Court Opinion

ID: 4421327
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2019-07-30 20:02:44.261063+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T14:23:16.627551
License: Public Domain

COURT OF CHANCERY
                                     OF THE
                               STATE OF DELAWARE
PATRICIA W. GRIFFIN                                                    CHANCERY COURTHOUSE
MASTER IN CHANCERY                                                          34 The Circle
                                                                    GEORGETOWN, DELAWARE 19947

                            Final Report: July 30, 2019
                           Date Submitted: June 11, 2019

Daniel A. O’Brien, Esquire
Jamie L. Edmonson, Esquire
Venable, LLP
1201 North Market Street, Suite 1400
Wilmington, DE 19801

Kenneth J. Nachbar, Esquire
Morris Nichols Arsht & Tunnell, LLP
1201 North Market Street
PO Box 1347
Wilmington, DE 19899

RE:      Senetas Corporation, Ltd. v. DeepRadiology Corporation
         C.A. No. 2019-0170-PWG

Dear Counsel:

         This case involves a demand to inspect the books and records of a closely

held company that develops artificial intelligence systems for medical visual

recognition tasks, specifically diagnostic radiology tasks. The plaintiff, a major

investor in the company, seeks to inspect the company’s books and records in

order to investigate potential corporate mismanagement and wrongdoing. The

defendant alleges the plaintiff is not entitled to inspection because it has not shown
Senetas Corporation, Ltd. v. DeepRadiology Corporation
C.A. No. 2019-0170-PWG
July 30, 2019

a credible basis to infer wrongdoing or mismanagement, is a competitor with an

ulterior motive for the inspection, and the scope of the demand is overbroad.

         I conclude the plaintiff has established a credible basis from which a court

can infer that mismanagement or wrongdoing may have occurred, and the

defendant has not shown that the plaintiff has an ulterior motive negating its proper

purpose.      I condition inspection on the parties entering into a confidentiality

agreement. With regard to the scope of the inspection, the parties shall confer and

submit to the Court their considerations on specific documents or categories of

books and records that are necessary, sufficient and essential for the plaintiff’s

proper purpose, prior to the Court making further determinations. This is a final

report.

I.       Background

         A. Factual Background1

         Plaintiff Senetas Corporation Limited (“Senetas”) is a publicly listed

Australian network encryption company.2 Senetas’ non-executive chairperson is

Francis W. Galbally.3            Defendant DeepRadiology (“DR”) is a Delaware

corporation involved in developing artificial intelligence systems for medical

1
 I refer to deposition transcripts as “Dep. Tr.,” the trial transcript as “Trial Tr.,” and the
parties’ joint exhibits submitted at trial as “JX.”
2
    Galbally Dep. Tr. 12:12-13; 13:21-24.
3
    Docket Item (“D.I.”) 46, at 1.
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visual recognition tasks.4 Kim Nguyen and Robert Lufkin founded DR on July 8,

2015.5 Nguyen is DR’s President, Secretary and Treasurer.6

          In May of 2017, Senetas invested approximately $1 million of seed capital in

exchange for 397,219 shares of DR’s Series Seed-1 Preferred Stock, becoming a

major investor/shareholder.7 Senetas invested in DR because DR “had a leading

medical application for artificial intelligence and machine learning, and had

assembled a team of the most expert people around the world that were assisting in

developing the application.”8 Senetas understood that, at the time it invested, the

first iteration of DR’s technology was awaiting FDA approval, and that approval

was a key factor in Senetas’ decision to invest in DR.9 Senetas also expected that

DR would pursue additional rounds of capital investment, thereby positioning DR

as an acquisition target for other companies in the industry.10

4
    D.I. 9, at 2.
5
    Id.; Nguyen Dep. Tr. 7:12-14.
6
    Nguyen Dep. Tr. 7:18-23.
7
    D.I. 46, at 4-5.
8
  Galbally Dep. Tr. 18:6-14. Senetas believed DR’s “technology will revolutionise [sic]
the medical radiology industry by significantly reducing the error rate, cost and time to
interpret medical images.” JX 175.
9
  Galbally Dep. Tr. 56:20-22; 58:2-10 (“FDA approval to me was one of the most
important aspects as to why I invested, and the fact that it was likely to be approved at
some stage during 2017”); 98:7-9.
10
     Galbally Dep. Tr. 20:11-24.

