Table of Contents

As filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission on May 12, 2014

Registration No. 333-


UNITED STATES
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
Washington, D.C. 20549



FORM S-1
REGISTRATION STATEMENT
UNDER
THE SECURITIES ACT OF 1933



Marinus Pharmaceuticals, Inc.
(Exact name of registrant as specified in its charter)

Delaware
(State or other jurisdiction of
incorporation or organization)
  2834
(Primary Standard Industrial
Classification Code Number)
  20-0198082
(I.R.S. Employer
Identification Number)

142 Temple St., Suite 205
New Haven, CT 06510
(203) 315-0566

(Address, including zip code and telephone number, including area code, of registrant's principal executive offices)



Christopher M. Cashman
President and Chief Executive Officer
Marinus Pharmaceuticals, Inc.
142 Temple St., Suite 205
New Haven, CT 06510
(203) 315-0566

(Name, address, including zip code and telephone number, including area code, of agent for service)




Kathleen M. Shay, Esq.
John W. Kauffman, Esq.
Duane Morris LLP
30 South 17th Street
Philadelphia, PA 19103-4196
(215) 979-1210

 

Thomas S. Levato, Esq.
Goodwin Procter LLP
The New York Times Building
620 Eighth Avenue
New York, NY 10018
(212) 813-8800



Approximate date of commencement of proposed sale to the public:
As soon as practicable after the effective date of this registration statement.

If any of the securities being registered on this form are to be offered on a delayed or continuous basis pursuant to Rule 415 under the Securities Act of 1933, as amended (the "Securities Act"), check the following box.     o

If this form is filed to register additional securities for an offering pursuant to Rule 462(b) under the Securities Act, check the following box and list the Securities Act registration statement number of the earlier effective registration statement for the same offering.     o

If this form is a post-effective amendment filed pursuant to Rule 462(c) under the Securities Act, check the following box and list the Securities Act registration statement number of the earlier effective registration statement for the same offering.     o

If this form is a post-effective amendment filed pursuant to Rule 462(d) under the Securities Act, check the following box and list the Securities Act registration statement number of the earlier effective registration statement for the same offering.     o

Indicate by check mark whether the registrant is a large accelerated filer, an accelerated filer, a non-accelerated filer or a smaller reporting company. See the definitions of "large accelerated filer," "accelerated filer" and "smaller reporting company" in Rule 12b-2 of the Exchange Act. (Check one):

Large accelerated filer  o   Accelerated filer  o   Non-accelerated filer  ý
(Do not check if a smaller
reporting company)
  Smaller reporting company  o



CALCULATION OF REGISTRATION FEE

       
 
Title of Each Class of Securities
to be Registered

  Proposed Maximum
Aggregate Offering
Price(1)(2)

  Amount of
Registration Fee

 

Common Stock, $0.001 par value per share

  $63,250,000   $8,147

 

(1)
Estimated solely for the purpose of calculating the registration fee pursuant to Rule 457(o) under the Securities Act of 1933.

(2)
Includes common stock issuable upon exercise of the underwriters' option to purchase additional shares of common stock.




The registrant hereby amends this registration statement on such date or dates as may be necessary to delay its effective date until the registrant shall file a further amendment which specifically states that this registration statement shall thereafter become effective in accordance with Section 8(a) of the Securities Act of 1933, as amended, or until the registration statement shall become effective on such date as the Commission acting pursuant to said Section 8(a), may determine.

   


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The information in this preliminary prospectus is not complete and may be changed. We may not sell these securities until the registration statement filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission is effective. This preliminary prospectus is not an offer to sell these securities and it is not soliciting offers to buy these securities in any state or other jurisdiction where the offer or sale is not permitted.

SUBJECT TO COMPLETION, DATED MAY 12, 2014

PRELIMINARY PROSPECTUS


GRAPHIC

             Shares
Common Stock
$             per Share


This is the initial public offering of Marinus Pharmaceuticals, Inc. We are offering            shares of common stock. Prior to this offering, there has been no public market for our common stock. We estimate that the initial public offering price will be between $            and $            per share.

We intend to apply to list our common stock on The NASDAQ Global Market under the symbol "MRNS."

We are an "emerging growth company" under the Jumpstart Our Business Startups Act of 2012 and applicable Securities and Exchange Commission rules, and, as such, have elected to comply with certain reduced public company reporting requirements for this prospectus and future filings. See "Prospectus Summary—Implications of Being an Emerging Growth Company."


Investing in our common stock involves a high degree of risk. See "Risk Factors" beginning on page 11.


 
  Per Share
  Total
 

Initial public offering price

  $     $    

Underwriting discounts and commissions (1)

  $     $    

Proceeds, before expenses, to us

  $     $    

(1)
See "Underwriting" beginning on page 134 for additional information regarding underwriting compensation.

We have granted the underwriters a 30-day option to purchase up to                        additional shares of common stock on the same terms and conditions set forth above.

Certain of our stockholders have indicated an interest in purchasing an aggregate of approximately $             million of shares of our common stock in this offering at the initial public offering price. However, because indications of interest are not binding agreements or commitments to purchase, the underwriters may determine to sell more, less or no shares in this offering to any of these stockholders, and any of these stockholders may determine to purchase more, less or no shares in this offering. The underwriters will receive the same underwriting discount on any shares purchased by these stockholders as they will on any other shares sold to the public in this offering.

The underwriters expect to deliver the shares to purchasers on                                    , 2014.


Neither the Securities and Exchange Commission nor any state securities commission has approved or disapproved of these securities or determined if this prospectus is truthful or complete. Any representation to the contrary is a criminal offense.


Stifel   JMP Securities



Oppenheimer & Co.   Janney Montgomery Scott

The date of this prospectus is                                    , 2014.


TABLE OF CONTENTS

 
  Page  

PROSPECTUS SUMMARY

    1  

RISK FACTORS

    11  

SPECIAL NOTE REGARDING FORWARD-LOOKING STATEMENTS

    47  

USE OF PROCEEDS

    50  

DIVIDEND POLICY

    50  

CAPITALIZATION

    51  

DILUTION

    53  

SELECTED FINANCIAL DATA

    55  

MANAGEMENT'S DISCUSSION AND ANALYSIS OF FINANCIAL CONDITION AND RESULTS OF OPERATIONS

    57  

BUSINESS

    71  

MANAGEMENT

    102  

EXECUTIVE AND DIRECTOR COMPENSATION

    109  

CERTAIN RELATIONSHIPS AND RELATED PARTY TRANSACTIONS

    119  

PRINCIPAL STOCKHOLDERS

    121  

DESCRIPTION OF CAPITAL STOCK

    125  

SHARES ELIGIBLE FOR FUTURE SALE

    130  

MATERIAL U.S. TAX CONSIDERATIONS FOR NON-U.S. HOLDERS OF OUR COMMON STOCK

    132  

UNDERWRITING

    136  

LEGAL MATTERS

    144  

EXPERTS

    144  

WHERE YOU CAN FIND MORE INFORMATION

    144  

INDEX TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

    F-1  



         Until and including                        , 2014 (25 days after the commencement of this offering), all dealers that buy, sell or trade shares of our common stock, whether or not participating in this offering, may be required to deliver a prospectus. This delivery requirement is in addition to the dealers' obligation to deliver a prospectus when acting as underwriters and with respect to their unsold allotments or subscriptions.



        We are responsible for the information contained in this prospectus. We have not authorized anyone to provide you with different information, and we take no responsibility for any other information others may give you. If anyone provides you with different or inconsistent information, you should not rely on it. We are not, and the underwriters are not, making an offer to sell these securities in any state or other jurisdiction where the offer or sale is not permitted. You should not assume that the information contained in this prospectus is accurate as of any date other than the date on the front of this prospectus, regardless of the time of delivery of this prospectus or of any sale of the common stock.

        Unless otherwise indicated, information contained in this prospectus concerning our industry and the markets in which we operate, including our general expectations, market opportunity and market share, is based on information from our own management estimates and research, as well as from industry and general publications and research, surveys and studies conducted by third parties. Management estimates are derived from publicly available information, our knowledge of our industry and assumptions based on such information and knowledge, which we believe to be reasonable. Our management estimates have not been verified by any independent source, and we have not independently verified any third-party information. In addition, assumptions and estimates of our and our industry's future performance are necessarily subject to a high degree of uncertainty and risk due to a variety of factors, including those described in "Risk Factors." These and other factors could cause our future performance to differ materially from our assumptions and estimates. See "Special Note Regarding Forward-Looking Statements."


        We use our registered trademark, Marinus Pharmaceuticals, in this prospectus. This prospectus also includes trademarks, trade names and service marks that are the property of other organizations. Solely for convenience, trademarks and trade names referred to in this prospectus appear without the ® and ™ symbols, but those references are not intended to indicate, in any way, that we will not assert, to the fullest extent under applicable law, our rights or that the applicable owner will not assert its rights, to these trademarks and trade names.

        For investors outside the United States: neither we nor the underwriters have done anything that would permit this offering or possession or distribution of this prospectus in any jurisdiction where action for that purpose is required, other than in the United States. Persons outside the United States who come into possession of this prospectus must inform themselves about, and observe any restrictions relating to, the offering of the shares of common stock and the distribution of this prospectus outside the United States.


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PROSPECTUS SUMMARY

         This summary highlights certain information about us and this offering contained elsewhere in this prospectus. Because it is only a summary, it does not contain all of the information that you should consider before investing in shares of our common stock and it is qualified in its entirety by, and should be read in conjunction with, the more detailed information appearing elsewhere in this prospectus. Before you decide to invest in our common stock, you should read the entire prospectus carefully, including "Risk Factors" beginning on page 11 and the financial statements and related notes thereto included in this prospectus.

         Unless the context indicates otherwise, as used in this prospectus, the terms "Marinus," "we," "us," "our," "our company" and "our business" refer to Marinus Pharmaceuticals, Inc.


Overview

Our Company

        We are a clinical stage biopharmaceutical company focused on developing and commercializing innovative neuropsychiatric therapeutics. Our clinical stage product candidate, ganaxolone, is a small molecule that is a synthetic analog of allopregnanolone, an endogenous neurosteroid produced in the central nervous system that modulates the brain neurotransmitter gamma-aminobutyric acid, or GABA. Our lead indication for ganaxolone is as an adjunctive, or add-on, therapy for the treatment of partial, also known as focal, onset seizures in adults with epilepsy. By targeting the same spectrum of GABA A receptors as endogenous allopregnanolone, ganaxolone delivers its therapeutic benefit through a natural mechanism that we believe may offer safety and efficacy advantages compared to other marketed antiepileptic medications. We have completed a Phase 2 clinical trial in 147 patients with focal onset seizures demonstrating that patients who added ganaxolone to their medication regimen experienced a statistically significant reduction in seizures as compared to patients who added placebo. We are currently enrolling patients in a randomized Phase 2b clinical trial, which we intend to expand so that it may serve as one of our adequate and well-controlled clinical trials in a registration filing with the United States Food and Drug Administration, or FDA, or the European Medicines Agency, or EMA, for ganaxolone in epilepsy. We expect data from this trial in the second half of 2015. In addition, we believe ganaxolone has potential in a broad range of neuropsychiatric disorders, including orphan indications. We currently have a proof-of-concept Phase 2 clinical trial in progress for ganaxolone as a treatment for behaviors in Fragile X Syndrome, or FXS, an orphan indication in which GABA activity has been implicated in the expression of the disorder. We plan to pursue other potential indications related to our mechanism when non-dilutive opportunities arise.

Ganaxolone Mechanism of Action

        The effects of allopregnanolone have been studied for over two decades and its role in controlling seizures and improving anxiety, mood and sleep through positive modulation of GABA A type receptors is well documented. Despite these positive characteristics, we believe allopregnanolone is not suitable for chronic use due to potential undesired steroidal effects. Ganaxolone was designed to have the same GABA modulation effects as allopregnanolone without steroidal effects. Ganaxolone and allopregnanolone differ from other GABA agents by interacting with unique binding sites on the GABA A receptor that are located both within, or synaptic, and outside, or extrasynaptic, the GABA synapse. Ganaxolone's activation of the extrasynaptic receptor is a unique mechanism that provides stabilizing effects that we believe differentiates it from other drugs that increase GABA signaling. Preclinical studies provide evidence that the GABA modulatory activity of ganaxolone is responsible for its anticonvulsive activity in epileptic seizures and its antianxiety effects in FXS and other neuropsychiatric disorders.

 

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Our Pipeline

        We are developing ganaxolone for multiple neuropsychiatric indications, including the following:

GRAPHIC

        We have global rights to develop and commercialize ganaxolone, excluding Russia and certain other eastern European nations. We have seven United States patents and corresponding foreign patents and patent applications directed to solid and liquid ganaxolone formulations and methods for the making and use thereof, the earliest of which will expire in 2026, excluding possible patent extension. We also have a United States patent and corresponding foreign patents and patent applications covering our ganaxolone synthesis process, the earliest of which will expire in 2030, excluding possible patent extension.

Ganaxolone in Epilepsy

        Epilepsy affects approximately 50 million people globally, and over 5 million people are under treatment in the United States, Europe and Japan. According to IMS Health, global sales of antiepileptic drugs, or AEDs, were approximately $14 billion in 2011. Existing AEDs attempt to control seizures through a variety of mechanisms and are effective in reducing seizure frequency in many patients. Currently available medications create a number of side effects, including mood changes, increased cardiovascular risks, weight changes and potential reproductive toxicity. Approximately 60% of patients will achieve an adequate level of seizure control with a single AED, and the remainder will resort to using multiple drugs, or polypharmacy. Even with polypharmacy, approximately 30 to 35% of all patients do not reach an acceptable level of seizure control. We estimate that the market opportunity for this refractory patient population, which will be ganaxolone's initial target segment, will exceed $4 billion in the United States, Europe and Japan.

        We believe ganaxolone to be a first-in-class therapy with potential to provide meaningful treatment advantages for adults with focal onset seizures who do not achieve adequate seizure control from, have developed tolerance to, or have safety concerns with currently available medications. We believe ganaxolone, if approved, may provide the following benefits for patients:

    Efficacy for refractory patients with focal onset seizures.   Our completed Phase 2 clinical trial in patients with refractory focal onset seizures demonstrated that patients who added ganaxolone to their medication regimen experienced a statistically significant reduction in seizures as compared to patients who added placebo.

 

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    Improved safety and tolerability profile.   Ganaxolone was engineered to be a synthetic analog of a natural molecule, allopregnanolone. Completed preclinical safety studies and Phase 1 and 2 clinical trials involving approximately 1,000 subjects show ganaxolone to be generally safe and well-tolerated, without evidence of toxicity to heart, liver, blood or other body systems and without many of the side effects common to other AEDs. We believe this safety profile may make ganaxolone a treatment of choice in antiepileptic polypharmacy regimens.

    Improved reproductive toxicity profile.   Based on ganaxolone's mechanism, and preclinical and clinical findings to date, we believe ganaxolone will offer a lower risk for reproductive toxicity than many currently available AEDs, which we believe would be an important safety differentiator for women of childbearing age.

        We have successfully completed a double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled, Phase 2 clinical trial of ganaxolone as an adjunctive treatment in 147 patients with refractory focal onset seizures. Ganaxolone satisfied the primary efficacy endpoint of the study, a reduction in seizure frequency, and was considered to be generally safe and well tolerated. In this clinical trial, ganaxolone demonstrated a 20% mean seizure reduction from baseline compared to placebo in a difficult-to-treat refractory patient population. In the open label extension to the study, patients who were switched to ganaxolone from placebo experienced reductions in seizures similar to the ganaxolone group in the blinded study. Ganaxolone has also been studied in a Phase 2 proof-of-concept clinical trial as the sole treatment, or monotherapy, for adults with treatment resistant focal onset seizures in which the primary endpoint was duration of treatment prior to withdrawal from the trial due to seizures. In the trial, 50% of ganaxolone subjects completed the study compared to 25% of placebo subjects.

        In October 2013 we initiated a Phase 2b clinical trial in epilepsy patients with focal onset seizures to evaluate ganaxolone compared to placebo as adjunctive treatment for 12 weeks. This randomized, placebo-controlled trial was designed to enroll approximately 150 adult subjects with focal onset seizures. With the proceeds from this offering, we intend to increase the size of this trial to approximately 300 subjects in order to meet statistical power requirements so that it may be considered as an adequate and well-controlled trial in an FDA or EMA filing package for registration. We expect to complete this clinical trial in the second half of 2015.

Ganaxolone in FXS

        FXS is a genetic condition that causes intellectual disability, behavioral and learning challenges and various physical characteristics. Approximately one million individuals in the United States have, or are at risk for developing, a Fragile X-associated disorder, with approximately 100,000 people having FXS. There are no known cures or approved therapies for FXS at the present time. Treatment approaches focus primarily on supportive care and medications addressing development delays, learning disabilities, and social and behavioral problems caused by the disease.

        FXS is caused by a genetic mutation. In animal models of this mutation certain brain regions show lower levels of the extrasynaptic GABA A receptors and reduction of proteins and enzymes responsible for GABA function. As a result of ganaxolone's ability to modulate GABA function, we believe that there is a strong rationale for studying ganaxolone for treatment of behaviors associated with FXS in children. We are currently conducting a Phase 2 proof-of-concept randomized, placebo-controlled, clinical trial in approximately 60 FXS patients. This trial is being conducted in collaboration with the MIND Institute at the University of California, Davis, which receives funding from the DoD for the trial. We expect the trial to be completed during the second half of 2015.

Additional Indications

        Due to its mechanism of action, we believe ganaxolone may have potential in a variety of neurologic and psychiatric disorders beyond our current clinical focus; however, we will need to undertake additional

 

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clinical studies in order to obtain additional labeled indications. Potential additional indications include generalized anxiety disorder, posttraumatic stress disorder and depression, multiple sclerosis, addictive behaviors such as alcoholism and smoking, attention deficit hyperactivity disorder, or ADHD, and orphan disorders such as Super Refractory Status Epilepticus, or SRSE, Neimann Pick Disease, Type C and certain autism subtypes. If we decide to pursue any additional indications for ganaxolone, we would need to undertake additional clinical trials.

Ganaxolone Safety and Tolerability

        In Phase 1 and 2 clinical trials, ganaxolone has been administered in approximately 1,000 subjects at therapeutically relevant dose levels and treatment regimens for up to two years. In these clinical trials, ganaxolone was generally well tolerated with no adverse effects on cardiovascular, liver, blood or other systems. In animal studies there was no evidence of reproductive toxicity or other toxicities after long-term administration of ganaxolone.

Our Strategy

        Our goal is to maximize the value of ganaxolone as a first-in-class innovative neuropsychiatric therapy with a portfolio of diversified indications. The key elements of our strategy to achieve this goal include:

    executing our registration studies and pursue regulatory approval for ganaxolone for adjunctive treatment of focal onset seizures and other epilepsy indications;

    expanding indications for ganaxolone;

    commercializing ganaxolone in the United States either alone or in collaboration with others; and

    establishing collaborations to develop and commercialize ganaxolone in territories outside the United States.

Risk Factors

        Our ability to implement our business strategy is subject to numerous risks and uncertainties. As a clinical stage biopharmaceutical company, we face many risks inherent in our business and our industry generally. You should carefully consider all of the information set forth in this prospectus and, in particular, the information under the heading "Risk Factors" in this prospectus prior to making an investment in our common stock. These risks include, among others, the following:

    We have a limited operating history, have incurred significant losses since our inception and anticipate that we will continue to incur losses in the future.

    We have not generated any revenue to date from product sales. We may never achieve or sustain profitability, which could depress the market price of our common stock, and could cause you to lose all or a part of your investment.

    We will require additional capital to fund our operations and if we fail to obtain necessary financing, we may be unable to complete the development and commercialization of ganaxolone.

    Our future success is dependent on the successful clinical development, regulatory approval and commercialization of ganaxolone, which is currently undergoing two clinical trials and will require significant capital resources and years of additional clinical development effort.

    Our commercial success depends upon attaining significant market acceptance of ganaxolone, if approved, among physicians, patients, government and private payors and others in the medical community.

 

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    We rely on third parties to conduct our preclinical studies and clinical trials. If these third parties do not successfully carry out their contractual duties or meet expected deadlines, we may not be able to obtain regulatory approval for or commercialize ganaxolone.

    Government funding for certain of our programs adds uncertainty to our research efforts with respect to those programs and may impose requirements that increase the costs of commercialization and production of product candidates developed under those government-funded programs.

    If we are unable to protect our intellectual property rights or if our intellectual property rights are inadequate for our technology and product candidates, our competitive position could be harmed.

    Our future success depends on our ability to retain our executive officers and to attract, retain and motivate qualified personnel.


Corporate Information

        We were incorporated in Delaware in August 2003. Our principal executive offices are located at 142 Temple St., Suite 205, New Haven, Connecticut 06510 and our telephone number is (203) 315-0566. Our website address is www.marinuspharma.com . The inclusion of our website address in this prospectus is, in each case, intended to be an inactive textual reference only and not an active hyperlink to our website. The information contained in, or that can be accessed through, our website is not part of this prospectus.


Implications of Being an Emerging Growth Company

        We are an "emerging growth company," as defined in Section 2(a) of the Securities Act of 1933, as amended, or the Securities Act, as modified by the Jumpstart Our Business Startups Act of 2012, or the JOBS Act. As such, we are eligible to take advantage of exemptions from various disclosure and reporting requirements that are applicable to other public companies that are not "emerging growth companies" including, but not limited to:

    not being required to comply with the auditor attestation requirements of Section 404(b) of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002, or the Sarbanes-Oxley Act;

    being permitted to present only two years of audited financial statements and only two years of related Management's Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations, in each case, instead of three years;

    being permitted to present the same number of years of selected financial data as the years of audited financial statements presented, instead of five years;

    reduced disclosure obligations regarding executive compensation, including the omission of a compensation disclosure and analysis;

    not being required to comply with any requirement that may be adopted by the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board regarding mandatory audit firm rotation or a supplement to the auditor's report providing additional information about the audit and the financial statements; and

    exemptions from the requirements of holding a non-binding advisory vote on executive compensation and stockholder approval of any golden parachute payments not previously approved.

        We may choose to take advantage of some or all of the available exemptions. We have taken advantage of some of the reduced reporting burdens in this prospectus. Accordingly, the scope of the information contained herein may be different than the scope of the information you receive from other public companies in which you hold stock. We do not know if some investors will find our shares less

 

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attractive as a result of our utilization of these or other exemptions. The result may be a less active trading market for our shares, and our share price may be more volatile.

        In addition, Section 107 of the JOBS Act also provides that an "emerging growth company" can take advantage of the extended transition period provided in Section 7(a)(2)(B) of the Securities Act for complying with new or revised accounting standards. In other words, an "emerging growth company" can delay the adoption of certain accounting standards until those standards would otherwise apply to private companies. We have irrevocably elected not to avail ourselves of this exemption from new or revised accounting standards and, therefore, we will be subject to the same new or revised accounting standards as other public companies that are not emerging growth companies.

        We will remain an "emerging growth company" until the earliest of (a) the last day of the first fiscal year in which our annual gross revenues exceed $1.0 billion; (b) the date that we become a "large accelerated filer" as defined in Rule 12b-2 under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended, or the Exchange Act, which would occur if the market value of our shares that are held by non-affiliates exceeds $700 million as of the last business day of our most recently completed second fiscal quarter; (c) the date on which we have issued more than $1.0 billion in nonconvertible debt during the preceding three-year period; and (d) the last day of our fiscal year containing the fifth anniversary of the date on which shares of our common stock become publicly traded in the United States.

 

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The Offering

Common stock offered by us

                  shares

Common stock to be outstanding after this offering

 

                shares

Underwriters' option

 

The underwriters have an option for a period of 30 days to purchase up to                additional shares of our common stock.

Use of proceeds

 

We intend to use the net proceeds of this offering to advance the preclinical and clinical development of ganaxolone and for working capital and general corporate purposes. See "Use of Proceeds" in this prospectus for a more complete description of the intended use of proceeds from this offering.

Risk factors

 

You should read the "Risk Factors" section of this prospectus beginning on page 11 for a discussion of factors to consider carefully before deciding to invest in shares of our common stock.

Proposed NASDAQ Global Market trading symbol

 

MRNS

        Unless otherwise noted, the information in this prospectus assumes:

    no exercise by the underwriters of their option to purchase up to                additional shares of common stock from us;

    the conversion of all outstanding shares of our preferred stock into 49,802,103 shares of our common stock, which will occur immediately prior to consummation of this offering;

    the exercise of all outstanding warrants to purchase 3,055,163 shares of Series B convertible preferred stock and 37,991 shares of Series C convertible preferred stock and the conversion of the resulting convertible preferred stock into                shares of our common stock immediately prior to consummation of this offering assuming net share settlement at an initial public offering price of $            per share (the midpoint of the estimated offering price range set forth on the cover page of this prospectus);

    a 1-for-      reverse split of our common stock prior to the effectiveness of the registration statement of which this prospectus forms a part; and

    no purchases by certain of our stockholders who have indicated an interest in purchasing an aggregate of approximately $             million in shares of our common stock in this offering.

        The shares of common stock to be outstanding after this offering is based on                shares of common stock outstanding as of March 31, 2014, after giving effect to the conversion of all of our outstanding shares of preferred stock into 49,802,103 shares of our common stock, including 422,119 shares of preferred stock issued in April 2014, and the net share settlement of our outstanding warrants and conversion of the resulting shares of preferred stock into                shares of our common stock and excludes:

    6,930,040 shares of common stock issuable upon exercise of options outstanding as of March 31, 2014, with a weighted average exercise price of $0.16 per share, under our 2005 Stock Option and Incentive Plan; and

    additional shares that will be made available for issuance under our 2014 Equity Incentive Plan.

 

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        Certain of our stockholders have indicated an interest in purchasing an aggregate of approximately $             million in shares of our common stock in this offering at the initial public offering price. However, because indications of interest are not binding agreements or commitments to purchase, the underwriters may determine to sell more, less or no shares in this offering to any of these stockholders, and any of these stockholders may determine to purchase more, less or no shares in this offering.

 

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Summary Financial Data

        The following table summarizes our historical financial data as of the dates indicated and for the periods then ended and other pro forma and pro forma as adjusted data. We have derived the following historical statements of operations data for the years ended December 31, 2012 and 2013 from our audited financial statements included elsewhere in this prospectus. We have derived the statement of operations data for the three months ended March 31, 2013 and 2014 and the period from August 14, 2003 (inception) to March 31, 2014 and the balance sheet data as of March 31, 2014 from our unaudited financial statements included elsewhere in this prospectus. Our unaudited financial statements have been prepared on the same basis as the audited financial statements and, in the opinion of our management, include all adjustments, consisting of normal recurring adjustments and accruals, necessary for a fair statement of the information for the interim periods. Our historical results are not necessarily indicative of the results that may be expected in the future and our interim results are not necessarily indicative of the results that may be expected for a full year. The summary of our financial data set forth below should be read together with our financial statements and the related notes to those statements, as well as "Selected Financial Data" and "Management's Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations" in this prospectus.

 
   
   
   
   
  Period From
August 14,
2003
(Inception) to
March 31,
2014
 
 
  Year Ended December 31,   Three Months
Ended
March 31,
 
 
  2012   2013   2013   2014  

Statements of Operations Data:

                               

Revenue

  $ 100,000   $   $   $   $ 688,469  
                       

Expenses:

                               

Research and development

    845,556     4,150,101     747,283     2,148,672     53,093,715  

General and administrative

    685,099     1,228,701     180,119     516,544     12,496,075  
                       

Total expenses

    1,530,655     5,378,802     927,402     2,665,216     65,589,790  
                       

Loss from operations

    (1,430,655 )   (5,378,802 )   (927,402 )   (2,665,216 )   (64,901,321 )

Change in fair value of warrant liability

    336,050     152,686         427,723     1,252,509  

Interest and other income

    6,842     46,872     3,837     2,187     2,675,084  

Interest expense

    (320,782 )   (90,611 )   (46,078 )       (2,764,593 )
                       

Net loss

    (1,408,545 )   (5,269,855 )   (969,643 )   (2,235,306 ) $ (63,738,321 )
                               
                               

Cumulative preferred stock dividends

    (2,185,737 )   (3,804,023 )   (785,961 )   (1,070,682 )      
                         

Net loss applicable to common stockholders

  $ (3,594,282 ) $ (9,073,878 ) $ (1,755,604 ) $ (3,305,988 )      
                         
                         

Per share information:

                               

Net loss per share of common stock—basic and diluted(1)

  $ (1.23 ) $ (3.02 ) $ (0.59 ) $ (1.09 )      
                         
                         

Basic and diluted weighted average shares outstanding(1)

    2,921,787     3,009,260     2,983,547     3,032,393        
                         
                         

Pro forma net loss per share of common stock—basic and diluted (unaudited)(1)

        $           $          
                             
                             

Pro forma basic and diluted weighted average shares outstanding (unaudited)(1)

                               
                             
                             

(1)
See Note 2 to our financial statements for an explanation of the method used to calculate net loss per share of common stock, basic and diluted, pro forma net loss per share of common stock, basic and diluted, and the basic and diluted pro forma weighted average shares outstanding used to calculate the pro forma per share amounts.

 

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  As of March 31, 2014  
 
  Actual   Pro
Forma(1)
  Pro Forma As
Adjusted(1)(2)
 
 
  (unaudited)
 

Balance Sheet Data:

                   

Cash and cash equivalents

  $ 8,829,946   $ 8,829,946   $    

Total assets

    10,564,473     10,564,473        

Total liabilities

    3,289,994     2,026,203        

Convertible preferred stock

    69,840,206            

Total stockholders' equity (deficit)

    (62,565,727 )   8,538,270        

(1)
Gives pro forma effect to the conversion of all outstanding shares of our preferred stock, including 422,119 shares of preferred stock in April 2014 reflected as an investor deposit for $500,000 in accrued expenses as of March 31, 2014 and net share settlement of all outstanding warrants and conversion of the resulting shares of preferred stock, which will occur immediately prior to consummation of this offering.

(2)
Gives further effect to the sale of            shares of our common stock in this offering, assuming an initial public offering price of $            per share (the midpoint of the estimated offering price range set forth on the cover page of this prospectus) after deducting the estimated underwriting discount and estimated offering costs payable by us. A $1.00 increase or decrease in the assumed initial public offering price of $            per share (the midpoint of the estimated offering price range set forth on the cover page of this prospectus) would increase or decrease cash and cash equivalents and total stockholders' equity on a pro forma as adjusted basis by approximately $             million, assuming that the number of shares offered, as set forth on the cover page of this prospectus, remains the same and after deducting the estimated underwriting discount and estimated offering costs payable by us. Similarly, each increase or decrease of 1,000,000 shares offered by us at the assumed initial public offering price would increase or decrease each of cash and cash equivalents and total stockholders' equity on a pro forma as adjusted basis by approximately $             million. The pro forma as adjusted information discussed above is illustrative only and will be adjusted based on the actual initial public offering price and other terms of our initial public offering determined at pricing.

 

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RISK FACTORS

         Investing in our common stock involves a high degree of risk. You should carefully consider the risks described below, together with the other information contained in this prospectus, including our financial statements and the related notes appearing at the end of this prospectus and "Management's Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations," before making your decision to invest in shares of our common stock. We cannot assure you that any of the events or developments discussed in the risk factors below will not occur. The occurrence of any of the events or developments discussed in the risk factors below could have a material and adverse impact on our business, results of operations, financial condition and cash flows and in such case, our future prospects would likely be materially and adversely affected. If any of such events or developments were to happen, the trading price of our common stock could decline, and you could lose all or part of your investment. Additional risks and uncertainties not presently known to us or that we currently deem immaterial also may impair our business operations.

Risks Related to Our Financial Position and Capital Needs

We have a limited operating history, have incurred significant losses since our inception and anticipate that we will continue to incur losses in the future.

        We commenced operations in 2003, and we have only a limited operating history upon which you can evaluate our business and prospects. Our operations to date have been limited to conducting product development activities for ganaxolone and performing research and development with respect to our clinical and preclinical programs. In addition, as a clinical stage biopharmaceutical company, we have not yet demonstrated an ability to successfully overcome many of the risks and uncertainties frequently encountered by companies in new and rapidly evolving fields, particularly in the biopharmaceutical area. Nor have we demonstrated an ability to obtain regulatory approval for or to commercialize any of our product candidates. Consequently, any predictions about our future performance may not be as accurate as they would be if we had a history of successfully developing and commercializing biopharmaceutical products.

        We have incurred significant operating losses since our inception, including net losses of $1.4 million and $5.3 million for the years ended December 31, 2012 and 2013, respectively, and $2.2 million for the three months ended March 31, 2014. As of March 31, 2014, we had an accumulated deficit of $63.7 million. Our prior losses, combined with expected future losses, have had and will continue to have an adverse effect on our stockholders' equity and working capital. Our losses have resulted principally from costs incurred in our research and development activities. We anticipate that our operating losses will substantially increase over the next several years as we execute our plan to expand our research, development and commercialization activities, including the clinical development and planned commercialization of our product candidate, ganaxolone, and incur the additional costs of operating as a public company. In addition, if we obtain regulatory approval of ganaxolone, we may incur significant sales and marketing expenses. Because of the numerous risks and uncertainties associated with developing biopharmaceutical products, we are unable to predict the extent of any future losses or whether or when we will become profitable, if ever.

We have not generated any revenue to date from product sales. We may never achieve or sustain profitability, which could depress the market price of our common stock, and could cause you to lose all or a part of your investment.

        To date, we have no products approved for commercial sale and have not generated any revenue from sales of any of our product candidates, and we do not know when, or if, we will generate revenues in the future. Our ability to generate revenue from product sales and achieve profitability will depend upon our ability to successfully gain regulatory approval and commercialize ganaxolone or other product candidates that we may develop, in-license or acquire in the future. Even if we are able to successfully achieve regulatory approval for ganaxolone, we do not know when we will generate revenue from product sales, if

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at all. Our ability to generate revenue from product sales from ganaxolone or any other future product candidates also depends on a number of additional factors, including our ability to:

    successfully complete development activities, including enrollment of study participants and completion of the necessary clinical trials;

    complete and submit new drug applications, or NDAs, to the United States Food and Drug Administration, or FDA, and obtain regulatory approval for indications for which there is a commercial market;

    complete and submit applications to, and obtain regulatory approval from, foreign regulatory authorities;

    make or have made commercial quantities of our products at acceptable cost levels;

    develop a commercial organization capable of manufacturing, selling, marketing and distributing any products we intend to sell ourselves in the markets in which we choose to commercialize on our own;

    find suitable partners to help us market, sell and distribute our approved products in other markets; and

    obtain adequate pricing, coverage and reimbursement from third parties, including government and private payors.

        In addition, because of the numerous risks and uncertainties associated with product development, including that ganaxolone may not advance through development or achieve the endpoints of applicable clinical trials, we are unable to predict the timing or amount of increased expenses, or if or when we will be able to achieve or maintain profitability. Even if we are able to complete the development and regulatory process for ganaxolone, we anticipate incurring significant costs associated with commercializing ganaxolone.

        Even if we are able to generate revenue from the sale of ganaxolone or any future commercial products, we may not become profitable and will need to obtain additional funding to continue operations. If we fail to become profitable or are unable to sustain profitability on a continuing basis, and we are not successful in obtaining additional funding, then we may be unable to continue our operations at planned levels, which would depress the market price of our common stock.

We will require additional capital to fund our operations and if we fail to obtain necessary financing, we may be unable to complete the development and commercialization of ganaxolone.

        Our operations have consumed substantial amounts of cash since inception. We expect to continue to spend substantial amounts to advance the clinical development of ganaxolone and launch and commercialize ganaxolone, if we receive regulatory approval. We will require additional capital for the further development and potential commercialization of ganaxolone and may also need to raise additional funds sooner to pursue a more accelerated development of ganaxolone. If we are unable to raise capital when needed or on attractive terms, we could be forced to delay, reduce or eliminate our research and development programs or any future commercialization efforts.

        We believe that the net proceeds from this offering together with our existing cash and cash equivalents as of March 31, 2014, will enable us to fund our operating expenses and capital expenditure requirements for at least the next 24 months. We have based this estimate on assumptions that may prove to be wrong, and we could deploy our available capital resources sooner than we currently expect. Our future funding requirements, both near and long-term, will depend on many factors, including, but not limited to the:

    initiation, progress, timing, costs and results of preclinical studies and clinical trials, including patient enrollment in such trials, for ganaxolone or any other future product candidates;

    clinical development plans we establish for ganaxolone and any other future product candidates;

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    obligation to make royalty and non-royalty sublicense receipt payments to third-party licensors, if any, under our licensing agreements;

    number and characteristics of product candidates that we discover or in-license and develop;

    outcome, timing and cost of regulatory review by the FDA and comparable foreign regulatory authorities, including the potential for the FDA or comparable foreign regulatory authorities to require that we perform more studies than those that we currently expect;

    costs of filing, prosecuting, defending and enforcing any patent claims and maintaining and enforcing other intellectual property rights;

    effects of competing technological and market developments;

    costs and timing of the implementation of commercial-scale manufacturing activities; and

    costs and timing of establishing sales, marketing and distribution capabilities for any product candidates for which we may receive regulatory approval.

        If we are unable to expand our operations or otherwise capitalize on our business opportunities due to a lack of capital, our ability to become profitable will be compromised.

Raising additional capital may cause dilution to our stockholders, restrict our operations or require us to relinquish rights to ganaxolone or any other future product candidates.

        Until we can generate substantial revenue from product sales, if ever, we expect to seek additional capital through a combination of private and public equity offerings, debt financings, strategic collaborations and alliances and licensing arrangements. To the extent that we raise additional capital through the sale of equity or convertible debt securities, the ownership interests of stockholders will be diluted, and the terms may include liquidation or other preferences that adversely affect the rights of stockholders. Debt financing, if available, may involve agreements that include liens or other restrictive covenants limiting our ability to take important actions, such as incurring additional debt, making capital expenditures or declaring dividends. If we raise additional funds through strategic collaborations and alliances or licensing arrangements with third parties, we may have to relinquish valuable rights to ganaxolone or any other future product candidates in particular countries, or grant licenses on terms that are not favorable to us. If we are unable to raise additional funds through equity or debt financing when needed, we may be required to delay, limit, reduce or terminate our product development or commercialization efforts or grant rights to develop and market ganaxolone or any other future product candidates that we would otherwise prefer to develop and market ourselves.

We intend to expend our limited resources to pursue our sole clinical stage product candidate, ganaxolone, for focal onset seizures and may fail to capitalize on other indications, technologies or product candidates that may be more profitable or for which there may be a greater likelihood of success.

        Because we have limited financial and managerial resources, we are focusing on research programs relating to ganaxolone for focal onset seizures, which concentrates the risk of product failure in the event ganaxolone proves to be ineffective or inadequate for clinical development or commercialization in this indication. As a result, we may forego or delay pursuit of opportunities for other indications or with other technologies or product candidates that later could prove to have greater commercial potential. We may be unable to capitalize on viable commercial products or profitable market opportunities as a result of our resource allocation decisions. Our spending on proprietary research and development programs relating to ganaxolone may not yield any commercially viable products. If we do not accurately evaluate the commercial potential or target market for ganaxolone, we may relinquish valuable rights to ganaxolone through collaboration, licensing or other royalty arrangements in cases in which it would have been more advantageous for us to retain sole development and commercialization rights to ganaxolone.

Our ability to utilize our net operating loss carryforwards and certain other tax attributes may be limited.

        Under Section 382 of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended, or Code, if a corporation undergoes an "ownership change" (generally defined as a greater than 50% change (by value) in its equity

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ownership over a three-year period), the corporation's ability to use its pre-change net operating loss carryforwards and other pre-change tax attributes to offset its post-change income may be limited. As a result of our most recent private placements and other transactions that have occurred over the past three years, we may have experienced, and, upon completion of this offering, may experience, an "ownership change." We may also experience ownership changes in the future as a result of subsequent shifts in our stock ownership. As of December 31, 2013, we had federal and state net operating loss carryforwards of approximately $59.0 million that will begin expiring in 2023, and federal and state research and development credits of $2.2 million and $0.5 million, respectively, that will begin expiring in 2019, which could be limited if we experience an "ownership change."

Risks Related to Our Business and Development of Our Product

Our future success is dependent on the successful clinical development, regulatory approval and commercialization of ganaxolone, which is currently undergoing two clinical trials and will require significant capital resources and years of additional clinical development effort.

        We do not have any products that have gained regulatory approval. Currently, our only clinical stage product candidate is ganaxolone. As a result, our business is dependent on our ability to successfully complete clinical development of, obtain regulatory approval for, and, if approved, successfully commercialize ganaxolone in a timely manner. We cannot commercialize ganaxolone in the United States without first obtaining regulatory approval from the FDA; similarly, we cannot commercialize ganaxolone outside of the United States without obtaining regulatory approval from comparable foreign regulatory authorities. Before obtaining regulatory approvals for the commercial sale of ganaxolone for a target indication, we must demonstrate with substantial evidence gathered in preclinical studies and clinical trials, generally including two adequate and well-controlled clinical trials, and, with respect to approval in the United States, to the satisfaction of the FDA, that ganaxolone is safe and effective for use for that target indication and that the manufacturing facilities, processes and controls are adequate. We intend to use the proceeds of this offering to expand our ongoing Phase 2b clinical trial so that it may serve as one of our adequate and well-controlled clinical trials for ganaxolone in epilepsy; however, we cannot be certain that the FDA will accept the trial as such. Even if ganaxolone were to successfully obtain approval from the FDA and comparable foreign regulatory authorities, any approval might contain significant limitations related to use restrictions for specified age groups, warnings, precautions or contraindications, or may be subject to burdensome post-approval study or risk management requirements. If we are unable to obtain regulatory approval for ganaxolone in one or more jurisdictions, or any approval contains significant limitations, we may not be able to obtain sufficient funding or generate sufficient revenue to continue the development of any other product candidate that we may in-license, develop or acquire in the future. Furthermore, even if we obtain regulatory approval for ganaxolone, we will still need to develop a commercial organization, establish commercially viable pricing and obtain approval for adequate reimbursement from third-party and government payors. If we are unable to successfully commercialize ganaxolone, we may not be able to earn sufficient revenue to continue our business.

Because the results of preclinical studies or earlier clinical trials are not necessarily predictive of future results, ganaxolone may not have favorable results in later preclinical studies or clinical trials or receive regulatory approval.

        Success in preclinical studies and early clinical trials does not ensure that later trials will generate adequate data to demonstrate the efficacy and safety of ganaxolone. A number of companies in the pharmaceutical and biotechnology industries, including those with greater resources and experience, have suffered significant setbacks in preclinical studies and clinical trials, even after seeing promising results in earlier studies and trials. Despite the results reported in earlier clinical trials for ganaxolone, we do not know whether the clinical trials we may conduct will demonstrate adequate efficacy and safety to result in regulatory approval to market ganaxolone in any particular jurisdiction. If later stage clinical trials do not produce favorable results, our ability to achieve regulatory approval for ganaxolone may be adversely impacted.

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The therapeutic efficacy and safety of ganaxolone are unproven, and we may not be able to successfully develop and commercialize ganaxolone in the future.

        Ganaxolone is a novel compound and its potential benefit as a therapeutic for focal onset seizures and Fragile X Syndrome, or FXS, is unproven. Our ability to generate revenue from ganaxolone, which we do not expect will occur for at least the next several years, if ever, will depend heavily on our successful development and commercialization after regulatory approval, which is subject to many potential risks and may not occur. Ganaxolone may interact with human biological systems in unforeseen, ineffective or harmful ways. If ganaxolone is associated with undesirable side effects or has characteristics that are unexpected, we may need to abandon its development or limit development to certain uses or subpopulations in which the undesirable side effects or other characteristics are less prevalent, less severe or more acceptable from a risk-benefit perspective. Many compounds that initially showed promise in early stage testing for treating the target indications for ganaxolone have later been found to cause side effects that prevented further development of the compound. As a result of these and other risks described herein that are inherent in the development of novel therapeutic agents, we may never successfully develop, enter into or maintain third-party licensing or collaboration transactions with respect to, or successfully commercialize, ganaxolone, in which case we will not achieve profitability and the value of our stock may decline.

Clinical development of product candidates involves a lengthy and expensive process with an uncertain outcome.

        Clinical testing is expensive, can take many years to complete, and its outcome is inherently uncertain. Failure can occur at any time during the clinical trial process.

        We may experience delays in our ongoing or future clinical trials and we do not know whether planned clinical trials will begin or enroll subjects on time, need to be redesigned or be completed on schedule, if at all. There can be no assurance that the FDA or other foreign regulatory authorities will not put clinical trials of ganaxolone on clinical hold now or in the future. Clinical trials may be delayed, suspended or prematurely terminated for a variety of reasons, such as:

    delay or failure in reaching agreement with the FDA or a comparable foreign regulatory authority on a trial design that we are able to execute;

    delay or failure in obtaining authorization to commence a trial or inability to comply with conditions imposed by a regulatory authority regarding the scope or design of a clinical trial;

    delay or failure in reaching agreement on acceptable terms with prospective clinical research organizations, or CROs, and clinical trial sites, the terms of which can be subject to extensive negotiation and may vary significantly among different CROs and trial sites;

    delay or failure in obtaining institutional review board, or IRB, approval or the approval of other reviewing entities, including comparable foreign regulatory authorities, to conduct a clinical trial at each site;

    withdrawal of clinical trial sites from our clinical trials as a result of changing standards of care or the ineligibility of a site to participate in our clinical trials;

    delay or failure in recruiting and enrolling suitable study subjects to participate in a trial;

    delay or failure in study subjects completing a trial or returning for post-treatment follow-up;

    clinical sites and investigators deviating from a trial protocol, failing to conduct the trial in accordance with regulatory requirements, or dropping out of a trial;

    inability to identify and maintain a sufficient number of trial sites, many of which may already be engaged in other clinical trial programs, including some that may be for competing product candidates with the same indication;

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    failure of our third-party clinical trial managers to satisfy their contractual duties or meet expected deadlines;

    delay or failure in adding new clinical trial sites;

    ambiguous or negative interim results or results that are inconsistent with earlier results;

    feedback from the FDA, the IRB, data safety monitoring boards, or a comparable foreign regulatory authority, or results from earlier stage or concurrent preclinical studies and clinical trials, that might require modification to the protocol for the trial;

    decision by the FDA, the IRB, a comparable foreign regulatory authority, or us, or recommendation by a data safety monitoring board or comparable foreign regulatory authority, to suspend or terminate clinical trials at any time for safety issues or for any other reason;

    unacceptable risk-benefit profile, unforeseen safety issues or adverse side effects or adverse events;

    failure of a product candidate to demonstrate any benefit;

    difficulties in manufacturing or obtaining from third parties sufficient quantities of a product candidate for use in clinical trials;

    lack of adequate funding to continue the clinical trial, including the incurrence of unforeseen costs due to enrollment delays, requirements to conduct additional clinical trials or increased expenses associated with the services of our CROs and other third parties;

    political developments that affect our ability to develop and obtain approval for ganaxolone, or license rights to develop and obtain approval for ganaxolone, in a foreign country; or

    changes in governmental regulations or administrative actions.

        Study subject enrollment, a significant factor in the timing of clinical trials, is affected by many factors including the size and nature of the subject population, the proximity of subjects to clinical sites, the eligibility criteria for the trial, the design of the clinical trial, ability to obtain and maintain subject consents, risk that enrolled subjects will drop out before completion, competing clinical trials and clinicians' and subjects' perceptions as to the potential advantages of the product candidate being studied in relation to other available therapies, including any new drugs that may be approved or product candidates that may be studied in competing clinical trials for the indications we are investigating. We rely on CROs and clinical trial sites to ensure the proper and timely conduct of our clinical trials, and while we have agreements governing their committed activities, we have limited influence over their actual performance.

        If we experience delays in the completion of any clinical trial of ganaxolone, the commercial prospects of ganaxolone may be harmed, and our ability to generate product revenue from ganaxolone, if approved, will be delayed. In addition, any delays in completing our clinical trials will increase our costs, slow down our development and approval process for ganaxolone and jeopardize our ability to commence product sales and generate revenues. In addition, many of the factors that could cause a delay in the commencement or completion of clinical trials may also ultimately lead to the denial of regulatory approval of ganaxolone.

Ganaxolone may cause undesirable side effects or have other properties that could delay or prevent its regulatory approval, limit the commercial profile of an approved label, or result in significant negative consequences following any marketing approval.

        Undesirable side effects caused by ganaxolone could cause us or regulatory authorities to interrupt, delay or halt clinical trials and could result in a restrictive label or the delay or denial of regulatory approval by the FDA or other comparable foreign regulatory authority. Although ganaxolone has generally

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been well tolerated by subjects in our earlier-stage clinical trials, in some cases there were side effects, and some of the side effects were severe. Specifically, in our most recently completed clinical trial, where ganaxolone was administered as an adjunctive to standard therapy in adult subjects with focal onset seizures, the most frequent side effects (those reported in greater than 5% of ganaxolone subjects) were dizziness, fatigue and somnolence (or drowsiness). Side effects of the Central Nervous System, or CNS, were categorized as severe as compared to side effects of other body systems, though no specific CNS side effect was reported as severe by more than one subject.

        If these side effects are reported in future clinical trials, or if other safety or toxicity issues are reported in our future clinical trials, we may not receive approval to market ganaxolone, which could prevent us from ever generating revenue or achieving profitability. Furthermore, although we are currently developing ganaxolone for three indications, negative safety findings in any one indication could force us to delay or discontinue development in other indications. Results of our clinical trials could reveal an unacceptably high severity and prevalence of side effects. In such an event, our clinical trials could be suspended or terminated and the FDA or comparable foreign regulatory authorities could order us to cease further development, or deny approval, of ganaxolone for any or all targeted indications. Drug-related side effects could affect study subject recruitment or the ability of enrolled subjects to complete our future clinical trials and may result in potential product liability claims.

        Additionally, if ganaxolone receives marketing approval, and we or others later identify undesirable side effects caused by ganaxolone, a number of potentially significant negative consequences could result, including:

    we may be forced to suspend marketing of ganaxolone;

    regulatory authorities may withdraw their approvals of ganaxolone;

    regulatory authorities may require additional warnings on the label that could diminish the usage or otherwise limit the commercial success of ganaxolone;

    we may be required to conduct post-market studies;

    we could be sued and held liable for harm caused to subjects or patients; and

    our reputation may suffer.

        Any of these events could prevent us from achieving or maintaining market acceptance of ganaxolone, if approved.

Even if ganaxolone receives regulatory approval, we may still face future development and regulatory difficulties.

        Even if we obtain regulatory approval for ganaxolone, it would be subject to ongoing requirements by the FDA and comparable foreign regulatory authorities governing the manufacture, quality control, further development, labeling, packaging, storage, distribution, safety surveillance, import, export, advertising, promotion, recordkeeping and reporting of safety and other post-market information. The safety profile of ganaxolone will continue to be closely monitored by the FDA and comparable foreign regulatory authorities after approval. If new safety information becomes available after approval of ganaxolone, the FDA or comparable foreign regulatory authorities may require labeling changes or establishment of a Risk Evaluation and Mitigation Strategy, or REMS, or similar strategy, impose significant restrictions on ganaxolone's indicated uses or marketing, or impose ongoing requirements for potentially costly post-approval studies or post-market surveillance. For example, the label ultimately approved for ganaxolone, if it achieves marketing approval, may include restrictions on use.

        In addition, manufacturers of drug products and their facilities are subject to continual review and periodic inspections by the FDA and other regulatory authorities for compliance with current good manufacturing practices, or cGMP, and other regulations. If we or a regulatory authority discover previously unknown problems with a product, such as adverse events of unanticipated severity or frequency, or problems with the facility where the product is manufactured, a regulatory authority may

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impose restrictions on that product, the manufacturing facility or us, including requiring recall or withdrawal of the product from the market or suspension of manufacturing. If we, ganaxolone or the manufacturing facilities for ganaxolone fail to comply with applicable regulatory requirements, a regulatory authority may:

    issue warning letters or untitled letters;

    mandate modifications to promotional materials or require us to provide corrective information to healthcare practitioners;

    require us to enter into a consent decree, which can include imposition of various fines, reimbursements for inspection costs, required due dates for specific actions and penalties for noncompliance;

    seek an injunction or impose civil or criminal penalties or monetary fines;

    suspend or withdraw regulatory approval;

    suspend any ongoing clinical trials;

    refuse to approve pending applications or supplements to applications filed by us;

    suspend or impose restrictions on operations, including costly new manufacturing requirements; or

    seize or detain products, refuse to permit the import or export of products, or require us to initiate a product recall.

        The occurrence of any event or penalty described above may inhibit or preclude our ability to commercialize ganaxolone and generate revenue.

        The FDA's and other regulatory authorities' policies may change, and additional government regulations may be enacted that could prevent, limit or delay regulatory approval of ganaxolone. We cannot predict the likelihood, nature or extent of government regulation that may arise from future legislation or administrative action, either in the United States or abroad. If we are slow or unable to adapt to changes in existing requirements or the adoption of new requirements or policies, or if we are not able to maintain regulatory compliance, we may lose any marketing approval that we may have obtained, and we may not achieve or sustain profitability, which would adversely affect our business, prospects, financial condition and results of operations.

        Advertising and promotion of any product candidate that obtains approval in the United States will be heavily scrutinized by, among others, the FDA, the Department of Justice, or the DOJ, the Office of Inspector General of the Department of Health and Human Services, or HHS, state attorneys general, members of Congress and the public. Violations, including promotion of our products for unapproved or off-label uses, are subject to enforcement letters, inquiries and investigations, and civil and criminal sanctions by the FDA or other government agencies. Additionally, advertising and promotion of any product candidate that obtains approval outside of the United States will be heavily scrutinized by comparable foreign regulatory authorities.

        In the United States, engaging in impermissible promotion of ganaxolone for off-label uses can also subject us to false claims litigation under federal and state statutes, and other litigation and/or investigation, which can lead to civil and criminal penalties and fines and agreements that materially restrict the manner in which we promote or distribute our drug products. These false claims statutes include the federal False Claims Act, which allows any individual to bring a lawsuit against a pharmaceutical company on behalf of the federal government alleging submission of false or fraudulent claims, or causing to present such false or fraudulent claims, for payment by a federal program such as Medicare or Medicaid. If the government prevails in the lawsuit, the individual will share in any fines or settlement funds. Since 2004, these False Claims Act lawsuits against pharmaceutical companies have increased significantly in volume and breadth, leading to several substantial civil and criminal settlements

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based on certain sales practices promoting off-label drug uses. This increasing focus and scrutiny has increased the risk that a pharmaceutical company will have to defend a false claim action, pay settlement fines or restitution, agree to comply with burdensome reporting and compliance obligations, and be excluded from the Medicare, Medicaid and other federal and state healthcare programs. If we do not lawfully promote our approved products, we may become subject to such litigation and/or investigation and, if we are not successful in defending against such actions, those actions could compromise our ability to become profitable.

Failure to obtain regulatory approval in international jurisdictions would prevent ganaxolone from being marketed in these jurisdictions.

        In order to market and sell our products in the European Union and many other jurisdictions, we must obtain separate marketing approvals and comply with numerous and varying regulatory requirements. The approval procedure varies among countries and can involve additional testing. The time required to obtain approval may differ substantially from that required to obtain FDA approval. The regulatory approval process outside the United States generally includes all of the risks associated with obtaining FDA approval. In addition, in many countries outside the United States, it is required that the product be approved for reimbursement before the product can be approved for sale in that country. We may not obtain approvals from regulatory authorities outside the United States on a timely basis, if at all. Approval by the FDA does not ensure approval by regulatory authorities in other countries or jurisdictions, and approval by one regulatory authority outside the United States does not ensure approval by regulatory authorities in other countries or jurisdictions or by the FDA. We may not be able to file for marketing approvals and may not receive necessary approvals to commercialize our products in any market. If we are unable to obtain approval of ganaxolone by regulatory authorities in the European Union or another country or jurisdiction, the commercial prospects of ganaxolone may be significantly diminished and our business prospects could decline.

We may not be able to obtain orphan drug exclusivity for ganaxolone or any other product candidates for which we seek it, which could limit the potential profitability of ganaxolone or such other product candidates.

        Regulatory authorities in some jurisdictions, including the United States and Europe, may designate drugs for relatively small patient populations as orphan drugs. Under the Orphan Drug Act, the FDA may designate a product as an orphan drug if it is a drug intended to treat a rare disease or condition, which is generally defined as a patient population of fewer than 200,000 individuals in the United States. Generally, if a product with an orphan drug designation subsequently receives the first marketing approval for an indication for which it receives the designation, then the product is entitled to a period of marketing exclusivity that precludes the applicable regulatory authority from approving another marketing application for the same drug for the same indication for the exclusivity period except in limited situations. For purposes of small molecule drugs, the FDA defines "same drug" as a drug that contains the same active moiety and is intended for the same use as the drug in question. A designated orphan drug may not receive orphan drug exclusivity if it is approved for a use that is broader than the indication for which it received orphan designation.

        We expect that we may in the future pursue orphan drug designations for ganaxolone for one or more indications, including behaviors in FXS, as well as certain of our future product candidates. However, obtaining an orphan drug designation can be difficult and we may not be successful in doing so for ganaxolone or any of our future product candidates. Even if we were to obtain orphan drug exclusivity for a product candidate, that exclusivity may not effectively protect the product from the competition of different drugs for the same condition, which could be approved during the exclusivity period. Additionally, after an orphan drug is approved, the FDA could subsequently approve another application for the same drug for the same indication if the FDA concludes that the later drug is shown to be safer, more effective or makes a major contribution to patient care. Orphan drug exclusive marketing rights in the United States also may be lost if the FDA later determines that the request for designation was materially defective or if the manufacturer is unable to assure sufficient quantity of the drug to meet the

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needs of patients with the rare disease or condition. The failure to obtain an orphan drug designation for any product candidates we may develop, the inability to maintain that designation for the duration of the applicable period, or the inability to obtain or maintain orphan drug exclusivity could reduce our ability to make sufficient sales of the applicable product candidate to balance our expenses incurred to develop it, which would have a negative impact on our operational results and financial condition.

Our business and operations would suffer in the event of computer system failures.

        Despite the implementation of security measures, our internal computer systems, and those of our CROs and other third parties on which we rely, are vulnerable to damage from computer viruses, unauthorized access, natural disasters, fire, terrorism, war and telecommunication and electrical failures. In addition, our systems safeguard important confidential personal data regarding subjects enrolled in our clinical trials. If a disruption event were to occur and cause interruptions in our operations, it could result in a material disruption of our drug development programs. For example, the loss of clinical trial data from completed, ongoing or planned clinical trials could result in delays in our regulatory approval efforts and significantly increase our costs to recover or reproduce the data. To the extent that any disruption or security breach results in a loss of or damage to our data or applications, or inappropriate disclosure of confidential or proprietary information, we could incur liability and the further development of ganaxolone could be delayed.

Business disruptions could seriously harm our future revenue and financial condition and increase our costs and expenses.

        Our operations could be subject to earthquakes, power shortages, telecommunications failures, water shortages, floods, hurricanes, typhoons, fires, extreme weather conditions, medical epidemics and other natural or man-made disasters or business interruptions, for which we are predominantly self-insured. The occurrence of any of these business disruptions could seriously harm our operations and financial condition and increase our costs and expenses. We rely on third-party manufacturers to produce ganaxolone. Our ability to obtain clinical supplies of ganaxolone could be disrupted if the operations of these suppliers are affected by a man-made or natural disaster or other business interruption. The ultimate impact on us, our significant suppliers and our general infrastructure of being in certain geographical areas is unknown, but our operations and financial condition could suffer in the event of a major earthquake, fire or other natural disaster.

Risks Related to the Commercialization of Our Product

Our commercial success depends upon attaining significant market acceptance of ganaxolone, if approved, among physicians, patients, government and private payors and others in the medical community.

        Even if ganaxolone receives regulatory approval, it may not gain market acceptance among physicians, patients, government and private payors, or others in the medical community. Market acceptance of ganaxolone, if we receive approval, depends on a number of factors, including the:

    efficacy and safety of ganaxolone, or ganaxolone administered with other drugs, each as demonstrated in clinical trials and post-marketing experience;

    clinical indications for which ganaxolone is approved;

    acceptance by physicians and patients of ganaxolone as a safe and effective treatment;

    potential and perceived advantages of ganaxolone over alternative treatments;

    safety of ganaxolone seen in a broader patient group, including its use outside the approved indications should physicians choose to prescribe for such uses;

    prevalence and severity of any side effects;

    product labeling or product insert requirements of the FDA or other regulatory authorities;

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    timing of market introduction of ganaxolone as well as competitive products;

    cost of treatment in relation to alternative treatments;

    availability of coverage and adequate reimbursement and pricing by government and private payors;

    relative convenience and ease of administration; and

    effectiveness of our sales and marketing efforts.

        For example, we are currently working on a tablet formulation of ganaxolone which we believe may be more convenient for patient compliance and ease of administration as compared to our current capsule and oral suspension formulations. If we are unable to develop the tablet formulation, it may impact market acceptance of ganaxolone. Moreover, if ganaxolone is approved but fails to achieve market acceptance among physicians, patients, government or private payors or others in the medical community, or the products or product candidates that are being administered with ganaxolone are restricted, withdrawn or recalled, or fail to be approved, as the case may be, we may not be able to generate significant revenues, which would compromise our ability to become profitable.

If we are unable to establish sales and marketing capabilities or enter into agreements with third parties to market and sell ganaxolone, we may be unable to generate any revenue.

        We do not currently have an organization for the sale, marketing and distribution of pharmaceutical products and the cost of establishing and maintaining such an organization may exceed the cost-effectiveness of doing so. In order to market any products that may be approved by the FDA and comparable foreign regulatory authorities, we must build our sales, marketing, managerial and other non-technical capabilities or make arrangements with third parties to perform these services. If we are unable to establish adequate sales, marketing and distribution capabilities, whether independently or with third parties, we may not be able to generate product revenue and may not become profitable. We will be competing with many companies that currently have extensive and well-funded sales and marketing operations. Without an internal commercial organization or the support of a third party to perform sales and marketing functions, we may be unable to compete successfully against these more established companies. To the extent we rely on third parties to commercialize ganaxolone, if approved, we may have little or no control over the marketing and sales efforts of such third parties, and our revenues from product sales may be lower than if we had commercialized ganaxolone ourselves.

A variety of risks associated with marketing ganaxolone internationally could materially adversely affect our business.

        We plan to seek regulatory approval for ganaxolone outside of the United States, and, accordingly, we expect that we will be subject to additional risks related to operating in foreign countries if we obtain the necessary approvals, including:

    differing regulatory requirements in foreign countries;

    the potential for so-called parallel importing, which is what happens when a local seller, faced with high or higher local prices, opts to import goods from a foreign market (with low or lower prices) rather than buying them locally;

    unexpected changes in tariffs, trade barriers, price and exchange controls and other regulatory requirements;

    economic weakness, including inflation, or political instability in particular foreign economies and markets;

    compliance with tax, employment, immigration and labor laws for employees living or traveling abroad;

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    foreign taxes, including withholding of payroll taxes;

    foreign currency fluctuations, which could result in increased operating expenses and reduced revenues, and other obligations incident to doing business in another country;

    difficulties staffing and managing foreign operations;

    workforce uncertainty in countries where labor unrest is more common than in the United States;

    challenges enforcing our contractual and intellectual property rights, especially in those foreign countries that do not respect and protect intellectual property rights to the same extent as the United States;

    production shortages resulting from any events affecting raw material supply or manufacturing capabilities abroad; and

    business interruptions resulting from geo-political actions, including war and terrorism.

        These and other risks associated with our international operations may materially adversely affect our ability to attain or maintain profitable operations.

Even if we are able to commercialize ganaxolone, it may not receive coverage and adequate reimbursement from third-party payors, which could harm our business.

        Our ability to commercialize ganaxolone successfully will depend, in part, on the extent to which coverage and adequate reimbursement for ganaxolone and related treatments will be available from government health administration authorities, private health insurers and other organizations. Government authorities and third-party payors, such as private health insurers and health maintenance organizations, determine which medications they will cover and establish reimbursement levels. A primary trend in the United States healthcare industry and elsewhere is cost containment. Government authorities and third-party payors have attempted to control costs by limiting coverage and the amount of reimbursement for particular medications. Increasingly, third-party payors are requiring that drug companies provide them with predetermined discounts from list prices and are challenging the prices charged for drugs. Third-party payors may also seek additional clinical evidence, beyond the data required to obtain marketing approval, demonstrating clinical benefits and value in specific patient populations before covering ganaxolone for those patients. We cannot be sure that coverage and adequate reimbursement will be available for ganaxolone and, if reimbursement is available, what the level of reimbursement will be. Coverage and reimbursement may impact the demand for, or the price of, ganaxolone, if we obtain marketing approval. If reimbursement is not available or is available only at limited levels, we may not be able to successfully commercialize ganaxolone even if we obtain marketing approval.

        There may be significant delays in obtaining coverage and reimbursement for newly approved drugs, and coverage may be more limited than the purposes for which the drug is approved by the FDA or comparable foreign regulatory authorities. Moreover, eligibility for coverage and reimbursement does not imply that any drug will be paid for in all cases or at a rate that covers our costs, including research, development, manufacture, sale and distribution. Interim reimbursement levels for new drugs, if applicable, may also not be sufficient to cover our costs and may only be temporary. Reimbursement rates may vary according to the use of the drug and the clinical setting in which it is used, may be based on reimbursement levels already set for lower cost drugs and may be incorporated into existing payments for other services. Net prices for drugs may be reduced by mandatory discounts or rebates required by government healthcare programs or private payors and by any future relaxation of laws that presently restrict imports of drugs from countries where they may be sold at lower prices than in the United States. Third-party payors often rely upon Medicare coverage policy and payment limitations in setting their own reimbursement policies. Our inability to obtain coverage and profitable reimbursement rates from both government-funded and private payors for any approved products that we develop could have a material

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adverse effect on our operating results, our ability to raise capital needed to commercialize products and our overall financial condition.

We face substantial competition, which may result in others discovering, developing or commercializing products before or more successfully than we do.

        The development and commercialization of new drug products is highly competitive. We face competition with respect to ganaxolone and will face competition with respect to any other product candidates that we may seek to develop or commercialize in the future, from major pharmaceutical companies, specialty pharmaceutical companies and biotechnology companies worldwide. There are a number of large pharmaceutical and biotechnology companies that currently market and sell products or are pursuing the development of products for the treatment of the disease indications for which we are developing ganaxolone. Some of these competitive products and therapies are based on scientific approaches that are the same as, or similar to, our approach, and others are based on entirely different approaches. For example, there are several companies developing product candidates that target the same gamma-aminobutyric acid, or GABA A, neuroreceptor that we are targeting or that are testing product candidates in the same indications that we are testing. Potential competitors also include academic institutions, government agencies and other public and private research organizations that conduct research, seek patent protection and establish collaborative arrangements for research, development, manufacturing and commercialization.

        Ganaxolone is presently being developed primarily as a neuropsychiatric therapeutic. There are a variety of available marketed therapies available for these patients. Some of these other drugs are branded and subject to patent protection, some are in clinical development and not yet approved, and others are available on a generic basis.

        Specifically, there are more than 15 approved antiepileptic drugs, or AEDs, available in the United States and worldwide, including the generic products levetiracetam, lamotrigine, carbamazepine, oxcarbazepine, valproic acid and topiramate. Recent market entrants include branded products developed by UCB, GlaxoSmithKline, Eisai, and Sunovion Pharmaceuticals. Additionally, there are several drugs in development for the treatment of behavioral and mental health conditions associated with FXS, including compounds being developed by Roche, Sunovion Pharmaceuticals, Afraxis and Neuren Pharmaceuticals.

        Many of the approved drugs are well established therapies or products and are widely accepted by physicians, patients and third-party payors. Insurers and other third-party payors may also encourage the use of generic products. These factors may make it difficult for us to achieve market acceptance at desired levels or in a timely manner to ensure viability of our business.

        More established companies may have a competitive advantage over us due to their greater size, cash flows and institutional experience. Compared to us, many of our competitors may have significantly greater financial, technical and human resources.

        As a result of these factors, our competitors may obtain regulatory approval of their products before we are able to, which may limit our ability to develop or commercialize ganaxolone. Our competitors may also develop drugs that are safer, more effective, more widely used and cheaper than ours, and may also be more successful than us in manufacturing and marketing their products. These appreciable advantages could render ganaxolone obsolete or non-competitive before we can recover the expenses of ganaxolone's development and commercialization.

        Mergers and acquisitions in the pharmaceutical and biotechnology industries may result in even more resources being concentrated among a smaller number of our competitors. Smaller and other early-stage companies may also prove to be significant competitors, particularly through collaborative arrangements with large and established companies. These third parties compete with us in recruiting and retaining qualified scientific, management and commercial personnel, establishing clinical trial sites and subject registration for clinical trials, as well as in acquiring technologies complementary to, or necessary for, our programs.

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Product liability lawsuits against us could cause us to incur substantial liabilities and to limit commercialization of ganaxolone or other product candidates that we may develop.

        We face an inherent risk of product liability exposure related to the testing of ganaxolone by us or our investigators in human clinical trials and will face an even greater risk if ganaxolone receives regulatory approval and we commercially sell ganaxolone after obtaining such regulatory approval. Product liability claims may be brought against us by study subjects enrolled in our clinical trials, patients, healthcare providers or others using, administering or selling ganaxolone. If we cannot successfully defend ourselves against claims that ganaxolone caused injuries, we could incur substantial liabilities. Regardless of merit or eventual outcome, liability claims may result in, for example:

    decreased demand for ganaxolone;

    termination of clinical trial sites or entire trial programs;

    injury to our reputation and significant negative media attention;

    withdrawal of clinical trial subjects;

    significant costs to defend the related litigation;

    substantial monetary awards to clinical trial subjects or patients;

    loss of revenue;

    diversion of management and scientific resources from our business operations;

    the inability to commercialize ganaxolone; and

    increased scrutiny and potential investigation by, among others, the FDA, the DOJ, the Office of Inspector General of the HHS, state attorneys general, members of Congress and the public.

        We currently have $5.0 million in product liability insurance coverage in the aggregate, which may not be adequate to cover all liabilities that we may incur. Insurance coverage is increasingly expensive. We may not be able to maintain insurance coverage at a reasonable cost or in an amount adequate to satisfy any liability that may arise. We intend to expand our product liability insurance coverage to include the sale of commercial products if we obtain marketing approval for ganaxolone, but we may be unable to obtain commercially reasonable product liability insurance for ganaxolone, if approved for marketing. Large judgments have been awarded in class action lawsuits based on drugs that had unanticipated side effects. A successful product liability claim or series of claims brought against us, particularly if judgments exceed our insurance coverage, could decrease our cash and adversely affect our business.

Risks Related to Our Dependence on Third Parties

We rely on third parties to conduct our preclinical studies and clinical trials. If these third parties do not successfully carry out their contractual duties or meet expected deadlines, we may not be able to obtain regulatory approval for or commercialize ganaxolone.

        We rely on third-party CROs to monitor and manage data for our ongoing preclinical and clinical programs. We rely on these parties for execution of our preclinical studies and clinical trials, and we control only some aspects of their activities. Nevertheless, we are responsible for ensuring that each of our preclinical studies and clinical trials are conducted in accordance with the applicable protocol and legal, regulatory and scientific requirements and standards, and our reliance on the CROs does not relieve us of our regulatory responsibilities. We also rely on third parties to assist in conducting our preclinical studies in accordance with Good Laboratory Practices, or GLP, and the Animal Welfare Act requirements. We and our CROs are required to comply with federal regulations and Good Clinical Practices, or GCP, which are international requirements meant to protect the rights and health of subjects that are enforced by the FDA, the Competent Authorities of the Member States of the European Economic Area and comparable

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foreign regulatory authorities for ganaxolone and any future product candidates in clinical development. Regulatory authorities enforce GCP through periodic inspections of trial sponsors, principal investigators and trial sites. If we or any of our CROs fail to comply with applicable GCP, the clinical data generated in our clinical trials may be deemed unreliable and the FDA or comparable foreign regulatory authorities may require us to perform additional clinical trials before approving our marketing applications. We cannot assure you that upon inspection by a given regulatory authority, such regulatory authority will determine that any of our clinical trials comply with GCP requirements. In addition, our clinical trials must be conducted with product produced under cGMP requirements. Failure to comply with these regulations may require us to repeat preclinical studies and clinical trials, which would delay the regulatory approval process.

        Our CROs are not our employees, and except for remedies available to us under our agreements with such CROs, we cannot control whether or not they devote sufficient time and resources to our ongoing clinical, nonclinical and preclinical programs. If CROs do not successfully carry out their contractual duties or obligations or meet expected deadlines or if the quality or accuracy of the data they obtain is compromised due to the failure to adhere to our protocols, regulatory requirements or for other reasons, our preclinical studies and clinical trials may be extended, delayed or terminated and we may not be able to obtain regulatory approval for or successfully commercialize ganaxolone. As a result, our results of operations and the commercial prospects for ganaxolone would be harmed, our costs could increase and our ability to generate revenue could be delayed.

        Because we have relied on third parties, our internal capacity to perform these functions is limited. Outsourcing these functions involves risk that third parties may not perform to our standards, may not produce results in a timely manner or may fail to perform at all. In addition, the use of third-party service providers requires us to disclose our proprietary information to these parties, which could increase the risk that this information will be misappropriated. We currently have a small number of employees, which limits the internal resources we have available to identify and monitor our third-party providers. To the extent we are unable to identify and successfully manage the performance of third-party service providers in the future, our business may be adversely affected. Though we carefully manage our relationships with our CROs, there can be no assurance that we will not encounter challenges or delays in the future or that these delays or challenges will not have a material adverse impact on our business, financial condition and prospects.

If we lose our relationships with CROs, our drug development efforts could be delayed.

        We rely on third-party vendors and CROs for preclinical studies and clinical trials related to our drug development efforts. Switching or adding additional CROs would involve additional cost and requires management time and focus. Our CROs generally have the right to terminate their agreements with us in the event of an uncured material breach. In addition, some of our CROs have an ability to terminate their respective agreements with us, or research projects pursuant to such agreements, if, in the reasonable opinion of the relevant CRO, the safety of the subjects participating in our clinical trials warrants such termination. These agreements or research projects may also be terminated if we make a general assignment for the benefit of our creditors or if we are liquidated. Identifying, qualifying and managing performance of third-party service providers can be difficult, time consuming and cause delays in our development programs. In addition, there is a natural transition period when a new CRO commences work and the new CRO may not provide the same type or level of services as the original provider. If any of our relationships with our third-party CROs terminate, we may not be able to enter into arrangements with alternative CROs or to do so on commercially reasonable terms.

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Our experience manufacturing ganaxolone is limited to the needs of our preclinical studies and clinical trials. We have no experience manufacturing ganaxolone on a commercial scale and have no manufacturing facility. We are dependent on third-party manufacturers for the manufacture of ganaxolone as well as on third parties for our supply chain, and if we experience problems with any such third parties, the manufacturing of ganaxolone could be delayed.

        We do not own or operate facilities for the manufacture of ganaxolone. We currently have no plans to build our own clinical or commercial scale manufacturing capabilities. We currently rely on contract manufacturing organizations, or CMOs, for the chemical manufacture of active pharmaceutical ingredients for ganaxolone and another CMO for the production of the ganaxolone nanoparticulate formulation into capsules. To meet our projected needs for preclinical and clinical supplies to support our activities through regulatory approval and commercial manufacturing, the CMOs with whom we currently work will need to increase the scale of production. We may need to identify additional CMOs for continued production of supply for ganaxolone. Although alternative third-party suppliers with the necessary manufacturing and regulatory expertise and facilities exist, it could be expensive and take a significant amount of time to arrange for alternative suppliers. If we are unable to arrange for alternative third-party manufacturing sources on commercially reasonable terms, in a timely manner or at all, we may not be able to complete development of ganaxolone, or market or distribute ganaxolone.

        Reliance on third-party manufacturers entails risks to which we would not be subject if we manufactured ganaxolone ourselves, including reliance on the third party for regulatory compliance and quality assurance, the possibility of breach of the manufacturing agreement by the third party because of factors beyond our control, including a failure to synthesize and manufacture ganaxolone or any products we may eventually commercialize in accordance with our specifications, and the possibility of termination or nonrenewal of the agreement by the third party, based on its own business priorities, at a time that is costly or damaging to us. In addition, the FDA and other regulatory authorities would require that ganaxolone and any products that we may eventually commercialize be manufactured according to cGMP and similar foreign standards. Any failure by our third-party manufacturers to comply with cGMP or failure to scale up manufacturing processes, including any failure to deliver sufficient quantities of ganaxolone in a timely manner, could lead to a delay in, or failure to obtain, regulatory approval of ganaxolone. In addition, such failure could be the basis for the FDA to issue a warning letter, withdraw approvals for ganaxolone previously granted to us, or take other regulatory or legal action, including recall or seizure of outside supplies of ganaxolone, total or partial suspension of production, suspension of ongoing clinical trials, refusal to approve pending applications or supplemental applications, detention of product, refusal to permit the import or export of products, injunction, or imposing civil and criminal penalties.

        Any significant disruption in our supplier relationships could harm our business. Any significant delay in the supply of ganaxolone or its key materials for an ongoing preclinical study or clinical trial could considerably delay completion of our preclinical study or clinical trial, product testing and potential regulatory approval of ganaxolone. If our manufacturers or we are unable to purchase these key materials after regulatory approval has been obtained for ganaxolone, the commercial launch of ganaxolone would be delayed or there would be a shortage in supply, which would impair our ability to generate revenues from the sale of ganaxolone.

We may elect to enter into licensing or collaboration agreements to partner ganaxolone in territories currently retained by us. Our dependence on such relationships may adversely affect our business.

        Because we have limited resources, we may seek to enter into collaboration agreements with other pharmaceutical or biotechnology companies. Any failure by our partners to perform their obligations or any decision by our partners to terminate these agreements could negatively impact our ability to successfully develop, obtain regulatory approvals for and commercialize ganaxolone. In the event we grant exclusive rights to such partners, we would be precluded from potential commercialization of ganaxolone

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within the territories in which we have a partner. In addition, any termination of our collaboration agreements will terminate the funding we may receive under the relevant collaboration agreement and may impair our ability to fund further development efforts and our progress in our development programs.

        Our commercialization strategy for ganaxolone may depend on our ability to enter into agreements with collaborators to obtain assistance and funding for the development and potential commercialization of ganaxolone in the territories in which we seek to partner. Despite our efforts, we may be unable to secure additional collaborative licensing or other arrangements that are necessary for us to further develop and commercialize ganaxolone. Supporting diligence activities conducted by potential collaborators and negotiating the financial and other terms of a collaboration agreement are long and complex processes with uncertain results. Even if we are successful in entering into one or more collaboration agreements, collaborations may involve greater uncertainty for us, as we have less control over certain aspects of our collaborative programs than we do over our proprietary development and commercialization programs. We may determine that continuing a collaboration under the terms provided is not in our best interest, and we may terminate the collaboration. Our potential future collaborators could delay or terminate their agreements, and as a result ganaxolone may never be successfully commercialized.

        Further, our potential future collaborators may develop alternative products or pursue alternative technologies either on their own or in collaboration with others, including our competitors, and the priorities or focus of our collaborators may shift such that ganaxolone receives less attention or resources than we would like, or they may be terminated altogether. Any such actions by our potential future collaborators may adversely affect our business prospects and ability to earn revenue. In addition, we could have disputes with our potential future collaborators, such as the interpretation of terms in our agreements. Any such disagreements could lead to delays in the development or commercialization of ganaxolone or could result in time-consuming and expensive litigation or arbitration, which may not be resolved in our favor.

Government funding for certain of our programs adds uncertainty to our research efforts with respect to those programs and may impose requirements that increase the costs of commercialization and production of product candidates developed under those government-funded programs.

        Our preclinical studies and clinical trials to evaluate ganaxolone in FXS patients have been conducted with the MIND Institute at the University of California, Davis which receives funding from the United States Department of Defense, or the DoD, for such studies and trials. In addition, our preclinical studies and clinical trials to evaluate ganaxolone in patients suffering from posttraumatic stress disorder, or PTSD, have been primarily conducted by the United States Department of Veterans Affairs, which also receives funding from the DoD. Programs funded by the United States government and its agencies, including the DoD, include provisions that reflect the government's substantial rights and remedies, many of which are not typically found in commercial contracts, including powers of the government to:

    terminate agreements, in whole or in part, for any reason or no reason;

    reduce or modify the government's obligations under such agreements without the consent of the other party;

    claim rights, including intellectual property rights, in products and data developed under such agreements;

    audit contract-related costs and fees, including allocated indirect costs;

    suspend the contractor from receiving new contracts pending resolution of alleged violations of procurement laws or regulations;

    impose United States manufacturing requirements for products that embody inventions conceived or first reduced to practice under such agreements;

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    suspend or debar the contractor from doing future business with the government; and

    control and potentially prohibit the export of products.

        We may not have the right to prohibit the United States government from using or allowing others to use certain technologies developed by us, and we may not be able to prohibit third party companies, including our competitors, from using those technologies in providing products and services to the United States government. The United States government generally obtains the right to royalty-free use of technologies that are developed under United States government contracts.

        In addition, government contracts normally contain additional requirements that may increase our costs of doing business, reduce our profits, and expose us to liability for failure to comply with these terms and conditions. These requirements include, for example:

    specialized accounting systems unique to government contracts;

    mandatory financial audits and potential liability for price adjustments or recoupment of government funds after such funds have been spent;

    public disclosures of certain contract information, which may enable competitors to gain insights into our research program; and

    mandatory socioeconomic compliance requirements, including labor standards, non-discrimination and affirmative action programs and environmental compliance requirements.

        If we fail to maintain compliance with these requirements, we may be subject to potential contract liability and to termination of our contracts.

        Changes in government budgets and agendas may result in a decreased and de-prioritized emphasis on supporting the development of ganaxolone in patients suffering from certain FXS-associated behavioral symptoms. Although we intend to use a portion of the proceeds from this offering to fund our development programs for ganaxolone in patients with FXS, any reduction or delay in DoD funding to our collaborators may force us to suspend or terminate these programs or seek alternative funding, which may not be available on non-dilutive terms, terms favorable to us or at all.

If our third-party manufacturers use hazardous and biological materials in a manner that causes injury or violates applicable law, we may be liable for damages.

        Our research and development activities involve the controlled use of potentially hazardous substances, including chemical and biological materials by our third-party manufacturers. Our manufacturers are subject to federal, state and local laws and regulations in the United States governing the use, manufacture, storage, handling and disposal of medical, radioactive and hazardous materials. Although we believe that our manufacturers' procedures for using, handling, storing and disposing of these materials comply with legally prescribed standards, we cannot completely eliminate the risk of contamination or injury resulting from medical, radioactive or hazardous materials. As a result of any such contamination or injury we may incur liability or local, city, state or federal authorities may curtail the use of these materials and interrupt our business operations. In the event of an accident, we could be held liable for damages or penalized with fines, and the liability could exceed our resources. We do not have any insurance for liabilities arising from medical radioactive or hazardous materials. Compliance with applicable environmental laws and regulations is expensive, and current or future environmental regulations may impair our research, development and production efforts, which could harm our business, prospects, financial condition or results of operations.

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Risks Related to Regulatory Compliance

Recently enacted and future legislation, including potentially unfavorable pricing regulations or other healthcare reform initiatives, may increase the difficulty and cost for us to obtain marketing approval of and commercialize ganaxolone and affect the prices we may obtain.

