Telebackup Systems faces a $1.5-million suit from D. Grant Macdonald Capital of Vancouver, the private financial advisory and merchant banking firm owned by Mr. Macdonald, the president of Vancouver-based brokerage Brink Hudson & Lefever. In a statement of claim filed Friday in the Supreme Court of British Columbia, Macdonald Capital claims it is entitled to options on Telebackup's rights offering last year, based on financial advisory work done. The suit seeks options for ten per-cent of the value of any financing arranged. Under the rights offering, Telebackup effectively issued 1.82 million shares at $1.50 and 914,000 warrants, exercisable at $3 per share with a $4 cap. Macdonald Capital effectively seeks options on 182,000 shares at $1.50 and 91,400 warrants. Shares of Telebackup, a star Canadian tech stock this year amid a weak overall tech stock market, rose 35 cents to $9.50 on the Alberta Stock Exchange on Monday. The stock, which traded at $4 in mid-July, has risen from $5.30 on Sept. 1, when Telebackup disclosed a $10-per-share stock merger offer from Veritas Software. Based on the current $9.50 share stock price, Macdonald's claimed options are worth $1.44-million, while the warrants are worth $90,000. The court dispute traces back to Telebackup's engagement of Macdonald Capital as its non-exclusive financial advisor on Apr. 25, 1997. Macdonald claims Telebackup agreed to pay it $5,000 per month plus expenses, a two per-cent commission on all money raised by third-party underwriters or financiers, a negotiable commission for all money raised directly and the disputed ten per-cent options. In a court-filed affidavit, Rick Mark of Vancouver, Macdonald Capital's former executive vice-president, notes the initial engagement agreement was signed two weeks after he and Mr. Macdonald met with Byron Osing, Telebackup's president and chief executive, CFO Lynn Thurlow and Karsten Nilson, a founding shareholder of Telebackup. Mr. Osing and Mr. Mark met with a handful of Bay Street finance targets in early May, 1997, starting with Peter Legault, a director of brokerage Thomson Kernaghan. Mr. Mark notes that Mr. Legault, a broker with strong telecommunications experience, already knew telecom industry consultant Eamon Hoey. Although Mr. Thurlow told Grant Macdonald Capital in a May 21 letter that Telebackup was "very happy with the progress made to date," Mr. Osing challenged the ten per-cent options demand a week later. In a court-filed letter, the Telebackup president noted he consulted two incoming directors, "very successful" tech industry veterans. These savvy directors, presumably including Mr. Hoey, called Macdonald Capital's requests for warrants and options "completely unreasonable, given standard ASE and TSE guidelines" according to Mr. Osing. The dispute between Macdonald Capital and Byron Osing has simmered ever since. "Have a good weekend and be prepared for verbal/physical abuse when you meet up with Byron," Mr. Thurlow told Mr. Mark in a June 13, 1997, fax-memo. An attached outline reviewed a proposed revised engagement agreement. Mr. Thurlow noted Telebackup's milestone targets included an initial $1-million private placement, a $3-million to $5-million Toronto underwriting, completion of a listing on the TSE and the successful completion of a secondary public offering and a potential listing on Nasdaq's National Market System. Telebackup proposed offering options on 160,000 founders' shares and options for 60,000 more shares from the company itself, contingent on stipulated performance. Telebackup formally terminated Macdonald Capital on Nov. 21, 1997, and stopped paying the $5,000 monthly retainer. Mr. Thurlow reminded Mr. Mark that Macdonald failed to raise the $1-million private placement. "The proposed options cannot be granted since they are performance-based for future services and were not approved by the board or regulatory bodies. Our legal counsel in fact has informed us that the Alberta Stock Exchange will never approve the granting of any options under this agreement," stated Mr. Thurlow in the termination letter. By this time, Telebackup had paid Macdonald Capital $80,000, including $55,000 as commission on the $2.75-million rights offering, which was handled by Thomson Kernaghan. "As the market for our shares has appreciated considerably, we hope you have also profited from the sale of whatever shares you have acquired and sold or are currently holding. We feel this is a generous compensation for the work performed," stated Mr. Thurlow. Macdonald also received a further $54,225 in July 1998 on the warrants portion of the offering, boosting its total fees to $134,000. With Telebackup's shares now soaring, Macdonald Capital has renewed its effort to collect on its options demand. Lawyer Robert Taylor of Walsh & Company seeks unspecified damages and a declaration that Telebackup has been "unjustly enriched" at the expense of Macdonald Capital. (c) Copyright 1998 Canjex Publishing Ltd. canada-stockwatch.com |