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         Galbally was appointed to DR’s Board of Directors (“Board”) as Senetas’

designee, and served on the Board with Nguyen, Lufkin, and Robert Rankin, the

designee of another investor.11 The evidence shows that the Board held a meeting

in August of 2017 during which no minutes were taken.12              No further board

meetings were held during Galbally’s tenure on the board.13

         In January of 2018, in an attempt to obtain additional funding and without

Board knowledge or approval, DR completed the preliminary steps of an Initial

Coin Offering (“ICO”).14 Galbally attempted to schedule a special meeting of the

Board to discuss the ICO as well as the company’s overall financial needs and

financing options.15 This special Board meeting was held on February 23, 2018

with Galbally as the only member in attendance.16 DR subsequently pulled the

ICO offering from its website and never finalized the offering.17 In a letter dated

11
   Galbally Dep. Tr. 335:11-15. The Amended and Restated Investors’ Rights Agreement
provides that Board composition will be five persons, with one vacant seat on the Board
at the time the Agreement was executed. JX 30, ¶2.3.
12
     Galbally Dep. Tr. 336:2-4; 337:2-6.
13
     Galbally Dep. Tr. 335:22-336:1; 337:7-22.
14
     Nguyen Dep. Tr. 162:7-16.
15
  Galbally Dep. Tr. 348:17-22. Galbally testified that he had “grave concerns” about the
ICO offering. Galbally Dep. Tr. 156:21-23.
16
     Galbally Dep. Tr. 319:24-320:7; 320:20-23; 349:8-17; JX 89.
17
     See JX 88.

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February 26, 2018, Galbally resigned from the Board and, shortly thereafter,

unsuccessfully attempted to inspect DR’s books and records at DR’s offices.18

         The evidence shows that DR depleted all of its seed capital by February of

2018.19 Since that time Nguyen and Lufkin have been funding the Company

personally.20

         In August of 2018, Senetas wrote the DR investment off its books.21 In

September of 2018, Nguyen told Galbally and other investors that DR was going to

stop seeking FDA approval and would deploy its technology in a manner that

would not require FDA approval.22 At that same meeting, she also promised

access to DR’s books and records.23 Later in September, Jack Dwyer (“Dwyer”), a

representative of another investor, inspected DR’s books and records covering

operations from December of 2016 through February of 2018, and requested

additional information that DR has not provided.24

         B. Procedural Background

18
     JX 122; Galbally Dep. Tr. 351:13-22.
19
     JX 88.
20
     Nguyen Dep. Tr. 34:13-35:4.
21
     Galbally Dep. Tr. 52:23-53:21; JX 38.
22
     Galbally Dep. Tr. 362:3-363:14; Trial Tr. 21:21-22:3.
23
     Galbally Dep. Tr. 364:12-17.
24
     See n. 49 infra.

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          On February 12, 2019, Senetas sent a written demand (“Demand”) dated

February 6, to inspect DR’s books and records.25 The letter demanded the right

under 8 Del. C. § 220 of the Delaware General Corporation Law (“Section 220”) to

inspect nine categories of books and records. DR failed to respond to the Demand

within the mandated five days.

          On February 28, 2019, Senetas filed a complaint in which they argue that,

under Section 220, it has a proper purpose to inspect DR’s stocklist and books and

records because the information requested “bears on questions about the true value

of the Company’s assets, and whether its assets and opportunities are being

managed and pursued in a way that maximizes shareholder value.”26

          On April 1, 2019, DR filed an answer, in which it asserts Senetas “lacks a

proper purpose . . . and, further, has an improper purpose and/or improperly seeks

to use . . . the requested documents to the detriment of the Company.” 27 And, DR

claims the Demand fails “to establish a credible basis from which to infer any

actual or possible mismanagement or wrongdoing”; its scope is overbroad; access

to sufficient information has already been provided; and confidential and

25
     D.I. 1, Ex. 2.
26
     Id. at 7.
27
     D.I. 9, at 10.

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  proprietary technical information should be protected from disclosure.28 Both

  parties request attorneys’ fees and costs.

           DR and Senetas filed their pre-trial briefs on June 6, 2019, the pre-trial

  conference was held on June 7, 2019, and the trial on June 11, 2019.

II.     Analysis

           “Stockholders of Delaware corporations enjoy a qualified right to inspect the

  corporation’s books and records.”29          Section 220 requires that a stockholder

  seeking inspection of books and records: (1) be a stockholder of record; (2) comply

  with the form and manner requirements when making the demand; and (3) state a

  proper purpose for the requested inspection.30           Section 220 defines a “proper

  purpose” as one “reasonably related to the party’s interest as a stockholder.”31

           It is undisputed that Senetas was a stockholder of record and adhered to

  Section 220’s form and manner requirements. The issues in this case are: (A) does

