs of the corporation shall be managed and all corporate
powers shall be exercised by or under the direction of the
Board. The Board may delegate the management of the
day-to-day
operation of the business of the corporation to a management
company or other person, provided that the business and affairs
of the corporation shall be managed and all corporate powers
shall be exercised under the ultimate direction of the Board.
(b) The corporation may, upon approval of the Board alone,
make loans of money or property to, or guarantee the obligations
of, any officer (whether or not a director) of the corporation
or of its parent, or adopt an employee benefit plan authorizing
such loans or guaranties, provided that:
(1) the Board determines that such a loan, guaranty, or
plan may reasonably be expected to benefit the corporation;
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(2) the corporation has outstanding shares held of record
by 100 or more persons (determined as provided in
Section 605 of the California Corporations Code) on the
date of approval by the Board;
(3) the approval by the Board is by a vote sufficient
without counting the vote of any interested director(s); and
(4) the loan is otherwise made in compliance with
Section 315 of the California Corporations Code.
Section 4.2 Number and Qualification of Directors.
The authorized number of directors shall be one (1) until
changed by an amendment of the Articles of Incorporation or
these Bylaws duly adopted by a vote or written consent of
holders of a majority of the outstanding shares.
Section 4.3 Election and Term of Office.
The directors shall be elected at each annual meeting of
shareholders, but, if any such annual meeting is not held or the
directors are not elected thereat, the directors may be elected
at any special meeting of shareholders held for that purpose.
Each director, including a director elected to fill a vacancy,
shall hold office until the expiration of the term for which
elected and until a successor has been elected and qualified,
subject, however, to such directors prior death,
resignation, retirement, disqualification or removal from office.
Section 4.4 Vacancies.
A vacancy in the Board shall be deemed to exist in case of the
death, resignation or removal of any director, if a director has
been declared of unsound mind by order of court or convicted of
a felony, if the authorized number of directors is increased, if
the incorporator or incorporators have failed to appoint the
authorized number of directors in any resolution for appointment
of directors upon the initial organization of the corporation,
or if the shareholders fail, at any annual or special meeting of
shareholders at which any director or directors are elected, to
elect the full authorized number of directors to be voted for at
that meeting.
Vacancies in the Board, except for a vacancy created by the
removal of a director, may be filled by a majority of the
directors present at a meeting at which a quorum is present, or
if the number of directors then in office is less than a quorum,
(a) by the unanimous written consent of the directors then
in office, (b) by the vote of a majority of the directors
then in office at a meeting held pursuant to notice or waivers
of notice in compliance with these Bylaws, or (c) by a sole
remaining director. Each director so elected shall hold office
until his or her successor is elected at an annual or a special
meeting of the shareholders. A vacancy in the Board created by
the removal of a director may be filled only by the vote of a
majority of the shares entitled to vote represented at a duly
held meeting at which a quorum is present, or by the written
consent of all of the holders of the outstanding shares.
The shareholders may elect a director or directors at any time
to fill any vacancy or vacancies not filled by the directors.
Any such election by written consent other than to fill a
vacancy created by removal which requires the unanimous written
consent of all shares entitled to vote for the election of
directors shall require the consent of holders of a majority of
the outstanding shares entitled to vote. Any such election by
written consent to fill a vacancy created by removal shall
require the unanimous written consent of all shares entitled to
vote for the election of directors.
Any director may resign effective upon giving written notice to
the Chairman of the Board (if there be such an officer
appointed), the President, the Secretary or the Board of the
corporation, unless the notice specifies a later time for the
effectiveness of such resignation. If the resignation is
effective at a future time, a successor may be elected to take
office when the resignation becomes effective.
No reduction of the authorized number of directors shall have
the effect of removing any director prior to the expiration of
the directors term of office.
No director may be removed (unless the entire Board is removed)
when the votes cast against removal, or not consenting in
writing to the removal, would be sufficient to elect the
director if voted cumulatively at an election at which the same
total number of votes were cast (or, if the action is taken by
written consent, all shares entitled to
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vote were voted) and the entire number of directors authorized
at the time of the directors most recent election were
then being elected.
Section 4.5 Time and Place of Meetings.
The Board shall hold a regular meeting immediately after the
meeting of shareholders at which it is elected and at the place
where such meeting is held, or as shall otherwise be fixed by
the Board, for the purpose of organization, election of officers
of the corporation and the transaction of other business. Notice
of such meeting is hereby dispensed with. Other regular meetings
of the Board shall be held without notice at such times and
places as are fixed by the Board. Special meetings of the Board
may be held at any time whenever called by the Chairman of the
Board (if there be such an officer appointed), the President,
any Vice President, the Secretary or any two directors.
Except as hereinabove provided in this Section 4.5,
all meetings of the Board may be held at any place within or
without the State of California that has been designated by
resolution of the Board as the place for the holding of regular
meetings, or by written consent of all directors as specified in
the notice for the meeting or, if designated by the Board, by
means of conference telephone, electronic video screen
communication or electronic transmission by and to the
corporation. In the absence of such designation, meetings of the
Board shall be held at the principal executive office of the
corporation.
Section 4.6 Notice of Special Meetings.
Notice of the time and place of special meetings shall be
delivered personally to each director or communicated to each
director by telephone, telegraph, facsimile (or other electronic
transmission by the corporation), or mail, charges prepaid,
addressed to the director at the directors address as it
is shown upon the records of the corporation or, if it is not so
shown on such records or is not readily ascertainable, at the
place at which the meetings of the directors are regularly held.
In case such notice is mailed, it shall be deposited in the
United States mail at least four days prior to the time of the
holding of the meeting. In case such notice is delivered
personally or by telephone, telegraph, facsimile, electronic
mail message or other electronic transmission by the
corporation, it shall be so delivered at least 48 hours
prior to the time of the holding of the meeting. Any such
transmission of notice, as above provided, shall be due, legal
and personal notice to such director. As used herein, notice by
telephone shall be deemed to include a voice messaging system or
other system or technology designed to record and communicate
messages, or wireless, to the recipient, including the
recipients designated voice mailbox or address on such a
system.
Notice of a meeting need not be given to any director who
provides a waiver of notice or a consent to holding the meeting
or an approval of the minutes thereof in writing, whether before
or after the meeting, or who attends the meeting without
protesting, prior thereto or at its commencement, the lack of
notice to such director. All such waivers, consents and
approvals shall be filed with the corporate records or made a
part of the minutes of the meetings.
Section 4.7 Action at a Meeting: Quorum and Required Vote.
(a) Presence of a majority of the authorized number of
directors at a meeting of the Board constitutes a quorum for the
transaction of business, except as hereinafter provided.
(b) Members of the Board may participate in a meeting
through use of conference telephone, electronic video screen
communication or electronic transmission by and to the
corporation. Participation in a meeting through use of
conference telephone or electronic video screen communication
pursuant to this subsection (b) constitutes presence in
person at such meeting as long as all members participating in
the meeting are able to hear one another. Participation in a
meeting through electronic transmission by and to the
corporation, other than conference telephone or electronic video
screen communication (to which the restrictions in this sentence
do not apply), pursuant to this subsection (b) constitutes
presence in person at such meeting, if both of the following
apply: (1) each member participating in the meeting can
communicate with all of the other members concurrently, and
(2) each member is provided the means of participating in
all matters before the Board, including, without limitation, the
capacity to propose, or to interpose an objection to, a specific
action to be taken by the corporation.