        The regulations that govern, among other things, marketing approvals, coverage, pricing and reimbursement for new drug products vary widely from country to country. In the United States and some foreign jurisdictions, there have been a number of legislative and regulatory changes and proposed changes regarding the healthcare system that could prevent or delay marketing approval of ganaxolone, restrict or regulate post-approval activities and affect our ability to successfully sell ganaxolone, if we obtain marketing approval.

        In the United States, the Medicare Prescription Drug, Improvement, and Modernization Act of 2003, or Medicare Modernization Act, changed the way Medicare covers and pays for pharmaceutical products. The legislation expanded Medicare coverage for drug purchases by the elderly and introduced a new reimbursement methodology based on average sales prices for physician administered drugs. In recent years, Congress has considered further reductions in Medicare reimbursement for drugs administered by physicians. The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, the agency that runs the Medicare program, also has the authority to revise reimbursement rates and to implement coverage restrictions for some drugs. Cost reduction initiatives and changes in coverage implemented through legislation or regulation could decrease utilization of and reimbursement for any approved products, which in turn would affect the price we can receive for those products. While the Medicare Modernization Act and Medicare regulations apply only to drug benefits for Medicare beneficiaries, private payors often follow Medicare coverage policy and payment limitations in setting their own reimbursement rates. Therefore, any reduction in reimbursement that results from federal legislation or regulation may result in a similar reduction in payments from private payors.

        In March 2010, President Obama signed into law the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act and the Health Care and Education Affordability Reconciliation Act of 2010, or the Affordable Care Act, a sweeping law intended to broaden access to health insurance, reduce or constrain the growth of healthcare spending, enhance remedies against fraud and abuse, add new transparency requirements for healthcare and health insurance industries, impose new taxes and fees on pharmaceutical and medical device manufacturers and impose additional health policy reforms. The Affordable Care Act expanded manufacturers' rebate liability to include covered drugs dispensed to individuals who are enrolled in Medicaid managed care organizations, increased the minimum rebate due for innovator drugs from 15.1% of average manufacturer price, or AMP, to 23.1% of AMP and capped the total rebate amount for innovator drugs at 100.0% of AMP. The Affordable Care Act and subsequent legislation also changed the definition of AMP. Furthermore, the Affordable Care Act imposes a significant annual, nondeductible fee on companies that manufacture or import certain branded prescription drug products. Substantial new provisions affecting compliance have also been enacted, which may affect our business practices with healthcare practitioners, and a significant number of provisions are not yet, or have only recently become, effective. Although it is too early to determine the effect of the Affordable Care Act, it appears likely to continue the pressure on pharmaceutical pricing, especially under the Medicare program, and may also increase our regulatory burdens and operating costs.

        In addition, other legislative changes have been proposed and adopted since the Affordable Care Act was enacted. More recently, in August 2011, President Obama signed into law the Budget Control Act of 2011, which, among other things, creates the Joint Select Committee on Deficit Reduction to recommend to Congress proposals in spending reductions. The Joint Select Committee did not achieve a targeted deficit reduction of an amount greater than $1.2 trillion for the years 2013 through 2021, triggering the legislation's automatic reduction to several government programs. This includes aggregate reductions to Medicare payments to healthcare providers of up to 2.0% per fiscal year, starting in 2013. In January 2013,

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President Obama signed into law the American Taxpayer Relief Act of 2012, which, among other things, reduced Medicare payments to several categories of healthcare providers and increased the statute of limitations period for the government to recover overpayments to providers from three to five years. If we ever obtain regulatory approval and commercialization of ganaxolone, these new laws may result in additional reductions in Medicare and other healthcare funding, which could have a material adverse effect on our customers and accordingly, our financial operations. Legislative and regulatory proposals have been made to expand post-approval requirements and restrict sales and promotional activities for pharmaceutical products. We cannot be sure whether additional legislative changes will be enacted, or whether FDA regulations, guidance or interpretations will be changed, or what the impact of such changes on the marketing approvals of ganaxolone may be.

        In the United States, the European Union and other potentially significant markets for ganaxolone, government authorities and third-party payors are increasingly attempting to limit or regulate the price of medical products and services, particularly for new and innovative products and therapies, which has resulted in lower average selling prices. Furthermore, the increased emphasis on managed healthcare in the United States and on country and regional pricing and reimbursement controls in the European Union will put additional pressure on product pricing, reimbursement and usage, which may adversely affect our future product sales and results of operations. These pressures can arise from rules and practices of managed care groups, judicial decisions and governmental laws and regulations related to Medicare, Medicaid and healthcare reform, pharmaceutical reimbursement policies and pricing in general.

        Some countries require approval of the sale price of a drug before it can be marketed. In many countries, the pricing review period begins after marketing or product licensing approval is granted. In some foreign markets, prescription pharmaceutical pricing remains subject to continuing governmental control even after initial approval is granted. As a result, we might obtain marketing approval for ganaxolone in a particular country, but then be subject to price regulations that delay our commercial launch of the product, possibly for lengthy time periods, which could negatively impact the revenue we are able to generate from the sale of the product in that particular country. Adverse pricing limitations may hinder our ability to recoup our investment in ganaxolone even if ganaxolone obtains marketing approval.

Laws and regulations governing international operations may preclude us from developing, manufacturing and selling product candidates outside of the United States and require us to develop and implement costly compliance programs.

        As we seek to expand our operations outside of the United States, we must comply with numerous laws and regulations in each jurisdiction in which we plan to operate. The creation and implementation of international business practices compliance programs is costly and such programs are difficult to enforce, particularly where reliance on third parties is required.

        The Foreign Corrupt Practices Act, or FCPA, prohibits any United States individual or business from paying, offering, authorizing payment or offering of anything of value, directly or indirectly, to any foreign official, political party or candidate for the purpose of influencing any act or decision of the foreign entity in order to assist the individual or business in obtaining or retaining business. The FCPA also obligates companies whose securities are listed in the United States to comply with certain accounting provisions requiring such companies to maintain books and records that accurately and fairly reflect all transactions of the corporation, including international subsidiaries, and to devise and maintain an adequate system of internal accounting controls for international operations. The anti-bribery provisions of the FCPA are enforced primarily by the DOJ. The Securities and Exchange Commission, or the SEC, is involved with enforcement of the books and records provisions of the FCPA.

        Compliance with the FCPA is expensive and difficult, particularly in countries in which corruption is a recognized problem. In addition, the FCPA presents particular challenges in the pharmaceutical industry, because, in many countries, hospitals are operated by the government, and doctors and other hospital

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employees are considered foreign officials. Certain payments to hospitals in connection with clinical trials and other work have been deemed to be improper payments to government officials and have led to FCPA enforcement actions.

        Various laws, regulations and executive orders also restrict the use and dissemination outside of the United States, or the sharing with certain foreign nationals, of information classified for national security purposes, as well as certain products and technical data relating to those products. Our expanding presence outside of the United States will require us to dedicate additional resources to comply with these laws, and these laws may preclude us from developing, manufacturing, or selling ganaxolone outside of the United States, which could limit our growth potential and increase our development costs.

        The failure to comply with laws governing international business practices may result in substantial penalties, including suspension or debarment from government contracting. Violation of the FCPA can result in significant civil and criminal penalties. Indictment alone under the FCPA can lead to suspension of the right to do business with the United States government until the pending claims are resolved. Conviction of a violation of the FCPA can result in long-term disqualification as a government contractor. The termination of a government contract or relationship as a result of our failure to satisfy any of our obligations under laws governing international business practices would have a negative impact on our operations and harm our reputation and ability to procure government contracts. The SEC also may suspend or bar issuers from trading securities on United States exchanges for violations of the FCPA's accounting provisions.

Our relationships with customers and third-party payors will be subject to applicable anti-kickback, fraud and abuse and other healthcare laws and regulations, which could expose us to criminal sanctions, civil penalties, contractual damages, reputational harm and diminished profits and future earnings.

        Healthcare providers, physicians and third-party payors will play a primary role in the recommendation and prescription of any product candidates for which we obtain marketing approval. Our future arrangements with third-party payors and customers may expose us to broadly applicable fraud and abuse and other healthcare laws and regulations that may affect the business or financial arrangements and relationships through which we would market, sell and distribute our products. Even though we do not and will not control referrals of healthcare services or bill directly to Medicare, Medicaid or other third-party payors, federal and state healthcare laws and regulations pertaining to fraud and abuse and patients' rights are and will be applicable to our business. Restrictions under applicable federal and state healthcare laws and regulations that may affect our operations (including our marketing, promotion, educational programs, pricing, and relationships with healthcare providers or other entities, among other things) and expose us to areas of risk including the following:

    the federal Anti-Kickback Statute prohibits, among other things, persons from knowingly and willfully soliciting, offering, receiving or providing remuneration, directly or indirectly, in cash or in kind, to induce or reward, or in return for, either the referral of an individual for, or the purchase, order or recommendation of, any good or service, for which payment may be made under a federal healthcare program such as Medicare and Medicaid;

    federal civil and criminal false claims laws and civil monetary penalty laws impose criminal and civil penalties, including through civil whistleblower or qui tam actions, against individuals or entities for knowingly presenting, or causing to be presented, to the federal government, including the Medicare and Medicaid programs, claims for payment that are false or fraudulent or making a false statement to avoid, decrease or conceal an obligation to pay money to the federal government;

    the federal Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act of 1996, or HIPAA, imposes criminal and civil liability for executing a scheme to defraud any healthcare benefit program and also created federal criminal laws that prohibit knowingly and willfully falsifying, concealing or

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      covering up a material fact or making any materially false statements in connection with the delivery of or payment for healthcare benefits, items or services;

    HIPAA, as amended by the Health Information Technology for Economic and Clinical Health Act, or HITECH, also imposes obligations, including mandatory contractual terms, with respect to safeguarding the privacy, security and transmission of individually identifiable health information;

    the Affordable Care Act requires manufacturers of drugs, devices, biologics and medical supplies that are reimbursable under Medicare, Medicaid, or Children's Health Insurance Program, to report annually to HHS information related to payments and other transfers of value to physicians and teaching hospitals, and ownership and investment interests held by physicians and their immediate family members and applicable group purchasing organizations; and

    analogous state and foreign laws and regulations, such as state anti-kickback and false claims laws, may apply to sales or marketing arrangements and claims involving healthcare items or services reimbursed by non-governmental third-party payors, including private insurers; some state laws require pharmaceutical companies to comply with the pharmaceutical industry's voluntary compliance guidelines and the relevant compliance guidance promulgated by the federal government and may require drug manufacturers to report information related to payments and other transfers of value to physicians and other healthcare providers or marketing expenditures; and state and foreign laws govern the privacy and security of health information in specified circumstances, many of which differ from each other in significant ways and often are not preempted by HIPAA, thus complicating compliance efforts.

        Efforts to ensure that our business arrangements with third parties are compliant with applicable healthcare laws and regulations will involve the expenditure of appropriate, and possibly significant, resources. Nonetheless, it is possible that governmental authorities will conclude that our business practices may not comply with current or future statutes, regulations or case law involving applicable fraud and abuse or other healthcare laws and regulations. If our operations are found to be in violation of any of these laws or any other governmental regulations that may apply to us, we may be subject to significant civil, criminal and administrative penalties, damages, fines, imprisonment, exclusion from government funded healthcare programs, such as Medicare and Medicaid, and the curtailment or restructuring of our operations. If any physicians or other healthcare providers or entities with whom we expect to do business are found to not be in compliance with applicable laws, they may be subject to criminal, civil or administrative sanctions, including exclusions from government funded healthcare programs.

Risks Related to Our Intellectual Property

If we are unable to protect our intellectual property rights or if our intellectual property rights are inadequate for our technology and product candidates, our competitive position could be harmed.

        Our commercial success will depend in large part on our ability to obtain and maintain patent and other intellectual property protection in the United States and other countries with respect to our proprietary technology and products. We rely on trade secret, patent, copyright and trademark laws, and confidentiality, licensing and other agreements with employees and third parties, all of which offer only limited protection. We seek to protect our proprietary position by filing and prosecuting patent applications in the United States and abroad related to our novel technologies and products that are important to our business.

        The patent positions of biotechnology and pharmaceutical companies generally are highly uncertain, involve complex legal and factual questions and have in recent years been the subject of much litigation. As a result, the issuance, scope, validity, enforceability and commercial value of our patents, including those patent rights licensed to us by third parties, are highly uncertain. The steps we or our licensors have taken

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to protect our proprietary rights may not be adequate to preclude misappropriation of our proprietary information or infringement of our intellectual property rights, both inside and outside the United States. Further, the examination process may require us or our licensors to narrow the claims for our pending patent applications, which may limit the scope of patent protection that may be obtained if these applications issue. The rights already granted under any of our currently issued patents or those licensed to us and those that may be granted under future issued patents may not provide us with the proprietary protection or competitive advantages we are seeking. If we or our licensors are unable to obtain and maintain patent protection for our technology and products, or if the scope of the patent protection obtained is not sufficient, our competitors could develop and commercialize technology and products similar or superior to ours, and our ability to successfully commercialize our technology and products may be adversely affected. It is also possible that we or our licensors will fail to identify patentable aspects of inventions made in the course of our development and commercialization activities before it is too late to obtain patent protection on them.

        With respect to patent rights, we do not know whether any of our granted or issued patents will effectively prevent others from commercializing competitive technologies and products. Publications of discoveries in the scientific literature often lag behind the actual discoveries, and patent applications in the United States and other jurisdictions are typically not published until 18 months after filing or in some cases not at all, until they are issued as a patent. Therefore we cannot be certain that we or our licensors were the first to make the inventions claimed in our owned or licensed patents or pending patent applications, or that we or our licensors were the first to file for patent protection of such inventions.

        Our pending applications cannot be enforced against third parties practicing the technology claimed in such applications unless and until a patent issues from such applications. Because the issuance of a patent is not conclusive as to its inventorship, scope, validity or enforceability, issued patents that we own or have licensed from third parties may be challenged in the courts or patent offices in the United States and abroad. Such challenges may result in the loss of patent protection, the narrowing of claims in such patents or the invalidity or unenforceability of such patents, which could limit our ability to stop others from using or commercializing similar or identical technology and products, or limit the duration of the patent protection for our technology and products. Protecting against the unauthorized use of our or our licensors' patented technology, trademarks and other intellectual property rights is expensive, difficult and may in some cases not be possible. In some cases, it may be difficult or impossible to detect third-party infringement or misappropriation of our intellectual property rights, even in relation to issued patent claims, and proving any such infringement may be even more difficult.

Third parties may initiate legal proceedings alleging that we are infringing their intellectual property rights, the outcome of which would be uncertain and could harm our business.

        Our commercial success depends upon our ability to develop, manufacture, market and sell ganaxolone, and to use our related proprietary technologies. We may become party to, or threatened with, future adversarial proceedings or litigation regarding intellectual property rights with respect to ganaxolone, including interference or derivation proceedings before the United States Patent and Trademark Office, or USPTO. Third parties may assert infringement claims against us based on existing patents or patents that may be granted in the future. If we are found to infringe a third party's intellectual property rights, we could be required to obtain a license from such third party to continue commercializing ganaxolone. However, we may not be able to obtain any required license on commercially reasonable terms or at all. Under certain circumstances, we could be forced, including by court order, to cease commercializing ganaxolone. In addition, in any such proceeding or litigation, we could be found liable for monetary damages. A finding of infringement could prevent us from commercializing ganaxolone or force us to cease some of our business operations, which could materially harm our business. Any claims by third parties that we have misappropriated their confidential information or trade secrets could have a similar negative impact on our business.

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        While ganaxolone is in preclinical studies and clinical trials, we believe that the use of ganaxolone in these preclinical studies and clinical trials falls within the scope of the exemptions provided by 35 U.S.C. Section 271(e) in the United States, which exempts from patent infringement liability activities reasonably related to the development and submission of information to the FDA. As ganaxolone progresses toward commercialization, the possibility of a patent infringement claim against us increases. While ganaxolone itself is off patent, we attempt to ensure that our solid and liquid nanoparticulate formulation of ganaxolone and the methods we employ to manufacture ganaxolone do not infringe other parties' patents and other proprietary rights. There can be no assurance they do not, however, and competitors or other parties may assert that we infringe their proprietary rights in any event.

If we breach our license agreement with Purdue Neuroscience Company, it could have a material adverse effect on our commercialization efforts for ganaxolone or such other compounds in the United States.

        In September 2004, we entered into a license agreement with Purdue Neuroscience Company, or Purdue, which was most recently amended and restated in May 2008, granting us exclusive rights to certain know-how and technology relating thereto, excluding the field of treatment of unpleasant sensory or emotional experience associated with actual or potential tissue damage, or described in terms of such damage. If we materially breach or fail to perform any provision under this license agreement (including failure to make payments to Purdue when due for royalties and other sub-license revenue, failure to cure a breach for failure to use commercially reasonable efforts to develop and commercialize at least one licensed product, and commencement of bankruptcy or insolvency proceedings against us) Purdue has the right to terminate our license, and upon the effective date of such termination, we must cease all activities licensed all rights, data, information, know-how, and material licensed or transferred to us under this license agreement will revert to Purdue and all rights, data, information, know-how, material, records and registrations developed or made by us that relate in whole or in part to the activities contemplated by our amended and restated license agreement with Purdue will be transferred to Purdue. To the extent such a breach relates to ganaxolone, we would expect to exercise all rights and remedies available to us, including attempting to cure any breach by us, and otherwise seek to preserve our rights, but we may not be able to do so in a timely manner, at an acceptable cost to us or at all. Any uncured, material breach under the license agreement could result in our loss of rights to practice our patent rights and could have a material adverse effect on our commercialization efforts for ganaxolone.

We may not be able to protect our intellectual property rights throughout the world.

        Filing, prosecuting and defending patents on ganaxolone and any future product candidates throughout the world would be prohibitively expensive, and our or our licensors' intellectual property rights in some countries outside the United States can be less extensive than those in the United States. In addition, the laws and practices of some foreign countries do not protect intellectual property rights to the same extent as federal and state laws in the United States. Consequently, we may not be able to prevent third parties from practicing our inventions in all countries outside the United States, or from selling or importing products made using our inventions into or within the United States or other jurisdictions. Competitors may use our technologies in jurisdictions where we have not obtained patent protection to develop their own products, and may export otherwise infringing products to territories where we have patent protection, but where enforcement is not as strong as that in the United States. These products may compete with our products in jurisdictions where we do not have any issued patents and our patent claims or other intellectual property rights may not be effective or sufficient to prevent them from competing with us in these jurisdictions.

        Many companies have encountered significant problems in protecting and defending intellectual property rights in certain foreign jurisdictions. The legal systems of certain countries, particularly certain developing countries, do not favor the enforcement of patents and other intellectual property protection, particularly those relating to biopharmaceuticals, which could make it difficult for us to stop the infringement of our or our licensor's patents or marketing of competing products in violation of our

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proprietary rights generally in those countries. Proceedings to enforce our patent rights in foreign jurisdictions could result in substantial cost and divert our efforts and attention from other aspects of our business, could put our patents at risk of being invalidated or interpreted narrowly and our patent applications at risk of not issuing and could provoke third parties to assert claims against us. We may not prevail in any lawsuits that we initiate and the damages or other remedies awarded, if any, may not be commercially meaningful.

        The laws of certain foreign countries may not protect our rights to the same extent as the laws of the United States, and these foreign laws may also be subject to change. For example, novel formulations and manufacturing processes may not be patentable in certain jurisdictions, and the requirements for patentability may differ in certain countries, particularly developing countries. Furthermore, generic drug manufacturers or other competitors may challenge the scope, validity or enforceability of our patents, requiring us to engage in complex, lengthy and costly litigation or other proceedings. Generic drug manufacturers may develop, seek approval for, and launch generic versions of our products. Many countries, including European Union countries, India, Japan and China, have compulsory licensing laws under which a patent owner may be compelled under certain circumstances to grant licenses to third parties. In those countries, we may have limited remedies if patents are infringed or if we are compelled to grant a license to a third party, which could materially diminish the value of our patents. This could limit our potential revenue opportunities. Accordingly, our efforts to enforce intellectual property rights around the world may be inadequate to obtain a significant commercial advantage from our intellectual property.

Patent terms may be inadequate to protect our competitive position on our products for an adequate amount of time.

        Given the amount of time required for the development, testing and regulatory review of new product candidates, such as ganaxolone, patents protecting such candidates might expire before or shortly after such candidates are commercialized. We expect to seek extensions of patent terms in the United States and, if available, in other countries where we are prosecuting patents. In the United States, the Drug Price Competition and Patent Term Restoration Act of 1984 permits a patent term extension of up to five years beyond the normal expiration of the patent, which is limited to the approved indication (or any additional indications approved during the period of extension). However, the applicable authorities, including the FDA and the USPTO in the United States, and any equivalent regulatory authority in other countries, may not agree with our assessment of whether such extensions are available, and may refuse to grant extensions to our patents, or may grant more limited extensions than we request. If this occurs, our competitors may be able to take advantage of our investment in development and clinical trials by referencing our clinical and preclinical data and launch their product earlier than might otherwise be the case.

Changes in patent laws, including recent patent reform legislation, could increase the uncertainties and costs surrounding the prosecution of our patent applications and the enforcement or defense of our issued patents.

        As is the case with other pharmaceutical companies, our success is heavily dependent on intellectual property, particularly patents. Obtaining and enforcing patents in the pharmaceutical industry involve technological and legal complexity, and obtaining and enforcing pharmaceutical patents is costly, time-consuming, and inherently uncertain. Changes in either the patent laws or interpretation of the patent laws in the United States and other countries may diminish the value of our patents or narrow the scope of our patent protection. For example, the United States Supreme Court has ruled on several patent cases in recent years, either narrowing the scope of patent protection available in certain circumstances or weakening the rights of patent owners in certain situations. In addition to increasing uncertainty with regard to our ability to obtain patents in the future, this combination of events has created uncertainty with respect to the value of patents, once obtained. Depending on decisions by Congress, the federal courts, and the USPTO, the laws and regulations governing patents could change in unpredictable ways that would weaken our ability to obtain new patents or to enforce existing patents and patents we may obtain in the future. Recent patent reform legislation could increase the uncertainties and costs surrounding the prosecution of our patent applications and the enforcement or defense of our issued patents.

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        In September 2011, the Leahy-Smith America Invents Act, or the Leahy-Smith Act, was signed into law. The Leahy-Smith Act includes a number of significant changes to United States patent law. These include provisions that affect the way patent applications will be prosecuted and may also affect patent litigation. In particular, under the Leahy-Smith Act, the United States transitioned in March 2013 to a "first to file" system in which the first inventor to file a patent application will be entitled to the patent. Third parties are allowed to submit prior art before the issuance of a patent by the USPTO and may become involved in opposition, derivation, reexamination, inter-parties review or interference proceedings challenging our patent rights or the patent rights of our licensors. An adverse determination in any such submission, proceeding or litigation could reduce the scope of, or invalidate patent rights, which could adversely affect our competitive position.

        The USPTO is currently developing regulations and procedures to govern administration of the Leahy-Smith Act, and many of the substantive changes to patent law associated with the Leahy-Smith Act, and in particular, the first to file provisions, did not become effective until March 16, 2013. Accordingly, it is not clear what, if any, impact the Leahy-Smith Act will have on the operation of our business. However, the Leahy-Smith Act and its implementation could increase the uncertainties and costs surrounding the prosecution of our patent applications and the enforcement or defense of our issued patents.

Obtaining and maintaining our patent protection depends on compliance with various procedural, document submissions, fee payment and other requirements imposed by governmental patent agencies, and our patent protection could be reduced or eliminated for non-compliance with these requirements.

        Periodic maintenance fees on any issued patent are due to be paid to the USPTO and foreign patent agencies in several stages over the lifetime of the patent. The USPTO and various foreign governmental patent agencies require compliance with a number of procedural, documentary, fee payment and other similar provisions during the patent application process. While an inadvertent lapse can in many cases be cured by payment of a late fee or by other means in accordance with the applicable rules, there are situations in which noncompliance can result in abandonment or lapse of the patent or patent application, resulting in partial or complete loss of patent rights in the relevant jurisdiction. Non-compliance events that could result in abandonment or lapse of a patent or patent application include, but are not limited to, failure to respond to official actions within prescribed time limits, non-payment of fees and failure to properly legalize and submit formal documents. If we or our licensors fail to maintain the patents and patent applications covering our product candidates, our competitive position would be adversely affected.

We may become involved in lawsuits to protect or enforce our intellectual property, which could be expensive, time consuming and unsuccessful and have a material adverse effect on the success of our business.

        Competitors may infringe our patents or misappropriate or otherwise violate our intellectual property rights. To counter infringement or unauthorized use, litigation may be necessary in the future to enforce or defend our intellectual property rights, to protect our trade secrets or to determine the validity and scope of our own intellectual property rights or the proprietary rights of others. Also, third parties may initiate legal proceedings against us to challenge the validity or scope of intellectual property rights we own or control. These proceedings can be expensive and time consuming. Many of our current and potential competitors have the ability to dedicate substantially greater resources to defend their intellectual property rights than we can. Accordingly, despite our efforts, we may not be able to prevent third parties from infringing upon or misappropriating our intellectual property. Litigation could result in substantial costs and diversion of management resources, which could harm our business and financial results. In addition, in an infringement proceeding, a court may decide that a patent owned or controlled by us is invalid or unenforceable, or may refuse to stop the other party from using the technology at issue on the grounds that our patents do not cover the technology in question. An adverse result in any litigation proceeding could put one or more of our patents at risk of being invalidated, held unenforceable or interpreted narrowly. Furthermore, because of the substantial amount of discovery required in connection with intellectual property litigation, there is a risk that some of our confidential information could be compromised by

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disclosure during this type of litigation. There could also be public announcements of the results of hearings, motions or other interim proceedings or developments. If securities analysts or investors perceive these results to be negative, it could have a material adverse effect on the price of shares of our common stock.

We may be subject to claims by third parties asserting that we have misappropriated their intellectual property, or claiming ownership of what we regard as our own intellectual property.

        Some of our employees were previously employed at universities or at other biotechnology or pharmaceutical companies, including our competitors or potential competitors. Some of these employees, including each member of our senior management, executed proprietary rights, non-disclosure and non-competition agreements, or similar agreements, in connection with such previous employment. Although we try to ensure that our employees do not use the proprietary information or know-how of others in their work for us, we may be subject to claims that we or these employees have used or disclosed intellectual property, including trade secrets or other proprietary information, of any such third party. Litigation may be necessary to defend against such claims. If we fail in defending any such claims, in addition to paying monetary damages, we may lose valuable intellectual property rights or personnel or sustain damages. Such intellectual property rights could be awarded to a third party, and we could be required to obtain a license from such third party to commercialize our technology or products. Such a license may not be available on commercially reasonable terms or at all. Even if we are successful in defending against such claims, litigation could result in substantial costs and be a distraction to management.

Intellectual property rights do not necessarily address all potential threats to our competitive advantage.

        The degree of future protection afforded by our intellectual property rights is uncertain because intellectual property rights have limitations, and may not adequately protect our business, or permit us to maintain our competitive advantage. The following examples are illustrative:

    others may be able to make compounds or ganaxolone formulations that are similar to our ganaxolone formulations but that are not covered by the claims of the patents that we own or control;

    we or any strategic partners might not have been the first to make the inventions covered by the issued patents or pending patent applications that we own or control;

    we might not have been the first to file patent applications covering certain of our inventions;

    others may independently develop similar or alternative technologies or duplicate any of our technologies without infringing our intellectual property rights;

    it is possible that our pending patent applications will not lead to issued patents;

    issued patents that we own or control may not provide us with any competitive advantages, or may be held invalid or unenforceable as a result of legal challenges;

    our competitors might conduct research and development activities in the United States and other countries that provide a safe harbor from patent infringement claims for certain research and development activities, as well as in countries where we do not have patent rights and then use the information learned from such activities to develop competitive products for sale in our major commercial markets;

    we may not develop additional proprietary technologies that are patentable; and

    the patents of others may have an adverse effect on our business.

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Risks Related to Employee Matters, Managing Growth and Becoming a Public Company

Our future success depends on our ability to retain our executive officers and to attract, retain and motivate qualified personnel.

        We are highly dependent upon Christopher M. Cashman, our Chief Executive Officer, Edward F. Smith, our Chief Financial Officer, and Gail M. Farfel, Ph.D., our Chief Clinical Development and Regulatory Officer. The employment agreements we have with the persons named above do not prevent such persons from terminating their employment with us at any time. We do not maintain "key person" insurance for any of our executives or other employees. The loss of the services of any of these persons could impede the achievement of our research, development and commercialization objectives.

We will need to grow the size of our organization, and we may experience difficulties in managing this growth.

        As of March 31, 2014, we had four full-time employees. As our development and commercialization plans and strategies develop, or as a result of any future acquisitions, we will need additional managerial, operational, sales, marketing, financial and other resources. In addition, it may become more cost effective to bring in house certain resources currently outsourced to consultants and other third-parties. Our management, personnel and systems currently in place may not be adequate to support our future growth. Future growth would impose significant added responsibilities on members of management, including:

    managing our clinical trials effectively;

    identifying, recruiting, maintaining, motivating and integrating additional employees;

    managing our internal development efforts effectively while complying with our contractual obligations to licensors, licensees, contractors and other third parties;

    improving our managerial, development, operational and finance systems; and

    expanding our facilities.

        As our operations expand, we will need to manage additional relationships with various strategic partners, suppliers and other third parties. Our future financial performance and our ability to commercialize ganaxolone, if approved, and to compete effectively will depend, in part, on our ability to manage any future growth effectively. To that end, we must be able to manage our development efforts and clinical trials effectively and hire, train and integrate additional management, administrative and sales and marketing personnel. Our failure to accomplish any of these tasks could prevent us from successfully growing our company.

If we are unable to attract and retain highly qualified employees, and other personnel, advisors and consultants with scientific, technical and managerial expertise, we may not be able to grow effectively.

        Our future growth and success depend on our ability to recruit, retain, manage and motivate our employees, consultants and other third-parties. The loss of any member of our senior management team or the inability to hire or retain experienced management personnel could compromise our ability to execute our business plan and harm our operating results.

        Because of the specialized scientific and managerial nature of our business, we rely heavily on our ability to attract and retain qualified scientific, technical and managerial personnel, advisors and consultants. The competition for qualified personnel in the pharmaceutical field is intense and as a result, we may be unable to continue to attract and retain qualified personnel necessary for the development of our business.

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We may acquire other assets or businesses, or form collaborations or make investments in other companies or technologies that could harm our operating results, dilute our stockholders' ownership, increase our debt or cause us to incur significant expense.

        As part of our business strategy, we may pursue acquisitions of assets, including preclinical, clinical or commercial stage products or product candidates, or businesses, or strategic alliances and collaborations, to expand our existing technologies and operations. We may not identify or complete these transactions in a timely manner, on a cost-effective basis, or at all, and we may not realize the anticipated benefits of any such transaction, any of which could have a detrimental effect on our financial condition, results of operations and cash flows. We have no experience with acquiring other companies, products or product candidates, and limited experience with forming strategic alliances and collaborations. We may not be able to find suitable acquisition candidates, and if we make any acquisitions, we may not be able to integrate these acquisitions successfully into our existing business and we may incur additional debt or assume unknown or contingent liabilities in connection therewith. Integration of an acquired company or assets may also disrupt ongoing operations, require the hiring of additional personnel and the implementation of additional internal systems and infrastructure, especially the acquisition of commercial assets, and require management resources that would otherwise focus on developing our existing business. We may not be able to find suitable strategic alliance or collaboration partners or identify other investment opportunities, and we may experience losses related to any such investments.

        To finance any acquisitions or collaborations, we may choose to issue debt or equity securities as consideration. Any such issuance of shares would dilute the ownership of our stockholders. If the price of our common stock is low or volatile, we may not be able to acquire other assets or companies or fund a transaction using our stock as consideration. Alternatively, it may be necessary for us to raise additional funds for acquisitions through public or private financings. Additional funds may not be available on terms that are favorable to us, or at all.

Our employees may engage in misconduct or other improper activities, including noncompliance with regulatory standards and requirements, which could cause significant liability for us and harm our reputation.

        We are exposed to the risk of employee fraud or other misconduct, including intentional failures to comply with FDA regulations or similar regulations of comparable foreign regulatory authorities, provide accurate information to the FDA or comparable foreign regulatory authorities, comply with manufacturing standards we have established, comply with federal and state healthcare fraud and abuse laws and regulations and similar laws and regulations established and enforced by comparable foreign regulatory authorities, report financial information or data accurately or disclose unauthorized activities to us. Employee misconduct could also involve the improper use of information obtained in the course of clinical trials, which could result in regulatory sanctions and serious harm to our reputation. We will adopt a code of conduct for our directors, officers and employees, or the Code of Conduct, which will be effective as of consummation of this offering, but it is not always possible to identify and deter employee misconduct, and the precautions we take to detect and prevent this activity may not be effective in controlling unknown or unmanaged risks or losses or in protecting us from governmental investigations or other actions or lawsuits stemming from a failure to be in compliance with such laws or regulations. If any such actions are instituted against us, and we are not successful in defending ourselves or asserting our rights, those actions could have a significant impact on our business and results of operations, including the imposition of significant fines or other sanctions.

If we fail to maintain an effective system of internal control over financial reporting in the future, we may not be able to accurately report our financial condition, results of operations or cash flows, which may adversely affect investor confidence in us and, as a result, the value of our common stock.

        The Sarbanes-Oxley Act requires, among other things, that we maintain effective internal controls for financial reporting and disclosure controls and procedures. Commencing with our annual report on

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Form 10-K for the year ending December 31, 2015, we will be required, under Section 404 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act, to furnish a report by management on, among other things, the effectiveness of our internal control over financial reporting. This assessment will need to include disclosure of any material weaknesses identified by our management in our internal control over financial reporting. A material weakness is a deficiency, or combination of deficiencies, in internal control over financial reporting that results in more than a reasonable possibility that a material misstatement of annual or interim financial statements will not be prevented or detected on a timely basis. Section 404 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act also generally requires an attestation from our independent registered public accounting firm on the effectiveness of our internal control over financial reporting. However, for as long as we remain an emerging growth company as defined in the JOBS Act, we intend to take advantage of the exemption permitting us not to comply with the independent registered public accounting firm attestation requirement.

        Our compliance with Section 404 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act may require that we incur substantial accounting expense and expend significant management efforts. We currently do not have an internal audit group, and we will need to hire additional accounting and financial staff with appropriate public company experience and technical accounting knowledge, and compile the system and process documentation necessary to perform the evaluation needed to comply with Section 404. We may not be able to complete our evaluation, testing and any required remediation in a timely fashion. During the evaluation and testing process, if we identify one or more material weaknesses in our internal control over financial reporting, we will be unable to assert that our internal control over financial reporting is effective. We cannot assure you that there will not be material weaknesses or significant deficiencies in our internal control over financial reporting in the future. Any failure to maintain internal control over financial reporting could severely inhibit our ability to accurately report our financial condition, results of operations or cash flows. If we are unable to conclude that our internal control over financial reporting is effective, or if our independent registered public accounting firm determines we have a material weakness or significant deficiency in our internal control over financial reporting once that firm begin its Section 404 reviews, we could lose investor confidence in the accuracy and completeness of our financial reports, the market price of our common stock could decline, and we could be subject to sanctions or investigations by The NASDAQ Stock Market, the SEC or other regulatory authorities. Failure to remedy any material weakness in our internal control over financial reporting, or to implement or maintain other effective control systems required of public companies, could also restrict our future access to the capital markets.

Our disclosure controls and procedures may not prevent or detect all errors or acts of fraud.

        Upon consummation of this offering, we will become subject to the periodic reporting requirements of the Exchange Act. Our disclosure controls and procedures are designed to reasonably assure that information required to be disclosed by us in reports we file or submit under the Exchange Act is accumulated and communicated to management, recorded, processed, summarized and reported within the time periods specified in the rules and forms of the SEC. We believe that any disclosure controls and procedures or internal controls and procedures, no matter how well conceived and operated, can provide only reasonable, not absolute, assurance that the objectives of the control system are met.

        These inherent limitations include the realities that judgments in decision-making can be faulty, and that breakdowns can occur because of simple error or mistake. Additionally, controls can be circumvented by the individual acts of some persons, by collusion of two or more people or by an unauthorized override of the controls. Accordingly, because of the inherent limitations in our control system, misstatements or insufficient disclosures due to error or fraud may occur and not be detected.

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Risks Related to This Offering and Ownership of Our Common Stock

We do not know whether an active, liquid and orderly trading market will develop for our common stock or what the market price of our common stock will be and as a result it may be difficult for you to sell your shares of our common stock.

        Prior to this offering there has been no market for shares of our common stock. Although we expect that our common stock will be approved for listing on The NASDAQ Global Market, an active trading market for our shares may never develop or be sustained following this offering. The initial public offering price for our common stock will be determined through negotiations with the underwriters, and the negotiated price may not be indicative of the market price of our common stock after this offering. The market value of our common stock may decrease from the initial public offering price. As a result of these and other factors, you may be unable to resell your shares of our common stock at or above the initial public offering price. The lack of an active market may impair your ability to sell your shares at the time you wish to sell them or at a price that you consider reasonable. The lack of an active market may also reduce the fair market value of your shares. Further, an inactive market may also impair our ability to raise capital by selling shares of our common stock and may impair our ability to enter into collaborations or acquire companies or products by using our shares of common stock as consideration. The market price of our stock may be volatile, and you could lose all or part of your investment.

The market price of our stock may be volatile, and you could lose all or part of your investment.

        The trading price of our common stock following this offering is likely to be highly volatile and could be subject to wide fluctuations in response to various factors, some of which are beyond our control. In addition to the factors discussed in this "Risk Factors" section and elsewhere in this prospectus, these factors include:

    the success of competitive products or technologies;

    regulatory actions with respect to our products or our competitors' products;

    actual or anticipated changes in our growth rate relative to our competitors;

    announcements by us or our competitors of significant acquisitions, strategic partnerships, joint ventures, collaborations or capital commitments;

    results of clinical trials of ganaxolone or product candidates of our competitors;

    regulatory or legal developments in the United States and other countries;

    developments or disputes concerning patent applications, issued patents or other proprietary rights;

    the recruitment or departure of key personnel;

    the level of expenses related to our clinical development programs;

    the results of our efforts to in-license or acquire additional product candidates or products;

    actual or anticipated changes in estimates as to financial results, development timelines or recommendations by securities analysts;

    variations in our financial results or those of companies that are perceived to be similar to us;

    fluctuations in the valuation of companies perceived by investors to be comparable to us;

    share price and volume fluctuations attributable to inconsistent trading volume levels of our shares;

    announcement or expectation of additional financing efforts;

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    sales of our common stock by us, our insiders or our other stockholders;

    changes in the structure of healthcare payment systems;

    market conditions in the pharmaceutical and biotechnology sectors;

    general economic, industry and market conditions; and

    other events or factors, many of which are beyond our control.

        In addition, the stock market in general, The NASDAQ Global Market and pharmaceutical and biotechnology companies in particular, have experienced extreme price and volume fluctuations that have often been unrelated or disproportionate to the operating performance of these companies. Broad market and industry factors may negatively affect the market price of our common stock, regardless of our actual operating performance. The realization of any of these risks or any of a broad range of other risks, including those described in these "Risk Factors," could have a dramatic and material adverse impact on the market price of our common stock.

We may be subject to securities litigation, which is expensive and could divert our management's attention.

        The market price of our common stock may be volatile, and in the past companies that have experienced volatility in the market price of their stock have been subject to securities class action litigation. We may be the target of this type of litigation in the future. Securities litigation against us could result in substantial costs and divert our management's attention from other business concerns, which could seriously harm our business.

Insiders have substantial influence over us and could delay or prevent a change in corporate control.

        Prior to this offering, our executive officers, directors, and holders of 5% or more of our capital stock collectively beneficially owned approximately 93.1% of our voting stock and, upon consummation of this offering, that same group will together hold approximately        % of our outstanding voting stock, assuming an initial public offering price of $            per share (the midpoint of the estimated offering price range set forth on the cover page of this prospectus). If our 5% stockholders and their affiliated entities purchase all of the shares they have indicated an interest in purchasing in this offering, the number of shares of our common stock beneficially owned by our executive officers, directors and stockholders who owned more than 5% of our outstanding common stock before this offering will, in the aggregate, increase to approximately        % of our common stock upon consummation of this offering. This concentration of ownership could harm the market price of our common stock by:

    delaying, deferring or preventing a change in control of our company;

    impeding a merger, consolidation, takeover or other business combination involving our company; or

    discouraging a potential acquirer from making a tender offer or otherwise attempting to obtain control of our company.

        The interests of this group of stockholders may not always coincide with your interests or the interests of other stockholders and they may act in a manner that advances their best interests and not necessarily those of other stockholders, including seeking a premium value for their common stock, and might negatively affect the prevailing market price for our common stock.

If you purchase our common stock in this offering, you will incur immediate and substantial dilution in the book value of your shares.

        The initial public offering price is substantially higher than the net tangible book value per share of our common stock. Investors purchasing common stock in this offering will pay a price per share that substantially exceeds the book value of our tangible assets after subtracting our liabilities. As a result,

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investors purchasing common stock in this offering will incur immediate dilution of $            per share, based on an assumed initial public offering price of $            per share (the midpoint of the estimated offering price range set forth on the cover page of this prospectus).

        The exercise of any of our outstanding options would result in additional dilution. These issuances of common stock from the exercise of options will result in additional dilution to investors purchasing shares in this offering. As a result of this dilution, investors may receive significantly less than the purchase price paid in this offering, if anything, in the event of our liquidation. Further, because we will need to raise additional capital to fund our clinical development programs, we may in the future sell substantial amounts of common stock or securities convertible into or exchangeable for common stock. These future issuances of equity or equity-linked securities, together with the exercise of outstanding options and any additional shares issued in connection with acquisitions, if any, may result in further dilution to investors. For a further description of the dilution that you will experience immediately after this offering, see "Dilution."

We are an "emerging growth company" and we intend to take advantage of reduced disclosure and governance requirements applicable to emerging growth companies, which could result in our common stock being less attractive to investors.

        We are an emerging growth company, as defined in the Jumpstart Our Business Startups Act of 2012, or the JOBS Act. For as long as we continue to be an emerging growth company, we may take advantage of exemptions from various reporting requirements that are applicable to other public companies that are not emerging growth companies, including not being required to comply with the auditor attestation requirements of Section 404 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002, or the Sarbanes-Oxley Act, reduced disclosure obligations regarding executive compensation in this prospectus and our periodic reports and proxy statements and exemptions from the requirements of holding nonbinding advisory votes on executive compensation and stockholder approval of any golden parachute payments not previously approved. We could be an emerging growth company for up to five years following the year in which we complete this offering, although circumstances could cause us to lose that status earlier, including if the market value of our common stock held by non-affiliates exceeds $700.0 million as of any June 30 before that time or if we have total annual gross revenue of $1.0 billion or more during any fiscal year before that time, in which cases we would no longer be an emerging growth company as of the following December 31 or, if we issue more than $1.0 billion in non-convertible debt during any three-year period before that time, we would cease to be an emerging growth company immediately. Even after we no longer qualify as an emerging growth company, we may still qualify as a "smaller reporting company" which would allow us to take advantage of many of the same exemptions from disclosure requirements including not being required to comply with the auditor attestation requirements of Section 404 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act and reduced disclosure obligations regarding executive compensation in this prospectus and our periodic reports and proxy statements. We cannot predict if investors will find our common stock less attractive because we may rely on these exemptions. If some investors find our common stock less attractive as a result, there may be a less active trading market for our common stock and our stock price may be more volatile.

        Under the JOBS Act, emerging growth companies can also delay adopting new or revised accounting standards until such time as those standards apply to private companies. We have irrevocably elected not to avail ourselves of this exemption from new or revised accounting standards and, therefore, will be subject to the same new or revised accounting standards as other public companies that are not emerging growth companies. As a result, changes in rules of United States generally accepted accounting principles or their interpretation, the adoption of new guidance or the application of existing guidance to changes in our business could significantly affect our financial position and results of operations.

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We will incur increased costs as a result of operating as a public company, and our management will be required to devote substantial time to new compliance initiatives.

        As a public company, we will incur significant legal, accounting and other expenses that we did not incur as a private company, and these expenses may increase even more after we are no longer an "emerging growth company." We will be subject to the reporting requirements of the Exchange Act, the Sarbanes-Oxley Act, the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Protection Act, as well as rules adopted, and to be adopted, by the SEC and NASDAQ Stock Market. Our management and other personnel will need to devote a substantial amount of time to these compliance initiatives. Moreover, we expect these rules and regulations to substantially increase our legal and financial compliance costs and to make some activities more time-consuming and costly. We estimate that we will incur approximately $1.0 million to $2.0 million in incremental costs per year associated with being a publicly traded company, although it is possible that our actual incremental costs will be higher than we currently estimate. The increased costs will increase our net loss. For example, we expect these rules and regulations to make it more difficult and more expensive for us to obtain director and officer liability insurance and we may be required to incur substantial costs to maintain sufficient coverage. We cannot predict or estimate the amount or timing of additional costs we may incur to respond to these requirements. The impact of these requirements could also make it more difficult for us to attract and retain qualified persons to serve on our board of directors, our board committees or as executive officers.

Because we do not anticipate paying any cash dividends on our capital stock in the foreseeable future, capital appreciation, if any, will be your sole source of gain.

        We have never declared or paid cash dividends on our capital stock. We currently intend to retain all of our future earnings, if any, to finance the growth and development of our business. In addition, our ability to pay cash dividends is prohibited by our credit facility with Square 1 Bank, entered into in April 2014, and the terms of any future debt agreements may also preclude us from paying dividends. As a result, capital appreciation, if any, of our common stock will be your sole source of gain for the foreseeable future.

Sales of a substantial number of shares of our common stock in the public market could cause our stock price to fall.

        If our stockholders sell, or indicate an intention to sell, substantial amounts of our common stock in the public market after the lock-up and other legal restrictions on resale discussed in this prospectus lapse, the trading price of our common stock could decline. Based on shares of common stock outstanding as of March 31, 2014, including upon the closing of this offering we will have outstanding a total of                        shares of common stock, assuming net share settlement of all outstanding warrants, no exercise of the underwriters' option to purchase additional shares and no exercise of outstanding options. Of these shares, only the shares of common stock sold in this offering by us (other than those shares purchased by certain of our affiliates in this offering), plus any shares sold upon exercise of the underwriters' option to purchase additional shares, will be freely tradable without restriction in the public market immediately following this offering. Stifel, Nicolaus & Company, Incorporated and JMP Securities, LLC, however, may, in their sole discretion, permit our officers, directors and other stockholders who are subject to these lock-up agreements to sell shares prior to the expiration of the lock-up agreements.

        We expect that the lock-up agreements pertaining to this offering will expire 180 days from the date of this prospectus. After the lock-up agreements expire, up to an additional                                     shares of common stock will be eligible for sale in the public market, of which                                    shares are held by directors, executive officers and other affiliates and will be subject to volume limitations under Rule 144 under the Securities Act of 1933, as amended, or Securities Act, assuming an initial public offering price of $            per share (the midpoint of the price range set forth on the cover page of this prospectus). In addition, shares of common stock that are either subject to outstanding options or reserved for future issuance under our employee benefit plans will become eligible for sale in the public market to the extent

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permitted by the provisions of various vesting schedules, the lock-up agreements and Rule 144 and Rule 701 under the Securities Act. If these additional shares of common stock are sold, or if it is perceived that they will be sold, in the public market, the trading price of our common stock could decline.

        After this offering, the holders of                                    shares of our common stock, or        % of our total outstanding common stock as of March 31, 2014, will be entitled to rights with respect to the registration of their shares under the Securities Act, subject to the 180-day lock-up agreements described above and assuming an initial public offering price of $            per share (the midpoint of the price range set forth on the cover page of this prospectus). See "Description of Capital Stock—Registration Rights." Registration of these shares under the Securities Act would result in the shares becoming freely tradable without restriction under the Securities Act. Any sales of securities by these stockholders could have a material adverse effect on the trading price of our common stock.

Future sales and issuances of our common stock or rights to purchase common stock, including pursuant to our equity incentive plans, could result in additional dilution of the percentage ownership of our stockholders and could cause our stock price to fall.

        We expect that significant additional capital will be needed in the future to continue our planned operations. To raise capital, we may sell substantial amounts of common stock or securities convertible into or exchangeable for common stock. These future issuances of equity or equity-linked securities, together with the exercise of stock options, warrants outstanding or granted in the future and any additional shares issued in connection with acquisitions, if any, may result in material dilution to our investors. Such sales may also result in material dilution to our stockholders, and new investors could gain rights, preferences and privileges senior to those of holders of our common stock, including shares of common stock sold in this offering.

        Pursuant to our equity incentive plans, our compensation committee is authorized to grant equity-based incentive awards to our directors, executive officers and other employees and service providers. The number of shares of our common stock available for future grant under our 2005 Stock Option and Incentive Plan was 522,148 as of March 31, 2014. Additionally, our board of directors adopted, and we expect our stockholders to approve, our 2014 Equity Incentive Plan reserving for issuance a number of shares equal to 15% of our fully diluted shares outstanding upon and including shares issued pursuant to the consummation of this offering. Future equity incentive grants and issuances of common stock under our equity incentive plans may have an adverse effect on the market price of our common stock.

We have broad discretion in the use of the net proceeds from this offering and may not use them effectively.

        Although we currently intend to use the net proceeds from this offering in the manner described in the "Use of Proceeds" section in this prospectus, our management will have broad discretion in the application of the net proceeds from this offering and could spend the proceeds in ways that do not improve our business, including our ganaxolone clinical development programs, or enhance the value of our common stock. The failure by our management to apply these funds effectively could result in financial losses that could have a material adverse effect on our business, cause the market price of our common stock to decline and delay the development of ganaxolone. Pending their use, we may invest the net proceeds from this offering in a manner that does not produce income or that loses value. If we do not invest the net proceeds from this offering in ways that enhance stockholder value, we may fail to achieve expected clinical development progression, which could cause the price of our common stock to decline.

Some provisions of our charter documents and Delaware law may have anti-takeover effects that could discourage an acquisition of us by others, even if an acquisition would be beneficial to our stockholders and may prevent attempts by our stockholders to replace or remove our current management.

        Provisions in our certificate of incorporation and bylaws that will become effective in connection with consummation of this offering, as well as provisions of Delaware law, could make it more difficult for a

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third party to acquire us or increase the cost of acquiring us, even if doing so would benefit our stockholders, or remove our current management. These include provisions that will:

    permit our board of directors to issue up to                         million shares of preferred stock, with any rights, preferences and privileges as it may designate;

    provide that all vacancies on our board of directors, including as a result of newly created directorships, may, except as otherwise required by law, be filled by the affirmative vote of a majority of directors then in office, even if less than a quorum;

    establish a classified board of directors such that only one of three classes of directors is elected each year;

    provide that directors can only be removed for cause;

    require that any action to be taken by our stockholders must be effected at a duly called annual or special meeting of stockholders and not be taken by written consent;

    provide that stockholders seeking to present proposals before a meeting of stockholders or to nominate candidates for election as directors at a meeting of stockholders must provide advance notice in writing, and also specify requirements as to the form and content of a stockholder's notice;

    require that the amendment of certain provisions of our certificate of incorporation and bylaws relating to anti-takeover measures may only be approved by a vote of 75% of our outstanding capital stock;

    not provide for cumulative voting rights, thereby allowing the holders of a majority of the shares of common stock entitled to vote in any election of directors to elect all of the directors standing for election; and

    provide that special meetings of our stockholders may be called only by the board of directors or by such person or persons designated by a majority of the board of directors to call such meetings.

        These provisions may frustrate or prevent any attempts by our stockholders to replace or remove our current management by making it more difficult for stockholders to replace members of our board of directors, who are responsible for appointing the members of our management. Because we are incorporated in Delaware, we are governed by the provisions of Section 203 of the Delaware General Corporation Law, which may discourage, delay or prevent someone from acquiring us or merging with us whether or not it is desired by or beneficial to our stockholders. Under Delaware law, a corporation may not, in general, engage in a business combination with any holder of 15.0% or more of its capital stock unless the holder has held the stock for three years or, among other things, the board of directors has approved the transaction. Any provision of our certificate of incorporation or bylaws or Delaware law that has the effect of delaying or deterring a change in control could limit the opportunity for our stockholders to receive a premium for their shares of our common stock, and could also affect the price that some investors are willing to pay for our common stock.

If securities or industry analysts do not publish research or publish inaccurate or unfavorable research about our business, our stock price and trading volume could decline.

        The trading market for our common stock will depend in part on the research and reports that securities or industry analysts publish about us or our business. Securities and industry analysts do not currently, and may never, publish research on our company. If no securities or industry analysts commence coverage of our company, the trading price for our stock would likely be negatively impacted. In the event securities or industry analysts initiate coverage, if one or more of the analysts who cover us downgrade our stock or publish inaccurate or unfavorable research about our business, our stock price would likely decline. If one or more of these analysts cease coverage of our company or fail to publish reports on us regularly, demand for our stock could decrease, which might cause our stock price and trading volume to decline.

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SPECIAL NOTE REGARDING FORWARD-LOOKING STATEMENTS

        This prospectus includes forward-looking statements. We may, in some cases, use terms such as "believes," "estimates," "anticipates," "expects," "plans," "projects," "intends," "potential," "may," "could," "might," "will," "should," "approximately" or other words that convey uncertainty of future events or outcomes to identify these forward-looking statements. Forward-looking statements appear in a number of places throughout this prospectus and include statements regarding our intentions, beliefs, projections, outlook, analyses or current expectations concerning, among other things:

    our ability to develop and commercialize ganaxolone;

    status, timing and results of preclinical studies and clinical trials;

    the potential benefits of ganaxolone;

    the timing of seeking regulatory approval of ganaxolone;

    our ability to obtain and maintain regulatory approval;

    our estimates of expenses and future revenue and profitability;

    our estimates regarding our capital requirements and our needs for additional financing;

    our plans to develop and market ganaxolone and the timing of our development programs;

    our estimates of the size of the potential markets for ganaxolone;

    our selection and licensing of ganaxolone;

    our ability to attract collaborators with acceptable development, regulatory and commercial expertise;

    the benefits to be derived from corporate collaborations, license agreements, and other collaborative or acquisition efforts, including those relating to the development and commercialization of ganaxolone;

    sources of revenue, including contributions from corporate collaborations, license agreements, and other collaborative efforts for the development and commercialization of products;

    our ability to create an effective sales and marketing infrastructure if we elect to market and sell ganaxolone directly;

    the rate and degree of market acceptance of ganaxolone;

    the timing and amount or reimbursement for ganaxolone;

    the success of other competing therapies that may become available;

    the manufacturing capacity for ganaxolone;

    our intellectual property position;

    our ability to maintain and protect our intellectual property rights;

    our results of operations, financial condition, liquidity, prospects, and growth strategies;

    our spending of the proceeds from this offering;

    the industry in which we operate; and

    the trends that may affect the industry or us.

        By their nature, forward-looking statements involve risks and uncertainties because they relate to events, competitive dynamics and industry changes, and depend on the economic circumstances that may

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or may not occur in the future or may occur on longer or shorter timelines than anticipated. Although we believe that we have a reasonable basis for each forward-looking statement contained in this prospectus, we caution you that forward-looking statements are not guarantees of future performance and that our actual results of operations, financial condition and liquidity, and the development of the industry in which we operate may differ materially from the forward-looking statements contained in this prospectus. In addition, even if our results of operations, financial condition and liquidity, and events in the industry in which we operate are consistent with the forward-looking statements contained in this prospectus, they may not be predictive of results or developments in future periods.

        Actual results could differ materially from our forward-looking statements due to a number of factors, including risks related to:

    our estimates regarding expenses, future revenue, capital requirements and needs for additional financing;

    the success and timing of our preclinical studies and clinical trials;

    the potential that results of preclinical studies and clinical trials indicate ganaxolone is unsafe or ineffective;

    our exposure to business disruptions;

    our dependence on third parties in the conduct of our preclinical studies and clinical trials;

    the difficulties and expenses associated with obtaining and maintaining regulatory approval of ganaxolone, and the labeling under any approval we may obtain;

    our plans and ability to develop and commercialize ganaxolone;

    our failure to recruit or retain key scientific or management personnel or to retain our executive officers;

    the size and growth of the potential markets for ganaxolone, market acceptance of ganaxolone and our ability to serve those markets;

    legal and regulatory developments in the United States and foreign countries;

    our ability to limit our exposure to product liability lawsuits;

    our exposure to additional scrutiny as a public company;

    the rate and degree of market acceptance of ganaxolone;

    our use of the proceeds from this offering;

    obtaining and maintaining intellectual property protection for ganaxolone and our proprietary technology;

    the successful development of our commercialization capabilities, including sales and marketing capabilities;

    recently enacted and future legislation regarding the healthcare system;

    the success of competing therapies and products that are or become available; and

    the performance of third parties, including CROs and third-party manufacturers.

        Ganaxolone is an investigational drug undergoing clinical development and has not been approved by the FDA, nor submitted to the FDA for approval. Ganaxolone has not been, nor may never be approved by any regulatory agency nor marketed anywhere in the world. Statements contained in this prospectus should not be deemed to be promotional.

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        Any forward-looking statements that we make in this prospectus speak only as of the date of such statement, and we undertake no obligation to update such statements to reflect events or circumstances after the date of this prospectus or to reflect the occurrence of unanticipated events. Comparisons of results for current and any prior periods are not intended to express any future trends or indications of future performance, unless expressed as such, and should only be viewed as historical data.

        You should also read carefully the factors described in the "Risk Factors" section of this prospectus and elsewhere to better understand the risks and uncertainties inherent in our business and underlying any forward-looking statements. As a result of these factors, we cannot assure you that the forward-looking statements in this prospectus will prove to be accurate. Furthermore, if our forward-looking statements prove to be inaccurate, the inaccuracy may be material. In light of the significant uncertainties in these forward-looking statements, you should not regard these statements as a representation or warranty by us or any other person that we will achieve our objectives and plans in any specified timeframe, or at all. The Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995 and Section 27A of the Securities Act do not protect any forward-looking statements that we make in connection with this offering.

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USE OF PROCEEDS

        We estimate that our net proceeds from the sale of            shares of common stock in this offering will be approximately $             million (or approximately $             million if the underwriters exercise their option to purchase additional shares in full), assuming an initial public offering price of $            per share (the midpoint of the estimated offering price range set forth on the cover page of this prospectus) after deducting the estimated underwriting discount and estimated offering costs payable by us.

        A $1.00 increase or decrease in the assumed initial public offering price of $            per share (the midpoint of the estimated offering price range set forth on the cover page of this prospectus) would increase or decrease our net proceeds from this offering by approximately $             million, assuming that the number of shares offered by us, as set forth on the cover page of this prospectus, remains the same and after deducting the estimated underwriting discount and estimated offering costs payable by us. We may also increase or decrease the number of shares we are offering. Each increase or decrease of 1,000,000 in the number of shares we are offering would increase or decrease the net proceeds to us from this offering, after deducting the estimated underwriting discount and estimated offering costs payable by us, by approximately $             million, assuming the assumed initial public offering price stays the same.

        We currently intend to use the net proceeds of this offering to advance the development of ganaxolone and for other working capital and general corporate purposes as follows:

    approximately $             million to increase the size of our Phase 2b clinical trial for subjects with focal onset seizures;

    approximately $             million to complete manufacturing scale-up and conduct related Phase 1 pharmacokinetic studies and other critical path activities for ganaxolone in patients with focal onset seizures;

    approximately $             million to complete other preclinical studies, including an animal carcinogenicity study;

    approximately $             million to add investigator sites to accelerate enrollment in our randomized, placebo-controlled, crossover Phase 2 clinical trial for FXS; and

    the remainder for working capital and general corporate purposes.

        We believe that the net proceeds from this offering and our existing cash and cash equivalents, together with interest thereon, will be sufficient to fund our operations for at least the 24 months following the date of this prospectus, although there can be no assurance in that regard.

        The amounts and timing of our actual expenditures will depend on numerous factors, including the progress of our clinical trials and other development efforts for ganaxolone and other factors described under "Risk Factors" in this prospectus, as well as the amount of cash used in our operations. We may find it necessary or advisable to use the net proceeds for other purposes, and we will have broad discretion in the application of the net proceeds. Pending application of the net proceeds, we may invest temporarily in mutual and money market funds, bank certificates of deposit and investment grade commercial paper, corporate notes and government securities.


DIVIDEND POLICY

        We have never declared or paid any cash dividends on our capital stock. We currently intend to retain all available funds and any future earnings to support our operations and finance the growth and development of our business. We do not intend to pay cash dividends on our common stock for the foreseeable future. In addition, our ability to pay cash dividends is prohibited by our credit facility with Square 1 Bank, entered into in April 2014, and the terms of any future debt agreements may also preclude us from paying dividends.

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CAPITALIZATION

        The following table sets forth our cash and cash equivalents and capitalization as of March 31, 2014:

    on an actual basis;

    on a pro forma basis to give effect to (i) the conversion of all outstanding shares of our preferred stock into 49,802,103 shares of our common stock, including 422,119 shares of preferred stock issued in April 2014 reflected as an investor deposit for $500,000 in accrued expenses as of March 31, 2014, which will occur prior to consummation of this offering and (ii) the exercise of all outstanding warrants to purchase 3,055,163 shares of Series B convertible preferred stock and 37,991 shares of Series C convertible preferred stock and the conversion of the resulting convertible preferred stock into            shares of our common stock immediately prior to consummation of this offering assuming net share settlement at an initial public offering price of $            per share (the midpoint of the estimated offering price range set forth on the cover page of this prospectus); and

    on a pro forma as adjusted basis to additionally give effect to the sale of            shares of our common stock in this offering, assuming an initial public offering price of $            per share (the midpoint of the estimated offering price range set forth on the cover page of this prospectus) after deducting the estimated underwriting discount and estimated offering costs payable by us.

        The pro forma and pro forma as adjusted information below is illustrative only, and our capitalization following the closing of this offering will be adjusted based on the actual initial public offering price and other terms of this offering determined at pricing. You should read the information in this table together with our financial statements and accompanying notes thereto and "Management's Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations" in this prospectus.

 
  As of March 31, 2014  
 
  Actual   Pro
Forma
  Pro Forma
As
Adjusted(1)
 
 
   
  (unaudited)
 

Cash and cash equivalents

  $ 8,829,946   $ 8,829,946   $    
               
               

Capitalization:

                   

Convertible preferred stock, $0.001 par value per share:

                   

Series A convertible preferred stock: 18,777,860 shares authorized, issued and outstanding, actual; no shares authorized, issued or outstanding, pro forma and pro forma as adjusted

    30,596,604            

Series B convertible preferred stock: 15,275,824 shares authorized, 12,220,661 shares issued and outstanding, actual; no shares authorized, issued or outstanding, pro forma and pro forma as adjusted

    17,929,483            

Series C convertible preferred stock: 18,900,000 shares authorized, 18,381,463 shares issued and outstanding, actual; no shares authorized, issued or outstanding, pro forma and pro forma as adjusted

    21,314,119            
               

Total convertible preferred stock

    69,840,206            
               

Stockholders' equity (deficit):

                   

Common stock, $0.001 par value per share: 65,100,000 shares authorized, 3,388,357 shares issued, and 3,198,357 shares outstanding, actual;                    shares issued and                    shares outstanding, pro forma; and                    shares issued and                    shares outstanding, pro forma as adjusted

    3,388     53,015        

Preferred stock, $0.001 par value per share, no shares authorized issued and outstanding, actual; 25,000,000 shares authorized, no shares issued or outstanding, pro forma and pro forma as adjusted

                 

Additional paid-in capital

    1,169,396     72,223,766        

Treasury stock at cost (190,000 shares)

    (190 )   (190 )      

Deficit accumulated during the development stage

    (63,738,321 )   (63,738,321 )      
               

Total stockholders' equity (deficit)

    (62,565,727 )   8,538,270        
               

Total capitalization

  $ 7,274,479   $ 8,538,270   $    
               
               

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(1)
A $1.00 increase or decrease in the assumed initial public offering price of $            per share (the midpoint of the estimated offering price range set forth on the cover page of this prospectus) would increase or decrease each of cash and cash equivalents, additional paid-in capital, total stockholders' equity and total capitalization on a pro forma as adjusted basis by approximately $             million, assuming that the number of shares offered by us, as set forth on the cover page of this prospectus, remains the same and after deducting the estimated underwriting discount and estimated offering costs payable by us. Similarly, each increase or decrease of 1,000,000 shares in the number of shares offered by us at the assumed initial public offering price would increase or decrease the pro forma as adjusted amount of each of cash and cash equivalents, additional paid-in capital, total stockholders' equity and total capitalization by approximately $             million.

        The shares of common stock outstanding in the table above excludes:

    6,930,040 shares of common stock issuable upon exercise of options outstanding as of March 31, 2014, with a weighted average exercise price of $0.16 per share, under our 2005 Stock Option and Incentive Plan; and

    additional shares that will be made available for issuance under our 2014 Equity Incentive Plan.

        Certain of our stockholders have indicated an interest in purchasing an aggregate of approximately $             million in shares of our common stock in this offering at the initial public offering price. However, because indications of interest are not binding agreements or commitments to purchase, the underwriters may determine to sell more, less or no shares in this offering to any of these stockholders, and any of these stockholders may determine to purchase more, less or no shares in this offering.

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DILUTION

        If you invest in our common stock in this offering, your ownership interest will be diluted to the extent of the difference between the initial public offering price per share of our common stock and the pro forma as adjusted net tangible book value per share of our common stock upon consummation of this offering. The historical net tangible book value (deficit) of our common stock as of March 31, 2014 was $(62.6) million, or $(19.62) per share. Historical net tangible book value (deficit) per share is determined by dividing the number of our outstanding shares of common stock into our total tangible assets (total assets less intangible assets) less total liabilities available to common stockholders.

        On a pro forma basis, after giving effect to the conversion of all outstanding shares of our preferred stock into 49,802,103 shares of our common stock, including 422,119 shares of preferred stock issued in April 2014 reflected as an investor deposit for $500,000 in accrued expenses as of March 31, 2014, and the net share settlement of our outstanding warrants and conversion of the resulting shares of preferred stock into            shares of our common stock, which will occur prior to consummation of this offering, our net tangible book value at March 31, 2014 would have been approximately $       million, or $      per share.

        Investors purchasing shares in this offering will incur immediate and substantial dilution. After giving effect to the sale of common stock offered in this offering assuming an initial public offering price of $      per share (the midpoint of the estimated offering price range set forth on the cover page of this prospectus) and after deducting the estimated underwriting discount and estimated offering costs payable by us, our pro forma as adjusted net tangible book value as of March 31, 2014 would have been $       million, or $       per share. This represents an immediate increase in pro forma net tangible book value of $      per share to stockholders, and an immediate dilution in the pro forma net tangible book value of $      per share to investors purchasing shares in this offering. The following table illustrates this per share dilution:

Assumed initial public offering price per share

        $    

Historical net tangible book value (deficit) per share as of March 31, 2014

  $ (19.62 )      

Pro forma increase in net tangible book value per share attributable to the conversion of all outstanding shares of our preferred stock and net share settlement of all outstanding warrants and conversion of the resulting shares of preferred stock into shares of our common stock, each of which will occur prior to consummation of this offering

             
             

Pro forma net tangible book value per share

             

Increase in pro forma net tangible book value per share attributable to investors purchasing in this offering

             
             

Pro forma as adjusted net tangible book value per share after this offering

             
             

Dilution per share to investors purchasing in this offering

        $    
             
             

        A $1.00 increase or decrease in the assumed initial public offering price of $      per share (the midpoint of the estimated offering price range set forth on the cover page of this prospectus) would increase or decrease the pro forma as adjusted net tangible book value per share by $      , assuming the number of shares of common stock offered by us, as set forth on the cover page of this prospectus, remains the same and after deducting the estimated underwriting discount and estimated offering costs payable by us. Each increase or decrease of 1,000,000 shares in the number of shares of common stock offered by us at the assumed initial public offering price of $      per share (the midpoint of the estimated offering price range set forth on the cover page of this prospectus) would increase or decrease our pro forma as adjusted net tangible book value by $       million, our pro forma as adjusted net tangible book value per share after this offering by $      per share and the dilution per share to new investors in this offering by $      .

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        If the underwriters exercise their option to purchase additional shares of our common stock in full in this offering, the pro forma as adjusted net tangible book value after the offering would be $      per share, the increase in pro forma net tangible book value per share to stockholders would be $      per share and the dilution per share to new investors would be $      per share, in each case assuming an initial public offering price of $      per share (the midpoint of the estimated offering price range set forth on the cover page of this prospectus).

        The following table summarizes, on a pro forma as adjusted basis described above as of March 31, 2014, the differences between the number of shares of common stock purchased from us, the total consideration paid and the average price per share paid by stockholders and by investors purchasing in this offering at an assumed initial public offering price of $      per share (the midpoint of the estimated offering price range set forth on the cover page of this prospectus), before deducting the estimated underwriting discount and estimated offering costs payable by us.

 
   
   
  Total
Consideration
   
 
 
  Shares Purchased    
 
 
  Average Price
Per Share
 
 
  Number   Percent   Amount   Percent  

Stockholders before this offering

            % $         % $    

Investors purchasing in this offering

                          $    
                         

Total

          100.0 % $       100.0 %      
                         
                         

        A $1.00 increase or decrease in the assumed initial public offering price of $      per share (the midpoint of the estimated offering price range set forth on the cover page of this prospectus) would increase or decrease the total consideration paid by new investors by $       million and increase or decrease the percentage of total consideration paid by new investors by approximately      %, assuming that the number of shares offered by us, as set forth on the cover page of this prospectus, remains the same.

        Except as otherwise indicated, the discussion and tables above assume no exercise of the underwriters' option to purchase additional shares and no exercise of any outstanding options. If the underwriters' option to purchase additional shares is exercised in full, the number of shares of common stock held by existing stockholders will be reduced to      % of the total number of shares of common stock to be outstanding upon consummation of this offering, and the number of shares of common stock held by investors purchasing in this offering will be increased to             shares or      % of the total number of shares of common stock to be outstanding upon consummation of this offering.

        The      shares of common stock to be outstanding after this offering assumes an initial public offering price of $      per share (the midpoint of the estimated offering price range set forth on the cover page of this prospectus) and is based on            shares of common stock outstanding as of March 31, 2014, after giving effect to the conversion of all of our outstanding shares of preferred stock including 422,119 shares of preferred stock issued in April 2014, into 49,802,103 shares of our common stock and the net share settlement of all of our outstanding warrants and conversion of the resulting shares of preferred stock into            shares of our common stock and excludes:

    6,930,040 shares of common stock issuable upon exercise of options outstanding as of March 31, 2014, with a weighted average exercise price of $0.16 per share, under our 2005 Stock Option and Incentive Plan; and

    additional shares that will be made available for issuance under our 2014 Equity Incentive Plan.

        We may choose to raise additional capital through the sale of equity or equity-linked securities due to market conditions or strategic considerations even if we believe we have sufficient funds for our current or future operating plans. To the extent that any options are exercised, new options are issued under our equity incentive plans or we issue additional shares of common stock or equity-linked securities in the future, there will be further dilution to investors purchasing in this offering.

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SELECTED FINANCIAL DATA

        The following selected financial data should be read together with our financial statements and accompanying notes thereto and "Management's Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations" in this prospectus.

        The following selected financial data as of and for the years ended December 31, 2012 and 2013 have been derived from our audited financial statements included elsewhere in this prospectus. The following selected financial data for the three months ended March 31, 2013 and 2014 and the period from August 14, 2003 (inception) to March 31, 2014 and as of March 31, 2014 have been derived from our unaudited financial statements included elsewhere in this prospectus. Our unaudited financial statements have been prepared on the same basis as the audited financial statements and, in the opinion of our management, include all adjustments, consisting of normal recurring adjustments and accruals, necessary for a fair statement of the information for the interim periods. Our historical results are not necessarily indicative of the results that may be expected in the future and our interim results are not necessarily indicative of the results that may be expected for a full year.

 
   
   
   
   
  Period From
August 14,
2003
(Inception) to
March 31,
2014
 
 
  Year Ended December 31,   Three Months Ended
March 31,
 
 
  2012   2013   2013   2014  
 
   
   
  (unaudited)
  (unaudited)
 

Statements of Operations Data:

                               

Revenue

  $ 100,000   $   $   $   $ 688,469  
                       

Expenses:

                               

Research and development

    845,556     4,150,101     747,283     2,148,672     53,093,715  

General and administrative

    685,099     1,228,701     180,119     516,544     12,496,075  
                       

Total expenses

    1,530,655     5,378,802     927,402     2,665,216     65,589,790  
                       

Loss from operations

    (1,430,655 )   (5,378,802 )   (927,402 )   (2,665,216 )   (64,901,321 )

Change in fair value of warrant liability

    336,050     152,686         427,723     1,252,509  

Interest and other income

    6,842     46,872     3,837     2,187     2,675,084  

Interest expense

    (320,782 )   (90,611 )   (46,078 )       (2,764,593 )
                       

Net loss

    (1,408,545 )   (5,269,855 )   (969,643 )   (2,235,306 ) $ (63,738,321 )

Cumulative preferred stock dividends

    (2,185,737 )   (3,804,023 )   (785,961 )   (1,070,682 )      
                         

Net loss applicable to common stockholders

  $ (3,594,282 ) $ (9,073,878 ) $ (1,755,604 ) $ (3,305,988 )      
                         
                         

Per share information:

                               

Net loss per share of common stock—basic and diluted(1)

  $ (1.23 ) $ (3.02 ) $ (0.59 ) $ (1.09 )      
                         
                         

Basic and diluted weighted average shares outstanding(1)

    2,921,787     3,009,260     2,983,547     3,032,393        
                         
                         

Pro forma net loss per share of common stock—basic and diluted (unaudited)(1)

        $           $          
                             
                             

Pro forma basic and diluted weighted average shares outstanding (unaudited)(1)

                               
                             
                             

(1)
See Note 2 to our financial statements for an explanation of the method used to calculate net loss per share of common stock, basic and diluted, pro forma net loss per share of common stock, basic and diluted, and the basic and diluted pro forma weighted average shares outstanding used to calculate the pro forma per share amounts.

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  As of December 31,    
 
 
  As of March 31,
2014
 
 
  2012   2013  
 
   
   
  (unaudited)
 

Balance Sheet Data:

                   

Cash and cash equivalents

  $ 8,633,775   $ 10,037,123   $ 8,829,946  

Total assets

    8,682,100     11,823,945     10,564,473  

Total liabilities

    4,499,942     2,365,770     3,289,994  

Convertible preferred stock

    59,548,852     69,840,206     69,840,206  

Total stockholders' deficit

    (55,366,694 )   (60,382,031 )   (62,565,727 )

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MANAGEMENT'S DISCUSSION AND ANALYSIS OF
FINANCIAL CONDITION AND RESULTS OF OPERATIONS

         You should read the following discussion and analysis of our financial condition and results of operations together with our financial statements and related notes appearing in this prospectus. Some of the information contained in this discussion and analysis or set forth elsewhere in this prospectus, including information with respect to our plans and strategy for our business and related financing, includes forward-looking statements that involve risks and uncertainties. As a result of many factors, including those factors set forth in the "Risk Factors" section of this prospectus, our actual results could differ materially from the results we describe or imply in the forward-looking statements contained in the following discussion and analysis.

Overview

        We are a clinical stage biopharmaceutical company focused on developing and commercializing innovative neuropsychiatric therapeutics. Our clinical stage product candidate, ganaxolone, is a small molecule that is a synthetic analog of allopregnanolone, an endogenous neurosteroid produced in the central nervous system that modulates the brain neurotransmitter GABA. Our lead indication for ganaxolone is as an adjunctive, or add-on, therapy for the treatment of partial, also known as focal, onset seizures in adults with epilepsy. By targeting the same spectrum of GABA A receptors as endogenous allopregnanolone, ganaxolone delivers its therapeutic benefit through a natural mechanism that we believe may offer safety and efficacy advantages compared to other marketed antiepileptic medications. We have completed a Phase 2 clinical trial in 147 patients with focal onset seizures demonstrating that patients who added ganaxolone to their medication regimen experienced a statistically significant reduction in seizures as compared to patients who added placebo. We are currently enrolling patients in a randomized Phase 2b clinical trial, which we intend to expand so that it may serve as one of our adequate and well-controlled clinical trials in a registration filing with the FDA or EMA, for ganaxolone in epilepsy. We expect data from this trial in the second half of 2015. In addition, we believe ganaxolone has potential in a broad range of neuropsychiatric disorders, including orphan indications. We currently have a proof-of-concept Phase 2 clinical trial in progress for ganaxolone as a treatment for behaviors in FXS, an orphan indication in which GABA activity has been implicated in the expression of the disorder. We plan to further pursue other potential indications related to our mechanism when non-dilutive opportunities arise.

        We have been a development stage company since our incorporation in August 2003. Our operations to date have consisted primarily of organizing and staffing our company, developing ganaxolone, including conducting preclinical testing and clinical trials, and raising capital. We have funded our operations primarily through sales of equity and debt securities. From our inception through March 31, 2014, we have received net proceeds of $46.1 million from the sale of various series of convertible preferred stock and $21.7 million from the sale of convertible notes that were subsequently converted into shares of our convertible preferred stock. We have no products currently available for sale and substantially all of our revenue to date has been derived from research grants. We have incurred operating losses since inception, have not generated any product sales revenue and have not achieved profitable operations. We incurred net losses of $1.4 million and $5.3 million for the years ended December 31, 2012 and 2013, respectively, and $2.2 million for the three months ended March 31, 2014. Our accumulated deficit as of March 31, 2014 was $63.7 million, and we expect to continue to incur substantial losses in future periods. We anticipate that our operating expenses will increase substantially as we continue to advance our clinical-stage product candidate, ganaxolone.

        We believe that the net proceeds from this offering together with our existing cash and cash equivalents as of March 31, 2014, will enable us to fund our operating expenses and capital expenditure requirements for at least the next 24 months. However, we will need to secure additional funding in the future, from one or more equity or debt financings, collaborations, or other sources, in order to carry out all of our planned research and development activities with respect to ganaxolone.

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Financial Overview

Revenue

        We have not generated any revenue from commercial product sales since we commenced operations and we do not expect to generate any such revenue in the near future. Our revenue recognized to date has primarily consisted of revenue from research grants and in 2012 included $0.1 million of revenue in connection with payments received under our license agreement with Domain Russia Investments Limited, or DRI, which rights were subsequently assigned to NovaMedica LLC, whereby we licensed our patents, along with the rights to develop and commercialize ganaxolone, in Russia and certain other eastern European nations.

Research and Development Expenses

        Our research and development expenses consist primarily of costs incurred for the development of ganaxolone, which include:

    employee-related expenses, including salaries, benefits, travel and stock-based compensation expense;

    expenses incurred under agreements with CROs and investigative sites that conduct our clinical trials and preclinical studies;

    the cost of acquiring, developing and manufacturing clinical trial materials;

    facilities, depreciation and other expenses, which include direct and allocated expenses for rent and maintenance of facilities, insurance and other supplies; and

    costs associated with preclinical activities and regulatory operations.

        We expense research and development costs when we incur them. We record costs for some development activities, such as clinical trials, based on an evaluation of the progress to completion of specific tasks using data such as subject enrollment, clinical site activations or information our vendors provide to us.

        We will incur substantial costs beyond our present and planned clinical trials in order to file an NDA for ganaxolone in patients with focal onset seizures, FXS and other target indications, and in each case, the nature, design, size and cost of further studies and trials will depend in large part on the outcome of preceding studies and trials and discussions with regulators. It is difficult to determine with certainty the costs and duration of our current or future clinical trials and preclinical studies, or if, when or to what extent we will generate revenue from the commercialization and sale of ganaxolone if we obtain regulatory approval. We may never succeed in achieving regulatory approval for ganaxolone. The duration, costs and timing of clinical trials and development of ganaxolone will depend on a variety of factors, including the uncertainties of future clinical trials and preclinical studies, uncertainties in clinical trial enrollment rate and significant and changing government regulation.

        In addition, the probability of success for ganaxolone will depend on numerous factors, including competition, manufacturing capability and commercial viability. See "Risk Factors." Our commercial success depends upon attaining significant market acceptance of ganaxolone, if approved, among physicians, patients, healthcare payors and the medical community. We will determine which programs to pursue and how much to fund each program in response to the scientific and clinical success of ganaxolone, as well as an assessment of ganaxolone's commercial potential.

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General and Administrative Expenses

        General and administrative expenses consist principally of salaries and related costs for executive and other administrative personnel and consultants, including stock-based compensation and travel expenses. Other general and administrative expenses include professional fees for legal, patent review, consulting and accounting services. General and administrative expenses are expensed when incurred.

        We expect that our general and administrative expenses will increase in the future as a result of new management and employee hiring and our scaling operations commensurate with supporting more advanced clinical trials and public company infrastructure. These increases will likely include increased costs for insurance, hiring of additional personnel, board committees, outside consultants, investor relations, lawyers and accountants, among other expenses.

Change in Fair Value of Warrant Liability

        Our warrants to purchase our preferred stock are classified as warrant liability and recorded at fair value. This warrant liability is subject to re-measurement at each balance sheet date and we recognize any change in fair value in our statements of operations as a change in fair value of the derivative liability.

Interest and Other Income

        Interest and other income consists principally of interest income earned on cash and cash equivalent balances and certain state tax benefits.

Interest Expense

        Interest expense is primarily attributable to interest expense associated with our previously outstanding convertible notes.

Cumulative Preferred Stock Dividends

        Cumulative preferred stock dividends represent dividends payable upon a liquidation or deemed liquidation, as defined in our certificate of incorporation, in connection with our Series B and C convertible preferred stock.

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Results of Operations

Comparison of the Three Months Ended March 31, 2013 and 2014

        The following table sets forth our results of operations for the three months ended March 31, 2013 and 2014.

 
  Three Months Ended March 31,  
 
  2013   2014  
 
  (unaudited)
 

Expenses:

             

Research and development

  $ 747,283   $ 2,148,672  

General and administrative

    180,119     516,544  
           

Total expenses

    927,402     2,665,216  
           

Loss from operations

    (927,402 )   (2,665,216 )

Change in fair value of warrant liability

        427,723  

Interest income

    3,587     4,447  

Interest expense

    (46,078 )    

State tax benefit (expense)

    250     (2,260 )
           

Net loss

    (969,643 )   (2,235,306 )

Cumulative preferred stock dividends

    (785,961 )   (1,070,682 )
           

Net loss applicable to common stockholders

  $ (1,755,604 ) $ (3,305,988 )
           
           

Research and Development Expenses

        Research and development expenses increased $1.4 million, to $2.1 million, for the three months ended March 31, 2014, as compared to the three months ended March 31, 2013. The increase resulted primarily from an increase in clinical costs related to our Phase 2b clinical trial of ganaxolone in patients with focal onset seizures that commenced during 2013.

        The following table summarizes our research and development expenses by targeted indication for the three months ended March 31, 2013 and 2014 and for the period from August 14, 2003 (inception) to March 31, 2014:

 
  Three Months Ended March 31,   Period From
August 14,
2003 (Inception)
to March 31,
2014
 
 
  2013   2014  
 
  (unaudited)
  (unaudited)
 

Focal Onset Seizures

  $ 634,959   $ 2,130,493   $ 50,043,368  

Fragile X Syndrome

    51,849     15,186     769,483  

Other

    60,475     2,993     2,280,864  
               

  $ 747,283   $ 2,148,672   $ 53,093,715  
               
               

General and Administrative Expenses

        General and administrative expenses increased $0.3 million, to $0.5 million, for the three months ended March 31, 2014, as compared to the three months ended March 31, 2013. The increase in general and administrative expenses was primarily due to the hiring of new management and the upward scaling of our operations in connection with our Phase 2b clinical trial of ganaxolone in patients with focal onset seizures that commenced during 2013.