  28
       Id. at 10-11.
  29
     Cf. KT4 Partners LLC v. Palantir Techs. Inc., 203 A.3d 738, 750 (Del. 2019)
  (“Stockholders of Delaware corporations have ‘a qualified common law and statutory
  right to inspect the corporation's books and records.’”) (citing Saito v. McKesson HBOC,
  Inc., 806 A.2d 113, 116 (Del. 2002)); Cent. Laborers Pension Fund v. News Corp., 45
  A.3d 139, 143 (Del. 2012) (citations omitted).
  30
    8 Del. C. §220 (c)(1)-(3); see also Cent. Laborers Pension Fund, 45 A.3d at 143;
  Amalgamated Bank v. Yahoo! Inc., 132 A.3d 752, 775 (Del. Ch. 2016).
  31
    Compaq Computer Corp. v. Horton, 631 A. 2d 1, 3 (Del. 1993) (citing 8 Del. C. §
  220(b)); Barnes v. Sprouts Farmers Mkt., Inc., 2018 WL 3471351, at *4 (Del. Ch. July
  18, 2018) (citation omitted); Rodgers v. Cypress Semiconductor Corp., 2017 WL
  1380621, at *2 (Del. Ch. Apr. 17, 2017) (citation omitted).

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Senetas have a proper purpose for seeking to inspect DR’s books and records; (B)

was Senetas’ proper purpose offered under false pretenses, or an attempt to “side-

step” the proper purpose requirement; and (C) should the inspection be conditioned

on a confidentiality agreement?32

      A. Is Senetas’ Demand for a proper purpose?

           Senetas states its purpose as determining the “true value of the Company’s

assets, and whether its assets and opportunities are being managed and pursued in a

way that maximizes shareholder value.”33 It intends to inspect the books and

records “to determine if [DR] is being properly managed.”34 Senetas argues it is

entitled to inspect DR’s books and records for a proper purpose – to investigate

mismanagement, waste and wrongdoing – and that it has demonstrated more than a

credible basis from which the Court can infer possible mismanagement. It claims

DR’s management failed to follow corporate governance mechanics and made

critical business decisions without consulting with the Board or stockholders;

failed to act with due diligence related to undertaking an ICO and discontinuing

efforts to pursue FDA approval of DR’s product; failed to keep systematic or

32
   There is an additional issue whether the scope of inspection in Senetas’ Demand is
properly tailored to its stated purpose. I do not address that issue in this report and ask
the parties to confer, once this report is final, and submit any remaining areas of
disagreement on the scope of the inspection to the Court.
33
     D.I. 1, Ex. 2.
34
     Id.

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accurate financial records; failed to keep the Board reasonably informed about

DR’s operations; misled investors; and breached their duty of loyalty and their

employment agreements by diverting time and attention from DR’s operations, and

by misappropriating DR’s intellectual property, to organize and promote a

competitor.35 DR asserts that Senetas does not “articulate a cognizable purpose for

much of its Demand,” and that Senetas knows that “there has been no

misappropriation of its investment.”36

          The predominate factor in determining whether a stockholder is entitled to

inspection is the propriety of their purpose.37 The stockholder has the burden of

showing that it has a proper purpose for seeking to inspect books and records.38

Valuation of a stockholder’s shares is a proper purpose for inspection.39 And, it is

35
     D.I. 46, at 54.
36
     D.I. 43, at 1-2.
37
     CM & M Grp., Inc. v. Carroll, 453 A.2d 788, 792 (Del. 1982).
38
  8 Del. C §220(c)(3). Cf. Rodgers, 2017 WL 1380621, at *3; Grimes v. DSC Commc’ns
Corp., 724 A.2d 561, 565 (Del. Ch. 1998); Helmsman Mgmt. Servs., Inc. v. A&S
Consultants, Inc., 525 A.2d 160, 164 (Del. Ch. 1987); Skouras v. Admiralty Enterprises,
Inc., 386 A.2d 674, 678 (Del. Ch. 1978).
39
  Cf. CM & M Grp., Inc., 453 A.2d at 792. Senetas’ Demand questions “the true value
of [DR’s] assets.” See generally Forsythe v. CIBC Emp. Private Equity Fund U.S. I LP,
2005 WL 1653963, *4 (Del. Ch. July 7, 2005) (in the demand letter, the plaintiffs stated
one of their purposes was “to determine the value of certain assets [held by the entity]
(and thereby, the court assumes, the value of their units)”).