(c) Every act or decision done or made by a majority of the
directors present at a meeting duly held at which a quorum is
present is the act of the Board, unless a greater number, or the
same number after disqualifying one or
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more directors from voting, is required by law, by the Articles
of Incorporation, or by these Bylaws. A meeting at which a
quorum is initially present may continue to transact business
notwithstanding the withdrawal of directors, if any action taken
is approved by at least a majority of the required quorum for
such meeting.
Section 4.8 Action Without a Meeting.
Any action required or permitted to be taken by the Board may be
taken without a meeting, if all members of the Board shall
individually or collectively consent in writing to such action.
Such written consent or consents shall be filed with the minutes
of the proceedings of the Board. Such action by written consent
shall have the same force and effect as a unanimous vote of such
directors. All members of the board shall include an
interested director or a common director
as described in Sections 310(a) or (b) of the
California Corporations Code, who abstains in writing from
providing consent, where the material facts of the contract or
transaction, and the interest or other directorship of the
interested or common director are fully disclosed to the
non-interested or non-common directors prior to their execution
of the written consent or consents, such disclosures are
conspicuously included in the written consent or consents
executed by the non-interested or non-common directors, and
non-interested or non-common directors constituting a quorum
approve the action.
Section 4.9 Adjourned Meeting and Notice.
A majority of the directors present, whether or not a quorum is
present, may adjourn any meeting to another time and place. If
the meeting is adjourned for more than 24 hours, notice of
any adjournment to another time or place shall be given prior to
the time of the adjourned meeting to the directors who were not
present at the time of the adjournment.
Section 4.10 Fees and Compensation.
Directors and members of committees may receive such
compensation, if any, for their services, and such reimbursement
for expenses, as may be fixed or determined by resolution of the
Board.
Section 4.11 Appointment of Executive and Other Committees.
The Board may, by resolution adopted by a majority of the
authorized number of directors, designate one or more
committees, each consisting of two or more directors, to serve
at the pleasure of the Board. The Board may designate one or
more directors as alternate members of any committee, who may
replace any absent member at any meeting of the committee. The
appointment of members or alternate members of a committee
requires the vote of a majority of the authorized number of
directors. Any such committee, to the extent provided in the
resolution of the Board or in these Bylaws, shall have all the
authority of the Board, except with respect to:
(a) The approval of any action for which the California
Corporations Code also requires shareholders approval or
approval of the outstanding shares.
(b) The filling of vacancies on the Board or in any
committee.
(c) The fixing of compensation of the directors for serving
on the Board or on any committee.
(d) The amendment or repeal of these Bylaws or the adoption
of new Bylaws.
(e) The amendment or repeal of any resolution of the Board
that by its express terms is not so amendable or repealable.
(f) A distribution to the shareholders of the corporation,
except at a rate, in a periodic amount or within a price range
determined by the Board.
(g) The appointment of other committees of the Board or the
members thereof.
The provisions of Section 4.5 through
Section 4.9 of these Bylaws also apply, mutatis
mutandis, to committees of the Board and action by such
committees.
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ARTICLE 5
OFFICERS
Section 5.1 Officers.
The officers of the corporation shall consist of the President,
the Secretary and the Treasurer, and each of them shall be
appointed by the Board. The corporation may also have a Chairman
of the Board, one or more Vice Presidents, a Controller, one or
more Assistant Secretaries and Assistant Treasurers, and such
other officers as may be appointed by the Board, or with
authorization from the Board by the President. The order of the
seniority of the Vice Presidents shall be in the order of their
nomination, unless otherwise determined by the Board. Any two or
more of such offices may be held by the same person. The Board
may appoint, and may empower the President to appoint, such
other officers as the business of the corporation may require,
each of whom shall have such authority and perform such duties
as are provided in these Bylaws or as the Board may from time to
time determine.
All officers of the corporation shall hold office from the date
appointed to the date of the next succeeding regular meeting of
the Board following the meeting of shareholders at which the
Board is elected, and until their successors are elected;
provided that all officers, as well as any other employee or
agent of the corporation, may be removed at any time at the
pleasure of the Board, or, except in the case of an officer
chosen by the Board, by any officer upon whom such power of
removal may be conferred by the Board, and upon the removal,
resignation, death or incapacity of any officer, the Board or
the President, in cases where he or she has been vested by the
Board with power to appoint, may declare such office vacant and
fill such vacancy. Nothing in these Bylaws shall be construed as
creating any kind of contractual right to employment with the
corporation.
Any officer may resign at any time by giving written notice to
the Board, the President, or the Secretary of the corporation,
without prejudice, however, to the rights, if any, of the
corporation under any contract to which such officer is a party.
Any such resignation shall take effect at the date of the
receipt of such notice or at any later time specified therein;
and, unless otherwise specified therein, the acceptance of such
resignation shall not be necessary to make it effective.
The salary and other compensation of the officers shall be fixed
from time to time by resolution of or in the manner determined
by the Board.
Section 5.2 The Chairman of the Board.
The Chairman of the Board (if there be such an officer
appointed) shall, when present, preside at all meetings of the
Board and shall perform all the duties commonly incident to that
office. The Chairman of the Board shall have authority to
execute in the name of the corporation bonds, contracts, deeds,
leases and other written instruments to be executed by the
corporation (except where by law the signature of the President
is required), and shall perform such other duties as the Board
may from time to time determine.
Section 5.3 The President.
Subject to such supervisory powers, if any, as may be given by
the Board to the Chairman of the Board, the President shall be
the chief executive officer of the corporation and shall perform
all the duties commonly incident to that office. The President
shall have authority to execute in the name of the corporation
bonds, contracts, deeds, leases and other written instruments to
be executed by the corporation. The President shall preside at
all meetings of the shareholders and, in the absence of the
Chairman of the Board or if there is none, at all meetings of
the Board, and shall perform such other duties as the Board may
from time to time determine.
Section 5.4 Vice Presidents.
The Vice Presidents (if there be such officers appointed), in
the order of their seniority (unless otherwise established by
the Board), may assume and perform the duties of the President
in the absence or disability of the President or whenever the
offices of the Chairman of the Board and President are vacant.
The Vice Presidents shall have such titles, perform such other
duties, and have such other powers as the Board, the President
or these Bylaws may designate from time to time.
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Section 5.5 The Secretary.