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Change in Fair Value of Warrant Liability

        We recorded income related to the change in fair value of our warrant liability of $0.4 million for the three months ended March 31, 2014.

Cumulative Preferred Stock Dividends

        Cumulative preferred stock dividends increased $0.3 million, to $1.1 million, for the three months ended March 31, 2014, as compared to the three months ended March 31, 2013. The increase was the result of the issuance of Series C convertible preferred stock in December 2012 and June 2013, which increased the number of shares of cumulative preferred stock outstanding for the three months ended March 31, 2014, as compared to three months ended March 31, 2013.

Comparison of the Years Ended December 31, 2012 and 2013

        The following table sets forth our results of operations for the years ended December 31, 2012 and 2013.

 
  Year Ended December 31,  
 
  2012   2013  

Revenue

  $ 100,000   $  
           

Expenses:

             

Research and development

    845,556     4,150,101  

General and administrative

    685,099     1,228,701  
           

Total expenses

    1,530,655     5,378,802  
           

Loss from operations

    (1,430,655 )   (5,378,802 )

Change in fair value of warrant liability

   
336,050
   
152,686
 

Interest income

    2,661     19,055  

Interest expense

    (320,782 )   (90,611 )

State tax benefit

    4,181     27,817  
           

Net loss

    (1,408,545 )   (5,269,855 )

Cumulative preferred stock dividends

    (2,185,737 )   (3,804,023 )
           

Net loss applicable to common stockholders

  $ (3,594,282 ) $ (9,073,878 )
           
           

Revenue

        Our revenue was $0.1 million for the year ended December 31, 2012, representing payments received under our license agreement with DRI, which rights were subsequently assigned to NovaMedica LLC, whereby we licensed our patents, along with the rights to develop and commercialize ganaxolone, in Russia and certain other eastern European nations. We did not generate any revenue for the year ended December 31, 2013.

Research and Development Expenses

        Research and development expenses increased $3.3 million, to $4.2 million, for the year ended December 31, 2013, as compared to the year ended December 31, 2012. The increase resulted primarily from an increase in clinical costs of $3.8 million related to our Phase 2b clinical trial of ganaxolone in patients with focal onset seizures that commenced during 2013, offset by a decrease in costs related to our PTSD and FXS programs of $0.4 million and $0.1 million, respectively.

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        The following table summarizes our research and development expenses by targeted indication for the years ended December 31, 2012 and 2013 and for the period from August 14, 2003 (inception) to December 31, 2013:

 
   
   
  Period From
August 14,
2003 (Inception)
to December 31,
2013
 
 
  Year Ended December 31,  
 
  2012   2013  

Focal Onset Seizures

  $ 11,665   $ 3,822,037   $ 47,912,875  

Fragile X Syndrome

    441,814     312,483     754,297  

Other

    392,077     15,581     2,277,871  
               

  $ 845,556   $ 4,150,101   $ 50,945,043  
               
               

General and Administrative Expenses

        General and administrative expenses increased $0.5 million, to $1.2 million, for the year ended December 31, 2013, as compared to the year ended December 31, 2012. The increase in general and administrative expenses was primarily due to the hiring of new management and employees and the upward scaling of our operations in connection with our Phase 2b clinical trial of ganaxolone in patients with focal onset seizures that commenced during 2013.

Change in Fair Value of Warrant Liability

        We recorded income related to the change in fair value of our warrant liability of $0.3 million and $0.2 million for the years ended December 31, 2012 and 2013, respectively.

Interest Expense

        Interest expense decreased $0.2 million, to $0.1 million, for the year ended December 31, 2013, as compared to the year ended December 31, 2012. The decrease was due to the conversion of our previously outstanding convertible promissory notes to Series C convertible preferred stock resulting in less interest expense.

Cumulative Preferred Stock Dividends

        Cumulative preferred stock dividends increased $1.6 million, to $3.8 million, for the year ended December 31, 2013, as compared to the year ended December 31, 2012. The increase was the result of the issuance of Series C convertible preferred stock in December 2012 and June 2013 which increased the number of shares of cumulative preferred stock outstanding for the year ended December 31, 2013, as compared to year ended December 31, 2012.

Liquidity and Capital Resources

        Since inception, we have incurred net losses and negative cash flows from our operations. We incurred net losses of $1.4 million and $5.3 million for the years ended December 31, 2012 and 2013, respectively and $2.2 million for the three months ended March 31, 2014. Our operating activities used $1.2 million and $6.6 million of cash flows during the years ended December 2012 and 2013, respectively and $0.7 million and $1.1 million for the three months ended March 31, 2013 and 2014, respectively. Historically, we have financed our operations principally through private placements of preferred stock and convertible debt. From inception through March 31, 2014, we have received net proceeds of $69.2 million from the issuance of preferred stock, common stock and notes payable. At March 31, 2014, we had cash and cash equivalents of $8.8 million.

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Square 1 Credit Facility

        In April 2014, we borrowed $2.0 million in connection with a credit facility we entered into with Square 1 Bank. Pursuant to the terms of the credit facility, we are required to make monthly interest-only payments for outstanding borrowings at an interest rate equal to the greater of (a) prime plus 2.25% or (b) 5.5% until April 2015. Commencing in May 2015 and continuing until April 2017, we are required to make monthly payments of 1/36th of our principal borrowings plus interest with the remaining principal balance due in April 2017. In connection with this facility, we issued to Square 1 Bank warrants to purchase 37,991 shares of our Series C convertible preferred stock, which expire on April 2, 2022.

Cash Flows

        The following table summarizes our sources and uses of cash:

 
  Year Ended December 31,   Three Months Ended
March 31,
 
 
  2012   2013   2013   2014  
 
   
   
  (Unaudited)
 

Net cash used in operating activities

  $ (1,228,428 ) $ (6,628,021 ) $ (698,976 ) $ (1,125,294 )

Net cash used in investing activities

    (5,472 )   (17,119 )   (4,009 )    

Net cash provided by (used in) financing activities

    8,881,778     8,048,488     (7,858 )   (81,883 )
                   

Net increase (decrease) in cash and cash equivalents

  $ 7,647,878   $ 1,403,348   $ (710,843 ) $ (1,207,177 )
                   
                   

        Operating Activities.     Cash used in operating activities during the year ended December 31, 2013 increased to $6.6 million as compared to $1.2 million used in the year ended December 31, 2012. The increase was driven primarily by an increase in our net loss of $3.9 million and increased net changes in operating assets and liabilities of $1.6 million, partially offset by a $0.1 million decrease in non-cash charges.

        Cash used in operating activities during the three months ended March 31, 2014 increased to $1.1 million as compared to $0.7 million used in the three months ended March 31, 2013. The increase was driven primarily by an increase in our net loss of $1.3 million and partially offset by decreased net changes in operating assets and liabilities of $1.1 million and a $0.4 million decrease in non-cash charges.

        Investing Activities.     Cash used in investing activities for the purchase of property and equipment was less than $0.1 million for the years ended December 31, 2012 and 2013 and the three months ended March 31, 2013 and 2014.

        Financing Activities.     Cash provided by (used in) financing activities was $8.9 million and $8.0 million for the years ended December 31, 2012 and 2013, respectively. Cash provided by financing activities is primarily attributable to $0.3 million of net proceeds received in 2012 from the issuance of convertible notes, $0.5 million related to an investor deposit received in 2013 and $8.6 million and $7.5 million of net proceeds from the sale of Series C convertible preferred stock in 2012 and 2013, respectively.

        Cash provided by (used in) financing activities was less than $0.1 million for the three months ended March 31, 2013 and 2014.

Funding Requirements

        We have not achieved profitability since our inception, and we expect to continue to incur net losses for the foreseeable future. We expect our cash expenditures to increase in the near term as we fund our planned clinical trials for ganaxolone. Following this offering, we will be a publicly traded company and will incur significant legal, accounting and other expenses that we were not required to incur as a private

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company. In addition, the Sarbanes-Oxley Act, as well as rules adopted by the SEC and The NASDAQ Stock Market, require public companies to implement specified corporate governance practices that are currently inapplicable to us as a private company. We expect these rules and regulations will increase our legal and financial compliance costs and will make some activities more time-consuming and costly. We estimate that we will incur approximately $1.0 million to $2.0 million in incremental costs per year associated with being a publicly traded company, although it is possible that our actual incremental costs will be higher than we currently estimate.

        We believe that the net proceeds from this offering, together with our existing cash and cash equivalents as of March 31, 2014, will enable us to fund our operating expenses and capital expenditure requirements for at least the next 24 months. However, we will need to raise substantial additional financing in the future to fund our operations. In order to meet these additional cash requirements, we may seek to sell additional equity or convertible debt securities that may result in dilution to our stockholders. If we raise additional funds through the issuance of convertible debt securities, these securities could have rights senior to those of our common stock and could contain covenants that restrict our operations. There can be no assurance that we will be able to obtain additional equity or debt financing on terms acceptable to us, if at all. Our failure to obtain sufficient funds on acceptable terms when needed could have a negative impact on our business, results of operations, and financial condition. Our future capital requirements will depend on many factors, including:

    the results of our preclinical studies and clinical trials;

    the development, formulation and commercialization activities related to ganaxolone;

    the scope, progress, results and costs of researching and developing ganaxolone or any other future product candidates, and conducting preclinical studies and clinical trials;

    the timing of, and the costs involved in, obtaining regulatory approvals for ganaxolone or any other future product candidates;

    the cost of commercialization activities if ganaxolone or any other future product candidates are approved for sale, including marketing, sales and distribution costs;

    the cost of manufacturing ganaxolone or any other future product candidates in preclinical studies, clinical trials and, if approved, in commercial sale;

    our ability to establish and maintain strategic collaborations, licensing or other arrangements and the financial terms of such agreements;

    any product liability, infringement or other lawsuits related to our products;

    the expenses needed to attract and retain skilled personnel;

    the costs associated with being a public company;

    the costs involved in preparing, filing, prosecuting, maintaining, defending and enforcing patent claims, including litigation costs and the outcome of such litigation; and

    the timing, receipt and amount of sales of, or royalties on, future approved products, if any.

        Please see "Risk Factors" above for additional risks associated with our substantial capital requirements.

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Contractual Obligations and Commitments

        The following summarizes our significant contractual obligations as of December 31, 2013:

 
  Payment due by period  
Contractual Obligations
  Total   Less than
1 year
  1 - 3 years   3 - 5 years   More than
5 years
 

Operating lease obligations(1)

  $ 32,500   $ 30,000   $ 2,500   $   $  
                       

Total

  $ 32,500   $ 30,000   $ 2,500   $   $  
                       
                       

(1)
Represents commitments for $32,500 of future minimum lease payments, with $30,000 to be paid in 2014 and the remainder in 2015.

Cumulative Preferred Stock Dividends

        As of March 31, 2014, there were $12.1 million of dividends payable on our Series B and C convertible preferred stock, which are payable upon the occurrence of a Liquidation (as more fully described in our certificate of incorporation). However, dividends are forfeited upon conversion of Series B and C convertible preferred stock to shares of our common stock, which we expect to occur immediately prior to the consummation of this offering.

Royalty-Based and Other Commitments

        In September 2004, we entered into a license agreement with Purdue Neuroscience Company, or Purdue, which was most recently amended and restated in May 2008 that granted us exclusive rights to certain know-how and technology relating to ganaxolone, excluding the field of treatment of unpleasant sensory or emotional experience associated with actual or potential tissue damage, or described in terms of such damage. The agreement contains a right by us to sublicense subject to prior written approval by Purdue. To date, we have paid license fees under the license agreement. As part of the consideration paid, we issued 1,189,812 shares of Series A convertible preferred stock and 630,318 shares of our common stock and agreed to pay Purdue certain royalties. In particular, we are obligated to pay royalties as a percentage in the range of high single digits up to 10% of net product sales for direct licensed products, such as ganaxolone. The obligation to pay royalties expires, on a country-by-country basis, 10 years from the first commercial sale of a licensed product in each country. We believe that we will not be obligated to pay royalties under the agreement because the underlying patents have either expired or are not applicable to ganaxolone. In addition, the agreement also requires that we pay Purdue a percentage in the mid-single digits of the non-royalty consideration that we receive from a sublicensee and a percentage in the twenties of milestone payments for indications other than seizure disorders and vascular migraine headaches not associated with mood disorders. Under the license agreement, we are committed to use commercially reasonable efforts to develop and commercialize at least one licensed product. Purdue has the right to terminate the agreement if we become insolvent or we breach the agreement. We have the right to terminate the agreement if Purdue breaches the agreement. Upon such termination, rights and licenses granted to us under the agreement will terminate and we must cease all activities licensed under the agreement; however, termination or expiration of the agreement will not affect accrued rights of either party arising under the agreement and will not release either party from any liability that has accrued or is attributable to a period prior to such termination or expiration. We also have the right to terminate the agreement upon 180 days written notice to Purdue, in which case all rights and information will revert to Purdue at no cost and Purdue will have no obligations to us.

Off-Balance Sheet Arrangements

        We do not have any off-balance sheet arrangements, as defined by applicable SEC regulations.

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Critical Accounting Policies and Significant Judgments and Estimates

        We base this management's discussion and analysis of our financial condition and results of operations on our financial statements, which we have prepared in accordance with GAAP. The preparation of our financial statements requires us to make estimates and judgments that affect the reported amounts of assets, liabilities, revenue and expenses and the disclosure of contingent assets and liabilities in our financial statements. We evaluate our estimates and judgments, including those related to warrant liabilities, stock-based compensation and accrued clinical trial expenses on an ongoing basis. We base our estimates on historical experience, known trends and events and various other factors that we believe to be reasonable under the circumstances, the results of which form the basis for making judgments about the carrying values of assets and liabilities that are not readily apparent from other sources. Actual results may differ from these estimates under different assumptions or conditions. You should consider your evaluation of our financial condition and results of operations with these policies, judgments and estimates in mind.

        While we describe our significant accounting policies in the notes to our financial statements appearing elsewhere in this prospectus, we believe the following accounting policies are the most critical to the judgments and estimates we use in the preparation of our financial statements.

Warrant Liability

        We classified our warrants to purchase our preferred stock as a warrant liability, which we recorded at fair value. We estimate the warrant fair values using the option pricing method as discussed in the American Institute of Certified Public Accountants, Audit and Accounting Practice Aid Series: Valuation of Privately Held Company Equity Securities Issued as Compensation , or the AICPA Practice Guide. The option pricing method treats securities as options on the enterprise's value, with exercise prices based on the liquidation preferences set forth in the terms of the respective stock, option or warrant agreements. Preferred stock, common stock, options and warrants are treated as call options that give its owner the right to buy the underlying net assets at a predetermined or "strike" price at a liquidity event. The option pricing method considers the various terms of the stockholder agreements and implicitly considers the effect of the liquidation preference as of the appropriate date in the future and uses the Black-Scholes model to price the call option.

        The significant inputs, which we estimate as part of this method, include the expected term of the warrants, expected volatility and the estimated fair value of the underlying preferred stock. Because we do not have sufficient history to estimate the expected volatility of our stock price, expected volatility is based on the average volatility of peer public entities that are similar in size and industry. We estimate the expected term of the warrants based on the timing of anticipated future liquidity events. The risk-free rate is based on the U.S. Treasury yield curve equal to the expected term of the warrant as of the measurement date. These warrant liabilities are subject to re-measurement at each balance sheet date, and we recognize any change in fair value in our statements of operations as a change in fair value of the derivative liability. As of the consummation of this offering, all of our preferred stock warrants will net share settle into shares of preferred stock and the resulting shares of preferred stock will convert into common stock. Upon such exercise of our preferred stock warrants, the then carrying value of the warrants will be classified as a component of stockholders' equity and no longer subject to re-measurement.

Stock-Based Compensation

        We recognize compensation expense related to the fair value of stock-based awards in our statements of operations. For stock options we issued to employees and members of our board of directors for their services on our board of directors, we estimate the grant-date fair value of options using the Black-Scholes option pricing model. The use of the Black-Scholes option pricing model requires management to make assumptions with respect to the expected term of the option, the expected volatility of the common stock consistent with the expected life of the option, risk-free interest rates, and the value of the common stock. For awards subject to time-based vesting, we recognize stock-based compensation expense, net of estimated forfeitures, on a straight-line basis over the requisite service period, which is generally the vesting term of the award. For awards subject to performance-based vesting conditions, we recognize

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stock-based compensation expense when it is probable that the performance condition will be achieved. We are required to estimate forfeitures at the time of grant and to revise the estimates, if necessary, in subsequent periods if actual forfeitures differ from those estimates. We record stock-based awards issued to non-employees at their fair values, and periodically revalue them as the equity instruments vest and are recognized as expense over the related service period of the award.

Fair Value of Common Stock

        We are required to estimate the fair value of the common stock underlying our stock-based awards when performing the fair value calculations. We engaged an independent third-party valuation firm to assist our board of directors in estimating the fair value of the common stock underlying our stock-based awards. We have granted all options to purchase shares of our common stock with an exercise price per share no less than the fair value per share of our common stock underlying those options on the date of grant, based on the information we knew on the date of grant.

        In the absence of a public trading market for our common stock, on each grant date, we develop an estimate of the fair value of our common stock in order to determine an exercise price for the option grants based in part on input from the independent third-party valuation firm. We determined the fair value of our common stock using methodologies, approaches and assumptions consistent with the AICPA Practice Guide. In addition, our board of directors considered various objective and subjective factors, along with input from management and the independent third-party valuation firm, to estimate the fair value of our common stock, including external market conditions affecting the biopharmaceutical industry, trends within the biopharmaceutical industry, the prices at which we sold shares of our different series of preferred stock, the superior rights and preferences of each series of preferred stock relative to our common stock at the time of each grant, our results of operations and financial position, the status of our research and development efforts and progress of our clinical programs, our stage of development and business strategy, the lack of an active public market for our common and our preferred stock, and the likelihood of achieving a liquidity event such as an initial public offering or sale in light of prevailing market conditions.

        Our independent third-party valuation firm assisted us in determining both the value of our company and the fair value of our common stock as of December 31, 2011, June 27, 2013 and March 31, 2014. We used the results of these valuations, in part, to estimate the grant-date fair value of the common stock underlying our stock-based awards. During the period from January 1, 2012 to March 31, 2014, we estimated the fair value of our common stock at $0.16 per share using methodologies, approaches and assumptions consistent with the AICPA Practice Guide. During this period, while we believe we made progress in planning and securing additional financing in support of the initiation and conduct of certain of our clinical development activities, we generated limited new clinical data for ganaxolone and had not yet conducted the requisite pivotal trials necessary for submission to FDA for approval.

        In February 2014, our board of directors approved exploring an initial public offering with the use of the proceeds directed toward (i) increasing the size of our recently initiated Phase 2b clinical trial in order to meet the statistical power requirements for this trial to be considered for one of our adequate and well-controlled clinical trials required for FDA approval, (ii) adding additional investigator sites to accelerate enrollment in our randomized, placebo-controlled, Phase 2 clinical trial for FXS, (iii) conducting other preclinical, clinical, manufacturing scale-up and bridging studies and other critical path activities and (iv) working capital and general corporate purposes.

        The per share estimated fair value of common stock in the table below represents the determination by our board of directors of the fair value of our common stock as of the date of grant, taking into consideration the various objective and subjective factors described above, including the conclusions, if applicable, of contemporaneous valuations of our common stock as discussed below. The following table

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presents the grant dates and related exercise prices of stock options granted to employees and non-employees from January 1, 2012 through the date of this prospectus:

Date of Issuance
  Number of
Shares
Underlying
Option Grants
  Exercise
Price Per
Option
  Per Share
Estimated
Fair Value of
Common
Stock
  Per Share
Grant Date
Intrinsic
Value of
Options
 

January 1, 2012 to December 3, 2012

    1,437,797   $ 0.16   $ 0.16   $  

December 4, 2012 to December 31, 2013*

    3,833,080     0.16     0.16      

*
No options have been granted after December 31, 2013

        In determining the fair value of our common stock for purposes of granting stock options, our board of directors considered the most recent valuations of our common stock, which an independent third party prepared as of December 31, 2011 and June 27, 2013 and based its determination in part on the analyses summarized below in determining the exercise price of options to be issued after those dates.

        The intrinsic value of all outstanding vested and unvested options of $       million is based on an assumed initial offering price of $      per share (the midpoint of the estimated price range set forth on the cover page of this prospectus) and 6,930,040 shares of common stock issuable upon the exercise of options outstanding as of March 31, 2014 with a weighted average exercise price of $0.16 per share.

Stock Option Grants from January 1, 2012 to December 3, 2012

        Our board of directors granted stock options from January 1, 2012 through December 3, 2012, with each having an exercise price of $0.16 per share. An independent third party valuation as of December 31, 2011 supported this exercise price per share. In conducting this valuation, we estimated the fair value of our common stock using an option-pricing method. The option-pricing method treats common stock as options on the enterprise's value based on the liquidation preferences set forth in the terms of the preferred stockholders agreements. The option-pricing method considers the various terms of the preferred securities, including the level of seniority among the securities, dividend rights, conversion ratios and liquidation allocations. Under this method, the common stock has value when the net assets of the enterprise exceed the liquidation value, which is measured as a call option using the Black-Scholes option-pricing valuation model. We then allocated the equity value among our preferred stock and common stock using the option-pricing method. We estimated the time to liquidity as 4 years and assumed an annual volatility rate of 80%. Our estimate of volatility was based on a review of volatility data for 13 public comparable companies. We applied a discount for lack of marketability of 38% to our common stock. Based on these factors, we concluded that our common stock had a fair value of $0.16 per share as of December 31, 2011.

        We concluded it was appropriate to use the valuation of December 31, 2011 for subsequent grants made until our next financing event, which occurred on December 4, 2012. This was primarily attributable to the absence of a significant value inflection point and our continued efforts to obtain financing to fund our operating expenses. The specific facts and circumstances our board of directors considered included the following:

    We had principally financed our operations through private placements of preferred stock and convertible debt. We needed to raise additional capital to fund clinical trials to advance ganaxolone.

    Our cash and cash equivalents were less than $1.0 million as of December 31, 2011, which represented less than one year of operating cash flow.

    Due to financial constraints, we made limited clinical progress in advancing ganaxolone. We had not conducted the requisite pivotal trials necessary for submission to the FDA for approval and did not receive funding to conduct such developmental activities.

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Stock Option Grants from December 4, 2012 to December 31, 2013

        Our board of directors granted stock options from December 4, 2012 through December 31, 2013, with each having an exercise price of $0.16 per share. An independent third party valuation as of June 27, 2013 supported this exercise price per share. In conducting this valuation, we estimated the fair value of our common stock using an option-pricing method. The option-pricing method treats common stock as options on the enterprise's value based on the liquidation preferences set forth in the terms of the preferred stockholders agreements. The option-pricing method considers the various terms of the preferred securities, including the level of seniority among the securities, dividend rights, conversion ratios and liquidation allocations. Under this method, the common stock has value when the net assets of the enterprise exceed the liquidation value, which is measured as a call option using the Black-Scholes option-pricing valuation model. Our current enterprise value was implied by the negotiated pricing and terms of the Series C convertible preferred stock, which we first sold in December 2012 and the lead unrelated investor paid $1.1845 per share (before giving effect to our 1-for- reverse stock split). We then allocated the equity value among our preferred stock and common stock using the option pricing method. We estimated the time to liquidity as 2.5 years and assumed an annual volatility rate of 75%. Our estimate of volatility was based on a review of volatility data for 13 public comparable companies. We applied a discount for lack of marketability of 28% to our common stock. Based on these factors, we concluded that our common stock had a fair value of $0.16 per share as of June 27, 2013.

        We concluded it was appropriate to use the valuation of June 27, 2013 for grants subsequent to the first closing of Series C convertible preferred stock on December 4, 2012 through December 31, 2013. This was primarily attributable to the absence of a significant inflection point and our continued efforts to prepare for the commencement of our Phase 2b clinical trial for adjunctive treatment of focal onset seizures. The specific facts and circumstances our board of directors considered included the following:

    Our current enterprise value was implied by the negotiated pricing and terms of the Series C convertible preferred stock sold in December 2012 and June 2013 where the lead unrelated investor paid $1.1845 per share (before giving effect to our 1-for-reverse stock split).

    While we made progress in funding and making preparations for our Phase 2b clinical trial of ganaxolone in patients with focal onset seizures, we did not achieve any value accretive clinical development milestones.

    We made limited clinical progress in advancing ganaxolone. We had not conducted the requisite pivotal trials necessary for submission to the FDA for approval and were not funded to conduct such developmental activities.

Clinical Trial Expense Accruals

        As part of the process of preparing our financial statements, we are required to estimate our accrued expenses. Our clinical trial accrual process seeks to account for expenses resulting from our obligations under contracts with vendors, consultants and CROs and clinical site agreements in connection with conducting clinical trials. The financial terms of these contracts are subject to negotiations, which vary from contract to contract and may result in payment flows that do not match the periods over which materials or services are provided to us under such contracts. Our objective is to reflect the appropriate clinical trial expenses in our financial statements by matching the appropriate expenses with the period in which services and efforts are expended. We account for these expenses according to the progress of the trial as measured by subject progression and the timing of various aspects of the trial. We determine accrual estimates through financial models that take into account discussion with applicable personnel and outside service providers as to the progress or state of completion of trials. During the course of a clinical trial, we adjust our clinical expense recognition if actual results differ from our estimates. We make estimates of our accrued expenses as of each balance sheet date in our financial statements based on the facts and circumstances known to us at that time. Our clinical trial accrual and prepaid assets are dependent, in part, upon the receipt of timely and accurate reporting from CROs and other third-party vendors. Although we do not expect our estimates to differ materially from amounts we actually incur, our

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understanding of the status and timing of services performed relative to the actual status and timing of services performed may vary and may result in us reporting amounts that are too high or too low for any particular period.

Net Operating Loss and Research and Development Tax Credit Carryforwards

        As of December 31, 2013, we had federal and state net operating loss carryforwards of approximately $59.0 million that will begin expiring in 2023, and federal and state research and development credits of $2.2 million and $0.5 million, respectively, that will begin expiring in 2019.

        Utilization of the net operating losses and credits may be subject to a substantial annual limitation due to ownership change limitations provided by the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended. The annual limitation may result in the expiration of our net operating losses and credits before we can use them. We have recorded a valuation allowance on all of our deferred tax assets, including our deferred tax assets related to our net operating loss and research and development tax credit carryforwards.

Quantitative and Qualitative Disclosure About Market Risk

        We are exposed to market risks in the ordinary course of our business. These market risks are principally limited to interest rate fluctuations.

        We had cash and cash equivalents of $8.8 million at March 31, 2014, consisting primarily of funds in cash and money market accounts. The primary objective of our investment activities is to preserve principal and liquidity while maximizing income without significantly increasing risk. We do not enter into investments for trading or speculative purposes. Due to the short-term nature of our investment portfolio, we do not believe an immediate 1.0% increase in interest rates would have a material effect on the fair market value of our portfolio, and accordingly we do not expect a sudden change in market interest rates to affect materially our operating results or cash flows.

JOBS Act

        Section 107 of the JOBS Act also provides that an "emerging growth company" can take advantage of the extended transition period provided in Section 7(a)(2)(B) of the Securities Act for complying with new or revised accounting standards. In other words, an "emerging growth company" can delay the adoption of new or revised accounting standards until those standards would otherwise apply to private companies. We have irrevocably elected not to avail ourselves of this exemption from new or revised accounting standards and, therefore, we will be subject to the same new or revised accounting standards as other public companies that are not emerging growth companies.

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BUSINESS

Overview

        We are a clinical stage biopharmaceutical company focused on developing and commercializing innovative neuropsychiatric therapeutics. Our clinical stage product candidate, ganaxolone, is a small molecule that is a synthetic analog of allopregnanolone, an endogenous neurosteroid produced in the central nervous system that modulates the brain neurotransmitter gamma-aminobutyric acid, or GABA. Our lead indication for ganaxolone is as an adjunctive, or add-on, therapy for the treatment of partial, also known as focal, onset seizures in adults with epilepsy. By targeting the same spectrum of GABA A receptors as endogenous allopregnanolone, ganaxolone delivers its therapeutic benefit through a natural mechanism that we believe may offer safety and efficacy advantages compared to other marketed antiepileptic medications. We have completed a Phase 2 clinical trial in 147 patients with focal onset seizures demonstrating that patients who added ganaxolone to their medication regimen experienced a statistically significant reduction in seizures as compared to patients who added placebo. We are currently enrolling patients in a randomized Phase 2b clinical trial, which we intend to expand so that it may serve as one of our adequate and well-controlled clinical trials in a registration filing with the United States Food and Drug Administration, or FDA, or the European Medicines Agency, or EMA, for ganaxolone in epilepsy. We expect data from this trial in the second half of 2015. In addition, we believe ganaxolone has potential in a broad range of neuropsychiatric disorders, including orphan indications. We currently have a proof-of-concept Phase 2 clinical trial in progress for ganaxolone as a treatment for behaviors in the orphan indication Fragile X Syndrome, or FXS, an orphan indication in which GABA activity has been implicated in the expression of the disorder. We plan to further pursue other potential indications related to our mechanism when non-dilutive opportunities arise.

        The effects of allopregnanolone have been studied for over two decades and its role in controlling seizures and improving anxiety, mood and sleep through positive modulation of GABA A type receptors is well documented. Despite these positive characteristics, we believe allopregnanolone is not suitable for chronic use due to potential undesired steroidal effects. Ganaxolone was designed to have the same GABA modulation effects as allopregnanolone without steroidal effects. Ganaxolone and allopregnanolone differ from other GABA A agents by interacting with unique binding sites on the GABA A receptor that are located both within, or synaptic, and outside, or extrasynaptic, the GABA synapse. Ganaxolone's activation of the extrasynaptic receptor is a unique mechanism that provides stabilizing effects that we believe differentiates it from other drugs that increase GABA signaling. Preclinical studies provide evidence that the GABA modulatory activity of ganaxolone is responsible for its anticonvulsive activity in epileptic seizures and its antianxiety effects in FXS and other neuropsychiatric disorders.

        Epilepsy affects approximately 50 million people globally, and over 5 million people are under treatment in the United States, Europe and Japan. According to IMS Health, global sales of antiepileptic drugs, or AEDs, were approximately $14 billion in 2011. Existing AEDs attempt to control seizures through a variety of mechanisms and are effective in reducing seizure frequency in many patients. Currently available medications create a number of side effects, including mood changes, increased cardiovascular risks, weight changes and potential reproductive toxicity. Approximately 60% of patients will achieve an adequate level of seizure control with a single AED, and the remainder will resort to using multiple drugs, or polypharmacy. Even with polypharmacy, approximately 30 to 35% of all patients do not reach an acceptable level of seizure control. We estimate that the market opportunity for this refractory patient population, which will be ganaxolone's initial target segment, will exceed $4 billion in the United States, Europe and Japan. We believe that ganaxolone, if approved, will be an attractive treatment option for patients that require polypharmacy to control their seizures, due to its novel mechanism of action and its safety and tolerability profile.

        We have successfully completed a double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled, Phase 2 clinical trial of ganaxolone for adjunctive treatment in 147 patients with refractory focal onset seizures. Ganaxolone satisfied the primary efficacy endpoint of the study, a reduction in seizure frequency, and was considered to be generally safe and well tolerated. In this clinical trial, ganaxolone demonstrated a 20% mean seizure

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reduction from baseline compared to placebo in a difficult-to-treat refractory patient population. In the open label extension to the study, patients who were switched to ganaxolone from placebo experienced reductions in seizures similar to the ganaxolone group in the blinded study. Ganaxolone has also been studied in a Phase 2 proof-of-concept clinical trial as the sole treatment, or monotherapy, for adults with treatment resistant focal onset seizures in which the primary endpoint was duration of treatment prior to withdrawal from the trial due to seizures. In the trial, 50% of ganaxolone subjects completed the study compared to 25% of placebo subjects.

        In Phase 1 and 2 clinical trials, ganaxolone has been administered in approximately 1,000 subjects at therapeutically relevant dose levels and treatment regimens for up to two years. In these trials, ganaxolone was generally well tolerated with no adverse effects on cardiovascular, liver, blood or other systems. In animal studies, there was no evidence of reproductive toxicity or other toxicities after long-term administration of ganaxolone. We believe ganaxolone to be a first-in-class therapy with potential to provide meaningful treatment advantages for adults with focal onset seizures who do not achieve adequate seizure control from, have developed tolerance to, or have safety concerns with currently available medications.

        In October 2013, we initiated a Phase 2b clinical trial in epilepsy patients with focal onset seizures to evaluate ganaxolone compared to placebo as adjunctive treatment for 12 weeks. This randomized, placebo-controlled trial was designed to enroll approximately 150 adult subjects with focal onset seizures. With the proceeds from this offering, we intend to increase the size of this study to approximately 300 subjects in order to meet statistical power requirements so that it may be considered as an adequate and well-controlled trial in an FDA or EMA filing package for registration. We expect to complete this clinical trial in the second half of 2015.

        We are also developing ganaxolone as a treatment for behaviors associated with FXS in children. FXS is a genetic condition that causes intellectual disability, behavioral and learning challenges and various physical characteristics. Approximately one million individuals in the United States have, or are at risk for developing, a Fragile X-associated disorder, with approximately 100,000 people having FXS. We are currently conducting a Phase 2 proof-of-concept randomized, placebo-controlled, clinical trial in approximately 60 FXS patients. This trial is being conducted in collaboration with the MIND Institute at the University of California, Davis, which receives funding from the DoD for the trial. We expect the trial to be completed during the second half of 2015.

        Due to its mechanism of action, we believe ganaxolone has potential in a variety of neurologic and psychiatric disorders beyond our current clinical focus. Potential additional indications include generalized anxiety disorder, posttraumatic stress disorder, or PTSD, and depression, multiple sclerosis, addictive behaviors such as alcoholism and smoking, attention deficit hyperactivity disorder, or ADHD, and orphan disorders such as Super Refractory Status Epilepticus, or SRSE, Neimann Pick Disease, Type C and certain autism subtypes. If we decide to pursue any additional indications for ganaxolone, we would need to undertake additional clinical trials.

        We have global rights to develop and commercialize ganaxolone, excluding Russia and certain other eastern European nations. We have seven United States patents and corresponding foreign patents and patent applications directed to solid and liquid ganaxolone formulations and methods for the making and use thereof, the earliest of which will expire in 2026, excluding possible patent extension. We also have a United States patent and corresponding foreign patents and patent applications covering our ganaxolone synthesis process, the earliest of which will expire in 2030, excluding possible patent extension.

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Our Strategy

        Our goal is to maximize the value of ganaxolone as a first-in-class innovative neuropsychiatric therapy with a portfolio of diversified indications. The key elements of our strategy to achieve this goal include:

    Executing our registration studies and pursue regulatory approval for ganaxolone for adjunctive treatment of focal onset seizures and other epilepsy indications. Building on efficacy established in our two completed clinical trials, and a differentiated safety profile as demonstrated in extensive preclinical studies and trials in more than 1,000 subjects, we are executing a clinical program to support a registration filing for ganaxolone for adjunctive treatment of focal onset seizures in adults in the United States, Europe and other major markets. Additionally, if the results from our adjunctive focal onset seizure trials are positive, we plan to develop ganaxolone in other segments of the epilepsy market including for monotherapy and pediatric epilepsy. As a result of its efficacy and safety profile, we believe ganaxolone could be a meaningful treatment for epilepsy patients who do not achieve adequate seizure control from, have developed tolerance to, or have safety concerns with currently available therapies including concerns around reproductive toxicity.

    Expanding indications for ganaxolone.   Due to its mechanism of action, we believe ganaxolone has potential for therapeutic benefit in a variety of neuropsychiatric disorders in addition to epilepsy. Evidence from preclinical and clinical studies demonstrates that treatment with an agent similar to naturally occurring allopregnanolone could be of benefit in patients with anxiety, mood, sleep and developmental disorders. A proof-of-concept clinical trial is ongoing for ganaxolone in patients with FXS, with data expected in the second half of 2015. We may explore development of ganaxolone in other neuropsychiatric disorders and orphan neurology indications.

    Commercializing ganaxolone in the United States either alone or in collaboration with others.   We intend to build sales and marketing infrastructure to reach high-prescribing neurologists and epilepsy specialists in the United States. We may seek co-promotion partners for our sales efforts to reach other United States physician groups, such as primary care physicians. We believe a focused sales and marketing organization could be leveraged to market ganaxolone in other neurology or psychiatry indications if we are able to obtain regulatory approval for those other indications.

    Establishing collaborations to develop and commercialize ganaxolone in territories outside the United States. We believe that there is significant market opportunity for ganaxolone in epilepsy and other neurological and psychiatric conditions outside of the United States. In order to capitalize on this opportunity, we may seek collaborations with pharmaceutical companies that have greater reach and resources by virtue of their size and experience in markets outside the United States.

Our Pipeline

        We are developing ganaxolone for multiple neuropsychiatric indications, including the following:

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Ganaxolone in Epilepsy

Overview and Treatment of Epilepsy

        Epilepsy is characterized by seizures that arise from abnormal electrical discharge in the brain, resulting in alterations of consciousness, involuntary movement, or altered sensations. Seizures in epilepsy may be related to a brain injury or heredity, but often the cause is unknown. Epileptic seizures are generally described in two major groups, primary generalized seizures and focal onset seizures. Primary generalized seizures begin with a widespread electrical discharge that involves both sides of the brain at once. Focal onset seizures begin with an electrical discharge in one limited area of the brain. Generally, a person is diagnosed as having epilepsy when they have had at least two seizures that do not have a self-limiting cause such as a high fever.

        In 2012, Decision Resources reported that approximately five million people were under treatment for epilepsy in the United States, Europe and Japan. IMS Health reported that global sales of AEDs were approximately $14 billion in 2011. It is estimated that approximately 3.8% of people will develop epilepsy during their lifetime, with a higher incidence in men than women. New cases of epilepsy are most common among children, especially during the first year of life. The rate of new cases gradually declines until about age 10, and then becomes stable. Remission is common for children as they age. After age 55 to 60, the rate of new epilepsy cases starts to increase, as people develop strokes, brain tumors, or Alzheimer's disease.

        Newly diagnosed epilepsy patients are treated with daily administration of an AED. Approximately 60% of patients will achieve an adequate level of seizure control with a single AED, and the remainder will resort to polypharmacy. Approximately 30 to 35% of all patients do not reach an acceptable level of seizure control even with polypharmacy, and are considered to be refractory cases. We estimate that the market opportunity for this refractory patient population, which will be ganaxolone's initial target segment, will exceed $4 billion in the United States, Europe and Japan. Despite the widespread availability of generic drugs for the treatment of epilepsy, in many countries, including the United States, health payors permit these epilepsy patients to switch to costlier medications or polypharmacy in order to gain seizure control or reduce side effects. Our market research suggests that many physicians attempt to add a medication with a new mechanism of action while also trying to minimize side effect burden when selecting a substitute or add-on AED. A subset of focal onset seizure patients who cannot gain acceptable seizure control through pharmacologic treatment options resort to implantable devices or removal of the part of the brain causing the seizures.

Market Opportunity

        Epileptic seizures require chronic treatment, often over a lifetime. Available AEDs are efficacious for many patients, but chronic treatment is complicated by side effects, including:

    cardiovascular risks;

    liver enzyme induction;

    kidney stones;

    behavioral changes;

    sedation and adverse effects on cognitive function;

    drug tolerance; and

    reproductive risk.

        Women have the added complication that several currently available AEDs increase the risk to the fetus, including birth defects, lowered IQ and low birth weight. Most of these drugs are categorized by the FDA as Pregnancy Category C, indicating a potential risk to the fetus, and three of these drugs (valproate, carbamazepine, phenytoin) have been classified as Pregnancy Category D, indicating that use is only justified if there is a serious condition where the need outweighs risk to the fetus based on registry data.

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        Despite the many available AEDs, approximately 30 to 35% of patients do not attain acceptable seizure control either with single drug or multiple drug therapy. Furthermore, medications with significant side effects or dosing regimens that undermine compliance make it difficult for patients to achieve and maintain seizure free status. For these reasons there is a need for new AEDs with novel mechanisms of action and improved side effect profiles that can maintain seizure control with chronic administration for people with refractory epilepsy. The recent successful introduction of Vimpat by UCB is an example of market acceptance of a new AED with a novel mechanism. Vimpat was approved in the United States and European Union in 2008, and achieved global sales of approximately €411 million in 2013. Several other successfully marketed AEDs experienced similar sales levels by their fifth year on the market. UCB has stated that it expects Vimpat to achieve over €1.2 billion in peak sales globally.

Our Solution

        We believe ganaxolone to be a first-in-class therapy with potential to provide meaningful treatment advantages for adults with focal onset seizures who do not achieve adequate seizure control from, have developed tolerance to, or have safety concerns with currently available medications. We believe ganaxolone, if approved, may provide the following benefits for patients:

    Efficacy for refractory patients with focal onset seizures.   Our completed Phase 2 clinical trial in patients with refractory focal onset seizures demonstrated that patients who added ganaxolone to their medication regimen experienced a statistically significant reduction in seizures as compared to patients who added placebo.

    Improved safety and tolerability profile.   Ganaxolone was engineered to be a synthetic analog of a natural molecule, allopregnanolone. Completed preclinical safety studies and Phase 1 and 2 clinical trials involving approximately 1,000 subjects show ganaxolone to be generally safe and well-tolerated, without evidence of toxicity to heart, liver, blood or other body systems and without many of the side effects common to other AEDs. We believe this safety profile may make ganaxolone a treatment of choice in antiepileptic polypharmacy regimens.

    Improved reproductive toxicity profile.   Based on ganaxolone's mechanism, and preclinical and clinical findings to date, we believe ganaxolone will offer a lower risk for reproductive toxicity than many currently available AEDs, which we believe would be an important safety differentiator for women of childbearing age.

        Our market research with physicians indicates neurologists and epilepsy specialists would expect to use ganaxolone in 16 to 29% of the their focal onset seizure patients.

Mechanism of Action

        Ganaxolone is a small molecule that is a synthetic analog of allopregnanolone, an endogenous neurosteroid produced in the central nervous system by metabolism of progesterone, that modulates GABA through activation of GABA A receptors. The neurosteroid class of molecules interact with GABA A receptors at two binding sites that are specific for neurosteroids. Neurosteroids have the ability to enact brain changes rapidly in response to the brain environment, unlike many molecules whose action depends on gene expression or protein synthesis and can take days or weeks. Their versatility is the basis for the positive effects of allopregnanolone in models of seizures, neuropathic pain, nicotine and alcohol addiction, brain and spinal cord injury, depression, anxiety, stress, ADHD, Alzheimer's disease, Parkinson's disease, Neimann Pick Disease, Type C, and multiple sclerosis. Of the neurosteroids currently in development, we believe ganaxolone is in the most advanced clinical stage.

        Multiple lines of evidence support the role of GABA in seizure disorders. In animal models both the structure and function of GABA A receptors is altered compared to non-epileptic animals, and in these animals, in some brain regions, GABA A receptors become less sensitive to neurosteroid effects. Several drugs known to cause seizures such as penicillin, pentylenetetrazol, bicuculine, and picrotoxin are GABA A receptor antagonists.

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Further, drugs that are known to increase GABA A receptor transmission such as the benzodiazepines and barbiturates have anticonvulsant activity. Ganaxolone has been shown to demonstrate anticonvulsant activity in multiple seizure models, including seizures induced by the GABA agonists bicuculine and pentylenetetrazol.

        Allopreganolone and certain related neurosteroids work by interacting with both synaptic and extrasynaptic GABA A receptors. Although some AEDs work through activation of synaptic GABA A receptors, none of them are believed to activate GABA A receptors by interacting with the neurosteroid recognition site. Outside of the synapse, allopregnanolone is absorbed into the cell membrane and slowly diffuses to activate the extrasynaptic GABA A receptors, providing constant, or tonal, modulation of the GABA inhibitory signal that calms overexcited neurons. This absorption-diffusion mechanism for tonal inhibition of GABA A receptors is specific to the chemical structure of neurosteroids.

        The activity of ganaxolone at GABA A receptors was established through a series of experiments in which ganaxolone increased or decreased specific binding of other drugs known to interact at the neurosteroid binding site. Consistent with these findings, electrophysiological studies demonstrated that ganaxolone potentiated electrical currents stimulated by GABA activity at GABA A receptors expressed in an in vitro experimental model. These studies demonstrating ganaxolone's anticonvulsant activity were not controlled and therefore no analysis for statistical significance was performed.

        Ganaxolone has the same chemical structure as allopregnanolone, with the addition of a methyl group designed to prevent conversion back to an active steroid, thereby eliminating the opportunity for unwanted hormonal effects while preserving its central nervous system, or CNS, activity. The modulatory activity of ganaxolone at GABA A receptors is comparable to that of allopregnanolone, established through a series of experiments in which ganaxolone enhanced the binding of [3H]flunitrazepam and [3H]muscimol, and inhibited the binding of [35S]TBPS, or t-butylbicyclophosphorohionate, at the GABA A receptor complex. Consistent with these findings, electrophysiological studies demonstrated that ganaxolone potentiated electrical currents stimulated by GABA A activity at GABA A receptors expressed in an in vitro experimental model. In binding studies, ganaxolone did not show appreciable affinity for estrogen or progesterone receptors, nor any other unintended activity through 37 non-target CNS receptors studied in the following classes: steroid, monoamine, second messenger, or amino acid.

Clinical Trials for Epilepsy in Adults

         Controlled Phase 2 Clinical Trial for Adjunctive Treatment of Drug-Resistant Focal Onset Seizures (Study 600)

        We successfully completed a double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled, Phase 2 clinical trial of ganaxolone as an adjunctive treatment in 147 patients with refractory focal onset seizures under an IND originally filed by a third party with the FDA on November 29, 1993. In this trial, ganaxolone satisfied the primary efficacy endpoint and was considered to be generally safe and well tolerated. The subjects in the trial were adult outpatients from the United States who had been diagnosed with epilepsy on average 25 years prior and 75% were taking two or three AEDs to control seizures before they entered the study. Subjects were treated for ten weeks with placebo or ganaxolone as adjunctive treatment to existing therapy and recorded their seizures daily in a diary. Mean baseline seizure frequency was 6.5 and 9.2 seizures per seven days in the ganaxolone and placebo groups, respectively. Subjects gradually increased their daily dose up to 1,500 milligrams per day, or mg/day, over the first two weeks, known as titration or the titration period, followed by maintenance dosing at 1,500 mg/day for eight weeks, known as the maintenance period. The primary efficacy endpoint was change from baseline in weekly seizure frequency. Results of the analysis, using a statistical test known as the Kruskal-Wallis test employed when data have non-normal distribution, are presented in the table below:


% Seizure Reduction From Baseline

 
  Ganaxolone (n=98)   Placebo (n=49)   Difference  

Mean (standard deviation)

  -17.6% (48.9)   +2.0% (63.2)     19.6 %

Median

  -26.0%              -10.2%                15.7 %

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        In the intention-to-treat, or ITT, population, which included all study subjects who took at least one dose of study medication, there was a statistically significant reduction in the percent change in mean weekly seizure frequency in the ganaxolone group, which decreased 17.6% from baseline at week 10, whereas in the placebo group, mean weekly seizure frequency increased by 2% compared to baseline at week 10, a difference of 19.6% (p=0.014). The p-value represents the probability that the difference between the two groups is due to chance rather than drug effect, and when that probability is less than 5%, or p<0.05, the result is considered statistically significant. In the ganaxolone group median seizure frequency decreased by 26.0%, whereas in the placebo group median seizure frequency decreased by 10.2%, a difference of 15.7%. We believe this effect size for an adjunctive treatment of a highly refractory patient population is consistent with the Phase 2 results for other AEDs that ultimately received FDA approval.

        Secondary analyses included the analysis of the percentage of subjects with greater than or equal to 50% improvement from baseline, or responder analysis, mean and percent change in seizure frequency from baseline, number of seizure-free days and seizure-free subjects, change in seizure frequency by week, and change from baseline in types of seizures. In general, the results of secondary efficacy analyses supported the primary outcome that subjects treated with ganaxolone showed improved seizure control compared to those treated with placebo. The responder analysis is considered by the EMA to be the primary analysis of a registration trial. In this study, the percent of responders in the ganaxolone group compared to the placebo group in the ITT population were 23.5% and 14.3% (p=0.192) for the titration plus maintenance period, and 26.3% v. 13.0% (p=0.057) for the maintenance period. No gender effect or effect of concomitant medication was observed.

         Open Label Extension of Controlled Phase 2 Clinical Trial for Adjunctive Treatment of Drug-Resistant Focal Onset Seizures (Study 601)

        Of the treatment-resistant subjects in our Phase 2 clinical trial, 95% of eligible subjects continued in a long-term open-label extension where the mean duration of treatment was 39 weeks. The objective of the open-label extension study was to evaluate the long-term safety, tolerability and efficacy of ganaxolone at a target dose of 1,500 mg/day. The primary endpoint was change in seizure frequency at endpoint compared to baseline of the double-blind study, presented as mean and median change. Secondary assessments were similar to those evaluated in the blinded portion of the study.

        The mean and median percent reductions in weekly seizure frequency were 14.2% and 23.2% from baseline to endpoint, respectively. In total, 70% of subjects had a reduction in seizure frequency during the study. Importantly, subjects previously randomized to placebo in the double-blind study (Study 600) that were switched to ganaxolone in the open-label study showed mean and median reduction in seizure frequency comparable to patients randomized to ganaxolone in the double-blind study.

        Secondary analyses included assessment of responders and seizure free status. Twenty-four percent of subjects met responder criteria at endpoint, defined as a reduction in seizures of 50% or more from baseline, while 43% of those who remained in the study for 52 weeks or more met responder criteria. Subjects in the study reported a mean increase in number of seizure-free days per week of 17.4%, an increase that we believe to be meaningful in the context of the severity and persistence of epilepsy in this drug-resistant population.

    Phase 2 Clinical Trial of Monotherapy in Drug Resistant Focal Onset Seizures (Study 104)

        A controlled clinical trial was also conducted to evaluate ganaxolone as monotherapy for focal onset seizures in a drug-resistant population. This double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled, Phase 2 clinical trial involved 52 subjects who were withdrawn from their antiepileptic medications prior to evaluation for surgical treatment of their seizures. The subjects were treated with ganaxolone monotherapy 625 mg three times per day for eight days. The primary efficacy measure was duration of treatment prior to study withdrawal as measured from day 2 of the study.

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GRAPHIC

        As depicted in the plot above showing the Kaplan-Meier survival function of subjects remaining in the study, 61% of subjects in the placebo group left the study due to emergence of seizures by day 8, compared with 38% of ganaxolone subjects (p=0.08). Statistical testing of completion rates between the two groups found a statistically significant difference between completion rates in the two groups, with 50% of ganaxolone subjects completing the study compared to 25% of placebo subjects (p=0.04).

Ganaxolone Safety Overview

        Approximately 1,000 subjects have received treatment with ganaxolone ranging in duration from one day to more than two years using doses from 50 to 2,000 mg/day. A total of 289 healthy subjects received ganaxolone doses of 50 to 2,000 mg/day in Phase 1 studies, for periods of up to two weeks. In the completed Phase 2 clinical studies, 697 unique subjects have received ganaxolone including 135 pediatric subjects with epilepsy, 169 adult subjects with epilepsy, and 393 adult subjects with migraine. Ganaxolone was administered in Phase 2 studies to pediatric subjects at doses up to 54 mg/kg and to adult subjects at doses up to 1,875 mg/day. No drug-related deaths occurred in any of these clinical trials, and the majority of adverse events were not medically serious and resolved upon discontinuation of therapy. In the ganaxolone safety database there are no trends of medically important changes in blood chemistry, vital signs, liver function, renal function or cardiovascular parameters in the adult or pediatric populations.

        We have completed preclinical safety pharmacology and toxicology testing, including reproductive toxicology. Animal pharmacokinetic and in vitro studies show that ganaxolone is primarily metabolized by the CYP3A family of liver enzymes, a common route of drug metabolism. All in vitro studies have shown ganaxolone has low potential for interaction with other drugs at several multiples of observed human ganaxolone levels. Furthermore, neither ganaxolone nor its metabolites have a ketone ring at the 3-position, a requirement for hormonal activity. In binding studies, ganaxolone has no appreciable affinity for estrogen or progesterone receptors. We found no evidence of changes in blood, liver, kidney or the gastrointestinal systems indicating functional or anatomical adverse effects associated with either single- or multiple-dose treatment with ganaxolone in preclinical safety pharmacology studies, nor have we seen evidence of any end organ toxicity from human clinical studies. We have not detected potential for ganaxolone to cause cellular mutations or carcinogenicity in studies to date. We plan to initiate the final two-year carcinogenicity studies in rats and mice in 2015.

        In reproductive toxicology studies, ganaxolone did not cause any malformations of the embryo or fetus in rats or mice and did not significantly affect the development of offspring. No changes in sperm

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parameters were found. We believe these findings are important as all currently marketed AEDs have shown developmental toxicities in animal studies such as fetal death or skeletal abnormalities, generating a rating of Pregnancy Category C that indicates a finding of developmental toxicities in animal studies. Valproate, carbamazepine, phenytoin and topiramate have been linked with birth defects in humans, for example, head and facial malformations, and lowered birth weight, at a rate higher than observed in women who did not take these drugs. This association has resulted in a categorization of Pregnancy Category D for these drugs, indicating positive evidence of human fetal risk based on scientific data. Based on ganaxolone's mechanism and preclinical and clinical findings to date, we intend to seek differentiated labeling including a designation of FDA Pregnancy Category B for ganaxolone, which indicates animal reproduction studies have failed to demonstrate a risk to the fetus and there are no adequate and well-controlled studies in pregnant women, which we believe would be an important safety differentiator for women of childbearing age.

    Clinical Safety Results in Epilepsy

        Ganaxolone was considered to be generally safe and well tolerated in the Phase 2 adjunctive treatment trials in adults with focal onset seizures. The majority of adverse events associated with ganaxolone treatment were related to known CNS effects of GABA, were not medically serious and resolved upon discontinuation of therapy. The data did not show any trends of medically important changes in blood chemistry, vital signs, liver function, renal function or cardiovascular parameters related to ganaxolone treatment.

        The most frequent treatment-emergent adverse events, or TEAEs, observed in Study 600 are presented in the table below.

Summary of Most Frequently Reported ( ³ 5% of Subjects) TEAEs by
System Organ Class and Preferred Term (ITT Population)

Preferred Term
  Ganaxolone
(n=98)
%
  Placebo
(n=49)
%
 

Dizziness

    16.3     8.2  

Fatigue

    16.3     8.2  

Somnolence

    13.3     2.0  

Injury, poisoning and procedural complications

    17.3     22.4  

Headache

    8.2     12.2  

Coordination abnormal

    6.1     6.1  

Convulsion

    5.1     8.2  

Nasopharyngitis

    5.1     10.2  

Fall

    5.1     12.2  

        The two treatment groups had similar rates of discontinuation due to adverse events (7% ganaxolone, 6% placebo) and similar rates of serious adverse events, or SAEs (5% ganaxolone, 8% placebo), mostly related to the underlying epilepsy. The majority of TEAEs resolved with continued treatment or dose reduction. In contrast to some marketed AEDs, the incidence of behavioral TEAEs (reported as depression, insomnia, affective disorder, confusional state, affect lability, aggression, anxiety) was similar in the ganaxolone and placebo treatment groups.

        Ganaxolone continued to be considered generally safe and well tolerated in the long-term open-label extension, Study 601, in which 120 subjects received ganaxolone for a mean duration of 39 weeks. The most common adverse events considered related to ganaxolone treatment were fatigue (14%), dizziness (9%) and somnolence, also known as sleepiness (7%). Eleven percent of the subjects discontinued due to one or more adverse events. One SAE out of 17 reported was considered related to ganaxolone treatment, a

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59 year old female on 900 mg/day whose liver enzymes were elevated after 57 days of treatment. The enzyme levels returned to normal with a reduction in dose to 600 mg/day. In this long-term open-label study of ganaxolone for adjunctive treatment of focal onset seizures, no new safety concerns were identified during extended treatment with doses up to 1,500 mg/day.

        In Study 104, the eight-day monotherapy study of ganaxolone and placebo in presurgical patients, ganaxolone was generally well-tolerated and the profile of adverse events between the two groups was similar. Dizziness, which was reported in four ganaxolone and three placebo subjects, was the most frequent adverse event. One SAE was reported in each group; the ganaxolone subject experienced severe agitation and depression while the placebo subject experienced postictal psychosis. As in the other studies, no clinically meaningful differences between treatment groups were noted in laboratory, vital sign, electrocardiogram, or physical/neurological exam results.

Ongoing and Planned Clinical Trials in Epilepsy

        In October 2013 we initiated an international, randomized, placebo-controlled, Phase 2b clinical trial in adult subjects for adjunctive treatment of focal onset seizures (Study 603). In Cohort 1, approximately 50 subjects will be randomized to receive either placebo or ganaxolone capsules in a step titration of 1,200 mg/day for four weeks followed by 1,800 mg/day for four weeks. Blood levels of ganaxolone will be assessed at steady state for each dose level.

        In Cohort 2, an additional 150 subjects will be randomized to receive either placebo or 1,800 mg/day of ganaxolone for 12 weeks. With the proceeds from this offering, we plan to increase the size of Cohort 2 to approximately 300 subjects in order to meet the statistical power requirements for the FDA and other regulatory bodies to consider this trial as one of our adequate and well-controlled studies as part of an FDA or EMA filing package for registration. The primary endpoint of this trial will be change in seizure frequency per month compared to baseline. We will also capture adverse events and other measures of safety as well as responder rate, seizure-free status and changes in seizure subtypes. We plan to complete this study in the second half of 2015. The trial design is shown below.

GRAPHIC

        We are planning to conduct a Phase 3, double-blind, randomized fixed-dose study to confirm the efficacy, tolerability and safety of ganaxolone for adjunctive treatment of focal onset seizures in adults. This study, per European guidelines and United States precedents, will enroll similar patients as those in our ongoing trial: adult outpatients with drug-resistant focal onset seizures who require add-on therapy in addition to their current AEDs. The study will contain three fixed dose arms of ganaxolone versus placebo for 12 weeks of maintenance therapy. Change in seizure frequency compared to baseline will be the primary outcome measure. Patients who complete the study would be eligible to enroll in a one year open-label extension.

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        Ganaxolone is currently formulated as an oral suspension and as a capsule. Study 600 and 601 were conducted with an oral suspension formulation and Study 603 is being conducted with a capsule formulation. We are planning to use a tablet formulation in future studies. In order to support clinical trials with a tablet formulation, two pharmacokinetic studies are being planned, one to demonstrate bioequivalence between the capsule and the tablet, and one to establish relative potency of the oral suspension to the tablet.

Ganaxolone in Fragile X Syndrome, or FXS

Overview and Treatment of FXS

        FXS is a genetic condition that causes intellectual disability, behavioral and learning challenges and various physical characteristics. The impairment can range from learning disabilities to more severe cognitive or intellectual disabilities. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, FXS affects 1 in 3,600 to 4,000 males and 1 in 4,000 to 6,000 females of all races and ethnic groups. Approximately 1 in 151 women carry the Fragile X gene and could pass it to their children. Approximately 1 in 468 men carry the Fragile X gene and their daughters will also be carriers. Patients with FXS exhibit autism-like symptoms including cognitive impairment, anxiety and mood swings, attention deficit and heightened stimuli. Approximately 7% of women and 18% of men with FXS have seizures. People with FXS are affected throughout their lives. Currently, there are no known cures or approved therapies for FXS. Special education and symptomatic treatments are employed to lessen the burden of illness.

Market Opportunity

        Approximately one million individuals in the United States have, or are at risk for developing, a Fragile X associated disorder, with approximately 100,000 people having FXS. Treatment approaches focus primarily on supportive care and medications addressing development delays, learning disabilities, and social and behavioral problems caused by the disease. Various classes of medications are used to treat behavioral and mental health conditions associated with FXS. Some patients with FXS benefit from medications that treat attention deficient disorders. Other patients who experience general anxiety, social anxiety and other chronic conditions may benefit from different types of anti-anxiety medications and other neuropsychiatric treatments.

Mechanism of Action

        FXS arises from a mutation of a gene known as the fmr1 gene in the coding for the Fragile X mental retardation protein. In a mouse model of this gene mutation, certain brain regions show lower levels of the extrasynaptic GABA A receptors and reduction of proteins and enzymes responsible for GABA function. The result of fewer GABA A receptors in these mice include over-sensitivity to noise, anxiety, and seizures. Ganaxolone and other agents that have been shown to improve GABA function have also been shown to improve FXS symptoms in this mouse model. As FXS symptoms may be diagnosed as early as infancy, it would be beneficial for a drug approved to treat FXS to have a safety profile acceptable for use in children as well as adults.

        We believe that ganaxolone, with its high-affinity for extrasynaptic GABA A receptors, may increase signaling at existing receptors to normalize GABA function thereby reducing anxiety, hyperactivity and other disabilities associated with this inherited disorder.

Ongoing Clinical Trial (Study 800)

        The MIND Institute at the University of California, Davis has been awarded a medical research grant from the DoD to study ganaxolone for treatment of behaviors in FXS in children and adolescents. In collaboration with Marinus, the MIND Institute at the University of California, Davis is conducting a randomized, placebo-controlled, Phase 2 proof-of-concept clinical trial in approximately 60 subjects under

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an IND filed by us with the FDA on July 2, 2012. Subjects are titrated up to a maximum dose of 1,500 mg/day of ganaxolone or placebo over a two week period followed by four weeks of treatment. At the end of the first treatment period and following a washout period, subjects are crossed over to the other treatment for a similar two week titration period followed by four weeks of treatment.

GRAPHIC

        The primary outcome measure of the study is Clinical Global Impression Rating Scale for Improvement. Secondary outcome measures include the Aberrant Behaviors Checklist and ratings scales for specific behaviors associated with childhood FXS. We plan to complete Study 800 during the second half of 2015.

Other Potential Future Development Programs for Ganaxolone

        We believe that due to its mechanism of action, there is a rationale for ganaxolone therapy to provide a clinical benefit in a broad array of indications beyond our current trials. Such additional indications may include generalized anxiety disorder, PTSD, addictive disorders, perinatal depression, ADHD, and other neurodegenerative disorders. Additionally ganaxolone might be useful in several rare genetic disorders related to impaired GABA function such as the orphan indications Neimann Pick Disease, Type C, or SRSE. We are not presently conducting any clinical trials for any of these potential future additional indications, but would need to do so in order to obtain labeled indications.

        The Injury and Traumatic Stress Consortium, or INTRuST, a group of PTSD treatment centers in the United States, has received government funding from the DoD to evaluate new treatments for PTSD. In collaboration with Marinus, INTRuST conducted a proof-of-concept study of ganaxolone versus placebo in adults with PTSD. The Phase 2 clinical trial was conducted at seven Veterans Administration centers in the United States under an IND filed by us with the FDA on January 4, 2010. The study enrolled 114 adults with PTSD who were treated for six weeks with ganaxolone or placebo in ascending doses followed by six weeks on open label ganaxolone.

        The primary efficacy measure is the Clinician-Administered PTSD Scale, or CAPS, the standard rating assessment in treatment studies for PTSD, measured at the end of week 6. The CAPS measures levels of repetitive thoughts, startle, vigilance, avoidance and depression that are the main characteristics of PTSD. Additional efficacy ratings include measures of resilience, sleep, and overall global improvement. Treatment has been completed in this study and the analysis is ongoing. Periodic reviews of the safety data from the study showed ganaxolone was safe in this population.

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Intellectual Property

        The proprietary nature of, and protection for our product candidates and discovery programs and know-how are important to our business. We have sought patent protection in the United States and internationally for ganaxolone and use of ganaxolone nanoparticles in oral solid and liquid dose formulations. Our policy is to pursue, maintain and defend patent rights whether developed internally or licensed from third parties and to protect the technology, inventions and improvements that are commercially important to the development of our business.

        The basis of our intellectual property was the discovery of a novel composition of nanoparticles and complexing agents that deliver consistent exposure and improved stability of ganaxolone. This discovery resulted in the issuance of United States and foreign patents, which cover use of these complexed ganaxolone nanoparticles in oral solid and liquid dose formulations. As of March 31, 2014, our patent portfolio contains seven United States patents and corresponding foreign patents and patent applications directed to solid and liquid ganaloxone formulations and methods for the making and use thereof. These patents expire in 2026, excluding accounting for possible patent term extension under the Drug Price Competition and Patent Term Restoration Act of 1984, or the Hatch-Waxman Act, or for possible pediatric exclusivity. Corresponding foreign patents have been granted in Australia, Canada, Eurasia, Japan, New Zealand and Singapore. Corresponding foreign patent applications are pending in China, Europe, India, Israel, Japan, Mexico, South Africa and South Korea. We have not licensed any rights to practice these patents in any of these territories. Pursuant to our agreement with Domain Russia Investments Limited, or DRI, we have assigned patent rights, which rights were subsequently assigned to NovaMedica LLC, whereby we licensed our patents, along with the rights to develop and commercialize ganaxolone, in Russia and certain other eastern European nations.

        Our patent portfolio also contains patents issued in the United States and New Zealand covering our novel and cost effective ganaxolone synthesis process, which expire in 2030, excluding accounting for possible patent term extension under the Hatch-Waxman Act, or for possible pediatric exclusivity. Corresponding foreign patent applications are pending in Australia, Brazil, Canada, China, Eurasia, Europe, Hong Kong, Israel, India, Japan, Mexico and South Korea. We continue to prosecute applications in additional geographies.

        In addition to patents, we rely upon unpatented trade secrets, know-how and continuing technological innovation to develop and maintain a competitive position. We seek to protect our proprietary information, in part, through confidentiality agreements with our employees, collaborators, contractors and consultants, and invention assignment agreements with our employees and some of our collaborators. The confidentiality agreements are designed to protect our proprietary information and, in the case of agreements or clauses requiring invention assignment, to grant us ownership of technologies that are developed through a relationship with a third party.

General considerations

        As with other biotechnology and pharmaceutical companies, our ability to maintain and solidify a proprietary position for ganaxolone will depend upon our success in obtaining effective patent claims and enforcing those claims once granted. Our commercial success will depend in part upon not infringing upon the proprietary rights of third parties. It is uncertain whether the issuance of any third-party patent would require us to alter our development or commercial strategies, obtain licenses, or cease certain activities. The biotechnology and pharmaceutical industries are characterized by extensive litigation regarding patents and other intellectual property rights.

        The term of a patent that covers a FDA-approved drug may be eligible for patent term extension, which provides patent term restoration as compensation for the patent term lost during the FDA regulatory review process. The Hatch-Waxman Act permits a patent term extension of up to five years beyond the expiration of the patent. The length of the patent term extension is related to the length of time

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the drug is under regulatory review. Patent extension cannot extend the remaining term of a patent beyond a total of 14 years from the date of product approval and only one patent applicable to an approved drug may be extended. Similar provisions are available in Europe and other foreign jurisdictions to extend the term of a patent that covers an approved drug. In the future, if and when our pharmaceutical products receive FDA approval, we expect to apply for patent term extensions on patents covering those products.

        Many pharmaceutical companies, biotechnology companies and academic institutions are competing with us in the field of neuropsychiatric disorders and filing patent applications potentially relevant to our business. Even when a third-party patent is identified, we may conclude upon a thorough analysis, that we do not infringe upon the patent or that the patent is invalid. If the third-party patent owner disagrees with our conclusion and we continue with the business activity in question, we may be subject to patent litigation. Alternatively, we might decide to initiate litigation in an attempt to have a court declare the third-party patent invalid or non-infringed by our activity. In either scenario, patent litigation typically is costly and time-consuming, and the outcome can be favorable or unfavorable.

Collaborations

    NovaMedica

        In connection with our Series C convertible preferred stock financing, in December 2012, we entered into a Technology Transfer Agreement, or the Transfer Agreement, with DRI, an affiliate of Domain Partners VI, L.P., a significant stockholder of our company. Pursuant to the Transfer Agreement, in exchange for a payment of $100,000, we assigned to DRI certain patents and patents applications in Armenia, Azerbaijan, Belarus, Georgia, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Moldova, Russia, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan, Ukraine and Uzbekistan, or the Covered Territory, and granted to DRI an exclusive, royalty-free, irrevocable and assignable license under our know-how to develop and commercialize ganaxolone and other products that would infringe our patent rights or use our know-how, or the Covered Products, in the Covered Territory, in the field of uses for any human or animal disease or condition excluding the treatment of unpleasant sensory or emotional experience associated with actual or potential tissue damage or described in terms of such damage, or the Field. Immediately thereafter, we, together with DRI, executed an Assignment and Assumption Agreement, pursuant to which all of DRI's rights and obligations under the Transfer Agreement were transferred to NovaMedica, LLC, or NovaMedica. We agreed to take all action required to register or record the patent transfers to DRI in each country in the Covered Territory and to ensure the assignment of DRI's rights under the Transfer Agreement to NovaMedica. NovaMedica is jointly owned by Rusnano Medinvest LLC, or Rusnano Medinvest, and DRI. RMI Investments, S.á.r.l, a significant stockholder of ours, is a wholly-owned subsidiary of Rusnano Medinvest.

        Under the terms of the Transfer Agreement, NovaMedica, or its permitted transferees or assignees, has the exclusive right within the Covered Territory to manufacture the Covered Products solely for development and commercialization in the Covered Territory in the Field. Until the first commercial sale of a Covered Product within the Covered Territory, NovaMedica will have the right to purchase supplies of the Covered Product from us as are reasonably available to us and as are reasonable and necessary to conduct clinical trials of Covered Product in the Covered Territory, provided that any such purchase does not reasonably interfere with our having sufficient supplies of Covered Products on hand for use in development (including the conduct of clinical trials) or commercialization outside of the Covered Territory. Such purchases will be made on a cost-plus basis. The parties shall enter into the Supply Agreement to supply ganaxolone and/or Covered Product for development in the Covered Territory within 60 calendar days from NovaMedica's request, which we have not yet received.

        In accordance with the terms of the Transfer Agreement, on June 25, 2013 we entered into a Clinical Development and Collaboration Agreement, or the Collaboration Agreement, with NovaMedica, pursuant to which we agreed to assist NovaMedica in the development and commercialization of Covered Products in the Covered Territory in the Field. The Collaboration Agreement requires the formation of committees

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consisting of our representatives and NovaMedica representatives to oversee the general development, day-to-day development work and commercialization of Covered Products in the Field in the Covered Territory. All decisions of these committees must be made by unanimous vote, subject to a dispute resolution process. Under the terms of the Collaboration Agreement, the joint committees will determine a development plan for ganaxolone in clinical trials and a plan for commercialization of ganaxolone. NovaMedica will have sole responsibility for the costs and expenses of obtaining regulatory approval for Covered Products and for commercializing any approved products in the Covered Territory, and NovaMedica will have the right to conduct its own clinical studies in the Covered Territory at its sole expense. NovaMedica also has the right to file applications for approval of Covered Products in the Covered Territory, subject to committee oversight. We have agreed, among other things, to provide NovaMedica with data and regulatory files necessary for it to obtain necessary approvals in the Covered Territory, information relating to applications for regulatory approval of Covered Products, certain commercialization information and to assist NovaMedica in conducting any clinical trials necessary for regulatory approval of Covered Products in the Covered Territory. We also have agreed to provide NovaMedica with certain development know-how and support, including making our clinical development personnel available to provide scientific and technical explanations, consultation and support that may be reasonably requested by NovaMedica.

        NovaMedica is required to reimburse us for any out-of-pocket expenses incurred by us in providing this assistance, except for expenses incurred in our participation on the joint committees. Pursuant to the Collaboration Agreement and the Transfer Agreement, we have agreed to use commercially reasonable efforts to include sites in the Russian Federation in our clinical trial programs for the first indications of the Covered Products at our sole expense. Under the Transfer Agreement, at least 36 months prior to the first commercial sale of a product candidate in the Covered Territory, the parties have agreed to negotiate in good faith a supply agreement pursuant to which we or a third party contract manufacturer authorized by us to manufacture and supply the Covered Products, will supply needed quantities of Covered Product to NovaMedica solely for commercialization of Covered Products in the Covered Territory, on commercially fair and reasonable terms. Such purchases will be made on a cost-plus basis. In the event the parties are unable to agree on pricing under the supply agreement, they have agreed to engage an internationally recognized consulting firm reasonably acceptable to both parties to perform an analysis to determine final pricing under the supply agreement, which decision will be binding upon the parties. In the event that the parties are unable to reach a reasonably acceptable supply agreement or we are unable to supply Covered Products to NovaMedica under such supply agreement for a period of at least 60 calendar days after the specified delivery date and we thereafter fail to cure such failure within 60 days after written notice from NovaMedica, we have agreed to cooperate with NovaMedica to identify a mutually acceptable alternative source of supply and will provide the necessary consents to allow such alternative source of supply to provide the needed quantities of the Covered Products to NovaMedica. The terms of the alternative source of supply would be negotiated directly by NovaMedica with the supplier.

        The Collaboration Agreement expires on the earlier of three years following the first commercial sale of a product candidate in the Covered Territory and terminates upon the termination of the Transfer Agreement. NovaMedica also has the right to terminate the Collaboration Agreement at any time at its convenience upon 90 days' prior written notice.

    Purdue

        In September 2004, we entered into a license agreement with Purdue, which was most recently amended and restated in May 2008 that granted us exclusive rights to certain know-how and technology relating to ganaxolone, excluding the field of treatment of unpleasant sensory or emotional experience associated with actual or potential tissue damage, or described in terms of such damage. The agreement contains a right by us to sublicense subject to prior written approval by Purdue. To date, we have paid an aggregate of $200,000 in license fees under the license agreement. As part of the consideration paid, we issued 1,189,812 shares of Series A convertible preferred stock and 630,318 shares of our common stock

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and agreed to pay Purdue certain royalties. In particular, we are obligated to pay royalties as a percentage in the range of high single digits up to 10% of net product sales for direct licensed products, such as ganaxolone. The obligation to pay royalties expires, on a country-by-country basis, 10 years from the first commercial sale of a licensed product in each country. We believe that we will not be obligated to pay royalties under the agreement because the underlying patents have either expired or are not applicable to ganaxolone. In addition, the agreement also requires that we pay Purdue a percentage in the mid-single digits of the non-royalty consideration that we receive from a sublicensee and a percentage in the twenties of milestone payments for indications other than seizure disorders and vascular migraine headaches not associated with mood disorders. Under the license agreement, we are committed to use commercially reasonable efforts to develop and commercialize at least one licensed product. Purdue has the right to terminate the agreement if we become insolvent or we breach the agreement. We have the right to terminate the agreement if Purdue breaches the agreement. Upon such termination, rights and licenses granted to us under the agreement will terminate and we must cease all activities licensed under the agreement; however, termination or expiration of the agreement will not affect accrued rights of either party arising under the agreement and will not release either party from any liability that has accrued or is attributable to a period prior to such termination or expiration. We also have the right to terminate the agreement upon 180 days written notice to Purdue, in which case all rights and information will revert to Purdue at no cost and Purdue will have no obligations to us.

Competition

        The pharmaceutical industry is highly competitive and subject to rapid and significant technological change. While we believe that our development experience and scientific knowledge provide us with competitive advantages, we face competition from both large and small pharmaceutical and biotechnology companies, specifically with companies that treat neuropsychiatric disorders.

        There are a variety of available therapies marketed for neuropsychiatric disorders. In many cases, these products are administered in combination to enhance efficacy or to reduce side effects. Some of these drugs are branded and subject to patent protection, some are in clinical development and not yet approved, and others are available on a generic basis. Many of these approved drugs are well established therapies or products and are widely accepted by physicians, patients and third-party payors. Insurers and other third-party payors may also encourage the use of generic products. More established companies have a competitive advantage over us due to their greater size, cash flows and institutional experience. Compared to us, many of our competitors have significantly greater financial, technical and human resources.

        Our competitors may also develop drugs that are safer, more effective, more widely used and less costly than ours, and may also be more successful than us in manufacturing and marketing their products. These appreciable advantages could render ganaxolone obsolete or non-competitive before we can recover the expenses of ganaxolone's development and commercialization.

        Mergers and acquisitions in the pharmaceutical and biotechnology industries may result in even more resources being concentrated among a smaller number of our competitors. Smaller and other early-stage companies may also prove to be significant competitors, particularly through collaborative arrangements with large and established companies. These third parties compete with us in recruiting and retaining qualified scientific, management and commercial personnel, establishing clinical trial sites and subject registration for clinical trials, as well as in acquiring technologies complementary to, or necessary for, our programs.

Competitive Landscape

        We primarily compete with pharmaceutical and biotechnology companies that are developing therapies or marketing drugs to treat indications that we are targeting.

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    Epileptic Seizures

        Currently available AEDs control seizures through a variety of mechanisms, including modulation of voltage-activated sodium channels, voltage-activated calcium channels, increasing GABA signaling, and interactions with a 2- d protein or synaptic vesicle protein SV2A. There are more than 15 approved AEDs available in the United States and worldwide. The top prescribed AEDs include the generic products levetiracetam, lamotrigine, carbamazepine, oxcarbazepine, valproic acid and topiramate. Decision Resources reports that these AEDs are used to treat a substantial percentage of epilepsy patients. Recent market entrants include Vimpat (UCB), Potiga (GlaxoSmithKline) and Fycompa (Eisai), and Aptiom (Sunovion Pharmaceuticals). In addition to ganaxolone there is one new chemical entity in late stage development that we are aware of, brivaracetam (UCB).

    FXS

        There are no drugs approved for the treatment of behavioral and mental health conditions associated with FXS although various classes of medications are used off-label. Some patients with FXS benefit from medications that treat attention deficient disorders and other patients who experience general anxiety, social anxiety and other chronic conditions may benefit from different types of anti-anxiety medications.

        We are aware of several drugs in development including a number of generic drugs used for other indications such as donepezil, memantine, sertraline, and minocycline. Companies developing compounds include Roche, Novartis, Sunovion Pharmaceuticals, Afraxis and Neuren Pharmaceuticals.

Manufacturing

        Manufacturing of drugs and product candidates, including ganaxolone, must comply with FDA current good manufacturing practice, or cGMP, regulations. Ganaxolone is a synthetic small molecule made through a series of organic chemistry steps starting with commercially available organic chemical raw materials. We conduct manufacturing activities under individual purchase orders with independent contract manufacturing organizations, or CMOs, to supply our clinical trials. We have an internal quality program and have qualified and signed quality agreements with our CMOs. We conduct periodic quality audits of their facilities. We believe that our existing suppliers of ganaxolone's active pharmaceutical ingredient and finished product will be capable of providing sufficient quantities of each to meet our clinical trial supply needs. Other CMOs may be used in the future for clinical supplies and, subject to approval, commercial manufacturing.

Ganaxolone Formulations

        The therapeutic possibilities of ganaxolone have been understood for some time, however, because ganaxolone is a high-dose water insoluble compound, developing a formulation that could provide consistent drug exposure and could be manufactured at a commercially feasible cost had proven challenging. We believe the discovery of our patented nanoparticulate formulation and novel manufacturing process for ganaxolone address the pharmacokinetic and cost of manufacturing challenges that previously encumbered the clinical and commercial feasibility of ganaxolone.

        Ganaxolone is currently formulated as an oral suspension and as a capsule. Additionally, we have developed a prototype for a tablet and an intravenous formulation. Prior and ongoing studies have utilized oral suspension or capsule formulations. We are planning two pharmacokinetic studies with respect to the tablet formulation, one to demonstrate bioequivalence between the capsule and the tablet, and one to establish relative potency of the oral suspension to the tablet. We are planning to use a tablet formulation in future studies.

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Commercial Operations

        If we obtain FDA approval for ganaxolone as an adjunctive treatment for patients with focal onset seizures we intend to build a sales and marketing infrastructure to reach high prescribing neurologist and epilepsy specialists in the United States. We believe a focused sales and marketing organization for epilepsy could be leveraged to market ganaxolone in other neurology or psychiatry indications if we are able to obtain regulatory approval for those other indications. We may seek co-promotion partners for our sales efforts to reach other United States physician groups, such as primary care physicians. We believe that there is significant market opportunity for ganaxolone in epilepsy and other neurological and psychiatric conditions outside of the United States. In order to capitalize on this opportunity, we plan to seek collaborations with pharmaceutical companies that have greater reach and resources by virtue of their size and experience in the field.

Government Regulation

        As a clinical stage biopharmaceutical company that operates in the United States, we are subject to extensive regulation by the FDA, and other federal, state, and local regulatory agencies. The Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act, or the FDC Act, and its implementing regulations set forth, among other things, requirements for the research, testing, development, manufacture, quality control, safety, effectiveness, approval, packaging, labeling, storage, record keeping, reporting, distribution, import, export, advertising and promotion of our products. Although the discussion below focuses on regulation in the United States, we anticipate seeking approval for, and marketing of, our products in other countries. Generally, our activities in other countries will be subject to regulation that is similar in nature and scope as that imposed in the United States, although there can be important differences. Additionally, some significant aspects of regulation in Europe are addressed in a centralized way through the EMA, but country-specific regulation remains essential in many respects. The process of obtaining regulatory marketing approvals and the subsequent compliance with appropriate federal, state, local and foreign statutes and regulations require the expenditure of substantial time and financial resources and may not be successful.

United States Government Regulation

        The FDA is the main regulatory body that controls pharmaceuticals in the United States, and its regulatory authority is based in the FDC Act. Pharmaceutical products are also subject to other federal, state and local statutes. A failure to comply explicitly with any requirements during the product development, approval, or post-approval periods, may lead to administrative or judicial sanctions. These sanctions could include the imposition by the FDA or an institutional review board, or IRB, of a hold on clinical trials, refusal to approve pending marketing applications or supplements, withdrawal of approval, warning letters, product recalls, product seizures, total or partial suspension of production or distribution, injunctions, fines, civil penalties or criminal prosecution.

        The steps required before a new drug may be marketed in the United States generally include:

    completion of non-clinical, or preclinical, studies, animal studies and formulation studies in compliance with the FDA's good laboratory practice, or GLP, regulations;

    submission to the FDA of an investigational new drug application, or IND, to support human clinical testing;

    approval by an IRB at each clinical site before each trial may be initiated;

    performance of adequate and well-controlled clinical trials in accordance with federal regulations, including requirements for good clinical practices, or GCPs, to establish the safety and efficacy of the investigational product candidate for each targeted indication;

    submission of a new drug application, or NDA, to the FDA;

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    satisfactory completion of an FDA Advisory Committee review, if applicable;

    satisfactory completion of an FDA inspection of clinical trial sites to ensure compliance with GCPs;

    satisfactory completion of an FDA inspection of the manufacturing facilities at which the investigational product candidate is produced to assess compliance with cGMP, and to assure that the facilities, methods and controls are adequate; and

    FDA review and approval of the NDA.