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well settled that the investigation of mismanagement, waste and wrongdoing is a

proper purpose for inspection.40           Stockholders “need only show, by a

preponderance of the evidence, a credible basis from which the Court of Chancery

can infer there is possible mismanagement that would warrant further

investigation,”   and    are   not    required    to     show   actual   wrongdoing     or

mismanagement.41 This threshold requirement “sets the lowest possible burden of

proof,” and may be met “by a credible showing, through documents, logic,

testimony or otherwise, that there are legitimate issues of wrongdoing.”42 But, a

stockholder “must do more than state in a conclusory manner, a generally accepted

proper purpose” – the investigation of corporate mismanagement “must be to some

end.”43 “Mere curiosity or a desire for a fishing expedition will not suffice.”44

40
  Cf. Seinfeld v. Verizon Commc’ns, Inc., 909 A.2d 117, 119 (Del. 2006)(stockholders
may obtain information “about corporate mismanagement, waste or wrongdoing” that can
be used in several ways); In re Facebook, Inc. Section 220 Litig., 2019 WL 2320842, at
*13 (Del. Ch. May 30, 2019); Rodgers, 2017 WL 1380621, at *3 (citation omitted).
41
  Seinfeld, 909 A.2d at 123; Thomas & Betts Corp. v. Leviton Mfg. Co., 681 A.2d 1026,
1031 (Del. 1996).
42
  Seinfeld, 909 A.2d at 123 (citations omitted); Louisiana Mun. Police Employees’ Ret.
Sys. v. Lennar Corp., 2012 WL 4760881, at *2-*3 (Del. Ch. Oct. 5, 2012).
43
   Graulich v. Dell, 2011 WL 1843813, at *5 (May 16, 2011) (quoting West Coast Mgmt.
& Capital, LLC v. Carrier Access Corp., 914 A.2d 636, 646 (Del. Ch. 2006)).
Stockholders “must state a reason for the purpose, i.e., what it will do with the
information or an end to which that investigation may lead.” Id. One reason that a
stockholder might seek to investigate corporate mismanagement or wrongdoing is to
possibly institute derivative litigation. Seinfeld, 909 A.2d at 119-20 (citations omitted);
Graulich, 2011 WL 1843813, at *5 (citations omitted). Here, the Demand does not
clearly state the reason it is seeking to investigate mismanagement. D.I. 1, Ex. 2. Since
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         With these principles in mind, I turn to the books and records demand in this

case. Each case involving a shareholder request for inspection of corporate books

and records rests on its own facts.45 DR is a small closely held corporation, with

Nguyen serving as DR’s president, secretary, treasurer and bookkeeper. Its co-

founders, Nguyen and Lufkin, are experts in medical imaging, and also serve as

Board members. The Series Seed-1 Preferred Stock Purchase Agreement, under

which Senetas became a major investor, requires that DR maintain internal

accounting controls sufficient for a company of its size and type. 46 And, DR’s

Investors’ Rights Agreement provides that DR shall furnish to each major investor

“when available” DR’s annual and quarterly unaudited financial statements “all

prepared in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles and

practices.”47

DR does not argue concerning Senetas’ failure to articulate in the Demand what it intends
to do with the information, I do not address that issue.
44
  Carapico v. Philadelphia Stock Exch., Inc., 791 A.2d 787, 792 (Del. Ch. 2000) (citing
Sec. First Corp. v. U.S. Die Casting & Dev. Co., 687 A.2d 563, 568 (Del. 1997)).
45
  CM & M Grp., Inc. v. Carroll, 453 A.2d 788, 792 (Del. 1982); Helmsman Mgmt. Servs.,
Inc. v. A & S Consultants, Inc., 525 A.2d 160, 164 (Del. Ch. 1987).
46
     JX 37, ¶ 2.17(b).
47
   JX 35, ¶ 5.1. DR asserts that its obligation under the Investors’ Rights Agreement to
provide financial statements is limited to when those statements are available. DR’s
interpretation would allow it to avoid all obligations regarding financial statements by
never preparing those statements, which conflicts with that Agreement’s provision that
annual and quarterly financial statements shall be furnished to major investors. It is more
reasonable to interpret the language that financial statements be provided “when
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         Nguyen admitted that she does not use accounting programs to track income

and expenses, and that she is “not a good person for all this stuff.” 48 There is no

evidence that DR’s management properly maintained DR’s financial records or

established internal accounting controls or prepared financial statements “in

accordance with generally accepted accounting principles and practices,” on an

annual or quarterly basis (and shared those statements with its major investors).49