The Secretary shall attend all meetings of the stockholders and
of the Board and any committee thereof, and shall record all
acts and proceedings thereof in the minute book of the
corporation, which may be maintained in either paper or
electronic form. The Secretary shall give notice, in conformity
with these Bylaws, of all meetings of the stockholders and of
all meetings of the Board and any Committee thereof requiring
notice. The Secretary shall perform such other duties and have
such other powers as the Board shall designate from time to
time. The President may direct any assistant secretary to assume
and perform the duties of the Secretary in the absence or
disability of the Secretary, and each assistant secretary shall
perform such other duties and have such other powers as the
Board or the President shall designate from time to time. The
President may direct any Assistant Secretary to assume and
perform the duties of the Secretary in the absence or disability
of the Secretary, and each Assistant Secretary shall perform
such other duties and have such other powers as the Board or the
President may designate from time to time.
Section 5.6 Treasurer.
The Treasurer shall be the chief financial officer of the
corporation and shall keep or cause to be kept the books of
account of the corporation in a thorough and proper manner, and
shall render statements of the financial affairs of the
corporation in such form and as often as required by the Board
or the President. The Treasurer, subject to the order of the
Board, shall have the custody of all funds and securities of the
corporation. The Treasurer shall perform all other duties
commonly incident to his office and shall perform such other
duties and have such other powers as the Board or the President
shall designate from time to time. The President may direct any
assistant treasurer to assume and perform the duties of the
Treasurer in the absence or disability of the Treasurer, and
each assistant treasurer shall perform such other duties and
have such other powers as the Board or the President shall
designate from time to time.
ARTICLE 6
EXECUTION OF CORPORATE INSTRUMENTS, RATIFICATION,
AND VOTING OF STOCKS OWNED BY THE CORPORATION
Section 6.1 Execution of Corporate Instruments.
In its discretion, the Board may determine the method and
designate the signatory officer or officers or other person or
persons, to execute any corporate instrument or document, or to
sign the corporate name without limitation, except where
otherwise provided by law, and such execution or signature shall
be binding upon the corporation.
All checks and drafts drawn on banks or other depositaries on
funds to the credit of the corporation, or in special accounts
of the corporation, shall be signed by such person or persons as
the Board shall authorize to do so.
The Board shall designate an officer who personally, or through
his representative, shall vote shares of other corporations
standing in the name of this corporation. The authority to vote
shares shall include the authority to execute a proxy in the
name of the corporation for purposes of voting the shares.
Section 6.2 Ratification by Shareholders.
In its discretion, the Board may submit any contract or act for
approval or ratification of the shareholders at any annual
meeting of shareholders, or at any special meeting of
shareholders called for that purpose; and any contract or act
that shall be approved or ratified by the holders of a majority
of the voting power of the corporation shall be as valid and
binding upon the corporation and upon the shareholders thereof
as though approved or ratified by each and every shareholder of
the corporation, unless a greater vote is required by law for
such purpose.
Section 6.3 Voting of Stocks Owned by the Corporation.
All stock of other corporations owned or held by the corporation
for itself, or for other parties in any capacity, shall be
voted, and all proxies with respect thereto shall be executed,
by the person authorized to do so by resolution of the Board, or
in the absence of such authorization, by the Chairman of the
Board (if there be such an officer appointed), the President or
any Vice President, or by any other person authorized to do so
by the Chairman of the Board, the President or any Vice
President.
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ARTICLE 7
ANNUAL AND OTHER REPORTS
Section 7.1 Reports to Shareholders.
The Board of the corporation shall cause an annual report to be
sent to the shareholders not later than 120 days after the
close of the fiscal year, and at least 15 days (or, if sent
by third-class mail, 35 days) prior to the annual meeting
of shareholders to be held during the next fiscal year. If
approved by the Board, the report and any accompanying material
may be sent by electronic transmission by the corporation. This
report shall contain a balance sheet as of the end of that
fiscal year and an income statement and statement of changes in
financial position for that fiscal year, accompanied by any
report thereon of independent accountants or, if there is no
such report, the certificate of an authorized officer of the
corporation that the statements were prepared without audit from
the books and records of the corporation. This report shall also
contain such other matters as required by Section 1501(b)
of the California Corporations Code, unless the corporation is
subject to the reporting requirements of Section 13 of the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended, and is not exempted
therefrom under Section 12(g)(2) thereof. As long as the
corporation has less than 100 holders of record of its shares
(determined as provided in Section 605 of the California
Corporations Code), the foregoing requirement of an annual
report is hereby waived.
If no annual report for the last fiscal year has been sent to
shareholders, the corporation shall, upon the written request of
any shareholder made more than 120 days after the close of
such fiscal year, deliver (including by electronic transmission
by the corporation or mail to the person making the request
within 30 days thereafter) the financial statements for
such year as required by Section 1501(a) of the California
Corporations Code. A shareholder or shareholders holding at
least 5% of the outstanding shares of any class of the
corporation may make a written request to the corporation for an
income statement of the corporation for the three-month,
six-month or nine-month period of the current fiscal year ended
more than 30 days prior to the date of the request and a
balance sheet of the corporation as of the end of such period
and, in addition, if no annual report for the last fiscal year
has been sent to shareholders, the annual report for the last
fiscal year, unless such report has been waived under these
Bylaws. The statements shall be delivered (including by
electronic transmission by the corporation if such transmission
is permitted to such shareholder pursuant to such definition) or
mailed to the person making the request within 30 days
thereafter. A copy of any such statements shall be kept on file
in the principal executive office of the corporation for
12 months, and they shall be exhibited at all reasonable
times to any shareholder demanding an examination of the
statements, or a copy shall be mailed to the shareholder.
The quarterly income statements and balance sheets referred to
in this section shall be accompanied by the report thereon, if
any, of any independent accountants engaged by the corporation
or the certificate of an authorized officer of the corporation
that the financial statements were prepared without audit from
the books and records of the corporation.
Section 7.2 Report of Shareholder Vote.
For a period of 60 days following the conclusion of an
annual, regular, or special meeting of shareholders, the
corporation shall, upon written request from a shareholder,
forthwith inform the shareholder of the result of any particular
vote of shareholders taken at the meeting, including the number
of shares voting for, the number of shares voting against, and
the number of shares abstaining or withheld from voting. If the
matter voted on was the election of directors, the corporation
shall report the number of shares (or votes if voted
cumulatively) cast for each nominee for director. If more than
one class or series of shares voted, the report shall state the
appropriate numbers by class and series of shares.
Section 7.3 Reports to the Secretary of State.
(a) Except as otherwise required by the Secretary of State,
every year, during the calendar month in which the original
Articles of Incorporation were filed with the California
Secretary of State, or during the preceding five calendar
months, the corporation shall file a certified statement with
the Secretary of State on the prescribed form, setting forth the
names and complete business or residence addresses of all
incumbent directors; the number of vacancies on the Board, if
any; the names and complete business or residence addresses of
the chief executive officer, the secretary, and the chief
financial officer; the street address of the corporations
principal executive office or principal business office in
California; a statement of the general type of business
constituting the principal
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business activity of the corporation; and a designation of the
agent of the corporation for the purpose of service of process,
all in compliance with Section 1502 of the California
Corporations Code.
(b) Notwithstanding the provisions of paragraph (a) of
this section, if there has been no change in the information
contained in the corporations last annual statement on
file in the Secretary of States office, the corporation
may in lieu of filing the annual statement described in
paragraph (a) of this section, advise the Secretary of
State, on the appropriate form, that no changes in the required
information have occurred during the applicable period, as
permitted by Section 1502 of the California Corporations
Code.