Clinical Trials

        An IND is a request for authorization from the FDA to administer an investigational product candidate to humans. This authorization is required before interstate shipping and administration of any new drug product to humans that is not the subject of an approved NDA. A 30-day waiting period after the submission of each IND is required prior to the commencement of clinical testing in humans. If the FDA has neither commented on nor questioned the IND within this 30-day period, the clinical trial proposed in the IND may begin. The FDA may submit questions after the 30 day period and after the trial was allowed to begin. Clinical trials involve the administration of the investigational product candidate to subjects under the supervision of qualified investigators following GCPs, requirements meant to protect the rights and health of subjects and to define the roles of clinical trial sponsors, administrators and monitors. Clinical trials are conducted under protocols that detail the subject inclusion and exclusion criteria, the dosing regimen, the parameters to be used in monitoring safety, and the efficacy criteria to be evaluated. Each protocol involving testing on United States subjects and subsequent protocol amendments must be submitted to the FDA as part of the IND. The informed written consent of each participating subject is required. The clinical investigation of an investigational product candidate is generally divided into three phases. Although the phases are usually conducted sequentially, they may overlap or be combined. The three phases of an investigation are as follows:

    Phase 1.   Phase 1 includes the initial introduction of an investigational product candidate into humans. Phase 1 studies may be conducted in subjects with the target disease or condition or healthy volunteers. These studies are designed to evaluate the safety, metabolism, pharmacokinetic properties, or PKs, and pharmacologic actions of the investigational product candidate in humans, the side effects associated with increasing doses, and if possible, to gain early evidence on effectiveness. During Phase 1 studies, sufficient information about the investigational product candidate's PKs and pharmacological effects may be obtained to permit the design of Phase 2 studies. The total number of participants included in Phase 1 studies varies, but is generally in the range of 20 to 80.

    Phase 2.   Phase 2 includes the controlled clinical trials conducted to evaluate the effectiveness of the investigational product candidate for a particular indication(s) in subjects with the disease or condition under study, to determine dosage tolerance and optimal dosage, and to identify possible adverse side effects and safety risks associated with the product candidate. Phase 2 studies are typically well-controlled, closely monitored, and conducted in a limited subject population, usually involving no more than several hundred participants.

    Phase 3.   Phase 3 studies are controlled clinical trials conducted in an expanded subject population at geographically dispersed clinical trial sites. They are performed after preliminary evidence suggesting effectiveness of the investigational product candidate has been obtained, and are intended to further evaluate dosage, clinical effectiveness and safety, to establish the overall benefit-risk relationship of the product candidate, and to provide an adequate basis for drug approval. Phase 3 studies usually involve several hundred to several thousand participants. In most cases, the FDA requires two adequate and well controlled Phase 3 studies to demonstrate the efficacy of the drug. A single Phase 3 study with other confirmatory evidence may be

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      sufficient in rare instances where the study is a large multicenter trial demonstrating internal consistency and a statistically very persuasive finding of a clinically meaningful effect on mortality, irreversible morbidity or prevention of a disease with a potentially serious outcome and confirmation of the result in a second trial would be practically or ethically impossible.

        The decision to terminate development of an investigational product candidate may be made by either a health authority body, such as the FDA or IRB/ethics committees, or by a company for various reasons. The FDA may order the temporary, or permanent, discontinuation of a clinical trial, which is referred to as a clinical hold, at any time, or impose other sanctions, if it believes that the clinical trial either is not being conducted in accordance with FDA requirements or presents an unacceptable risk to the clinical trial subjects. In some cases, clinical trials are overseen by an independent group of qualified experts organized by the trial sponsor, or the clinical monitoring board or data safety monitoring board. This group provides authorization for whether or not a trial may move forward at designated check points. These decisions are based on the limited access to data from the ongoing trial. The suspension or termination of development can occur during any phase of clinical trials if it is determined that the participants or subjects are being exposed to an unacceptable health risk. In addition, there are requirements for the registration of ongoing clinical trials of product candidates on public registries and the disclosure of certain information pertaining to the trials as well as clinical trial results after completion.

        A sponsor may be able to request a special protocol assessment, or SPA, the purpose of which is to reach agreement with the FDA on the Phase 3 study protocol design and analysis that will form the primary basis of an efficacy claim. A sponsor meeting the regulatory criteria may make a specific request for an SPA and provide information regarding the design and size of the proposed clinical trial. An SPA request must be made before the proposed trial begins, and all open issues must be resolved before the trial begins. If a written agreement is reached, it will be documented and made part of the record. The agreement will be binding on the FDA and may not be changed by the sponsor or the FDA after the trial begins except with the written agreement of the sponsor and the FDA or if the FDA determines that a substantial scientific issue essential to determining the safety or efficacy of the product candidate was identified after the testing began. An SPA is not binding if new circumstances arise, and there is no guarantee that a study will ultimately be adequate to support an approval even if the study is subject to an SPA.

        Assuming successful completion of all required testing in accordance with all applicable regulatory requirements, detailed investigational product candidate information is submitted to the FDA in the form of an NDA to request market approval for the product in specified indications.

New Drug Applications

        In order to obtain approval to market a drug in the United States, a marketing application must be submitted to the FDA that provides data establishing the safety and effectiveness of the product candidate for the proposed indication. The application includes all relevant data available from pertinent preclinical studies and clinical trials, including negative or ambiguous results as well as positive findings, together with detailed information relating to the product's chemistry, manufacturing, controls and proposed labeling, among other things. Data can come from company-sponsored clinical trials intended to test the safety and effectiveness of a product, or from a number of alternative sources, including studies initiated by investigators. To support marketing approval, the data submitted must be sufficient in quality and quantity to establish the safety and effectiveness of the investigational product candidate to the satisfaction of the FDA.

        In most cases, the NDA must be accompanied by a substantial user fee; there may be some instances in which the user fee is waived. The FDA will initially review the NDA for completeness before it accepts the NDA for filing. The FDA has 60 days from its receipt of an NDA to determine whether the application will be accepted for filing based on the agency's threshold determination that it is sufficiently complete to permit substantive review. After the NDA submission is accepted for filing, the FDA begins an in-depth

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review. The FDA has agreed to certain performance goals in the review of NDAs. Most such applications for standard review product candidates are reviewed within ten to twelve months. The FDA can extend this review by three months to consider certain late-submitted information or information intended to clarify information already provided in the submission. The FDA reviews the NDA to determine, among other things, whether the proposed product is safe and effective for its intended use, and whether the product is being manufactured in accordance with cGMP. The FDA may refer applications for novel product candidates which present difficult questions of safety or efficacy to an advisory committee, typically a panel that includes clinicians and other experts, for review, evaluation and a recommendation as to whether the application should be approved and under what conditions. The FDA is not bound by the recommendations of an advisory committee, but it considers such recommendations carefully when making decisions.

        Before approving an NDA, the FDA will inspect the facilities at which the product is manufactured. The FDA will not approve the product unless it determines that the manufacturing processes and facilities are in compliance with cGMP requirements and adequate to assure consistent production of the product within required specifications. Additionally, before approving an NDA, the FDA will typically inspect one or more clinical sites to assure compliance with GCP. After the FDA evaluates the NDA and the manufacturing facilities, it issues either an approval letter or a complete response letter. A complete response letter generally outlines the deficiencies in the submission and may require substantial additional testing or information in order for the FDA to reconsider the application. If, or when, those deficiencies have been addressed to the FDA's satisfaction in a resubmission of the NDA, the FDA will issue an approval letter. The FDA has committed to reviewing such resubmissions in two or six months depending on the type of information included. Notwithstanding the submission of any requested additional information, the FDA ultimately may decide that the application does not satisfy the regulatory criteria for approval.

        An approval letter authorizes commercial marketing of the drug with specific prescribing information for specific indications. As a condition of NDA approval, the FDA may require a risk evaluation and mitigation strategy, or REMS, to help ensure that the benefits of the drug outweigh the potential risks. REMS can include medication guides, communication plans for healthcare professionals, and elements to assure safe use, or ETASU. ETASU can include, but are not limited to, special training or certification for prescribing or dispensing, dispensing only under certain circumstances, special monitoring, and the use of patient registries. The requirement for a REMS can materially affect the potential market and profitability of the drug. Moreover, product approval may require substantial post-approval testing and surveillance to monitor the drug's safety or efficacy. Once granted, product approvals may be withdrawn if compliance with regulatory requirements is not maintained or problems are identified following initial marketing.

        Changes to some of the conditions established in an approved application, including changes in indications, labeling, or manufacturing processes or facilities, require submission and FDA approval of a new NDA or NDA supplement before the change can be implemented. An NDA supplement for a new indication typically requires clinical data similar to that in the original application, and the FDA uses the same procedures and actions in reviewing NDA supplements as it does in reviewing NDAs.

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Advertising and Promotion

        The FDA and other federal regulatory agencies closely regulate the marketing and promotion of drugs through, among other things, standards and regulations for direct-to-consumer advertising, communications regarding unapproved uses, industry-sponsored scientific and educational activities, and promotional activities involving the Internet. A product cannot be commercially promoted before it is approved. After approval, product promotion can include only those claims relating to safety and effectiveness that are consistent with the labeling approved by the FDA. Healthcare providers are permitted to prescribe drugs for "off-label" uses—that is, uses not approved by the FDA and therefore not described in the drug's labeling—because the FDA does not regulate the practice of medicine. However, FDA regulations impose stringent restrictions on manufacturers' communications regarding off-label uses. Broadly speaking, a manufacturer may not promote a drug for off-label use, but may engage in non-promotional, balanced communication regarding off-label use under specified conditions. Failure to comply with applicable FDA requirements and restrictions in this area may subject a company to adverse publicity and enforcement action by the FDA, the United States Department of Justice, or DOJ, or the Office of the Inspector General of the United States Department of Health and Human Services, or HHS, as well as state authorities. This could subject a company to a range of penalties that could have a significant commercial impact, including civil and criminal fines and agreements that materially restrict the manner in which a company promotes or distributes drug products.

Post-Approval Regulations

        After regulatory approval of a drug is obtained, a company is required to comply with a number of post-approval requirements. For example, as a condition of approval of an NDA, the FDA may require post-marketing testing, including Phase 4 clinical trials, and surveillance to further assess and monitor the product's safety and effectiveness after commercialization. In addition, as a holder of an approved NDA, a company would be required to report adverse reactions and production problems to the FDA, to provide updated safety and efficacy information, and to comply with requirements concerning advertising and promotional labeling for any of its products. Also, quality control and manufacturing procedures must continue to conform to cGMP after approval to assure and preserve the long term stability of the drug product. The FDA periodically inspects manufacturing facilities to assess compliance with cGMP, which imposes extensive procedural and substantive record keeping requirements. In addition, changes to the manufacturing process are strictly regulated, and, depending on the significance of the change, may require prior FDA approval before being implemented. FDA regulations also require investigation and correction of any deviations from cGMP and impose documentation requirements upon a company and any third-party manufacturers that a company may decide to use. Accordingly, manufacturers must continue to expend time, money and effort in the area of production and quality control to maintain compliance with cGMP and other aspects of regulatory compliance.

        We rely, and expect to continue to rely, on third parties for the production of clinical and commercial quantities of ganaxolone. Future FDA and state inspections may identify compliance issues at our facilities or at the facilities of our contract manufacturers that may disrupt production or distribution, or require substantial resources to correct. In addition, discovery of previously unknown problems with a product or the failure to comply with applicable requirements may result in restrictions on a product, manufacturer or holder of an approved NDA, including withdrawal or recall of the product from the market or other voluntary, FDA-initiated or judicial action that could delay or prohibit further marketing.

        Newly discovered or developed safety or effectiveness data may require changes to a product's approved labeling, including the addition of new warnings and contraindications, and also may require the implementation of other risk management measures. Also, new government requirements, including those resulting from new legislation, may be established, or the FDA's policies may change, which could delay or prevent regulatory approval of our products under development.

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The Hatch-Waxman Amendments to the FDC Act

Orange Book Listing

        In seeking approval for a drug through an NDA, applicants are required to list with the FDA each patent whose claims cover the applicant's product or a method of using the product. Upon approval of a drug, each of the patents listed in the application for the drug is then published in the FDA's Approved Drug Products with Therapeutic Equivalence Evaluations, commonly known as the Orange Book. Drugs listed in the Orange Book can, in turn, be cited by potential generic competitors in support of approval of an abbreviated new drug application, or ANDA, or 505(b)(2) application. An ANDA provides for marketing of a drug product that has the same active ingredients, generally in the same strengths and dosage form, as the listed drug and has been shown through PK testing to be bioequivalent to the listed drug. Other than the requirement for bioequivalence testing, ANDA applicants are generally not required to conduct, or submit results of, preclinical studies or clinical tests to prove the safety or effectiveness of their drug product. 505(b)(2) applications provide for marketing of a drug product that may have the same active ingredients as the listed drug and contains full safety and effectiveness data as an NDA, but at least some of this information comes from studies not conducted by or for the applicant. Drugs approved in this way are commonly referred to as "generic equivalents" to the listed drug, and can often be substituted by pharmacists under prescriptions written for the original listed drug.

        The ANDA or 505(b)(2) applicant is required to certify to the FDA concerning any patents listed for the approved product in the FDA's Orange Book. Specifically, the applicant must certify that: (i) the required patent information has not been filed; (ii) the listed patent has expired; (iii) the listed patent has not expired, but will expire on a particular date and approval is sought after patent expiration; or (iv) the listed patent is invalid or will not be infringed by the new product. The ANDA or 505(b)(2) applicant may also elect to submit a statement certifying that its proposed ANDA label does not contain (or carves out) any language regarding a patented method of use rather than certify to such listed method of use patent. If the applicant does not challenge the listed patents by filing a certification that the listed patent is invalid or will not be infringed by the new product, the ANDA or 505(b)(2) application will not be approved until all the listed patents claiming the referenced product have expired.

        A certification that the new product will not infringe the already approved product's listed patents, or that such patents are invalid, is called a Paragraph IV certification. If the ANDA or 505(b)(2) applicant has provided a Paragraph IV certification to the FDA, the applicant must also send notice of the Paragraph IV certification to the NDA and patent holders once the ANDA or 505(b)(2) application has been accepted for filing by the FDA. The NDA and patent holders may then initiate a patent infringement lawsuit in response to the notice of the Paragraph IV certification. The filing of a patent infringement lawsuit within 45 days of the receipt of a Paragraph IV certification automatically prevents the FDA from approving the ANDA or 505(b)(2) application until the earliest of 30 months, expiration of the patent, settlement of the lawsuit, and a decision in the infringement case that is favorable to the ANDA or 505(b)(2) applicant.

        The ANDA or 505(b)(2) application also will not be approved until any applicable non-patent exclusivity listed in the Orange Book for the referenced product has expired.

Marketing Exclusivity

        Upon NDA approval of a new chemical entity, which is a drug that contains no active moiety that has been approved by the FDA in any other NDA, that drug receives five years of marketing exclusivity during which the FDA cannot approve any ANDA seeking approval of a generic version of that drug. Certain changes to a drug, such as the addition of a new indication to the package insert, are associated with a three-year period of exclusivity during which the FDA cannot approve an ANDA for a generic drug that includes the change.

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        An ANDA may be submitted one year before marketing exclusivity expires if a Paragraph IV certification is filed. In this case, the 30 months stay, if applicable, runs from the end of the five years marketing exclusivity period. If there is no listed patent in the Orange Book, there may not be a Paragraph IV certification, and, thus, no ANDA may be filed before the expiration of the exclusivity period.

Patent Term Extension

        After NDA approval, owners of relevant drug patents may apply for up to a five year patent extension. The allowable patent term extension is calculated as half of the drug's testing phase—the time between an effective IND and NDA submission—and all of the review phase—the time between NDA submission and approval up to a maximum of five years. The time can be shortened if the FDA determines that the applicant did not pursue approval with due diligence. The total patent term after the extension may not exceed 14 years.

        Many other countries also provide for patent term extensions or similar extensions of patent protection for pharmaceutical products. For example, in Japan, it may be possible to extend the patent term for up to five years and in Europe, it may be possible to obtain a supplementary patent certificate that would effectively extend patent protection for up to five years.

The Foreign Corrupt Practices Act

        The Foreign Corrupt Practices Act, or FCPA, prohibits any United States individual or business from paying, offering, or authorizing payment or offering of anything of value, directly or indirectly, to any foreign official, political party or candidate for the purpose of influencing any act or decision of the foreign entity in order to assist the individual or business in obtaining or retaining business. The FCPA also obligates companies whose securities are listed in the United States to comply with accounting provisions requiring such companies to maintain books and records that accurately and fairly reflect all transactions of the corporation, including international subsidiaries, and to devise and maintain an adequate system of internal accounting controls for international operations.

European and Other International Government Regulation

        In addition to regulations in the United States, we will be subject to a variety of regulations in other jurisdictions governing, among other things, clinical trials and any commercial sales and distribution of our products. Whether or not we obtain FDA approval for a product, we must obtain the requisite approvals from regulatory authorities in foreign countries prior to the commencement of clinical trials or marketing of the product in those countries. Some countries outside of the United States have a similar process that requires the submission of a request for a clinical trial authorization, or CTA, much like the IND prior to the commencement of human clinical trials. In Europe, for example, a request for a CTA must be submitted to each country's national health authority and an independent ethics committee, much like the FDA and IRB, respectively. Once the CTA request is approved in accordance with a country's requirements, clinical trial development may proceed.

        To obtain regulatory approval to commercialize a new drug under European Union regulatory systems, we must submit a marketing authorization application, or MAA. The MAA is similar to the NDA, with the exception of, among other things, country-specific document requirements.

        For other countries outside of the European Union, such as countries in Eastern Europe, Russia, Latin America or Asia, the requirements governing the conduct of clinical trials, product licensing, pricing and reimbursement vary from country to country. Internationally, clinical trials are generally required to be conducted in accordance with GCP, applicable regulatory requirements of each jurisdiction and the medical ethics principles that have their origin in the Declaration of Helsinki.

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Compliance

        During all phases of development (pre- and post-marketing), failure to comply with applicable regulatory requirements may result in administrative or judicial sanctions. These sanctions could include the FDA's imposition of a clinical hold on trials, refusal to approve pending applications, withdrawal of an approval, warning letters, product recalls, product seizures, total or partial suspension of production or distribution, product detention or refusal to permit the import or export of products, injunctions, fines, civil penalties or criminal prosecution. Any agency or judicial enforcement action could have a material adverse effect on us.

Other Special Regulatory Procedures

Orphan Drug Designation

        The FDA may grant Orphan Drug Designation to drugs intended to treat a rare disease or condition that affects fewer than 200,000 individuals in the United States, or, if the disease or condition affects more than 200,000 individuals in the United States, there is no reasonable expectation that the cost of developing and making the drug would be recovered from sales in the United States. In the European Union, the EMA's Committee for Orphan Medicinal Products grants Orphan Drug Designation to promote the development of products that are intended for the diagnosis, prevention or treatment of life-threatening or chronically debilitating conditions affecting not more than five in 10,000 persons in the European Union community. Additionally, designation is granted for products intended for the diagnosis, prevention or treatment of a life-threatening, seriously debilitating or serious and chronic condition and when, without incentives, it is unlikely that sales of the drug in the European Union would be sufficient to justify the necessary investment in developing the drug.

        In the United States, Orphan Drug Designation entitles a party to financial incentives, such as opportunities for grant funding towards clinical trial costs, tax credits for certain research and user fee waivers under certain circumstances. In addition, if a product receives the first FDA approval for the indication for which it has orphan designation, the product is entitled to seven years of market exclusivity, which means the FDA may not approve any other application for the same drug for the same indication for a period of seven years, except in limited circumstances, such as a showing of clinical superiority over the product with orphan exclusivity. Orphan drug exclusivity does not prevent the FDA from approving a different drug for the same disease or condition, or the same drug for a different disease or condition.

        In the European Union, Orphan Drug Designation also entitles a party to financial incentives such as reduction of fees or fee waivers and ten years of market exclusivity is granted following drug approval. This period may be reduced to six years if the Orphan Drug Designation criteria are no longer met, including where it is shown that the product is sufficiently profitable not to justify maintenance of market exclusivity.

        Orphan drug designation must be requested before submission of an application for marketing approval. Orphan drug designation does not convey any advantage in, or shorten the duration of the regulatory review and approval process.

Priority Review (United States) and Accelerated Review (European Union)

        Based on results of the Phase 3 study(ies) submitted in an NDA, upon the request of an applicant, a priority review designation may be granted to a product by the FDA, which sets the target date for FDA action on the application at six months from FDA filing. Priority review is given where preliminary estimates indicate that a product, if approved, has the potential to provide a safe and effective therapy where no satisfactory alternative therapy exists, or a significant improvement compared to marketed products is possible. If criteria are not met for priority review, the standard FDA review period is ten months from FDA filing. Priority review designation does not change the scientific/medical standard for approval or the quality of evidence necessary to support approval.

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        Under the Centralized Procedure in the European Union, the maximum timeframe for the evaluation of a MAA is 210 days (excluding "clock stops," when additional written or oral information is to be provided by the applicant in response to questions asked by the Committee for Medicinal Products for Human Use, or CHMP). Accelerated evaluation might be granted by the CHMP in exceptional cases, when a medicinal product is expected to be of a major public health interest, defined by three cumulative criteria: the seriousness of the disease (e.g., heavy disabling or life-threatening diseases) to be treated; the absence or insufficiency of an appropriate alternative therapeutic approach; and anticipation of high therapeutic benefit. In this circumstance, EMA ensures that the opinion of the CHMP is given within 150 days.

Healthcare Reform

        In March 2010, President Obama signed one of the most significant healthcare reform measures in decades. The Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act and the Health Care and Education Reconciliation Act of 2010, or Affordable Care Act, substantially changes the way healthcare will be financed by both governmental and private insurers, and significantly impacts the pharmaceutical industry. The Affordable Care Act will impact existing government healthcare programs and will result in the development of new programs. For example, the Affordable Care Act provides for Medicare payment for performance initiatives and improvements to the physician quality reporting system and feedback program.

        Among the Affordable Care Act's provisions of importance to the pharmaceutical industry are the following:

    an annual, nondeductible fee on any covered entity engaged in manufacturing or importing certain branded prescription drugs and biological products, apportioned among such entities in accordance with their respective market share in certain government healthcare programs;

    an increase in the statutory minimum rebates a manufacturer must pay under the Medicaid Drug Rebate Program, retroactive to January 1, 2010, to 23.0% and 13.0% of the average manufacturer price, or AMP, for most branded and generic drugs, respectively;

    expansion of healthcare fraud and abuse laws, including the False Claims Act and the Anti-Kickback Statute, new government investigative powers, and enhanced penalties for noncompliance;

    a new partial prescription drug benefit for Medicare recipients, or Medicare Part D, coverage gap discount program, in which manufacturers must agree to offer 50.0% point-of-sale discounts off negotiated prices of applicable brand drugs to eligible beneficiaries during their coverage gap period, as a condition for the manufacturers' outpatient drugs to be covered under Medicare Part D;

    extension of manufacturers' Medicaid rebate liability to covered drugs dispensed to individuals who are enrolled in Medicaid managed care organizations;

    expansion of eligibility criteria for Medicaid programs by, among other things, allowing states to offer Medicaid coverage to additional individuals beginning in 2014 and by adding new mandatory eligibility categories for individuals with income at or below 133.0% of the Federal Poverty Level, thereby potentially increasing manufacturers' Medicaid rebate liability;

    expansion of the entities eligible for discounts under the Public Health Service pharmaceutical pricing program;

    new requirements to report annually specified financial arrangements with physicians and teaching hospitals, as defined in the Affordable Care Act and its implementing regulations, including reporting any "payments or transfers of value" made or distributed to physicians and teaching hospitals,and reporting any ownership and investment interests held by physicians and

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      their immediate family members and applicable group purchasing organizations during the preceding calendar year, with data collection to be required beginning August 1, 2013 and reporting to the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, or CMS, to be required by March 31, 2014 and by the 90th day of each subsequent calendar year;

    a new requirement to annually report drug samples that manufacturers and distributors provide to physicians;

    a new Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Institute to oversee, identify priorities in, and conduct comparative clinical effectiveness research, along with funding for such research; and

    a mandatory nondeductible payment for employers with 50 or more full-time employees (or equivalents) who fail to provide certain minimum health insurance coverage for such employees and their dependents, beginning in 2015 (pursuant to relief enacted by the Treasury Department).

        The Affordable Care Act also establishes an Independent Payment Advisory Board, or IPAB, to reduce the per capita rate of growth in Medicare spending. Beginning in 2014, IPAB is mandated to propose changes in Medicare payments if it determines that the rate of growth of Medicare expenditures exceeds target growth rates. The IPAB has broad discretion to propose policies to reduce expenditures, which may have a negative impact on payment rates for pharmaceutical products. A proposal made by the IPAB is required to be implemented by CMS unless Congress adopts a proposal with savings greater than those proposed by the IPAB. IPAB proposals may impact payments for physician and free-standing services beginning in 2015 and for hospital services beginning in 2020.

        In addition, other legislative changes have been proposed and adopted since the Affordable Care Act was enacted. In August 2011, President Obama signed into law the Budget Control Act of 2011, which, among other things, created the Joint Select Committee on Deficit Reduction to recommend proposals in spending reductions to Congress. The Joint Select Committee did not achieve its targeted deficit reduction of an amount greater than $1.2 trillion for the years 2013 through 2021, triggering the legislation's automatic reductions to several government programs. These reductions include aggregate reductions to Medicare payments to healthcare providers of up to 2.0% per fiscal year, starting in 2013. In January 2013, President Obama signed into law the American Taxpayer Relief Act of 2012, which, among other things, reduced Medicare payments to several categories of healthcare providers and increased the statute of limitations period for the government to recover overpayments to providers from three to five years. These new laws may result in additional reductions in Medicare and other healthcare funding, which could have a material adverse effect on our customers and accordingly, our financial operations.

        We anticipate that the Affordable Care Act will result in additional downward pressure on coverage and the price that we receive for any approved product, and could seriously harm our business. Any reduction in reimbursement from Medicare and other government programs may result in a similar reduction in payments from private payors. The implementation of cost containment measures or other healthcare reforms may prevent us from being able to generate revenue, attain profitability, or commercialize our products. In addition, it is possible that there will be further legislation or regulation that could harm our business, financial condition and results of operations.

Coverage and Reimbursement

        Significant uncertainty exists as to the coverage and reimbursement status of any drug products for which we obtain regulatory approval. In the United States and markets in other countries, sales of any products for which we receive regulatory approval for commercial sale will depend in part on the availability of reimbursement from third-party payors. Third-party payors include government health administrative authorities, managed care providers, private health insurers and other organizations. The process for determining whether a payor will provide coverage for a drug product may be separate from the process for setting the price or reimbursement rate that the payor will pay for the drug product. Third-

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party payors may limit coverage to specific drug products on an approved list, or formulary, which might not include all of the FDA-approved drugs for a particular indication. Third-party payors are increasingly challenging the price and examining the medical necessity and cost-effectiveness of medical products and services, in addition to their safety and efficacy. We may need to conduct expensive pharmacoeconomic studies in order to demonstrate the medical necessity and cost-effectiveness of our products, in addition to the costs required to obtain FDA approvals. Ganaxolone may not be considered medically necessary or cost-effective. A payor's decision to provide coverage for a drug product does not imply that an adequate reimbursement rate will be approved. Adequate third-party reimbursement may not be available to enable us to maintain price levels sufficient to realize an appropriate return on our investment in product development.

        In 2003, the United States Congress enacted legislation providing Medicare Part D, which became effective at the beginning of 2006. Government payment for some of the costs of prescription drugs may increase demand for any products for which we receive marketing approval. However, to obtain payments under this program, we would be required to sell products to Medicare recipients through prescription drug plans operating pursuant to this legislation. These plans will likely negotiate discounted prices for our products. Federal, state and local governments in the United States continue to consider legislation to limit the growth of healthcare costs, including the cost of prescription drugs. Future legislation could limit payments for pharmaceuticals such as the product candidates that we are developing.

        Different pricing and reimbursement schemes exist in other countries. In the European Union, governments influence the price of pharmaceutical products through their pricing and reimbursement rules and control of national healthcare systems that fund a large part of the cost of those products to consumers. Some jurisdictions operate positive and negative list systems under which products may only be marketed once a reimbursement price has been agreed upon. To obtain reimbursement or pricing approval, some of these countries may require the completion of clinical trials that compare the cost-effectiveness of a particular product candidate to currently available therapies. Other member states allow companies to fix their own prices for medicines, but monitor and control company profits. The downward pressure on healthcare costs in general, particularly prescription drugs, has become more intense. As a result, increasingly high barriers are being erected to the entry of new products. The European Union provides options for its member states to restrict the range of medicinal products for which their national health insurance systems provide reimbursement and to control the prices of medicinal products for human use. A member state may approve a specific price for the medicinal product or it may instead adopt a system of direct or indirect controls on the profitability of the company placing the medicinal product on the market. We may face competition for ganaxolone from lower-priced products in foreign countries that have placed price controls on pharmaceutical products. In addition, in some countries, cross-border imports from low-priced markets exert a commercial pressure on pricing within a country.

        The marketability of any products for which we receive regulatory approval for commercial sale may suffer if the government and third-party payors fail to provide adequate coverage and reimbursement. In addition, an increasing emphasis on managed care in the United States has increased and will continue to increase the pressure on pharmaceutical pricing. Coverage policies and third-party reimbursement rates may change at any time.

        Even if favorable coverage and reimbursement status is attained for one or more products for which we receive regulatory approval, less favorable coverage policies and reimbursement rates may be implemented in the future.

Other Healthcare Laws and Compliance Requirements

        The federal Anti-Kickback Statute prohibits, among other things, knowingly and willfully offering, paying, soliciting or receiving remuneration to induce or in return for purchasing, leasing, ordering or

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arranging for the purchase, lease or order of any healthcare item or service reimbursable under Medicare, Medicaid or other federally financed healthcare programs. This statute has been interpreted to apply to arrangements between pharmaceutical manufacturers on one hand and prescribers, purchasers, and formulary managers on the other. Although there are a number of statutory exemptions and regulatory safe harbors protecting some business arrangements from prosecution, the exemptions and safe harbors are drawn narrowly and practices that involve remuneration intended to induce prescribing, purchasing or recommending may be subject to scrutiny if they do not qualify for an exemption or safe harbor. Our practices may not in all cases meet all of the criteria for safe harbor protection from federal Anti-Kickback Statute liability. The reach of the Anti-Kickback Statute was broadened by the Affordable Care Act, which, among other things, amends the intent requirement of the federal Anti-Kickback Statute. Pursuant to the statutory amendment, a person or entity no longer needs to have actual knowledge of this statute or specific intent to violate it in order to have committed a violation. In addition, the Affordable Care Act provides that the government may assert that a claim including items or services resulting from a violation of the federal Anti-Kickback Statute constitutes a false or fraudulent claim for purposes of the civil False Claims Act (discussed below) or the civil monetary penalties statute, which imposes penalties against any person who is determined to have presented or caused to be presented a claim to a federal health program that the person knows or should know is for an item or service that was not provided as claimed or is false or fraudulent.

        The federal False Claims Act prohibits any person from knowingly presenting, or causing to be presented, a false claim for payment to the federal government or knowingly making, using, or causing to be made or used a false record or statement material to a false or fraudulent claim to the federal government. As a result of a modification made by the Fraud Enforcement and Recovery Act of 2009, a claim includes "any request or demand" for money or property presented to the United States government. Recently, several pharmaceutical and other healthcare companies have been prosecuted under these laws for allegedly providing free product to customers with the expectation that the customers would bill federal programs for the product. Other companies have been prosecuted for causing false claims to be submitted because of the companies' marketing of the product for unapproved, and thus non-reimbursable, uses. The Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act of 1996, or HIPAA, created new federal criminal statutes that prohibit knowingly and willfully executing a scheme to defraud any healthcare benefit program, including private third-party payors and knowingly and willfully falsifying, concealing or covering up a material fact or making any materially false, fictitious or fraudulent statement in connection with the delivery of or payment for healthcare benefits, items or services. Also, many states have similar fraud and abuse statutes or regulations that apply to items and services reimbursed under Medicaid and other state programs, or, in several states, apply regardless of the payor.

        In addition, we may be subject to data privacy and security regulation by both the federal government and the states in which we conduct our business. HIPAA, as amended by The Health Information Technology for Economic and Clinical Health Act, or HITECH, and its implementing regulations, imposes requirements relating to the privacy, security and transmission of individually identifiable health information. Among other things, HITECH makes HIPAA's privacy and security standards directly applicable to "business associates"—independent contractors or agents of covered entities that receive or obtain protected health information in connection with providing a service on behalf of a covered entity. HITECH also increased the civil and criminal penalties that may be imposed against covered entities, business associates and possibly other persons, and gave state attorneys general new authority to file civil actions for damages or injunctions in federal courts to enforce the federal HIPAA laws and seek attorney's fees and costs associated with pursuing federal civil actions. In addition, state laws govern the privacy and security of health information in specified circumstances, many of which differ from each other in significant ways and may not have the same effect, thus complicating compliance efforts.

        In the United States our activities are potentially subject to additional regulation by various federal, state and local authorities in addition to the FDA, including CMS, other divisions of HHS (for example,

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the Office of Inspector General), the DOJ and individual United States Attorney offices within the DOJ, and state and local governments. If a drug product is reimbursed by Medicare or Medicaid, pricing and rebate programs must comply with, as applicable, The Medicare Prescription Drug, Improvement, and Modernization Act of 2003, or Medicare Modernization Act, as well as the Medicaid rebate requirements of the Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of 1990, or the OBRA, and the Veterans Health Care Act of 1992, or the VHCA, each as amended. Among other things, the OBRA requires drug manufacturers to pay rebates on prescription drugs to state Medicaid programs and empowers states to negotiate rebates on pharmaceutical prices, which may result in prices for our future products that will likely be lower than the prices we might otherwise obtain. If products are made available to authorized users of the Federal Supply Schedule of the General Services Administration, additional laws and requirements apply. Under the VHCA, drug companies are required to offer some drugs at a reduced price to a number of federal agencies including the United States Department of Veterans Affairs and the DoD, the Public Health Service and some private Public Health Service designated entities in order to participate in other federal funding programs including Medicaid. Recent legislative changes require that discounted prices be offered for specified DoD purchases for its TRICARE program via a rebate system. Participation under the VHCA requires submission of pricing data and calculation of discounts and rebates pursuant to complex statutory formulas, as well as the entry into government procurement contracts governed by the Federal Acquisition Regulation.

        Because of the breadth of these laws and the narrowness of available statutory and regulatory exemptions, it is possible that some of our business activities could be subject to challenge under one or more of such laws. If our operations are found to be in violation of any of the federal and state laws described above or any other governmental regulations that apply to us, we may be subject to penalties, including criminal and significant civil monetary penalties, damages, fines, imprisonment, exclusion from participation in government programs, injunctions, recall or seizure of products, total or partial suspension of production, denial or withdrawal of pre-marketing product approvals, private "qui tam" actions brought by individual whistleblowers in the name of the government or refusal to allow us to enter into supply contracts, including government contracts, and the curtailment or restructuring of our operations, any of which could adversely affect our ability to operate our business and our results of operations. To the extent that any of our products are sold in a foreign country, we may be subject to similar foreign laws and regulations, which may include, for instance, applicable post- marketing requirements, including safety surveillance, anti-fraud and abuse laws, and implementation of corporate compliance programs and reporting of payments or transfers of value to healthcare professionals.

        In order to distribute products commercially, we must comply with state laws that require the registration of manufacturers and wholesale distributors of pharmaceutical products in a state, including, in some states, manufacturers and distributors who ship products into the state even if such manufacturers or distributors have no place of business within the state. Some states also impose requirements on manufacturers and distributors to establish the pedigree of product in the chain of distribution, including some states that require manufacturers and others to adopt new technology capable of tracking and tracing product as it moves through the distribution chain. In addition, in November 2013, the Drug Quality and Security Act became law and establishes requirements to facilitate the tracing of prescription drug products through the pharmaceutical supply distribution chain. This law includes a number of new requirements that will be implemented over time and will require us to devote additional resources to satisfy these requirements. Several states have enacted legislation requiring pharmaceutical companies to, among other things, establish marketing compliance programs, file periodic reports with the state, make periodic public disclosures on sales, marketing, pricing, clinical trials and other activities, and/or register their sales representatives, as well as to prohibit pharmacies and other healthcare entities from providing specified physician prescribing data to pharmaceutical companies for use in sales and marketing, and to prohibit other specified sales and marketing practices. All of our activities are potentially subject to federal and state consumer protection and unfair competition laws.

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Employees

        As of March 31, 2014, we had four full-time employees. In addition to our full-time employees, we contract with third-parties for the conduct of certain clinical development, manufacturing, accounting and administrative activities. We anticipate increasing our head count within the 12 months following this offering. We have no collective bargaining agreements with our employees and none are represented by labor unions.

Facilities

        Our corporate headquarters are located in New Haven, Connecticut, where we lease approximately 1,600 square feet of office space, pursuant to a lease agreement which expires on January 31, 2015. When our lease expires, we may exercise renewal options or look for additional or alternate space for our operations. We believe that suitable additional or alternative space will be available if required on commercially reasonable terms.

Legal Proceedings

        We are not party to any legal proceedings.

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MANAGEMENT

Executive Officers, Key Employees and Directors

        The following table sets forth information regarding our executive officers, key employees and directors, including their respective ages as of March 31, 2014

Name
  Age   Position(s)

Executive Officers

         

Christopher M. Cashman

    57   Chairman, President and Chief Executive Officer

Edward F. Smith

    43   Vice President, Chief Financial Officer, Secretary and Treasurer

Gail M. Farfel, Ph.D. 

    50   Chief Clinical Development and Regulatory Officer

Key Employee

         

Julia Tsai, Ph.D. 

    39   Senior Director of Clinical Development and Project Management

Non-Employee Directors

         

Stephen Bloch, M.D.(1)

    51   Director

Enrique J. Carrazana, M.D.(2)

    52   Director

Anton Gopka(1)(3)

    32   Director

Tim M. Mayleben(1)(3)

    53   Director

Anand Mehra, M.D.(2)

    38   Director

Jay P. Shepard(2)

    56   Director

Nicole Vitullo(2)(3)

    57   Director

(1)
Member of the audit committee

(2)
Member of the compensation committee

(3)
Member of the nominating and corporate governance committee

Executive Officers

         Christopher M. Cashman has served as Chairman of our board of directors since September 2011 and as our President and Chief Executive Officer since October 2012. From August 2010 to May 2011, Mr. Cashman provided consulting services to Quaker Partners, a private venture capital fund. From 2003 to June 2010, Mr. Cashman served as President and Chief Executive Officer of Protez Pharmaceuticals, Inc., a company specializing in the development of antibiotics. Prior to his time with Protez, Mr. Cashman served as President and Chief Executive Officer of Message Pharmaceuticals Inc., and as Vice President for both Pfizer Inc. and SmithKline Beecham plc. Mr. Cashman began his pharmaceutical career at SmithKline Corporation. Mr. Cashman currently serves on the board of directors of Rapid Micro Biosystems, Inc., Noble Biomaterials, Inc. and MBF Therapeutics Inc. Mr. Cashman holds an M.S. in Economics from Purdue University and B.S. in Business Management from the University of Minnesota. We believe Mr. Cashman's experience in the life sciences industry, including his prior experience serving as chief executive officer of companies in the pharmaceutical development business, qualifies him to serve as the Chairman of our board of directors.

         Edward F. Smith has served as our Vice President, Chief Financial Officer, Secretary and Treasurer since November 2013. From July 2013 to November 2013, Mr. Smith served as a financial advisor in a consulting capacity for TetraLogic Pharmaceuticals Corporation. From January 2006 to April 2013, Mr. Smith served as Chief Financial Officer of PolyMedix, Inc., a company engaged in the development of small-molecule drugs for the treatment of serious acute care conditions, which voluntarily filed for chapter 7 bankruptcy on April 1, 2013. From September 2000 to December 2005, Mr. Smith was Executive Director of Finance at InKine Pharmaceutical Company, Inc., a biopharmaceutical company focused on the diagnosis and

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treatment of gastrointestinal disorders. Earlier in his career, Mr. Smith held various positions of increasing responsibility in public accounting, most recently as a manager in the audit practice at Deloitte & Touche LLP. Mr. Smith is licensed as a Certified Public Accountant in Pennsylvania and holds a B.S. in Business Administration from the University of Hartford. Mr. Smith has been named as a defendant in a shareholder class action suit filed against PolyMedix, Inc. and certain of its executive officers, including Mr. Smith, related to, among other things, statements made in PolyMedix, Inc.'s filings with the SEC. Pursuant to a court order issued in February 2014, the case has been suspended pending settlement discussions among the parties.

         Gail M. Farfel, Ph.D. has served as our Chief Clinical Development and Regulatory Officer since December 2012. From May 2008 until December 2012, she served as President of G. Meredith Consulting LLC, a firm providing strategic consulting and support to biopharmaceutical and software development companies, of which Marinus was a client. From March 2006 through April 2008, Dr. Farfel was employed at Novartis Pharmaceuticals Corp., a United States subsidiary of Novartis AG, as Vice President, Therapeutic Area and Head for Neuroscience Clinical Development and Medical Affairs. From November 1996 to February 2006, Dr. Farfel held a variety of leadership positions in Clinical Development and Global Medical Affairs at Pfizer, Inc. where she directed programs through all stages of clinical development and regulatory submissions including development of the first product approved globally to treat PTSD. Dr. Farfel currently serves on the board of directors of PrintedArt. Dr. Farfel is the author of over 50 scientific articles in the areas of neuropsychopharmacology and drug treatment. Dr. Farfel holds a Ph.D. in Neuropsychopharmacology from the University of Chicago, where she trained as a behavioral scientist and neurotoxicologist, and received the Ginsburg Prize for Dissertation Excellence. She has a Bachelor's degree in Biochemistry from the University of Virginia.

Key Employee

         Julia Tsai, Ph.D. has served as our Senior Director of Clinical Development and Project Management since November 2012. From September 2006 to November 2012, Dr. Tsai served as our Director, Drug Development and from 2004 to 2006, she served as our Manager, Drug Development. Dr. Tsai is responsible for all facets of our drug development operations. Dr. Tsai holds a Ph.D. in Neuroscience and Physiology from the Sackler Institute of Graduate Biomedical Sciences, New York University School of Medicine and a B.A. from Cornell University.

Non-Employee Directors

         Stephen Bloch, M.D. has served as a member of our board of directors since September 2005. Since November 2007, he has served as a General Partner of Canaan Partners, a venture capital firm. Since 2002, he served in various capacities at Canaan Partners including Principal then Partner. He currently also serves on the boards of directors of several private healthcare companies. Dr. Bloch received an A.B. degree from Dartmouth College, a M.A. in the history of science and public policy from Harvard University and a M.D. from the University of Rochester. We believe Dr. Bloch's operating and investment experience in biotechnology and pharmaceutical development, medical devices, diagnostics, healthcare information technology and related industries qualifies him to serve on our board of directors.

         Enrique J. Carrazana, M.D. has served on our board of directors since November 2013. Since October 2011, Dr. Carrazana has been Chief Medical Officer at Acorda Therapeutics, Inc., a developer of medications treating persons with nervous system disorders, with responsibilities over the management of their drug development programs and regulatory filings, as well as the company's medical affairs and drug safety departments. From October 2010 to October 2011, Dr. Carrazana was an Associate Professor of Neurology at the University of Miami Miller School of Medicine. From June 2008 to September 2010, Dr. Carrazana served as the Global Head of the Development Franchise Established Medicines group for Novartis Pharmaceuticals AG. Dr. Carrazana is a board-certified neurologist with more than 20 years of

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experience in the pharmaceutical industry and clinical practice. Dr. Carrazana has presented and published a wide range of research on various neurology topics, with an emphasis on epilepsy. Dr. Carrazana received a M.D. from the Harvard Medical School and completed his residency in Neurology and fellowship in Neurophysiology at the Harvard Longwood Neurology Program. We believe Dr. Carrazana's medical background and experience in pharmaceutical development qualify him to serve on our board of directors.

         Anton Gopka has served on our board of directors since December 2012. Mr. Gopka has been a managing partner of RMI Partners, the management company of RusnanoMedInvest, LLC, one of the largest Russia-based biotechnological venture capital funds, since May 2012. From October 2010 to April 2011, Mr. Gopka was a vice president for mergers and acquisitions at Barclays Capital, LLC, a subsidiary of Barclays PLC. Prior to Barclays Capital, from October 2008 to October 2010, he was director of mergers and acquisitions at Sistema JSFC, the largest diversified conglomerate in Russia. From April 2006 to October 2008, Mr. Gopka worked at Dresdner Kleinwort Limited, an investment bank, where he advised on a number of M&A and capital markets transactions. Mr. Gopka serves on the board of directors of many healthcare companies, including Regado BioSciences, Inc., CoDa Therapeutics, Inc., Lithera, Inc., Tragara Pharmaceuticals, Inc., Atea Pharmaceuticals, Inc. and NovaDigm Therapeutics, Inc. Mr. Gopka received a masters degree in international economics from the Moscow State University for International Affairs. He also earned a corporate finance course diploma from INSEAD. We believe Mr. Gopka's extensive transactional experience in a wide range of industries, strong healthcare exposure as the managing partner of a leading Russian pharmaceutical venture capital firm as well as service on the board of directors for a number of healthcare companies qualify him to serve on our board of directors.

         Tim M. Mayleben has served on our board of directors since December 2008. Since December 2012, Mr. Mayleben has been President, Chief Executive Officer and a director of Esperion Therapeutics, Inc., a biopharmaceutical company focused on the development and commercialization of therapies for the treatment of elevated levels of cholesterol and other cardiometabolic risk markers. From December 2009 to December 2012, Mr. Mayleben was President and Chief Executive Officer and a director of Aastrom Biosciences, Inc. From 2007 to 2008, Mr. Mayleben served as President, Chief Operating Officer and a director of NightHawk Radiology Holdings, Inc. Prior to joining Nighthawk, Mr. Mayleben was the Chief Operating Officer and CFO of the original Esperion, Inc., until its acquisition by Pfizer in 2004. He is also an advisor to, investor in, and member of the board of directors of several life science companies, including Kaleo, Inc., Lycera Corporation and DeNovo Sciences, Inc. Mr. Mayleben earned an M.B.A., with distinction, from the J.L. Kellogg Graduate School of Management at Northwestern University, and a B.A. from the University of Michigan, Ross School of Business. We believe Mr. Mayleben's experience in the life sciences industry, including his prior experience serving as an executive and director of public companies in the pharmaceutical and biotechnology industries, qualifies him to serve on our board of directors.

         Anand Mehra, M.D. has served on our board of directors since October 2007. Dr. Mehra is currently a General Partner of Sofinnova Ventures, a venture capital firm focused on biotech investments, which he joined in 2007 as a Principal and focuses on biopharmaceutical investing. Prior to Sofinnova, Dr. Mehra worked in JPMorgan Chase & Co.'s private equity and venture capital group. Before joining the venture community, Dr. Mehra was a consultant in McKinsey & Company's pharmaceutical practice, advising pharma and biotech on key strategic issues. Dr. Mehra currently serves on the board of directors of Aerie Pharmaceuticals, Inc. and several private companies. Dr. Mehra received his M.D. from Columbia University's College of Physicians and Surgeons and graduated Phi Beta Kappa from the University of Virginia where he was an Echols Scholar. We believe Dr. Mehra's experience working in the venture capital, finance and consulting industries with a focus on pharmaceutical and biotechnology companies qualifies him to serve on our board of directors.

         Jay P. Shepard has served on our board of directors since November 2013. Mr. Shepard has served as an Executive Partner at Sofinnova Ventures since November 2012. From 2010 until November of 2012,

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Mr. Shepard was President and Chief Executive Officer of NextWave Pharmaceuticals Inc., a pediatric focused therapeutics company. From 2008 to 2010, Mr. Shepard was an Executive in Residence at Sofinnova Ventures. Prior to Sofinnova, Mr. Shepard was President and Chief Executive Officer of Relypsa, Inc., a clinical-stage biopharmaceutical company focused on the development and commercialization of nonabsorbed polymeric drugs to treat disorders in the areas of renal, cardiovascular and metabolic diseases. Prior to Relypsa, Mr. Shepard was President and Chief Executive Officer of Ilypsa, Inc., a nephrology therapeutics company. Prior to Ilypsa, Mr. Shepard served as Vice President, Commercial Operations at Telik, Inc., a biopharmaceutical company dedicated to discovering, developing and commercializing novel small molecule drugs to treat cancer and other serious diseases. Prior to Telik, he was Vice President of the Oncology Business Unit of ALZA Pharmaceuticals, a subsidiary of ALZA Corporation, a pharmaceutical and medical systems development company. Mr. Shepard currently serves on the board of directors of Durect Corporation. Mr. Shepard holds a B.S. in Business Administration from the University of Arizona. We believe that Mr. Shepard's experience as an executive with multiple pharmaceutical development companies and in the venture capital industry qualifies him to serve on our board of directors.

         Nicole Vitullo has served on our board of directors since September 2005. Ms. Vitullo has been a Partner of Domain Associates, a venture capital firm that invests in the life sciences sector, since 2004 and in addition to investment responsibilities, she is also involved in the distribution/liquidation strategies for the public companies in Domain's venture capital portfolios. From 2000 to 2011, Ms. Vitullo was responsible for Domain Public Equity Partners L.P., a fund focused on private investments in public companies. Ms. Vitullo joined Domain Associates in 1999. From 1992 to 1999, Ms. Vitullo was Senior Vice President at Rothschild Asset Management, Inc. where she had responsibility for the United States public market investments of International Biotechnology Trust plc. and Biotechnology Investments Limited. From 1991 to 1992, Ms. Vitullo served as the Director of Corporate Communications and Investor Relations at Cephalon, Inc., then a publicly traded biotechnology company. Prior to Cephalon, Ms. Vitullo spent 12 years at Eastman Kodak, most recently in Corporate Development, where she was involved in the development and management of Kodak's venture capital activities. Ms. Vitullo currently serves on the boards of directors of Achillion Pharmaceuticals, Inc., Celator Pharmaceuticals, Inc., Durata Therapeutics, Inc., Esperion Therapeutics, Inc. and VentiRx Pharmaceuticals, Inc. Ms. Vitullo received a B.A. and an M.B.A. from the University of Rochester. We believe Ms. Vitullo's experience working with and serving on the boards of directors of life sciences companies and working in the venture capital industry qualifies her to serve on our board of directors.

Board Composition

        Our board of directors currently consists of eight members. Our certificate of incorporation and our bylaws that will be effective following this offering divide our board of directors into three classes with staggered three-year terms. Effective upon the closing of this offering, our directors will be divided among the three classes as follows:

    the Class I directors will be            and            , and their terms will expire at our first annual meeting of stockholders following this offering;

    the Class II directors will be            ,             and            , and their terms will expire at our second annual meeting of stockholders following this offering; and

    the Class III directors will be            ,             and            , and their terms will expire at our third annual meeting of stockholders following this offering.

        In addition, such certificate of incorporation and bylaws provide that a director may be removed only for cause and only by the affirmative vote of the holders of at least 75% of the votes that all our stockholders would be entitled to cast in an annual election of directors. Under such certificate of incorporation and bylaws, any vacancy on our board of directors, including a vacancy resulting from an

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enlargement of our board of directors, may be filled only by vote of a majority of our directors then in office. Furthermore, such certificate of incorporation provides that the authorized number of directors may be changed only by a resolution of our board of directors.

Board Committees and Independence

        Our board of directors has established an audit committee, compensation committee and nominating and corporate governance committee. The members of our audit committee are Tim Mayleben, Stephen Bloch and Anton Gopka, with Tim Mayleben serving as chair. The members of our compensation committee are Jay Shepard, Anand Mehra, Nicole Vitullo and Enrique Carrazana, with Jay Shepard serving as chair. The members of our nominating and corporate governance committee are Nicole Vitullo, Anton Gopka and Tim Mayleben, with Nicole Vitullo serving as chair.

        Our board of directors and its audit, compensation and nominating and corporate governance committees satisfy all of the applicable independence requirements of the NASDAQ Stock Market rules and the SEC regulations. To comply with these requirements, our board of directors has undertaken a review of the independence of our directors and has determined that all directors except Christopher M. Cashman are independent within the meaning of Section 5605(a)(2) of the NASDAQ Stock Market rules and Rule 10A-3 under the Securities Act, that Tim Mayleben, Stephen Bloch and Anton Gopka meet the additional test for independence for audit committee members imposed by SEC regulations and Section 5605(c)(2)(A) of the NASDAQ Stock Market rules and that Anand Mehra, Nicole Vitullo and Enrique Carrazana meet the additional test for independence for compensation committee members imposed by Section 5605(d)(2) of the NASDAQ Stock Market rules.

    Audit Committee

        The primary purpose of our audit committee will be to assist the board of directors in the oversight of the integrity of our accounting and financial reporting process, the audits of our financial statements, and our compliance with legal and regulatory requirements. The functions of our audit committee will include, among other things:

    hiring the independent registered public accounting firm to conduct the annual audit of our financial statements and monitoring its independence and performance;

    reviewing and approving the planned scope of the annual audit and the results of the annual audit;

    pre-approving all audit services and permissible non-audit services provided by our independent registered public accounting firm;

    reviewing the significant accounting and reporting principles to understand their impact on our financial statements;

    reviewing our internal financial, operating and accounting controls with management, our independent registered public accounting firm and our internal audit provider;

    reviewing with management and our independent registered public accounting firm, as appropriate, our financial reports, earnings announcements and our compliance with legal and regulatory requirements;

    reviewing potential conflicts of interest under and violations of our Code of Conduct;

    establishing procedures for the treatment of complaints received by us regarding accounting, internal accounting controls or auditing matters and confidential submissions by our employees of concerns regarding questionable accounting or auditing matters;

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    reviewing and approving related-party transactions; and

    reviewing and evaluating, at least annually, our audit committee's charter.

        With respect to reviewing and approving related-party transactions, our audit committee will review related-party transactions for potential conflicts of interests or other improprieties. Under SEC rules, related-party transactions are those transactions to which we are or may be a party in which the amount involved exceeds $120,000, and in which any of our directors or executive officers or any other related person had or will have a direct or indirect material interest, excluding, among other things, compensation arrangements with respect to employment and board membership. Our audit committee could approve a related-party transaction if it determines that the transaction is in our best interests. Our directors will be required to disclose to this committee or the full board of directors any potential conflict of interest, or personal interest in a transaction that our board is considering. Our executive officers will be required to disclose any related-party transaction to the audit committee. We also poll our directors on an annual basis with respect to related-party transactions and their service as an officer or director of other entities. Any director involved in a related-party transaction that is being reviewed or approved must recuse himself or herself from participation in any related deliberation or decision. Whenever possible, the transaction should be approved in advance and if not approved in advance, must be submitted for ratification as promptly as practical.

        The financial literacy requirements of the SEC require that each member of our audit committee be able to read and understand fundamental financial statements. In addition, at least one member of our audit committee is qualified as an audit committee financial expert, as defined in Item 407(d)(5) of Regulation S-K promulgated under the Securities Act, and have financial sophistication in accordance with the NASDAQ Stock Market Rules. Our board of directors has determined that Tim Mayleben qualifies as an audit committee financial expert.

        Both our independent registered public accounting firm and management periodically will meet privately with our audit committee.

        Prior to the consummation of this offering, our board of directors will adopt a charter for the audit committee that complies with NASDAQ Stock Market rules. The charter will be available on our website at www.marinuspharma.com upon the listing of our common stock on The NASDAQ Global Market. The information contained in, or that can be accessed through, our website is not part of this prospectus.

    Compensation Committee

        The primary purpose of our compensation committee will be to assist our board of directors in exercising its responsibilities relating to compensation of our executive officers and employees and to administer our equity compensation and other benefit plans. In carrying out these responsibilities, this committee will review all components of executive officer and employee compensation for consistency with its compensation philosophy, as in effect from time to time. The functions of our compensation committee will include, among other things:

    designing and implementing competitive compensation policies to attract and retain key personnel;

    reviewing and formulating policy and determining the compensation of our executive officers and employees;

    reviewing and recommending to our board of directors the compensation of our directors;

    administering our equity incentive plans and granting equity awards to our employees and directors under these plans;

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    if required from time to time, reviewing with management our disclosures under the caption "Compensation Discussion and Analysis" and recommending to the full board its inclusion in our periodic reports to be filed with the SEC;

    if required from time to time, preparing the report of the compensation committee to be included in our annual proxy statement;

    engaging compensation consultants or other advisors it deems appropriate to assist with its duties; and

    reviewing and evaluating, at least annually, our compensation committee's charter.

        Prior to the consummation of this offering, our board of directors will adopt a charter for the compensation committee that complies with NASDAQ Stock Market rules. The charter will be available on our website at www.marinuspharma.com upon the listing of our common stock on The NASDAQ Global Market. The information contained in, or that can be accessed through, our website is not part of this prospectus.

    Nominating and Corporate Governance Committee

        The primary purpose of our nominating and corporate governance committee will be to assist our board of directors in promoting the best interests of our company and our stockholders through the implementation of sound corporate governance principles and practices. The functions of our nominating and corporate governance committee will include, among other things:

    identifying, reviewing and evaluating candidates to serve on our board;

    determining the minimum qualifications for service on our board;

    developing and recommending to our board an annual self-evaluation process for our board and overseeing the annual self-evaluation process;

    developing, as appropriate, a set of corporate governance principles, and reviewing and recommending to our board any changes to such principles; and

    periodically reviewing and evaluating our nominating and corporate governance committee's charter.

        Prior to the consummation of this offering, our board of directors will adopt a charter for the nominating and corporate governance committee that complies with NASDAQ Stock Market rules. The charter will be available on our website at www.marinuspharma.com upon the listing of our common stock on The NASDAQ Global Market. The information contained in, or that can be accessed through, our website is not part of this prospectus.

Code of Conduct for Employees, Executive Officers and Directors

        Prior to the consummation of this offering, our board of directors will adopt a Code of Conduct applicable to all of our employees, executive officers and directors. The audit committee of our board of directors will be responsible for overseeing the Code of Conduct and must approve any waivers of the Code of Conduct for employees, executive officers or directors. The Code of Conduct will be available on our website at www.marinuspharma.com upon the listing of our common stock on The NASDAQ Global Market. We expect that any amendments to the Code of Conduct, or any waivers of its requirements, will also be disclosed on our website. The information contained in, or that can be accessed through, our website is not part of this prospectus.

Compensation Committee Interlocks and Insider Participation

        No member of our compensation committee has ever been an executive officer or employee of ours. None of our officers currently serves, or has served during the last completed year, on the board of directors, compensation committee or other committee serving an equivalent function, of any other entity that has one or more officers serving as a member of our board of directors or compensation committee.

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EXECUTIVE AND DIRECTOR COMPENSATION

        This section discusses the material components of the executive compensation program for our executive officers who are named in the "2013 Summary Compensation Table" below. In 2013, our chief executive officer and our two other highest-paid executive officers, or our named executive officers, were as follows:

    Christopher M. Cashman, President and Chief Executive Officer

    Edward F. Smith, Chief Financial Officer

    Gail M. Farfel, Ph.D., Chief Clinical Development and Regulatory Officer

        This discussion may contain forward-looking statements that are based on our current plans, considerations, expectations and determinations regarding future compensation programs. Actual compensation programs that we adopt following the completion of this offering may differ materially from the currently planned programs summarized in this discussion.

2013 Summary Compensation Table

        The following table sets forth information concerning the compensation of our named executive officers during the fiscal year ended December 31, 2013:

Name and Principal Position
  Year   Salary
($)
  Bonus
($)(1)
  Stock Awards
($)(2)
  All Other
Compensation
($)
  Total
($)
 

Christopher M. Cashman

                                     

President and Chief Executive Officer

    2013     260,000     110,880     142,695         513,575  

Edward F. Smith(3)

                                     

Chief Financial Officer

    2013     30,000         121,432         151,432  

Gail M. Farfel, Ph.D.

                                     

Chief Clinical Development and Regulatory Officer

    2013     290,000     69,600     36,010         395,610  

(1)
Represents annual bonus amounts paid pursuant to the named executive officers' employment agreements. Amounts were accrued as of December 31, 2013 and were paid in February 2014.

(2)
This amount reflects the aggregate grant-date fair value of stock awards computed in accordance with FASB ASC Topic 718.

(3)
Mr. Smith was hired on November 25, 2013. His annual base salary is $300,000.

Employment Agreements

        We have entered into employment agreements with all of our named executive officers. The following is a summary of the material terms of each employment agreement. For complete terms, please see the respective employment agreements attached as exhibits to the registration statement of which this prospectus forms a part.

    Christopher M. Cashman

        On November 2, 2012, we entered into an employment agreement with Christopher M. Cashman, our Chairman, President and Chief Executive Officer. The principal terms of Mr. Cashman's employment agreement are as follows:

    base salary of $260,000 per year for 80% of full-time effort and $325,000 for full-time effort (Mr. Cashman became full-time effective January 1, 2014);

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    annual performance bonus in an amount up to 40.0% of base salary based on the achievement of certain performance goals established by our board of directors or the compensation committee; and

    stock options as described below under the heading "Outstanding Equity Awards at Fiscal Year-End."

        Upon a termination of Mr. Cashman's employment by us without cause or a resignation by Mr. Cashman for good reason, Mr. Cashman is eligible to receive a continuation of his base salary for nine months, subject to his execution and delivery of a general release of claims.

        Termination for "cause" under Mr. Cashman's employment agreement generally means termination of Mr. Cashman by us for: (i) habitual intoxication; (ii) abuse of a controlled substance; (iii) conviction of a felony involving moral turpitude; (iv) adjudication as an incompetent; (v) a breach of any material term of the employment agreement; (vi) violation in any material respect of any of our rules, regulations or policies; (vii) gross insubordination; (viii) engaging in any conduct, action or behavior that, in the reasonable opinion of our board of directors, has had a material adverse effect on our reputation; (ix) any continued or repeated absence; or (x) misappropriation of any funds or property.

        Termination for "good reason" under Mr. Cashman's employment agreement generally means termination by Mr. Cashman for (i) a reassignment to a location outside the greater Philadelphia area; (ii) any material failure by us to comply with any material term of the employment agreement; or (iii) the demotion of Mr. Cashman to a lesser position or a substantial diminution of Mr. Cashman's authority, duties or responsibilities, except under certain limited circumstances.

        Mr. Cashman is entitled to participate in all of our group welfare plans, subject to the terms and conditions applicable to such plans as approved from time to time by our board of directors. Mr. Cashman's employment agreement contains customary non-solicitation and non-competition covenants, which covenants remain in effect for one year following any cessation of employment with respect to Mr. Cashman. Further, Mr. Cashman has executed a Mutual Non-Disclosure Agreement.

    Edward F. Smith

        On November 25, 2013, we entered into an employment agreement with Edward F. Smith, our Vice President, Chief Financial Officer, Secretary and Treasurer. The principal terms of Mr. Smith's employment agreement are as follows:

    base salary of $300,000 per year;

    annual performance bonus in an amount up to 35.0% of base salary based on the achievement of certain performance goals established by our board of directors or the compensation committee; and

    stock options as described below under the heading "Outstanding Equity Awards at Fiscal Year-End."

        Upon a termination of Mr. Smith's employment by us without cause or a resignation by Mr. Smith for good reason, Mr. Smith is eligible to receive a continuation of his base salary for six months, subject to his execution and delivery of a general release of claims.

        Termination for "cause" under Mr. Smith's employment agreement generally means termination of Mr. Smith by us for: (i) substantial and continuing failure to carry out the reasonable instructions of our board of directors; (ii) embezzlement or misappropriation of assets or property (tangible or intangible); (iii) gross negligence, breach of fiduciary duty or fraud; (iv) the commission of an act that constitutes unfair competition or which induces any customer or supplier to breach a contract; or (v) conviction of a felony.

        Termination for "good reason" under Mr. Smith's employment agreement generally means termination by Mr. Smith for (i) a material reduction in Mr. Smith's responsibilities or title; (ii) a material

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reduction of Mr. Smith's annual base salary; or (iii) a relocation of the our business requiring Mr. Smith to commute greater than 50 miles from his current residence, except under certain limited circumstances.

        Mr. Smith is entitled to participate in all of our group welfare plans, subject to the terms and conditions applicable to such plans as approved from time to time by our board of directors. Mr. Smith's employment agreement contains customary non-solicitation and non-competition covenants, which covenants remain in effect for six months following any cessation of employment with respect to Mr. Smith. Further, Mr. Smith has executed a Confidentiality Agreement which expires five years after the last disclosure of confidential information by the Company.

    Gail M. Farfel, Ph.D.

        On November 2, 2012, we entered into an employment agreement with Gail M. Farfel, Ph.D., our Chief Clinical Development and Regulatory Officer. The principal terms of Dr. Farfel's employment agreement are as follows:

    base salary of $290,000 per year;

    annual performance bonus in an amount up to 25.0% of base salary based on the achievement of certain performance goals established by our board of directors or the compensation committee; and

    stock options as described below under the heading "Outstanding Equity Awards at Fiscal Year-End."

        Upon a termination of Dr. Farfel's employment by us without cause, Dr. Farfel is eligible to receive continuation of her base salary for six months, subject to her execution and delivery of a general release of claims.

        Termination for "cause" under Dr. Farfel's employment agreement generally means termination of Dr. Farfel by us for: (i) any material breach by Dr. Farfel of any agreement between Dr. Farfel and us, (ii) any commission of a crime constituting a felony, or (iii) repeated, willful failure to perform any duties or other insubordination.

        Dr. Farfel is entitled to participate in all of our group welfare plans, subject to the terms and conditions applicable to such plans as approved from time to time by our board of directors. Further, Dr. Farfel has executed a Non-Competition, Non-Solicitation, Confidentiality and Invention Assignment Agreement which contains customary non-solicitation and non-competition covenants, which covenants remain in effect for one year following any cessation of employment with respect to Dr. Farfel.

Potential Payments Upon a Termination or Change in Control

        As discussed under the caption "—Employment Agreements" above, we have agreements with our named executive officers, pursuant to which they will receive severance payments upon certain termination events. The information below describes and quantifies certain compensation that would be available under our existing plans and arrangements if (i) the named executive officer was terminated as of December 31, 2013 or (ii) if a "change in control" occurred on December 31, 2013 and the named executive officer had been subsequently terminated on the same date. For purposes of the employment agreements, "change in control" generally has the same meaning as such term is given under our 2005 Stock Option and Incentive Plan. See "—Equity Benefit Plans—2005 and 2014 Equity Incentive Plan—Change in Control" in this prospectus for a summary of the definition of a "change in control" under the 2005 Stock Option and Incentive Plan.

    Acceleration of Equity Awards

        Pursuant to the terms of each of Mr. Cashman's and Mr. Smith's employment agreements, in the event of a "change in control" that occurs during any time prior to such named executive officer's

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termination of employment with us, all or a portion of the executive's then unvested stock options shall fully vest.

    Potential Payments

        The table below summarizes the payments and benefits that each of our named executive officers would have been entitled to receive if his or her last day of employment with us had been December 31, 2013.

Name
  Cash
Severance
Payment
($)
  Accelerated
Option
Vesting
($)
  Total
($)
 

Christopher M. Cashman

                   

Voluntary termination for good reason or involuntary termination without cause

    195,000         195,000  

No termination following a change in control(1)

             

Voluntary termination for good reason or involuntary termination without cause following a change in control

    195,000         195,000  

Edward F. Smith

                   

Voluntary termination for good reason or involuntary termination without cause

    150,000         150,000  

No termination following a change in control(1)

             

Voluntary termination for good reason or involuntary termination without cause following a change in control

    150,000         150,000  

Gail M. Farfel, Ph.D.

                   

Involuntary termination without cause

    145,000         145,000  

No termination following a change in control

             

Involuntary termination without cause following a change in control

    145,000         145,000  

(1)
Messrs. Cashman and Smith's options shall vest in full upon a change in control. As of December 31, 2013, the estimated value of our common stock is equal to the exercise price of Messrs. Cashman and Smith's outstanding options.

        With respect to Messrs. Cashman and Smith and Dr. Farfel, see "—Employment Agreements" above for a discussion of the benefits to which each would be entitled in the event that their employment is terminated for any reason other than for cause, death, or disability, or, in the case of Messrs. Cashman and Smith, if they resign for good reason.

    Risk Considerations in Our Compensation Program

        Our board of directors is evaluating the philosophy and standards on which our compensation plans will be implemented. It is our belief that our compensation programs do not, and in the future will not, encourage inappropriate actions or risk taking by our executive officers. We do not believe that any risks arising from our employee compensation policies and practices are reasonably likely to have a material adverse effect on us. In addition, we do not believe that the mix and design of the components of our executive compensation program will encourage management to assume excessive risks. We believe that our current business process and planning cycle fosters the behaviors and controls that would mitigate the potential for adverse risk caused by the action of our executives.

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Outstanding Equity Awards at Fiscal Year-End

        The following table provides information regarding equity awards held by each of our named executive officers that were outstanding as of December 31, 2013.

Name
  Number of
Securities
Underlying
Unexercised
Options
(#) Exercisable
  Number of
Securities
Underlying
Unexercised
Options
(#) Unexercisable
  Option
Exercise
Price
($)
  Option
Expiration
Date
 

Christopher M. Cashman

    351,531     273,469 (1)   0.16     9/14/2021  

    215,663     167,772 (2)   0.16     2/28/2022  

    320,174     777,478 (3)   0.16     4/3/2023  

Edward F. Smith

        934,096 (4)   0.16     11/24/2023  

Gail M. Farfel, Ph.D. 

    218,725     31,275 (5)   0.16     3/31/2020  

    375,000         0.16     5/31/2021  

    75,020     201,980 (6)   0.16     4/3/2023  

(1)
25% of the total shares underlying this option vested on September 15, 2012. The remaining shares vest 1/36 th  monthly over 36 months thereafter, subject to continued service to us through each vesting date.

(2)
25% of the total shares underlying this option vested on September 15, 2012. The remaining shares vest 1/36 th  monthly over 36 months thereafter, subject to continued service to us through each vesting date.

(3)
114,371 of the total shares underlying this option vested on April 4, 2013. The remaining shares vest 1/43 rd  monthly over 43 months thereafter, subject to continued service to us through each vesting date.

(4)
25% of the total shares underlying this option will vest on November 22, 2014. The remaining shares vest 1/36 th  monthly over 36 months thereafter, subject to continued service to us through each vesting date.

(5)
25% of the total shares underlying this option vested on April 1, 2011. The remaining shares vest 1/36 th  monthly over 36 months thereafter, subject to continued service to us through each vesting date.

(6)
25% of the total shares underlying this option vested on November 2, 2013. The remaining shares vest 1/36 th  monthly over 36 months thereafter, subject to continued service to us through each vesting date.

Equity Benefit Plans

    2005 and 2014 Equity Incentive Plan

        Our board of directors adopted our 2005 Stock Option and Incentive Plan in 2005 for the purpose of attracting key employees, directors and consultants, inducing them to remain with us and encouraging them to increase their efforts to make our business more successful. Our 2005 Stock Option and Incentive Plan provides for the grant of stock options and restricted stock to our employees, directors and consultants. As of December 31, 2013, 8,010,227 shares of common stock were reserved for issuance pursuant to our 2005 Stock Option and Incentive Plan, subject to adjustment as set forth in the plan. All of the shares reserved under our 2005 Stock Option and Incentive Plan have been issued pursuant to outstanding awards. Following the adoption of the 2014 Equity Incentive Plan, we may not make any further grants under the 2005 Stock Option and Incentive Plan, but all outstanding awards under the 2005 Stock Option and Incentive Plan will continue to vest and be exercisable in accordance with their original terms.

        In connection with this offering, our board of directors adopted, and we expect our stockholders to approve, our 2014 Equity Incentive Plan subject to the completion of this offering. The 2014 Equity

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Incentive Plan provides for grants of stock options, stock appreciation rights, or SARs, restricted stock, restricted stock units, or RSUs, and performance awards. Our directors, officers and consultants will be eligible for grants under the 2014 Equity Incentive Plan. The purpose of the 2014 Equity Incentive Plan is to provide incentives that attract, retain and motivate high-performing officers, directors, employees and consultants by providing them a proprietary interest in our long-term success or compensation based on their performance in fulfilling their responsibilities to our company. This summary may not include all of the provisions of the 2014 Equity Incentive Plan. For further information about the 2014 Equity Incentive Plan, we refer you to the complete copy of the form of the 2014 Equity Incentive Plan, filed as an exhibit to the registration statement of which this prospectus forms a part.

        Administration.     The 2014 Equity Incentive Plan will be administered by the compensation committee. The compensation committee's powers include: (i) determining the form, amount and other terms and conditions of awards; (ii) construing or interpreting any provision of the 2014 Equity Incentive Plan or any award agreement; (iii) amending the terms of outstanding awards; and (iv) adopting such rules, guidelines and practices for administering the 2014 Equity Incentive Plan as it deems advisable. The compensation committee has full authority to administer and interpret the 2014 Equity Incentive Plan, to grant discretionary awards under the 2014 Equity Incentive Plan, to determine the persons to whom awards will be granted, to determine the types of awards to be granted, to determine the terms and conditions of each award, to determine the number of shares of common stock to be covered by each award, to make all other determinations in connection with the 2014 Equity Incentive Plan and the awards thereunder as the committee deems necessary or desirable and to delegate authority under the 2014 Equity Incentive Plan to our executive officers.

        Available shares.     Initially, the aggregate number of shares of our common stock that may be issued pursuant to awards under the 2014 Equity Incentive Plan is 15% of the fully diluted shares outstanding including the shares issued in this offering and shares issuable pursuant to 2014 Equity Incentive Plan. All shares subject to the 2014 Equity Incentive Plan may be issued upon the exercise of incentive stock options. No person may be granted in a calendar year an award covering more than 1,500,000 shares. Such limitations are designed to help assure that any deductions to which we would otherwise be entitled with respect to such awards will not be subject to the $1.0 million limitation on the income tax deductibility by us of compensation paid to any covered executive officer imposed by Section 162(m) of the Code.

        The number of shares available for issuance under the 2014 Equity Incentive Plan may be subject to adjustment in the event of a reorganization, stock split, merger or similar change in our corporate structure or the number of outstanding shares of our common stock. In the event of any of these occurrences, we will make equitable adjustments to, among other things, the number and kind of shares, options or other property available for issuance under the plan or covered by grants previously made under the plan. The shares available for issuance under the plan may be, in whole or in part, either authorized and unissued shares of our common stock or shares of common stock held in or acquired for our treasury. In general, if awards under the 2014 Equity Incentive Plan are for any reason cancelled, or expire or terminate unexercised, the shares covered by such awards may again be available for the grant of awards under the 2014 Equity Incentive Plan.

        Eligibility for participation.     Members of our board of directors, as well as employees of, and consultants to, us or any of our subsidiaries and affiliates will be eligible to receive awards under the 2014 Equity Incentive Plan.

        Award agreements.     Awards granted under the 2014 Equity Incentive Plan will be evidenced by award agreements, which need not be identical, and that provide additional terms, conditions, restrictions or limitations covering the grant of the award, including, without limitation, additional terms providing for the acceleration of exercisability or vesting of awards in the event of a Change in Control (as defined in the 2014 Equity Incentive Plan) or conditions regarding the participant's employment, as determined by the committee.

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        Stock options.     The committee may grant nonqualified stock options to any individuals eligible to participate in the 2014 Equity Incentive Plan and incentive stock options to purchase shares of our common stock only to eligible employees. The committee will determine: (i) the number of shares of our common stock subject to each option; (ii) the term of each option, which may not exceed ten years, or five years in the case of an incentive stock option granted to a 10.0% or greater stockholder; (iii) the exercise price; (iv) the vesting schedule, if any and (v) the other material terms of each option. No incentive stock option or nonqualified stock option may have an exercise price less than the fair market value of a share of our common stock at the time of grant or, in the case of an incentive stock option granted to a 10.0% or greater stockholder, 110.0% of such share's fair market value. Options will be exercisable at such time or times and subject to such terms and conditions as determined by the committee at the time of grant and the exercisability of such options may be accelerated by the committee.

        Stock appreciation rights.     The committee may grant SARs representing the right to receive a payment in shares of our common stock or cash, as determined by the committee, equal in value to the excess of the fair market value of one share of our common stock on the date of exercise over the exercise price per share established in connection with the grant of the SAR. The term of each SAR may not exceed ten years. The exercise price per share covered by a SAR will be the fair market value of our common stock on the date of grant.

        Restricted stock.     The committee may award shares of restricted stock. Except as otherwise provided by the committee upon the award of restricted stock, the recipient generally will have the rights of a stockholder with respect to the shares, including the right to receive dividends, the right to vote the shares of restricted stock and, conditioned upon full vesting of shares of restricted stock, the right to tender such shares, subject to the conditions and restrictions generally applicable to restricted stock or specifically set forth in the recipient's restricted stock agreement. The committee may determine at the time of award that the payment of dividends, if any, will be deferred until the expiration of the applicable restriction period. Recipients of restricted stock will be required to enter into a restricted stock agreement with us that states the restrictions to which the shares are subject, which may include satisfaction of pre-established performance goals, and the criteria or date or dates on which such restrictions will lapse. If the grant of restricted stock or the lapse of the relevant restrictions is based on the attainment of performance goals, the committee will establish for each recipient the applicable performance goals, formulae or standards and the applicable vesting percentages with reference to the attainment of such goals or satisfaction of such formulae or standards while the outcome of the performance goals are substantially uncertain. Such performance goals may incorporate provisions for disregarding, or adjusting for, changes in accounting methods, corporate transactions, including, without limitation, dispositions and acquisitions, and other similar events or circumstances. Section 162(m) of the Code requires that performance awards be based on objective performance measures. The performance goals for performance-based restricted stock will be based on one or more of the objective criteria discussed in general below.

        RSUs.     RSUs are granted in reference to a specified number of shares of common stock and entitle the holder to receive, on achievement of specific performance goals, after a period of continued service or any combination of the above as set forth in the applicable award agreement, one share of common stock for each such share of common stock covered by the RSU. The board may, in its discretion, accelerate the vesting of RSUs. If the grant of RSUs or the lapse of the relevant restrictions is based on the attainment of performance goals, the committee will establish for each recipient the applicable performance goals, formulae or standards and the applicable vesting percentages with reference to the attainment of such goals or satisfaction of such formulae or standards while the outcome of the performance goals are substantially uncertain. Such performance goals may incorporate provisions for disregarding, or adjusting for, changes in accounting methods, corporate transactions, including, without limitation, dispositions and acquisitions, and other similar events or circumstances. Section 162(m) of the Code requires that performance awards be based on objective performance measures. The performance goals for performance-based restricted stock will be based on one or more of the objective criteria discussed in general below.

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        Performance awards.     The committee may grant a performance award to a participant payable upon the attainment of specific performance goals. The committee may grant performance awards that are intended to qualify as performance-based compensation under Section 162(m) of the Code as well as performance awards that are not intended to qualify as performance-based compensation under Section 162(m) of the Code. Based on service, performance or other factors or criteria, the committee may, at or after grant, accelerate the vesting of all or any part of any performance award.

        Performance goals.     The committee may grant awards of restricted stock, RSUs and performance awards that are intended to qualify as performance-based compensation for purposes of Section 162(m) of the Code. These awards may be granted, vest and be paid based on attainment of specified performance goals established by the committee. These performance goals may be based on one or more of the following measures selected by the committee: (1) the attainment of certain target levels of, or a specified increase in, operational cash flow; (2) the achievement of a certain level of, reduction of, or other specified objectives with regard to limiting the level of increase in, all or a portion of, our bank debt or other long-term or short-term public or private debt or other similar financial obligations, which may be calculated net of such cash balances and/or other specified offsets; (3) appreciation in and/or maintenance of certain target levels in the fair market value of our common stock; (4) the attainment of a certain level of, reduction of, or other specified objectives with regard to limiting the level of or rate of increase in all or a portion of specified expenses; (5) individual objectives; and (6) any combination of the foregoing. In addition, all performance goals may be based on the attainment of specified levels of our performance, or the performance of a subsidiary, division or other operational unit, under one or more of the measures described above relative to the performance of other corporations. The committee may designate additional business criteria on which the performance goals may be based or adjust, modify or amend those criteria.

        To the extent permitted by law, the committee may also exclude the impact of an event or occurrence which the committee determines should be appropriately excluded, such as (i) restructurings, discontinued operations, extraordinary items and other unusual or non-recurring charges; (ii) an event either not directly related to our operations or not within the reasonable control of management or (iii) a change in tax law or accounting standards required by GAAP.

        Change in Control.     In connection with a Change in Control (as defined below) the committee may, on a participant-by-participant basis (i) cause any outstanding awards to become vested and immediately exercisable, in whole or in part; (ii) cause any outstanding option to become fully vested and immediately exercisable for a reasonable period in advance of the Change in Control and, to the extent not exercised prior to that Change in Control, cancel that option upon closing of the Change in Control; (iii) cancel any unvested award or unvested portion thereof, with or without consideration; (iv) cancel any award in exchange for a substitute award; (v) redeem any RSU for cash and/or other substitute consideration with value equal to the fair market value of an unrestricted share on the date of the Change in Control; (vi) cancel any option in exchange for cash and/or other substitute consideration with a value equal to: (A) the number of shares subject to that option, multiplied by (B) the difference, if any, between the fair market value per share on the date of the Change in Control and the exercise price of that option; provided that if the fair market value per share on the date of the Change in Control does not exceed the exercise price of any such option, the committee may cancel that option without any payment of consideration; and/or (vii) take such other action as the committee determines to be reasonable under the circumstances; provided that the committee may only use discretion to the extent permitted under Section 409A of the Code.

        Under the 2014 Equity Incentive Plan, a Change in Control means the happening of an event, which shall be deemed to have occurred upon the earliest to occur of the following events: (i) any person or group acquires (in one or more transactions) beneficial ownership of our stock possessing 50.0% or more of the total power to vote for the election of our board of directors; (ii) a majority of the members of our board of directors is replaced during any 12-month period by directors whose appointment or election is not endorsed by a majority of our board of directors prior to the date of the appointment or election; (iii) a

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merger or consolidation with another corporation where our shareholders immediately prior to such transaction will not beneficially own stock possessing 50.0% or more of the total power to vote for the election of the surviving corporation's board of directors (without consideration of the rights of any class of stock to elect directors by a separate class vote) immediately after such transaction; (iv) any person or group acquires all or substantially all of our assets; (v) we complete a full liquidation or dissolution; or (vi) our stockholders accept a share exchange, whereby stockholders immediately before such exchange do not (or will not) directly or indirectly own more than 50.0% of the combined voting power of the surviving entity immediately following such exchange in substantially the same proportion as their ownership immediately before such exchange. The definition of Change in Control in the 2005 Stock Option and Incentive Plan is substantially similar to the definition in the 2014 Equity Incentive Plan.

        Stockholder rights.     Except as otherwise provided in the applicable award agreement, and with respect to an award of restricted stock, a participant will have no rights as a stockholder with respect to shares of our common stock covered by any award until the participant becomes the record holder of such shares.

        Amendment and termination.     Notwithstanding any other provision of the 2014 Equity Incentive Plan, our board of directors may at any time amend any or all of the provisions of the 2014 Equity Incentive Plan, or suspend or terminate it entirely, retroactively or otherwise; provided, however, that, unless otherwise required by law or specifically provided in the 2014 Equity Incentive Plan, the rights of a participant with respect to awards granted prior to such amendment, suspension or termination may not be adversely affected without the consent of such participant.

        Transferability.     Awards granted under the 2014 Equity Incentive Plan generally will be nontransferable, other than by will or the laws of descent and distribution, except that the committee may provide for the transferability of nonqualified stock options at the time of grant or thereafter to certain family members.

        Repricing.     The committee may not, without obtaining prior approval of our stockholders: (i) implement any cancellation/re-grant program pursuant to which outstanding options under the 2014 Equity Incentive Plan are cancelled and new options are granted in replacement with a lower exercise per share, (ii) cancel outstanding options under the 2014 Equity Incentive Plan with exercise per share in excess of the then current fair market value per share for consideration payable in our equity securities or (iii) otherwise directly reduce the exercise price in effect for outstanding options under the 2014 Equity Incentive Plan.