         Under DR’s Certificate of Incorporation (“Charter”), as amended on March

1, 2017, “the management of the business and the conduct of the affairs of the

Corporation [is] vested in its Board of Directors.”50 Contrary to the Charter,

important decisions were made on behalf of DR without obtaining the Board’s

available” as allowing flexibility in the timing of the preparation of those statements
following the end of each quarter or year.
48
     Nguyen Dep. Tr. 41:1-8; 43:13; 86:1-16.
49
   DR’s financial documents were missing a number of standard sections such as cash-
flow statements and balance sheets, and the income statement included in the March 1,
2019 Update to investors interchanged equity with revenue. See JX 87; JX 88. And,
although Dwyer, who inspected DR’s books and records, believed “the numbers [were]
correct,” he also requested additional information (bank statements and information from
February 2018 to present) and there is no evidence that information has been provided.
Galbally Dep. Tr. 145:10-24; 366:12-19; see Nguyen Dep. Tr. 37:11-20; 38:22-39:16.
See generally Tanyous v. Happy Child World, Inc., 2008 WL 2780357, at *7 (Del. Ch.
July 17, 2008) (the stockholder “must adduce ‘some evidence’ that warrants further
investigation of the matter,” and in that case, the books and records were “in a
shambles”). In addition, other corporate requirements have not been addressed – for
example, DR’s Charter became void on March 1, 2019 for DR’s failure to make required
corporate filings and pay corporate taxes. Trial Tr. 11:11-14; Del. Dep’t of State: Div. of
Corp. Filings, Delaware.gov (July 9, 2019).

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input. Those decisions included DR’s taking concrete steps towards an ICO in

early 2018,51 as well as DR’s decision not to continue to pursue FDA approval.52

This failure to adhere to proper corporate governance is also reflected in the fact

that the Board met only once – in August of 2017 – while Galbally was a Board

member, and no minutes of that meeting were prepared.53 Galbally and others

made requests to Nguyen that additional Board meetings be held, to no avail.54

         Senetas asked repeatedly for updated information on DR’s operations and

financial status, and only limited information, primarily in the form of written

50
  D.I. 46, Ex. 2 (Amended and Restated Certificate of Incorporation of DeepRadiology
Corporation), Art. VI (1).
51
  DR claims that an ICO never actually occurred and that DR did not accept ICO funds.
Nguyen Dep. Tr. 162:4-6; JX 88. But, in January of 2018, DR had an ICO offering on its
website with a clock counting down to the time when the coins would be available.
Nguyen Dep. Tr. 165:2-5; see JX 151. Galbally discovered the impending ICO, by
happenstance, and took actions, including requesting a special Board meeting and
meeting separately with Nguyen, to prevent the ICO from occurring. See JX 151, 152;
Galbally Dep. Tr. 153:4-11; 155:5-9; 160:11-19.
52
  Senetas asserts that it learned about the plan to discontinue seeking FDA approval for
DR’s products in September of 2018 after the decision had been made without any Board
involvement. Galbally Dep. Tr. 66:19-23. DR’s pursuit of FDA approval of its products
was a key factor in DR’s decision to invest in DR, since it understood FDA approval to
be necessary to market DR’s products for generating revenue. Galbally Dep. Tr. 58:2-11;
59:17-24; 61:5-12.
53
     Galbally Dep. Tr. 69:11-13.
54
  Galbally Dep. Tr. 237:11-16; see, e.g., JX 152. It appears the original understanding
was that the Board would hold formal meetings three times a year. JX 150. If DR has
corporate documents, such as bylaws, that fix the number and timing of Board meetings,
those documents have not been made available to the Court. See JX 37, ¶ 2.21.

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updates, was provided.55           Updates on DR’s status were provided to

stockholders/investors on three occasions – November 2, 2017, May 14, 2018, and

March 1, 2019.56 There are a number of ways in which information provided to

Senetas and other investors could be considered misleading.            Contrary to the

statements in the updates, Nguyen testified that none of DR’s products has been

deployed and DR has had no revenue. Information provided to Senetas and others,

in November of 2017, January of 2018, and March of 2019, give the inaccurate

impression that DR’s products were being deployed or were already deployed, and

also indicated that revenue was forthcoming – anticipated “as early as the first

quarter of 2018.”57 Further, there are questions about the information reported to

55
   Cf. Galbally Dep. Tr. 97:14-20; JX 57; JX 152; JX 153; JX 155. Galbally stated that
he feels like he is “the orange boy.” JX 55. Galbally explained that being the “orange
boy” is an Australian expression related to a player who comes in to bring oranges to the
team but is sent off before the coach tells the team what is happening. Galbally Dep. Tr.
199:1-15. He was not being provided with proper updates, had no detailed information
about the patents or FDA approval, and “every time we seem to be starting to get trials
and into hospitals, that slips and revenues slips.” Galbally Dep. Tr. 199:24-200:7. When
Galbally resigned from the Board in February of 2018, his reasons included his “concerns
around the governance of the company, the lack of financial and legal disclosure to the
Board by management.” JX 124.
56
  The information from all updates is reflected in the March 1, 2019 Update. JX 88.
Nguyen also provided an update to Galbally and Rankin by email on January 8, 2018. JX
157.
57
   The November 2, 2017 Update noted that “[w]e are currently deploying CT products
for actual services in several major hospitals. We anticipate revenue in Q1 2018. We are
planning to ramp up deployment of our products for a couple of thousand facilities in
2018.” JX 88. That information is repeated in Nguyen’s January 8, 2018 email. And, the
March 1, 2019 Update reported that DR “achieved a major milestone, and we now have
certain products commercially deployed.” Id.