ARTICLE 8
SHARES OF STOCK
Section 8.1 Stock Certificates.
Every holder of shares in the corporation shall be entitled to
have a certificate signed in the name of the corporation by the
Chairman or Vice Chairman of the Board (if there be such
officers appointed) or the President or a Vice President and by
the Treasurer or any Assistant Treasurer or the Secretary or any
Assistant Secretary, certifying the number of shares and the
class or series of shares owned by the shareholder. Any of the
signatures on the certificate may be a facsimile. In case any
officer, transfer agent or registrar who has signed or whose
facsimile signature has been placed upon a certificate has
ceased to be such officer, transfer agent or registrar before
such certificate is issued, it may be issued by the corporation
with the same effect as if such person were an officer, transfer
agent or registrar at the date of issue.
Any such certificate shall also contain such legends or other
statements as may be required by Sections 417 and 418 of
the California Corporations Code, the Corporate Securities Law
of 1968, federal or other state securities laws, and any
agreement between the corporation and the issuee of the
certificate.
Certificates for shares may be issued prior to full payment,
under such restrictions and for such purposes as the Board or
these Bylaws may provide; provided, however, that the
certificate issued to represent any such partly paid shares
shall state on the face thereof the total amount of the
consideration to be paid therefor, the amount remaining unpaid
and the terms of payment.
No new certificate for shares shall be issued in lieu of an old
certificate unless the latter is surrendered and canceled at the
same time; provided, however, that a new certificate will be
issued without the surrender and cancellation of the old
certificate if (a) the old certificate is lost, apparently
destroyed or wrongfully taken; (b) the request for the
issuance of the new certificate is made within a reasonable time
after the owner of the old certificate has notice of its loss,
destruction, or theft; (c) the request for the issuance of
a new certificate is made prior to the receipt of notice by the
corporation that the old certificate has been acquired by a bona
fide purchaser; (d) the owner of the old certificate files
a sufficient indemnity bond with or provides other adequate
security to the corporation; and (e) the owner satisfies
any other reasonable requirement imposed by the corporation. In
the event of the issuance of a new certificate, the rights and
liabilities of the corporation, and of the holders of the old
and new certificates, shall be governed by the provisions of
Sections 8104 and 8405 of the California Commercial Code.
Section 8.2 Uncertificated Shares.
Notwithstanding Section 8.1, the corporation may
adopt a system of issuance, recordation and transfer of its
shares by electronic or other means not involving any issuance
of certificates, including provisions for notice to purchasers
in substitution for the required statements on certificates
under Sections 417, 418, and 1302 of the California
Corporations Code, and as may be required by the commissioner in
administering the Corporate Securities Law of 1968, which system
(a) has been approved by the United States Securities and
Exchange Commission, (b) is authorized in any statute of
the United States, or (c) is in accordance with
Division 8 (commencing with Section 8101) of the
California Commercial Code. Any system so adopted shall not
become effective as to issued and outstanding certificated
securities until the certificates therefor have been surrendered
to the corporation.
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ARTICLE 9
INSPECTION OF CORPORATE RECORDS
Section 9.1 General Records.
The accounting books and records and the minutes of proceedings
of the shareholders, the Board and committees thereof of the
corporation and any subsidiary of the corporation shall be open
to inspection upon the written demand on the corporation of any
shareholder or holder of a voting trust certificate at any
reasonable time during usual business hours, for a purpose
reasonably related to such holders interests as a
shareholder or as the holder of such voting trust certificate.
Such inspection by a shareholder or holder of a voting trust
certificate may be made in person or by agent or attorney, and
the right of inspection includes the right to copy and make
extracts. Minutes of proceedings of the shareholders, Board, and
committees thereof and other books and records shall be kept
either in written form or in another form capable of being
converted into clearly legible tangible form or any combination
of the foregoing.
A shareholder or shareholders holding at least 5% in the
aggregate of the outstanding voting shares of the corporation or
who hold at least 1% of such voting shares shall have (in
person, or by agent or attorney) the right to inspect and copy
the record of shareholders names and addresses and
shareholdings during usual business hours upon five business
days prior written demand upon the corporation or to
obtain from the transfer agent for the corporation, upon written
demand and upon the tender of its usual charges for such list, a
list of the shareholders names and addresses, who are
entitled to vote for the election of directors, and their
shareholdings, as of the most recent record date for which it
has been compiled or as of a date. The list shall be made
available on or before the later of five business days after the
demand is received or the date specified therein as the date as
of which the list is to be compiled.
Every director shall have the absolute right at any reasonable
time to inspect and copy all books, records and documents of
every kind and to inspect the physical properties of the
corporation and its subsidiaries. Such inspection by a director
may be made in person or by agent or attorney, and the right of
inspection includes the right to copy and make extracts.
Section 9.2 Inspection of Bylaws.
The corporation shall keep at its principal executive office in
California, or if its principal executive office is not in
California, then at its principal business office in California
(or shall otherwise provide upon written request of any
shareholder if it has no such office in California) the original
or a copy of these Bylaws as amended to date, which shall be
open to inspection by the shareholders at all reasonable times
during office hours.
ARTICLE 10
INDEMNIFICATION OF OFFICERS, DIRECTORS, EMPLOYEES AND
AGENTS
Section 10.1 Right to Indemnification.
Each person who was or is a party or is threatened to be made a
party to or is involved (as a party, witness, or otherwise), in
any threatened, pending, or completed action, suit, or
proceeding, whether civil, criminal, administrative, or
investigative (hereinafter, a Proceeding) by
reason of the fact that such person, or another person of whom
such person is the legal representative, is or was a director,
officer, employee, or agent of the corporation or is or was
serving at the request of the corporation as a director,
officer, employee, or agent of another foreign or domestic
corporation, partnership, joint venture, trust, or other
enterprise, or was a director, officer, employee, or agent of a
foreign or domestic corporation that was a predecessor
corporation of the corporation or of another enterprise at the
request of such predecessor corporation, including service with
respect to employee benefit plans, whether the basis of the
Proceeding is alleged action in an official capacity as a
director, officer, employee, or agent or in any other capacity
while serving as a director, officer, employee, or agent
(hereafter an Agent), shall be indemnified
and held harmless by the corporation to the fullest extent
authorized by statutory and decisional law, as the same exists
or may hereafter be interpreted or amended (but, in the case of
any such amendment or interpretation, only to the extent that
such amendment or interpretation permits the corporation to
provide broader indemnification rights than were permitted prior
thereto) against all expenses, liability, and loss (including
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attorneys fees, judgments, fines, ERISA excise taxes and
penalties, amounts paid or to be paid in settlement, any
interest, assessments, or other charges imposed thereon, and any
federal, state, local, or foreign taxes imposed on any Agent as
a result of the actual or deemed receipt of any payments under
this Article) reasonably incurred or suffered by such person in
connection with investigating, defending, being a witness in, or
participating in (including on appeal), or preparing for any of
the foregoing in, any Proceeding (hereafter
Expenses); provided that except as to actions
to enforce indemnification rights pursuant to
Section 10.3, the corporation shall indemnify any
Agent seeking indemnification in connection with a Proceeding
(or part thereof) initiated by such person only if the
Proceeding (or part thereof) was authorized by the Board of the
corporation. The right to indemnification conferred in this
Article shall be a contract right. It is the corporations
intention that these Bylaws provide indemnification in excess of
that expressly permitted by Section 317 of the California
Corporations Code, as authorized by the corporations
Articles of Incorporation.