        Effective date.     We expect that the 2014 Equity Incentive Plan will become effective immediately prior to the completion of this offering.

Retirement Benefits

        We maintain a Section 401(k) retirement plan for all employees who are 21 years of age or older. Employees can contribute up to 50.0% of their eligible pay, subject to maximum amounts allowed under law. We may make discretionary profit sharing contributions, which vest over a period of four years from each employee's commencement of employment with us. We did not make any discretionary contributions in our fiscal year ended December 31, 2013.

Compensation of Directors

        During our fiscal year ended December 31, 2013, we did not pay any cash compensation to our directors. All of our directors were eligible to receive awards under the 2005 Stock Option and Incentive Plan. Only Dr. Carrazana and Mr. Shepard received a stock option award under the 2005 Stock Option and Incentive Plan, pursuant to which each received an option to purchase 155,683 shares of our common stock at an exercise price of $0.16 per share. These options vest in equal monthly installments over 48 months commencing January 1, 2014, subject to continuing service. Immediately after the consummation of this offering, all of our directors will be eligible to receive awards under the 2014 Equity

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Incentive Plan. We expect to adopt a formal director compensation policy prior to the completion of this offering.

Limitations of Liability and Indemnification Matters

        Our amended and restated certificate of incorporation and our amended and restated bylaws provide that we will indemnify our directors and officers to the fullest extent permitted by the Delaware General Corporation Law, which prohibits our amended and restated certificate of incorporation from limiting the liability of our directors for the following:

    any breach of the director's duty of loyalty to us or our stockholders;

    acts or omissions not in good faith or that involve intentional misconduct or a knowing violation of law;

    unlawful payment of dividends or unlawful stock repurchases or redemptions; or

    any transaction from which the director derived an improper personal benefit.

        Our amended and restated certificate of incorporation and our amended and restated bylaws also provide that if Delaware law is amended to authorize corporate action further eliminating or limiting the personal liability of a director, then the liability of our directors will be eliminated or limited to the fullest extent permitted by Delaware law, as so amended. This limitation of liability does not apply to liabilities arising under the federal securities laws and does not affect the availability of equitable remedies such as injunctive relief or rescission.

        Our amended and restated certificate of incorporation and our amended and restated bylaws also provide that we shall have the power to indemnify our employees and agents to the fullest extent permitted by law. Our amended and restated bylaws also permit us to secure insurance on behalf of any officer, director, employee or other agent for any liability arising out of his or her actions in this capacity, regardless of whether our amended and restated bylaws would permit indemnification. We have obtained directors' and officers' liability insurance.

        We have entered into separate indemnification agreements with our directors and executive officers, in addition to indemnification provided for in our amended and restated certificate of incorporation and amended and restated bylaws. These agreements, among other things, provide for indemnification of our directors and executive officers for expenses, judgments, fines and settlement amounts incurred by this person in any action or proceeding arising out of this person's services as a director or executive officer or at our request. We believe that these provisions in our amended and restated certificate of incorporation and amended and restated bylaws and indemnification agreements are necessary to attract and retain qualified persons as directors and executive officers.

        The above description of the indemnification provisions of our amended and restated certificate of incorporation, our amended and restated bylaws and our indemnification agreements is not complete and is qualified in its entirety by reference to these documents, each of which is filed as an exhibit to this registration statement to which this prospectus forms a part.

        The limitation of liability and indemnification provisions in our amended and restated certificate of incorporation and amended and restated bylaws may discourage stockholders from bringing a lawsuit against directors for breach of their fiduciary duties. They may also reduce the likelihood of derivative litigation against directors and officers, even though an action, if successful, might benefit us and our stockholders. A stockholder's investment may be harmed to the extent we pay the costs of settlement and damage awards against directors and officers pursuant to these indemnification provisions. Insofar as indemnification for liabilities under the Securities Act may be permitted to directors, officers or persons controlling us pursuant to the foregoing provisions, we have been informed that in the opinion of the SEC such indemnification is against public policy as expressed in the Securities Act and is therefore unenforceable. There is no pending litigation or proceeding naming any of our directors or officers as to which indemnification is being sought, nor are we aware of any pending or threatened litigation that may result in claims for indemnification by any director or officer.

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CERTAIN RELATIONSHIPS AND RELATED PARTY TRANSACTIONS

        The following is a description of transactions since January 1, 2011, to which we have been a party, in which the amount involved in the transaction exceeds $120,000, and in which any of our directors, executive officers or, to our knowledge, beneficial owners of more than 5.0% of our capital stock or an affiliate or immediate family member thereof, had or will have a direct or indirect material interest, other than employment, compensation, termination, indemnification and change in control arrangements with our named executive officers, which are described under "Executive and Director Compensation." We believe the terms obtained or consideration that we paid or received, as applicable, in connection with the transactions described below were comparable to terms available or the amounts that would be paid or received, as applicable, in arm's-length transactions with unrelated third parties.

        After consummation of this offering, our audit committee will be responsible for the review, approval and ratification of related person transactions. The audit committee will review these transactions under our Code of Conduct, which will govern conflicts of interests, among other matters, and will be applicable to our employees, officers and directors. See "Management—Audit Committee" for additional information regarding related-party transactions.

Preferred Stock and Convertible Promissory Note Issuances

    Issuance of Series C Convertible Preferred Stock

        In December 2012, May 2013 and April 2014, we issued and sold an aggregate of 18,803,582 shares of our series C convertible preferred stock at a purchase price per share of $1.1845 per share (before giving effect to our 1-for-    reverse split), for an aggregate purchase price of approximately $22.3 million, including approximately $5.2 million of aggregate principal and accrued interest, in connection with the conversion of previously outstanding convertible notes. The table below sets forth the purchases of our series C convertible preferred stock by persons who hold more than 5.0% of our outstanding capital stock and entities affiliated with our directors:

Stockholders
  Series C
Preferred
Shares Held
  Aggregate
Investment
 

Domain Partners VI, L.P. and DP VI Associates, L.P.(1)

    3,775,163   $ 4,471,681  

Canaan VII L.P.(2)

    3,355,859   $ 3,975,018  

Sofinnova Venture Partners VI, L.P.(3)

    2,502,950   $ 2,964,744  

RusnanoMedInvest(4)

    8,176,802   $ 9,685,422  

Foundation Medical Partners

    570,689   $ 675,981  

(1)
Nicole Vitullo, a member of our board of directors, is a managing member of One Palmer Square Associates VI, L.L.C, the general partner of Domain Partners VI, L.P. and DP VI Associates, L.P.

(2)
Stephen Bloch, M.D., a member of our board of directors, is a manager of Canaan Partners VII LLC, the general partner of Canaan VII L.P.

(3)
Anand Mehra, M.D. and Jay P. Shepard, members of our board of directors, are employees of Sofinnova Ventures.

(4)
Anton Gopka, a member of our board of directors, is a managing partner of RusnanoMedInvest.

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    Convertible Promissory Notes

        In July 2012, we issued an additional $300,000 of unsecured convertible promissory notes to certain of our stockholders for a total of $4.3 million, including $4.0 million in convertible promissory notes issued in January and October 2010. These convertible promissory notes, and related accrued interest, converted into shares of Series C convertible preferred stock in December 2012 and May 2013.

        In connection with the Series C convertible preferred stock financing, we entered into the Transfer Agreement, and related agreements, with DRI, an affiliate of Domain Partners VI, L.P. We incorporate by reference the description of these agreements included under the caption "Business— Collaborations—NovaMedica."

Investor Rights Agreement

        We entered into a second amended and restated investor rights agreement in December 2012 with the holders of our convertible preferred stock, including entities with which certain of our directors are affiliated. Upon consummation of this offering, we will enter into a third amended and restated investor rights agreement with the same parties. This agreement provides for certain registration rights (including the related provisions pursuant to which we have agreed to indemnify the parties to the investor rights agreement) that will continue following this offering and will terminate six years following the completion of this offering, or for any particular holder with registration rights, at such time following this offering when all securities held by that stockholder subject to registration rights may be sold pursuant to Rule 144 under the Securities Act in a three-month period. See "Description of Capital Stock—Registration Rights" for additional information.

Voting Agreement

        We entered into a second amended and restated voting agreement in December 2012 by and among us and certain of our stockholders, pursuant to which certain of our directors were each elected to serve as members on our board of directors and, as of the date of this prospectus, continue to so serve. The voting agreement will terminate upon the closing of this offering, and members previously elected to our board of directors pursuant to this agreement will continue to serve as directors until they resign, are removed or their successors are duly elected by holders of our common stock. The composition of our board of directors after this offering is described in more detail under "Management—Board Composition."

Participation in This Offering

        Certain of our stockholders have indicated an interest in purchasing an aggregate of approximately $             million in shares of our common stock in this offering at the initial public offering price. However, because indications of interest are not binding agreements or commitments to purchase, the underwriters may determine to sell more, less or no shares in this offering to any of these stockholders, and any of these stockholders may determine to purchase more, less or no shares in this offering.

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PRINCIPAL STOCKHOLDERS

        The following table sets forth certain information regarding the beneficial ownership of our capital stock outstanding as of April 30, 2014 by:

    each person, or group of affiliated persons, known by us to beneficially own more than 5% of our common stock;

    each of the members of our board of directors;

    each of our named executive officers; and

    all of the members of our board of directors and executive officers as a group.

        The percentage ownership information shown in the table is based on 53,000,460 shares of common stock outstanding as of April 30, 2014 assuming, immediately prior to consummation of this offering, the conversion of all of our outstanding shares of preferred stock as of April 30, 2014 into an aggregate of 49,802,103 shares of common stock, excluding common stock issuable upon the net share settlement of our outstanding warrants and conversion of the resulting shares of preferred stock, for which the number of shares to be issued is based on the initial public offering price of our common stock in this offering. The number of shares and percentage of shares beneficially owned after the offering gives effect to the issuance by us of shares of common stock in this offering. The percentage ownership information after this offering assumes no exercise of the underwriters' option to purchase additional shares of common stock.

        Each individual or entity shown in the table has furnished us with information with respect to beneficial ownership. We have determined beneficial ownership in accordance with the SEC's rules. These rules generally attribute beneficial ownership of securities to persons who possess sole or shared voting power or investment power with respect to those securities. In addition, the rules include shares of common stock issuable pursuant to the exercise of stock options, warrants or other rights that are either immediately exercisable or exercisable within 60 days after April 30, 2014. These shares are deemed to be outstanding and beneficially owned by the person holding those rights for the purpose of computing the percentage ownership of that person, but they are not treated as outstanding for the purpose of computing the percentage ownership of any other person. Unless otherwise indicated, the persons or entities identified in this table have sole voting and investment power with respect to all shares shown as beneficially owned by them, subject to applicable community property laws.

        Certain of our stockholders have indicated an interest in purchasing an aggregate of approximately $             million in shares of our common stock in this offering at the initial public offering price. However, because indications of interest are not binding agreements or commitments to purchase, the underwriters may determine to sell more, less or no shares in this offering to any of these stockholders, and any of these stockholders may determine to purchase more, less or no shares in this offering. The following table does not reflect any potential purchases by these stockholders or their affiliated entities.

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        Except as otherwise noted below, the address for each person or entity listed in the table is c/o Marinus Pharmaceuticals, Inc., 142 Temple St., Suite 205, New Haven, Connecticut 06510.

 
   
  Percentage of
Shares
Beneficially Owned
 
  Number of
Shares
Beneficially
Owned
Name and Address of Beneficial Owner
  Before
Offering
  After
Offering

5% or greater stockholders:

               

Domain Partners VI, L.P., DP VI Associates, L.P. and Domain Associates, LLC(1)

    13,758,485     26.0 %  

One Palmer Square

               

Suite 515

               

Princeton, NJ 08542

               

Canaan VII L.P.(2)

    11,936,589     22.5 %  

285 Riverside Ave., Suite 250

               

Westport, CT 06880

               

Sofinnova Venture Partners VI, L.P.(3)

    8,938,572     16.9 %  

2800 Sand Hill Road, Suite 150

               

Menlo Park, CA 94025

               

RusnanoMedInvest(4)

    8,176,802     15.4 %  

29, 1-St Brestskaya Street

               

Moscow, Russia

               

Foundation Medical Partners(5)

    3,806,272     7.2 %  

105 Rowayton Ave

               

Norwalk, CT 06853

               

Directors and Named Executive Officers:

               

Christopher M. Cashman(6)

    1,150,604     2.1 %  

Gail M. Farfel, Ph.D.(7)

    734,640     1.4 %  

Stephen Bloch, M.D.(8)

    276,570     *   *

Enrique J. Carrazana, M.D.(9)

    19,458     *   *

Tim M. Mayleben(10)

    276,570     *   *

Anand Mehra, M.D.(11)

    276,570     *   *

Jay P. Shepard(12)

    19,458     *   *

Nicole Vitullo

         

Anton Gopka

         

Edward F. Smith

         

All current executive officers and directors as a group(13) (10 persons)

    2,753,870     4.9 %  

*
Represents beneficial ownership of less than 1%.

(1)
Consists of: (a) 5,332,077 and 57,145 shares of common stock issuable upon conversion of shares of Series A convertible preferred stock to Domain Partners VI, L.P. and DP VI Associates, L.P., respectively, (b) 4,271,750 and 45,780 shares of common stock issuable upon conversion of shares of Series B convertible preferred stock to Domain Partners VI, L.P. and DP VI Associates, L.P., respectively, (c) 3,767,590 and 7,573 shares of common stock issuable upon conversion of shares of Series C convertible preferred stock to Domain Partners VI, L.P. and DP VI Associates, L.P., respectively, and (d) 276,570 shares of common stock beneficially owned by Domain Associates, LLC; and excludes            and            shares of common stock issuable upon the exercise and full conversion of warrants to purchase 1,067,937 and 11,445 shares of Series B convertible preferred stock to Domain Partners VI, L.P. and DP VI Associates, L.P., respectively, assuming an initial public

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    offering price of $            per share (the midpoint of the estimated offering price range set forth on the cover page of this prospectus).

    Ms. Vitullo, a member of our board of directors, is a managing member of One Palmer Square Associates VI, L.L.C., the general partner of Domain Partners VI, L.P. and DP VI Associates, L.P and a managing member of Domain Associates, LLC. The managing members of One Palmer Square Associates VI, L.L.C. share voting and investment power with respect to shares beneficially owned by Domain Partners VI, L.P. and DP VI Associates, L.P. and the managing members of Domain Associates, LLC share voting and investment power with respect to the shares beneficially owned by Domain Associates, LLC. Ms. Vitullo disclaims beneficial ownership of these shares except to the extent of her pecuniary interest therein. The percentage of shares beneficially owned after this offering would be        %, assuming the purchase of all of the shares that Domain Partners VI, L.P. and DP VI Associates, L.P. have indicated an interest in purchasing in this offering.

(2)
Consists of: (a) 4,742,516 shares of common stock issuable upon conversion of shares of Series A convertible preferred stock, (b) 3,838,214 shares of common stock issuable upon conversion of shares of Series B convertible preferred stock, and (c) 3,355,859 shares of common stock issuable upon conversion of shares of Series C convertible preferred stock; and excludes            shares of common stock issuable upon the exercise and full conversion of warrants to purchase 959,553 shares of Series B convertible preferred stock, assuming an initial public offering price of $            per share (the midpoint of the estimated offering price range set forth on the cover page of this prospectus).

The shares stated above are held directly by Canaan VII L.P. Canaan Partners VII LLC is the general partner of Canaan VII L.P., and may be deemed to have sole voting, investment and dispositive power over the shares held by Canaan VII L.P. The managers of Canaan Partners VII LLC are Dr. Bloch, a member of our board of directors, Brenton K. Ahrens, John V. Balen, Deepak Kamra, Gregory Kopchinsky, Wende S. Hutton, Maha Ibrahim, Guy M. Russo and Eric A. Young. Investment and voting decisions with respect to the shares held by Canaan VII L.P. are made by the managers of Canaan Partners VII LLC collectively. No stockholder, partner, director, officer, manager, member or employee of Canaan Partners VII LLC has beneficial ownership (within the meaning of Rule 13d-3 promulgated under the Exchange Act) of any shares held by Canaan VII L.P. The percentage of shares beneficially owned after this offering would be        %, assuming the purchase of all of the shares that Canaan VII L.P. has indicated an interest in purchasing in this offering.

(3)
Consists of: (a) 3,892,216 shares of common stock issuable upon conversion of shares of Series A convertible preferred stock, (b) 2,543,406 shares of common stock issuable upon conversion of shares of Series B convertible preferred stock, and (c) 2,502,950 shares of common stock issuable upon conversion of shares of Series C convertible preferred stock; and excludes            shares of common stock issuable upon the exercise and full conversion of warrants to purchase 635,851 shares of Series B convertible preferred stock, assuming an initial public offering price of $            per share (the midpoint of the estimated offering price range set forth on the cover page of this prospectus).

Anand Mehra, M.D. and Jay P. Shepard, members of our board of directors, are employees of Sofinnova Ventures. The managing members of Sofinnova Venture Partners VI, LLC share voting and investment power with respect to the shares beneficially owned by Sofinnova Venture Partners VI, L.P. Messrs. Mehra and Shepard are not managing members of Sofinnova Venture Partners VI, LLC and disclaim beneficial ownership of shares beneficially owned by Sofinnova Venture Partners VI, L.P., except to the extent of their pecuniary interest therein. The percentage of shares beneficially owned after this offering would be        %, assuming the purchase of all of the shares that Sofinnova Venture Partners VI, L.P. has indicated an interest in purchasing in this offering.

(4)
Consists of 8,176,802 shares of common stock issuable upon conversion of shares of Series C convertible preferred stock.

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    Anton Gopka, a member of our board of directors, is a managing partner of RusnanoMedInvest. Mr. Gopka disclaims beneficial ownership of shares beneficially owned by RusnanoMedInvest, except to the extent of his pecuniary interest therein. The percentage of shares beneficially owned after this offering would be        %, assuming the purchase of all of the shares that RusnanoMedInvest has indicated an interest in purchasing in this offering.

(5)
Consists of: (a) 1,796,407 shares of common stock issuable upon conversion of shares of Series A convertible preferred stock, (b) 1,439,176 shares of common stock issuable upon conversion of shares of Series B convertible preferred stock, and (c) 570,689 shares of common stock issuable upon conversion of shares of Series C convertible preferred stock and excludes            shares of common stock issuable upon the exercise and full conversion of warrants to purchase 359,794 shares of Series B convertible preferred stock, assuming an initial public offering price of $            per share (the midpoint of the estimated offering price range set forth on the cover page of this prospectus).

The shares stated above are held directly by Foundation Medical Partners I L.P. Foundation Medical Managers LLC is the general partner of Foundation Medical Partners I L.P., and may be deemed to have sole voting, investment and dispositive power over the shares held by Foundation Medical Partners I L.P. The managers of Foundation Medical Managers LLC are Drs. Lee Wrubel and Andrew Firlik. Investment and voting decisions with respect to the shares held by Foundation Medical Partners I L.P. are made by the managers of Foundation Medical Managers LLC collectively. No stockholder, partner, director, officer, manager, member or employee of Foundation Medical Managers LLC has beneficial ownership (within the meaning of Rule 13d 3 promulgated under the Exchange Act) of any shares held by Foundation Medical Partners I L.P. The percentage of shares beneficially owned after this offering would be        %, assuming the purchase of all of the shares that Foundation Medical Parnters I L.P. has indicated an interest in purchasing in this offering.

(6)
Includes options to purchase 1,150,604 shares of common stock exercisable within 60 days of April 30, 2014.

(7)
Includes options to purchase 734,640 shares of common stock exercisable within 60 days of April 30, 2014.

(8)
Includes options to purchase 276,570 shares of common stock exercisable within 60 days of April 30, 2014.

(9)
Includes options to purchase 19,458 shares of common stock exercisable within 60 days of April 30, 2014.

(10)
Includes options to purchase 276,570 shares of common stock exercisable within 60 days of April 30, 2014.

(11)
Includes options to purchase 276,570 shares of common stock exercisable within 60 days of April 30, 2014.

(12)
Includes options to purchase 19,458 shares of common stock exercisable within 60 days of April 30, 2014.

(13)
Includes options to purchase 2,753,870 shares of common stock exercisable within 60 days of April 30, 2014.

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DESCRIPTION OF CAPITAL STOCK

         The following is a summary of our capital stock and the material provisions of our certificate of incorporation and bylaws, as amended and restated effective upon consummation of this offering, the investor rights agreement to which we and certain of our stockholders are parties and the Delaware General Corporation Law. Because the following is only a summary, it does not purport to be complete or contain all of the information that may be important to you. For a complete description, you should refer to our certificate of incorporation, bylaws and investor rights agreement, copies of which have been filed as exhibits to the registration statement of which this prospectus is a part.

Common Stock

        Upon consummation of this offering, our authorized capital stock will consist of              shares,               of which will be designated as common stock with a par value of $0.001 per share and 25,000,000 of which will be designated as preferred stock with a par value of $0.001 per share. As of March 31, 2014, there were 53,000,460 shares of common stock outstanding, held by approximately 60 stockholders of record, and no shares of preferred stock outstanding. This amount assumes the conversion of all outstanding shares of our preferred stock, including 422,119 shares of preferred stock issued in April 2014, into common stock but excludes the net share settlement of all of our outstanding warrants and conversion of the resulting shares of preferred stock into common stock, which will occur immediately prior to consummation of this offering. In addition, as of March 31, 2014, we had options to purchase 6,930,040 shares of our common stock outstanding under our 2005 Stock Option and Incentive Plan, as amended.

    Voting Rights

        Each holder of our common stock is entitled to one vote for each share on all matters submitted to a vote of the stockholders, other than election of directors, which will be determined by a plurality of the votes cast by the stockholders entitled to vote on the election of such directors. Holders of our common stock do not have the right to cumulate their votes in elections of the directors.

    Dividends

        Subject to the preferences that may be applicable to any outstanding preferred stock, holders of our common stock are entitled to receive ratably any dividends that may be declared by the board of directors out of funds legally available for that purpose.

    Liquidation

        In the event of our liquidation, dissolution or winding up, holders of our common stock are entitled to share ratably in all assets remaining after payment of liabilities and the liquidation preference of any outstanding preferred stock.

    No Preemptive or Similar Rights

        Holders of our common stock have no preemptive, conversion or other similar rights, and there are no redemption or sinking fund provisions applicable to our common stock. The rights, preferences and privileges of the holders of our common stock are subject to and may be adversely affected by the rights of the holders of shares of any series of our preferred stock that we may designated in the future.

    Fully Paid and Nonassessable

        All of our outstanding shares of common stock are, and the shares of common stock to be issued in this offering will be, fully paid and nonassessable.

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    Change of control

        Please see "—Delaware Anti-Takeover Law and Provisions of Our Certificate of Incorporation and Bylaws" below for a discussion of provisions in our certificate of incorporation and bylaws that may have the effect of delaying, deferring or preventing a change in control of us.

Preferred Stock

        Immediately prior to consummation of this offering, all outstanding shares of our preferred stock will be converted into an aggregate of 49,802,103 shares of common stock. Under our certificate of incorporation that will be in effect upon the consummation of this offering, our board of directors has the authority, subject to limitations prescribed by Delaware law, to issue preferred stock in one or more series, to establish from time to time the number of shares to be included in each series and to fix the designation, powers, preferences and rights of the shares of each series and any of its qualifications, limitations and restrictions. Our board of directors also can increase or decrease the number of shares of any series, but not below the number of shares of that series then outstanding.

        Our board of directors may authorize the issuance of preferred stock with voting, conversion or other rights that could adversely affect the voting power or other rights of the holders of our common stock. The issuance of preferred stock, while providing flexibility in connection with possible acquisitions and other corporate purposes, could, among other things, have the effect of delaying, deferring or preventing a change in control of our company and may adversely affect the market price of our common stock and the voting and other rights of the holders of our common stock. We have no current plan to issue any shares of preferred stock.

Warrants

        In April 2014, we entered into a credit facility with Square 1 Bank and in connection with this facility issued to the lender a warrant with an 8-year term to purchase 37,991 shares of Series C convertible preferred stock at an exercise price of $1.1845 per share. This warrant will automatically net share settle in connection with this offering. In April 2009, we issued to our investors warrants with a 10-year term to purchase 3,055,163 shares of our Series B convertible preferred stock at an exercise price of $1.67 per share.

Registration Rights

        Under our investor rights agreement, following the closing of this offering, the holders of approximately              shares of common stock, including shares issuable upon exercise of the warrants, or their transferees, will have the right to require us to register their shares under the Securities Act so that those shares may be publicly resold, or to include their shares in any registration statement we file, in each case as further described below.

    Demand Registration Rights

        Following              , and subject to specified limitations set forth in the investor rights agreement, the holders of at least 50.0% of the then-outstanding registrable securities may, at any time, demand in writing that we register all or a portion of the registrable shares under the Securities Act if the total amount of registrable securities registered have an aggregate offering price of at least $5.0 million. We are not obligated to file a registration statement pursuant to this provision on more than two occasions.

        In addition, subject to specified limitations set forth in the investor rights agreement, at any time after we become eligible to file a registration statement on Form S-3, holders of the registrable securities then outstanding may request that we register their registrable securities on Form S-3 for purposes of a public offering if the total amount of registrable securities registered have an aggregate offering price of at least

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$1.0 million (after deductions for underwriters' discounts or commissions). We are not obligated to file a registration statement pursuant to this provision on more than two occasions in any 12-month period.

    Piggyback/Incidental Registration Rights

        If, at any time after the consummation of this offering, we propose to file a registration statement to register any of our securities under the Securities Act, either for our own account or for the account of any of our stockholders, subject to specified exceptions including registrations relating solely to employee benefit plans, registrations relating solely to a Rule 145 transaction and registrations relating to the offer and sale of debt securities, the holders of our registrable securities are entitled to notice of registration and, subject to any limitations that the underwriters in an underwritten offering may impose on the number of shares included in the registration, we will be required upon the holder's request to use our reasonable best efforts to register their then-held registrable securities.

    Other Provisions

        The investor rights agreement provides that, in connection with this offering and upon our or the underwriters' request, holders of registrable securities will be subject to a "lock-up" provision prohibiting the sale or other disposition of the our securities without our or the underwriters written consent for up to 180 days, subject to specified conditions.

        We will pay all registration expenses, other than any underwriting discount and commission and, in connection with a piggyback registration, other than applicable stock transfer fees, and the reasonable fees and expenses of a single special counsel for the selling stockholders, related to any demand or piggyback registration. The investor rights agreement contains customary cross-indemnification provisions, pursuant to which we are obligated to indemnify the selling stockholders in the event of material misstatements or omissions in the registration statement attributable to us, and they are obligated to indemnify us for material misstatements or omissions in the registration statement attributable to them.

        The registration rights of each holder expire as to that holder following the earlier of six years following this offering or the date on which the applicable holder holds less than 1% of our outstanding capital stock and all registrable securities held by the applicable holder may be sold under Rule 144 within a single 90-day period.

Delaware Anti-Takeover Law and Provisions of Our Certificate of Incorporation and Bylaws

    Delaware Anti-Takeover Law

        Upon the consummation of this offering, we will be subject to Section 203 of the Delaware General Corporation Law. Section 203 generally prohibits a public Delaware corporation from engaging in a "business combination" with an "interested stockholder" for a period of three years after the date of the transaction in which the person became an interested stockholder, unless:

    prior to the date of the transaction, the board of directors of the corporation approved either the business combination or the transaction which resulted in the stockholder becoming an interested stockholder;

    upon consummation of the transaction that resulted in the stockholder becoming an interested stockholder, the interested stockholder owned at least 85% of the voting stock of the corporation outstanding at the time the transaction commenced, excluding specified shares; or

    at or subsequent to the date of the transaction, the business combination is approved by the board of directors and authorized at an annual or special meeting of stockholders, and not by written consent, by the affirmative vote of at least 66 2 / 3 % of the outstanding voting stock which is not owned by the interested stockholder.

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        Section 203 defines a "business combination" to include:

    any merger or consolidation involving the corporation and the interested stockholder;

    any sale, lease, exchange, mortgage, pledge, transfer or other disposition of 10% or more of the assets of the corporation to or with the interested stockholder;

    subject to exceptions, any transaction that results in the issuance or transfer by the corporation of any stock of the corporation to the interested stockholder;

    subject to exceptions, any transaction involving the corporation that has the effect of increasing the proportionate share of the stock of any class or series of the corporation beneficially owned by the interested stockholder; or

    the receipt by the interested stockholder of the benefit of any loans, advances, guarantees, pledges or other financial benefits provided by or through the corporation.

        In general, Section 203 defines an "interested stockholder" as any person that is:

    the owner of 15% or more of the outstanding voting stock of the corporation;

    an affiliate or associate of the corporation who was the owner of 15% or more of the outstanding voting stock of the corporation at any time within three years immediately prior to the relevant date; or

    the affiliates and associates of the above.

        Under specific circumstances, Section 203 makes it more difficult for an "interested stockholder" to effect various business combinations with a corporation for a three-year period, although the stockholders may, by adopting an amendment to the corporation's certificate of incorporation or bylaws, elect not to be governed by this section, effective 12 months after adoption.

        Our certificate of incorporation and bylaws do not exclude us from the restrictions of Section 203. We anticipate that the provisions of Section 203 might encourage companies interested in acquiring us to negotiate in advance with our board of directors since the stockholder approval requirement would be avoided if a majority of the directors then in office approve either the business combination or the transaction that resulted in the stockholder becoming an interested stockholder.

    Certificate of Incorporation and Bylaws

        Provisions of our certificate of incorporation and bylaws that will be in effect upon the consummation of this offering may delay or discourage transactions involving an actual or potential change of control or change in our management, including transactions in which stockholders might otherwise receive a premium for their shares, or transactions that our stockholders might otherwise deem to be in their best interests. Therefore, these provisions could adversely affect the price of our common stock. Among other things, our certificate of incorporation and bylaws will:

    permit our board of directors to issue up to 25,000,000 shares of preferred stock, with any rights, preferences and privileges as it may designate;

    provide that all vacancies on our board of directors, including as a result of newly created directorships, may, except as otherwise required by law, be filled by the affirmative vote of a majority of directors then in office, even if less than a quorum;

    require that any action to be taken by our stockholders must be effected at a duly called annual or special meeting of stockholders and not be taken by written consent;

    provide that stockholders seeking to present proposals before a meeting of stockholders or to nominate candidates for election as directors at a meeting of stockholders must provide advance

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      notice in writing, and also specify requirements as to the form and content of a stockholder's notice;

    divide our board of directors into three classes with staggered three-year terms;

    provide that a director may be removed only for cause;

    provide that the authorized number of directors may be changed only by the resolution of our board of directors;

    provide that special meetings of our stockholders may be called only by the board of directors or by such person or persons requested by a majority of the board of directors to call such meetings; and

    provide that the Court of Chancery of the State of Delaware is the exclusive forum in which we and our directors may be sued by our stockholders.

Listing on The NASDAQ Global Market

        We intend to apply to list our common stock on The NASDAQ Global Market under the symbol "MRNS."

Transfer Agent and Registrar

        The transfer agent and registrar for our common stock is American Stock Transfer & Trust Company, LLC. The transfer agent and registrar's address is 6201 15th Avenue, Brooklyn, NY 11219.

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SHARES ELIGIBLE FOR FUTURE SALE

        Immediately prior to this offering, there was no public market for our common stock. Future sales of substantial amounts of our common stock in the public market could adversely affect prevailing market prices. Furthermore, since only a limited number of shares will be available for sale shortly after this offering because of contractual and legal restrictions on resale described below, sales of substantial amounts of common stock in the public market after the restrictions lapse could adversely affect the prevailing market price for our common stock as well as our ability to raise equity capital in the future.

        After consummation of this offering,              shares of common stock will be outstanding, assuming no exercise of the underwriters' option to purchase additional shares of common stock. All of the shares sold in this offering will be freely tradable unless held by an affiliate of ours. Except as set forth below, the remaining              shares of common stock outstanding after this offering will be "restricted securities" as that term is defined in Rule 144 under the Securities Act. These restricted securities will be subject in certain circumstances to the volume, manner of sale and other limitations under Rule 144 and Rule 701 under the Securities Act, each of which is summarized below. We expect that substantially all of these shares will be subject to the 180-day lock-up period under the lock-up agreements described below.

Rule 144

        In general, pursuant to Rule 144 under the Securities Act as in effect on the date of this prospectus, beginning 90 days after the effective date of the registration statement of which this prospectus is a part, a person who is not an affiliate of ours at any time during the three months preceding a sale, and who has held their shares for at least six months, as measured by SEC rule, including the holding period of any prior owner other than one of our affiliates, may sell shares without restriction, provided current public information about us is available. In addition, under Rule 144, any person who is not an affiliate of ours at any time during the three months preceding a sale, and who has held their shares for at least one year, as measured by SEC rule, including the holding period of any prior owner other than one of our affiliates, would be entitled to sell an unlimited number of shares immediately upon consummation of this offering without regard to whether current public information about us is available.

        Beginning 90 days after the effective date of the registration statement of which this prospectus is a part, a person who is an affiliate of ours and who has beneficially owned restricted securities for at least six months, as measured by SEC rule, including the holding period of any prior owner other than one of our affiliates, is entitled to sell a number of restricted shares within any three-month period that does not exceed the greater of:

    1.0% of the number of shares of our common stock then outstanding; and

    the average weekly trading volume of our common stock on The NASDAQ Global Market during the four calendar weeks preceding the filing of a notice on Form 144 with respect to the sale.

        Sales of restricted shares under Rule 144 held by our affiliates are also subject to requirements regarding the manner of sale, notice to the SEC and the availability of current public information about us. Rule 144 also requires that affiliates relying on Rule 144 to sell shares of our common stock that are not restricted shares must nonetheless comply with the same restrictions applicable to restricted shares, other than the holding period requirement.

        Notwithstanding the availability of Rule 144, certain holders of our restricted shares have entered into lock-up agreements as described below and their restricted shares will become eligible for sale at the expiration of the restrictions set forth in those agreements.

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Rule 701

        Pursuant to Rule 701 under the Securities Act, which provides an exemption from registration for certain compensatory securities, shares of our common stock acquired outright, upon the exercise of currently outstanding options or pursuant to other rights granted under a written compensatory stock or option plan or other written agreement in compliance with Rule 701, may be resold by:

    persons other than affiliates, beginning 90 days after the effective date of the registration statement of which this prospectus is a part, subject only to the manner of sale provisions of Rule 144; and

    our affiliates, beginning 90 days after the effective date of the registration statement of which this prospectus is a part, subject to the manner-of-sale and volume limitations, current public information and filing requirements of Rule 144, in each case, without compliance with the six-month holding period requirement of Rule 144.

        Options to purchase a total of 6,930,040 shares of common stock are outstanding, of which 4,536,195 were vested. Of the total number options,              are subject to contractual lock-up agreements with the underwriters described in this prospectus under "Underwriting" and will become eligible for sale at the expiration of those agreements.

Lock-up Agreements

        In connection with this offering, we, our officers and directors and holders of substantially all of our outstanding capital stock have agreed with the underwriters, subject to certain exceptions, not to dispose of or hedge any shares of our common stock or securities convertible into or exchangeable for shares of common stock during the period from the date of the lock-up agreement continuing through the date 180 days after the date of this prospectus, except with the prior written consent of Stifel, Nicolaus & Company, Incorporated and JMP Securities LLC.

        Following the lock-up periods set forth in the agreements described above, and assuming that Stifel, Nicolaus & Company, Incorporated and JMP Securities LLC do not release any parties from these agreements and that there is no extension of the lock-up period, all of the shares of our common stock that are restricted securities or are held by our affiliates as of the date of this prospectus will be eligible for sale in the public market in compliance with Rule 144 under the Securities Act.

Registration Rights

        Upon consummation of this offering, the holders of              shares of our common stock will be entitled to rights with respect to the registration of their shares under the Securities Act, subject to the lock-up arrangement described above, assuming the conversion of all of our outstanding convertible preferred stock and the net share settlement of all of our outstanding warrants and conversion of the resulting shares of preferred stock into common stock. Registration of these shares under the Securities Act would result in the shares becoming freely tradable without restriction under the Securities Act, except for shares purchased by affiliates, immediately upon the effectiveness of the registration statement of which this prospectus is a part. Any sales of securities by these stockholders could have a material adverse effect on the trading price of our common stock. See "Description of Capital Stock—Registration Rights" in this prospectus.

Equity Incentive Plans

        We intend to file one or more registration statements on Form S-8 under the Securities Act as soon as practicable upon the effectiveness of the registration statement of which this prospectus forms a part to register the shares of our common stock that are issuable pursuant to our 2005 Stock Option and Incentive Plan and our 2014 Equity Incentive Plan. The registration statements are expected to be filed and become effective as soon as practicable after the consummation of this offering. Accordingly, shares registered under the registration statements will be available for sale in the open market following their effective dates, subject to Rule 144 volume limitations and the lock-up arrangement described above, if applicable.

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MATERIAL U.S. TAX CONSIDERATIONS
FOR NON-U.S. HOLDERS OF OUR COMMON STOCK

        The following is a general discussion of material U.S. federal income and estate tax considerations relating to the ownership and disposition of our common stock by a non-U.S. holder. For purposes of this discussion, the term "non-U.S. holder" means a beneficial owner of our common stock that is not, for U.S. federal income tax purposes:

    an individual who is a citizen or resident of the U.S.;

    a corporation, or other entity treated as a corporation for U.S. federal income tax purposes, created or organized in or under the laws of the U.S. or of any political subdivision of the U.S.;

    an estate the income of which is subject to U.S. federal income taxation regardless of its source; or

    a trust, if a U.S. court is able to exercise primary supervision over the administration of the trust and one or more U.S. persons have authority to control all substantial decisions of the trust or if the trust has a valid election to be treated as a U.S. person under applicable U.S. Treasury Regulations.

        An individual may be treated as a resident instead of a nonresident of the U.S. in any calendar year for U.S. federal income tax purposes if the individual was present in the U.S. for at least 31 days in that calendar year and for an aggregate of at least 183 days during the three-year period ending with the current calendar year. For purposes of this calculation, all of the days present in the current year, one-third of the days present in the immediately preceding year and one-sixth of the days present in the second preceding year are counted. Residents are taxed for U.S. federal income tax purposes as if they were U.S. citizens.

        This discussion is based on current provisions of the Code, existing and proposed U.S. Treasury Regulations promulgated thereunder, current administrative rulings and judicial decisions, all as in effect as of the date of this prospectus and all of which are subject to change or to differing interpretation, possibly with retroactive effect. Any change could alter the tax consequences to non-U.S. holders described in this prospectus. In addition, the Internal Revenue Service, or the IRS, could challenge one or more of the tax consequences described in this prospectus.

        We assume in this discussion that each non-U.S. holder holds shares of our common stock as a capital asset (generally, property held for investment). This discussion does not address all aspects of U.S. federal income and estate taxation that may be relevant to a particular non-U.S. holder in light of that non-U.S. holder's individual circumstances nor does it address any aspects of U.S. state, local or non-U.S. taxes. This discussion also does not consider any specific facts or circumstances that may apply to a non-U.S. holder and does not address the special tax rules applicable to particular non-U.S. holders, such as:

    insurance companies;

    tax-exempt organizations;

    financial institutions;

    brokers or dealers in securities;

    regulated investment companies;

    pension plans;

    controlled foreign corporations;

    passive foreign investment companies;

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    owners that hold our common stock as part of a straddle, hedge, conversion transaction, synthetic security or other integrated investment; and

    certain U.S. expatriates.

        In addition, this discussion does not address the tax treatment of partnerships or persons who hold their common stock through partnerships or other entities that are pass-through entities for U.S. federal income tax purposes. A partner in a partnership or other pass-through entity that will hold our common stock should consult his, her or its own tax advisor regarding the tax consequences of the ownership and disposition of our common stock through a partnership or other pass-through entity, as applicable.

         Prospective investors should consult their own tax advisors regarding the U.S. federal, state, local and non-U.S. income and other tax considerations of acquiring, holding and disposing of our common stock.

Dividends

        If we pay distributions on our common stock, those distributions generally will constitute dividends for U.S. federal income tax purposes to the extent paid from our current or accumulated earnings and profits, as determined under U.S. federal income tax principles. If a distribution exceeds our current and accumulated earnings and profits, the excess will be treated as a tax-free return of the non-U.S. holder's capital and will first reduce the basis in our common stock, but not below zero, and then will be treated as a gain from the sale of stock, which will be subject to tax as described under the heading "—Gain on Disposition of Common Stock."

        Dividends paid to a non-U.S. holder generally will be subject to withholding of U.S. federal income tax at a 30.0% rate or such lower rate as may be specified by an applicable income tax treaty between the U.S. and such holder's country of residence. If we determine, at a time reasonably close to the date of payment of a distribution on our common stock, that the distribution will not constitute a dividend because we do not anticipate having current or accumulated earnings and profits, we may elect not to withhold U.S. federal income tax from such distribution as permitted by U.S. Treasury Regulations. Any such distribution made after June 30, 2014 will also be subject to the discussion below under the heading "—Withholding and Information Reporting Requirements—FATCA."

        Dividends that are treated as effectively connected with a trade or business conducted by a non-U.S. holder within the U.S., and, if an applicable income tax treaty so provides, that are attributable to a permanent establishment or a fixed base maintained by the non-U.S. holder within the U.S., are generally exempt from the 30.0% withholding tax if the non-U.S. holder provides a properly executed IRS Form W-8 ECI (or successor form). However, such U.S. effectively connected income, net of specified deductions and credits, is taxed at the same graduated U.S. federal income tax rates applicable to U.S. persons (as defined in the Code). Any U.S. effectively connected income received by a non-U.S. holder that is a corporation may also, under certain circumstances, be subject to an additional "branch profits tax" at a 30.0% rate or such lower rate as may be specified by an applicable income tax treaty between the U.S. and such holder's country of residence.

        A non-U.S. holder of our common stock who claims the benefit of an applicable income tax treaty between the U.S. and such holder's country of residence generally will be required to provide a properly executed IRS Form W-8BEN (or successor form) and satisfy applicable certification and other requirements. Non-U.S. holders are urged to consult their own tax advisors regarding their entitlement to benefits under a relevant income tax treaty.

        A non-U.S. holder that is eligible for a reduced rate of U.S. withholding tax under an income tax treaty may obtain a refund or credit of any excess amounts withheld by timely filing an appropriate claim with the IRS.

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Gain on Disposition of Common Stock

        A non-U.S. holder generally will not be subject to U.S. federal income tax on gain recognized on a disposition of our common stock unless:

    the gain is effectively connected with the non-U.S. holder's conduct of a trade or business in the U.S., and, if an applicable income tax treaty so provides, the gain is attributable to a permanent establishment or fixed base maintained by the non-U.S. holder in the U.S.; in these cases, the non-U.S. holder will be taxed on a net income basis at the regular graduated rates and in the manner applicable to U.S. persons, and, if the non-U.S. holder is a foreign corporation, an additional branch profits tax at a rate of 30.0%, or a lower rate as may be specified by an applicable income tax treaty, may also apply;

    the non-U.S. holder is an individual present in the U.S. for 183 days or more in the taxable year of the disposition and certain other requirements are met, in which case the non-U.S. holder will be subject to a 30.0% tax (or such lower rate as may be specified by an applicable income tax treaty) on the net gain derived from the disposition, which may be offset by U.S. source capital losses of the non-U.S. holder, if any; or

    we are or have been, at any time during the five-year period preceding such disposition (or the non-U.S. holder's holding period, if shorter) a "U.S. real property holding corporation" unless our common stock is regularly traded on an established securities market and the non-U.S. holder held no more than 5.0% of our outstanding common stock, directly or indirectly, during the shorter of the 5-year period ending on the date of the disposition or the period that the non-U.S. holder held our common stock. Generally, a corporation is a "U.S. real property holding corporation" if the fair market value of its "U.S. real property interests" equals or exceeds 50.0% of the sum of the fair market value of its worldwide real property interests plus its other assets used or held for use in a trade or business. Although there can be no assurance, we believe that we are not currently, and we do not anticipate becoming, a "U.S. real property holding corporation" for U.S. federal income tax purposes. No assurance can be provided that our common stock will be regularly traded on an established securities market for purposes of the rule described above.

        Gross proceeds from a sale or other disposition of our common stock made after December 31, 2016 will also be subject to the discussion below under the heading "—Withholding and Information Reporting Requirements—FATCA."

Information Reporting and Backup Withholding

        The gross amount of the distributions on our common stock paid to each non-U.S. holder and the tax withheld, if any, with respect to such distributions must be reported annually to the IRS. Non-U.S. holders may have to comply with specific certification procedures to establish that the holder is not a U.S. person (as defined in the Code) in order to avoid backup withholding at the applicable rate, currently 28.0%, with respect to dividends on our common stock. Generally, a holder will comply with such procedures if it provides a properly executed IRS Form W-8BEN (or other applicable Form W-8) or otherwise meets documentary evidence requirements for establishing that it is a non-U.S. holder, or otherwise establishes an exemption. Dividends paid to non-U.S. holders subject to withholding of U.S. federal income tax, as described above under the heading "Dividends," will generally be exempt from backup withholding.

        Information reporting and backup withholding generally will apply to the proceeds of a disposition of our common stock by a non-U.S. holder effected by or through the U.S. office of any broker, U.S. or foreign, unless the holder certifies its status as a non-U.S. holder and satisfies certain other requirements, or otherwise establishes an exemption. Generally, information reporting and backup withholding will not apply to a payment of disposition proceeds to a non-U.S. holder where the transaction is effected outside

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the U.S. through a non-U.S. office of a broker. However, for information reporting purposes, dispositions effected through a non-U.S. office of a broker with substantial U.S. ownership or operations generally will be treated in a manner similar to dispositions effected through a U.S. office of a broker. Non-U.S. holders should consult their own tax advisors regarding the application of the information reporting and backup withholding rules to them.

        Copies of information returns may be made available to the tax authorities of the country in which the non-U.S. holder resides or is incorporated under the provisions of a specific treaty or agreement.

        Backup withholding is not an additional tax. Any amounts withheld under the backup withholding rules from a payment to a non-U.S. holder can be refunded or credited against the non-U.S. holder's U.S. federal income tax liability, if any, provided that an appropriate claim is timely filed with the IRS.

Withholding and Information Reporting Requirements—FATCA

        The Foreign Account Tax Compliance Act ("FATCA") generally will impose a U.S. federal withholding tax on certain types of payments made to "foreign financial institutions" (as specially defined under these rules) and certain other non-U.S. entities if certification, information reporting and other specified requirements are not met. FATCA potentially imposes a 30% withholding tax on dividends on or gross proceeds from the sale or other disposition of our common stock if they are paid to a foreign financial institution or to a foreign non-financial entity, unless (i) the foreign financial institution undertakes certain diligence and reporting obligations and other specified requirements are satisfied or (ii) the foreign non-financial entity either certifies it does not have any substantial U.S. owners or furnishes identifying information regarding each substantial U.S. owner and other specified requirements are satisfied. If the payee is a foreign financial institution, it must enter into an agreement with the U.S. Treasury requiring, among other things, that it undertake to identify accounts held by certain U.S. persons or U.S.-owned foreign entities, annually report certain information about such accounts and withhold 30% on payments to account holders whose actions prevent it from complying with these reporting and other requirements. Under FATCA, withholding on dividends of our stock, will be required for payments made on or after July 1, 2014, and withholding on payments of gross proceeds from the sale or disposition of our stock will be required for payments made on or after January 1, 2017. An intergovernmental agreement between the United States and an applicable foreign country may modify the requirements described in this paragraph. Prospective investors should consult their tax advisors regarding the impact of this legislation on their investment in our common stock.

Federal Estate Tax

        Common stock owned or treated as owned by an individual (including by reason of holding interests in certain entities) who is a non-U.S. holder (as specially defined for U.S. federal estate tax purposes) at the time of death will be included in the individual's gross estate for U.S. federal estate tax purposes and, therefore, may be subject to U.S. federal estate tax, unless an applicable estate tax or other treaty provides otherwise.

         The preceding discussion of material U.S. federal tax considerations is for general information only. It is not tax advice. Prospective investors should consult their own tax advisors regarding the particular U.S. federal, state, local and non-U.S. tax consequences of purchasing, holding and disposing of our common stock, including the consequences of any proposed changes in applicable laws.

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UNDERWRITING

        Subject to the terms and conditions set forth in an underwriting agreement, each of the underwriters named below has severally agreed to purchase from us the aggregate number of shares of common stock set forth opposite their respective names below:

Underwriters
  Number of Shares

Stifel, Nicolaus & Company, Incorporated

   

JMP Securities LLC

   

Oppenheimer & Co. Inc. 

   

Janney Montgomery Scott LLC

   

Total

   

        The underwriting agreement provides that the obligations of the several underwriters are subject to various conditions, including approval of legal matters by counsel. The nature of the underwriters' obligations commits them to purchase and pay for all of the shares of common stock listed above if any are purchased. The underwriters reserve the right to withdraw, cancel or modify offers to the public and to reject orders in whole or in part.

        The underwriters expect to deliver the shares of common stock to purchasers on or about                        , 2014.

Over-Allotment Option

        We have granted a 30-day option to the underwriters to purchase up to a total of                additional shares of our common stock from us, at the initial public offering price, less the underwriting discounts and commissions payable by us, as set forth on the cover page of this prospectus. If the underwriters exercise this option in whole or in part, then each of the underwriters will be separately committed, subject to the conditions described in the underwriting agreement, to purchase the additional shares of our common stock in proportion to their respective commitments set forth in the table above. We will pay the expenses associated with the exercise of the option to purchase additional shares.

Lock-Up Agreements

        We and the holders (including all of our directors and executive officers) of substantially all of the shares of our common stock outstanding prior to this offering have agreed that, without the prior written consent of each of Stifel, Nicolaus & Company, Incorporated and JMP Securities LLC, we and they will not directly or indirectly:

    offer, sell, contract to sell (including any short sale), pledge, hypothecate, establish an open "put equivalent position" within the meaning of Rule 16a-1(h) under the Exchange Act, grant any option, right or warrant for the sale of, purchase any option or contract to sell, sell any option or contract to purchase, or otherwise encumber, dispose of or transfer, or grant any rights with respect to, directly or indirectly, any shares of common stock or securities convertible into or exchangeable or exercisable for any shares of common stock;

    enter into a transaction which would have the same effect, or enter into any swap, hedge or other arrangement that transfers, in whole or in part, any of the economic consequences of ownership of the common stock, whether any such transaction is to be settled by delivery of the common stock or other securities, in cash or otherwise; or

    publicly disclose the intention to do any of the foregoing,

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for a period of 180 days after the date of this prospectus. However, in the case of our officers, directors and stockholders, these lock-up restrictions will not apply to:

    bona fide gifts made by the holder;

    the surrender or forfeiture of shares of common stock to us to satisfy tax withholding obligations upon exercise or vesting of stock options or equity awards;

    transfers of common stock or any security convertible into or exercisable for common stock to an immediate family member, an immediate family member of a domestic partner or a trust for the benefit of the undersigned, a domestic partner or an immediate family member;

    transfers of shares of common stock or any security convertible into or exercisable for common stock to any corporation, partnership, limited liability company or other entity all of the beneficial ownership interests of which are held exclusively by the holder, a domestic partner and/or one or more family members of the holder or the holder's domestic partner in a transaction not involving a disposition for value;

    transfers of shares of common stock or any security convertible into or exercisable for common stock upon death by will or intestate succession;

    the exercise of any option or other right to acquire shares of common stock;

    transactions relating to securities acquired in open market transactions after the date of this prospectus; or

    transfers of securities pursuant to any order or decree of any court or governmental agency or body.

        Except for transfers related to securities acquired on the open market or in this offering or to the surrender or forfeiture of shares of common stock to us to satisfy tax withholding obligations upon exercise or vesting of stock options or equity awards or pursuant to a trading plan, as described above, any transferee under the excepted transfers above must agree in writing, prior to the transfer, to be bound by the lock-up agreements.

        Additionally, in our case, the lock-up restrictions will not apply to:

    shares sold in this offering;

    equity based awards granted pursuant to our equity incentive plans referred to in this prospectus, including any amendments to those plans, and shares of common stock issued upon the exercise of any equity based awards;

    shares of common stock issued upon the conversion of outstanding securities described in this prospectus;

    the filing of a registration statement on Form S-8 relating to the registration of shares issuable pursuant to our equity incentive plans; or

    shares of common stock issued in satisfaction of the accumulated dividend on our outstanding convertible preferred stock.

        Stifel, Nicolaus & Company, Incorporated and JMP Securities LLC, in their sole discretion, may release the common stock and other securities subject to the lock-up agreements described above in whole or in part at any time with or without notice. When determining whether or not to release common stock and other securities from lock-up agreements, Stifel, Nicolaus & Company, Incorporated and JMP Securities LLC will consider, among other factors, the holder's reasons for requesting the release, the number of shares of common stock and other securities for which the release is being requested and market conditions at the time.

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Determination of Offering Price

        Prior to this offering, there has been no public market for our common stock. The initial public offering price will be determined through negotiations between us and Stifel, Nicolaus & Company, Incorporated and JMP Securities LLC, as representatives of the several underwriters. In addition to prevailing market conditions, the factors to be considered in determining the initial public offering price will include:

    the information set forth in this prospectus and otherwise available to the representatives;

    our history and prospects, including our past and present financial performance and our prospects for future earnings;

    the history and prospects of companies in our industry;

    prior offerings of those companies;

    our capital structure;

    an assessment of our management and their experience;

    general conditions of the securities markets at the time of the offering; and

    other factors as we deem relevant.

        We cannot assure you that an active or orderly trading market will develop for our common stock or that our common stock will trade in the public markets subsequent to this offering at or above the initial public offering price.

Commissions and Expenses

        The underwriters propose to offer the shares of common stock directly to the public at the initial public offering price set forth on the cover page of this prospectus, and at this price less a concession not in excess of $            per share of common stock to other dealers specified in a master agreement among underwriters who are members of the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority, Inc. The underwriters may allow, and the other dealers specified may reallow, concessions not in excess of $            per share of common stock to these other dealers. After this offering, the offering price, concessions, and other selling terms may be changed by the underwriters. Our common stock is offered subject to receipt and acceptance by the underwriters and to certain other conditions, including the right to reject orders in whole or in part.

        The following table summarizes the compensation to be paid to the underwriters by us and the proceeds, before expenses, payable to us:

 
   
  Total  
 
  Per Share   Without
Over-Allotment
  With
Over-Allotment
 

Public offering price

  $   $     $    

Underwriting discounts and commissions

  $   $     $    

Proceeds, before expenses, to us

  $   $     $    

        Pursuant to the terms of the underwriting agreement, we have also agreed to reimburse the underwriters for certain expenses, including reasonable fees and expenses of counsel, relating to certain aspects of this offering that will not exceed $20,000.

        We estimate that the total expenses of the offering payable by us, including registration, filing and listing fees, printing fees and legal and accounting expenses, but excluding underwriting discounts and commissions, will be approximately $             million.

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Indemnification of Underwriters

        We will indemnify the underwriters against some civil liabilities, including liabilities under the Securities Act. If we are unable to provide this indemnification, we will contribute to payments the underwriters may be required to make in respect of those liabilities.

NASDAQ Market Listing

        We intend to apply to have our common stock listed on The NASDAQ Global Market under the symbol "MRNS."

Short Sales, Stabilizing Transactions and Penalty Bids

        In order to facilitate this offering, persons participating in this offering may engage in transactions that stabilize, maintain, or otherwise affect the price of our common stock during and after this offering. Specifically, the underwriters may engage in the following activities in accordance with the rules of the Securities and Exchange Commission.

        Short sales.     Short sales involve the sales by the underwriters of a greater number of shares than they are required to purchase in the offering. Covered short sales are short sales made in an amount not greater than the underwriters' option to purchase additional shares from us in this offering. The underwriters may close out any covered short position by either exercising their option to purchase additional shares or purchasing shares in the open market. In determining the source of shares to close out the covered short position, the underwriters will consider, among other things, the price of shares available for purchase in the open market as compared to the price at which they may purchase shares through their option to purchase additional shares. Naked short sales are any short sales in excess of such option. The underwriters must close out any naked short position by purchasing shares in the open market. A naked short position is more likely to be created if the underwriters are concerned that there may be downward pressure on the price of the common stock in the open market after pricing that could adversely affect investors who purchase in this offering.

        Stabilizing transactions.     The underwriters may make bids for or purchases of the shares for the purpose of pegging, fixing, or maintaining the price of the shares, so long as stabilizing bids do not exceed a specified maximum.

        Penalty bids.     If the underwriters purchase shares in the open market in a stabilizing transaction or syndicate covering transaction, they may reclaim a selling concession from the underwriters and selling group members who sold those shares as part of this offering. Stabilization and syndicate covering transactions may cause the price of the shares to be higher than it would be in the absence of these transactions. The imposition of a penalty bid might also have an effect on the price of the shares if it discourages resales of the shares.

        The transactions above may occur on The NASDAQ Global Market or otherwise. Neither we nor the underwriters make any representation or prediction as to the effect that the transactions described above may have on the price of the shares. If these transactions are commenced, they may be discontinued without notice at any time.

Discretionary Sales

        The underwriters have informed us that they do not expect to confirm sales of common stock offered by this prospectus to accounts over which they exercise discretionary authority without obtaining the specific approval of the account holder.

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Electronic Distribution

        A prospectus in electronic format may be made available on the internet sites or through other online services maintained by one or more of the underwriters participating in this offering, or by their affiliates. Other than the prospectus in electronic format, the information on any underwriter's web site and any information contained in any other web site maintained by an underwriter is not part of the prospectus or the registration statement of which this prospectus forms a part, has not been approved and/or endorsed by us or any underwriter in its capacity as underwriter and should not be relied upon by investors.

Relationships

        The underwriters and their respective affiliates are full service financial institutions engaged in various activities, which may include securities trading, commercial and investment banking, financial advisory, investment management, principal investment, hedging, financing and brokerage activities. Certain of the underwriters and their affiliates have in the past provided, and may in the future from time to time provide, investment banking and other financing and banking services to us, for which they have in the past received, and may in the future receive, customary fees and reimbursement for their expenses. In the ordinary course of their various business activities, the underwriters and their respective affiliates may make or hold a broad array of investments and actively trade debt and equity securities (or related derivative securities) and financial instruments (including bank loans) for their own account and for the accounts of their customers and may at any time hold long and short positions in such securities and instruments. Such investment and securities activities may involve our securities and instruments.

European Economic Area

        In relation to each member state of the European Economic Area that has implemented the Prospectus Directive (each, a relevant member state), with effect from and including the date on which the Prospectus Directive is implemented in that relevant member state (the relevant implementation date), an offer of securities described in this prospectus may not be made to the public in that relevant member state other than:

    to any legal entity that is authorized or regulated to operate in the financial markets or, if not so authorized or regulated, whose corporate purpose is solely to invest in securities;

    to any legal entity that has two or more of (1) an average of at least 250 employees during the last financial year; (2) a total balance sheet of more than €43,000,000 and (3) an annual net turnover of more than €50,000,000, as shown in its last annual or consolidated accounts;

    to fewer than 100 natural or legal persons (other than qualified investors as defined in the Prospectus Directive) subject to obtaining the prior consent of the representatives; or

    in any other circumstances that do not require the publication of a prospectus pursuant to Article 3 of the Prospectus Directive,

provided that no such offer of securities shall require us or any underwriter to publish a prospectus pursuant to Article 3 of the Prospectus Directive. For purposes of this provision, the expression an "offer of securities to the public" in any relevant member state means the communication in any form and by any means of sufficient information on the terms of the offer and the securities to be offered so as to enable an investor to decide to purchase or subscribe the securities, as the expression may be varied in that member state by any measure implementing the Prospectus Directive in that member state, and the expression "Prospectus Directive" means Directive 2003/71/EC and includes any relevant implementing measure in each relevant member state.

        We have not authorized and do not authorize the making of any offer of securities through any financial intermediary on their behalf, other than offers made by the underwriters with a view to the final

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placement of the securities as contemplated in this prospectus. Accordingly, no purchaser of the securities, other than the underwriters, is authorized to make any further offer of the securities on behalf of us or the underwriters.

United Kingdom

        This prospectus is only being distributed to, and is only directed at, persons in the United Kingdom that are qualified investors within the meaning of Article 2(1)(e) of the Prospectus Directive (Qualified Investors) that are also (i) investment professionals falling within Article 19(5) of the Financial Services and Markets Act 2000 (Financial Promotion) Order 2005 (the Order) or (ii) high net worth entities, and other persons to whom it may lawfully be communicated, falling within Article 49(2)(a) to (d) of the Order (all such persons together being referred to as relevant persons). This prospectus and its contents are confidential and should not be distributed, published or reproduced (in whole or in part) or disclosed by recipients to any other persons in the United Kingdom. Any person in the United Kingdom that is not a relevant person should not act or rely on this document or any of its contents.

France

        This prospectus has not been prepared in the context of a public offering of financial securities in France within the meaning of Article L.411-1 of the French Code Monétaire et Financier and Title I of Book II of the Reglement Général of the Autorité des marchés financiers (the "AMF") and therefore has not been and will not be filed with the AMF for prior approval or submitted for clearance to the AMF. Consequently, the shares of our common stock may not be, directly or indirectly, offered or sold to the public in France and offers and sales of the shares of our common stock may only be made in France to qualified investors (investisseurs qualifiés) acting for their own, as defined in and in accordance with Articles L.411-2 and D.411-1 to D.411-4, D.734-1, D.744-1, D.754-1 and D.764-1 of the French Code Monétaire et Financier. Neither this prospectus nor any other offering material may be released, issued or distributed to the public in France or used in connection with any offer for subscription on sale of the shares of our common stock to the public in France. The subsequent direct or indirect retransfer of the shares of our common stock to the public in France may only be made in compliance with Articles L.411-1, L.411-2, L.412-1 and L.621-8 through L.621-8-3 of the French Code Monétaire et Financier.

Germany

        Each person who is in possession of this prospectus is aware of the fact that no German securities prospectus (wertpapierprospekt) within the meaning of the securities prospectus act (wertpapier-prospektgesetz, the "act") of the federal republic of Germany has been or will be published with respect to the shares of our common stock. In particular, each underwriter has represented that it has not engaged and has agreed that it will not engage in a public offering in the federal republic of Germany (ôffertliches angebot) within the meaning of the act with respect to any of the shares of our common stock otherwise than in accordance with the act and all other applicable legal and regulatory requirements.

Switzerland

        The securities which are the subject of the offering contemplated by this prospectus may not be publicly offered in Switzerland and will not be listed on the SIX Swiss Exchange, or SIX, or on any other stock exchange or regulated trading facility in Switzerland. This prospectus has been prepared without regard to the disclosure standards for issuance prospectuses under art. 652a or art. 1156 of the Swiss Code of Obligations or the disclosure standards for listing prospectuses under art. 27 ff. of the SIX Listing Rules or the listing rules of any other stock exchange or regulated trading facility in Switzerland. None of this prospectus or any other offering or marketing material relating to the securities or the offering may be publicly distributed or otherwise made publicly available in Switzerland.

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        None of this prospectus or any other offering or marketing material relating to the offering, us or the securities have been or will be filed with or approved by any Swiss regulatory authority. In particular, this prospectus will not be filed with, and the offer of securities will not be supervised by, the Swiss Financial Market Supervisory Authority FINMA and the offer of securities has not been and will not be authorized under the Swiss Federal Act on Collective Investment Schemes, or CISA. The investor protection afforded to acquirers of interests in collective investment schemes under the CISA does not extend to acquirers of the securities.

Netherlands

        The offering of the shares of our common stock is not a public offering in The Netherlands. The shares of our common stock may not be offered or sold to individuals or legal entities in The Netherlands unless (i) a prospectus relating to the offer is available to the public, which has been approved by the Dutch Authority for the Financial Markets (Autoriteit Financiële Markten) or by the competent supervisory authority of another state that is a member of the European Union or party to the Agreement on the European Economic Area, as amended or (ii) an exception or exemption applies to the offer pursuant to Article 5:3 of The Netherlands Financial Supervision Act (Wet op het financieel toezicht) or Article 53 paragraph 2 or 3 of the Exemption Regulation of the Financial Supervision Act, for instance due to the offer targeting exclusively "qualified investors" (gekwalificeerde beleggers) within the meaning of Article 1:1 of The Netherlands Financial Supervision Act.

Japan

        The underwriters will not offer or sell any of the shares of our common stock directly or indirectly in Japan or to, or for the benefit of, any Japanese person or to others, for re-offering or re-sale directly or indirectly in Japan or to any Japanese person, except in each case pursuant to an exemption from the registration requirements of, and otherwise in compliance with, the Financial Instruments and Exchange Law of Japan and any other applicable laws and regulations of Japan. For purposes of this paragraph, "Japanese person" means any person resident in Japan, including any corporation or other entity organized under the laws of Japan.

Hong Kong

        The underwriters and each of their affiliates have not (1) offered or sold, and will not offer or sell, in Hong Kong, by means of any document, any shares of our common stock other than (a) to "professional investors" within the meaning of the Securities and Futures Ordinance (Cap. 571) of Hong Kong and any rules made under that Ordinance or (b) in other circumstances which do not result in the document being a "prospectus" as defined in the Companies Ordinance (Cap. 32) of Hong Kong or which do not constitute an offer to the public within the meaning of that Ordinance; and (2) issued or had in its possession for the purposes of issue, and will not issue or have in its possession for the purposes of issue, whether in Hong Kong or elsewhere any advertisement, invitation or document relating to the shares of our common stock which is directed at, or the contents of which are likely to be accessed or read by, the public in Hong Kong (except if permitted to do so under the securities laws of Hong Kong) other than with respect to the shares of our common stock which are or are intended to be disposed of only to persons outside Hong Kong or only to "professional investors" within the meaning of the Securities and Futures Ordinance and any rules made under that Ordinance. The contents of this document have not been reviewed by any regulatory authority in Hong Kong. You are advised to exercise caution in relation to the offer. If you are in any doubt about any of the contents of this document, you should obtain independent professional advice.

Singapore

        This document has not been registered as a prospectus with the Monetary Authority of Singapore. Accordingly, this document and any other document or material in connection with the offer or sale, or

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invitation for subscription or purchase, of shares of our common stock may not be circulated or distributed, nor may shares of our common stock be offered or sold, or be made the subject of an invitation for subscription or purchase, whether directly or indirectly, to persons in Singapore other than (i) to an institutional investor under Section 274 of the Securities and Futures Act, Chapter 289 of Singapore (the "Securities and Futures Act"), (ii) to a relevant person, or any person pursuant to Section 275(1A), and in accordance with the conditions, specified in Section 275 of the Securities and Futures Act or (iii) otherwise pursuant to, and in accordance with the conditions of, any other applicable provision of the Securities and Futures Act.

        Where shares of our common stock are subscribed or purchased under Section 275 by a relevant person, which is:

    (a)
    a corporation (which is not an accredited investor) the sole business of which is to hold investments and the entire share capital of which is owned by one or more individuals, each of whom is an accredited investor; or

    (b)
    a trust (where the trustee is not an accredited investor) whose sole purpose is to hold investments and each beneficiary is an accredited investor,

shares, debentures and units of shares and debentures of that corporation or the beneficiaries' rights and interest in that trust shall not be transferable for six months after that corporation or that trust has acquired the shares of our common stock under Section 275 except:

    (1)
    to an institutional investor or to a relevant person, or to any person pursuant to an offer that is made on terms that such rights or interest are acquired at a consideration of not less than $200,000 (or its equivalent in a foreign currency) for each transaction, whether such amount is to be paid for in cash or by exchange of securities or other assets;

    (2)
    where no consideration is given for the transfer; or

    (3)
    by operation of law.

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LEGAL MATTERS

        The validity of the shares of common stock being offered by this prospectus, as well as certain legal matters relating to us, will be passed upon for us by Duane Morris LLP, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Certain legal matters relating to the offering will be passed upon for the underwriters by Goodwin Procter LLP, New York, New York.


EXPERTS

        The financial statements of Marinus Pharmaceuticals, Inc. as of December 31, 2012 and 2013, and for the years then ended and for the period from August 14, 2003 (inception) to December 31, 2013, have been included herein and in this prospectus in reliance upon the report of KPMG LLP, independent registered public accounting firm, appearing elsewhere in the registration statement, upon the authority of said firm as experts in accounting and auditing.


WHERE YOU CAN FIND MORE INFORMATION

        We have filed with the SEC a registration statement on Form S-1 under the Securities Act with respect to the shares of common stock being offered by this prospectus. This prospectus, which constitutes a part of the registration statement, does not contain all of the information in the registration statement and the exhibits filed as part of the registration statement. For further information with respect to us and the common stock offered by this prospectus, you should refer to the registration statement and the exhibits filed as part of the registration statement. Statements contained in this prospectus as to the contents of any contract or any other document referred to are not necessarily complete, and in each instance, we refer you to the copy of the contract or other document filed as an exhibit to the registration statement. Each of such statements is qualified in all respects by this reference.

        You can read our SEC filings, including the registration statement, over the Internet at the SEC's website at http://www.sec.gov . You may also read and copy any document we file with the SEC at its public reference facilities at 100 F Street, N.E., Room 1580, Washington, D.C. 20549. You may also obtain copies of these documents at prescribed rates by writing to the Public Reference Section of the SEC at 100 F Street, N.E., Washington, D.C. 20549. Please call the SEC at 1-800-SEC-0330 for further information on the operation of the public reference facilities. You may also request a copy of these filings, at no cost, by writing us at Marinus Pharmaceuticals, Inc., 142 Temple St., Suite 205, New Haven, CT 06510, or by calling (203) 315-0566.

        Upon the effectiveness of the registration statement of which this prospectus is a part, we will be subject to the information and periodic reporting requirements of the Exchange Act, and we will file periodic reports, proxy statements and other information with the SEC. These reports, proxy statements and other information will be available for inspection and copying at the public reference room and website of the SEC referred to above. We also maintain a website at http://www.marinuspharma.com , at which you may access these materials free of charge as soon as reasonably practicable after they are electronically filed with, or furnished to, the SEC. The inclusion of our website address in this prospectus is intended to be an inactive textual reference only and not an active hyperlink to our website. The information contained in, or that can be accessed through, our website is not part of this prospectus.

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MARINUS PHARMACEUTICALS, INC.

INDEX TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

Report of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm

  F-2

Balance Sheets

  F-3

Statements of Operations

  F-4

Statements of Convertible Preferred Stock and Stockholders' Deficit

  F-5

Statements of Cash Flows

  F-6

Notes to Financial Statements

  F-7

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REPORT OF INDEPENDENT REGISTERED PUBLIC ACCOUNTING FIRM

The Board of Directors and Stockholders
Marinus Pharmaceuticals, Inc.

        We have audited the accompanying balance sheets of Marinus Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (a development-stage company) (the Company) as of December 31, 2012 and 2013, and the related statements of operations, convertible preferred stock and stockholders' deficit, and cash flows for the years then ended and for the period from August 14, 2003 (inception) to December 31, 2013. These financial statements are the responsibility of the Company's management. Our responsibility is to express an opinion on these financial statements based on our audits.

        We conducted our audits in accordance with the standards of the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board (United States). Those standards require that we plan and perform the audit to obtain reasonable assurance about whether the financial statements are free of material misstatement. An audit includes examining, on a test basis, evidence supporting the amounts and disclosures in the financial statements. An audit includes assessing the accounting principles used and significant estimates made by management, as well as evaluating the overall financial statement presentation. We believe that our audits provide a reasonable basis for our opinion.

        In our opinion, the financial statements referred to above present fairly, in all material respects, the financial position of Marinus Pharmaceuticals, Inc. as of December 31, 2012 and 2013, and the results of its operations and its cash flows for the years then ended and for the period from August 14, 2003 (inception) to December 31, 2013, in conformity with United States generally accepted accounting principles.

/s/ KPMG LLP

Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
April 4, 2014

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MARINUS PHARMACEUTICALS, INC.

(A DEVELOPMENT-STAGE COMPANY)

BALANCE SHEETS

 
  December 31,    
   
 
 
  March 31,
2014
  Pro Forma
March 31,
2014
 
 
  2012   2013  
 
   
   
  (Unaudited)
  (Unaudited)
 

ASSETS

                         

Current assets:

                         

Cash and cash equivalents

  $ 8,633,775   $ 10,037,123   $ 8,829,946   $ 8,829,946  

Deferred offering costs

            517,900     517,900  

Prepaid expenses and other current assets

    31,261     1,761,379     1,193,691     1,193,691  
                   

Total current assets

    8,665,036     11,798,502     10,541,537     10,541,537  

Property and equipment, net

    8,734     16,063     13,556     13,556  

Other assets

    8,330     9,380     9,380     9,380  
                   

Total assets

  $ 8,682,100   $ 11,823,945   $ 10,564,743   $ 10,564,743  
                   
                   

LIABILITIES AND STOCKHOLDERS' EQUITY (DEFICIT)

                         

Current liabilities:

                         

Convertible notes payable

  $ 2,670,521   $   $   $  

Accounts payable

    115,065     77,782     1,772,625     1,772,625  

Accrued expenses

    370,156     1,096,474     753,578     253,578  

Warrant liability

    1,344,200     1,191,514     763,791      
                   

Total current liabilities

    4,499,942     2,365,770     3,289,994     2,026,203  
                   

Commitments and contingencies (Note 9)

                         

Series A convertible preferred stock, $0.001 par value; 18,777,860 shares authorized, issued, and outstanding at December 31, 2012 and 2013 and March 31, 2014 (liquidation preference of $31,359,026 at March 31, 2014)

    30,596,604     30,596,604     30,596,604      

Series B convertible preferred stock, $0.001 par value; 15,275,824 shares authorized, 12,220,661 shares issued and outstanding at December 31, 2012 and 2013 and March 31, 2014 (liquidation preference of $30,407,017 at March 31, 2014)

    17,929,483     17,929,483     17,929,483      

Series C convertible preferred stock, $0.001 par value; 18,900,000 shares authorized, 9,654,443 shares issued and outstanding at December 31, 2012 and 18,381,463 shares issued and outstanding at December 31, 2013 and March 31, 2014 (liquidation preference of $23,839,418 at March 31, 2014)

    11,022,765     21,314,119     21,314,119      
                   

Stockholders' equity (deficit):

                         

Common stock, $0.001 par value; 65,100,000 shares authorized, 3,111,787 issued and 2,921,787 outstanding at December 31, 2012, 3,212,630 issued and 3,022,630 outstanding at December 31, 2013 and 3,388,357 issued and 3,198,357 outstanding at March 31, 2014 and                issued and outstanding at March 31, 2014, pro forma

    3,112     3,213     3,388     53,015  

Additional paid-in capital

    863,544     1,117,961     1,169,396     72,223,766  

Treasury stock at cost, 190,000 shares at December 31, 2012 and 2013, March 31, 2014 and pro forma

    (190 )   (190 )   (190 )   (190 )

Deficit accumulated during the development stage

    (56,233,160 )   (61,503,015 )   (63,738,321 )   (63,738,321 )
                   

Total stockholders' equity (deficit)

    (55,366,694 )   (60,382,031 )   (62,565,727 )   8,538,270  
                   

Total liabilities and stockholders' equity (deficit)

  $ 8,682,100   $ 11,823,945   $ 10,564,473   $ 10,564,473  
                   
                   

   

See accompanying notes to financial statements.

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MARINUS PHARMACEUTICALS, INC.

(A DEVELOPMENT-STAGE COMPANY)

STATEMENTS OF OPERATIONS

 
   
   
  Period From
August 14,
2003
(Inception) to
December 31,
2013
   
   
  Period From
August 14,
2003
(Inception) to
March 31,
2014
 
 
  Year Ended December 31,   Three Months Ended March 31,  
 
  2012   2013   2013   2014  
 
   
   
   
  (unaudited)
  (unaudited)
 

Revenue

  $ 100,000   $   $ 688,469   $   $   $ 688,469  
                           

Expenses:

                                     

Research and development

    845,556     4,150,101     50,945,043     747,283     2,148,672     53,093,715  

General and administrative

    685,099     1,228,701     11,979,531     180,119     516,544     12,496,075  
                           

Total expenses

    1,530,655     5,378,802     62,924,574     927,402     2,665,216     65,589,790  
                           

Loss from operations

    (1,430,655 )   (5,378,802 )   (62,236,105 )   (927,402 )   (2,665,216 )   (64,901,321 )

Change in fair value of warrant liability

    336,050     152,686     824,786         427,723     1,252,509  

Interest income

    2,661     19,055     2,168,449     3,587     4,447     2,172,896  

Interest expense

    (320,782 )   (90,611 )   (2,764,593 )   (46,078 )       (2,764,593 )

State tax benefit (expense)

    4,181     27,817     504,448     250     (2,260 )   502,188  
                           

Net loss

    (1,408,545 )   (5,269,855 ) $ (61,503,015 )   (969,643 )   (2,235,306 ) $ (63,738,321 )
                                   
                                   

Cumulative preferred stock dividends

    (2,185,737 )   (3,804,023 )         (785,961 )   (1,070,682 )      
                               

Net loss applicable to common stockholders

  $ (3,594,282 ) $ (9,073,878 )       $ (1,755,604 ) $ (3,305,988 )      
                               
                               

Per share information:

                                     

Net loss per share of common stock—basic and diluted

  $ (1.23 ) $ (3.02 )       $ (0.59 ) $ (1.09 )      
                               
                               

Basic and diluted weighted average shares outstanding

    2,921,787     3,009,260           2,983,547     3,032,393        
                               
                               

Pro forma net loss per share of common stock—basic and diluted (unaudited)

        $                 $          
                                   
                                   

Pro forma basic and diluted weighted average shares outstanding (unaudited)

                                     
                                   
                                   

   

See accompanying notes to financial statements.

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MARINUS PHARMACEUTICALS, INC.

(A DEVELOPMENT-STAGE COMPANY)

STATEMENTS OF CONVERTIBLE PREFERRED STOCK AND STOCKHOLDERS' DEFICIT

PERIOD FROM AUGUST 14, 2003 (INCEPTION) TO MARCH 31, 2014

 
  Convertible Preferred Stock   Stockholders' Deficit  
 
  Series A   Series B   Series C   Common Stock    
  Treasury Stock    
   
 
 
  Additional Paid-in Capital   Deficit Accumulated During the Development Stage    
 
 
  Shares   Amount   Shares   Amount   Shares   Amount   Shares   Amount   Shares   Amount   Total Stockholders' Deficit  

Balance, August 14, 2003 (Inception)

      $       $       $       $   $       $   $   $  

Issuance of common stock to founders

                            1,000     1     99                 100  

Net loss

                                                (61,443 )   (61,443 )
                                                       

Balance, December 31, 2003

                            1,000     1     99             (61,443 )   (61,343 )

Issuance of common stock to founders

                            787,600     788     66                 854  

Stock-based compensation expense

                                    8,504                 8,504  

Net loss

                                                (1,538,149 )   (1,538,149 )
                                                       

Balance, December 31, 2004

                            788,600     789     8,669             (1,599,592 )   (1,590,134 )

Issuance of common stock to employees and consultants

                            1,401,400     1,401     825                 2,226  

Issuance of common stock for license fees

                            10,000     10     1,590                 1,600  

Issuance of preferred stock and conversion of notes

    17,588,048     28,609,618                                              

Beneficial conversion of Series A Convertible Notes

                                    430,671                 430,671  

Issuance of preferred stock for license fees

    1,059,523     1,769,403                                              

Repurchase of common stock

                                        190,000     (190 )       (190 )

Stock-based compensation expense

                                    5,099                 5,099  

Net loss

                                                (5,114,168 )   (5,114,168 )
                                                       

Balance, December 31, 2005

    18,647,571     30,379,021                     2,200,000     2,200     446,854     190,000     (190 )   (6,713,760 )   (6,264,896 )

Stock-based compensation expense

                                    17,110                 17,110  

Net loss

                                                (7,281,460 )   (7,281,460 )
                                                       

Balance, December 31, 2006

    18,647,571     30,379,021                     2,200,000     2,200     463,964     190,000     (190 )   (13,995,220 )   (13,529,246 )

Stock-based compensation expense

                                    11,990                 11,990  

Exercise of stock options

                            150,469     150     25,429                 25,579  

Net loss

                                                (13,377,404 )   (13,377,404 )
                                                       

Balance, December 31, 2007

    18,647,571     30,379,021                     2,350,469     2,350     501,383     190,000     (190 )   (27,372,624 )   (26,869,081 )

Stock-based compensation expense

                                    5,128                 5,128  

Issuance of preferred stock for license fees

    130,289     217,583                                              

Exercise of stock options

                            131,000     131     22,139                 22,270  

Net loss

                                                (16,778,769 )   (16,778,769 )
                                                       

Balance, December 31, 2008

    18,777,860     30,596,604                     2,481,469     2,481     528,650     190,000     (190 )   (44,151,393 )   (43,620,452 )

Stock-based compensation expense

                                    46,467                 46,467  

Issuance of common stock for license fees

                            630,318     631     100,220                 100,851  

Issuance of preferred stock and warrants and conversion of notes

            12,220,661     17,929,483                                      

Net loss

                                                (7,891,706 )   (7,891,706 )
                                                       

Balance, December 31, 2009

    18,777,860     30,596,604     12,220,661     17,929,483             3,111,787     3,112     675,337     190,000     (190 )   (52,043,099 )   (51,364,840 )

Stock-based compensation expense

                                    16,758                 16,758  

Net loss

                                                (1,465,478 )   (1,465,478 )
                                                       

Balance, December 31, 2010

    18,777,860     30,596,604     12,220,661     17,929,483             3,111,787     3,112     692,095     190,000     (190 )   (53,508,577 )   (52,813,560 )

Stock-based compensation expense

                                    50,850                 50,850  

Net loss

                                                (1,316,038 )   (1,316,038 )
                                                       

Balance, December 31, 2011

    18,777,860     30,596,604     12,220,661     17,929,483             3,111,787     3,112     742,945     190,000     (190 )   (54,824,615 )   (54,078,748 )

Stock-based compensation expense

                                    120,599                 120,599  

Issuance of preferred stock and conversion of notes

                    9,654,443     11,022,765                              

Net loss

                                                (1,408,545 )   (1,408,545 )
                                                       

Balance, December 31, 2012

    18,777,860     30,596,604     12,220,661     17,929,483     9,654,443     11,022,765     3,111,787     3,112     863,544     190,000     (190 )   (56,233,160 )   (55,366,694 )

Stock-based compensation expense

                                    236,365                 236,365  

Issuance of preferred stock and conversion of notes

                    8,727,020     10,291,354                              

Exercise of stock options

                            100,843     101     18,052                 18,153  

Net loss

                                                (5,269,855 )   (5,269,855 )
                                                       

Balance, December 31, 2013

    18,777,860     30,596,604     12,220,661     17,929,483     18,381,463     21,314,119     3,212,630     3,213     1,117,961     190,000     (190 )   (61,503,015 )   (60,382,031 )

Stock-based compensation expense (unaudited)

                                    23,493                 23,493  

Exercise of stock options (unaudited)

                            175,727     175     27,942                 28,117  

Net loss (unaudited)

                                                (2,235,306 )   (2,235,306 )
                                                       

Balance, March 31, 2014 (unaudited)

    18,777,860   $ 30,596,604     12,220,661   $ 17,929,483     18,381,463   $ 21,314,119     3,388,357   $ 3,388   $ 1,169,396     190,000   $ (190 ) $ (63,738,321 ) $ (62,565,727 )
                                                       
                                                       


See accompanying notes to financial statements.