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investors on the status of DR’s patent applications,58 and Nguyen and Lufkin’s

efforts with dmed.ai and dmed.ai’s potential effect on DR’s interests.59

       Based upon the foregoing, I recommend that the Court find Senetas has met

its low burden of showing sufficient evidence for the Court to infer possible

mismanagement and wrongdoing at DR. DR has not shown it has systematic

record-keeping procedures or a detailed accounting documenting its financial

affairs; that proper governance procedures were followed since major decisions

were made without Board knowledge or approval; and some of the information

provided to stockholders was misleading. Senetas should be given the information

necessary to effectively address these concerns.60

58
  See JX 88 (November 2, 2017 Update states “[w]e now have filed seven patents with
USPTO and 6 more are in the pipeline”; March 1, 2019 Update states there were eight
patent applications filed between January 4, 2017 and August 9, 2018); JX 170 (patent
lawyer states there are seven pending patent applications for DR as of June 6, 2019).
Senetas questions why none of DR’s patent applications have been made publicly
available since patent applications generally become public after 18 months and seven
applications are significantly older than 18 months. Trial Tr. 46:17-22.
59
   Senetas was not aware of Nguyen and Lufkin’s new dmed.ai initiative until receiving
information in the May 14, 2018 Update about the proposal to roll DR into dmed.ai, a
new company formed by Nguyen and Lufkin. JX 88. When Galbally and Rankin met
with Nguyen on March 1, 2018, she stated she was traveling to South Korea to speak at a
competition on behalf of DR. Galbally Dep. Tr. 160:19-23; 161:4-7. Senetas
subsequently learned that the award received in South Korea in March of 2018 was not
for DR but for dmed.ai. See JX 147; D.I. 46, at 26. However, DR later abandoned the
plan to roll DR into dmed.ai. Nguyen Dep. Tr. 239:23-240:4, 242:24-243:3.
60
  DR argues that Senetas knows that “its investment was not…misappropriated” pointing
to DR’s recognition, through its international medical artificial intelligence challenge
award, to demonstrate its valuable technology. D.I. 43, at 2. It is not the value of DR’s
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      B. Was Senetas’ proper purpose offered under false pretenses, or an
         attempt to “side-step” the proper purpose requirement?

         DR claims that Senetas is wholly or primarily driven by its desire to gain

competitive access to DR’s artificial intelligence technology and human resources

for use in Senetas’ cyber-security business, or for EON Reality, Inc. (“EON”),

another company in which Senetas has invested.61 DR further argues that Senetas

attempted to destroy DR when it publicly wrote off its investment in DR, and by

actively interfering with DR’s business and investor relationships.62            Senetas

responds that it is not a competitor since DR’s artificial intelligence technology for

the medical field is not of any value to Senetas, whose business relates to

“encrypting communications in government systems.”63

         A “defendant may not rebut a proper purpose solely by demonstrating that a

secondary improper purpose or additional ulterior motive also exists.”64 “[O]nce a

proper purpose has been established, any secondary purpose or ulterior motive of

technology that is at issue here, but DR’s actions with regard to its funds and its
stockholders, which support the inference of possible mismanagement and wrongdoing.
61
     D.I. 43, at 17-18.
62
     Id. at 19-20.
63
  Trial Tr. 115:7-116:6. Senetas argues that artificial intelligence is not “some
monolithic thing that works for everybody.” Trial Tr. 117:3-8.
64
  Caspian Select Credit Master Fund Ltd. v. Key Plastics Corp., 2014 WL 686308, at *4
(Del. Ch. Feb. 24, 2014); Carapico v. Philadelphia Stock Exch., Inc., 791 A.2d 787, 791
(Del. Ch. 2000) (“[t]he existence of a secondary purpose does not defeat plaintiff’s claim
that his purpose is bona fide”).