Section 10.2 Authority to Advance Expenses.
Expenses incurred by an officer or director (acting in his
capacity as such) in defending a Proceeding shall be paid by the
corporation in advance of the final disposition of such
Proceeding, provided that if required by the California
Corporations Code, such Expenses shall be advanced only upon
delivery to the corporation of an undertaking by or on behalf of
such director or officer to repay such amount if it shall
ultimately be determined that he is not entitled to be
indemnified by the corporation as authorized in this Article or
otherwise. Expenses incurred by other Agents of the corporation
(or by the directors or officers not acting in their capacity as
such, including service with respect to employee benefit plans)
may be advanced upon the receipt of a similar undertaking, if
required by law, and upon such other terms and conditions as the
Board deems appropriate. Any obligation to reimburse the
corporation for Expense advances shall be unsecured, and no
interest shall be charged thereon.
Section 10.3 Right of Claimant to Bring Suit.
If a claim under Section 10.1 or
Section 10.2 of these Bylaws is not paid in full by
the corporation within 30 days after a written claim has
been received by the corporation, the claimant may at any time
thereafter bring suit against the corporation to recover the
unpaid amount of the claim and, if successful in whole or in
part, the claimant shall be entitled to be paid also the expense
(including attorneys fees) of prosecuting such claim. It
shall be a defense to any such action (other than an action
brought to enforce a claim for expenses incurred in defending a
Proceeding in advance of its final disposition where the
required undertaking has been tendered to the corporation) that
the claimant has not met the standards of conduct that make it
permissible under the California Corporations Code for the
corporation to indemnify the claimant for the amount claimed.
The burden of proving such a defense shall be on the
corporation. Neither the failure of the corporation (including
its Board, independent legal counsel, or its shareholders) to
have made a determination prior to the commencement of such
action that indemnification of the claimant is proper under the
circumstances because he or she has met the applicable standard
of conduct set forth in the California Corporations Code, nor an
actual determination by the corporation (including its Board,
independent legal counsel, or its shareholders) that the
claimant had not met such applicable standard of conduct, shall
be a defense to the action or create a presumption that claimant
has not met the applicable standard of conduct.
Section 10.4 Provisions Nonexclusive.
The rights conferred on any person by this Article shall not be
exclusive of any other rights that such person may have or
hereafter acquire under any statute, provision of the Articles
of Incorporation, agreement, vote of shareholders or
disinterested directors, or otherwise, both as to action in an
official capacity and as to action in another capacity while
holding such office. To the extent that any provision of the
Articles of Incorporation, agreement, or vote of the
shareholders or disinterested directors is inconsistent with
these Bylaws, the provision, agreement, or vote shall take
precedence.
Section 10.5 Authority to Insure.
The corporation may purchase and maintain insurance to protect
itself and any Agent against any Expense asserted against or
incurred by such person, whether or not the corporation would
have the power to indemnify the Agent against such Expense under
applicable law or the provisions of this Article, provided that,
in cases where the corporation owns all or a portion of the
shares of the company issuing the insurance policy, the company
and/or the
policy must meet one of the two sets of conditions set forth in
Section 317 of the California Corporations Code.
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Section 10.6 Survival of Rights.
The rights provided by this Article shall continue as to a
person who has ceased to be an Agent and shall inure to the
benefit of the heirs, executors, and administrators of such
person.
Section 10.7 Settlement of Claims.
The corporation shall not be liable to indemnify any Agent under
this ARTICLE 10 (1) for any amounts paid in
settlement of any action or claim effected without the
corporations written consent, which consent shall not be
unreasonably withheld; or (2) for any judicial award, if
the corporation was not given a reasonable and timely
opportunity to participate, at its expense, in the defense of
such action.
Section 10.8 Effect of Amendment.
Any amendment, repeal, or modification of this Article shall not
adversely affect any right or protection of any Agent existing
at the time of such amendment, repeal, or modification without
the prior written consent of such Agent.
Section 10.9 Subrogation.
In the event of payment under this Article, the corporation
shall be subrogated to the extent of such payment to all of the
rights of recovery of the Agent, who shall execute all papers
required and shall do everything that may be necessary to secure
such rights, including the execution of such documents necessary
to enable the corporation effectively to bring suit to enforce
such rights.
Section 10.10 No Duplication of Payments.
The corporation shall not be liable under this Article to make
any payment in connection with any claim made against the Agent
to the extent the Agent has otherwise actually received payment
(under any insurance policy, agreement, vote, or otherwise) of
the amounts otherwise indemnifiable hereunder.
ARTICLE 11
AMENDMENTS
Section 11.1 Power of Shareholders.
New bylaws may be adopted or these Bylaws may be amended or
repealed by the affirmative vote of a majority of the
outstanding shares entitled to vote, or by the written consent
of shareholders entitled to vote such shares, except as
otherwise provided by law or by the Articles of Incorporation or
by these Bylaws.
Section 11.2 Power of Directors.
Subject to the right of shareholders as provided in
Section 11.1 of these Bylaws to adopt, amend or
repeal these Bylaws, these Bylaws (other than a bylaw or
amendment thereof changing the authorized number of directors,
or providing for the approval by the Board, acting alone, of a
loan or guarantee to any officer or an employee benefit plan
providing for the same) may be adopted, amended or repealed by
the Board.
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CERTIFICATE
OF SECRETARY
The undersigned Secretary of Cardiogenesis Corporation, a
California corporation, hereby certifies that the foregoing is a
full, true and correct copy of the Bylaws of the corporation
with all amendments to date of this Certificate.
WITNESS the signature of the undersigned this day
of ,
2011.
Name: Suzanne K. Gabbert
Title: Secretary
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Annex B
4675 MacArthur Court
Suite 1500
Newport Beach, CA 92660
Tel: 949.852.9911
Fax: 949.852.0430
www.brileyco.com
Member FINRA and SIPC
March 22, 2011
The Board of Directors
Cardiogenesis Corporation
11 Musick
Irvine, CA 92618
In care of: Paul J. McCormick, Executive Chairman
Dear Mr. McCormick:
You have requested our opinion (the Opinion) as to
the fairness, from a financial point of view, to the holders of
the common stock, no par value (the Shares), of
Cardiogenesis Corporation (the Company) of the
Consideration (as defined below) to be paid to the holders of
the Shares, pursuant to the Agreement and Plan of Merger and
Reorganization (the Agreement), among the Company,
CryoLife, Inc. (the Acquiror), and CL Falcon, Inc.,
a Florida corporation and wholly-owned subsidiary of the
Acquiror (Merger Sub). Pursuant to the Agreement,
the Acquiror will cause Merger Sub to commence a tender offer
(the Offer) for all the outstanding Shares, at a
price for each share equal to $.457 payable in cash (the
Consideration). The Agreement further provides that,
following completion of the Offer, Merger Sub will be merged
with and into the Company (the Merger) and each
outstanding Share, other than (i) Shares owned by the
Acquiror, Merger Sub (including Shares received in the Offer) or
the Company or any of their respective direct or indirect
wholly-owned subsidiaries (other than Shares held on behalf of
third parties) and (ii) Dissenting Shares, will be
converted into the right to receive the Consideration. The terms
and conditions of the Offer and the Merger are more fully set
forth in the Agreement. Any term not otherwise defined herein
shall have the meaning given such term in the Agreement.
