Company: HURA
Filing Date: 2025-05-06
Form Type: S-4/A
Source: 0001193125-25-113920
Chunk: 311

Company: TuHURA Biosciences, Inc./NV
Filing Date: 2025-05-06
Form: S-4/A
Chunk 311
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 and other documents with the SEC and provide to its stockholders the same type of information that it has previously filed and provided. Stockholders who own shares of TuHURA Common Stock that are freely tradable prior to the Delaware Conversion, including Kineta stockholders who receive shares of TuHURA Common Stock as Merger Consideration, will continue to have freely tradable shares, and stockholders holding restricted shares of TuHURA Common Stock will continue to hold their shares subject to the same restrictions on transfer to which their shares are presently subject. In summary, the Delaware Conversion will not change the respective positions under federal securities laws of TuHURA or its stockholders. Reasons for the Delaware Conversion Approval of the Delaware Conversion is not a condition to the completion of the Mergers. The completion of the Mergers and other transactions contemplated by the Merger Agreement depends upon the satisfaction or 185

waiver of a number of conditions, as set forth in greater detail in the section entitled “The Merger Agreement—Conditions to the Completion of the Mergers”.

However, notwithstanding that the Mergers are not conditioned upon the approval of the Delaware Conversion, the corporate laws of the State of Delaware are more comprehensive, widely-used and extensively interpreted than the corporate laws of other states, including Nevada. As a result of the flexibility and responsiveness of the Delaware corporate laws to the legal and business needs of corporations, many major corporations have incorporated in Delaware or have changed their corporate domiciles to Delaware in a manner similar to the Delaware Conversion that TuHURA is proposing.

Delaware is a nationally recognized leader in adopting and implementing comprehensive and flexible corporate laws. The DGCL is frequently revised and updated to accommodate changing legal and business needs. In addition, Delaware has established a specialized court, the Court of Chancery, that has exclusive jurisdiction over matters relating to the DGCL. In the Court of Chancery, corporate cases are heard by judges, without juries, who have many years of experience with corporate issues. Traditionally, this has meant that the Delaware courts are able in most cases to process corporate litigation relatively quickly and effectively. By comparison, many states, including Nevada, do not have a specialized judiciary for matters relating to corporate issues.

Delaware courts have developed considerable expertise in dealing with corporate legal issues and produced a substantial body of case law construing the DGCL, with multiple cases concerning areas that no Nevada court has considered. Because the judicial system is based largely on legal precedents, the abundance of Delaware case law should serve to