 

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MARINUS PHARMACEUTICALS, INC.

(A DEVELOPMENT-STAGE COMPANY)

STATEMENTS OF CASH FLOWS

 
   
   
  Period From
August 14, 2003
(Inception) to
December 31,
2013
  Three Months Ended March 31,   Period From
August 14, 2003
(Inception) to
March 31,
2014
 
 
  Year Ended December 31,  
 
  2012   2013   2013   2014  
 
   
   
   
  (unaudited)
  (unaudited)
 

Cash flows from operating activities

                                     

Net loss

  $ (1,408,545 ) $ (5,269,855 ) $ (61,503,015 ) $ (969,643 ) $ (2,235,306 ) $ (63,738,321 )

Adjustments to reconcile net loss to net cash used in operating activities:

                                     

Depreciation and amortization

    17,902     9,790     561,234     2,924     2,507     563,741  

Stock-based compensation expense

    120,599     236,365     518,870     16,454     23,493     542,363  

Noncash interest on convertible notes payable

    305,206     90,498     2,471,530     45,999         2,471,530  

Change in fair value of warrant liability

    (336,050 )   (152,686 )   (824,786 )       (427,723 )   (1,252,509 )

Loss on disposal of fixed assets

            62,968             62,968  

Acquired in-process research and development

            2,289,437             2,289,437  

Changes in operating assets and liabilities:

                                     

Prepaid expenses and other assets

    40,383     (1,731,168 )   (1,770,759 )   7,457     567,688     (1,203,071 )

Accounts payable and accrued expenses

    32,077     189,035     674,256     197,833     944,047     1,618,303  
                           

Net cash used in operating activities

    (1,228,428 )   (6,628,021 )   (57,520,265 )   (698,976 )   (1,125,294 )   (58,645,559 )
                           

Cash flows from investing activities

                                     

Purchases of property and equipment

    (5,472 )   (17,119 )   (640,265 )   (4,009 )       (640,265 )

Purchase of license

            (200,000 )           (200,000 )

Purchase of short-term investments

            (23,462,743 )           (23,462,743 )

Maturities of short-term investments

            23,462,743             23,462,743  
                           

Net cash used in investing activities

    (5,472 )   (17,119 )   (840,265 )   (4,009 )       (840,265 )
                           

Cash flows from financing activities

                                     

Proceeds from exercise of stock options

        18,153     66,002     14,429     28,117     94,119  

Proceeds from investor deposit

        500,000     500,000             500,000  

Proceeds from notes payable

    300,000         23,049,536             23,049,536  

Proceeds from issuance of convertible preferred stock and common stock, net of offering costs

    8,581,778     7,530,335     46,167,952     (22,287 )   (110,000 )   46,057,952  

Payments on notes payable

            (1,385,837 )           (1,385,837 )
                           

Net cash provided (used in) by financing activities

    8,881,778     8,048,488     68,397,653     (7,858 )   (81,883 )   68,315,770  
                           

Net increase (decrease) in cash and cash equivalents

    7,647,878     1,403,348     10,037,123     (710,843 )   (1,207,177 )   8,829,946  

Cash and cash equivalents—beginning of period

    985,897     8,633,775         8,633,775     10,037,123      
                           

Cash and cash equivalents—end of period

  $ 8,633,775   $ 10,037,123   $ 10,037,123   $ 7,922,932   $ 8,829,946   $ 8,829,946  
                           
                           

Supplemental disclosure of cash flow information

                                     

Conversion of notes principal and accrued interest to preferred stock

  $ 2,440,987   $ 2,761,019   $ 23,704,558   $   $   $ 23,704,558  
                           
                           

Cash paid for interest

  $ 15,576   $   $ 250,546   $   $   $ 250,546  
                           
                           

Fair value of warrant issued in connection with preferred stock

  $   $   $ 2,016,300   $   $   $ 2,016,300  
                           
                           

   

See accompanying notes to financial statements.

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Table of Contents


MARINUS PHARMACEUTICALS, INC.

(A DEVELOPMENT-STAGE COMPANY)

NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

(Information as of March 31, 2014 and for the three months ended
March 31, 2013 and 2014 is unaudited)

1. Organization and Description of the Business

        Marinus is a biopharmaceutical company dedicated to the development of innovative neuropsychiatric therapeutics. Our clinical stage product candidate, ganaxolone, is a synthetic small molecule that is an analog of allopregnanolone, a natural occurring neurosteriod produced by the human body, which modulates gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA), a neurotransmitter in the brain. GABA and its well-characterized central nervous system (CNS) receptor target, a unique binding site on GABA A receptors, have been implicated as playing an important role in certain seizures, psychiatric and developmental disorders. We have operated as a development-stage company since our inception and Delaware incorporation in August 2003 and accordingly, our operations to date have been directed primarily toward developing business strategies, raising capital, research and development activities and conducting preclinical testing and human clinical trials of our product candidates.

Liquidity

        We have not generated any product revenues and have incurred operating losses since inception. There is no assurance that profitable operations will ever be achieved, and if achieved, could be sustained on a continuing basis. In addition, development activities, clinical and preclinical testing, and commercialization of our product candidates will require significant additional financing. Our deficit accumulated during the development stage through March 31, 2014 was $63.7 million and we expect to incur substantial losses in future periods.

        We plan to finance our future operations with a combination of proceeds from the issuance of equity securities, the issuance of additional debt, potential collaborations and revenues from potential future product sales, if any. We have not generated positive cash flows from operations, and there are no assurances that we will be successful in obtaining an adequate level of financing for the development and commercialization of our planned product candidates. Our cash and cash equivalents balance as of March 31, 2014 is adequate to fund our operations into the middle of 2015 and we believe that our net proceeds from our initial public offering, if successful, will provide adequate financial resources to fund our operations for at least the next 24 months; however, there can be no assurance in this regard. Such endeavors primarily include raising additional capital from stockholders or securing additional external financing. We may not be able to obtain additional funding on favorable terms, if at all. If we are unable to secure adequate additional funding, our business, operating results, financial condition and cash flows may be materially and adversely affected.

Unaudited Interim Results

        The accompanying balance sheet as of March 31, 2014, the statements of operations and cash flows for the three months ended March 31, 2013 and March 31, 2014 and the statements of convertible preferred stock and stockholders' deficit for the three months ended March 31, 2014 are unaudited. The unaudited internal financial statements have been prepared on the same basis as the annual financial statements and in the opinion of management reflect all adjustments, which include only normal recurring adjustments, necessary to present fairly our financial position and results of operations and cash flows for the periods presented. The financial data and other information disclosed in these notes to the financial statements related to the three month and subsequent periods are unaudited. The results for the three months ended March 31, 2014 are not necessarily indicative of the results to be expected for the year ending December 31, 2014 or for any other interim period or for any other future year.

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MARINUS PHARMACEUTICALS, INC.

(A DEVELOPMENT-STAGE COMPANY)

NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (Continued)

(Information as of March 31, 2014 and for the three months ended
March 31, 2013 and 2014 is unaudited)

1. Organization and Description of the Business (Continued)

Unaudited Pro Forma Presentation

        In February 2014, our board of directors authorized management to confidentially submit a registration statement to the Securities and Exchange Commission, or the SEC, to potentially sell shares of common stock to the public.

        The unaudited pro forma balance sheet as of March 31, 2014 reflects:

    The automatic conversion of all outstanding shares of preferred stock into 49,802,103 shares of common stock upon the closing of the Company's initial public offering (IPO), including 422,119 shares of Series C convertible preferred stock ("Series C Preferred Stock") issued in April 2014 reflected as an investor deposit in accrued expenses as of March 31, 2014. The shares of common stock and any related estimated net proceeds are excluded from the pro forma information.

    The exercise of all outstanding warrants to purchase 3,055,163 shares of Series B convertible preferred stock ("Series B Preferred Stock") and 37,991 shares of Series C Preferred Stock and the conversion of the resulting convertible preferred stock into            shares of common stock upon the closing of the IPO assuming net share settlement.

2. Summary of Significant Accounting Policies

Use of Estimates

        The preparation of financial statements in conformity with generally accepted accounting principles, or GAAP, requires management to make estimates and assumptions that affect the reported amounts of assets and liabilities and disclosure of contingent assets and liabilities at the date of the financial statements and the reported amounts of revenues and expenses during the reporting period. Actual results could differ from such estimates.

Fair Value of Financial Instruments and Credit Risk

        At December 31, 2012 and 2013 and March 31, 2014, our financial instruments included cash and cash equivalents, accounts payable, accrued expenses, convertible notes payable and derivative liabilities. The carrying amount of cash and cash equivalents, accounts payable and accrued expenses approximates fair value, given their short-term nature. The carrying amount of our convertible notes payable approximate fair value because the interest rates on these instruments are reflective of rates that we could obtain on unaffiliated third-party debt with similar terms and conditions. The carrying value of the derivative liabilities are the estimated fair value of the liability as more fully described below.

        Cash and cash equivalents subject us to concentrations of credit risk. However, we invest our cash in accordance with a policy objective that seeks to ensure both liquidity and safety of principal. The policy limits investments to instruments issued by the U.S. government and certain SEC-registered money market funds that invest only in U.S. government obligations and places restrictions on portfolio maturity terms.

Cash and Cash Equivalents

        We consider all highly liquid investments that have maturities of three months or less when acquired to be cash equivalents. As of December 31, 2012 and 2013 and March 31, 2014, we invested a portion of

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Table of Contents


MARINUS PHARMACEUTICALS, INC.

(A DEVELOPMENT-STAGE COMPANY)

NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (Continued)

(Information as of March 31, 2014 and for the three months ended
March 31, 2013 and 2014 is unaudited)

2. Summary of Significant Accounting Policies (Continued)

our cash balances in money market investments, which we have included as cash equivalents on our balance sheets.

Property and Equipment

        Property and equipment consist of laboratory and office equipment and are recorded at cost. Property and equipment are depreciated on a straight-line basis over their estimated useful lives. We estimate a life of three years for computer equipment, including software, and five years for laboratory equipment, office equipment, and furniture. When property and equipment are sold or otherwise disposed of, the cost and related accumulated depreciation are removed from the accounts and the resulting gain or loss is included in operating expenses.

Impairment of Long-Lived Assets

        We review long-lived assets, including property and equipment, for impairment whenever events or changes in business circumstances indicate that the carrying amount of an asset may not be fully recoverable. If the estimated undiscounted future cash flows expected to result from the use of the asset and its eventual disposition is less than its carrying amount an impairment loss would be recognized if the carrying value of the asset exceeded its fair value. Fair value is generally determined using discounted cash flows. Through March 31, 2014, no impairment has occurred.

Revenue Recognition

        We follow Accounting Standards Update, or ASU, 2009-13, "Multiple-Deliverable Revenue Arrangements," which amends ASC 605-25, "Revenue Recognition—Multiple Element Arrangements," and also adopted ASU 2010-17, "Revenue Recognition—Milestone Method."

        In accordance with ASU 2009-13, we consider whether the deliverables under the arrangement represent separate units of accounting. In determining the units of accounting, management evaluates certain criteria, including whether the deliverables have stand-alone value. The consideration received is allocated to the separate units of accounting using the relative selling price method, and the applicable revenue recognition criteria are applied to each of the separate units.

        We recognize grant revenue when persuasive evidence of an arrangement exists, delivery has occurred or services have been rendered, the price is fixed and determinable, and collectability is reasonably assured. Grant revenue relates primarily to a federal grant for $488,959 received from the U.S. Internal Revenue Service under the Qualifying Therapeutic Discovery Project program in 2010 and from other grants received under government sponsored research programs.

        In December 2012, we recognized $100,000 for a license fee from Domain Russia Investments Limited, an affiliate of a significant stockholder, in connection with the license of our patents along with the rights to develop and commercialize ganaxolone in Russia and certain other eastern European nations.

Research and Development

        Research and development costs are expensed as incurred. Costs for certain development activities, such as clinical trials, are recognized based on an evaluation of the progress to completion of specific tasks using data such as subject enrollment, clinical site activations, or information provided to us by our vendors

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MARINUS PHARMACEUTICALS, INC.

(A DEVELOPMENT-STAGE COMPANY)

NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (Continued)

(Information as of March 31, 2014 and for the three months ended
March 31, 2013 and 2014 is unaudited)

2. Summary of Significant Accounting Policies (Continued)

with respect to their actual costs incurred. Payments for these activities are based on the terms of the individual arrangements, which may differ from the pattern of costs incurred, and are reflected in the financial statements as prepaid or accrued research and development expense, as the case may be.

Income Taxes

        We recognize deferred tax assets and liabilities for temporary differences between the financial reporting basis and the tax basis of our assets and liabilities and the expected benefits of net operating loss carryforwards. The impact of changes in tax rates and laws on deferred taxes, if any, applied during the years in which temporary differences are expected to be settled, is reflected in the financial statements in the period of enactment. The measurement of deferred tax assets is reduced, if necessary, if, based on weight of the evidence, it is more likely than not that some, or all, of the deferred tax assets will not be realized. The effect on deferred tax assets and liabilities of a change in tax rates is recognized in the period that such tax rate changes are enacted. At December 31, 2012 and 2013 and March 31, 2014, we have concluded that a full valuation allowance is necessary for our net deferred tax assets. We had no material amounts recorded for uncertain tax positions, interest or penalties in the accompanying consolidated financial statements.

Loss Per Share of Common Stock

        Basic loss per share is computed by dividing net loss applicable to common stockholders by the weighted average number of shares of common stock outstanding during each period. Diluted loss per share includes the effect, if any, from the potential exercise or conversion of securities, such as convertible preferred stock, convertible notes payable, warrants, stock options, and unvested restricted stock, which would result in the issuance of incremental shares of common stock. In computing the basic and diluted net loss per share applicable to common stockholders, the weighted average number of shares remains the same for both calculations due to the fact that when a net loss exists, dilutive shares are not included in the calculation. These potentially dilutive securities are more fully described in Note 7.

        The following table sets forth the computation of basic and diluted earnings per share for the years ended December 31, 2012 and 2013 and the three months ended March 31, 2013 and 2014:

 
  Year Ended December 31,   Three Months Ended
March 31,
 
 
  2012   2013   2013   2014  

Basic and diluted net loss per share of common stock:

                         

Net loss

  $ (1,408,545 ) $ (5,269,855 ) $ (969,643 ) $ (2,235,306 )

Dividends on Series B and C Preferred Stock

    (2,185,737 )   (3,804,023 )   (785,961 )   (1,070,682 )
                   

Net loss applicable to common stockholders

  $ (3,594,282 ) $ (9,073,878 ) $ (1,755,604 ) $ (3,305,988 )
                   
                   

Weighted average shares of common stock outstanding

    2,921,787     3,009,260     2,983,547     3,032,393  
                   
                   

Net loss per share of common stock—basic and diluted

  $ (1.23 ) $ (3.02 ) $ (0.59 ) $ (1.09 )
                   
                   

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MARINUS PHARMACEUTICALS, INC.

(A DEVELOPMENT-STAGE COMPANY)

NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (Continued)

(Information as of March 31, 2014 and for the three months ended
March 31, 2013 and 2014 is unaudited)

2. Summary of Significant Accounting Policies (Continued)

        The following potentially dilutive securities outstanding at December 31, 2012 and 2013 and March 31, 2013 and 2014 have been excluded from the computation of diluted weighted average shares outstanding, as they would be antidilutive:

 
  December 31,   March 31,  
 
  2012   2013   2013   2014  

Convertible preferred stock

    40,652,964     49,379,984     40,652,964     49,379,984  

Warrants

    3,055,163     3,055,163     3,055,163     3,055,163  

Stock options

    4,482,808     7,105,767     4,381,965     6,930,040  
                   

    48,190,935     59,540,914     48,090,092     59,365,187  
                   
                   

        The unaudited pro forma net loss per share is computed using the weighted-average number of shares of common stock outstanding after giving effect to the conversion of all issued and outstanding shares of preferred stock that will convert, upon the closing of an IPO, into an aggregate of 49,379,984 shares of common stock and the net exercise of all outstanding warrants and the conversion of the resulting shares of preferred stock that will convert to shares of our common stock upon the closing of the IPO into            shares of our common stock, assuming net share settlement at an initial public offering price of $            per share (the midpoint of the estimated offering price range set forth on the cover page of this prospectus), as if they had occurred at the beginning of the period, or the date of original issuance, if later. Upon conversion of the convertible preferred stock into shares of the Company's common stock in the event of an IPO, the holders of the convertible preferred stock are not entitled to receive undeclared dividends. Accordingly, the impact of the cumulative preferred stock dividends has been excluded from the determination of the unaudited pro forma net loss per share.

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MARINUS PHARMACEUTICALS, INC.

(A DEVELOPMENT-STAGE COMPANY)

NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (Continued)

(Information as of March 31, 2014 and for the three months ended
March 31, 2013 and 2014 is unaudited)

2. Summary of Significant Accounting Policies (Continued)

        The following table summarizes the calculation of unaudited pro forma basic and diluted net loss per common share:

 
  Year Ended
December 31,
2013
  Three Months
Ended
March 31,
2014
 

Numerator:

             

Net loss applicable to common stockholders

  $ (9,073,878 ) $ (3,305,988 )

Effect of pro forma adjustments:

             

Cumulative preferred stock dividends

    3,804,023     1,070,682  
           

Pro forma net loss applicable to common stockholders

  $ (5,269,855 ) $ (2,235,306 )
           
           

Denominator:

             

Weighted average common shares outstanding

    3,009,260     3,032,393  

Effect of pro forma adjustments:

             

Conversion of convertible preferred stock

    48,157,236     49,379,984  

Conversion of shares resulting from exercise of warrants

             
           

Shares used in computing unaudited pro forma weighted average basic and diluted common shares outstanding

             
           
           

Unaudited pro forma basic and diluted net loss per common share

  $     $    
           
           

Comprehensive Loss

        Comprehensive loss is defined as the change in equity of a business enterprise during a period from transactions and other events and circumstances from non-owner sources. Comprehensive loss was equal to net loss for all periods presented.

Segment Information

        Operating segments are defined as components of an enterprise about which separate discrete information is available for evaluation by the chief operating decision maker, or decision-making group, in deciding how to allocate resources and in assessing performance. We view our operations and manage our business in one segment, which is the identification and development of neuropsychiatric therapeutics.

Stock-Based Compensation

        We account for stock-based compensation in accordance with the provisions of ASC Topic 718, Compensation—Stock Compensation, or ASC 718, which requires the recognition of expense related to the fair value of stock-based awards in the statements of operations. For stock options issued to employees and members of our board of directors for their services on our board of directors, we estimate the grant-date fair value of options using the Black-Scholes option pricing model. The use of the Black-Scholes option pricing model requires management to make assumptions with respect to the expected term of the option, the expected volatility of the common stock consistent with the expected life of the option, risk-free interest rates, and the value of the common stock. For awards subject to time-based vesting, we recognize stock-based compensation expense, net of estimated forfeitures, on a straight-line basis over the requisite

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MARINUS PHARMACEUTICALS, INC.

(A DEVELOPMENT-STAGE COMPANY)

NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (Continued)

(Information as of March 31, 2014 and for the three months ended
March 31, 2013 and 2014 is unaudited)

2. Summary of Significant Accounting Policies (Continued)

service period, which is generally the vesting term of the award. For awards subject to performance-based vesting conditions, we recognize stock-based compensation expense when it is probable that the performance condition will be achieved. Stock-based awards issued to non-employees are recorded at their fair values, and are periodically revalued as the equity instruments vest and are recognized as expense over the related service period in accordance with the provisions of ASC 718 and ASC Topic 505, Equity.

Clinical Trial Expense Accruals

        As part of the process of preparing our financial statements, we are required to estimate our expenses resulting from our obligations under contracts with vendors, clinical research organizations and consultants and under clinical site agreements in connection with conducting clinical trials. The financial terms of these contracts are subject to negotiations, which vary from contract to contract and may result in payment flows that do not match the periods over which materials or services are provided under such contracts. Our objective is to reflect the appropriate trial expenses in our financial statements by matching those expenses with the period in which services are performed and efforts are expended. We account for these expenses according to the progress of the trial as measured by patient progression and the timing of various aspects of the trial. We determine accrual estimates through financial models taking into account discussion with applicable personnel and outside service providers as to the progress or state of consummation of trials. During the course of a clinical trial, we adjust our clinical expense recognition if actual results differ from its estimates. We make estimates of our accrued expenses as of each balance sheet date based on the facts and circumstances known at that time. Our clinical trial accruals are dependent upon the timely and accurate reporting of contract research organizations and other third-party vendors. Although we do not expect our estimates to be materially different from amounts actually incurred, our understanding of the status and timing of services performed relative to the actual status and timing of services performed may vary and may result in reporting amounts that are too high or too low for any particular period. For the years ended December 31, 2012 and 2013 and the three months ended March 31, 2013 and 2014, there were no material adjustments to our prior period estimates of accrued expenses for clinical trials.

3. Fair Value Measurements

        Financial Accounting Standards Board (FASB) accounting guidance defines fair value as the price that would be received to sell an asset or paid to transfer a liability (the exit price) in an orderly transaction between market participants at the measurement date. The accounting guidance outlines a valuation framework and creates a fair value hierarchy in order to increase the consistency and comparability of fair value measurements and the related disclosures. In determining fair value, we use quoted prices and observable inputs. Observable inputs are inputs that market participants would use in pricing the asset or liability based on market data obtained from independent sources.

        The fair value hierarchy is broken down into three levels based on the source of inputs as follows:

    Level 1—Valuations based on unadjusted quoted prices in active markets for identical assets or liabilities.

    Level 2—Valuations based on observable inputs and quoted prices in active markets for similar assets and liabilities.

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MARINUS PHARMACEUTICALS, INC.

(A DEVELOPMENT-STAGE COMPANY)

NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (Continued)

(Information as of March 31, 2014 and for the three months ended
March 31, 2013 and 2014 is unaudited)

3. Fair Value Measurements (Continued)

    Level 3—Valuations based on inputs that are unobservable and models that are significant to the overall fair value measurement.

        The following fair value hierarchy table presents information about each major category of our financial assets and liabilities measured at fair value on a recurring basis:

 
  Level 1   Level 2   Level 3   Total  

December 31, 2012

                         

Assets

                         

Money market funds (cash equivalents)

  $ 8,613,673   $   $   $ 8,613,673  
                   

Total assets

  $ 8,613,673   $   $   $ 8,613,673  
                   
                   

Liabilities

                         

Warrant liability

  $   $   $ 1,344,200   $ 1,344,200  
                   

Total liabilities

  $   $   $ 1,344,200   $ 1,344,200  
                   
                   

December 31, 2013

                         

Assets

                         

Money market funds (cash equivalents)

  $ 9,250,663   $   $   $ 9,250,663  
                   

Total assets

  $ 9,250,663   $   $   $ 9,250,663  
                   
                   

Liabilities

                         

Warrant liability

  $   $   $ 1,191,514   $ 1,191,514  
                   

Total liabilities

  $   $   $ 1,191,514   $ 1,191,514  
                   
                   

March 31, 2014

                         

Assets

                         

Money market funds (cash equivalents)

  $ 8,005,080   $   $   $ 8,005,080  
                   

Total assets

  $ 8,005,080   $   $   $ 8,005,080  
                   
                   

Liabilities

                         

Warrant liability

  $   $   $ 763,791   $ 763,791  
                   

Total liabilities

  $   $   $ 763,791   $ 763,791  
                   
                   

        We have outstanding warrants to purchase our Series B Preferred Stock, or the Series B Warrants. The Series B Preferred Stock underlying the Series B Warrants can be redeemed for cash upon an event that is not within our control, such as the liquidation of our preferred stock, as the preferred stockholders have voting control of our company and control of our board of directors and therefore have the ability to trigger the liquidation of our preferred stock. As a result, the Series B Warrants are recorded as a warrant liability on our balance sheets with subsequent changes to fair value recorded on our statement of operations as change in fair value of warrant liability. On the grant date and in subsequent periods, we estimated the fair value of the preferred stock warrant liability using an option-pricing model, which requires inputs such as the expected volatility based on comparable public companies (75% - 80%), the estimated fair value of the Series B Preferred Stock ($0.82 - $1.51 per share), and the estimated time to liquidity (0.25 - 4 years). For this liability, we developed our own assumptions that do not have observable inputs or available market data to support the fair value.

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MARINUS PHARMACEUTICALS, INC.

(A DEVELOPMENT-STAGE COMPANY)

NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (Continued)

(Information as of March 31, 2014 and for the three months ended
March 31, 2013 and 2014 is unaudited)

3. Fair Value Measurements (Continued)

        The following tables set forth a summary of changes in the fair value of Level 3 preferred stock warrant liability for the years ended December 31, 2012 and 2013 and for the three months ended March 31, 2014:

 
  Beginning of
Period
  Issuances   Exercises   Change in Fair
Value
  End of Period  

December 31, 2012

  $ 1,680,250   $   $   $ (336,050 ) $ 1,344,200  

December 31, 2013

    1,344,200             (152,686 )   1,191,514  

March 31, 2014

  $ 1,191,514   $   $   $ (427,723 ) $ 763,791  

4. Property and Equipment

        Property and equipment consisted of the following:

 
  December 31,    
 
 
  March 31,
2014
 
 
  2012   2013  

Laboratory equipment

  $ 368,540   $ 368,542   $ 368,540  

Office equipment

    59,183     76,300     76,302  
               

    427,723     444,842     444,842  

Less: accumulated depreciation and amortization

    (418,989 )   (428,779 )   (431,286 )
               

  $ 8,734   $ 16,063   $ 13,556  
               
               

        Depreciation and amortization expense was $17,902, $9,790, $2,924, $2,507 and $563,741 for the years ended December 31, 2012 and 2013, for the three months ended March 31, 2013 and 2014, and for the period from August 14, 2003 (date of inception) to March 31, 2014, respectively.

5. Accrued Expenses

        At December 31, 2012 and 2013 and March 31, 2014, accrued expenses consisted of the following:

 
  December 31,    
 
 
  March 31,
2014
 
 
  2012   2013  

Investor deposit

  $   $ 500,000   $ 500,000  

Payroll and related costs

    1,076     203,718     88,145  

Clinical trials and drug development

        73,500     1,114  

Professional fees

    350,733     295,000     120,991  

Other

    18,347     24,256     43,328  
               

  $ 370,156   $ 1,096,474   $ 753,578  
               
               

        Investor deposit represents funds received from an investor for 422,119 shares of Series C Preferred Stock. The shares were issued in April 2014.

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MARINUS PHARMACEUTICALS, INC.

(A DEVELOPMENT-STAGE COMPANY)

NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (Continued)

(Information as of March 31, 2014 and for the three months ended
March 31, 2013 and 2014 is unaudited)

6. Notes Payable

        During 2003, 2004 and 2005, we received a total of $3,155,000 in proceeds from the issuance of convertible promissory notes ("Series A Convertible Notes") to several investors. The Series A Convertible Notes accrued interest at a rate of 6.0% per year, were payable on demand after December 31, 2005 and principal and accrued interest were convertible upon the occurrence of a qualified financing, as defined, into the same shares of capital stock issued in connection with the financing and at a conversion price equal to 85% of the price per share paid by the investors in such a qualified financing.

        In September 2005, $2,288,500 of Series A Convertible Notes, and related accrued interest of $152,600, were converted into 1,719,783 shares of Series A convertible preferred stock ("Series A Preferred Stock") at a conversion price of $1.42 per share (see Note 7). At the time of conversion in September 2005, we recognized a beneficial conversion feature of $430,671 as additional interest expense with a corresponding credit to additional paid-in capital. Of the remaining principal, $231,500 plus accrued interest was repaid in December 2005 and $635,000, plus accrued interest, was converted into a term note payable in 24 monthly payments of principal and interest, with interest fixed at 6% per year. In May 2006, we repaid the outstanding balance due under the note, including accrued interest.

        In 2008 and 2009, we received a total of $15,075,199 in proceeds from the issuance of convertible promissory notes ("Series B Convertible Notes") to several investors. The Series B Convertible Notes accrued interest at a rate of 9.5% per year and were payable on demand on various dates after September 30, 2008. The principal and accrued interest were convertible into the same shares of capital stock issued in connection with the next financing, as defined at a conversion price equal to the price per share paid by the investors in the next financing. In April 2009, all outstanding Series B Convertible Notes, along with the related accrued interest of $985,815, were converted into 9,617,374 shares of Series B Preferred Stock at a conversion price of $1.67 per share (see Note 7).

        In 2010 and 2012 we received $4,000,000 and $300,000, respectively, in proceeds from the issuance of convertible promissory notes ("Series C Convertible Notes") to several investors. The Series C Convertible Notes accrued interest at a rate of 8% per year, were payable on demand on various dates after December 31, 2011 and principal and accrued interest were convertible into the next financing, as defined, into the same shares of capital stock issued in connection with and at a conversion price equal to the price per share paid by the investors in the next financing. In December 2012, in connection with the first Series C Preferred Stock closing, $2,000,000 of the Series C Convertible Notes issued in 2010, along with accrued interest of $441,425, were converted into 2,061,141 shares of Series C Preferred Stock at a conversion price of $1.1845 per share. In June 2013, the remaining $2,300,000 of Series C Convertible Notes, along with accrued interest of $461,019, converted into 2,330,955 shares of Series C Preferred Stock at $1.1845 per share (see Note 7).

7. Convertible Preferred Stock, Detachable Warrants and Stockholders' Deficit

Convertible Preferred Stock

    Authorized

        At March 31, 2014, we had 52,853,684 authorized shares of Convertible Preferred Stock, of which 18,777,860 were designated for Series A Preferred Stock, 15,275,824 were designated for Series B Preferred Stock and 18,900,000 were designated for Series C Preferred Stock.

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MARINUS PHARMACEUTICALS, INC.

(A DEVELOPMENT-STAGE COMPANY)

NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (Continued)

(Information as of March 31, 2014 and for the three months ended
March 31, 2013 and 2014 is unaudited)

7. Convertible Preferred Stock, Detachable Warrants and Stockholders' Deficit (Continued)

    Issued and Outstanding

        In September and October 2005, we issued 15,868,265 shares of Series A Preferred Stock at $1.67 per share for proceeds of $26,168,518, net of issuance costs of $331,484. In addition, we issued 1,719,783 shares of Series A Preferred Stock from the conversion of $2,441,100 in Series A Convertible Notes, including related accrued interest (as described in Note 6). During 2005, we issued 1,059,523 shares of Series A Preferred Stock with a fair value of $1,769,403 under the terms of a license agreement with Purdue Neuroscience Company ("Purdue"). During May 2008, we and Purdue executed an agreement to amend the license agreement and we issued 130,289 shares of Series A Preferred Stock (see Note 9).

        In April 2009, we issued 2,603,287 shares of Series B Preferred Stock and related detachable warrants ("Series B Warrants") at $1.67 per share, for proceeds of $3,863,869, net of issuance costs of $483,620. In addition, we issued 9,617,374 shares of Series B Preferred Stock from the conversion of $16,061,014 of Series B Convertible Notes, including related accrued interest of $985,815 (as described in Note 6). In connection with the Series B financing, we issued warrants to purchase an aggregate of 3,055,163 shares of Series B Preferred Stock at $1.67 per share. These warrants are immediately exercisable and have a 10-year life. The net proceeds from the sale of Series B Preferred Stock and the conversion of the Series B Convertible Notes was recorded based on a grant-date fair value of the warrants of $2,016,300, which has been recorded as a discount to the carrying value of the Series B Preferred Stock with a corresponding credit to warrant liability, which is carried at fair value (see Note 3).

        In December 2012, we issued 7,593,302 shares of Series C Preferred Stock at $1.1845 per share, for proceeds of $8,581,340, net of issuance costs of $412,926. In addition, we issued 2,061,141 shares of Series C Preferred Stock from the conversion of $2,441,425 of Series C Convertible Notes, including related accrued interest of $441,425 (as described in Note 6). In June 2013, we issued 6,396,065 shares of Series C Preferred Stock at $1.1845 per share for proceeds of $7,530,335, net of issuance costs of $45,804. In addition, we issued 2,330,955 shares of Series C Preferred Stock from the conversion of the remaining outstanding $2,761,019 in Series C Convertible Notes, including related accrued interest of $461,019 (as described in Note 6).

    Voting

        Holders of the Series A, B and C Preferred Stock, voting as a class, are entitled to elect five members of the board of directors. Holders of the common stock, voting as a single class, are entitled to elect one member of the board of directors. The holders of the common stock and the preferred stock, voting as a class, are entitled to elect all remaining members of the board of directors.

    Conversion

        Each share of preferred stock is convertible into one share of common stock at any time at the option of the holder. The preferred stock is automatically convertible in the event of (i) an initial public offering at a per share price of at least $2.96125 per share and gross proceeds to us of at least $30 million; or (ii) the affirmative vote or written consent of the holders of at least 70% of the then-outstanding preferred stock, voting as a single class on an as-if-converted to common stock basis.

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MARINUS PHARMACEUTICALS, INC.

(A DEVELOPMENT-STAGE COMPANY)

NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (Continued)

(Information as of March 31, 2014 and for the three months ended
March 31, 2013 and 2014 is unaudited)

7. Convertible Preferred Stock, Detachable Warrants and Stockholders' Deficit (Continued)

    Dividends

        Holders of Series B and C Preferred Stock are entitled to receive 8% annual dividends if and when declared by the Board of Directors. The Series B and C Preferred Stock dividends shall accrue monthly from the date of issuance, whether or not declared, and shall be cumulative. Holders of Series A Preferred Stock are entitled to receive 8% annual non-cumulative dividends if declared by our board of directors. No dividends have been declared through March 31, 2014. As of December 31, 2013 and March 31, 2014, Series B and C Preferred Stock dividends in arrears were $9,398,333, $1,596,074, $9,998,515 and $2,066,575, respectively.

    Liquidation

        In the event of our liquidation, dissolution, or winding-up, or in the event we merge with, or are acquired by another entity, the holders of each share of Series A, B, and C Preferred Stock shall be entitled to receive an amount equal to the liquidation value of their shares. The Series C Preferred Stock liquidation value is equal to $1.1845 per share plus all cumulative dividends in arrears, whether or not declared. The Series B Preferred Stock liquidation value is equal to $1.67 per share plus all cumulative dividends in arrears, whether or not declared. The Series A Preferred Stock liquidation value is equal to $1.67 per share plus any declared but unpaid dividends. With respect to the liquidation preference, the Series C Preferred Stock will rank prior to all other series of preferred stock and common stock, the Series B Preferred Stock will rank senior to the Series A Preferred Stock and common stock and the Series A Preferred Stock will rank prior to the common stock. After payment has been made to all preferred stockholders, the Series B and C Preferred Stock shall participate with our common stockholders with respect to any remaining assets available for distribution.

    Redemption

        The preferred stock is subject to redemption under certain "deemed liquidation" events, as defined in our certificate of incorporation, and as such, the preferred stock is considered contingently redeemable for financial accounting purposes. We have concluded that none of these events are probable during the periods presented.

Common Stock

    Authorized, Issued and Outstanding

        We are authorized to issue 65,100,000 shares of common stock, with a par value of $0.001, of which 3,111,787 were issued and 2,921,787 were outstanding at December 31, 2012, 3,212,630 were issued and 3,022,630 were outstanding at December 31, 2013, and 3,388,357 were issued and 3,198,357 were outstanding at March 31, 2014. The voting, dividend and liquidation rights of the holders of shares of common stock are subject to and qualified by the rights, powers and preferences of the holders of shares of preferred stock.

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MARINUS PHARMACEUTICALS, INC.

(A DEVELOPMENT-STAGE COMPANY)

NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (Continued)

(Information as of March 31, 2014 and for the three months ended
March 31, 2013 and 2014 is unaudited)

7. Convertible Preferred Stock, Detachable Warrants and Stockholders' Deficit (Continued)

    Voting

        Each holder of our common stock is entitled to one vote for each share on all matters submitted to a vote of the stockholders, other than election of directors, which shall be determined by a plurality of the votes cast by the stockholders entitled to vote on the election of such director. In addition, the affirmative vote of the holders of at least 75% of the voting power of all of the then outstanding voting stock will be required to take certain actions, including amending certain provisions of our amended and restated certificate of incorporation, such as the provisions relating to the classified board and director liability, amending our bylaws, removing directors without cause or changing the Court of Chancery of the State of Delaware from being the sole and exclusive forum for certain actions brought by our stockholders against us or our directors, officers or employees.

    Dividends

        The holders of shares of common stock are entitled to receive dividends, if and when declared by the board of directors. Cash dividends may not be declared or paid to holders of shares of common stock until paid on each series of outstanding preferred stock in accordance with their respective terms. As of March 31, 2014, no dividends have been declared or paid since our inception.

    Liquidation

        After payment to the holders of shares of preferred stock of their liquidation preferences, the holders of shares of common stock are entitled to share ratably in our assets available for distribution to stockholders, in the event of any voluntary or involuntary liquidation, dissolution or winding up by us or upon the occurrence of a liquidation.

    Reserved for Future Issuance

 
  December 31,
2013
  March 31,
2014
 

Conversion of Series A Preferred Stock

    18,777,860     18,777,860  

Conversion of Series B Preferred Stock

    12,220,661     12,220,661  

Conversion of Series C Preferred Stock

    18,381,463     18,381,463  

Warrants to purchase Series B Preferred Stock

    3,055,163     3,055,163  

Options to purchase common stock

    7,105,767     6,930,040  

Shares reserved for future equity compensation awards

    522,148     522,148  
           

    60,063,062     59,887,335  
           
           

Warrants

        We presently have Series B Warrants outstanding to purchase 3,055,163 shares of our Series B Preferred Stock at an exercise price of $1.67 per share. These warrants expire April 7, 2019. Since the Series B Preferred Stock underlying the Series B Warrants can be redeemed for cash upon an event that is

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MARINUS PHARMACEUTICALS, INC.

(A DEVELOPMENT-STAGE COMPANY)

NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (Continued)

(Information as of March 31, 2014 and for the three months ended
March 31, 2013 and 2014 is unaudited)

7. Convertible Preferred Stock, Detachable Warrants and Stockholders' Deficit (Continued)

not within our control, these warrants are classified as a derivative liability on our balance sheets with subsequent changes to fair value recorded through earnings at each reporting period on our statement of operations as change in fair value of warrant liability.

8. 2005 Stock Option and Incentive Plan

        In 2005, we adopted the 2005 Stock Option and Incentive Plan ("2005 Plan") that authorizes us to grant options, restricted stock and other equity-based awards. As amended and as of December 31, 2013, the number of shares of common stock reserved for issuance in connection with the Plan was 8,010,227. The amount, terms of grants, and exercisability provisions are determined and set by our board of directors.

        Total compensation cost recognized for all stock option awards in the statements of operations is as follows:

 
  Year Ended
December 31,
  Three Months Ended
March 31,
   
 
 
  August 14, 2003
(Inception) to
March 31, 2014
 
 
  2012   2013   2013   2014  

Research and development

  $ 25,402   $ 15,594   $   $ 1,732   $ 132,585  

General and administrative

    95,197     220,771     16,454     21,761     409,778  
                       

Total stock-based compensation expense

  $ 120,599   $ 236,365   $ 16,454   $ 23,493   $ 542,363  
                       
                       

    Stock Options

        Options issued under the 2005 Plan may have a contractual life of up to 10 years and may be exercisable in cash or as otherwise determined by the board of directors. Vesting generally occurs over a

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MARINUS PHARMACEUTICALS, INC.

(A DEVELOPMENT-STAGE COMPANY)

NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (Continued)

(Information as of March 31, 2014 and for the three months ended
March 31, 2013 and 2014 is unaudited)

8. 2005 Stock Option and Incentive Plan (Continued)

period of not greater than four years. A summary of activity for all options since inception is presented below:

 
  Shares   Weighted-
Average
Exercise Price
Per Share
  Aggregate
Intrinsic
Value
 

Outstanding—December 31, 2005

      $        

Granted

    1,902,500     0.16        

Forfeited

    (219,138 )          
                 

Outstanding—December 31, 2006

    1,683,362            

Granted

    75,000     0.16        

Exercised

    (150,469 )          

Forfeited

    (687,032 )          
                 

Outstanding—December 31, 2007

    920,861            

Exercised

    (131,000 )          

Forfeited

    (180,361 )          
                 

Outstanding—December 31, 2008

    609,500            

Granted

    2,642,659     0.16        

Forfeited

    (1,356,305 )          
                 

Outstanding—December 31, 2009

    1,895,854            

Granted

    250,000     0.16        

Forfeited

    (100,843 )          
                 

Outstanding—December 31, 2010

    2,045,011            

Granted

    1,000,000     0.16        
                 

Outstanding—December 31, 2011

    3,045,011            

Granted

    1,437,797     0.16        
                 

Outstanding—December 31, 2012

    4,482,808            

Granted

    3,833,080            

Exercised

    (100,843 )   0.16        

Forfeited

    (1,109,278 )          
                 

Outstanding—December 31, 2013

    7,105,767     0.16        

Exercised

    (175,727 )   0.16        
               

Outstanding—March 31, 2014

    6,930,040   $ 0.16   $ 6,029,135  
               
               

Exercisable—March 31, 2014

    4,536,195   $ 0.16   $ 3,946,490  
               
               

Exercisable and expected to vest—March 31, 2014

    6,930,040   $ 0.16   $ 6,029,135  
               
               

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MARINUS PHARMACEUTICALS, INC.

(A DEVELOPMENT-STAGE COMPANY)

NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (Continued)

(Information as of March 31, 2014 and for the three months ended
March 31, 2013 and 2014 is unaudited)

8. 2005 Stock Option and Incentive Plan (Continued)

        The weighted average remaining contractual term of options exercisable as of December 31, 2013 and March 31, 2014 is 8.09 years and 7.84 years, respectively.

        The aggregate intrinsic value in the preceding tables represent the total intrinsic value that would have been received had all option holders exercised their options on March 31, 2014. Intrinsic value is determined by calculating the difference between the estimated fair value of our common stock on the last day of the year and the exercise price, multiplied by the number of options.

        The weighted-average grant date fair value of the options granted to employees was $0.13 per share in 2012 and 2013 and was estimated at the date of grant using the Black-Scholes option-pricing model with the following weighted-average assumptions:

 
  2012   2013

Expected stock price volatility

  105.8 - 106.1%   103.9 - 118.0%

Expected term of options

  5 years   5 - 6.25 years

Risk-free interest rate

  0.72%   0.84 - 1.75%

Expected annual dividend yield

  0%   0%

        The weighted-average valuation assumptions were determined as follows:

    Expected stock price volatility: The expected volatility is based on historical volatilities of similar entities within our industry which were commensurate with our expected term assumption as described in the SEC's Staff Accounting Bulletin, or SAB, No. 107.

    Expected term of options: We estimated the expected term of our stock options with service-based vesting using the "simplified" method, as prescribed in SAB No. 107, whereby the expected life equals the arithmetic average of the vesting term and the original contractual term of the option due to our lack of sufficient historical data.

    Risk-free interest rate: We base the risk-free interest rate on the interest rate payable on U.S. Treasury securities in effect at the time of grant for a period that is commensurate with the assumed expected option term.

    Expected annual dividend yield: The estimated annual dividend yield is 0% because we have not historically paid, and do not expect for the foreseeable future to pay, a dividend on our common stock.

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MARINUS PHARMACEUTICALS, INC.

(A DEVELOPMENT-STAGE COMPANY)

NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (Continued)

(Information as of March 31, 2014 and for the three months ended
March 31, 2013 and 2014 is unaudited)

8. 2005 Stock Option and Incentive Plan (Continued)

        As of December 31, 2013, there was $244,237 of total unrecognized compensation expense related to unvested stock options granted under the 2005 Plan. That expense is expected to be recognized in the years ended as follows:

December 31, 2014

  $ 93,973  

December 31, 2015

    72,621  

December 31, 2016

    51,368  

December 31, 2017

    26,275  
       

  $ 244,237  
       
       

9. Commitments and Contingencies

Leases

        In February 2013, we entered into a two year operating lease agreement for office space in New Haven, Connecticut and pay $2,500 per month over the term of the lease. Prior to that and through April 2013, we leased a facility in Branford, Connecticut. Rent expense under these operating leases was $18,000, $33,885, $11,885, $7,500 and $1,611,247 for the years ended 2012 and 2013, and for the three months ended March 31, 2013 and 2014, and for the period from August 14, 2003 (Inception) to March 31, 2014, respectively. As of December 31, 2013, we had commitments for $32,500 of future minimum lease payments; $30,000 to be paid in 2014 and the remainder in 2015.

Employee Benefit Plan

        We maintain a Section 401(k) retirement plan for all employees. Employees can contribute up to 50% of their eligible pay, subject to maximum amounts allowed under law. We may make discretionary profit sharing contributions, which vest over a period of four years from each employee's commencement of employment with us. We have not made any discretionary contributions.

License Agreement

        In September 2004, we entered into a license agreement with Purdue, which was most recently amended and restated in May 2008 that granted us exclusive rights to certain know-how and technology relating to ganaxolone, excluding the field of treatment of unpleasant sensory or emotional experience associated with actual or potential tissue damage, or described in terms of such damage. The agreement contains a right by us to sublicense subject to prior written approval by Purdue. To date, we have paid an aggregate of $200,000 in license fees under the license agreement. As part of the consideration paid, we issued 1,189,812 shares of Series A Preferred Stock to Purdue and 630,318 shares of our common stock to Purdue and have agreed to pay Purdue certain royalties. The $200,000 license fee and fair value of the Series A Preferred Stock issued of $1,769,403 in 2005 and $217,583 in 2008 and the fair value of common stock of $100,851 issued in 2009 have been recognized as acquired in-process research and development and regulatory approval is required in order to commercialize ganaxolone and the related technology. We are obligated to pay royalties as a percentage of net product sales for direct licensed products, such as

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MARINUS PHARMACEUTICALS, INC.

(A DEVELOPMENT-STAGE COMPANY)

NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (Continued)

(Information as of March 31, 2014 and for the three months ended
March 31, 2013 and 2014 is unaudited)

9. Commitments and Contingencies (Continued)

ganaxolone. The obligation to pay royalties expires, on a country-by-country basis, 10 years from the first commercial sale of a licensed product in each country. The agreement also requires that we pay Purdue a percentage of the non-royalty consideration that we receive from a sublicensee and a percentage of milestone payments for indications other than seizure disorders and vascular migraine headaches not associated with mood disorders. Under the license agreement, we are committed to use commercially reasonable efforts to develop and commercialize at least one licensed product.

10. Income Taxes

        As of December 31, 2012 and 2013, we had approximately $53.9 million and $59.0 million, respectively, of net operating loss, or NOL, carry forwards available to offset future federal and state taxable income that will expire beginning in 2023. We also have federal research and development credit carryovers of approximately $2.2 million and state credit carryovers of approximately $0.5 million which expire beginning in 2019.

        The State of Connecticut provides companies with the opportunity to exchange certain research and development credit carryforwards for cash in exchange for foregoing the carryforward. The program provides for such exchange of the research and development credits at a rate of 65% of the annual research and development credit, as defined. During 2012 and 2013, we recorded a net benefit of $4,181 and $27,817, respectively, primarily for the estimated proceeds from the exchange of the research and development credit.

        The NOL carry forwards are subject to review and possible adjustment by the Internal Revenue Service and state tax authorities. NOL, and tax credit carry forwards may become subject to an annual limitation in the event of certain cumulative changes in the ownership interest of significant stockholders over a three-year period in excess of 50%, as defined under Sections 382 and 383 of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended, or the Code, as well as similar state tax provisions. This could limit the amount of NOLs that we can utilize annually to offset future taxable income or tax liabilities. The amount of the annual limitation, if any, will be determined based on the value of our company immediately prior to an ownership change. Subsequent ownership changes may further affect the limitation in future years. Additionally, U.S. tax laws limit the time during which these carry forwards may be applied against future taxes, therefore, we may not be able to take full advantage of these carry forwards for federal income tax purposes. We are currently evaluating the ownership history of our company to determine if there were any ownership changes as defined under Section 382(g) of the Code and the effects any ownership change may have had.

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MARINUS PHARMACEUTICALS, INC.

(A DEVELOPMENT-STAGE COMPANY)

NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (Continued)

(Information as of March 31, 2014 and for the three months ended
March 31, 2013 and 2014 is unaudited)

10. Income Taxes (Continued)

        The components of the net deferred tax asset are as follows:

 
  December 31,  
 
  2012   2013  

Gross deferred tax assets:

             

Net operating loss carryovers

  $ 21,033,120   $ 23,006,063  

Accrued expenses

        18,307  

Contributions

    144     1,196  

Stock-based compensation

    67,873     142,846  

Research and development and other credits

    2,492,245     2,692,646  
           

Total gross deferred tax assets

    23,593,382     25,861,058  
           
           

Gross deferred tax liabilities:

             

Depreciation

    (158 )   (1,951 )
           

Total gross deferred tax liabilities

    (158 )   (1,951 )
           

Net deferred tax assets

    23,593,224     25,859,107  

Less: valuation allowance

    (23,593,224 )   (25,859,107 )
           

Net deferred tax assets after valuation allowance

  $   $  
           
           

        In assessing the realizability of deferred tax assets, we consider whether it is more-likely-than-not that some portion or all of the deferred tax assets will not be realized. The ultimate realization of deferred tax assets is dependent upon the generation of future taxable income during the periods in which the temporary differences representing net future deductible amounts become deductible. After consideration of all the evidence, both positive and negative, we have recorded a full valuation allowance against our net deferred tax assets at December 31, 2012 and 2013, respectively, because our management has determined that is it more likely than not that these assets will not be fully realized. The valuation allowance increased by $2,265,883 during the years ended December 31, 2012 and 2013 due primarily to the generation of NOLs during those periods.

        We did not have unrecognized tax benefits as of December 31, 2012 and 2013, respectively, and do not expect this to change significantly over the next twelve months. We recognize interest and penalties accrued on any unrecognized tax benefits as a component of income tax expense. As of December 31, 2012 and 2013, we have not accrued interest or penalties related to any uncertain tax positions. Our tax returns filed since inception are still subject to examination by major tax jurisdictions.

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MARINUS PHARMACEUTICALS, INC.

(A DEVELOPMENT-STAGE COMPANY)

NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (Continued)

(Information as of March 31, 2014 and for the three months ended
March 31, 2013 and 2014 is unaudited)

10. Income Taxes (Continued)

        A reconciliation of income tax expense (benefit) at the statutory federal income tax rate and income taxes as reflected in the financial statements is as follows:

 
  Year Ended
December 31,
 
 
  2012   2013  

Federal income tax expense at statutory rate

    34.0 %   34.0 %

Permanent items

    (2.2 )   (0.3 )

State income tax, net of federal benefit

    5.0     5.0  

State refundable credit

    0.1     0.7  

R&D tax credits

    (0.8 )   (3.3 )

Change in valuation allowance

    (36.0 )   (35.4 )
           

Effective income tax rate

    0.1 %   0.7 %
           
           

        For all years through December 31, 2013, we generated research credits but have not conducted a study to document the qualified activities. This study may result in an adjustment to our research and development credit carryforwards; however, until a study is completed and any adjustment is known, no amounts are being presented as an uncertain tax position for these years. A full valuation allowance has been provided against our research and development credits and, if an adjustment is required, this adjustment to the deferred tax asset established for the research and development credit carryforwards would be offset by an adjustment to the valuation allowance.

        We file income tax returns in the United States and the State of Connecticut. The federal and state income tax returns are generally subject to tax examinations for the tax years ended December 31, 2010 through December 31, 2012. To the extent we have tax attribute carryforwards, the tax years in which the attribute was generated may still be adjusted upon examination by the Internal Revenue Service or state tax authorities to the extent utilized in a future period.

11. Subsequent Events

        We have completed an evaluation of all subsequent events after December 31, 2013 through April 4, 2014. We have concluded that no subsequent events have occurred that require disclosure, except as disclosed within these financial statements.

        In April 2014, the Company issued 422,119 shares of Series C Preferred Stock. Proceeds of $500,000 related to this issuance were received in 2013 and are reflected as an investor deposit in accrued expenses on the balance sheet as of December 31, 2013 and March 31, 2014.

        In April 2014, we borrowed $2.0 million in connection with a credit facility we entered into with a financial institution. Pursuant to the terms of the credit facility, we are required to make monthly interest-only payments for outstanding borrowings at an interest rate equal to the greater of (a) prime plus 2.25% or (b) 5.5% until April 2015. Commencing in May 2015 and continuing until April 2017, we are required to make monthly payments of 1/36th of our principal borrowings plus interest with the remaining principal balance due in April 2017. In connection with this facility, we issued to the financial institution warrants to purchase 37,991 shares of our Series C Preferred Stock with a term of 8 years.

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GRAPHIC

             Shares
Common Stock


PROSPECTUS
                        , 2014


Stifel
JMP Securities
Oppenheimer & Co.
Janney Montgomery Scott


Neither we nor any of the underwriters have authorized anyone to provide information different from that contained in this prospectus. When you make a decision about whether to invest in our common stock, you should not rely upon any information other than the information in this prospectus. Neither the delivery of this prospectus nor the sale of our common stock means that information contained in this prospectus is correct after the date of this prospectus. This prospectus is not an offer to sell or solicitation of an offer to buy these shares of common stock in any circumstances under which the offer or solicitation is unlawful.


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PART II
INFORMATION NOT REQUIRED IN PROSPECTUS

Item 13.    Other Expenses of Issuance and Distribution.

        The following table sets forth all costs and expenses, other than the underwriting discount paid or payable by us in connection with the sale of the common stock being registered. All amounts shown are estimates except for the SEC registration fee, the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority, or FINRA, filing fee and the initial listing fee for The NASDAQ Global Market.

 
  Amount  

SEC registration fee

  $ 8,147  

FINRA filing fee

    9,988  

NASDAQ Global Market initial listing fee

      *

Printing expenses

      *

Legal fees and expenses

      *

Accounting fees and expenses

      *

Transfer agent and registrar fees and expenses

      *

Miscellaneous expenses

      *

Total

  $   *

*
To be completed by amendment.

Item 14.    Indemnification of Directors and Officers.

        We are incorporated under the laws of the State of Delaware. Section 145 of the Delaware General Corporation Law provides that a Delaware corporation may indemnify any persons who are, or are threatened to be made, parties to any threatened, pending or completed action, suit or proceeding, whether civil, criminal, administrative or investigative (other than an action by or in the right of such corporation), by reason of the fact that such person was an officer, director, employee or agent of such corporation, or is or was serving at the request of such person as an officer, director, employee or agent of another corporation or enterprise. The indemnity may include expenses (including attorneys' fees), judgments, fines and amounts paid in settlement actually and reasonably incurred by such person in connection with such action, suit or proceeding, provided that such person acted in good faith and in a manner he or she reasonably believed to be in or not opposed to the corporation's best interests and, with respect to any criminal action or proceeding, had no reasonable cause to believe that his or her conduct was illegal. A Delaware corporation may indemnify any persons who are, or are threatened to be made, a party to any threatened, pending or completed action or suit by or in the right of the corporation by reason of the fact that such person was a director, officer, employee or agent of such corporation, or is or was serving at the request of such corporation as a director, officer, employee or agent of another corporation or enterprise. The indemnity may include expenses (including attorneys' fees) actually and reasonably incurred by such person in connection with the defense or settlement of such action or suit provided that such person acted in good faith and in a manner he or she reasonably believed to be in or not opposed to the corporation's best interests except that no indemnification is permitted without judicial approval if the officer or director is adjudged to be liable to the corporation. Where an officer or director is successful on the merits or otherwise in the defense of any action referred to above, the corporation must indemnify him or her against the expenses which such officer or director has actually and reasonably incurred. Our certificate of incorporation and bylaws, each of which will become effective upon consummation of this offering, provide for the indemnification of our directors and officers to the fullest extent permitted under the Delaware General Corporation Law.

        Section 102(b)(7) of the Delaware General Corporation Law permits a corporation to provide in its certificate of incorporation that a director of the corporation shall not be personally liable to the

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corporation or its stockholders for monetary damages for breach of fiduciary duties as a director, except for liability for any:

    transaction from which the director derives an improper personal benefit;

    act or omission not in good faith or that involves intentional misconduct or a knowing violation of law;

    unlawful payment of dividends or redemption of shares; or

    breach of a director's duty of loyalty to the corporation or its stockholders.

        Our certificate of incorporation which will become effective upon consummation of this offering includes such a provision. Expenses incurred by any officer or director in defending any such action, suit or proceeding in advance of its final disposition shall be paid by us upon delivery to us of an undertaking, by or on behalf of such director or officer, to repay all amounts so advanced if it shall ultimately be determined that such director or officer is not entitled to be indemnified by us.

        As permitted by the Delaware General Corporation Law, we intend to enter into indemnification agreements with our directors and executive officers. These agreements, among other things, will require us to indemnify each director and officer to the fullest extent permitted by law and advance expenses to each indemnitee in connection with any proceeding in which indemnification is available.

        At present, there is no pending litigation or proceeding involving any of our directors or executive officers as to which indemnification is required or permitted, and we are not aware of any threatened litigation or proceeding that may result in a claim for indemnification.

        We have an insurance policy covering our officers and directors with respect to certain liabilities, including liabilities arising under the Securities Act of 1933, as amended, or the Securities Act, or otherwise.

        In any underwriting agreement we enter into in connection with the sale of common stock being registered hereby, the underwriters will agree to indemnify, under certain conditions, us, our directors, our officers and persons who control us within the meaning of the Securities Act of 1933, as amended, or Securities Act, against certain liabilities.

Item 15.    Recent Sales of Unregistered Securities.

        Set forth below is information regarding shares of capital stock issued and options granted by us since January 1, 2011 that were not registered under the Securities Act. Also included is the consideration, if any, received by us for such shares and options and information relating to the section of the Securities Act, or rule of the SEC, under which exemption from registration was claimed.

(a)
Issuances of Capital Stock:

            (1)   In December 2012, we issued and sold an aggregate of 9,654,443 shares of our Series C convertible preferred stock at a purchase price of $1.1845 per share (before giving effect to our 1-for-    reverse split), for an aggregate purchase price of $11,435,691, including $2,441,425 aggregate principal amount and accrued interest in conversion of previously outstanding convertible notes. As part of our Series C convertible preferred stock financing, in June 2013 we issued and sold an additional 8,727,020 shares at $1.1845 per share (before giving effect to our 1-for-    reverse split), for an aggregate purchase price of $10,337,158, including $2,761,019 aggregate principal amount and accrued interest in the conversion of previously outstanding unsecured convertible promissory notes.

            (2)   In April 2014, we issued and sold an aggregate of 422,119 shares of our Series C convertible preferred stock at a purchase price of $1.1845 per share (before giving effect to our 1-for-            reverse split), for an aggregate purchase price of $500,000.

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(b)
Issuance of Convertible Notes:

            (1)   In July 2012, we issued unsecured convertible promissory notes in the aggregate principal amount of $300,000 to a group of our stockholders. These promissory notes, in addition to other unsecured convertible promissory notes that were issued in 2010, were converted into Series C convertible preferred stock, as provided above, and are no longer outstanding.

(c)
Stock Option Grants (amounts are actual grant numbers and not adjusted for our 1-for-    reverse stock split):

            (1)   On June 20, 2011, we granted a stock option to purchase a total of 375,000 shares of common stock at an exercise price of $0.16 per share to an employee pursuant to our 2005 Stock Option and Incentive Plan.

            (2)   On September 15, 2011, we granted a stock option to purchase a total of 625,000 shares of common stock at an exercise price of $0.16 per share to an employee pursuant to our 2005 Stock Option and Incentive Plan.

            (3)   On April 12, 2012, we granted stock options to purchase a total of 1,437,797 shares of common stock at an exercise price of $0.16 per share to an employee and six board members pursuant to our 2005 Stock Option and Incentive Plan.

            (4)   On April 4, 2013, we granted stock options to purchase a total of 1,504,652 shares of common stock at an exercise price of $0.16 per share to three employees and four consultants pursuant to our 2005 Stock Option and Incentive Plan.

            (5)   On May 21, 2013, we granted a stock option to purchase a total of 1,082,966 shares of common stock at an exercise price of $0.16 per share to a consultant pursuant to our 2005 Stock Option and Incentive Plan.

            (6)   On December 31, 2013, we granted a stock option to purchase a total of 934,096 shares of common stock at an exercise price of $0.16 per share to an employee pursuant to our 2005 Stock Option and Incentive Plan.

            (7)   On December 31, 2013, we granted stock options to purchase a total of 311,366 shares of common stock at an exercise price of $0.16 per share to two board members pursuant to our 2005 Stock Option and Incentive Plan.

(d)
Stock Option Exercises (amounts are actual issuance numbers and not adjusted for our 1-for-    reverse stock split):

            (1)   On January 28, 2013, we issued 88,228 shares of common stock pursuant to an exercise of stock options by an option holder, at an exercise price of $0.16 per share, pursuant to our 2005 Stock Option and Incentive Plan.

            (2)   On July 18, 2013, we issued 12,615 shares of common stock pursuant to an exercise of stock options by an option holder, at an exercise price of $0.16 per share, pursuant to our 2005 Stock Option and Incentive Plan.

            (3)   On March 26, 2014, we issued 175,727 shares of common stock pursuant to an exercise of stock options by an option holder, at an exercise price of $0.16 per shares, pursuant to our 2005 Stock Option and Incentive Plan.

(e)
Issuance of Warrants:

            (1)   On April 2, 2014, we issued a warrant to purchase 37,991 shares of our Series C convertible preferred stock at a purchase price of $1.1845 per share (before giving effect to our 1-for-    reverse split) expiring April 2, 2022, in connection with the credit facility we entered into with Square 1 Bank.

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        The offers, sales and issuances of the securities described in paragraphs (a)(1), (b)(1) and (e) above were exempt from registration in reliance upon the exemption from the registration requirements of the Securities Act, as set forth in Section 4(2) under the Securities Act and on Regulation D of the Securities Act, relative to transactions by an issuer not involving a public offering.

        The grants of stock options and issuances of shares upon exercise thereof described in paragraphs (c) and (d) above were exempt from registration under the Securities Act in reliance on Rule 701 as offers and sales of securities under written compensatory benefit plans and contracts relating to compensation in compliance with Rule 701. Each of the recipients of securities in any transaction exempt from registration either received or had adequate access, through employment, business or other relationships, to information about us.

        All purchasers of securities in transactions exempt from registration pursuant to Regulation D described above represented to us in connection with their purchase that they were "accredited investors" and were acquiring the securities for investment purposes only and not with a view to, or for sale in connection with, any distribution thereof and that they could bear the risks of the investment and could hold the securities for an indefinite period of time. The purchasers received written disclosures that the securities had not been registered under the Securities Act and that any resale must be made pursuant to a registration statement or an available exemption from the registration requirements of the Securities Act.

        All of the foregoing securities are deemed restricted securities for purposes of the Securities Act. The certificates representing the issued securities described in this Item 15 included appropriate legends setting forth that the applicable securities have not been registered and reciting the applicable restrictions on transfer. There were no underwriters employed in connection with any of the transactions set forth in this Item 15.

Item 16.    Exhibits and Financial Statement Schedules.

    (a)
    Exhibits. See the Index to Exhibits attached to this registration statement, which is incorporated by reference herein.

    (b)
    Financial statement schedule. No financial statement schedules are provided because the information called for is not required or is shown either in the financial statements or notes thereto.

Item 17.    Undertakings.

        The undersigned registrant hereby undertakes to provide to the underwriters at the closing specified in the underwriting agreement certificates in such denominations and registered in such names as required by the underwriters to permit prompt delivery to each purchaser.

        Insofar as indemnification for liabilities arising under the Securities Act may be permitted to directors, officers and controlling persons of the registrant pursuant to the foregoing provisions, or otherwise, the registrant has been advised that in the opinion of the SEC such indemnification is against public policy as expressed in the Securities Act and is, therefore, unenforceable. In the event that a claim for indemnification against such liabilities (other than the payment by the registrant of expenses incurred or paid by a director, officer or controlling person of the registrant in the successful defense of any action, suit or proceeding) is asserted by such director, officer or controlling person in connection with the securities being registered, the registrant will, unless in the opinion of its counsel the matter has been settled by controlling precedent, submit to a court of appropriate jurisdiction the question whether such indemnification by it is against public policy as expressed in the Securities Act and will be governed by the final adjudication of such issue.

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        The undersigned registrant hereby undertakes that:

    (1)
    For purposes of determining any liability under the Securities Act, the information omitted from the form of prospectus filed as part of this registration statement in reliance upon Rule 430A and contained in a form of prospectus filed by the registrant pursuant to Rule 424(b)(1) or (4) or 497(h) under the Securities Act shall be deemed to be part of this registration statement as of the time it was declared effective.

    (2)
    For the purpose of determining any liability under the Securities Act, each post-effective amendment that contains a form of prospectus shall be deemed to be a new registration statement relating to the securities offered therein, and the offering of such securities at that time shall be deemed to be the initial bona fide offering thereof.

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SIGNATURES

        Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Act of 1933, as amended, the registrant has duly caused this registration statement to be signed on its behalf by the undersigned, thereunto duly authorized, in the Borough of New Haven, State of Connecticut, on this 12th day of May, 2014.

    MARINUS PHARMACEUTICALS, INC.

 

 

By:

 

/s/ CHRISTOPHER M. CASHMAN

Christopher M. Cashman
President and Chief Executive Officer


POWER OF ATTORNEY

        We, the undersigned officers and directors of Marinus Pharmaceuticals, Inc., hereby severally constitute and appoint Christopher M. Cashman and Edward F. Smith, and each of them singly (with full power to each of them to act alone), our true and lawful attorneys-in-fact and agents, with full power of substitution and resubstitution in each of them for him or her and in his or her name, place and stead, and in any and all capacities, to sign any and all amendments (including post-effective amendments) to this registration statement (or any other registration statement for the same offering that is to be effective upon filing pursuant to Rule 462(b) under the Securities Act of 1933), and to file the same, with all exhibits thereto and other documents in connection therewith, with the Securities and Exchange Commission, granting unto said attorneys-in-fact and agents, and each of them, full power and authority to do and perform each and every act and thing requisite or necessary to be done in and about the premises, as full to all intents and purposes as he might or could do in person, hereby ratifying and confirming all that said attorneys-in-fact and agents or any of them, or their or his substitute or substitutes, may lawfully do or cause to be done by virtue hereof.

        Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Act of 1933, as amended, this registration statement has been signed by the following persons in the capacities and on the dates indicated.

Signature
 
Title
 
Date

 

 

 

 

 
/s/ CHRISTOPHER M. CASHMAN

Christopher M. Cashman
  President and Chief Executive Officer (Principal Executive Officer) and Chairman   May 12, 2014

/s/ EDWARD F. SMITH

Edward F. Smith

 

Chief Financial Officer and Treasurer (Principal Financial and Accounting Officer)

 

May 12, 2014

/s/ STEPHEN BLOCH, M.D.

Stephen Bloch, M.D.

 

Director

 

May 12, 2014

/s/ ENRIQUE J. CARRAZANA, M.D.

Enrique J. Carrazana, M.D.

 

Director

 

May 12, 2014

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Signature
 
Title
 
Date

 

 

 

 

 
/s/ ANTON GOPKA

Anton Gopka
  Director   May 12, 2014

/s/ TIM M. MAYLEBEN

Tim M. Mayleben

 

Director

 

May 12, 2014

/s/ ANAND MEHRA, M.D.

Anand Mehra, M.D.

 

Director

 

May 12, 2014

/s/ JAY P. SHEPARD

Jay P. Shepard

 

Director

 

May 12, 2014

/s/ NICOLE VITULLO

Nicole Vitullo

 

Director

 

May 12, 2014

II-7


Table of Contents


INDEX TO EXHIBITS

Exhibit
Number
  Exhibit Description
  1.1 Form of Underwriting Agreement.

 

3.1

 

Third Restated Certificate of Incorporation of the Registrant, as amended.

 

3.2


Form of Amended and Restated Certificate of Incorporation of the Registrant to be effective upon closing of the offering.

 

3.3

 

Second Amended and Restated By-laws of the Registrant.

 

3.4


Form of By-laws of the Registrant to be effective upon the closing of the offering.

 

4.1


Specimen Certificate evidencing shares of the Registrant's common stock.

 

4.2


Third Amended and Restated Investor Rights Agreement by and among the Registrant and the parties listed therein.

 

4.3

 

Warrant to Purchase Stock dated April 2, 2014 issued by the Registrant to Square 1 Bank.

 

5.1


Opinion of Duane Morris LLP.

 

10.1

+

Marinus Pharmaceuticals, Inc. 2005 Stock Option and Incentive Plan, as amended.

 

10.2

+

Forms of Stock Option Agreement under the 2005 Stock Option and Incentive Plan.

 

10.3

+

Employment Agreement dated as of November 2, 2012 between the Registrant and Christopher M. Cashman.

 

10.4

+

Employment Agreement as of dated November 22, 2013 between the Registrant and Edward F. Smith.

 

10.5

+

Employment Agreement dated as of November 2, 2012 between the Registrant and Gail M. Farfel.

 

10.6

*

Technology Transfer Agreement dated December 4, 2012 between Domain Russia Investments Limited and the Registrant.

 

10.7

 

Assignment and Assumption Agreement dated as of December 4, 2012 among Domain Russia Investments Limited, the Registrant and NovaMedica, LLC.

 

10.8

 

Clinical Development and Collaboration Agreement dated as of June 25, 2013 between NovaMedica, LLC and the Registrant.

 

10.9

 

Loan and Security Agreement dated as of April 2, 2014 between Square 1 Bank and the Registrant.

 

10.10

 

Form of Amended and Restated Indemnification Agreement (VC Directors).

 

10.11

 

Form of Amended and Restated Indemnification Agreement (Non-VC Directors).

 

10.12

*

Amended and Restated Agreement dated as of May 23, 2008 between the Registrant and Purdue Neuroscience Company.

 

23.1


Consent of Duane Morris LLP (to be included in Exhibit 5.1).

 

23.2

 

Consent of KPMG LLP.

 

24.1

 

Powers of Attorney (included on signature page).

To be filed by amendment.

+
Indicates management contract or compensatory plan.

*
Portions of this exhibit (indicated by asterisks) have been omitted pursuant to a request for confidential treatment pursuant to Rule 406 under the Securities Act of 1933.



EXHIBIT 3.1

 

THIRD RESTATED CERTIFICATE OF INCORPORATION

 

OF

 

MARINUS PHARMACEUTICALS, INC.

 

(Pursuant to Sections 242 and 245 of the

General Corporation Law of the State of Delaware)

 

Marinus Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (hereinafter called the “ Corporation ”), a corporation organized and existing under and by virtue of the General Corporation Law of the State of Delaware, does hereby certify as follows:

 

1.                                       The name of the Corporation is Marinus Pharmaceuticals, Inc.  The date of the filing of its original Certificate of Incorporation with the Secretary of State of the State of Delaware was August 14, 2003 (“ Original Certificate of Incorporation ”).  The Original Certificate of Incorporation was amended and restated in its entirety by the filing of that certain Restated Certificate of Incorporation with the Secretary of State of the State of Delaware on September 30, 2005 (the “ Restated Certificate of Incorporation ”).  The Restated Certificate of Incorporation was amended on February 5, 2009.  The Restated Certificate of Incorporation was amended and restated in its entirety by the filing of that certain Second Restated Certificate of Incorporation with the Secretary of State of the State of Delaware on April 7, 2009 (the “ Second Restated Certificate of Incorporation ”).  The Second Restated Certificate of Incorporation was amended on June 9, 2009, January 29, 2010 and May 4, 2012.  This Third Restated Certificate of Incorporation, as amended from time to time, is referred to as the “ Third Restated Certificate of Incorporation .”

 

2.                                       This Third Restated Certificate of Incorporation was duly adopted by unanimous written consent of the board of directors and written consent of the stockholders of the Corporation in accordance with the applicable provisions of Sections 141, 228, 242 and 245 of the General Corporation Law of the State of Delaware.

 

3.                                       This Third Restated Certificate of Incorporation restates, integrates and amends the Second Restated Certificate of Incorporation filed April 7, 2009, as amended, and the text of the Second Restated Certificate of Incorporation is hereby amended and restated to read as herein set forth in full:

 

ARTICLE 1

 

The name of the Corporation is Marinus Pharmaceuticals, Inc.

 

ARTICLE 2

 

The address of the registered office of the Corporation in the State of Delaware is Corporation Trust Center, 1209 Orange Street, City of Wilmington, County of New Castle, State of Delaware 19801.  The registered agent in charge thereof is The Corporation Trust Company.

 



 

ARTICLE 3

 

The purpose of the Corporation is to engage in any lawful act or activity for which corporations may be organized under the General Corporation Law of Delaware.

 

ARTICLE 4

 

A.                                                 Classes of Stock .  The Corporation is authorized to issue two classes of stock to be designated, respectively, “ Common Stock ” and “ Preferred Stock .”  The total number of shares which the Corporation is authorized to issue is One Hundred Sixteen Million Fifty Three Thousand Six Hundred Eighty Four (116,053,684) shares each having a par value of one tenth of one cent ($0.001) per share.  Sixty Four Million (64,000,000) shares shall be Common Stock and Fifty Two Million Fifty Three Thousand Six Hundred Eighty Four (52,053,684) shares shall be Preferred Stock.  Eighteen Million Seven Hundred Seventy-Seven Thousand Eight Hundred Sixty (18,777,860) shares of the Preferred Stock are designated Series A Preferred Stock (the “ Series A Preferred Stock ”), Fifteen Million Two Hundred Seventy Five Thousand Eight Hundred Twenty Four (15,275,824) shares of the Preferred Stock are designated Series B Preferred Stock (the “ Series B Preferred Stock ”) and Eighteen Million (18,000,000) shares of the Preferred Stock are designated Series C Preferred Stock (the “ Series C Preferred Stock ”).  The Series A Preferred Stock, the Series B Preferred Stock and the Series C Preferred Stock are collectively referred to herein as the “ Preferred Stock .”

 

B.                                     Preferred Stock .  The powers, preferences, rights, restrictions, and other matters relating to the Preferred Stock are as follows:

 

1.                                       Dividends .

 

a.                                       Prior and in preference to any dividends payable on any securities of the Corporation, including the Series B Preferred Stock, the Series A Preferred Stock or the Common Stock, the holders of the Series C Preferred Stock shall be entitled to receive cumulative dividends, whether or not declared, in cash on shares of Series C Preferred Stock, such dividends to accrue from and after the date of the issuance of such shares of Series C Preferred Stock, at a rate of eight percent (8%) per annum of the Series C Original Issue Price (as defined herein), and to compound monthly (the “ Series C Accruing Dividends ”).  After payment in full of the Series C Accruing Dividends, but prior and in preference to any dividends payable on any securities of the Corporation, including the Series A Preferred Stock or the Common Stock, the holders of the Series B Preferred Stock shall be entitled to receive cumulative dividends, whether or not declared, in cash on shares of Series B Preferred Stock, such dividends to accrue from and after the date of the issuance of such shares of Series B Preferred Stock, at a rate of eight percent (8%) per annum of the Series B Original Issue Price (as defined herein), and to compound monthly (the “ Series B Accruing Dividends ” and together with the Series C Accruing Dividends, the “ Accruing Dividends ”).  After payment in full of the Accruing Dividends, the holders of the Series A Preferred Stock shall be entitled to receive in any fiscal year of the Corporation, out of any assets legally available therefor and in preference to any dividends payable on the Common Stock, non-cumulative dividends in cash at the rate of eight percent (8%) per annum of the Series A Original Issue Price (as defined herein) for each outstanding share of Series A Preferred Stock.  Such dividends on the Series A Preferred Stock

 

2



 

shall be due and payable only when, as, and if declared by the Board of Directors.  The “ Series A Original Issue Price ” of the Series A Preferred Stock shall be $1.67 per share (such amount to be proportionately adjusted for any stock dividends, stock splits, reverse stock splits or other similar transactions with respect to such shares).  The “ Series B Original Issue Price ” of the Series B Preferred Stock shall be $1.67 per share (such amount to be proportionately adjusted for any stock dividends, stock splits, reverse stock splits or other similar transactions with respect to such shares).  The “ Series C Original Issue Price ” of the Series C Preferred Stock shall be $1.1845 per share (such amount to be proportionately adjusted for any stock dividends, stock splits, reverse stock splits or other similar transactions with respect to such shares).

 

Subject to the preceding paragraph, no cash distributions or dividends (other than those payable solely in the Common Stock of the Corporation for which adjustments to the Series A Conversion Price (as defined below), the Series B Conversion Price (as defined below) and the Series C Conversion Price (as defined below) are effected in accordance with Article 4(B)(5)(f) below) shall be paid or declared and set apart for payment on any shares of any class or series of capital stock of the Corporation during any fiscal year of the Corporation unless and until there shall first or simultaneously be declared and paid on each share of each series of Preferred Stock a cash dividend in an amount equal to such dividend or distribution with each share of each series of the Preferred Stock entitled to receive the amount specified above (plus dividends for any prior year in which dividends were declared or accumulated but remain unpaid) plus the product of (i) the amount of the dividend, if any, declared on each share of Common Stock and (ii) the number of shares of Common Stock into which such share of Preferred Stock is then convertible determined by reference to the Series A Conversion Price, the Series B Conversion Price and/or the Series C Conversion Price (as applicable) in effect as of the record date for such dividend.

 

b.                                       In the event the Corporation shall declare a distribution payable in securities of other persons, evidences of indebtedness issued by the Corporation or other persons, assets (excluding cash dividends) or options or rights to purchase any such securities or evidences of indebtedness, then, in each such case the holders of the Preferred Stock shall be entitled to a proportionate share of any such distribution as though the holders of the Preferred Stock were the holders of the number of shares of Common Stock of the Corporation into which their shares of Preferred Stock are convertible as of the record date fixed for the determination of the holders of Common Stock of the Corporation entitled to receive such distribution.

 

2.                                       Liquidation Preference .

 

a.                                       In the event of any liquidation, dissolution or winding up of the Corporation, whether voluntary or involuntary (a “ Liquidating Transaction ”), the holders of shares of Series C Preferred Stock then outstanding shall be entitled to receive, prior and in preference to any distribution of any of the assets or surplus funds of the Corporation to the holders of the Series B Preferred Stock, the Series A Preferred Stock or the holders of the Common Stock by reason of their ownership thereof, an amount per share equal to the Series C Original Issue Price for each share of Series C Preferred Stock then held by such holder, plus all then unpaid Series C Accruing Dividends plus any other declared or accrued but unpaid dividends on each such share (the “ Series C Liquidation Preference ”).  All of the preferential amounts to be paid to the holders of the Series C Preferred Stock under this Section 2(a) shall be

 

3



 

paid or set apart for payment before the payment or setting apart for payment of any amount for, or the distribution of any assets or funds of the Corporation to, the holders of the Series B Preferred Stock, the Series A Preferred Stock or the Common Stock in connection with such Liquidating Transaction.  If, upon the occurrence of a Liquidating Transaction, the assets and funds of the Corporation are insufficient to provide for the payment of the full Series C Liquidation Preference to the holders of the Series C Preferred Stock, then the entire assets and funds of the Corporation legally available for distribution shall be distributed ratably among the holders of the Series C Preferred Stock in proportion to the full preferential amount each such holder is otherwise entitled to receive.

 

b.                                       After payment has been made to the holders of the Series C Preferred Stock of the full Series C Liquidation Preference to which they are entitled as provided in Article 4(B)(2)(a) above, the holders of the Series B Preferred Stock then outstanding shall be entitled to receive, prior and in preference to any distribution of any of the assets or surplus funds of the Corporation to the holders of the Series A Preferred Stock and the Common Stock by reason of their ownership thereof, an amount per share equal to the Series B Original Issue Price for each share of Series B Preferred Stock then held by such holder, plus all then unpaid Series B Accruing Dividends plus any other declared but unpaid dividends on each such share (the “ Series B Liquidation Preference ”).  All of the preferential amounts to be paid to the holders of the Series B Preferred Stock under this Section 2(b) shall be paid or set aside for payment before the payment or setting apart for payment of any amount for, or the distribution of any assets or funds of the Corporation to, the holders of the Series A Preferred Stock or the Common Stock in connection with such Liquidating Transaction.  If, upon the occurrence of a Liquidating Transaction and after payment in full of the Series C Liquidation Preference, the assets and funds of the Corporation are insufficient to provide for the payment of the full Series B Liquidation Preference to the holders of the Series B Preferred Stock, then the entire assets and funds of the Corporation legally available for distribution shall be distributed ratably among the holders of the Series B Preferred Stock in proportion to the full preferential amount each such holder is otherwise entitled to receive.

 

c.                                        After payment has been made to the holders of the Series C Preferred Stock of the full Series C Liquidation Preference to which they are entitled as provided in Article 4(B)(2)(a) above and after payment has been made to the holders of the Series B Preferred Stock of the full Series B Liquidation Preference to which they are entitled as provided in Article 4(B)(2)(b) above, the holders of the Series A Preferred Stock then outstanding shall be entitled to receive, prior and in preference to any distribution of any of the assets or surplus funds of the Corporation to the holders of the Common Stock by reason of their ownership thereof, an amount per share equal to the Series A Original Issue Price for each share of Series A Preferred Stock then held by such holder, plus all declared but unpaid dividends on each such share (the “ Series A Liquidation Preference ;” the Series A Liquidation Preference, the Series B Liquidation Preference and the Series C Liquidation Preference are collectively referred to herein as the “ Liquidation Preference ”).  All of the preferential amounts to be paid to the holders of the Series A Preferred Stock under this Section 2(c) shall be paid or set aside for payment before the payment or setting apart for payment of any amount for, or the distribution of any assets or funds of the Corporation to, the holders of the Common Stock in connection with such Liquidating Transaction.  If, upon the occurrence of a Liquidating Transaction and after payment in full of the Series C Liquidation Preference and the Series B Liquidation Preference, the assets

 

4



 

and funds of the Corporation are insufficient to provide for the payment of the full Series A Liquidation Preference to the holders of the Series A Preferred Stock, then the entire assets and funds of the Corporation legally available for distribution shall be distributed ratably among the holders of the Series A Preferred Stock in proportion to the full preferential amount each such holder is otherwise entitled to receive.

 

d.                                       After payment has been made to the holders of the Preferred Stock of their full Liquidation Preference required by Article 4(B)(2)(a), Article 4(B)(2)(b) and Article 4(B)(2)(c) above, the entire remaining assets or surplus funds of the Corporation legally available for distribution, if any, to stockholders shall be distributed among the holders of the Common Stock and the holders of the Series C Preferred Stock and the Series B Preferred Stock pro rata based on the number of shares of Common Stock held by each (assuming conversion of all shares of Preferred Stock into Common Stock).

 

e.                                        Each holder of an outstanding share of Preferred Stock shall be deemed to have consented, for purposes of Section 160 of the Delaware General Corporation Law, to distributions made by the Corporation in connection with the repurchase of shares of Common Stock issued to or held by employees or consultants, at a price per share no greater than the price paid for such shares, upon the termination of their employment with or services to the Corporation pursuant to agreements providing for the right of said repurchase between the Corporation and such persons, provided that such repurchases are effected in accordance with Article 4(B)(6)(a)(viii) below.

 

f.                                         Unless otherwise agreed to by the holders of at least 70% of the Preferred Stock (determined on an as-converted to Common Stock basis), each of the following shall be deemed to be a Liquidating Transaction within the meaning of this Article 4(B)(2):  (i) any acquisition of the Corporation by another person or entity (or group of persons or entities) by means of any transaction or series of transactions (including, without limitation, any reorganization, consolidation or merger of the Corporation with or into any other entity) (A) in which the holders of the Corporation’s outstanding capital stock immediately before the first such transaction do not, immediately after the consummation such transaction, retain stock or other equity interests representing at least fifty percent (50%) of the voting power of the surviving entity of such transaction or (B) after which any such person or entity and its affiliates hold more than fifty percent (50%) of the voting power of the Corporation’s outstanding capital stock (other than, in either case, in connection with a bona fide equity financing transaction primarily for capital raising purposes); (ii) any sale, conveyance or disposition of all or substantially all of the assets of the Corporation; or (iii) a grant of an exclusive license or other transfer (in one or a series of related transactions) of all or a substantial portion of the Corporation’s intellectual property (collectively, a “ Sale of the Company ”).