Our Opinion specifically addresses the fairness, from a
financial point of view, of the Consideration to be received by
the holders of Shares in connection with the Offer and the
Merger. In conjunction with this Opinion, we have made such
reviews, analyses and inquiries, as we have deemed necessary and
appropriate under the circumstances. Among other things, we have:
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Reviewed and analyzed certain historical and projected financial
information for Cardiogenesis;
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Interviewed the Companys management and discussed the
Companys operations, financial conditions, future
prospects and business plans;
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Reviewed the Companys audited financial statements for the
three fiscal years ended December 31, 2009, and the
unaudited financial results for the fiscal year ended
December 31, 2010;
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Reviewed CryoLifes audited financial statements for the
four fiscal years ended December 31, 2010;
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Reviewed certain internal financial statements and forecasts
prepared by the Companys management and also reviewed
other financial and operating data concerning the Company, (the
Company Projections). With respect to the Company
Projections, upon advice of the Company, we have assumed that
such projections have been reasonably prepared on a basis
reflecting the best currently available estimates and judgments
of the management of the Company as to the future financial
performance of the Company;
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Reviewed historical prices, trading multiples and trading volume
of the common stock of Cardiogenesis;
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Reviewed the latest draft of the Agreement, dated March 17,
2011, in substantially final form;
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Reviewed certain publicly available financial data, stock market
performance data and trading multiples of companies which we
deemed generally comparable to Cardiogenesis;
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Reviewed the financial terms and premimuns, to the extent
publicly available, of certain comparable merger and acquisition
transactions of companies similar to the Company;
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Performed a discounted cash flow analysis based on future
projected cash flows for the Company prepared by management;
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Performed a series of commonly used and widely accepted analyses
relating to determining fair value for transactions of this type
and profile; and
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Conducted such other financial studies, analyses and
investigations and evaluated such other information as B.
Riley & Co. deemed appropriate.
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In connection with rendering our Opinion, B. Riley performed a
variety of financial analyses. The preparation of a fairness
opinion involves various determinations as to the most
appropriate and relevant methods of financial analysis and the
application of these methods to the particular circumstances
and, therefore, such an opinion is not readily susceptible to a
partial analysis or summary description. Accordingly, B. Riley
believes that its analyses must be considered as a whole and
that selecting portions of the analyses and factors considered
by them, without considering all such analyses and factors, or
attempting to ascribe relative weights to some or all such
analyses and factors, could create an incomplete view of the
evaluation process underlying the Opinion.
Our Opinion expressed herein is for the benefit of the
Companys Board of Directors on their behalf as
representatives of the Companys stockholders, and our
Opinion is rendered in connection with the Boards
consideration of the Offer and the Merger. It is further
understood that this Opinion may not be used for any other
purpose, nor may it be reproduced, disseminated, quoted or
referred to at any time, in whole or in part, in any manner or
for any purpose, without our prior written consent; provided,
however, that this Opinion and any description thereof may be
included in its entirety in any proxy statement or consent
solicitation statement distributed to the Companys
stockholders in connection with the Offer
and/or the
Merger provided that any such inclusion or description shall be
subject to our prior review and approval, which will not be
unreasonably withheld. Notwithstanding the foregoing, this
Opinion is not intended as and does not constitute a
recommendation to any such stockholder as to whether such
stockholder should accept the Offer or vote to approve the
Merger.
We have undertaken no independent analysis of any pending or
threatened litigation, possible unasserted claims or other
contingent liabilities to which either the Company is a party or
may be subject and our Opinion makes no assumption concerning,
and therefore does not consider, the possible assertion of
claims, outcomes or damages arising out of any such matters.
We have relied upon and assumed, without independent
verification, that the financial information and reports
provided to us have been reasonably prepared and reflect the
best currently available estimates of the financial results and
condition of the Company, and that there have been no material
or adverse changes in the assets, financial condition, business
or prospects of the Company since the date of the most recent
financial statements made available to us.
Without limiting the generality of the foregoing, for the
purpose of this Opinion, we have assumed that the Company is not
a party to any pending transactions, including external
financing, recapitalizations, acquisitions, or merger
discussions, other than the Offer and the Merger. We have also
assumed that the Offer and the Merger will be consummated in
accordance with the Agreement referred to above.
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Events occurring after the date hereof could materially affect
the assumptions used in preparing this Opinion; however, we do
not have any obligation to reaffirm this Opinion. We were not
requested to opine as to, and this Opinion does not in any
manner address, the Companys underlying decision to
proceed with or effect the Transaction or structure thereof.
We have not independently verified the accuracy and completeness
of the information supplied to us with respect to the Company
and do not assume any responsibility with respect to it. We have
not made any physical inspection or independent appraisal of any
of the properties or assets of the Company. Our Opinion is
necessarily based on business, economic, market and other
conditions as they currently exist and can be evaluated by us at
the date of this letter. Our Opinion is subject to the
assumptions, limitations, qualifications and other conditions
contained herein and is necessarily based on business, economic,
market and other conditions, and the information made available
to us, as of the date hereof. We assume no responsibility for
updating or revising our Opinion based on circumstances or
events occurring after the date hereof. The Opinion does not
address the Companys underlying business decision to
proceed with or effect the Offer or the Merger.
For our services in rendering this Opinion, the Company has paid
us a fee and has agreed to indemnify us against certain
liabilities associated with the issuance of this Opinion. This
Opinion has been approved by the Fairness Opinion Committee of
B. Riley & Co., LLC.
B. Riley & Co. and our affiliates provide a full
range of financial advisory, securities and other financial
services in the ordinary course of business for which we receive
customary fees. In the ordinary course of our business, we and
our affiliates may actively trade or hold the securities
(including derivative securities) of the Company or CryoLife for
our own account or for the account of our customers and,
accordingly, may at any time hold a long or short position in
such securities.
Based upon and subject to the foregoing, it is our Opinion that,
as of the date hereof, the Consideration to be received by the
Companys stockholders pursuant to the Agreement is fair
from a financial point of view to the holders of Shares.
Very truly yours,
B. Riley & Co., LLC
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Annex C
SECTION 1300-1313
OF THE CALIFORNIA GENERAL CORPORATION LAW
Dissenters
Rights.
