Early Stage companies require
capital, people, and often the need to protect intellectual
property. Some common errors can be avoided that otherwise
will inhibit or prevent companies from achieving success.
Some of the most common and significant lessons to learn
are:
Properly
Maintaining Organizational Records
The
doctrine of "piercing the corporate veil" is well established
in the corporate law of most states. Under that doctrine,
a court may ignore a corporate entity and permit creditors
of the corporation to assert their claims directly against
the corporation's stockholders, if the court finds that
the corporation is under capitalized and acts as a mere
alter ego for its stockholders. One factor that courts consider
in such cases is whether the corporation has observed corporate
formalities by maintaining proper corporate records.
Another
serious problem is the failure to maintain a complete record
of equity ownership. Nothing will impair an IPO or venture
financing more than confusion about how many shares of a
company are outstanding and who owns them. The Uniform Commercial
Code eliminated the requirement that contracts to sell securities
be in writing. As a result, companies that make careless
oral or e-mail promises to sell stock or grant options are
creating serious future problems.
Practical
Solution: All promises of stock options must be signed and
in writing. All Corporate records must properly reflect
share ownership.
"Securities
Act"). Regulation D imposes particularly stringent conditions
on sales of securities to persons who are "unaccredited
investors." In the SEC's view, unaccredited investors tend
to be less sophisticated investors who require special protection
when buying stock. An "unaccredited investor" is any individual
who, generally, is NOT one of the following:
- A
director, executive officer or general partner of the
issuer;
- A
person with a net worth of more than $1,000,000; or
- A
person who has had income in excess of $200,000 in each
of the two most recent years (or joint income with his
or her spouse in excess of $300,000 in each of those years)
and has a reasonable expectation of reaching the same
income level in the current year.
In
offerings involving more than $1,000,000 of securities,
Regulation D requires that companies provide unaccredited
investors with specific written information about the company
and its proposed sale of securities.
While
Regulation D does not prohibit selling securities to unaccredited
investors, it makes doing so more complicated than selling
securities only to accredited investors. This complexity
increases the chance that a company will make a technical
mistake in the offering.
Technical
securities law violations can strike back at the company
at the time of its IPO or if the company later fails and
the investors determine to seek redress directly from those
behind the offering. In connection with the IPO, the SEC
will carefully study all prior issuance of stock by the
company and demand that it take immediate action to cure
any past violations of securities laws. Those remedial actions
can delay, stall or even kill the IPO.
Practical
Solution: Either avoid selling securities to unaccredited
investors in early rounds, if possible, or do a full and
complete offering circular. Investor questionnaires must
be completed from each investor in order to verify their
accredited status.
"Cheap
Stock" Problems
Grants of low-priced stock options and restricted
stock have become indispensable tools to attract and retain
talented employees. However, granting below-market stock
options or restricted stock without careful planning can
give rise to "cheap stock" problems.
"Cheap
stock" problems arise when the SEC decides that a company
has not properly charged against its earnings the fair market
value of stock and option awards granted. The SEC may take
this position if there is a significant difference between
the value of the stock that the company has been using for
purposes of calculating compensation expense and the price
at which the company's stock will be sold in an IPO. In
such circumstances, the SEC will demand that the company
restate its earnings to reflect the higher level of compensation
expense (and lower level of earnings) that the company would
have incurred in earlier periods had the stock been properly
valued. This demand can have a devastating effect on a company's
plans for an IPO and the tax consequences to the stock recipient
can be enormous. If the fair market value at the time of
grant was higher than the option or grant price, the stock
recipient could be personally liable for ordinary income
taxes on the value received, which tax liability is payable
immediately even though no cash is available for payment.
To
evidence the value of equity compensation grants, companies
should keep a careful record of any contemporaneous sales
of the company's stock to third parties. Appraisals by a
qualified investment banker or valuation specialist are
also good evidence of value. Appraisals made at the time
stock or options are issued are generally more persuasive
than those made in retrospect on the eve of an IPO.
Where
companies cannot point to contemporaneous same-price purchases
or appraisals, they must be ready with a credible explanation
of any significant difference between the value attributed
to the stock or option grants and the IPO price. Most will
point to goals achieved or accomplishments made by the company
between the time of the grants and the time of the IPO.
Accomplishments might be meeting sales targets, entering
into important contracts or obtaining patent or other legal
protections for the company's intellectual property.
Practical
Solution: Make sure the value of the stock granted reflects
its fair market value at the time of grant by contemporaneously
reflecting in the minutes the justification for the price.
Employee Stock-Option Plans
A company must adopt a stock-option plan prior to
granting stock options to employees. Failure to do so can
result in the loss of significant tax benefits and the imposition
of tax liability on key employees.