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the stockholder becomes irrelevant.”65 Instead, the defendant must demonstrate

that the stockholder’s stated purpose was offered under false pretenses, or an

attempt to “side-step” the proper purpose requirement, and is improper.66 And,

“[a]n examination of books and records to ascertain the condition of corporate

affairs and the propriety of certain actions is a proper purpose even though the one

who seeks the inspection may be hostile to management” or a business

competitor.67 “A stockholder’s status as a competitor may limit the scope of, or

require imposing conditions upon, inspection relief, but that status does not defeat

the shareholder’s legal entitlement to relief.”68

       Here, Senetas has established a proper purpose of investigating wrongdoing

or mismanagement, so the Court discounts any purported or actual secondary or

ulterior motive, unless DR shows that Senetas’ stated purpose is not its actual

65
  CM & M Grp., Inc. v. Carroll, 453 A.2d 788, 792 (Del. 1982); see also Grimes v. DSC
Commc’ns Corp., 724 A.2d 561, 565 (Del. Ch. 1998) (“Proper purpose has been
construed to mean that a shareholder’s primary purpose must be proper, irrespective of
whether any secondary purpose is proper.”); Skouras v. Admiralty Enterprises, Inc., 386
A.2d 674, 678 (Del. Ch. 1978).
66
   Caspian Select Credit Master Fund Ltd., 2014 WL 686308, at *4; Carapico, 791 A.2d
at 791.
67
  Henshaw v. Am. Cement Corp., 252 A.2d 125, 129 (Del. Ch. 1969); see also BBC
Acquisition Corp. v. Durr-Fillauer Med., Inc., 623 A.2d 85, 90 (Del. Ch. 1992).
68
   Kortum v. Webasto Sunroofs, Inc., 769 A.2d 113, 124 (Del. Ch. 2000); see also
Jefferson v. Dominion Holdings, Inc., 2014 WL 4782961, at *2 (Del. Ch. Sept. 24, 2014)
(holding that courts do not have to resolve whether the stockholder seeking inspection
has a secondary, ulterior motive because “confidentiality concerns can be adequately
protected by a confidentiality order”).

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purpose. DR claims that Senetas’ real purpose is to gain access to DR’s artificial

intelligence technology and experts for its own purposes as a competitor and is

adverse to DR’s interests. DR points to Senetas’ public announcement when it

invested in DR and its involvement with EON to show that Senetas is a competitor

who wants access to DR’s technology and experts.69

         Senetas claims it is not a competitor to DR since its business is encrypting

communications         in    government     systems,     military   and   government

communications, it has no involvement with assisted analysis of medical imaging

data, radiology or healthcare, and artificial intelligence technology is not one size

fits all so DR’s technology is not useful to it.70 It appears that, at the time Senetas

announced its investment in DR, it believed that a relationship with DR and DR’s

personnel, and a “joint collaboration” would be valuable. That said, DR has not

met its burden to show that Senetas is a competitor to DR. The potential for a

“joint collaboration” between Senetas and DR does not necessarily mean they are

competitors. Senetas operates in a different market than DR and there is no

69
   Senetas’ May 11, 2017 press release announcing its investment in DR includes a quote
from Senetas’ CEO: “Senetas needs access to the world’s greatest minds in computing
science and especially deep learning if it is going to remain a global leader in cyber
security solutions. This investment not only gives us access to these people but it is
structured to allow joint technology collaboration between Senetas and DeepRadiology
on researching and developing machine learning based solutions for analyzing and
protecting network data in transit.” JX 158.
70
     See Trial Tr. 115:10-116:10.

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evidence that Senetas is trying to enter the healthcare field or that DR’s artificial

intelligence technology, in its current form, is transferable to the cybersecurity

field.

         DR also asserts that Senetas’ stated purpose is not its actual purpose and that

its intention is to harm DR, as evidenced by publicly announcing its write down of

its investment in DR and its counsel’s letters to DR’s partners/experts.71 Senetas

publicly announced on August 27, 2018 that it was writing down the carrying

value of its investment in DR to “nil,” after acknowledging that DR’s failure to

achieve FDA approval for its technology and missing “milestone and projected

revenue targets.”72       Although Senetas understood that such an action could

negatively affect DR’s future funding,73 it states that, as a publicly traded company

in Australia, it is required to review its carrying value of its investments semi-

annually and, when appropriate, write down its investments, such as it did with

71
   DR also argues that Senetas, an EON investor, began its efforts to destroy DR after DR
turned down EON’s investment in DR. D.I. 43, at 18-19. There is not sufficient evidence
to support that claim. Based upon the evidence, it appears more likely that Senetas, in its
efforts to support additional funding for DR, promoted investment in DR by other entities
with which it had a relationship, such as EON. See JX 114.
72
     Galbally Dep. Tr. 52:23-53:21; JX 38.
73
     See JX 150.