§
1300. Shareholder in short-form Merger; Purchase at fair
market value; Dissenting shares; Dissenting
shareholder
(a) If the approval of the outstanding shares
(Section 152) of a corporation is required for a
reorganization under subdivisions (a) and (b) or
subdivision (e) or (f) of Section 1201, each
shareholder of the corporation entitled to vote on the
transaction and each shareholder of a subsidiary corporation in
a short-form Merger may, by complying with this chapter,
require the corporation in which the shareholder holds shares to
purchase for cash at their fair market value the shares owned by
the shareholder which are dissenting shares as defined in
subdivision (b). The fair market value shall be determined as of
the day before the first announcement of the terms of the
proposed reorganization or short-form Merger, excluding any
appreciation or depreciation in consequence of the proposed
action, but adjusted for any stock split, reverse stock split,
or share dividend which becomes effective thereafter.
(b) As used in this chapter, dissenting shares
means shares which come within all of the following descriptions:
(1) Which were not immediately prior to the reorganization
or short-form Merger listed on any national securities
exchange certified by the Commissioner of Corporations under
subdivision (o) of Section 25100, and the notice of
meeting of shareholders to act upon the reorganization
summarizes this section and Sections 1301, 1302, 1303 and
1304; provided, however, that this provision does not apply to
any shares with respect to which there exists any restriction on
transfer imposed by the corporation or by any law or regulation;
and provided, further, that this provision does not apply to any
class of shares if demands for payment are filed with respect to
5 percent or more of the outstanding shares of that class.
(2) Which were outstanding on the date for the
determination of shareholders entitled to vote on the
reorganization and (A) were not voted in favor of the
reorganization or, (B) if described in paragraph (1)
(without regard to the provisos in that paragraph), were voted
against the reorganization, or were held of record on the
effective date of a short-form Merger; provided, however,
that subparagraph (A) rather than subparagraph (B) of
this paragraph applies in any case where the approval required
by Section 1201 is sought by written consent rather than at
a meeting.
(3) Which the dissenting shareholder has demanded that the
corporation purchase at their fair market value, in accordance
with Section 1301.
(4) Which the dissenting shareholder has submitted for
endorsement, in accordance with Section 1302.
(c) As used in this chapter, dissenting
shareholder means the record holder of dissenting shares
and includes a transferee of record.
§
1301. Notice to holder of dissenting shares of reorganization
approval; Demand for purchase of shares; Contents of
demand
(a) If, in the case of a reorganization, any shareholders
of a corporation have a right under Section 1300, subject
to compliance with paragraphs (3) and (4) of
subdivision (b) thereof, to require the corporation to
purchase their shares for cash, that corporation shall mail to
each such shareholder a notice of the approval of the
reorganization by its outstanding shares
(Section 152) within 10 days after the date of
that approval, accompanied by a copy of Sections 1300,
1302, 1303, and 1304 and this section, a statement of the price
determined by the corporation to represent the fair market value
of the dissenting shares, and a brief description of the
procedure to be followed if the shareholder desires to exercise
the shareholders right under those sections. The statement
of price constitutes an offer by the corporation to purchase at
the price stated any dissenting shares as defined in subdivision
(b) of Section 1300, unless they lose their status as
dissenting shares under Section 1309.
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(b) Any shareholder who has a right to require the
corporation to purchase the shareholders shares for cash
under Section 1300, subject to compliance with paragraphs
(3) and (4) of subdivision (b) thereof, and who
desires the corporation to purchase shares shall make written
demand upon the corporation for the purchase of those shares and
payment to the shareholder in cash of their fair market value.
The demand is not effective for any purpose unless it is
received by the corporation or any transfer agent thereof
(1) in the case of shares described subdivision (b) of
Section 1300 (without regard to the provisos in that
paragraph), not later than the date of the shareholders
meeting to vote upon the reorganization, or (2) in any
other case within 30 days after the date on which the
notice of the approval by the outstanding shares pursuant to
subdivision (a) or the notice pursuant to subdivision
(i) of Section 1110 was mailed to the shareholder.
(c) The demand shall state the number and class of the
shares held of record by the shareholder which the shareholder
demands that the corporation purchase and shall contain a
statement of what that shareholder claims to be the fair market
value of those shares as of the day before the announcement of
the proposed reorganization or short-form Merger. The
statement of fair market value constitutes an offer by the
shareholder to sell the shares at that price.
§
1302. Stamping or endorsing dissenting shares
Within 30 days after the date on which notice of the
approval by the outstanding shares or the notice pursuant to
subdivision (i) of Section 1110 was mailed to the
shareholder, the shareholder shall submit to the corporation at
its principal office or at the office of any transfer agent
thereof, (a) if the shares are certificated securities, the
shareholders certificates representing any shares which
the shareholder demands that the corporation purchase, to be
stamped or endorsed with a statement that the shares are
dissenting shares or to be exchanged for certificates of
appropriate denomination so stamped or endorsed or (b) if
the shares are uncertificated securities, written notice of the
number of shares which the shareholder demands that the
corporation purchase. Upon subsequent transfers of the
dissenting shares on the books of the corporation, the new
certificates, initial transaction statement, and other written
statements issued therefor shall bear a like statement, together
with the name of the original dissenting holder of the shares.
§
1303. Dissenting shareholder entitled to agreed price with
interest thereon; When price to be paid
(a) If the corporation and the shareholder agree that the
shares are dissenting shares and agree upon the price of the
shares, the dissenting shareholder is entitled to the agreed
price with interest thereon at the legal rate on judgments from
the date of the agreement. Any agreements fixing the fair market
value of any dissenting shares as between the corporation and
the holders thereof shall be filed with the secretary of the
corporation.
(b) Subject to the provisions of Section 1306, payment
of the fair market value of dissenting shares shall be made
within 30 days after the amount thereof has been agreed or
within 30 days after any statutory or contractual
conditions to the reorganization are satisfied, whichever is
later, and in the case of certificated securities, subject to
surrender of the certificates therefor, unless provided
otherwise by agreement.
§
1304. Action by dissenters to determine whether shares are
dissenting shares or fair market value of dissenting shares or
both; Joinder of shareholders; Consolidation of actions;
Determination of issues; Appointment of appraisers
(a) If the corporation denies that the shares are
dissenting shares, or the corporation and the shareholder fail
to agree upon the fair market value of the shares, then the
shareholder demanding purchase of such shares as dissenting
shares or any interested corporation, within six months after
the date on which notice of the approval by the outstanding
shares (Section 152) or notice pursuant to subdivision
(i) of Section 1110 was mailed to the shareholder, but
not thereafter, may file a complaint in the superior court of
the proper county praying the court to determine whether the
shares are dissenting shares or the fair market value of the
dissenting shares or both or may intervene in any action pending
on such a complaint.
(b) Two or more dissenting shareholders may join as
plaintiffs or be joined as defendants in any such action and two
or more such actions may be consolidated.
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(c) On the trial of the action, the court shall determine
the issues. If the status of the shares as dissenting shares is
in issue, the court shall first determine that issue. If the
fair market value of the dissenting shares is in issue, the
court shall determine, or shall appoint one or more impartial
appraisers to determine, the fair market value of the shares.