 

g.                                        Subject to the terms of Article 4(B)(2)(j), whenever the distribution provided for in this Article 4(B)(2) shall be payable in any assets other than cash, the value of the assets to be distributed shall be the fair market value thereof as determined by the Board of Directors (including a majority of the Preferred Directors, as hereinafter defined), consistent with the following valuation principles:

 

5



 

(i)                                      Freely traded securities:

 

(A)                                If traded on a securities exchange or through the NASDAQ Global Market, the value shall be based on the formula specified in the definitive agreements for the deemed liquidation transaction(s) or if no such formula exists, then the value of such securities shall be deemed to be the average of the closing prices of the securities on such exchange or system over the ten (10) trading day period ending three (3) days prior to the closing;

 

(B)                                If actively traded over-the-counter but not on a securities exchange or through the NASDAQ Global Market, the value shall be based on the formula specified in the definitive agreements for the deemed liquidation transaction(s) or if no such formula exists, then the value of such securities shall be deemed to be the average of the closing bid or sale prices (whichever is applicable) over the ten (10) trading day period ending three (3) days prior to the closing; and

 

(C)                                If there is no active public market, the value shall be the fair market value thereof, as so determined by the Board of Directors (including a majority of the Preferred Directors).

 

(ii)                                   The method of valuation of securities subject to investment letter or other restrictions on free marketability (other than restrictions arising solely by virtue of a stockholder’s status as an affiliate or former affiliate) shall be to make an appropriate discount from the market value determined as above in (i)(A), (B) or (C) to reflect the approximate fair market value thereof.

 

(iii)                                In the event the requirements of this Article 4(B)(2) are not complied with, the Corporation shall forthwith either:

 

(A)                                cause such closing to be postponed until such time as the requirements of this Article 4(B)(2) have been complied with; or

 

(B)                                cancel such transaction, in which event the rights, preferences and privileges of the holders of the Preferred Stock shall revert to and be the same as such rights, preferences and privileges existing immediately prior to the date of the first notice referred to in Article 4(B)(2)(g)(iv) below.

 

(iv)                               The Corporation shall give each holder of record of the Preferred Stock written notice of such impending transaction within ten (10) days after the Board of Directors approves such transaction or within ten (10) days after the commencement of any involuntary proceeding, whichever is earlier.  Such written notice shall describe the material terms and conditions of the impending transaction and the provisions of this Article 4(B)(2), and the Corporation shall thereafter give such holders prompt notice of any material changes.  The transaction shall in no event take place sooner than twenty (20) days after the Corporation has given the first notice provided for herein or sooner than ten (10) days after the Corporation has given notice of any material changes provided for herein; provided, however, that such periods may be shortened upon the written consent of the holders of shares of the Preferred Stock that are entitled to such notice rights or similar notice rights and that represent at least 70% of all

 

6



 

such outstanding shares of the Preferred Stock, voting together as a single class on an as converted to Common Stock basis.

 

h.                                       Notwithstanding anything in this Article 4(B)(2) to the contrary, for purposes of determining the amount that each holder of Series A Preferred Stock is entitled to receive in connection with any Liquidating Transaction pursuant to this Article 4(b)(2) in respect thereof, each such holder of Series A Preferred Stock shall be deemed to have converted (regardless of whether such holder actually converted) such holder’s shares of Series A Preferred Stock into shares of Common Stock at such time as such holder would receive, as a result of an actual conversion, in the aggregate, an amount greater than the amount that would be distributed to such holder if such holder did not convert such shares of Series A Preferred Stock into shares of Common Stock; provided that if any such holder of Series A Preferred Stock shall be deemed to have converted such shares of Series A Preferred Stock into Common Stock pursuant to the foregoing clause, then such holder shall not be entitled to receive any distribution that would otherwise be made to such holder in respect of such shares of Series A Preferred Stock under the first sentence of Article 4(b)(2)(c) and, to the extent that such holder already received any distribution under the first sentence of Article 4(b)(2)(c) in respect of such shares of Series A Preferred Stock, then the amount that such holder shall receive shall be reduced by the amount of such distribution.

 

i.                                           Unless otherwise agreed upon by the holders of at least 70% of the then outstanding shares of Preferred Stock, voting together as a single class on an as-converted to Common Stock basis, no stockholder of the Corporation shall enter into any transaction or series of related transactions resulting in a liquidation, dissolution or winding up of the Corporation pursuant to the terms hereof unless the terms of such transaction or transactions provide that the consideration to be paid to the stockholders of the Corporation is to be allocated in accordance with the preferences and priorities set forth in this Section 2.

 

j.                                          Unless otherwise agreed to by the holders of at least 70% of the Preferred Stock, voting together as a single class on an as-converted to Common Stock basis, in the event that any consideration payable to the Corporation or its stockholders in connection with any Sale of the Company is contingent upon the occurrence of any future event or the passage of time (including, without limitation, any deferred purchase price payments, installment payments, payments made in respect of any promissory note issued in such transaction, purchase price adjustment payments or payments in respect of “earnouts” but excluding those payments from escrow or holdbacks the principal purpose of which escrow or holdback is security for or protection with respect to representations, warranties or covenants made by stockholders of the Corporation), such consideration shall not be deemed received by the Corporation or its stockholders or available for distribution to such stockholders unless and until such consideration is indefeasibly received by the Corporation or its stockholders in accordance with the terms of such Sale of the Company.

 

3.                                       Redemption . Neither the Series A Preferred Stock, the Series B Preferred Stock nor the Series C Preferred Stock is redeemable.

 

7



 

4.                                       Voting Rights .

 

a.                                       Each holder of shares of the Series A Preferred Stock, each holder of shares of the Series B Preferred Stock and each holder of shares of the Series C Preferred Stock shall be entitled to the number of votes per share (rounded up to the nearest whole share) equal to the number of shares of Common Stock into which such share of Series A Preferred Stock, share of Series B Preferred Stock or share of Series C Preferred Stock, as applicable, is convertible as of the record date of the determination of the holders of shares entitled to vote, or, if no record date is established, at the date such vote is taken or any written consent is first solicited.  Each of the Series A Preferred Stock, Series B Preferred Stock and Series C Preferred Stock shall have voting rights and powers equal to the voting rights and powers of the Common Stock (except as otherwise expressly provided herein or as required by law).  Except as provided in the second sentence of Article 4(B)(4)(b) below (and as otherwise expressly provided herein or as provided by law), the holders of the Series A Preferred Stock, the holders of the Series B Preferred Stock and the holders of the Series C Preferred Stock shall vote together with the holders of the Common Stock, as a single class on an as-converted to Common Stock basis, on all matters upon which holders of Common Stock have the right to vote.  The holders of the Series A Preferred Stock, the holders of the Series B Preferred Stock and the holders of the Series C Preferred Stock shall be entitled to notice of any stockholders’ meeting in accordance with the Bylaws of the Corporation.

 

b.                                       The holders of at least 70% of the Preferred Stock, voting together as a single class on an as-converted to Common Stock basis, shall be entitled to elect five (5) members of the Board of Directors at each meeting or pursuant to each consent of the Corporation’s stockholders for the election of directors, and to remove from office such directors and to fill any vacancy caused by the resignation, death or removal of such directors (the “ Preferred Directors ”).  The holders of the Common Stock, voting together as a single and separate class, shall be entitled to elect one (1) member of the Board of Directors at each meeting or pursuant to each consent of the Corporation’s stockholders for the election of directors, and to remove from office such directors and to fill any vacancy caused by the resignation, death or removal of such directors.  The holders of the Common Stock and the holders of the Preferred Stock, voting together as a single class on an as-converted to Common Stock basis, shall be entitled to elect the remaining members of the Board of Directors at each meeting or pursuant to each consent of the Corporation’s stockholders for the election of directors, and to remove from office such director and to fill any vacancy caused by the resignation, death or removal of such director.

 

5.                                       Conversion .  The holders of the Preferred Stock shall have conversion rights as follows (the “ Conversion Rights ”):

 

a.                                       Right to Convert .  Each share of Series A Preferred Stock shall be convertible, at the option of the holder thereof and without the payment of any additional consideration by the holder thereof, at any time after the date of issuance of such share, at the office of the Corporation or any transfer agent for such stock, into such number of fully paid and nonassessable shares of Common Stock as provided herein.  Each share of Series B Preferred Stock shall be convertible, at the option of the holder thereof and without the payment of any additional consideration by the holder thereof, at any time after the date of issuance of such

 

8



 

share, at the office of the Corporation or any transfer agent for such stock, into such number of fully paid and nonassessable shares of Common Stock as provided herein.  Each share of Series C Preferred Stock shall be convertible, at the option of the holder thereof and without the payment of any additional consideration by the holder thereof, at any time after the date of issuance of such share, at the office of the Corporation or any transfer agent for such stock, into such number of fully paid and nonassessable shares of Common Stock as provided herein.

 

b.                                       Conversion of Preferred Stock .  The number of shares of Common Stock which a holder of Series A Preferred Stock shall be entitled to receive upon conversion of a share of Series A Preferred Stock shall be determined by dividing the Series A Original Issue Price by the Series A Conversion Price (as defined herein) then in effect.  The number of shares of Common Stock which a holder of Series B Preferred Stock shall be entitled to receive upon conversion of a share of Series B Preferred Stock shall be determined by dividing the Series B Original Issue Price by the Series B Conversion Price (as defined herein) then in effect.  The number of shares of Common Stock which a holder of Series C Preferred Stock shall be entitled to receive upon conversion of a share of Series C Preferred Stock shall be determined by dividing the Series C Original Issue Price by the Series C Conversion Price (as defined herein) then in effect.

 

c.                                        Conversion Price .  The conversion price for the Series A Preferred Stock shall initially be $1.67, subject to adjustment, in order to adjust the number of shares of Common Stock into which the shares of Series A Preferred Stock are convertible, as hereinafter provided (the “ Series A Conversion Price ”).  The conversion price for the Series B Preferred Stock shall initially be $1.67, subject to adjustment, in order to adjust the number of shares of Common Stock into which the shares of Series B Preferred Stock are convertible, as hereinafter provided (the “ Series B Conversion Price ”).  The conversion price for the Series C Preferred Stock shall initially be $1.1845, subject to adjustment, in order to adjust the number of shares of Common Stock into which the shares of Series C Preferred Stock are convertible, as hereinafter provided (the “ Series C Conversion Price ”; the Series A Conversion Price, the Series B Conversion Price and the Series C Conversion Price are sometimes collectively referred to herein as the “ Conversion Price ”).

 

d.                                       Automatic Conversion .  Each share of each series of the Preferred Stock shall automatically be converted into shares of Common Stock at the then effective Conversion Price for such series upon the earlier to occur of: (i) the date specified by written consent or agreement of holders of at least 70% of the shares of Preferred Stock then outstanding, voting together as a single class on an as-converted to Common Stock basis, or (ii) immediately prior to the closing of a firm commitment underwritten public offering pursuant to a registration statement filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission, and declared effective under the Securities Act of 1933, as amended (the “ Securities Act ) , covering the offer and sale of Common Stock for the account of the Corporation to the public at a price per share of at least $2.96125 (such amount to be proportionately adjusted for any stock dividends, stock splits, reverse stock splits or other similar transactions) resulting in net offering proceeds to the Corporation of at least $30,000,000 (a “ Qualifying Offering ”).

 

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e.                                        Mechanics of Conversion .

 

(i)                                      Before any holder of any series of Preferred Stock shall be entitled to receive a certificate or certificates representing shares of Common Stock into which such holder’s shares of Preferred Stock have been converted pursuant to Article 4(B)(5)(a) above, such holder shall surrender the certificate or certificates therefor, duly endorsed (or comply with applicable lost certificate provisions), at the office of the Corporation or of any transfer agent for the Preferred Stock, and shall give written notice to the Corporation at such office that it elects to convert the same and shall state therein the name or names in which it wishes the certificate or certificates for shares of Common Stock to be issued.  The Corporation shall, as soon as practicable thereafter, issue and deliver at such office to such holder of Preferred Stock, or to the nominee or nominees of such holder, a certificate or certificates for the number of shares of Common Stock (together with a certificate for any shares of Preferred Stock not converted, if applicable) to which it shall be entitled as aforesaid.  Such conversion shall be deemed to have been made immediately prior to the close of business on the date of surrender of the shares of such series of Preferred Stock to be converted and the person or persons entitled to receive the shares of Common Stock issuable upon such conversion shall be treated for all purposes as the record holder or holders of such shares of Common Stock on and as of such date.

 

(ii)                                   Before any holder of any series of Preferred Stock shall be entitled to receive a certificate or certificates representing shares of Common Stock into which such holder’s shares of Preferred Stock have been converted pursuant to Article 4(B)(5)(d) above, such holder shall surrender the certificate or certificates therefor, duly endorsed (or comply with applicable lost certificate provisions), at the office of the Corporation or of any transfer agent for the Preferred Stock.  The Corporation shall, as soon as practicable thereafter, issue and deliver at such office to such holder of Preferred Stock, or to the nominee or nominees of such holder, a certificate or certificates for the number of shares of Common Stock to which it shall be entitled as aforesaid.  Such conversion shall be deemed to have been made immediately prior to the close of business on the date specified in said Article 4(B)(5)(d) above and the person or persons entitled to receive the shares of Common Stock issuable upon such conversion shall be treated for all purposes as the record holder or holders of such shares of Common Stock on and as of such date.

 

(iii)                                If the conversion is in connection with a firm commitment underwritten offering of securities pursuant to the Securities Act, the conversion may, at the option of any holder tendering shares of any series of Preferred Stock for conversion, be conditioned upon the closing with the underwriters of the sale of securities pursuant to such offering, in which event the person(s) entitled to receive the Common Stock upon conversion of such series of Preferred Stock shall not be deemed to have converted such Preferred Stock until immediately prior to the closing of such sale of securities.

 

f.                                         Adjustments to Conversion Price for Stock Dividends and for Combinations or Subdivisions of Common Stock .  In the event that the Corporation at any time shall declare or pay, without consideration, any dividend or distribution on the Common Stock payable in Common Stock (or any securities or rights convertible into, or entitling the holder thereof to receive, directly or indirectly, additional shares of Common Stock), or shall effect a subdivision of the outstanding shares of Common Stock into a greater number of shares of

 

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Common Stock (by stock split, reclassification or otherwise than by payment of a dividend in Common Stock or in any right to acquire Common Stock), or in the event the outstanding shares of Common Stock shall be combined or consolidated, by reclassification or otherwise, into a lesser number of shares of Common Stock, then each of the Series A Conversion Price, the Series B Conversion Price and the Series C Conversion Price immediately prior to such event shall, concurrently with the effectiveness of such event, be proportionately decreased (so that the number of shares issuable upon conversion of such series of Preferred Stock is increased) or increased (so that the number of shares issuable upon conversion of such series of Preferred Stock is decreased), as appropriate.  In the event that the Corporation shall declare or pay, without consideration, any dividend on the Common Stock payable in any right to acquire Common Stock for no consideration, then the Corporation shall be deemed to have made a dividend payable in Common Stock in an amount of shares equal to the maximum number of shares issuable upon exercise of such rights to acquire Common Stock.  However, no such adjustment shall be made if the holders of Preferred Stock simultaneously receive (i) a dividend or other distribution of shares of Common Stock in a number equal to the number of shares of Common Stock as they would have received if all outstanding shares of Series A Preferred Stock, Series B Preferred Stock or Series C Preferred Stock, as applicable, had been converted into Common Stock on the date of such event, or (ii) a dividend or other distribution of shares of Series A Preferred Stock, Series B Preferred Stock or Series C Preferred Stock, as applicable, which are convertible, as of the date of such event, into such number of shares of Common Stock as is equal to the number of additional shares of Common Stock being issued with respect to each share of Common Stock in such dividend or distribution.

 

g.                                        Adjustments for Mergers, Reclassification and Reorganization .  If there shall occur any reorganization, recapitalization, reclassification, consolidation or merger involving the Corporation in which the Common Stock (but not the Preferred Stock) is converted into or exchanged for securities, cash or other property (other than a transaction covered by Article 4(B)(5)(f) above or a deemed liquidation transaction referred to in Article 4(B)(2)(f) above), then following any such reorganization, recapitalization, reclassification, consolidation or merger, each share of each series of  Preferred Stock shall thereafter be convertible in lieu of the Common Stock into which it was convertible prior to such event into the kind and amount of securities, cash or other property which a holder of the number of shares of Common Stock of the Corporation issuable upon conversion of one share of such series of Preferred Stock immediately prior to such reorganization, recapitalization, reclassification, consolidation or merger would have been entitled to receive pursuant to such transaction (all subject to further adjustment as provided in this Article 4(B)(5)); and, in such case, appropriate adjustment (as determined in good faith by the Board of Directors) shall be made in the application of the provisions in this Article 4(B)(5) with respect to the rights and interests thereafter of the holders of the Preferred Stock, to the end that the provisions set forth in this Article 4(B)(5) (including provisions with respect to changes in and other adjustments of the applicable Conversion Price) shall thereafter be applicable, as nearly as reasonably may be, in relation to any securities or other property thereafter deliverable upon the conversion of the Preferred Stock.

 

h.                                       Adjustments for Issuance of Additional Equity Securities :

 

(i)                                      Special Definitions .  For purposes of this Article 4(B)(5)(h), the following definitions shall apply:

 

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(A)                                Option ” shall mean rights, options or warrants to subscribe for, purchase or otherwise acquire Common Stock or Convertible Securities.

 

(B)                                Original Issue Date ” shall mean the date on which a share of Series C Preferred Stock is first issued.

 

(C)                                Convertible Securities ” shall mean any evidences of indebtedness, shares or other securities directly or indirectly convertible into or exchangeable for Common Stock, but excluding Options.

 

(D)                                Additional Shares of Common Stock ” shall mean all shares of Common Stock issued (or, pursuant to Article 4(B)(5)(h)(iii) below, deemed to be issued) by the Corporation after the Original Issue Date, other than:

 

(I)                                    shares of Common Stock issued or issuable upon the conversion of shares of any series of Preferred Stock (including without limitation shares of Preferred Stock issued or issuable upon exercise of the warrants described in Article 4(B)(5)(h)(i)(D)(VII) below) or as a dividend or distribution on any series of Preferred Stock;

 

(II)                               up to an aggregate of Five Million Two Hundred Twenty Eight Thousand Seven Hundred Fifty Eight (5,228,758) shares (such number to be proportionately adjusted for any stock dividends, stock splits, reverse stock splits or other similar transactions with respect to such shares) of Common Stock (or Options to purchase such number of shares of Common Stock) issued or issuable to officers, directors or employees of, or consultants to, the Corporation or a subsidiary under or pursuant to a stock option, stock grant or other equity incentive plan or agreement approved by the Board of Directors, provided that the terms of any such award or grant is approved by a majority of the Preferred Directors, and such additional number of shares, if any, from time to time specifically approved by the Board of Directors (including a majority of the Preferred Directors);

 

(III)                          shares of Common Stock issued or issuable upon the closing of a Qualifying Offering in which all shares of the Preferred Stock are automatically converted to Common Stock pursuant to Article 4(B)(5)(d) hereof;

 

(IV)                           shares of Common Stock issued or issuable by reason of a dividend, stock split, split-up, recapitalization or other distribution on or with respect to shares of Common Stock for which adjustment is otherwise made pursuant to this Article 4(B)(5) hereof;

 

(V)                                shares of Common Stock, Options or Convertible Securities issued to strategic partners, banks, savings and loans institutions or similar institutions in connection with revolving credit arrangements, equipment leases or financings, strategic partnerships, licensing arrangements, technology licensing arrangements or similar transactions, provided that the terms thereof are approved by the Board of Directors (including a majority of the Preferred Directors) and the principal purpose of such issuance is not equity financing;

 

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(VI)                           shares of Common Stock, Options or Convertible Securities issued pursuant to or in connection with the acquisition of another corporation or another entity by the Corporation, whether by way of merger or consolidation, purchase of all or substantially all of the assets of such other corporation or other entity or a stock for stock exchange or otherwise, provided that such acquisition not primarily for financing purposes and is approved by the Board of Directors (including a majority of the Preferred Directors);

 

(VII)                      warrants to acquire up to an aggregate of Three Million Fifty Five Thousand One Hundred Sixty Three (3,055,163) shares of the Series B Preferred Stock (such number of shares to be subject to adjustment as may be provided thereunder) (the “ Series B Warrants ”) or the shares of Series B Preferred Stock issued or issuable upon exercise of such Series B Warrants;

 

(VIII)                 up to Eight Thousand Three Hundred Eighty Three (8,383) shares of Common Stock pursuant to the exercise of that certain Stock Subscription Warrant issued to Webster Bank (the “ Webster Warrant ”), which is outstanding as of the date of filing hereof (such number of shares to be subject to adjustment as provided under the Webster Warrant); or

 

(IX)  shares of Series C Preferred Stock issued pursuant to that certain Series C Preferred Stock Purchase Agreement to be dated as of November 2, 2012 among the Corporation and the purchasers listed therein (the “ Stock Purchase Agreement ”).

 

(ii)                                   No Adjustment of Conversion Price .  No adjustment in any Conversion Price shall be made under this Article 4(B)(5)(h), unless the consideration per share (determined pursuant to Article 4(B)(5)(h)(v) for an Additional Share of Common Stock issued or deemed to be issued by the Corporation) is less than such Conversion Price in effect on the date of, and immediately prior to, the issue of such Additional Shares.

 

(iii)                                Deemed Issue of Additional Shares of Common Stock .  If the Corporation at any time or from time to time after the Original Issue Date shall issue any Options or Convertible Securities (excluding Options or Convertible Securities which are themselves exempted from the definition of Additional Shares of Common Stock) or shall fix a record date for the determination of holders of any class of securities entitled to receive any such Options or Convertible Securities, then the maximum number of shares of Common Stock (as set forth in the instrument relating thereto without regard to any provision contained therein designed to protect against dilution) issuable upon the exercise of such Options or, in the case of Convertible Securities and Options therefor, the conversion or exchange of such Convertible Securities, shall be deemed to be Additional Shares of Common Stock issued as of the time of such issue or, in case such a record date shall have been fixed, as of the close of business on such record date, provided that Additional Shares of Common Stock shall not be deemed to have been issued unless the consideration per share (determined pursuant to Article 4(B)(5)(h)(v) hereof) of such Additional Shares of Common Stock would be less than the Series A Conversion Price, the Series B Conversion Price or the Series C Conversion Price in effect on the date of, and immediately prior to, the deemed issuance, or such record date, as the case may be, provided

 

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further that in any such case in which Additional Shares of Common Stock are deemed to be issued:

 

(A)                                No further adjustment in the applicable Conversion Price shall be made upon the subsequent issue of Convertible Securities or shares of Common Stock upon the exercise of such Options or conversion or exchange of such Convertible Securities;

 

(B)                                If such Options or Convertible Securities by their terms provide, with the passage of time or otherwise, for any increase in the consideration payable to the Corporation, or decrease in the number of shares of Common Stock issuable upon the exercise, conversion or exchange thereof, the Series A Conversion Price, the Series B Conversion Price and/or the Series C Conversion Price, as applicable, computed upon the original issue of such Options or Convertible Securities (or upon the occurrence of a record date with respect thereto), and any subsequent adjustments based thereon, shall, upon any such increase or decrease becoming effective, be recomputed to reflect such increase or decrease insofar as it affects such Options or the rights of conversion or exchange under such Convertible Securities;

 

(C)                                Upon the expiration of any such Options or rights, the termination of any such Options or rights to convert or exchange or the expiration of any Options or rights related to such Convertible Securities, the Series A Conversion Price, the Series B Conversion Price and/or the Series C Conversion Price, to the extent in any way affected by or computed using such Options, rights or Convertible Securities, shall be recomputed to reflect the issuance of only the number of shares of Common Stock (and convertible or exchangeable securities which remain in effect) actually issued upon the exercise of such Options, rights or Convertible Securities, upon the conversion or exchange of such Convertible Securities or upon the exercise of the Options or rights related to such Convertible Securities;

 

(D)                                No readjustment pursuant to clause (B) or (C) above shall have the effect of increasing the Series A Conversion Price to an amount which exceeds the lower of (1) the Series A Conversion Price on the original adjustment date and (2) the Series A Conversion Price that would have resulted from any issuance of Additional Shares of Common Stock between the original adjustment date and such readjustment date.  No readjustment pursuant to clause (B) or (C) above shall have the effect of increasing the Series B Conversion Price to an amount which exceeds the lower of (1) the Series B Conversion Price on the original adjustment date and (2) the Series B Conversion Price that would have resulted from any issuance of Additional Shares of Common Stock between the original adjustment date and such readjustment date.  No readjustment pursuant to clause (B) or (C) above shall have the effect of increasing the Series C Conversion Price to an amount which exceeds the lower of (1) the Series C Conversion Price on the original adjustment date and (2) the Series C Conversion Price that would have resulted from any issuance of Additional Shares of Common Stock between the original adjustment date and such readjustment date;

 

(E)                                 In the case of any Options which expire by their terms not more than ninety (90) days after the date of issue thereof, no adjustment of the Series A Conversion Price, Series B Conversion Price or Series C Conversion Price shall be made until

 

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the expiration or exercise of all such Options issued on the same date, whereupon such adjustment shall be made in the manner provided in clause (C) above; and

 

(F)                                  If such record date shall have been fixed and such Options or Convertible Securities are not issued on the date fixed therefor, the adjustments previously made in the Series A Conversion Price, Series B Conversion Price and/or Series C Conversion Price which became effective on such record date shall be canceled as of the close of business on such record date, and thereafter such Conversion Price(s) shall be adjusted pursuant to this Article 4(B)(5)(h)(iii) as of the actual date of their issuance.

 

(iv)                               Adjustment of Conversion Prices Upon Issuance of Additional Shares of Common Stock .  Subject to the provisions of Article 4(B)(5)(h)(ii) and Article 4(B)(5)(h)(v), in the event the Corporation shall at any time after the Original Issue Date issue Additional Shares of Common Stock (including Additional Shares of Common Stock deemed to be issued pursuant to Article 4(B)(5)(h)(iii), but excluding shares issued as a dividend or distribution or upon a stock split or combination as provided in Article 4(B)(5)(f)), without consideration or for a consideration per share less than:

 

(A)                                The Series C Conversion Price in effect on the date of and immediately prior to the issuance of such Additional Shares of Common Stock, then and in each such event, the Series C Conversion Price shall be reduced, concurrently with such issue, to the consideration per share received by the Corporation for such issue or deemed issue of the Additional Shares of Common Stock; provided that if such issuance or deemed issuance was without consideration, then the Corporation shall be deemed to have received, on a per share basis, an aggregate of $0.001 of consideration for all such Additional Shares of Common Stock issued or deemed to be issued; or

 

(B)                                The Series B Conversion Price in effect on the date of and immediately prior to the issuance of such Additional Shares of Common Stock, then and in each such event, the Series B Conversion Price shall be reduced, concurrently with such issue, to the consideration per share received by the Corporation for such issue or deemed issue of the Additional Shares of Common Stock; provided that if such issuance or deemed issuance was without consideration, then the Corporation shall be deemed to have received, on a per share basis, an aggregate of $0.001 of consideration for all such Additional Shares of Common Stock issued or deemed to be issued; or

 

(C)                                The Series A Conversion Price in effect on the date of and immediately prior to the issuance of such Additional Shares of Common Stock, then and in each such event, the Series A Conversion Price shall be reduced concurrently with such issue to a price (calculated to the nearest whole cent) determined by multiplying the Series A Conversion Price then in effect by a fraction (x) the numerator of which shall be the number of shares of Common Stock Outstanding (as defined below) immediately prior to such issuance plus the number of shares of Common Stock which the aggregate consideration received by the Corporation for the total number of Additional Shares of Common Stock so issued would purchase at the Series A Conversion Price and (y) the denominator of which shall be the number of shares of Common Stock Outstanding immediately prior to such issuance plus the number of the Additional Shares of Common Stock so issued.

 

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For purposes of this section, “Common Stock Outstanding” shall include (a) shares of Common Stock then issued and outstanding, (b) shares of Common Stock into which the Preferred Stock are then convertible without giving effect to the anti-dilution provisions hereof, (c) shares of Common Stock then issuable upon the exercise of then outstanding stock options described in Article 4(B)(5)(h)(i)(D)(II) (without giving effect to any adjustments that otherwise may be permitted or required as a result of the issuance of the Additional Shares of Common Stock that is the subject of this calculation), (d) shares of Common Stock then issuable pursuant to the Webster Warrant (if then outstanding) (without giving effect to any adjustments that otherwise may be permitted or required as a result of the issuance of the Additional Shares of Common Stock that is the subject of this calculation) and (e) shares of Common Stock then issuable pursuant to the Series B Warrants (if then outstanding) (without giving effect to any adjustments that otherwise may be permitted or required as a result of the issuance of the Additional Shares of Common Stock that is the subject of this calculation).

 

Notwithstanding the foregoing, no Conversion Price shall be so reduced at such time if the amount of such reduction would be an amount less than $0.01, but any such amount shall be carried forward and reduction with respect thereto made at the time of and together with any subsequent reduction which, together with such amount and any other amount or amounts so carried forward, shall aggregate $0.01 or more.

 

(v)                                  Determination of Consideration .  For purposes of this Article 4(B)(5)(h), the consideration received by the Corporation for the issue of any Additional Shares of Common Stock shall be computed as follows:

 

(A)                                Cash and Property .  Such consideration shall:

 

(I)                                    insofar as it consists of cash, be computed at the aggregate of cash received by the Corporation, excluding amounts paid or payable for accrued interest or accrued dividends;

 

(II)                               insofar as it consists of property other than cash, be computed at the fair market value thereof at the time of such issue, as determined by the Board of Directors (including a majority of the Preferred Directors); and

 

(III)                          in the event Additional Shares of Common Stock are issued together with other shares or securities or other assets of the Corporation for consideration which covers both, be the proportion of such consideration so received, computed as provided in clauses (I) and (II) above, as determined by the Board of Directors (including a majority of the Preferred Directors).

 

(B)                                Options and Convertible Securities .  The consideration per share received by the Corporation for Additional Shares of Common Stock deemed to have been issued pursuant to Article 4(B)(5)(h)(iii), relating to Options and Convertible Securities, shall be determined by dividing:

 

(x)                                  the total amount, if any, received or receivable by the Corporation as consideration for the issue of such Options or Convertible Securities, plus the minimum aggregate amount of additional

 

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consideration (as set forth in the instruments relating thereto, without regard to any provision contained therein designed to protect against dilution) payable to the Corporation upon the exercise of such Options or the conversion or exchange of such Convertible Securities, or in the case of Options for Convertible Securities, the exercise of such Options for Convertible Securities and the conversion or exchange of such Convertible Securities, by

 

(y)                                  the maximum number of shares of Common Stock (as set forth in the instruments relating thereto, without regard to any provision contained therein designed to protect against dilution) issuable upon the exercise of such Options or the conversion or exchange of such Convertible Securities.

 

i.                                           Certificates as to Adjustments .  Upon the occurrence of each adjustment or readjustment of any Conversion Price pursuant to this Article 4(B)(5), the Corporation at its expense shall promptly compute such adjustment or readjustment in accordance with the terms hereof and prepare and furnish to each holder of Preferred Stock a certificate executed by the Corporation’s Executive Chairman, President or Chief Financial Officer setting forth such adjustment or readjustment and showing in detail the facts upon which such adjustment or readjustment is based.  The Corporation shall, upon the written request at any time of any holder of Preferred Stock, furnish or cause to be furnished to such holder a like certificate setting forth (i) such adjustments and readjustments, (ii) each Conversion Price at the time in effect, and (iii) the number of shares of Common Stock and the amount, if any, of other property which at the time would be received upon the conversion of the Preferred Stock.

 

j.                                          Notices of Record Date .  In the event that the Corporation shall propose at any time: (i) to declare any dividend or distribution upon its Common Stock, whether in cash, property, stock or other securities, whether or not a regular cash dividend and whether or not out of earnings or earned surplus; (ii) to offer for subscription pro rata to the holders of any class or series of its stock any additional shares of stock of any class or series or other rights; (iii) to effect any reclassification or recapitalization of its Common Stock outstanding involving a change in the Common Stock; or (iv) to merge or consolidate with or into any other corporation, or sell, lease or convey all or substantially all of its assets, or to grant an exclusive license or otherwise transfer all or substantially all of its intellectual property or to liquidate, dissolve or wind up; then, in connection with each such event, the Corporation shall send to the holders of the Preferred Stock: (1) at least twenty (20) days prior written notice of the date on which a record shall be taken for such dividend, distribution or subscription rights (and specifying the date on which the holders of Common Stock shall be entitled thereto) or for determining rights to vote, if any, in respect of the matters referred to in (iii) and (iv) above and (2) in the case of the matters referred to in (iii) and (iv) above, at least twenty (20) days prior written notice of the date when the same shall take place (and specifying the date on which the holders of Common Stock shall be entitled to exchange their Common Stock for securities or other property deliverable upon the occurrence of such event).

 

k.                                       Issue Taxes .  The Corporation shall pay any and all issue and other taxes that may be payable in respect of any issue or delivery of shares of Common Stock on

 

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conversion of any shares of any series of Preferred Stock pursuant hereto; provided, however, that the Corporation shall not be obligated to pay any transfer taxes resulting from any transfer requested by any holder in connection with any such conversion.

 

l.                                           Reservation of Stock Issuable Upon Conversion .  The Corporation shall at all times reserve and keep available out of its authorized but unissued shares of Common Stock, solely for the purpose of effecting the conversion of the shares of each series of Preferred Stock, such number of its shares of Common Stock as shall from time to time be sufficient to effect the conversion of all outstanding shares of each series of Preferred Stock; and if at any time the number of authorized but unissued shares of Common Stock shall not be sufficient to effect the conversion of all then outstanding shares of each series of Preferred Stock, the Corporation will take such corporate action as may, in the opinion of its counsel, be necessary to increase its authorized but unissued shares of Common Stock to such number of shares as shall be sufficient for such purpose, including, without limitation, engaging in best efforts to obtain the requisite stockholder approval of any necessary amendment to this Third Restated Certificate of Incorporation.

 

m.                                   Fractional Shares .  No fractional share shall be issued upon the conversion of any share or shares of any series of Preferred Stock.  All shares of Common Stock (including fractions thereof) issuable upon conversion of more than one share of any series of Preferred Stock by a holder thereof shall be aggregated for purposes of determining whether the conversion would result in the issuance of any fractional share.  If, after the aforementioned aggregation, the conversion would result in the issuance of a fraction of a share of Common Stock, the Corporation shall, in lieu of issuing any fractional share, pay the holder otherwise entitled to such fraction a sum in cash equal to the fair market value of such fraction on the date of conversion (as determined in good faith by the Board of Directors).

 

n.                                       Notices .  Any notice required by the provisions of this Article 4(B)(5) to be given to the holders of shares of any series of Preferred Stock shall be deemed given if deposited in the United States mail, postage prepaid, and addressed to each holder of record at his or its address appearing on the books of the Corporation.

 

o.                                       Definition of Common Stock .  As used in this Article 4(B)(5), the term “Common Stock” shall mean and include the Corporation’s authorized Common Stock, par value $0.001 per share, and shall also include any security of the Corporation hereafter authorized which shall not be limited to a fixed sum or percentage in respect of the rights of the holders thereof to participate in dividends or in the distribution of assets upon the voluntary or involuntary liquidation, dissolution or winding up of the Corporation; provided that the shares of Common Stock issuable upon conversion of shares of any series of Preferred Stock shall include only shares designated as Common Stock of the Corporation on the date of filing of this instrument, or in case of any reorganization of the outstanding shares thereof, the stock, securities or assets provided for in Article 4(B)(5)(g).

 

6.                                       Protective Provisions .

 

a.                                       So long as at least Two Million Five Hundred Thousand (2,500,000) shares of Preferred Stock (such number to be proportionately adjusted for any stock

 

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dividends, stock splits, reverse stock splits or other similar transactions with respect to such shares) remain outstanding, the Corporation shall not (whether by reclassification, reorganization, recapitalization, transfer of assets, consolidation, merger, amendment, dissolution, issuance or sale of securities or any other action), without the vote or written consent by the holders of at least 70% of the then outstanding shares of Preferred Stock, voting together as a single class on an as-converted to Common Stock basis:

 

(i)                                      Authorize, create or issue, or obligate itself to issue, any other security (including any security convertible into or exercisable for any equity security) having rights, preferences or privileges senior to or on parity with any series of Preferred Stock, except as otherwise contemplated pursuant to the Stock Purchase Agreement;

 

(ii)                                   Increase or decrease the authorized number of shares of Preferred Stock (or any series thereof) or Common Stock;

 

(iii)                                Take any action which would result in a liquidation, dissolution or winding up of the Corporation (including any transaction or series of related transactions deemed to be a liquidation, dissolution or winding up of the Corporation pursuant to Article 4(B)(2) hereof);

 

(iv)                               Amend or waive the Corporation’s Third Restated Certificate of Incorporation or Bylaws in any way;

 

(v)                                  Take any action that would alter or change in any respect the rights, preferences, privileges or restrictions of or on any series of Preferred Stock;

 

(vi)                               Pay or declare any dividend or distribution on any shares of the capital stock of the Corporation (other than dividends payable solely in shares of Common Stock);

 

(vii)                            Take any action which would result in the taxation of holders of the Preferred Stock under Internal Revenue Code Section 305;

 

(viii)                         Redeem, purchase or otherwise acquire (or pay into or set aside for a sinking fund for such purpose) any equity security; provided, however, that this restriction shall not apply to the repurchase of shares of Common Stock from employees, officers, directors, consultants or other persons performing services for the Corporation or any subsidiary pursuant to plans or agreements under which the Corporation has the option to repurchase such shares at no greater than cost upon the termination of employment or other provision of services to the Corporation provided such plans or agreements were approved by the Board of Directors;

 

(ix)                               Cause the Corporation to effect (by acquisition of stock or otherwise) any acquisition of the assets, business or property of any corporation or other entity outside the ordinary course of business (or permit any subsidiary of the Corporation to do any of the foregoing);

 

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(x)                                  Take any action which results in any license of all or a substantial portion of any of the Corporation’s intellectual property, a license of all or substantially all of any of the Corporation’s other assets, a strategic partnership, a merger, consolidation, recapitalization or other corporate reorganization, sale of control, or sale of all or substantially all of the assets of the Corporation (or permit any subsidiary of the Corporation to do any of the foregoing);

 

(xi)                               Increase or decrease the authorized number of directors of the Board of Directors;

 

(xii)                            (A) permit any subsidiary of the Corporation to authorize or issue any security other than to the Corporation or (B) sell, assign, convey or otherwise dispose of any security of any subsidiary;

 

(xiii)                         Effect any acquisition of the capital stock or equity interests of any other corporation or other entity which results or will result in the operations thereof being consolidated with the results of operations of the Corporation (or permit any subsidiary of the Corporation to do the foregoing); or

 

(xiv)                        Enter into, create, execute or otherwise become obligated under a debt instrument or instruments, or the incurrence of any debt, which, individually or in the aggregate, exceed(s) at any one time One Million Dollars ($1,000,000), or encumber all or substantially all of the Corporation’s property or business (or permit any subsidiary of the Corporation to do the foregoing).

 

b.                                       So long as at least Two Million Five Hundred Thousand (2,500,000) shares of Series C Preferred Stock (such number to be proportionately adjusted for any stock dividends, stock splits, reverse stock splits or other similar transactions with respect to such shares) remain outstanding, the Corporation shall not (whether by reclassification, reorganization, recapitalization, transfer of assets, consolidation, merger, amendment, dissolution, issuance or sale of securities or any other action), without the vote or written consent by the holders of at least 60% of the then outstanding shares of Series C Preferred Stock, voting together as a separate class on an as-converted to Common Stock basis:

 

(i)                                      Increase or decrease the authorized number of shares of Series C Preferred Stock; or

 

(ii)                                   Take any action that would alter or change in any respect the rights, preferences, privileges or restrictions of or on the Series C Preferred Stock unless such action involves the authorization, creation or issuance of a security to provide the Corporation with additional financing and the Series C Preferred Stock is not treated in a manner that is different than any other series of Preferred Stock.

 

7.                                       No Reissuance of Preferred Stock .  No share or shares of any series of Preferred Stock acquired by the Corporation by reason of purchase, conversion, redemption or otherwise shall be reissued, and all such shares shall be canceled, retired and eliminated from the shares which the Corporation shall be authorized to issue.  This Third Restated Certificate of

 

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Incorporation shall be appropriately amended to effect the corresponding reduction in corporation’s capital stock.

 

C.                                     Common Stock .

 

1.                                       Dividend Rights .  Subject to the prior rights of the holders of all classes of stock at the time outstanding having prior rights as to dividends, the holders of the Common Stock shall be entitled to receive, when and as declared by the Board of Directors, out of any assets or the Corporation legally available therefor, such dividends as may be declared from time to time by the Board of Directors.

 

2.                                       Liquidation Rights .  Upon the liquidation, dissolution or winding up of the Corporation, the assets of the Corporation shall be distributed as provided in Article 4(B)(2) hereof.

 

3.                                       Redemption .  The Common Stock shall not be redeemable.

 

4.                                       Voting Rights .  Each holder of shares of Common Stock shall have the right to one (1) vote per each share of Common Stock held by such holder, and shall be entitled to notice of any stockholders’ meeting in accordance with the Bylaws of the Corporation, and shall be entitled to vote upon such matters and in such manner as may be provided herein or by law.  The number of authorized shares of Common Stock may be increased or decreased by the affirmative vote of the holders of capital stock having a majority of the voting power of the Corporation (voting together on an as-converted to Common Stock basis), irrespective of the provision of Section 242(b)(2) of the General Corporation Law of the State of Delaware.

 

ARTICLE 5

 

A director of the Corporation shall not be personally liable to the Corporation or its stockholders (including without limitation their heirs, executors and administrators) for monetary damages for breach of fiduciary duty as a director in accordance with and to the fullest extent permitted by the Delaware General Corporation Law as the same exists or as may hereafter be amended.

 

The Corporation shall indemnify each of the Corporation’s directors in each and every situation where, under Section 145 of the Delaware General Corporation Law, as amended from time to time (“ Section 145 ”), the Corporation is permitted or empowered to make such indemnification.  The Corporation may, in the sole discretion of the Board of Directors, indemnify any other person who may be indemnified pursuant to Section 145 to the extent the Board of Directors deems advisable, as permitted by Section 145.  The Corporation shall promptly make or cause to be made any determination required to be made pursuant to Section 145.

 

Any repeal or modification of the foregoing provisions of this Article 5 by the stockholders of the Corporation shall not adversely affect any right or protection of a director of the Corporation or any former director of the Corporation existing at the time of such repeal or modification.

 

21


 

ARTICLE 6

 

Election of directors need not be by written ballot unless the Bylaws of the Corporation shall so provide.  The right to cumulate votes in the election of directors shall not exist with respect to shares of stock of the Corporation.

 

ARTICLE 7

 

The number of directors which shall constitute the whole Board of Directors shall be eight (8) until this Article 7 shall be duly amended.

 

ARTICLE 8

 

Meetings of stockholders may be held within or without the State of Delaware, as the Bylaws may provide.  The books of the Corporation may be kept (subject to any provision contained in the statutes) outside the State of Delaware at such place or places as may be designated from time to time by the Board of Directors or in the Bylaws of the Corporation.

 

ARTICLE 9

 

Except as otherwise provided in this Third Restated Certificate of Incorporation, in furtherance and not in limitation of the powers conferred by statute, the Board of Directors is expressly authorized to make, repeal, alter, amend and rescind any or all of the Bylaws of the Corporation.

 

ARTICLE 10

 

The Corporation expressly elects not to be governed by Section 203 of the Delaware General Corporation Law.

 

ARTICLE 11

 

Pursuant to Section 122(17) of the General Corporation Law of the State of Delaware, the Corporation hereby renounces any interest or expectancy of the Corporation or any subsidiary of the Corporation in, or in being offered an opportunity to participate in, any and all business opportunities that are presented to the holders of  Preferred Stock or their affiliates (including, without limitation, any representative or affiliate of such holders of Preferred Stock serving on the Board of Directors or the board of directors or other governing body of any subsidiary of the Corporation (each a “ Board ”)) (collectively, the “ Investor Parties ”).  Without limiting the foregoing renunciation, the Corporation on behalf of itself and its subsidiaries (a) acknowledges that the Investor Parties are in the business of making investments in, and have or may have investments in, other businesses similar to and that may compete with the businesses of the Corporation and its subsidiaries (“ Competing Businesses ”) and (b) agrees that the Investor Parties shall have the unfettered right to make investments in or have relationships with other Competing Businesses independent of their investments in the Corporation.  By virtue of a Investor Party holding capital stock of the Corporation or by having persons designated by or affiliated with such Investor Party serving on or observing at meetings of any Board or otherwise, no Investor Party shall have any obligation to the Corporation, any of its subsidiaries

 

22



 

or any other holder of capital stock or securities of the Corporation to refrain from competing with the Corporation and any of its subsidiaries, making investments in or having relationships with Competing Businesses, or otherwise engaging in any commercial activity and none of the Corporation, any of its subsidiaries or any other holder of capital stock or securities of the Corporation shall have any right with respect to any investment or activities undertaken by such Investor Party.  Without limitation of the foregoing, each Investor Party may engage in or possess any interest in other business ventures of any nature or description, independently or with others, similar or dissimilar to the business of the Corporation or any of its subsidiaries, and none of the Corporation, any of its subsidiaries or any other holder of capital stock or securities of the Corporation shall have any rights or expectancy by virtue of such Investor Parties’ relationships with the Corporation, or otherwise in and to such independent ventures or the income or profits derived therefrom; and the pursuit of any such ventures, even if such investment is in a Competing Business, shall not for any purpose be deemed wrongful or improper.  No Investor Party shall be obligated to present any particular investment opportunity to the Corporation or its subsidiaries even if such opportunity is of a character that, if presented to the Corporation or such subsidiary, could be taken by the Corporation or such subsidiary, and each Investor Party shall continue to have the right for its own respective account or to recommend to others any such particular investment opportunity.  The foregoing provisions shall not apply to any opportunity offered to a member of the Board of Directors of the Corporation specifically and expressly in such person’s capacity as a director of the Corporation, and such specific and express opportunities shall belong to the Corporation.

 

[Remainder of Page Intentionally Left Blank]

 

23



 

IN WITNESS WHEREOF, this Third Restated Certificate of Incorporation which restates and amends the provisions of the Second Restated Certificate of Incorporation of the Corporation, as amended to date, and which has been duly adopted in accordance with Sections 141, 228, 242 and 245 of the General Corporation Law of the State of Delaware, has been executed by its Executive Chairman this 2nd day of November, 2012.

 

 

 

MARINUS PHARMACEUTICALS, INC.

 

 

 

 

 

By:

/s/ Christopher M. Cashman

 

 

Name: Christopher M. Cashman

 

 

Title: Chief Executive Officer

 

24



 

CERTIFICATE OF AMENDMENT
OF
THIRD RESTATED CERTIFICATE OF INCORPORATION
OF
MARINUS PHARMACEUTICALS, INC.

 

Marinus Pharmaceuticals, Inc., a corporation organized and existing under and by virtue of the General Corporation Law of the State of Delaware,

 

DOES HEREBY CERTIFY THAT:

 

FIRST:  The Board of Directors of Marinus Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (the “Corporation”), pursuant to a written consent of the Board of Directors dated as of April 21, 2013, duly adopted the following resolution setting forth a proposed amendment of the Third Restated Certificate of Incorporation of the Corporation, declaring said amendment to be advisable and calling for consideration thereof by the stockholders of the Corporation.  The resolution setting forth the proposed amendment is as follows:

 

RESOLVED, that Section A of Article Four of the Third Restated Certificate of Incorporation of Marinus Pharmaceuticals, Inc. shall be amended in its entirety so as to provide as set forth on Exhibit A hereto.

 

SECOND:  Thereafter, pursuant to a resolution of the Board of Directors, the stockholders of the Corporation voted in favor of the amendment.

 

THIRD:  The amendment was duly adopted in accordance with the provisions of Section 242 of the General Corporation Law of the State of Delaware.  With respect to such adoption, written consent of the stockholders of the Corporation has been given in accordance with the provisions of Section 228 of the General Corporation Law of the State of Delaware and written notice has been given as provided in Section 228.

 

IN WITNESS WHEREOF, the Corporation has caused this Certificate of Amendment to be executed by a duly authorized officer as of April 30, 2013.

 

 

MARINUS PHARMACEUTICALS, INC.

 

 

 

 

 

By:

/s/ Christopher M. Cashman

 

 

Christopher M. Cashman

 

 

Chief Executive Officer

 



 

EXHIBIT A

 

A.                Classes of Stock .  The Corporation is authorized to issue two classes of stock to be designated, respectively, “ Common Stock ” and “ Preferred Stock .”  The total number of shares which the Corporation is authorized to issue is One Hundred Eighteen Million Fifty Three Thousand Six Hundred Eighty Four (118,053,684) shares each having a par value of one tenth of one cent ($0.001) per share.  Sixty Five Million One Hundred Thousand (65,100,000) shares shall be Common Stock and Fifty Two Million Nine Hundred Fifty Three Thousand Six Hundred Eighty Four (52,953,684) shares shall be Preferred Stock.  Eighteen Million Seven Hundred Seventy-Seven Thousand Eight Hundred Sixty (18,777,860) shares of the Preferred Stock are designated Series A Preferred Stock (the “ Series A Preferred Stock ”), Fifteen Million Two Hundred Seventy Five Thousand Eight Hundred Twenty Four (15,275,824) shares of the Preferred Stock are designated Series B Preferred Stock (the “ Series B Preferred Stock ”) and Eighteen Million Nine Hundred Thousand (18,900,000) shares of the Preferred Stock are designated Series C Preferred Stock (the “ Series C Preferred Stock ”).  The Series A Preferred Stock, the Series B Preferred Stock and the Series C Preferred Stock are collectively referred to herein as the “ Preferred Stock .”

 

A-1




EXHIBIT 3.3

 

SECOND AMENDED AND RESTATED

 

BY-LAWS OF

 

MARINUS PHARMACEUTICALS, INC.

 

A DELAWARE CORPORATION

 

Dated: April 8, 2009

 



 

ARTICLE I — MEETINGS OF STOCKHOLDERS

1

 

 

SECTION 1.

PLACE OF MEETINGS

1

SECTION 2.

ANNUAL MEETING

1

SECTION 3.

SPECIAL MEETINGS

1

SECTION 4.

NOTICE OF MEETINGS

2

SECTION 5.

VOTING LIST

2

SECTION 6.

QUORUM

2

SECTION 7.

ADJOURNMENTS

2

SECTION 8.

ACTION AT MEETINGS

3

SECTION 9.

VOTING AND PROXIES

3

SECTION 10.

ACTION WITHOUT MEETING

3

 

 

ARTICLE II — DIRECTORS

4

 

 

SECTION 1.

NUMBER, ELECTION, TENURE AND QUALIFICATION

4

SECTION 2.

ENLARGEMENT

4

SECTION 3.

VACANCIES

4

SECTION 4.

RESIGNATION AND REMOVAL

5

SECTION 5.

GENERAL POWERS

5

SECTION 6.

CHAIRMAN OF THE BOARD

5

SECTION 7.

PLACE OF MEETINGS

5

SECTION 8.

REGULAR MEETINGS

5

SECTION 9.

SPECIAL MEETINGS

5

SECTION 10.

QUORUM, ACTION AT MEETING, ADJOURNMENTS

5

SECTION 11.

ACTION BY CONSENT

6

SECTION 12.

TELEPHONIC MEETINGS

6

SECTION 13.

COMMITTEES

6

SECTION 14.

COMPENSATION

6

 

 

ARTICLE III — OFFICERS

7

 

 

SECTION 1.

ENUMERATION

7

SECTION 2.

ELECTION

7

SECTION 3.

TENURE

7

SECTION 4.

PRESIDENT

7

SECTION 5.

VICE-PRESIDENTS

8

SECTION 6.

SECRETARY

8

SECTION 7.

ASSISTANT SECRETARIES

8

SECTION 8.

TREASURER

8

SECTION 9.

ASSISTANT TREASURERS

9

SECTION 10.

BOND

9

 

 

ARTICLE IV — NOTICES

9

 

 

SECTION 1.

DELIVERY

9

SECTION 2.

WAIVER OF NOTICE

9

 

 

ARTICLE V — INDEMNIFICATION

10

 

 

SECTION 1.

ACTIONS OTHER THAN BY OR IN THE RIGHT OF THE CORPORATION

10

 



 

SECTION 2.

ACTIONS BY OR IN THE RIGHT OF THE CORPORATION

10

SECTION 3.

SUCCESS ON THE MERITS

11

SECTION 4.

SPECIFIC AUTHORIZATION

11

SECTION 5.

ADVANCE PAYMENT

11

SECTION 6.

NON-EXCLUSIVITY

11

SECTION 7.

INSURANCE

11

SECTION 8.

CONTINUATION OF INDEMNIFICATION AND ADVANCEMENT OF EXPENSES

12

SECTION 9.

SEVERABILITY

12

SECTION 10.

INTENT OF ARTICLE

12

 

 

ARTICLE VI — CAPITAL STOCK

12

 

 

SECTION 1.

CERTIFICATES OF STOCK

12

SECTION 2.

LOST CERTIFICATES

12

SECTION 3.

TRANSFER OF STOCK

13

SECTION 4.

RECORD DATE

13

SECTION 5.

REGISTERED STOCKHOLDERS

13

 

 

ARTICLE VII — CERTAIN TRANSACTIONS

14

 

 

SECTION 1.

TRANSACTIONS WITH INTERESTED PARTIES

14

SECTION 2.

QUORUM

14

 

 

ARTICLE VIII — GENERAL PROVISIONS

14

 

 

SECTION 1.

DIVIDENDS

14

SECTION 2.

RESERVES

14

SECTION 3.

CHECKS

15

SECTION 4.

FISCAL YEAR

15

SECTION 5.

SEAL

15

 

 

ARTICLE IX — AMENDMENTS

15

 

 

ADDENDUM

 

 

 

Register of Amendments to the Second Amended and Restated By-Laws

 

 

ii


 

* * * * *

 

SECOND AMENDED AND RESTATED BY-LAWS

 

* * * * *

 

ARTICLE I

 

MEETINGS OF STOCKHOLDERS

 

Section 1.              Place of Meetings .  All meetings of the stockholders may be held at such place within or without the State of Delaware as may be fixed from time to time by the Board of Directors or the Chief Executive Officer, or if not so designated, at the registered office of the Corporation.  Notwithstanding the foregoing, the Board of Directors may, in its sole discretion, determine that the meeting shall not be held at any place, but may instead be held solely by means of remote communication as authorized by Section 211(a)(2) of the General Corporation Law of Delaware.  If so authorized, and subject to such guidelines and procedures as the Board of Directors may adopt, stockholders and proxyholders not physically present at a meeting of stockholders may, by means of remote communication, participate in a meeting of stockholders whether such meeting is to be held at a designated place or solely by means of remote communication, provided that (i) the Corporation shall implement reasonable measures to verify that each person deemed present and permitted to vote at the meeting by means of remote communication is a stockholder or proxyholder, (ii) the Corporation shall implement reasonable measures to provide such stockholders and proxyholders a reasonable opportunity to participate in the meeting and to vote on matters submitted to the stockholders, including an opportunity to read or hear the proceedings of the meeting substantially concurrently with such proceedings, and (iii) if any stockholder or proxyholder votes or takes other action at the meeting by means of remote communication, a record of such vote or other action shall be maintained by the Corporation.

 

Section 2.              Annual Meeting . Unless directors are elected by written consent in lieu of an annual meeting as permitted by law and these Second Amended and Restated By-Laws (the “ By-Laws ”), an annual meeting of stockholders may be held at such date and time, and by such means of remote communication, if any, as shall be designated from time to time by the Board of Directors or the Chief Executive Officer, at which meeting the stockholders shall elect by a plurality vote a board of directors and shall transact such other business as may be properly brought before the meeting.  If no annual meeting is held in accordance with the foregoing provisions, the Board of Directors shall cause the meeting to be held as soon thereafter as convenient, which meeting shall be designated a special meeting in lieu of annual meeting.

 

Section 3.              Special Meetings .  Special meetings of the stockholders, for any purpose or purposes, may, unless otherwise prescribed by statute or by the certificate of incorporation, as amended to date and as may be amended from time to time (the “ Restated Certificate ”) be called by the Board of Directors or the Chief Executive Officer and shall be called by the Chief Executive Officer or Secretary at the request in writing of a majority of the Board of Directors,

 



 

or at the request in writing of stockholders, voting together as one class on an as converted to common stock basis, owning a majority in interest, of the  capital stock of the Corporation issued and outstanding and entitled to vote.  Such request shall state the purpose or purposes of the proposed meeting.  Business transacted at any special meeting shall be limited to matters relating to the purpose or purposes stated in the notice of meeting.

 

Section 4.              Notice of Meetings .  Except as otherwise provided by law, written notice of each meeting of stockholders, annual or special, stating the place, date and hour of the meeting, the means of remote communications, if any, by which stockholders and proxyholders may be deemed to be present in person and vote at such meeting and, in the case of a special meeting, the purpose or purposes for which the meeting is called, shall be given not less than ten (10) nor more than sixty (60) days before the date of the meeting, to each stockholder entitled to vote at such meeting.

 

Section 5.              Voting List .  The officer who has charge of the stock ledger of the Corporation shall prepare and make, at least ten (10) days before every meeting of stockholders, a complete list of the stockholders entitled to vote at the meeting, arranged in alphabetical order, and showing the address of each stockholder and the number of shares registered in the name of each stockholder.  Such list shall be open to the examination of any stockholder, for any purpose germane to the meeting, during ordinary business hours, for a period of at least ten (10) days prior to the meeting, either (i) on a reasonably accessible electronic network, provided that the information required to gain access to such list is provided with the notice of the meeting, or (ii) at the Corporation’s principal place of business.  In the event that the Corporation determines to make the list available on an electronic network, the Corporation may take reasonable steps to ensure that such information is available only to stockholders of the Corporation.  If the meeting is to be held at a place, then the list shall be produced and kept at the time and place of the meeting during the whole time thereof, and may be inspected by any stockholder who is present.  If the meeting is to be held solely by means of remote communication, then the list shall also be open to the examination of any stockholder during the whole time of the meeting on a reasonably accessible electronic network, and the information required to access such list shall be provided with the notice of the meeting.

 

Section 6.              Quorum .  The holders of a majority of the stock issued and outstanding and entitled to vote thereat, present in person or by remote communication, or represented by proxy, shall constitute a quorum at all meetings of the stockholders for the transaction of business, except as otherwise provided by statute, the Restated Certificate or these By-Laws.  Where a separate vote by a class or classes is required, one-third of the outstanding shares of such class or classes, present in person or by remote communication, or represented by proxy, shall constitute a quorum entitled to take action with respect to that vote on that matter.  If no quorum shall be present or represented at any meeting of stockholders, such meeting may be adjourned in accordance with Section 7 hereof, until a quorum shall be present or represented.

 

Section 7.              Adjournments .  Any meeting of stockholders may be adjourned from time to time to any other time and to any other place at which a meeting of stockholders may be held under these By-Laws, which time and place shall be announced at the meeting, by a majority of the stockholders present in person or by remote communication, or represented by proxy at the

 

2



 

meeting and entitled to vote (whether or not a quorum is present), or, if no stockholder is present or represented by proxy, by any officer entitled to preside at or to act as Secretary of such meeting, without notice other than announcement at the meeting.  At such adjourned meeting, any business may be transacted which might have been transacted at the original meeting, provided that a quorum either was present at the original meeting or is present at the adjourned meeting.  If the adjournment is for more than thirty days, or if after the adjournment a new record date is fixed for the adjourned meeting, a notice of the adjourned meeting shall be given to each stockholder of record entitled to vote at the meeting.

 

Section 8.              Action at Meetings .  When a quorum is present at any meeting, the affirmative vote of the holders of a majority of the stock present in person or by remote communication, or represented by proxy, entitled to vote and voting on the matter (or where a separate vote by a class or classes is required, the affirmative vote of the majority of shares of such class or classes present in person or represented by proxy at the meeting) shall decide any matter (other than the election of Directors) brought before such meeting, unless the matter is one upon which by express provision of law, the Restated Certificate or these By-Laws, a different vote is required, in which case such express provision shall govern and control the decision of such matter.  The stock of holders who abstain from voting on any matter shall be deemed not to have been voted on such matter.  Directors shall be elected by a plurality of the votes of the shares present in person or by remote communication, or represented by proxy at the meeting, entitled to vote and voting on the election of Directors.

 

Section 9.              Voting and Proxies .  Unless otherwise provided in the Restated Certificate, each stockholder shall at every meeting of the stockholders be entitled to one vote for each share of capital stock having voting power held of record by such stockholder.  Each stockholder entitled to vote at a meeting of stockholders, or to express consent or dissent to corporate action in writing without a meeting, may authorize another person or persons to act for him by proxy, but no such proxy shall be voted or acted upon after three years from its date, unless the proxy provides for a longer period.

 

Section 10.            Action Without Meeting .  Any action required to be taken at any annual or special meeting of stockholders, or any action which may be taken at any annual or special meeting of such stockholders, may be taken without a meeting, without prior notice and without a vote, if a consent or consents in writing, setting forth the action so taken, shall be signed and dated by the holders of outstanding stock 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.  Prompt notice of the taking of the corporate action without a meeting by less than unanimous written consent shall be given to those stockholders who have not consented in writing.  A telegram, cablegram or other electronic transmission consenting to an action to be taken and transmitted by a stockholder or proxyholder, or by a person or persons authorized to act for a stockholder or proxyholder, shall be deemed to be written, signed and dated for the purposes herein, provided that any such telegram, cablegram or other electronic transmission sets forth or is delivered with information from which the Corporation can determine (A) that the telegram, cablegram or other electronic transmission was transmitted by the stockholder or proxyholder or by a person or persons authorized to act for the stockholder or proxyholder and (B) the date on which such stockholder or proxyholder or authorized person or

 

3



 

persons transmitted such telegram, cablegram or other electronic transmission.  The date on which such telegram, cablegram or electronic transmission is transmitted shall be deemed to be the date on which such consent was signed.  No consent given by telegram, cablegram or electronic transmission shall be deemed to have been delivered until such consent is reproduced in paper form and until such paper form shall be delivered in accordance with Section 228 of the General Corporation Law of Delaware, to the Corporation by delivery to its registered office in Delaware, its principal place of business or an officer or agent of the corporation having custody of the book in which proceedings of meetings of stockholders are recorded.  Any copy, facsimile or other reliable reproduction of a consent in writing may be substituted or used in lieu of the original writing for any and all such purposes for which the original writing could be used, provided that such copy, facsimile or other reproduction shall be a complete reproduction of the entire original writing.

 

ARTICLE II

 

DIRECTORS

 

Section 1.              Number, Election, Tenure and Qualification .  The number of Directors which shall constitute the whole board shall be six (6) until Article 7 of the Restated Certificate is amended in accordance the provisions of such Restated Certificate.  The directors shall be elected at the annual meeting or at any special meeting of stockholders entitled to vote thereon, or by written consent in lieu of an annual or special meeting of the stockholders entitled to vote thereon (provided, however, that if such consent is less than unanimous, such action by written consent may be in lieu of holding an annual meeting only if all of the directorships to which directors could be elected at an annual meeting held at the effective time of such action are vacant and are filled by such action) in accordance with Article 4(B)(4) of the Restated Certificate, except as provided in section 3 of this Article. Each director elected shall hold office until his successor is elected and qualified, unless sooner displaced, in each case in accordance with Article 4(B)(4) of the Restated Certificate.  Directors need not be stockholders.

 

Section 2.              Enlargement .  Unless otherwise provided in the Restated Certificate or in these By-laws, the number of directors which shall constitute the whole board shall be determined from time to time by resolution of the Board of Directors.

 

Section 3.              Vacancies .  Vacancies shall be filled in accordance with Article 4(B)(4) of the Restated Certificate.  Unless otherwise set forth in the Restated Certificate, newly created Directorships resulting from any increase in the authorized number of Directors may be filled by a majority of the Directors then in office, though less than a quorum, or by a sole remaining director, and the Directors so chosen shall hold office until the next annual election and until their successors are duly elected and shall qualify, unless sooner displaced.  If there are no Directors in office, then an election of Directors may be held in the manner provided by statute.  In the event of a vacancy in the Board of Directors, the remaining Directors, except as otherwise provided by law or these By-Laws, may exercise the powers of the full board until the vacancy is filled.

 

4



 

Section 4.              Resignation and Removal .  Any director may resign at any time upon notice given in writing or by electronic transmission to the Corporation at its principal place of business or to the Chief Executive Officer or Secretary.  Such resignation shall be effective upon receipt unless it is specified to be effective at some other time or upon the happening of some other event.  A director or the entire Board of Directors may be removed, with or without cause, by the holders of a majority of the shares then entitled to vote at the election of such Director in accordance with Article 4(B)(4) of the Restated Certificate.

 

Section 5.              General Powers .  The business and affairs of the Corporation shall be managed by its Board of Directors, which may exercise all powers of the Corporation and do all such lawful acts and things as are not by statute or by the Restated Certificate or by these By-Laws directed or required to be exercised or done by the stockholders.

 

Section 6.              Chairman of the Board .  If the Board of Directors appoints a chairman of the board, he shall, when present, preside at all meetings of the stockholders and the Board of Directors.  He shall perform such duties and possess such powers as are customarily vested in the office of the chairman of the board or as may be vested in him by the Board of Directors.

 

Section 7.              Place of Meetings .  The Board of Directors may hold meetings, both regular and special, either within or without the State of Delaware.

 

Section 8.              Regular Meetings .  Regular meetings of the Board of Directors may be held without notice at such time and at such place as shall from time to time be determined by the board; provided that any director who is absent when such a determination is made shall be given prompt notice of such determination.  A regular meeting of the Board of Directors may be held without notice immediately after and at the same place as the annual meeting of stockholders.

 

Section 9.              Special Meetings .  Special meetings of the board may be called by the Chief Executive Officer, Secretary, or on the written request of two (2) or more Directors, or by one director in the event that there is only one director in office.  Two (2) days’ notice to each director, either personally or by telegram, cable, telecopy, electronic mail, commercial delivery service, telex or similar means sent to his business or home address, or three (3) days’ notice by written notice deposited in the mail, shall be given to each director by the Secretary or by the officer or one of the Directors calling the meeting.  A notice or waiver of notice of a meeting of the Board of Directors need not specify the purposes of the meeting.

 

Section 10.            Quorum, Action at Meeting, Adjournments .  At all meetings of the board a majority of Directors then in office, but in no event less than one third of the entire board, shall constitute a quorum for the transaction of business and the act of a majority of the Directors present at any meeting at which there is a quorum shall be the act of the Board of Directors, except as may be otherwise specifically provided by law or by the Restated Certificate.  For purposes of this section, the term “entire board” shall mean the number of Directors last fixed by the stockholders or Directors, as the case may be, in accordance with law and these By-Laws; provided, however, that if less than all the number so fixed of Directors were elected, the “entire board” shall mean the greatest number of Directors so elected to hold office at any one time

 

5



 

pursuant to such authorization.  If a quorum shall not be present at any meeting of the Board of Directors, a majority of the Directors present thereat may adjourn the meeting from time to time, without notice other than announcement at the meeting, until a quorum shall be present.

 

Section 11.            Action by Consent .  Unless otherwise restricted by the Restated Certificate or these By-Laws, any action required or permitted to be taken at any meeting of the Board of Directors or of any committee thereof may be taken without a meeting, if all members of the board or committee, as the case may be, consent thereto in writing or electronic transmission, and the writing or writings or electronic transmission or transmissions are filed with the minutes of proceedings of the board or committee.  Such filing shall be in paper form if the minutes are maintained in paper form and shall be in electronic form if the minutes are maintained in electronic form.

 

Section 12.            Telephonic Meetings .  Unless otherwise restricted by the Restated Certificate or these By-Laws, members of the Board of Directors or of any committee thereof may participate in a meeting of the Board of Directors or of any committee, as the case may be, by means of conference telephone or similar communications equipment by means of which all persons participating in the meeting can hear each other, and such participation in a meeting shall constitute presence in person at the meeting.

 

Section 13.            Committees .  The Board of Directors may designate one or more committees, each committee to consist of one or more of the Directors of the Corporation.  The board may designate one or more Directors as alternate members of any committee, who may replace any absent or disqualified member at any meeting of the committee.  Any such committee, to the extent provided in the resolution of the Board of Directors, shall have and may exercise all the powers and authority of the Board of Directors in the management of the business and affairs of the Corporation, and may authorize the seal of the Corporation to be affixed to all papers which may require it; but no such committee shall have the power or authority in reference to (a) adopting, amending or repealing the By-Laws of the Corporation or any of them or (b) approving or adopting, or recommending to the stockholders any action or matter expressly required by law to be submitted to stockholders for approval.  Such committee or committees shall have such name or names as may be determined from time to time by resolution adopted by the Board of Directors.  Each committee shall keep regular minutes of its meetings and make such reports to the Board of Directors as the Board of Directors may request.  Except as the Board of Directors may otherwise determine, any committee may make rules for the conduct of its business, but unless otherwise provided by the Directors or in such rules, its business shall be conducted as nearly as possible in the same manner as is provided in these By-Laws for the conduct of its business by the Board of Directors.

 

Section 14.            Compensation .  Unless otherwise restricted by the Restated Certificate or these By-Laws, the Board of Directors shall have the authority to fix from time to time the compensation of Directors.  The Directors may be paid their expenses, if any, of attendance at each meeting of the Board of Directors and the performance of their responsibilities as Directors and may be paid a fixed sum for attendance at each meeting of the Board of Directors and/or a stated salary as director.  No such payment shall preclude any director from serving the Corporation or its parent or subsidiary corporations in any other capacity and receiving

 

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compensation therefor.  The Board of Directors may also allow compensation for members of special or standing committees for service on such committees.

 

ARTICLE III

 

OFFICERS

 

Section 1.              Enumeration .  The officers of the Corporation shall be chosen by the Board of Directors and shall be a President, a Secretary and a Treasurer and such other officers with such titles, terms of office and duties as the Board of Directors may from time to time determine, including a Chairman of the Board, one or more Vice-Presidents, and one or more Assistant Secretaries and Assistant Treasurers.  If authorized by resolution of the Board of Directors, the Chief Executive Officer may be empowered to appoint from time to time Assistant Secretaries and Assistant Treasurers.  Any number of offices may be held by the same person, unless the Restated Certificate or these By-Laws otherwise provide.

 

Section 2.              Election .  The Board of Directors at its first meeting after each annual meeting of stockholders shall choose a President, a Secretary and a Treasurer.  Other officers may be appointed by the Board of Directors at such meeting, at any other meeting, or by written consent.

 

Section 3.              Tenure .  The officers of the Corporation shall hold office until their successors are chosen and qualify, unless a different term is specified in the vote choosing or appointing him, or until his earlier death, resignation or removal.  Any officer elected or appointed by the Board of Directors or by the Chief Executive Officer may be removed at any time, with or without cause, by the affirmative vote of a majority of the Board of Directors or a committee duly authorized to do so, except that any officer appointed by the Chief Executive Officer may also be removed at any time, with or without cause, by the Chief Executive Officer.  Any vacancy occurring in any office of the Corporation may be filled by the Board of Directors, at its discretion.  Any officer may resign by delivering his written resignation to the Corporation at its principal place of business or to the Chief Executive Officer or the Secretary.  Such resignation shall be effective upon receipt unless it is specified to be effective at some other time or upon the happening of some other event.

 

Section 4.              President .  The President shall be the Chief Operating Officer of the Corporation.  He shall also be the Chief Executive Officer unless the Board of Directors otherwise provides.  If no Chief Executive Officer shall have been appointed by the Board of Directors, all references herein to the “Chief Executive Officer” shall be to the President.  The President shall, unless the Board of Directors provides otherwise in a specific instance or generally, preside at all meetings of the stockholders and the Board of Directors, have general and active management of the business of the Corporation and see that all orders and resolutions of the Board of Directors are carried into effect.  The President shall execute bonds, mortgages, and other contracts requiring a seal, under the seal of the Corporation, except where required or permitted by law to be otherwise signed and executed and except where the signing and

 

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execution thereof shall be expressly delegated by the Board of Directors to some other officer or agent of the Corporation.

 

Section 5.              Vice-Presidents .  In the absence of the President or in the event of his or her inability or refusal to act, the Vice-President, or if there be more than one Vice-President, the Vice-Presidents in the order designated by the Board of Directors or the Chief Executive Officer (or in the absence of any designation, then in the order determined by their tenure in office) shall perform the duties of the President, and when so acting, shall have all the powers of and be subject to all the restrictions upon the President.  The Vice-Presidents shall perform such other duties and have such other powers as the Board of Directors or the Chief Executive Officer may from time to time prescribe.

 

Section 6.              Secretary .  The Secretary shall have such powers and perform such duties as are incident to the office of Secretary.  The Secretary shall maintain a stock ledger and prepare lists of stockholders and their addresses as required and shall be the custodian of corporate records.  The Secretary shall attend all meetings of the Board of Directors and all meetings of the stockholders and record all the proceedings of the meetings of the Corporation and of the Board of Directors in a book to be kept for that purpose and shall perform like duties for the standing committees when required.  The Secretary shall give, or cause to be given, notice of all meetings of the Stockholders and special meetings of the Board of Directors, and shall perform such other duties as may be from time to time prescribed by the Board of Directors or Chief Executive Officer, under whose supervision the Secretary shall be.  The Secretary shall have custody of the corporate seal of the Corporation and the Secretary, or an assistant Secretary, shall have authority to affix the same to any instrument requiring it and when so affixed, it may be attested by his or her signature or by the signature of such assistant Secretary.  The Board of Directors may give general authority to any other officer to affix the seal of the Corporation and to attest the affixing by his or her signature.

 

Section 7.              Assistant Secretaries .  The assistant Secretary, or if there be more than one, the assistant secretaries in the order determined by the Board of Directors, the Chief Executive Officer or the Secretary (or if there be no such determination, then in the order determined by their tenure in office), shall, in the absence of the Secretary or in the event of his or her inability or refusal to act, perform the duties and exercise the powers of the Secretary and shall perform such other duties and have such other powers as the Board of Directors, the Chief Executive Officer or the Secretary may from time to time prescribe.  In the absence of the Secretary or any assistant Secretary at any meeting of stockholders or Directors, the person presiding at the meeting shall designate a temporary or acting Secretary to keep a record of the meeting.

 

Section 8.              Treasurer .  The Treasurer shall perform such duties and shall have such powers as may be assigned to him or her by the Board of Directors or the Chief Executive Officer.  In addition, the Treasurer shall perform such duties and have such powers as are incident to the office of Treasurer.  The Treasurer shall have the custody of the corporate funds and securities and shall keep full and accurate accounts of receipts and disbursements in books belonging to the Corporation and shall deposit all moneys and other valuable effects in the name and to the credit of the Corporation in such depositories as may be designated by the Board of

 

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Directors.  He shall disburse the funds of the Corporation as may be ordered by the Board of Directors, taking proper vouchers for such disbursements, and shall render to the Chief Executive Officer and the Board of Directors, when the Chief Executive Officer or Board of Directors so requires, an account of all his or her transactions as Treasurer and of the financial condition of the Corporation.

 

Section 9.              Assistant Treasurers .  The assistant Treasurer, or if there shall be more than one, the assistant Treasurers in the order determined by the Board of Directors, the Chief Executive Officer or the Treasurer (or if there be no such determination, then in the order determined by their tenure in office), shall, in the absence of the Treasurer or in the event of his or her inability or refusal to act, perform the duties and exercise the powers of the Treasurer and shall perform such other duties and have such other powers as the Board of Directors, the Chief Executive Officer or the Treasurer may from time to time prescribe.

 

Section 10.            Bond .  If required by the Board of Directors, any officer shall give the Corporation a bond in such sum and with such surety or sureties and upon such terms and conditions as shall be satisfactory to the Board of Directors, including without limitation a bond for the faithful performance of the duties of his office and for the restoration to the Corporation of all books, papers, vouchers, money and other property of whatever kind in his possession or under his control and belonging to the Corporation.

 

 

ARTICLE IV

 

NOTICES

 

Section 1.              Delivery .  Whenever, under the provisions of law, or of the Restated Certificate  or these By-Laws, notice is required to be given to any person, such notice may be given by mail, addressed to such person, at his address as it appears on the records of the Corporation, with postage thereon prepaid, and such notice shall be deemed to be given at the time when the same shall be deposited in the United States mail.  Unless written notice by mail is required by law, notice may also be given by telegram, cable, telecopy, commercial delivery service, telex or similar means, addressed to such person at his address as it appears on the records of the corporation, in which case such notice shall be deemed to be given when delivered into the control of the persons charged with effecting such transmission, the transmission charge to be paid by the Corporation or the person sending such notice and not by the addressee.  Notice may also be given to stockholders by a form of electronic transmission in accordance with and subject to the provisions of Section 232 of the General Corporation Law of Delaware.  Oral notice or other in-hand delivery (in person or by telephone) shall be deemed given at the time it is actually given.

 

Section 2.              Waiver of Notice .  Whenever any notice is required to be given under the provisions of law or of the Restated Certificate or of these By-Laws, a waiver thereof in writing, signed by the person or persons entitled to said notice or a waiver by electronic transmission by the person entitled to notice, whether before or after the time stated therein, shall be deemed equivalent thereto.

 

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ARTICLE V

 

INDEMNIFICATION

 

Section 1.              Actions other than by or in the Right of the Corporation .  The corporation shall indemnify any person who was or is a party or is threatened to be made a party to any threatened, pending or completed action, suit or proceeding, whether civil, criminal, administrative or investigative (other than an action by or in the right of the Corporation) by reason of the fact that such person is or was a director, and may indemnify (upon the vote of a majority of the members of the Board of Directors), any person who was or is a party or is threatened to be made a party to any threatened, pending or completed action, suit or proceeding, whether civil, criminal, administrative or investigative (other than an action by or in the right of the Corporation) by reason of the fact that such person is or was an 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 corporation, partnership, joint venture, trust or other enterprise, against expenses (including attorneys’ fees), judgments, fines and amounts paid in settlement actually and reasonably incurred by such person in connection with such action, suit or proceeding if such person acted in good faith and in a manner such person reasonably believed to be in or not opposed to the best interests of the Corporation, and, with respect to any criminal action or proceedings, had no reasonable cause to believe such person’s conduct was unlawful.  The termination of any action, suit or proceeding by judgment, order, settlement, conviction, or upon a plea of nolo contendere or its equivalent, shall not, of itself, create a presumption that the person did not act in good faith and in a manner which such person reasonably believed to be in or not opposed to the best interests of the corporation, and, with respect to any criminal action or proceeding, had reasonable cause to believe that such person’s conduct was unlawful.

 

Section 2.              Actions by or in the Right of the Corporation .  The corporation shall indemnify any person who was or is a party or is threatened to be made a party to any threatened, pending or completed action or suit by or in the right of the Corporation to procure a judgment in its favor by reason of the fact that he or she is or was a director of the Corporation, and may indemnify (upon the vote of a majority of the members of the Board of Directors), any person who was or is a party or is threatened to be made a party to any threatened, pending or completed action or suit by or in the right of the Corporation to procure a judgment in its favor by reason of the fact that he or she is or was an 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 corporation, partnership, joint venture, trust or other enterprise against expenses (including attorneys’ fees) actually and reasonably incurred by such person in connection with the defense or settlement of such action or suit if such person acted in good faith and in a manner he or she reasonably believed to be in or not opposed to the best interests of the Corporation and except that no indemnification shall be made in respect of any claim, issue or matter as to which such person shall have been adjudged to be liable unless and only to the extent that the Court of Chancery of the State of Delaware or the court in which such action or suit was brought shall determine upon application that, despite the adjudication of liability but in view of all the circumstances of the case, such person is fairly and reasonably entitled to indemnity for such

 

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expenses which the Court of Chancery of the State of Delaware or such other court shall deem proper.

 

Section 3.              Success on the Merits .  To the extent that a director described in Section 1 or 2 of this Article V has been successful on the merits or otherwise in defense of any action, suit or proceeding referred to in said Sections, or in defense of any claim, issue or matter therein, he shall be indemnified against expenses (including attorneys’ fees) actually and reasonably incurred by him in connection therewith.  To the extent that any other person described in Section 1 or 2 of this Article V has been successful on the merits or otherwise in defense of any action, suit or proceeding referred to in said Sections, or in defense of any claim, issue or matter therein, he may be indemnified (upon the vote of a majority of the members of the Board of Directors), against expenses (including attorneys’ fees) actually and reasonably incurred by him in connection therewith.

 

Section 4.              Specific Authorization .  Any indemnification under Section 1 or 2 of this Article V (unless ordered by a court) shall be made by the Corporation only as authorized in the specific case upon a determination that indemnification of any person described in said Sections is proper in the circumstances because he has met the applicable standard of conduct set forth in said Sections.  Such determination shall be made (1) by the Board of Directors by a majority vote of Directors who were not parties to such action, suit or proceeding (even though less than a quorum), or (2) if there are no disinterested Directors or if a majority of disinterested Directors so directs, by independent legal counsel (who may be regular legal counsel to the Corporation) in a written opinion, or (3) by the stockholders of the Corporation.

 

Section 5.              Advance Payment .  Expenses incurred in defending a pending or threatened civil or criminal action, suit or proceeding may be paid by the Corporation in advance of the final disposition of such action, suit or proceeding upon receipt of an undertaking by or on behalf of any person described in said Section to repay such amount if it shall ultimately be determined that he or she is not entitled to indemnification by the Corporation as authorized in this Article V.

 

Section 6.              Non-Exclusivity .  The indemnification and advancement of expenses provided by, or granted pursuant to, the other Sections of this Article V shall not be deemed exclusive of any other rights to which those provided indemnification or advancement of expenses may be entitled under any By-Law, agreement, vote of stockholders or disinterested Directors or otherwise, both as to action in his official capacity and as to action in another capacity while holding such office.

 

Section 7.              Insurance .  The Board of Directors may authorize, by a vote of the majority of the full board, the Corporation to purchase and maintain insurance on behalf of any person who 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 corporation, partnership, joint venture, trust or other enterprise against any liability asserted against him and incurred by him in any such capacity, or arising out of his status as such, whether or not the Corporation would have the power to indemnify him against such liability under the provisions of this Article V.

 

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Section 8.              Continuation of Indemnification and Advancement of Expenses .  The indemnification and advancement of expenses provided by, or granted pursuant to, this Article V shall continue as to a person who has ceased to be a director, officer, employee or agent and shall inure to the benefit of the heirs, executors and administrators of such a person.

 

Section 9.              Severability .  If any word, clause or provision of this Article V or any award made hereunder shall for any reason be determined to be invalid, the provisions hereof shall not otherwise be affected thereby but shall remain in full force and effect.