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DR, in a public way.74 I do not find that Senetas’ primary purpose in publicly

announcing its write down of the DR investment was to harm DR.75

         DR also argues that letters sent to DR’s partners/experts by Senetas’ counsel

on June 4, 2018 were intended as a threat, “deliberately designed to disrupt any

relationship between the recipients of the letters and [DR].” 76 Those letters related

to the dispute between DR and dmed.ai, and sought information from recipients

about their involvement with dmed.ai.77 I do not find that Senetas’ intention in

sending the letters was to harm DR, since the letters focused on Nguyen and

Lufkin’s possible move from DR to dmed.ai, which would not have benefitted DR.

         Finally, I conclude that DR has not met its burden of showing that Senetas’

stated purpose is not its actual purpose. And, many of DR’s concerns about

Senetas’ intentions, including Senetas’ competitive access to DR’s technology and

74
  According to Galbally, this was necessary to ensure that the value of Senetas’ assets
were properly reflected on Senetas’ balance sheet for accounting purposes. Galbally Dep.
Tr. 55:8-12; Trial Tr. 59:9-21.
75
   DR also claims Senetas intended to harm DR by not giving DR advance notice of its
public announcement to write down its investment. Trial Tr. 71:21-72:19. DR was aware
that Senetas’ auditors conducted semi-annual reviews of the value of Senetas’
investments and of the possibility that Senetas would write down its investment in DR.
See Trial Tr. 72:2-6; JX 150. The failure to provide advance notice does not, in itself,
show Senetas intended to harm DR.
76
     Trial Tr. 73:16-74:16.
77
     JX 62; JX 63; JX 64; JX 65.

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experts and the protection of its confidential information, can be addressed through

a confidentiality agreement/order.

     C. Should the inspection be conditioned on a confidentiality agreement?

       One common limitation on a stockholder’s inspection under Section 220 is

to condition the inspection on the stockholder entering into a reasonable

confidentiality agreement, in recognition of the corporation’s legitimate interest in

safeguarding highly confidential information from its competitors.78 DR asks that

the production of any documents be subject to a confidentiality order, and Senetas

agrees.79   For many of DR’s concerns, I am convinced that a confidentiality

agreement can safeguard that information and adequately protect DR from

potential harm. Therefore, I condition Senetas’ inspection rights on its entering into

such an agreement with DR and filing it for the Court’s approval.

78
   Cf. Amalgamated Bank v. Yahoo! Inc., 132 A.3d 752, 796-97 (Del. Ch. 2016);
Jefferson v. Dominion Holdings, Inc., 2014 WL 4782961, at *2 (Del. Ch. Sept. 24, 2014)
(“Confidentiality agreements provide a rational, reasonable, and enforceable
methodology for dealing with corporate books and records that otherwise would not be
subject to public review.”); Schoon v. Troy Corp., 2006 WL 1851481, at *2 (Del. Ch.
June 27, 2006), clarified on denial of reargument, 2006 WL 2162036 (Del. Ch. July 24,
2006).
79
   DR argues “there should be a confidentiality order providing that Senetas will not
disclose the information to third parties or use it for any purpose other than the purpose
set forth in its demand.” Trial Tr. 108:18-23; 110:11-18. Senetas agrees that a
confidentiality agreement or protective order will protect documents provided under
Section 220 from improper disclosure or usage. Trial Tr. 122:2-123:3.

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III.   Conclusion

       For the foregoing reasons, I find Senetas has established a credible basis

from which the Court can infer that mismanagement or wrongdoing may have

occurred, and DR has not shown that Senetas has an ulterior motive negating its

proper purpose. I condition inspection of the parties entering into a confidentiality

agreement. I do not address the scope of the inspection in this report. The parties

presented evidence in their pre-trial briefs and at trial on the scope of Senetas’

inspection of DR’s books and records. Given that the parties have the benefit of

the findings in this report regarding proper purpose, once this report becomes final,

the parties should confer regarding specific documents or categories of books and

records that are necessary, sufficient and essential to Senetas’ proper purpose, and

regarding a confidentiality agreement/order. They should submit to the Court any

specific items of disagreement on the scope of the inspection, or on the

confidentiality agreement/order, that remain following those discussions. This is a

final report and notice of exceptions shall be filed within three days of the date of

this report, pursuant to Court of Chancery Rule 144(d)(2), given the expedited and

summary nature of Section 220 proceedings.

                                                 Respectfully,
                                                 /s/ Patricia W. Griffin
                                                 Patricia W. Griffin
                                                 Master in Chancery

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