§
1305. Duty and report of appraisers; Courts confirmation
of report; Determination of fair market value by court; Judgment
and payment; Appeal; Costs of action
(a) If the court appoints an appraiser or appraisers, they
shall proceed forthwith to determine the fair market value per
share. Within the time fixed by the court, the appraisers, or a
majority of them, shall make and file a report in the office of
the clerk of the court. Thereupon, on the motion of any party,
the report shall be submitted to the court and considered on
such evidence as the court considers relevant. If the court
finds the report reasonable, the court may confirm it.
(b) If a majority of the appraisers appointed fail to make
and file a report within 10 days from the date of their
appointment or within such further time as may be allowed by the
court or the report is not confirmed by the court, the court
shall determine the fair market value of the dissenting shares.
(c) Subject to the provisions of Section 1306,
judgment shall be rendered against the corporation for payment
of an amount equal to the fair market value of each dissenting
share multiplied by the number of dissenting shares which any
dissenting shareholder who is a party, or who has intervened, is
entitled to require the corporation to purchase, with interest
thereon at the legal rate from the date on which judgment was
entered.
(d) Any such judgment shall be payable forthwith with
respect to uncertificated securities and, with respect to
certificated securities, only upon the endorsement and delivery
to the corporation of the certificates for the shares described
in the judgment. Any party may appeal from the judgment.
(e) The costs of the action, including reasonable
compensation to the appraisers to be fixed by the court, shall
be assessed or apportioned as the court considers equitable,
but, if the appraisal exceeds the price offered by the
corporation, the corporation shall pay the costs (including in
the discretion of the court attorneys fees, fees of expert
witnesses and interest at the legal rate on judgments from the
date of compliance with Sections 1300, 1301 and 1302 if the
value awarded by the court for the shares is more than
125 percent of the price offered by the corporation under
subdivision (a) of Section 1301).
§
1306. Prevention of payment to holders of dissenting shares of
fair market value; Effect
To the extent that the provisions of Chapter 5 prevent the
payment to any holders of dissenting shares of their fair market
value, they shall become creditors of the corporation for the
amount thereof together with interest at the legal rate on
judgments until the date of payment, but subordinate to all
other creditors in any liquidation proceeding, such debt to be
payable when permissible under the provisions of Chapter 5.
§
1307. Disposition of dividends upon dissenting shares
Cash dividends declared and paid by the corporation upon the
dissenting shares after the date of approval of the
reorganization by the outstanding shares
(Section 152) and prior to payment for the shares by
the corporation shall be credited against the total amount to be
paid by the corporation therefor.
§
1308. Rights and privileges of dissenting shares; Withdrawal of
demand for payment
Except as expressly limited in this chapter, holders of
dissenting shares continue to have all the rights and privileges
incident to their shares, until the fair market value of their
shares is agreed upon or determined. A dissenting shareholder
may not withdraw a demand for payment unless the corporation
consents thereto.
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§
1309. When dissenting shares lose their status
Dissenting shares lose their status as dissenting shares and the
holders thereof cease to be dissenting shareholders and cease to
be entitled to require the corporation to purchase their shares
upon the happening of any of the following:
(a) The corporation abandons the reorganization. Upon
abandonment of the reorganization, the corporation shall pay on
demand to any dissenting shareholder who has initiated
proceedings in good faith under this chapter all necessary
expenses incurred in such proceedings and reasonable
attorneys fees.
(b) The shares are transferred prior to their submission
for endorsement in accordance with Section 1302 or are
surrendered for conversion into shares of another class in
accordance with the articles.
(c) The dissenting shareholder and the corporation do not
agree upon the status of the shares as dissenting shares or upon
the purchase price of the shares, and neither files a complaint
or intervenes in a pending action as provided in
Section 1304, within six months after the date on which
notice of the approval by the outstanding shares or notice
pursuant to subdivision (i) of Section 1110 was mailed
to the shareholder.
(d) The dissenting shareholder, with the consent of the
corporation, withdraws the shareholders demand for
purchase of the dissenting shares.
§
1310. Suspension of proceedings for compensation or valuation
pending litigation
If litigation is instituted to test the sufficiency or
regularity of the votes of the shareholders in authorizing a
reorganization, any proceedings under Sections 1304 and
1305 shall be suspended until final determination of such
litigation.
§
1311. Shares to which chapter inapplicable
This chapter, except Section 1312, does not apply to
classes of shares whose terms and provisions specifically set
forth the amount to be paid in respect to such shares in the
event of a reorganization or Merger.
§
1312. Attack on validity of reorganization or short-form merger;
Rights of shareholders; Burden of proof
(a) No shareholder of a corporation who has a right under
this chapter to demand payment of cash for the shares held by
the shareholder shall have any right at law or in equity to
attack the validity of the reorganization or short
form merger, or to have the reorganization or short-form merger
set aside or rescinded, except in an action to test whether the
number of shares required to authorize or approve the
reorganization have been legally voted in favor thereof; but any
holder of shares of a class whose terms and provisions
specifically set forth the amount to be paid in respect to them
in the event of a reorganization or short-form merger is
entitled to payment in accordance with those terms and
provisions or, if the principal terms of the reorganization are
approved pursuant to subdivision (b) of Section 1202,
is entitled to payment in accordance with the terms and
provisions of the approved reorganization.
(b) If one of the parties to a reorganization or short-form
merger is directly or indirectly controlled by, or under common
control with, another party to the reorganization or short-form
merger, subdivision (a) shall not apply to any shareholder
of such party who has not demanded payment of cash for such
shareholders shares pursuant to this chapter; but if the
shareholder institutes any action to attack the validity of the
reorganization or short-form merger or to have the
reorganization or short-form merger set aside or rescinded, the
shareholder shall not thereafter have any right to demand
payment of cash for the shareholders shares pursuant to
this chapter. The court in any action attacking the validity of
the reorganization or short-form merger or to have the
reorganization or short-form merger set aside or rescinded shall
not restrain or enjoin the consummation of the transaction
except upon 10 days prior notice to the corporation
and upon a determination by the court that clearly no other
remedy will adequately protect the complaining shareholder or
the class of shareholders of which such shareholder is a member.
(c) If one of the parties to a reorganization or short-form
merger is directly or indirectly controlled by, or under common
control with, another party to the reorganization or short-form
merger, in any action to attack the validity
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of the reorganization or short-form merger or to have the
reorganization or short-form merger set aside or rescinded,
(1) a party to a reorganization or short-form merger which
controls another party to the reorganization or short-form
merger shall have the burden of proving that the transaction is
just and reasonable as to the shareholders of the controlled
party, and (2) a person who controls two or more parties to
a reorganization shall have the burden of proving that the
transaction is just and reasonable as to the shareholders of any
party so controlled.
§
1313. Conversion deemed to constitute reorganization for
purposes of chapter
A conversion pursuant to Chapter 11.5 (commencing with
Section 1150) shall be deemed to constitute a
reorganization for purposes of applying the provisions of this
chapter, in accordance with and to the extent provided in
Section 1159.
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