Section
83 of the Internal Revenue Code (the "IRC") governs the
taxation of employees who receive stock options in exchange
for services. Under Section 83, an employee is taxed
at the time he exercises an option, rather than at the time
it is granted to him, if the price of the option is equivalent
to the fair market value of the stock. The tax is assessed
at ordinary income rates on the difference between the fair
market value of the underlying stock on the date of exercise
and the exercise price of the option, which price may be
very low. This tax will be due and payable, whether or not
the employee sells the stock he receives, upon the exercise
of the option. If the employee does sell the stock, at the
time of exercise or at anytime thereafter, he will be taxed
again on the difference between the fair market value of
the stock on the date of option and the sales price of the
stock. This tax will be assessed at capital gains rates
if the employee held the stock for more than 12 months following
the exercise of the option, or at ordinary income rates
if not.
Qualified
incentive stock option plans ("ISO"), can provide a way
for companies to reduce the tax burden of options on themselves
and their employees. ISOs permit an employee to postpone
recognizing income on option exercises until the time the
employee actually sells the underlying stock. By postponing
taxation of that income, an ISO relieves the employee of
the need to find the cash necessary to pay taxes on the
stock appreciation until the time he actually sells the
stock and has the cash available to pay the tax.
Practical
Solution: Adopt an ISO, which must:
- Be
in writing.
- Be
approved in writing by the shareholders of the company
within 12 months before or after the plan is adopted by
the company's board of directors.
- Provide
that options be granted within 10 years following approval
of the plan by the shareholders and expire within 10 years
following the date of the grant (five years if the options
are granted to persons holding 10 percent or more of the
company's stock).
- Provide
that options are granted only to persons who remain employees
of the company (but not directors or consultants) until
not more than three months prior to exercise (or one year
in the event of death or disability).
- Ensure
that options have a set exercise price at no less than
100 percent of the fair market value as of the grant date
(or 110 percent of the fair market value if the option
holder is a 10-percent shareholder).
- Limit
the amount of option stock that can vest to an option
holder in any calendar year to $100,000 (based on the
grant date value).
- Prohibit
the transfer of options, except by will or the laws of
descent and distribution.
- Establish
an appropriate vesting schedule.
The Section 83(b) Election
Employees,
directors and contractors of the company who receive awards
of restricted stock need to make an important tax election
under Section 83(b) of the IRC. Restricted stock awards
are a form of equity compensation that is used as an alternative
or supplement to grants of stock options. Awards are restricted
in
that the recipient cannot transfer the stock he receives,
and the company will have the right to repurchase the stock
for a below-fair value price if the recipient terminates
his employment. These restrictions generally lapse over
time as the stock vests.
Section
83 provides that as the stock vests, the recipient must
recognize income equal to the difference between what the
recipient paid for the stock and the fair market value of
the stock on the vesting date. Where the value of the restricted
stock has appreciated substantially between the date of
grant and the vesting date, the tax liability can be substantial.
Moreover, since the now unrestricted stock may still be
illiquid (e.g. because of the lack of a market for the stock),
the recipient may have no ready source of cash from which
to pay the tax.
Section
83(b) is intended to relieve the tax burden that the vesting
of restricted stock places on award recipients. Section
83(b) permits recipients of restricted stock awards to elect
to be taxed immediately upon the receipt of the restricted
equity, rather than upon the lapse of the restrictions.
Practical
Solution: Make the Section 83(b) election so that
tax will be paid at the time of receipt of an award of restricted
stock on the difference, if any, between the fair market
value of the stock and the purchase price paid. Since the
fair market value of stock in early stage companies is usually
very low, the recipient will likely owe little if any tax
upon receipt of the restricted stock. The recipient will
only owe additional tax upon his sale of the stock, and
then potentially at favorable capital gains rates.
Failing to Obtain Good Title to Intellectual
Property
Many early stage technology companies pay little
attention to the legal formalities necessary to obtain ownership
of intellectual property.
Patents
Under certain patent law doctrines of employee invention,
the patent rights to an invention made by an employee belong
to the employee (and not to the employee's employer), even
if the employee conceived and developed the invention in
the course of his employment on the employer's time and
used the employer's tools and materials. The employee should
assign those rights to their employer by a written document
which must be supported by consideration. Continuation of
employment alone may not suffice.
Some
states also limit the circumstances under which an employer
can require an employee to assign patent rights and may
require the employer to make certain disclosures to the
employee in connection with such assignments (see Section
2870 of the California Labor Code). Assignments of rights
to employers that do not comply with these requirements
may be void.
Copyrights
Under copyright law, title to a work belongs to its
author upon creation of the work, not to the creator's employer
or the person paying for the work. Although the work-for-hire
doctrine in the Copyright Act may deem the employer to be
the author of a work under certain circumstances, those
circumstances are limited and not applicable to third party
contractors.
In
a work-at-home, use-your-own-laptop, project-based environment,
the answer of whether a worker is an employee or contractor
can sometimes be surprising. When a work is not a "work
made for hire," an employer may still obtain ownership of
the copyright to works created by its employee -- but only
by obtaining written assignment of the work from the employee
that is supported by consideration.
Practical
Solution: Have all contractors and, as appropriate, employees,
sign an agreement transferring all of their right, title
and interest in the intellectual property created to the
company as a condition of initial employment.
Trade Secret Protection Program
Trade secrets are among the most valuable forms
of intellectual property. To be subject to protection as
a trade secret, confidential information must have economic
value and its owner must take "reasonable precautions" to
keep it secret.
Early
stage companies often err by not taking the "reasonable
precautions" necessary to turn their confidential business
information into legally protectable trade secrets.
Practical
Solution: Adopt a formal trade secret protection policy.
The policy should establish standard procedures and practices
that the company, its employees and third party contractors
must follow to protect the confidential information. Policies
should include at least some of the following provisions:
- Employees
should be informed in writing of the importance of maintaining
the secrecy of the company's trade secrets.
- Confidential
information should be made available to employees only
on a need-to-know basis.
- Written
confidentiality agreements should be obtained from all
employees and consultants.
- Material
containing confidential information should be locked in
safes or desks at night and all programs containing confidential
information should be password protected.
- Departing
employees should have exit interviews in which their ongoing
obligation to protect the company's confidential information
is explained and the return of all documents and programs
owned by the company is required.
Trademark Protection
Branding is a driving force behind many early stage
companies. However, registering a domain name or using a
meta-tag in a Web site before thoroughly confirming the
availability of the corresponding trademark can have serious
consequences.
The
owner of a trademark may preclude others from using names
which are similar to its mark and that are likely to cause
confusion in the minds of consumers. To acquire trademark
rights to a name or symbol, a company need merely use the
trademark in commerce. Registration is not required.
A
company may be liable for infringing the trademark of another
if it uses a domain name or meta-tag that is similar to
an existing trademark and the domain name or meta-tag identifies
a Web site that either sells goods that may be confused
with those of the trademark owner or interferes with or
diverts the trademark owner's business.
A
company may also be subject to criminal penalties under
the Anti-Cybersquatting Consumer Protection Act, if it knowingly
and improperly registers a domain name that infringes upon
an existing trademark.
Practical
Solution: Conduct a full and complete trademark search before
selecting a domain name.
Licensing Technology Owned by Others
Companies must pay careful attention to the exact scope
of the rights they are licensing. Licenses may be exclusive,
often with quota requirements, or non-exclusive. They may
include a right to sublicense the rights or allow for third
party contract manufacturing, or not. They should allocate
responsibility for prosecuting those who infringe and for
defending against claims of infringement that may be brought
by other patent holders.
The
consequences of patent infringement can be severe. A court
may enjoin an infringer from using the patented process
and, in cases of intentional infringement, may award damages
to the patent owner of up to three times its actual losses
from the infringing use. Infringing upon a patent, either
out of ignorance or as the consequence of an inadequate
licensing agreement, can be expensive and disruptive to
the business of an early stage company.
Practical
Solution: Hire experienced intellectual property counsel
to make sure the company gets what it needs and understands
what it may not have.
Hiring Former Employees of a Competitor
Where new employees have had access to the trade secrets
of a competitor, problems may arise.
The
company should inquire whether the person is subject to
a restrictive covenant in favor of a former employer. Restrictive
covenants generally fall into two categories: Covenants
of non-competition and covenants of non-disclosure. State
laws vary substantially in their treatment of non-competition
covenants. In California they are void, unless tied to the
sale of a business. In other jurisdictions, a court's willingness
to enforce a specific covenant may turn on factors such
as the reasonableness of the covenant's term and geographic
restrictions, the burden of compliance on the former employee
and the cost to the public of enforcing the covenant. Covenants
of non-disclosure of trade secrets are more readily enforceable,
though the question of what information they may rightfully
protect from disclosure can be contested.
Using
a relatively new legal principle known as the doctrine of
inevitable disclosure, several courts have recently enjoined
companies from employing former employees of competitors
where the court felt that the nature of the employee's new
duties would inevitably lead to the disclosure of the former
employer's trade secrets. Companies hiring former employees
of competitors should carefully tailor the job responsibilities
of such new hires so as to minimize the chances of a former
employer bringing an inevitable disclosure claim.
Practical
Solution: Query all new hires on whether they are subject
to any restrictions regarding their former employment.
These
issues are always present in early stage companies. Carefully
managing through them often determines a company’s success
or failure. The axiom that an ounce of prevention is worth
a pound of cure is particularly true for new organizations.
About
Paul R. Katz
Paul R. Katz is a shareholder in the Los
Angeles office of Greenberg Traurig, a national law firm
comprised of over 800 lawyers and focuses his practice on
internet, e-commerce, convergent media, intellectual property
and information technology matters. He provides services
to emerging companies as well as to larger organizations
procuring technology and can be reached at katzp@gtlaw.com.