 

Section 10.            Intent of Article .  The intent of this Article V is to provide for indemnification and advancement of expenses to the fullest extent permitted by Section 145 of the General Corporation Law of Delaware.  To the extent that such Section or any successor section may be amended or supplemented from time to time, this Article V shall be amended automatically and construed so as to permit indemnification and advancement of expenses to the fullest extent from time to time permitted by law.

 

ARTICLE VI

 

CAPITAL STOCK

 

Section 1.              Certificates of Stock .  Every holder of stock in the Corporation shall be entitled to have a certificate, signed by, or in the name of the Corporation by, the chairman or Vice-chairman of the Board of Directors, or the President or a Vice-President and the Treasurer or an assistant Treasurer, or the Secretary or an assistant Secretary of the Corporation, certifying the number of shares owned by such holder in the Corporation.  Any or all 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 shall have 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 he were such officer, transfer agent or registrar at the date of issue.  Certificates may be issued for partly paid shares and in such case upon the face or back of the certificates issued to represent any such partly paid shares, the total amount of the consideration to be paid therefor, and the amount paid thereon shall be specified.

 

Section 2.              Lost Certificates .  The Board of Directors may direct a new certificate or certificates to be issued in place of any certificate or certificates theretofore issued by the Corporation alleged to have been lost, stolen or destroyed.  When authorizing such issue of a new certificate or certificates, the Board of Directors may, in its discretion and as a condition precedent to the issuance thereof, require the owner of such lost, stolen or destroyed certificate or certificates, or his legal representative, to give reasonable evidence of such loss, theft or destruction, to advertise the same in such manner as it shall require and/or to give the Corporation a bond in such sum as it may direct as indemnity against any claim that may be made against the Corporation with respect to the certificate alleged to have been lost, stolen or destroyed or the issuance of such new certificate.

 

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Section 3.              Transfer of Stock .  Upon surrender to the Corporation or the transfer agent of the Corporation of a certificate for shares, duly endorsed or accompanied by proper evidence of succession, assignment or authority to transfer, and proper evidence of compliance with other conditions to rightful transfer, it shall be the duty of the Corporation to issue a new certificate to the person entitled thereto, cancel the old certificate and record the transaction upon its books.

 

Section 4.              Record Date .  In order that the Corporation may determine the stockholders entitled to notice of or to vote at any meeting of stockholders or any adjournment thereof, the Board of Directors may fix a record date, which shall not precede the date upon which the resolution fixing the record date is adopted by the Board of Directors, and which shall not be more than sixty days nor less then ten days before the date of such meeting.  A determination of stockholders of record entitled to notice of or to vote at a meeting of stockholders shall apply to any adjournment of the meeting; provided, however, that the Board of Directors may fix a new record date for the adjourned meeting.  If no record date is fixed, the record date for determining stockholders entitled to notice of or to vote at a meeting of stockholders shall be at the close of business on the day before the day on which notice is given, or, if notice is waived, at the close of business on the day before the day on which the meeting is held.  In order that the Corporation may determine the stockholders entitled to consent to corporate action in writing without a meeting, the Board of Directors may fix a record date, which shall not precede the date upon which the resolution fixing the record date is adopted by the Board of Directors, and which shall not be more than ten days after the date upon which the resolution fixing the record date is adopted by the Board of Directors.  If no record date is fixed, the record date for determining stockholders entitled to consent to corporate action in writing without a meeting, when no prior action by the Board of Directors is required by statute, shall be the first date on which a signed written consent setting forth the action taken or proposed to be taken is delivered to the Corporation as provided in Section 10 of Article I.  If no record date is fixed and prior action by the Board of Directors is required, the record date for determining stockholders entitled to consent to corporate action in writing without a meeting shall be at the close of business on the date on which the Board of Directors adopts the resolution taking such prior action.  In order that the Corporation may determine the stockholders entitled to receive payment of any dividend or other distribution or allotment of any rights or the stockholders entitled to exercise any rights in respect of any change, conversion or exchange of stock, or for the purpose of any other lawful action, the Board of Directors may fix a record date, which shall not precede the date upon which the resolution fixing the record date is adopted, and which shall be not more than sixty days prior to such action.  If no record date is fixed, the record date for determining stockholders for any such purpose shall be at the close of business on the day on which the Board of Directors adopts the resolution relating to such purpose.

 

Section 5.              Registered Stockholders .  The Corporation shall be entitled to recognize the exclusive right of a person registered on its books as the owner of shares to receive dividends, and to vote as such owner, and to hold liable for calls and assessments a person registered on its books as the owner of shares, and shall not be bound to recognize any equitable or other claim to or interest in such share or shares on the part of any other person, whether or not it shall have express or other notice thereof, except as otherwise provided by the laws of Delaware.

 

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ARTICLE VII

 

CERTAIN TRANSACTIONS

 

Section 1.              Transactions with Interested Parties .  No contract or transaction between the Corporation and one or more of its Directors or officers, or between the Corporation and any other corporation, partnership, association, or other organization in which one or more of its Directors or officers are Directors or officers, or have a financial interest, shall be void or voidable solely for this reason, or solely because the director or officer is present at or participates in the meeting of the board or committee thereof which authorizes the contract or transaction or solely because his or their votes are counted for such purpose, if:

 

(a)           The material facts as to his relationship or interest and as to the contract or transaction are disclosed or are known to the Board of Directors or the committee, and the board or committee in good faith authorizes the contract or transaction by the affirmative votes of a majority of the disinterested Directors, even though the disinterested Directors be less than a quorum; or

 

(b)           The material facts as to his relationship or interest and as to the contract or transaction are disclosed or are known to the stockholders entitled to vote thereon, and the contract or transaction is specifically approved in good faith by vote of the stockholders; or

 

(c)           The contract or transaction is fair as to the Corporation as of the time it is authorized, approved or ratified, by the Board of Directors, a committee thereof, or the stockholders.

 

Section 2.              Quorum .  Common or interested Directors may be counted in determining the presence of a quorum at a meeting of the Board of Directors or of a committee which authorizes the contract or transaction.

 

 

ARTICLE VIII

 

GENERAL PROVISIONS

 

Section 1.              Dividends .  Dividends upon the capital stock of the corporation, if any, may be declared by the Board of Directors at any regular or special meeting or by written consent, pursuant to law.  Dividends may be paid in cash, in property, or in shares of the capital stock, subject to the provisions of the Restated Certificate.

 

Section 2.              Reserves .  The Directors may set apart out of any funds of the Corporation available for dividends a reserve or reserves for any proper purpose and may abolish any such reserve.

 

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Section 3.              Checks .  All checks or demands for money and notes of the Corporation shall be signed by such officer or officers or such other person or persons as the Board of Directors may from time to time designate.

 

Section 4.              Fiscal Year .  The fiscal year of the Corporation shall be fixed by resolution of the Board of Directors.

 

Section 5.              Seal .  The Board of Directors may, by resolution, adopt a corporate seal.  The corporate seal shall have inscribed thereon the name of the Corporation, the year of its organization and the word “Delaware.”  The seal may be used by causing it or a facsimile thereof to be impressed or affixed or reproduced or otherwise.  The seal may be altered from time to time by the Board of Directors.

 

ARTICLE IX

 

AMENDMENTS

 

Except as otherwise provided in the Restated Certificate, in furtherance and not in limitation of the powers conferred by statute, the Board of Directors may make, repeal, alter, amend and rescind any or all of these By-Laws, when such power is conferred upon the Board of Directors by the Restated Certificate, at any regular or special meeting of the Board of Directors.  Except as otherwise provided in the Restated Certificate, the stockholders may make, repeal, alter, amend and rescind any or all of these By-Laws, at any regular or special meeting of the stockholders, provided, however, that in the case of a result or special meeting of stockholders, notice of such adoption of new By-Laws, repeal, alteration, amendment or rescission shall be contained in the notice of such meeting.

 

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Register of Amendments to the By-Laws

 

Date

 

Section Affected

 

Change

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 




EXHIBIT 4.3

 

THIS WARRANT AND THE SHARES ISSUABLE HEREUNDER HAVE NOT BEEN REGISTERED UNDER THE SECURITIES ACT OF 1933, AS AMENDED, AND MAY NOT BE SOLD, PLEDGED OR OTHERWISE TRANSFERRED EXCEPT IN ACCORDANCE WITH APPLICABLE LAW.

 

WARRANT TO PURCHASE STOCK

 

Corporation:

 

Marinus Pharmaceuticals, Inc.

Number of Shares:

 

37,991

Class of Stock:

 

Series C Preferred

Initial Exercise Price:

 

$1.1845 per share

Issue Date:

 

April 2, 2014

Expiration Date:

 

April 2, 2022

 

THIS WARRANT CERTIFIES THAT, for good and valuable consideration, the receipt of which is hereby acknowledged, SQUARE 1 BANK or its assignee (“ Holder ”) is entitled to purchase the number of fully paid and nonassessable shares of the class of securities (the “ Shares ”) of the corporation (the “ Company ”) at the initial exercise price per Share (the “ Warrant Price ”) all as set forth above and as adjusted pursuant to Article 2 of this warrant, subject to the provisions and upon the terms and conditions set forth in this warrant.

 

ARTICLE 1

 

EXERCISE

 

1.1                                Method of Exercise.  Holder may exercise this warrant by delivering this warrant and a duly executed Notice of Exercise in substantially the form attached as Appendix 1 to the principal office of the Company. Unless Holder is exercising the conversion right set forth in Section 1.2, Holder shall also deliver to the Company a check for the aggregate Warrant Price for the Shares being purchased.

 

1.2                                Conversion Right.   In lieu of exercising this warrant as specified in Section 1.1, Holder may from time to time convert this warrant, in whole or in part, into a number of Shares determined by dividing (a) the aggregate fair market value of the Shares or other securities otherwise issuable upon exercise of this warrant minus the aggregate Warrant Price of such Shares by (b) the fair market value of one Share. The fair market value of the Shares shall be determined pursuant to Section 1.3.

 

1.3                                Fair Market Value.   If the Shares are traded regularly in a public market, the fair market value of the Shares shall be the closing price of the Shares (or the closing price of the Company’s stock into which the Shares are convertible) reported for the business day immediately before Holder delivers its Notice of Exercise to the Company. If the Shares are not regularly traded in a public market, the Board of Directors of the Company shall determine fair market value in its reasonable good faith judgment. In the event of an exercise of this warrant in connection with an initial public offering of the Company’s Common Stock, the fair market value for a Share issuable under this warrant shall be the per share offering price at which the

 



 

underwriters initially sell shares of the Common Stock to the public, as adjusted if necessary to reflect the conversion of a Share into Common Stock.

 

1.4                                Delivery of Certificate and New Warrant.   Promptly after Holder exercises or converts this warrant, the Company shall deliver to Holder certificates for the Shares acquired and, if this warrant has not been fully exercised or converted and has not expired, a new warrant representing the Shares not so acquired.

 

1.5                                Replacement of Warrants.   On receipt of evidence reasonably satisfactory to the Company of the loss, theft, destruction or mutilation of this warrant and, in the case of loss, theft or destruction, on delivery of an indemnity agreement reasonably satisfactory in form and amount to the Company or, in the case of mutilation, on surrender and cancellation of this warrant, the Company at its expense shall execute and deliver, in lieu of this warrant, a new warrant of like tenor.

 

1.6                                Repurchase on Sale, Merger, or Consolidation of the Company.

 

1.6.1                      Acquisition . ”  For the purpose of this warrant, “Acquisition” means (a) any sale, license, or other disposition of all or substantially all of the assets (including intellectual property) of the Company, or (b) any reorganization, consolidation, merger or sale of the voting securities of the Company or any other transaction where the holders of the Company’s securities before the transaction beneficially own less than 50% of the outstanding voting securities of the surviving entity after the transaction.

 

1.6.2                      Assumption of Warrant.   If upon the closing of any Acquisition the successor entity assumes the obligations of this warrant, then this warrant shall be exercisable for the same securities, cash, and property as would be payable for the Shares issuable upon exercise of the unexercised portion of this warrant as if such Shares were outstanding on the record date for the Acquisition and subsequent closing. The Warrant Price shall be adjusted accordingly. The Company shall use reasonable efforts to cause the surviving corporation to assume the obligations of this warrant.

 

1.6.3                      Nonassumption.   If upon the closing of any Acquisition the successor entity does not assume the obligations of this warrant and Holder has not otherwise exercised this warrant in full, then this warrant shall be deemed to have been automatically converted pursuant to Section 1.2 and thereafter Holder shall participate in the Acquisition on the same terms as other holders of the same class of securities of the Company.

 

ARTICLE 2

 

ADJUSTMENTS TO THE SHARES

 

2.1                                Stock Dividends, Splits, Etc.  If the Company declares or pays a dividend on its Series C Preferred Stock payable in Series C Preferred Stock, or other securities, or subdivides the outstanding Series C Preferred Stock into a greater amount of Series C Preferred Stock, then upon exercise of this warrant, for each Share acquired, Holder shall receive, without cost to Holder, the total number and kind of securities to which Holder would have been entitled had Holder owned the Shares of record as of the date the dividend or subdivision occurred.

 



 

2.2                                Reclassification, Exchange or Substitution.   Upon any reclassification, exchange, substitution, or other event that results in a change of the number and/or class of the securities issuable upon exercise or conversion of this warrant, Holder shall be entitled to receive, upon exercise or conversion of this warrant, the number and kind of securities and property that Holder would have received for the Shares if this warrant had been exercised immediately before such reclassification, exchange, substitution, or other event. Such an event shall include any automatic conversion of the outstanding or issuable securities of the Company of the same class or series as the Shares to common stock pursuant to the terms of the Company’s Certificate of Incorporation upon the vote of the requisite holders of the Series C Preferred Stock or upon the closing of a registered public offering of the Company’s common stock. The Company or its successor shall promptly issue to Holder a new warrant for such new securities or other property. The new warrant shall provide for adjustments which shall be as nearly equivalent as may be practicable to the adjustments provided for in this Article 2 including, without limitation, adjustments to the Warrant Price and to the number of securities or property issuable upon exercise of the new warrant. The provisions of this Section 2.2 shall similarly apply to successive reclassifications, exchanges, substitutions, or other events.

 

2.3                                Adjustments for Combinations, Etc.   If the outstanding shares of Series C Preferred Stock are combined or consolidated, by reclassification or otherwise, into a lesser number of shares of Series C Preferred Stock, the Warrant Price shall be proportionately increased. If the outstanding shares of Series C Preferred Stock are combined or consolidated, by reclassification or otherwise, into a greater number of shares of Series C Preferred Stock, the Warrant Price shall be proportionately decreased.

 

2.4                                Adjustments for Diluting Issuances.   In the event of the issuance (a “ Diluting Issuance ”) by the Company after the Issue Date of securities at a price per share less than the Warrant Price, then the number of shares of common stock issuable upon conversion of the Shares shall, if and to the extent applicable, be adjusted in accordance with those provisions of the Company’s Certificate of Incorporation that apply to Diluting Issuances.

 

2.5                                Certificate as to Adjustments.   Upon each adjustment of the Warrant Price, the Company at its expense shall promptly compute such adjustment, and furnish Holder with a certificate of its Chief Financial Officer setting forth such adjustment and the facts upon which such adjustment is based. The Company shall, upon written request, furnish Holder a certificate setting forth the Warrant Price in effect upon the date thereof and the series of adjustments leading to such Warrant Price.

 

2.6                                Fractional Shares.   No fractional Shares shall be issuable upon exercise or conversion of the warrant, and the Number of Shares to be issued shall be rounded down to the nearest whole Share. If a fractional share interest arises upon any exercise or conversion of the warrant, the Company shall eliminate such fractional share interest by paying Holder the amount computed by multiplying the fractional interest by the fair market value of a full Share.

 



 

ARTICLE 3

 

REPRESENTATIONS AND COVENANTS OF THE COMPANY

 

3.1                                Representations and Warranties.   The Company hereby represents and warrants to the Holder as follows:

 

(a)                                  The initial Warrant Price referenced on the first page of this warrant is the purchase price per share of Series C Preferred Stock paid by the investors in the Company’s most recent equity financing.

 

(b)                                  All Shares which may be issued upon the exercise of the purchase right represented by this warrant, and all securities, if any, issuable upon conversion of the Shares, shall, upon issuance, be duly authorized, validly issued, fully paid and nonassessable, and free of any liens and encumbrances except for restrictions on transfer provided for herein or under applicable federal and state securities laws.

 

(c)                                   The Company’s capitalization table most recently delivered to Bank prior to the Issue Date is true and complete as of the Issue Date.

 

3.2                                Notice of Certain Events.   The Company shall provide Holder with not less than 10 days prior written notice, including a description of the material facts surrounding, any of the following events: (a) declaration of any dividend or distribution upon its common stock, whether in cash, property, stock, or other securities and whether or not a regular cash dividend; (b) offering for subscription pro rata to the holders of any class or series of its stock any additional shares of stock of any class or series or other rights; (c) effecting any reclassification or recapitalization of common stock; or (d) the merger or consolidation with or into any other corporation, or sale, lease, license, or conveyance of all or substantially all of its assets, or liquidation, dissolution or winding up.

 

3.3                                Information Rights.   So long as the Holder holds this warrant and/or any of the Shares, the Company shall deliver to the Holder (a) promptly after mailing, copies of all communiques to the stockholders of the Company, (b) within one hundred eighty (180) days after the end of each fiscal year of the Company, the annual audited financial statements of the Company certified by independent public accountants of recognized standing and (c) within forty-five (45) days after the end of each of the first three quarters of each fiscal year, the Company’s quarterly, unaudited financial statements. Notwithstanding anything to the contrary set forth above, the Company shall be required to deliver the financial statements set forth in clauses (b) and (c) above only at such times as that certain Loan and Security Agreement entered into between the Company and the Holder on or about February 19, 2014 shall no longer be in effect.

 

3.4                                Registration Under Securities Act of 1933, as amended.   The Company agrees that the Shares or, if the Shares are convertible into common stock of the Company, such common stock, shall be “Registrable Securities”, and Holder shall be a “Holder” under the Second Amended and Restated Investor Rights Agreement among the Company and other persons dated as of December 4, 2012 as it may be amended and then in effect.

 



 

ARTICLE 4

MISCELLANEOUS

 

4.1                                Term: Exercise Upon Expiration.   This warrant is exercisable in whole or in part, at any time and from time to time on or before the Expiration Date set forth above. If this warrant has not been previously exercised in full at the time the Company completes its initial public offering or sells its equity securities registered under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, then this warrant shall be deemed to have been automatically exercised by “cashless” conversion pursuant to Section 1.2 upon the first closing of the initial public offering or the first sale in reliance upon registration under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, whichever occurs first. If this warrant has not been exercised prior to the Expiration Date, this warrant shall be deemed to have been automatically exercised on the Expiration Date by “cashless” conversion pursuant to Section 1.2.

 

4.2                                Legends.   This warrant and the Shares (and the securities issuable, directly or indirectly, upon conversion of the Shares, if any) shall be imprinted with a legend in substantially the following form:

 

THIS SECURITY HAS NOT BEEN REGISTERED UNDER THE SECURITIES ACT OF 1933, AS AMENDED, AND MAY NOT BE SOLD, PLEDGED OR OTHERWISE TRANSFERRED EXCEPT IN ACCORDANCE WITH APPLICABLE LAW.

 

4.3                                Compliance with Securities Laws on Transfer.   This warrant and the Shares issuable upon exercise of this warrant (and the securities issuable, directly or indirectly, upon conversion of the Shares, if any) may not be transferred or assigned in whole or in part without compliance with applicable federal and state securities laws by the transferor and the transferee. The Company shall not require Holder to provide an opinion of counsel if the transfer is to an affiliate of Holder or if there is no material question as to the availability of current information as referenced in Rule 144(c), Holder represents that it has complied with Rule 144 (d) and (e) in reasonable detail, the selling broker represents that it has complied with Rule 144(f), and the Company is provided with a copy of Holder’s notice of proposed sale.

 

4.4                                Transfer Procedure.   Subject to the provisions of Section 4.3, Holder may transfer all or part of this warrant or the Shares issuable upon exercise of this warrant (or the securities issuable, directly or indirectly, upon conversion of the Shares, if any) by giving the Company notice of the portion of the warrant being transferred setting forth the name, address and taxpayer identification number of the transferee and surrendering this warrant to the Company for reissuance to the transferee(s) (and Holder, if applicable). No surrender or reissuance shall be required if the transfer is to an affiliate of Holder.

 

4.5                                Notices.   All notices and other communications from the Company to the Holder, or vice versa, shall be deemed delivered and effective when given personally or mailed by first- class registered or certified mail, postage prepaid, at such address as may have been furnished to the Company or the Holder, as the case may be, in writing by the Company or such Holder from time to time. All notices to the Holder shall be addressed as follows:

 

Square 1 Bank

Attn:  Warrant Administrator
406 Blackwell Street, Suite 240
Crowe Building

 



 

Durham, NC 27701

 

4.6                                Amendments.   This warrant and any term hereof may be changed, waived, discharged or terminated only by an instrument in writing signed by the party against which enforcement of such change, waiver, discharge or termination is sought.

 

4.7                                Attorneys’ Fees.   In the event of any dispute between the parties concerning the terms and provisions of this warrant, the party prevailing in such dispute shall be entitled to collect from the other party all costs incurred in such dispute, including reasonable attorneys’ fees.

 

4.8                                Governing Law.   This warrant shall be governed by and construed in accordance with the laws of the State of Delaware, without giving effect to its principles regarding conflicts of law.

 

[Signature Page Follows]

 



 

IN WITNESS WHEREOF, the undersigned has executed this Warrant to Purchase Stock as of the date set forth above.

 

 

MARINUS PHARMACEUTICALS, INC.

 

 

 

 

 

 

By:

/s/ Edward Smith

 

 

 

 

Name:

Edward Smith

 

 

 

 

Title:

Chief Financial Officer

 

[Signature Page to Warrant to Purchase Stock]

 



 

APPENDIX 1

 

NOTICE OF EXERCISE

 

1.                                       The undersigned hereby elects to purchase                                     shares of the Series C Preferred Stock of MARINUS PHARMACEUTICALS, INC. pursuant to the terms of the attached warrant, and tenders herewith payment of the purchase price of such shares in full.

 

1.                                       The undersigned hereby elects to convert the attached warrant into shares in the manner specified in the warrant.  This conversion is exercised with respect to    of the shares covered by the warrant.

 

[Strike paragraph that does not apply.]

 

2.                                       Please issue a certificate or certificates representing said shares in the name of the undersigned or in such other name as is specified below:

 

Square 1 Bank

Attn:  Warrant Administrator

406 Blackwell Street, Suite 240

Fowler Building

Durham, NC 27701

 

3.                                       The undersigned represents it is acquiring the shares solely for its own account and not as a nominee for any other party and not with a view toward the resale or distribution thereof except in compliance with applicable securities laws.

 

 

SQUARE 1 BANK or Registered Assignee

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

(Signature)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

(Date)

 

 




EXHIBIT 10.1

 

MARINUS PHARMACEUTICALS, INC.

 

2005 STOCK OPTION AND INCENTIVE PLAN

 

1.                                       Purpose and Eligibility

 

The purpose of this 2005 Stock Option and Incentive Plan (the “ Plan ”) of Marinus Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (the “ Company ”) is to provide stock options and other equity interests in the Company (each an “ Award ”) to employees, officers, directors, consultants and advisors of the Company and its Subsidiaries, all of whom are eligible to receive Awards under the Plan.  Any person to whom an Award has been granted under the Plan is called a “ Participant .”  Additional definitions are contained in Section 8.

 

2.                                       Administration

 

a.             Administration by Board of Directors .  The Plan will be administered by the Board of Directors of the Company (the “ Board ”).  The Board, in its sole discretion, shall have the authority to grant and amend Awards, to adopt, amend and repeal rules relating to the Plan and to interpret and correct the provisions of the Plan and any Award.   All decisions by the Board shall be final and binding on all interested persons. Neither the Company nor any member of the Board shall be liable for any action or determination relating to the Plan.

 

b.             Appointment of Committees .  To the extent permitted by applicable law, the Board may delegate any or all of its powers under the Plan to one or more committees or subcommittees of the Board (a “ Committee ”).  All references in the Plan to the “Board” shall mean such Committee or the Board.

 

c.             Delegation to Executive Officers .  To the extent permitted by applicable law, the Board may delegate to one or more executive officers of the Company the power to grant Awards and exercise such other powers under the Plan as the Board may determine, provided that the Board shall fix the maximum number of Awards to be granted and the maximum number of shares issuable to any one Participant pursuant to Awards granted by such executive officers.

 

3.                                       Stock Available for Awards

 

a.             Number of Shares .  Subject to adjustment under Section 3(c), the aggregate number of shares of Common Stock of the Company (the “ Common Stock ”) that may be issued pursuant to the Plan is 8,010,227 shares (including shares issued upon the exercise of previously granted stock options), all of which may be issued as Incentive Stock Options.  If any Award expires, or is terminated, surrendered or forfeited, in whole or in part, the unissued Common Stock covered by such Award shall again be available for the grant of Awards under the Plan.  If shares of Common Stock issued pursuant to the Plan are repurchased by, or are surrendered or forfeited to, the Company at no more than cost, such shares of Common Stock shall again be available for the grant of Awards under the Plan; provided, however , that the cumulative number of such shares that may be issued under the Plan will not exceed 8,010,227 shares.  Shares issued

 



 

under the Plan may consist in whole or in part of authorized but unissued shares or treasury shares.

 

b.             [Intentionally omitted].

 

c.             Adjustment to Common Stock .  In the event of any stock split, stock dividend, extraordinary cash dividend, recapitalization, reorganization, merger, consolidation, combination, exchange of shares, liquidation, spin-off, split-up, or other similar change in capitalization or event, (i) the number and class of securities available for Awards under the Plan and the per-Participant share limit, (ii) the number and class of securities, vesting schedule and exercise price per share subject to each outstanding Option, (iii) the repurchase price per security subject to repurchase, and (iv) the terms of each other outstanding stock-based Award shall be appropriately and equitably or proportionately adjusted by the Board (or substituted Awards may be made). If Section 7(e)(i) applies for any event, this Section 3(c) shall not be applicable.

 

4.                                       Stock Options

 

a.             General .  The Board may grant options to purchase Common Stock (each, an “ Option ”) and determine the number of shares of Common Stock to be covered by each Option, the exercise price of each Option and the conditions and limitations applicable to the exercise of each Option and the Common Stock issued upon the exercise of each Option, including vesting provisions, repurchase provisions and restrictions relating to applicable federal or state securities laws, as it considers advisable.

 

b.             Incentive Stock Options .  An Option that the Board intends to be an “incentive stock option” as defined in Section 422 of the Code (an “ Incentive Stock Option ”) shall be granted only to employees of the Company and shall be subject to and shall be construed consistently with the requirements of Section 422 of the Code.  The Board and the Company shall have no liability if an Option or any part thereof that is intended to be an Incentive Stock Option does not qualify as such. An Option or any part thereof that does not qualify as an Incentive Stock Option is referred to herein as a “ Nonstatutory Stock Option .”

 

c.             Exercise Price .  The Board shall establish the exercise price (or determine the method by which the exercise price shall be determined) at the time each Option is granted and specify it in the applicable option agreement; provided that the exercise price per share shall not be less than 100% of the fair market value of such share on the date of grant.  If an employee owns or is deemed to own (by reason of the attribution rules of Section 424(d) of the Code) more than 10% of the combined voting power of all classes of capital stock of the Company or any parent or Subsidiary and an Incentive Stock Option is granted to such employee, the exercise price per share of such Incentive Stock Option shall be not less than 110% of the fair market value of such share on the grant date.

 

d.             Duration of Options .  Each Option shall be exercisable at such times and subject to such terms and conditions as the Board may specify in the applicable option agreement.

 

2



 

e.             Exercise of Option .  Options may be exercised only by delivery to the Company of a written notice of exercise signed by the proper person together with payment in full as specified in Section 4(f) for the number of shares for which the Option is exercised.

 

f.             Payment Upon Exercise .  Common Stock purchased upon the exercise of an Option shall be paid for by one or any combination of the following forms of payment:

 

(i)            by check payable to the order of the Company;

 

(ii)           except as otherwise explicitly provided in the applicable option agreement, and only if the Common Stock is then publicly traded, delivery of an irrevocable and unconditional undertaking by a creditworthy broker to deliver promptly to the Company sufficient funds to pay the exercise price, or delivery by the Participant to the Company of a copy of irrevocable and unconditional instructions to a creditworthy broker to deliver promptly to the Company cash or a check sufficient to pay the exercise price; or

 

(iii)          to the extent explicitly provided in the applicable option agreement, by (x) delivery of shares of Common Stock owned by the Participant valued at  fair market value (as determined by the Board or as determined pursuant to the applicable option agreement), (y) delivery of a promissory note of the Participant to the Company (and delivery to the Company by the Participant of a check in an amount equal to the par value of the shares purchased), or (z) payment of such other lawful consideration as the Board may determine.

 

5.                                       Restricted Stock

 

a.             Grants .  The Board may grant Awards entitling recipients to acquire shares of Common Stock, subject to (i) delivery to the Company by the Participant of cash or other lawful consideration in an amount at least equal to the par value of the shares purchased, and (ii) the right of the Company to repurchase all or part of such shares at their issue price or other stated or formula price from the Participant in the event that conditions specified by the Board in the applicable Award are not satisfied prior to the end of the applicable restriction period or periods established by the Board for such Award (each, a “ Restricted Stock Award ”).

 

b.             Terms and Conditions . The Board shall determine the terms and conditions of any such Restricted Stock Award.  Any stock certificates issued in respect of a Restricted Stock Award shall be registered in the name of the Participant and, unless otherwise determined by the Board, deposited by the Participant, together with a stock power endorsed in blank, with the Company (or its designee).  After the expiration of the applicable restriction periods, the Company (or such designee) shall deliver the certificates no longer subject to such restrictions to the Participant or, if the Participant has died, to the beneficiary designated by a Participant, in a manner determined by the Board, to receive amounts due or exercise rights of the Participant in the event of the Participant’s death (the “ Designated Beneficiary ”).  In the absence of an effective designation by a Participant, Designated Beneficiary shall mean the Participant’s estate.

 

3



 

6.                                       Other Stock-Based Awards

 

The Board shall have the right to grant other Awards based upon the Common Stock having such terms and conditions as the Board may determine, including, without limitation, the grant of shares based upon certain conditions, the grant of securities convertible into Common Stock and the grant of stock appreciation rights, phantom stock awards or stock units.

 

7.                                       General Provisions Applicable to Awards

 

a.             Transferability of Awards .  Except as the Board may otherwise determine or provide in an Award, Awards shall not be sold, assigned, transferred, pledged or otherwise encumbered by the person to whom they are granted, either voluntarily or by operation of law, except by will or the laws of descent and distribution, and, during the life of the Participant, shall be exercisable only by the Participant.  References to a Participant, to the extent relevant in the context, shall include references to authorized transferees.

 

b.             Documentation .  Each Award under the Plan shall be evidenced by a written instrument in such form as the Board shall determine or as executed by an officer of the Company pursuant to authority delegated by the Board.  Each Award may contain terms and conditions in addition to those set forth in the Plan provided that such terms and conditions do not contravene the provisions of the Plan.

 

c.             Board Discretion .  The terms of each type of Award need not be identical, and the Board need not treat Participants uniformly.

 

d.             Termination of Status .  The Board shall determine the effect on an Award of the disability, death, retirement, authorized leave of absence or other change in the employment or other status of a Participant and the extent to which, and the period during which, the Participant, or the Participant’s legal representative, conservator, guardian or Designated Beneficiary, may exercise rights under the Award.

 

e.             Acquisition of the Company

 

(i)            Consequences of an Acquisition .  Upon the consummation of an Acquisition, the Board or the board of directors of the surviving or acquiring entity (as used in this Section 7(e)(i), also the “ Board ”), shall, as to outstanding Awards (on the same basis or on different bases as the Board shall specify), make appropriate provision for the continuation of such Awards by the Company or the assumption of such Awards by the surviving or acquiring entity and by substituting on an equitable basis for the shares then subject to such Awards either (a) the consideration payable with respect to the outstanding shares of Common Stock in connection with the Acquisition, (b) shares of stock of the surviving or acquiring corporation or (c) such other securities or other consideration as the Board deems appropriate, the fair market value of which (as determined by the Board in its sole discretion) shall not materially differ from the fair market value of the shares of Common Stock subject to such Awards immediately preceding the Acquisition. In addition to or in lieu of the foregoing, with respect to outstanding Options, the Board may, on the same basis or on different bases as the Board shall specify, upon

 

4



 

written notice to the affected optionees, provide that one or more Options then outstanding must be exercised, in whole or in part, within a specified number of days of the date of such notice, at the end of which period such Options shall terminate, or provide that one or more Options then outstanding, in whole or in part, shall be terminated in exchange for a cash payment equal to the excess of the fair market value (as determined by the Board in its sole discretion) for the shares subject to such Options over the exercise price thereof; provided, however, that before terminating any portion of an Option that is not vested or exercisable (other than in exchange for a cash payment), the Board must first accelerate in full the exercisability of the portion that is to be terminated.  Unless otherwise determined by the Board (on the same basis or on different bases as the Board shall specify), any repurchase rights or other rights of the Company that relate to an Option or other Award shall continue to apply to consideration, including cash, that has been substituted, assumed or amended for an Option or other Award pursuant to this paragraph. The Company may hold in escrow all or any portion of any such consideration in order to effectuate any continuing restrictions.

 

(ii)           Acquisition Defined .  An “ Acquisition ” shall mean: (x) the sale of the Company by merger in which the shareholders of the Company in their capacity as such no longer own a majority of the outstanding equity securities of the Company (or its successor); or (y) any sale of all or substantially all of the assets or capital stock of the Company (other than in a spin-off or similar transaction) or  (z) any other acquisition of the business of the Company, as determined by the Board.

 

(iii)          Assumption of Options Upon Certain Events .  In connection with a merger or consolidation of an entity with the Company or the acquisition by the Company of property or stock of an entity, the Board may grant Awards under the Plan in substitution for stock and stock-based awards issued by such entity or an affiliate thereof.  The substitute Awards shall be granted on such terms and conditions as the Board considers appropriate in the circumstances.

 

f.             Withholding .  Each Participant shall pay to the Company, or make provisions satisfactory to the Company for payment of, any taxes required by law to be withheld in connection with Awards to such Participant no later than the date of the event creating the tax liability.  The Board may allow Participants to satisfy such tax obligations in whole or in part by transferring shares of Common Stock, including shares retained from the Award creating the tax obligation, valued at their fair market value (as determined by the Board or as determined pursuant to the applicable option agreement).  The Company may, to the extent permitted by law, deduct any such tax obligations from any payment of any kind otherwise due to a Participant.

 

g.             Amendment of Awards .  The Board may amend, modify or terminate any outstanding Award including, but not limited to, substituting therefor another Award of the same or a different type, changing the date of exercise or realization, and converting an Incentive Stock Option to a Nonstatutory Stock Option, provided that the Participant’s consent to such action shall be required unless the Board determines that the action, taking into account any related action, would not materially and adversely affect the Participant.

 

h.             Conditions on Delivery of Stock .  The Company will not be obligated to deliver any shares of Common Stock pursuant to the Plan or to remove restrictions from shares

 

5



 

previously delivered under the Plan until (i) all conditions of the Award have been met or removed to the satisfaction of the Company, (ii) in the opinion of the Company’s counsel, all other legal matters in connection with the issuance and delivery of such shares have been satisfied, including any applicable securities laws and any applicable stock exchange or stock market rules and regulations, and (iii) the Participant has executed and delivered to the Company such representations or agreements as the Company may consider appropriate to satisfy the requirements of any applicable laws, rules or regulations.

 

i.              Acceleration .  The Board may at any time provide that any Options shall become immediately exercisable in full or in part, that any Restricted Stock Awards shall be free of some or all restrictions, or that any other stock-based Awards may become exercisable in full or in part or free of some or all restrictions or conditions, or otherwise realizable in full or in part, as the case may be, despite the fact that the foregoing actions may (i) cause the application of Sections 280G and 4999 of the Code if a change in control of the Company occurs, or (ii) disqualify all or part of the Option as an Incentive Stock Option. In the event of the acceleration of the exercisability of one or more outstanding Options, including pursuant to paragraph (e)(i), the Board may provide, as a condition of full exercisability of any or all such Options, that the Common Stock or other substituted consideration, including cash, as to which exercisability has been accelerated shall be restricted and subject to forfeiture back to the Company at the option of the Company at the cost thereof upon termination of employment or other relationship, with the timing and other terms of the vesting of such restricted stock or other consideration being equivalent to the timing and other terms of the superseded exercise schedule of the related Option.

 

8.                                       Miscellaneous

 

a.             Definitions .

 

(i)            “ Company ,” for purposes of eligibility under the Plan, shall include any present or future subsidiary corporations of Marinus Pharmaceuticals, Inc., as defined in Section 424(f) of the Code (a “ Subsidiary ”), and any present or future parent corporation of Marinus Pharmaceuticals, Inc., as defined in Section 424(e) of the Code.  For purposes of Awards other than Incentive Stock Options, the term “Company” shall include any other business venture in which the Company has a direct or indirect significant interest, as determined by the Board in its sole discretion.

 

(ii)           “ Code ” means the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended, and any regulations promulgated thereunder.

 

(iii)          “ employee ” for purposes of eligibility under the Plan (but not for purposes of Section 4(b)) shall include a person to whom an offer of employment has been extended by the Company.

 

b.             Compliance with Section 409A .  To the extent an Award is subject to the requirements of Section 409A of the Code and the regulations and other guidance promulgated thereunder (“ Section 409A ”), then the applicable agreement evidencing such Award and the Plan

 

6



 

shall be construed and administered in a manner such that the Award complies with Section 409A, and the Board may revise the agreement evidencing such Award and/or the Plan so that such Award shall be in compliance with Section 409A.  Additionally, to the extent any Award is subject to Section 409A, notwithstanding any provision herein to the contrary, the Plan shall not permit the acceleration of, or changes in, the time or schedule of any distribution related to such Award, except to the extent consistent with the requirements of Section 409A.

 

c.             No Right To Employment or Other Status .  No person shall have any claim or right to be granted an Award, and the grant of an Award shall not be construed as giving a Participant the right to continued employment or any other relationship with the Company.  The Company expressly reserves the right at any time to dismiss or otherwise terminate its relationship with a Participant free from any liability or claim under the Plan.

 

d.             No Rights As Stockholder .  Subject to the provisions of the applicable Award, no Participant or Designated Beneficiary shall have any rights as a stockholder with respect to any shares of Common Stock to be distributed with respect to an Award until becoming the record holder thereof.

 

e.             Effective Date and Term of Plan .  The Plan shall become effective on the date on which it is adopted by the Board.  No Awards shall be granted under the Plan after the completion of ten years from the date on which the Plan was adopted by the Board, but Awards previously granted may extend beyond that date.

 

f.             Amendment of Plan .  The Board may amend, suspend or terminate the Plan or any portion thereof at any time.

 

g.             Governing Law .  The provisions of the Plan and all Awards made hereunder shall be governed by and interpreted in accordance with the laws of Delaware, without regard to any applicable conflicts of law.

 

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EXHIBIT 10.2

 

MARINUS PHARMACEUTICALS, INC.

 

FORM OF NON-QUALIFIED STOCK OPTION AGREEMENT

 

Marinus Pharmaceuticals, Inc., a Delaware corporation (the “ Company ”), hereby grants the following stock option pursuant to its 2005 Stock Option and Incentive Plan.  The terms and conditions attached hereto are also a part hereof.

 

Name of optionee (the “ Optionee ”):

 

 

 

 

 

Date of this option grant:

 

 

 

 

 

Number of shares of the Company’s Common Stock subject to this option (“ Shares ”):

 

 

 

 

 

Option exercise price per share:

 

 

 

 

 

Number, if any, of Shares that may be purchased on or after the grant date:

 

 

 

 

 

Shares that are subject to vesting schedule:

 

 

 

 

 

Vesting Start Date:

 

 

 

Vesting Schedule :

 

The date of this option grant, as first written above:

 

 

 

 

 

One calendar year from the Vesting Start Date (the “Anniversary Date”):

 

 

 

 

 

All vesting is dependent on the continuation of a Business Relationship with the Company, as provided herein.

 

Payment alternatives:

 

Section 7(a) (i) - (iii)

 

This option satisfies in full all commitments that the Company has heretofore made to the Optionee with respect to the issuance of stock, stock options or other equity securities.

 

 

 

MARINUS PHARMACEUTICALS,

 

 

INC.

 

 

 

Signature of Optionee

 

By:

 

 

 

 

Name of Officer:

 

 

 

Title:

 

 

 

Street Address

 

 

 

 

 

City/State/Zip Code

 

 

 



 

MARINUS PHARMACEUTICALS, INC.

 

NON-QUALIFIED STOCK OPTION AGREEMENT — INCORPORATED TERMS AND CONDITIONS

 

1.             Grant Under Plan .  This option is granted pursuant to and is governed by the Company’s 2005 Stock Option and Incentive Plan (the “ Plan ”) and, unless the context otherwise requires, terms used herein without definition shall have the same meaning as in the Plan.

 

2.             Grant as Non-Qualified Stock Option .  This option shall be treated for federal income tax purposes as a Non-Qualified Option (rather than an incentive stock option under Section 422 of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended, and the regulations thereunder (the “ Code ”)).

 

3.             Vesting of Option .

 

(a)           Vesting if Business Relationship Continues .  The Optionee may exercise this option on or after the date of this option grant for the number of Shares, if any, set forth on the cover page hereof.  If the Optionee has continuously maintained a Business Relationship (as defined below) with the Company through the dates listed on the vesting schedule set forth on the cover page hereof, the Optionee may exercise this option for the additional number of Shares that become exercisable upon the applicable vesting date.  Notwithstanding the foregoing, the Board may, in its discretion, accelerate the date that any installment of this option becomes exercisable.  The foregoing rights are cumulative and may be exercised only before the date which is ten years from the date of this option grant.

 

(b)           Accelerated Vesting Due to Acquisition .  In the event an Acquisition (as defined below) that is not a Private Transaction (as defined below) occurs while the Optionee maintains a Business Relationship with the Company and this option has not fully vested, this option shall become exercisable for an additional one-half of the number of Shares which are then not vested, such vesting to occur immediately prior to the closing of the Acquisition, with vesting to continue after such closing at one-half the rate/number set forth on the cover page as to the remainder of the Shares subject to vesting and on the same vesting dates, provided that the Optionee continuously maintains a Business Relationship with the Company or its successor through the applicable vesting dates.  If within twelve months of the closing of the Acquisition, the Optionee terminates his or her Business Relationship for Good Reason (as defined below) or the Company or the acquiror terminates the Business Relationship without Cause (as defined below), then immediately upon such termination date this option shall become exercisable as to all remaining Shares, and this option shall expire (may no longer be exercised) after the passage of three months from the date of termination, but in no event later than the scheduled expiration date.

 

(c)           Definitions .  The following definitions shall apply:

 

Acquisition ” means (i) the sale of the Company by merger in which the shareholders of the Company in their capacity as such no longer own a majority of the outstanding equity securities of the Company (or its successor); or (ii) any sale of all or substantially all of the assets or capital stock of the Company (other than in a spin-off or similar transaction) or (iii) any other acquisition of the business of the Company, as determined by the Board.

 

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Business Relationship ” means service to the Company, any of its Subsidiaries, or their successors in the capacity of an employee, officer, director, consultant or advisor.

 

Cause ” means: (i) the Optionee’s substantial and continuing failure, as determined by the Board of Directors in good faith, to carry out the reasonable instructions of the Board   of Directors, after reasonable notice thereof   and opportunity to cure; (ii) embezzlement or misappropriation of assets or property (tangible or intangible) of the Company; (iii) gross negligence, breach of fiduciary duty to the Company or fraud; (iv) the commission of an act that constitutes unfair competition with the Company or which induces any customer or supplier to breach a contract with the Company; or (v)  conviction of a felony.  For the avoidance of doubt, “Cause” shall not mean a failure to achieve scientific goals, financial goals or forecasted timelines.

 

Good Reason ” means: (i) a material reduction in the responsibilities or title of the Optionee; (ii) a material reduction by the Company in the Optionee’s annual base salary; or (iii) a relocation of the Company’s business greater than 50 miles from its current location.

 

Private Transaction ” means any Acquisition where the consideration received or retained by the holders of the then outstanding capital stock of the Company does not consist of (i) cash or cash equivalent consideration, (ii) securities which are registered under the Securities Act and/or (iii) securities for which the Company or any other issuer thereof has agreed, including pursuant to a demand, to file a registration statement within ninety (90) days of completion of the transaction for resale to the public pursuant to the Securities Act.

 

4.             Termination of Business Relationship .

 

(a)           Termination .  If the Optionee’s Business Relationship ceases, voluntarily or  involuntarily, with or without Cause, no further installments of this option shall become exercisable, and this option shall expire (may no longer be exercised) after the passage of three months from the date of termination, but in no event later than the scheduled expiration date.  Any determination under this agreement as to the status of a Business Relationship or other matters referred to above shall be made in good faith by the Board of Directors of the Company.

 

(b)           Employment Status .  For purposes hereof, with respect to employees of the Company or its Subsidiaries, employment shall not be considered as having terminated during any leave of absence if such leave of absence has been approved in writing by the Company, or applicable Subsidiary, and if such written approval contractually obligates the Company, or applicable Subsidiary, to continue the employment of the Optionee after the approved period of absence; in the event of such an approved leave of absence, vesting of this option shall be suspended (and the period of the leave of absence shall be added to all vesting dates) unless otherwise provided in the written approval of the Company, or applicable Subsidiary, of the leave of absence.  For purposes hereof, a termination of employment followed by another Business Relationship shall be deemed a termination of the Business Relationship with all vesting to cease

 

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unless the Company enters into a written agreement related to such other Business Relationship in which it is specifically stated that there is no termination of the Business Relationship under this agreement.  This option shall not be affected by any change of employment within or among the Company and its Subsidiaries so long as the Optionee continuously remains an employee of the Company or any Subsidiary.

 

(c)           Termination for Cause .  If the Business Relationship of the Optionee is terminated for Cause, this option may no longer be exercised from and after the Optionee’s receipt of written notice of such termination.

 

5.             Death; Disability .

 

(a)           Death .  Upon the death of the Optionee while the Optionee is maintaining a Business Relationship with the Company, this option may be exercised, to the extent otherwise exercisable on the date of the Optionee’s death, by the Optionee’s estate, personal representative or beneficiary to whom this option has been transferred pursuant to Section 10, only at any time within 180 days after the date of death, but not later than the scheduled expiration date.

 

(b)           Disability .  If the Optionee ceases to maintain a Business Relationship with the Company by reason of his or her disability, this option may be exercised, to the extent otherwise exercisable on the date of cessation of the Business Relationship, only at any time within 180 days after such cessation of the Business Relationship, but not later than the scheduled expiration date.  For purposes hereof, “ disability ” means “ permanent and total disability ” as defined in Section 22(e)(3) of the Code.

 

6.             Partial Exercise .  This option may be exercised in part at any time and from time to time within the above limits, except that this option may not be exercised for a fraction of a Share.

 

7.             Payment of Exercise Price .

 

(a)           Payment  Options .  The  exercise price shall be paid by one or any combination of the following forms of payment that are applicable to this option, as indicated on the cover page hereof:

 

(i)            by check payable to the order of the Company; or

 

(ii)           delivery of an irrevocable and unconditional undertaking, satisfactory in form and substance to the Company, by a creditworthy broker to deliver promptly to the Company sufficient funds to pay the exercise price, or delivery by the Optionee to the Company of a copy of irrevocable and unconditional instructions, satisfactory in form and substance to the Company, to a creditworthy broker to deliver promptly to the Company cash or a check sufficient to pay the exercise price; or

 

(iii)          subject to Section 7(b) below, if the Common Stock is then traded on a national securities exchange or on the Nasdaq National Market (or successor trading system), by delivery of shares of Common Stock having a fair market value equal as of the date of exercise to the exercise price.

 

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In the case of (iii) above, fair market value as of the date of exercise shall be determined as of the last business day for which such prices or quotes are available prior to the date of exercise and shall mean (i) the last reported sale price (on that date) of the Common Stock on the principal national securities exchange on which the Common Stock is traded, if the Common Stock is then traded on a national securities exchange; or (ii) the last reported sale price (on that date) of the Common Stock on the Nasdaq National Market (or successor trading system), if the Common Stock is not then traded on a national securities exchange.

 

(b)           Limitations on Payment by Delivery of Common Stock .  If Section 7(a)(iii) is applicable, and if the Optionee delivers Common Stock held by the Optionee (“ Old Stock ”) to the Company in full or partial payment of the exercise price and the Old Stock so delivered is subject to restrictions or limitations imposed by agreement between the Optionee and the Company, an equivalent number of Shares shall be subject to all restrictions and limitations applicable to the Old Stock to the extent that the Optionee paid for the Shares by delivery of Old Stock, in addition to any restrictions or limitations imposed by this agreement.  Notwithstanding the foregoing, the Optionee may not pay any part of the exercise price hereof by transferring Common Stock to the Company unless such Common Stock has been owned by the Optionee free of any substantial risk of forfeiture for at least six months.

 

8.             Securities Laws Restrictions on Resale .  Until registered under the Securities Act of 1933, as amended, or any successor statute (the “ Securities Act ”), the Shares will be illiquid and will be deemed to be “restricted securities” for purposes of the Securities Act.  Accordingly, such Shares must be sold in compliance with the registration requirements of the Securities Act or an exemption therefrom and may need to be held indefinitely.  Unless the Shares have been registered under the Securities Act, each certificate evidencing any of the Shares shall bear a restrictive legend specified by the Company.

 

9.             Method of Exercising Option .  Subject to the terms and conditions of this agreement, this option may be exercised by written notice to the Company at its principal executive office, or to such transfer agent as the Company shall designate.  Such notice shall state the election to exercise this option and the number of Shares for which it is being exercised and shall be signed by the person or persons so exercising this option.  Such notice shall be accompanied by payment of the full exercise price of such Shares, and the Company shall deliver a certificate or certificates representing such Shares as soon as practicable after the notice shall be received.  Such certificate or certificates shall be registered in the name of the person or persons so exercising this option (or, if this option shall be exercised by the Optionee and if the Optionee shall so request in the notice exercising this option, shall be registered in the name of the Optionee and another person jointly, with right of survivorship).  In the event this option shall be exercised, pursuant to Section 5 hereof, by any person or persons other than the Optionee, such notice shall be accompanied by appropriate proof of the right of such person or persons to exercise this option.

 

10.          Option Not Transferable .  This option is not transferable or assignable except by will or by the laws of descent and distribution.  During the Optionee’s lifetime only the Optionee can exercise this option.

 

11.          No Obligation to Exercise Option .  The grant and acceptance of this option imposes no obligation on the Optionee to exercise it.

 

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12.          No Obligation to Continue Business Relationship .  Neither the Plan, this agreement, nor the grant of this option imposes any obligation on the Company or any of its Subsidiaries to continue the Optionee in employment or other Business Relationship.

 

13.          Adjustments .  Except as is expressly provided in the Plan with respect to certain changes in the capitalization of the Company, no adjustment shall be made to Shares for dividends or similar rights for which the record date is prior to such date of exercise of such Shares.

 

14.          Withholding Taxes .  If the Company in its discretion determines that it (or a Subsidiary) is obligated to withhold any tax in connection with the exercise of this option, or in connection with the transfer of, or the lapse of restrictions on, any Common Stock or other property acquired pursuant to this option, the Optionee hereby agrees that the Company (or applicable Subsidiary) may withhold from the Optionee’s wages or other remuneration the appropriate amount of tax.  At the discretion of the Company, the amount required to be withheld may be withheld in cash from such wages or other remuneration or in kind from the Common Stock or other property otherwise deliverable to the Optionee on exercise of this option.  The Optionee further agrees that, if the Company (or applicable Subsidiary) does not withhold an amount from the Optionee’s wages or other remuneration sufficient to satisfy the withholding obligation of the Company (or Subsidiary), the Optionee will make reimbursement on demand, in cash, for the amount underwithheld.

 

15.          Restrictions on Transfer; Company’s Right of First Refusal .

 

(a)           Exercise of Right .  Shares may not be transferred without the Company’s written consent except by will, by the laws of descent and distribution or in accordance with the further provisions of this Section 15.  If the Optionee desires to transfer all or any part of the Shares to any person other than the Company (an “ Offeror ”), the Optionee shall:  (i) obtain in writing an irrevocable and unconditional bona fide offer (the “ Offer ”) for  the purchase thereof from the Offeror; and  (ii) give written notice (the “ Option Notice ”) to the Company setting forth the Optionee’s desire to transfer such Shares, which Option Notice shall be accompanied by a photocopy of the Offer and shall set forth at least the name and address of the Offeror and the price and terms of the Offer. Upon receipt of the Option Notice, the Company shall have an assignable option to purchase any or all of such Shares (the “ Offered Shares ”) specified in the Option Notice, such option to be exercisable by giving, within 15 days after receipt of the Option Notice, a written counter-notice to the Optionee.  If the Company elects to purchase all of such Offered Shares, it shall be obligated to purchase, and the Optionee shall be obligated to sell to the Company or its assignee, such Offered Shares at the price and terms indicated in the Offer within 30 days from the date of delivery by the Company of such counter- notice.  To the extent that the consideration proposed to be paid by the Offeror for the Shares consists of property other than cash or a promissory note, the consideration required to be paid by the Company may consist of cash equal to the fair market value of such property, as determined in good faith by the Board of the Company.

 

(b)           Sale of  Shares to Offeror .  The Optionee may, for 60 days after the expiration of the 30-day option period as set forth in Section 15(a), sell to the Offeror, pursuant to the terms of the Offer, all of such Offered Shares not purchased or agreed to be purchased by the Company or its assignee; provided, however , that the Optionee shall not sell such Shares to such Offeror if such Offeror is a competitor of the Company and

 

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the Company gives written notice to the Optionee, within 30 days of its receipt of the Option Notice, stating that the Optionee shall not sell his or her Shares to such Offeror; and provided, further, that prior to the sale of such Shares to an Offeror, such Offeror shall execute an agreement with the Company pursuant to which such Offeror agrees to be subject to the restrictions set forth in this Section 15.  If any or all of such Shares are not sold pursuant to an Offer within the time permitted above, the unsold Shares shall remain subject to the terms of this Section 15.

 

(c)           Failure to Deliver Shares .  If the Optionee (or his or her legal representative) who has become obligated to sell Shares hereunder shall fail to deliver such Shares to the Company in accordance with the terms of this agreement, the Company may, at its option, in addition to all other remedies it may have, mail to the Optionee the exercise price for such Shares as is herein specified.  Thereupon, the Company: (i) shall cancel on its books the certificate or certificates representing such Shares to be sold; and (ii) shall issue, in lieu thereof, a new certificate or certificates in the name of the Company representing such Shares (or cancel such Shares), and thereupon all of such Optionee’s rights in and to such Shares shall terminate.

 

(d)           Expiration of Company’s Right of First Refusal and Transfer Restrictions .  The first refusal rights of the Company and the transfer restrictions set forth in this Section 15 shall expire as to Shares on the earliest to occur of (i) the tenth anniversary of the date of this agreement, (ii) immediately prior to the closing of a public offering of Common Stock by the Company pursuant to an effective registration statement filed under the Securities Act, or (iii) the occurrence of an Acquisition that is not a Private Transaction.  In addition, if the Company and the Optionee are parties to an agreement containing first refusal provisions similar to the foregoing, the terms and conditions of such other agreement shall govern and shall take precedence over the provisions of this Section 15.

 

16.          Company’s Right of Repurchase for Shares .

 

(a)           Right of Repurchase .  The Company shall have the assignable right (the “ Repurchase Right ”) to repurchase from the Optionee all, but not less than all, of the Shares upon the occurrence of any of the events specified in Section 16(b) below (the “ Repurchase  Event ”).  The Repurchase Right may be exercised within 3 months following the date the Company receives actual knowledge of such event (the “ Repurchase Period ”).  The Repurchase Right shall be exercised by the Company by giving the holder written notice on or before the last day of the Repurchase Period of its intention to exercise the Repurchase Right, and, together with such notice, tendering to the holder an amount (the “ Repurchase Price ”) equal to the lesser of the purchase price or the fair market value of the Shares.  Upon timely exercise of the Repurchase Right in the manner provided in this Section 16(a), the holder shall deliver to the Company or its assignee the stock certificate or certificates representing the shares being repurchased, duly endorsed and free and clear of any and all liens, charges and encumbrances.

 

If Shares are not purchased under the Repurchase Right, the Optionee and his or her successor in interest, if any, will hold any such Shares subject to all of the provisions of this agreement.

 

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(b)           Company’s Right to Exercise Repurchase Right .  The Company or its assignee shall have the Repurchase Right in the event that any of the following events shall occur:

 

(i)            The termination of the Optionee’s Business Relationship for Cause (as defined in Section 3(c) hereof); or

 

(ii)           Within one year of the termination of the Optionee’s Business Relationship with the Company for any reason whatsoever, the engagement by the Optionee, directly or indirectly, alone or with others, in (a) any business activity which is in competition with the Company; (b) the solicitation of, interference with or endeavor to entice away any employee of the Company; or (c) the breach of any confidentiality agreement with the Company.

 

(c)           Determination of Fair Market Value .  The fair market value of the Shares shall be, for purposes of this Section 16, determined by the Board in its sole discretion as of the date of the Repurchase Event.  Should Optionee disagree with the Board’s determination of the fair market value (the “ Board Determination ”), Optionee shall notify the Board in writing (the “ Dispute Notification ”) that Optionee wishes to dispute the determination.  If the dispute is not resolved between the Board and the Optionee within 15 days of receipt of the Dispute Notification, then the Board shall appoint a third-party expert in valuing companies that are comparable to the Company to conduct a determination of the fair market value (the “ Third Party Determination ”).  The Third Party Determination shall be conclusive and binding upon the Board and the Optionee.  If the Third Party Determination is within ten percent of the Board Determination, then the Optionee shall bear the costs incurred in obtaining the Third Party Determination.  Should the Third Party Determination differ from the Board Determination by ten percent or more, the Company shall bear such costs.

 

(d)           Repurchase Procedure .  Any repurchase of Shares by the Company shall take place at the principal executive offices of the Company at the time and date set by the Company.  Such sale shall be effected by the Optionee’s delivery to the Company of a certificate or certificates evidencing the repurchased Shares, duly endorsed for transfer to the Company, against payment to the Optionee by the Company of the Repurchase Price by check for the repurchased Shares (which check may be delivered by mail) or by cancellation of indebtedness owed to the Company by the Optionee.  Upon the mailing of a check in payment of the Repurchase Price in accordance with the terms hereof or cancellation of indebtedness as aforesaid, the Company shall become the legal and beneficial owner of the Shares being repurchased and all rights and interests therein or relating thereto, and the Company shall have the right to retain and transfer to its own name the number of Shares being repurchased by the Company.

 

(e)           Expiration of Company’s Repurchase Right :  The  Repurchase Right shall remain in effect until such time, if ever, as the Shares are transferred in accordance with Section 15 hereof.

 

17.          Consequences of an Acquisition .  In connection with the consummation of an Acquisition, the Board of Directors of the Company or the board of directors of the surviving or acquiring entity (as used in this Section 17, also the “ Board ”), shall make appropriate provision for the continuation of this option by the Company or the assumption of this option by the

 

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surviving or acquiring entity and by substituting on an equitable basis for the shares then subject to this option either (a) the consideration payable with respect to the outstanding shares of Common Stock in connection with the Acquisition, (b) shares of stock of the surviving or acquiring corporation or (c) such other securities or other consideration as the Board deems appropriate, the fair market value of which (as determined by the Board in its sole discretion) shall not materially differ from the fair market value of the shares of Common Stock subject to this option immediately preceding the Acquisition. In addition to or in lieu of the foregoing, the Board may, upon written notice to the Optionee, provide that this option must be exercised, in whole or in part, within a specified number of days of the date of such notice, at the end of which period this option shall terminate, or provide that this option, in whole or in part, shall be terminated in exchange for a cash payment equal to the excess of the fair market value (as determined by the Board in its sole discretion) for the shares subject to this option over the exercise price thereof; provided, however, that before terminating any portion of this option that is not vested or exercisable (other than in exchange for a cash payment), the Board must first accelerate in full the exercisability of the portion that is to be terminated.  Unless otherwise determined by the Board, any repurchase rights or other rights of the Company that relate to this option shall continue to apply to consideration, including cash, that has been substituted, assumed or amended for this option pursuant to this paragraph.  The Company may hold in escrow all or any portion of any such consideration in order to effectuate any continuing restrictions.

 

18.          Early Disposition .  The Optionee agrees to notify the Company in writing immediately after the Optionee transfers any Shares, if such transfer occurs on or before the later of (a) the date that is two years after the date of this agreement or (b) the date that is one year after the date on which the Optionee acquired such Shares.  The Optionee also agrees to provide the Company with any information concerning any such transfer required by the Company for tax purposes.

 

19.          Lock-up Agreement .  The Optionee agrees that in the event that the Company effects an initial underwritten public offering of Common Stock registered under the Securities Act, the Shares may not be sold, offered for sale or otherwise disposed of, directly or indirectly, without the prior written consent of the managing underwriter(s) of the offering, for such period of time after the execution of an underwriting agreement in connection with such offering that all of the Company’s then directors and executive officers agree to be similarly bound.

 

20.          Arbitration .  Any dispute, controversy, or claim arising out of, in connection with, or relating to the performance of this agreement or its termination shall be settled by arbitration in the State of Connecticut, pursuant to the rules then obtaining of the American Arbitration Association.  Any award shall be final, binding and conclusive upon the parties and a judgment rendered thereon may be entered in any court having jurisdiction thereof.

 

21.          Provision of Documentation to Optionee .  By signing this agreement the Optionee acknowledges receipt of a copy of this agreement and a copy of the Plan.

 

22.          Miscellaneous .

 

(a)           Notices .  All notices hereunder shall be in writing and shall be deemed given when sent by mail, if to the Optionee, to the address set forth on the cover page hereof or at the address shown on the records of the Company, and if to the Company, to

 

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the Company’s principal executive offices, to the attention of the Secretary of the Company.

 

(b)           Entire Agreement; Modification .  This agreement constitutes the entire agreement between the parties relative to the subject matter hereof, and supersedes all proposals, written or oral, and all other communications between the parties relating to the subject matter of this agreement.  This agreement may be modified, amended or rescinded only by a written agreement executed by both parties.

 

(c)           Fractional Shares .  If this option becomes exercisable for a fraction of a Share because of the adjustment provisions contained in the Plan, such fraction shall be rounded down.

 

(d)           Issuances of Securities; Changes in Capital Structure .  Except as expressly provided herein or in the Plan, no issuance by the Company of shares of stock of any class, or securities convertible into shares of stock of any class, shall affect, and no adjustment by reason thereof shall be made with respect to, the number or exercise price of Shares subject to this option.  No adjustments need be made for dividends paid in cash or in property other than securities of the Company.  If there shall be any change in the Common Stock of the Company through merger, consolidation, reorganization, recapitalization, stock dividend, stock split, combination or exchange of shares, spin-off, split-up or other similar change in capitalization or event, the restrictions contained in this agreement shall apply with equal force to additional and/or substitute securities, if any, received by the Optionee in exchange for, or by virtue of his or her ownership of, Shares, except as otherwise determined by the Board.

 

(e)           Severability .  The invalidity, illegality or unenforceability of any provision of this agreement shall in no way affect the validity, legality or enforceability of any other provision.

 

(f)            Successors and Assigns .  This agreement shall be binding upon and inure to the benefit of the parties hereto and their respective permitted successors and assigns.

 

(g)           Governing Law .  This agreement shall be governed by and interpreted in accordance with the laws of Delaware, without giving effect to the principles of the conflicts of laws thereof.

 

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MARINUS PHARMACEUTICALS, INC.

 

Form of Incentive Stock Option Agreement

 

Marinus Pharmaceuticals, Inc., a Delaware corporation (the “ Company ”), hereby grants the following stock option pursuant to its 2005 Stock Option and Incentive Plan. The terms and conditions attached hereto are also a part hereof.

 

Name of optionee (the “ Optionee ”):

 

 

 

 

 

Date of this option grant:

 

 

 

 

 

Number of shares of the Company’s Standard Common Stock subject to this option (“ Shares ”):

 

 

 

 

 

Option exercise price per share:

 

$

 

 

 

Payment alternatives:

 

Section 7(a) (i) - (iii)

 

 

 

Number, if any, of Shares that may be purchased on or after the grant date:

 

 

 

 

 

Shares that are subject to vesting schedule:

 

100%

 

 

 

Vesting Start Date:

 

 

 

Vesting Schedule:

 

The date of this option grant, as first written above:

 

No shares

 

 

 

One calendar year from the Vesting Start Date (the “Anniversary Date”):

 

25% of the Shares

 

 

 

On the last day of each of the first 35 calendar months after the Anniversary Date:

 

An additional 2.083% of the Shares

 

 

 

On the last day of the 36th calendar month after the Anniversary Date:

 

An additional 2.095% of the Shares, such that all Shares subject to this option grant are vested.

 

 

 

All vesting is dependent on the continuation of a Business Relationship with the Company, as provided herein.

 

This option satisfies in full all commitments that the Company has heretofore made to theOptionee with respect to the issuance of stock, stock options or other equity securities.

 

 

 

MARINUS PHARMACEUTICALS, INC.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

By:

 

Signature of Optionee

 

 

Name of Officer:

 

 

 

Title:

 

 

 

Street Address

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

City/State/Zip Code

 

 

 



 

MARINUS PHARMACEUTICALS, INC.

 

INCENTIVE STOCK OPTION AGREEMENT — INCORPORATED  TERMS AND CONDITIONS

 

1.                                       Grant Under Plan . This option is granted pursuant to and is governed by the Company’s 2005 Stock Option and Incentive Plan, as amended, (the “ Plan ”) and, unless the context otherwise requires, terms used herein without definition shall have the same meaning as in the Plan.

 

2.                                       Grant as Incentive Stock Option . This option is intended to qualify as an incentive stock option under Section 422 of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended, and the regulations thereunder (the “ Code ”).

 

3.                                       Vesting .

 

(a)                                  Vesting if Business Relationship Continues .  The Optionee may exercise this option on or after the date of this option grant for the number of Shares, if any, set forth on the cover page hereof. If the Optionee has continuously maintained a Business Relationship (as defined below) with the Company through the dates listed on the vesting schedule set forth on the cover page hereof, the Optionee may exercise this option for the additional number of Shares that become exercisable upon the applicable vesting date. Notwithstanding the foregoing, the Board may, in its discretion, accelerate the date that any installment of this option becomes exercisable. The foregoing rights are cumulative and may be exercised only before the date which is ten years from the date of this option grant.

 

(b)                                  Accelerated Vesting Due to Acquisition.   In the event an Acquisition (as defined below) that is not a Private Transaction (as defined below) occurs while the Optionee maintains a Business Relationship with the Company and this option has not fully vested, this option shall become exercisable for an additional one-half of the number of Shares which are then not vested, such vesting to occur immediately prior to the closing of the Acquisition, with vesting to continue after such closing at one-half the rate/number set forth on the cover page as to the remainder of the Shares subject to vesting and on the same vesting dates, provided that the Optionee continuously maintains a Business Relationship with the Company or its successor through the applicable vesting dates. If within twelve months of the closing of the Acquisition, the Optionee terminates his or her Business Relationship for Good Reason (as defined below) or the Company or the acquiror terminates the Business Relationship without Cause (as defined below), then immediately upon such termination date this option shall become exercisable as to all remaining Shares, and this option shall expire (may no longer be exercised) after the passage of three months from the date of termination, but in no event later than the scheduled expiration date.

 

(c)                                   Definitions . The following definitions shall apply:

 

Acquisition ” means (i) the sale of the Company by merger in which the shareholders of the Company in their capacity as such no longer own a majority of the outstanding equity securities of the Company (or its successor); or (ii) any sale of all or substantially all of the assets or capital stock of the Company (other than in a spin-off or similar

 



 

transaction) or (iii) any other acquisition of the business of the Company, as determined by the Board.

 

Business Relationship ” means service to the Company, any of its Subsidiaries, or their successors in the capacity of an employee, officer, director, consultant or advisor.

 

Cause ” shall mean: (i) the Optionee’s substantial and continuing failure, as determined by the Board of Directors in good faith, to carry out the reasonable instructions of the Board of Directors, after reasonable notice thereof and opportunity to cure; (ii) embezzlement or misappropriation of assets or property (tangible or intangible) of the Company; (iii) gross negligence, breach of fiduciary duty to the Company or fraud; (iv) the commission of an act that constitutes unfair competition with the Company or which induces any customer or supplier to breach a contract with the Company; or (v)  conviction of a felony. For the avoidance of doubt, “Cause” shall not mean a failure to achieve scientific goals, financial goals or forecasted timelines.

 

Good Reason ” means: (i) a material reduction in the responsibilities or title of the Optionee; (ii) a material reduction by the Company in the Optionee’s annual base salary; or (iii) a relocation of the Company’s business greater than 50 miles from its current location.

 

Private Transaction ” means any Acquisition where the consideration received or retained by the holders of the then outstanding capital stock of the Company does not consist of (i) cash or cash equivalent consideration, (ii) securities which are registered under the Securities Act and/or (iii) securities for which the Company or any other issuer thereof has agreed, including pursuant to a demand, to file a registration statement within ninety (90) days of completion of the transaction for resale to the public pursuant to the Securities Act.

 

4.                                       Termination of Business Relationship .

 

(a)                                  Termination . If the Optionee’s Business Relationship ceases, voluntarily or involuntarily, with or without Cause, no further installments of this option shall become exercisable, and this option shall expire (may no longer be exercised) after the passage of three months from the date of termination, but in no event later than the scheduled expiration date. Any determination under this agreement as to the status of a Business Relationship or other matters referred to above shall be made in good faith by the Board of Directors of the Company.

 

(b)                                  Employment Status . For purposes hereof, with respect to employees of the Company or its Subsidiaries, employment shall not be considered as having terminated during any leave of absence if such leave of absence has been approved in writing by the Company, or applicable Subsidiary, and if such written approval contractually obligates the Company, or applicable Subsidiary, to continue the employment of the Optionee after the approved period of absence; in the event of such an approved leave of absence, vesting of this option shall be suspended (and the period of the leave of absence shall be added to all vesting dates) unless otherwise provided in the written approval of the Company, or applicable Subsidiary, of the leave of absence. For purposes hereof, a termination of employment followed by another Business Relationship shall be deemed a termination of the Business Relationship with all vesting to cease unless the Company enters into a written agreement related to such other

 

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Business Relationship in which it is specifically stated that there is no termination of the Business Relationship under this agreement. This option shall not be affected by any change of employment within or among the Company and its Subsidiaries so long as the Optionee continuously remains an employee of the Company or any Subsidiary.

 

(c)                                   Termination for Cause . If the Business Relationship of the Optionee is terminated for Cause, this option may no longer be exercised from and after the Optionee’s receipt of written notice of such termination.

 

5.                                       Death; Disability .

 

(a)                                  Death . Upon the death of the Optionee while the Optionee is maintaining a Business Relationship with the Company, this option may be exercised, to the extent otherwise exercisable on the date of the Optionee’s death, by the Optionee’s estate, personal representative or beneficiary to whom this option has been transferred pursuant to Section 10, only at any time within 180 days after the date of death, but not later than the scheduled expiration date.

 

(b)                                  Disability . If the Optionee ceases to maintain a Business Relationship with the Company by reason of his or her disability, this option may be exercised, to the extent otherwise exercisable on the date of cessation of the Business Relationship, only at any time within 180 days after such cessation of the Business Relationship, but not later than the scheduled expiration date. For purposes hereof, “ disability ” means “ permanent and total disability ” as defined in Section 22(e)(3) of the Code.

 

6.                                       Partial Exercise . This option may be exercised in part at any time and from time to time within the above limits, except that this option may not be exercised for a fraction of a Share.

 

7.                                       Payment of Exercise Price .

 

(a)                                  Payment Options . The exercise price shall be paid by one or any combination of the following forms of payment that are applicable to this option, as indicated on the cover page hereof:

 

(i)                                      by check payable to the order of the Company; or

 

(ii)                                   delivery of an irrevocable and unconditional undertaking, satisfactory in form and substance to the Company, by a creditworthy broker to deliver promptly to the Company sufficient funds to pay the exercise price, or delivery by the Optionee to the Company of a copy of irrevocable and unconditional instructions, satisfactory in form and substance to the Company, to a creditworthy broker to deliver promptly to the Company cash or a check sufficient to pay the exercise price; or

 

(iii)                                subject to Section 7(b) below, if the Common Stock is then traded on a national securities exchange or on the Nasdaq National Market (or successor trading system), by delivery of shares of Common Stock having a fair market value equal as of the date of exercise to the exercise price.

 

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In the case of (iii) above, fair market value as of the date of exercise shall be determined as of the last business day for which such prices or quotes are available prior to the date of exercise and shall mean (i) the last reported sale price (on that date) of the Common Stock on the principal national securities exchange on which the Common Stock is traded, if the Common Stock is then traded on a national securities exchange; or (ii) the last reported sale price (on that date) of the Common Stock on the Nasdaq National Market (or successor trading system), if the Common Stock is not then traded on a national securities exchange.

 

(b)                                  Limitations on Payment by Delivery of Common Stock .  If Section 7(a)(iii) is applicable, and if the Optionee delivers Common Stock held by the Optionee (“ Old Stock ”) to the Company in full or partial payment of the exercise price and the Old Stock so delivered is subject to restrictions or limitations imposed by agreement between the Optionee and the Company, an equivalent number of Shares shall be subject to all restrictions and limitations applicable to the Old Stock to the extent that the Optionee paid for the Shares by delivery of Old Stock, in addition to any restrictions or limitations imposed by this agreement.  Notwithstanding the foregoing, the Optionee may not pay any part of the exercise price hereof by transferring Common Stock to the Company unless such Common Stock has been owned by the Optionee free of any substantial risk of forfeiture for at least six months.

 

8.                                       Securities Laws Restrictions on Resale .  Until registered under the Securities Act of 1933, as amended, or any successor statute (the “ Securities Act ”), the Shares will be illiquid and will be deemed to be “restricted securities” for purposes of the Securities Act.  Accordingly, such Shares must be sold in compliance with the registration requirements of the Securities Act or an exemption therefrom and may need to be held indefinitely. Unless the Shares have been registered under the Securities Act, each certificate evidencing any of the Shares shall bear a restrictive legend specified by the Company.

 

9.                                       Method of Exercising Option .  Subject to the terms and conditions of this agreement, this option may be exercised by written notice to the Company at its principal executive office, or to such transfer agent as the Company shall designate. Such notice shall state the election to exercise this option and the number of Shares for which it is being exercised and shall be signed by the person or persons so exercising this option.  Such notice shall be accompanied by payment of the full exercise price of such Shares, and the Company shall deliver a certificate or certificates representing such Shares as soon as practicable after the notice shall be received. Such certificate or certificates shall be registered in the name of the person or persons so exercising this option (or, if this option shall be exercised by the Optionee and if the Optionee shall so request in the notice exercising this option, shall be registered in the name of the Optionee and another person jointly, with right of survivorship). In the event this option shall be exercised, pursuant to Section 5 hereof, by any person or persons other than the Optionee, such notice shall be accompanied by appropriate proof of the right of such person or persons to exercise this option.

 

10.                                Option Not Transferable . This option is not transferable or assignable except by will or by the laws of descent and distribution.  During the Optionee’s lifetime only the Optionee can exercise this option.

 

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11.                                No Obligation to Exercise Option . The grant and acceptance of this option imposes no obligation on the Optionee to exercise it.

 

12.                                No Obligation to Continue Business  Relationship .  Neither the Plan, this agreement, nor the grant of this option imposes any obligation on the Company or any of its Subsidiaries to continue the Optionee in employment or other Business Relationship.

 

13.                                Adjustments .  Except as is expressly provided in the Plan with respect to certain changes in the capitalization of the Company, no adjustment shall be made to Shares for dividends or similar rights for which the record date is prior to such date of exercise of such Shares.

 

14.                                Withholding Taxes . If the Company in its discretion determines that it (or a Subsidiary) is obligated to withhold any tax in connection with the exercise of this option, or in connection with the transfer of, or the lapse of restrictions on, any Common Stock or other property acquired pursuant to this option, the Optionee hereby agrees that the Company (or applicable Subsidiary) may withhold from the Optionee’s wages or other remuneration the appropriate amount of tax. At the discretion of the Company, the amount required to be withheld may be withheld in cash from such wages or other remuneration or in kind from the Common Stock or other property otherwise deliverable to the Optionee on exercise of this option. The Optionee further agrees that, if the Company (or applicable Subsidiary) does not withhold an amount from the Optionee’s wages or other remuneration sufficient to satisfy the withholding obligation of the Company (or Subsidiary), the Optionee will make reimbursement on demand, in cash, for the amount underwithheld.

 

15.                                Restrictions on Transfer; Company’s Right of First Refusal .

 

(a)                                  Exercise of Right .  Shares may not be transferred without the Company’s written consent except by will, by the laws of descent and distribution or in accordance with the further provisions of this Section 15.  If the Optionee desires to transfer all or any part of the Shares to any person other than the Company (an “ Offeror ”), the Optionee shall: (i) obtain in writing an irrevocable and unconditional bona fide offer (the “ Offer ”) for the purchase thereof from the Offeror; and (ii) give written notice (the “ Option Notice ”) to the Company setting forth the Optionee’s desire to transfer such Shares, which Option Notice shall be accompanied by a photocopy of the Offer and shall set forth at least the name and address of the Offeror and the price and terms of the Offer.  Upon receipt of the Option Notice, the Company shall have an assignable option to purchase any or all of such Shares (the “ Offered Shares ”) specified in the Option Notice, such option to be exercisable by giving, within 15 days after receipt of the Option Notice, a written counter-notice to the Optionee.  If the Company elects to purchase all of such Offered Shares, it shall be obligated to purchase, and the Optionee shall be obligated to sell to the Company or its assignee, such Offered Shares at the price and terms indicated in the Offer within 30 days from the date of delivery by the Company of such counter-notice.  To the extent that the consideration proposed to be paid by the Offeror for the Shares consists of property other than cash or a promissory note, the consideration required to be paid by the Company may consist of cash equal to the fair market value of such property, as determined in good faith by the Board of the Company.

 

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(b)                                  Sale of Shares to Offeror .  The Optionee may, for 60 days after the expiration of the 30-day option period as set forth in Section 15(a), sell to the Offeror, pursuant to the terms of the Offer, all of such Offered Shares not purchased or agreed to be purchased by the Company or its assignee; provided, however, that the Optionee shall not sell such Shares to such Offeror if such Offeror is a competitor of the Company and the Company gives written notice to the Optionee, within 30 days of its receipt of the Option Notice, stating that the Optionee shall not sell his or her Shares to such Offeror; and provided, further, that prior to the sale of such Shares to an Offeror, such Offeror shall execute an agreement with the Company pursuant to which such Offeror agrees to be subject to the restrictions set forth in this Section 15.  If any or all of such Shares are not sold pursuant to an Offer within the time permitted above, the unsold Shares shall remain subject to the terms of this Section 15.

 

(c)                                   Failure to Deliver Shares . If the Optionee (or his or her legal representative) who has become obligated to sell Shares hereunder shall fail to deliver such Shares to the Company in accordance with the terms of this agreement, the Company may, at its option, in addition to all other remedies it may have, mail to the Optionee the exercise price for such Shares as is herein specified.  Thereupon, the Company: (i) shall cancel on its books the certificate or certificates representing such Shares to be sold; and (ii) shall issue, in lieu thereof, a new certificate or certificates in the name of the Company representing such Shares (or cancel such Shares), and thereupon all of such Optionee’s rights in and to such Shares shall terminate.

 

(d)                                  Expiration of Company’s Right of First Refusal and Transfer Restrictions .  The first refusal rights of the Company and the transfer restrictions set forth in this Section 15 shall expire as to Shares on the earliest to occur of (i) the tenth anniversary of the date of this agreement, (ii) immediately prior to the closing of a public offering of Common Stock by the Company pursuant to an effective registration statement filed under the Securities Act, or (iii) the occurrence of an Acquisition that is not a Private Transaction.  In addition, if the Company and the Optionee are parties to an agreement containing first refusal provisions similar to the foregoing, the terms and conditions of such other agreement shall govern and shall take precedence over the provisions of this Section 15.

 

16.                                Company’s Right of Repurchase for Shares .

 

(a)                                  Right of Repurchase .  The Company shall have the assignable right (the “ Repurchase Right ”) to repurchase from the Optionee all, but not less than all, of the Shares upon the occurrence of any of the events specified in Section 16(b) below (the “ Repurchase Event ”).  The Repurchase Right may be exercised within 3 months following the date the Company receives actual knowledge of such event (the “ Repurchase Period ”).  The Repurchase Right shall be exercised by the Company by giving the holder written notice on or before the last day of the Repurchase Period of its intention to exercise the Repurchase Right, and, together with such notice, tendering to the holder an amount (the “ Repurchase Price ”) equal to the lesser of the purchase price or the fair market value of the Shares. Upon timely exercise of the Repurchase Right in the manner provided in this Section 16(a), the holder shall deliver to the Company or its assignee the stock certificate or certificates representing the shares being repurchased, duly endorsed and free and clear of any and all liens, charges and encumbrances.

 

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If Shares are not purchased under the Repurchase Right, the Optionee and his or her successor in interest, if any, will hold any such Shares subject to all of the provisions of this agreement.

 

(b)                                  Company’s Right to Exercise Repurchase Right .  The Company or its assignee shall have the Repurchase Right in the event that any of the following events shall occur:

 

(i)                                      The termination of the Optionee’s Business Relationship for Cause (as defined in Section 3(c) hereof); or

 

(ii)                                   Within one year of the termination of the Optionee’s Business Relationship with the Company for any reason whatsoever, the engagement by the Optionee, directly or indirectly, alone or with others, in (a) any business activity which is in competition with the Company; (b) the solicitation of, interference with or endeavor to entice away any employee of the Company; or (c) the breach of any confidentiality agreement with the Company.

 

(c)                                   Determination of Fair Market Value . The fair market value of the Shares shall be, for purposes of this Section 16, determined by the Board in its sole discretion as of the date of the Repurchase Event.  Should Optionee disagree with the Board’s determination of the fair market value (the “ Board Determination ”), Optionee shall notify the Board in writing (the “ Dispute Notification ”) that Optionee wishes to dispute the determination.  If the dispute is not resolved between the Board and the Optionee within 15 days of receipt of the Dispute Notification, then the Board shall appoint a third-party expert in valuing companies that are comparable to the Company to conduct a determination of the fair market value (the “ Third Party Determination ”). The Third Party Determination shall be conclusive and binding upon the Board and the Optionee.  If the Third Party Determination is within ten percent of the Board Determination, then the Optionee shall bear the costs incurred in obtaining the Third Party Determination.  Should the Third Party Determination differ from the Board Determination by ten percent or more, the Company shall bear such costs.

 

(d)                                  Repurchase Procedure .  Any repurchase of Shares by the Company shall take place at the principal executive offices of the Company at the time and date set by the Company. Such sale shall be effected by the Optionee’s delivery to the Company of a certificate or certificates evidencing the repurchased Shares, duly endorsed for  transfer to the Company, against payment to the Optionee by the Company of the Repurchase Price by check for the repurchased Shares (which check may be delivered by mail) or by cancellation of indebtedness owed to the Company by the Optionee.  Upon the mailing of a check in payment of the Repurchase Price in accordance with the terms hereof or cancellation of indebtedness as aforesaid,  the  Company  shall  become  the  legal  and  beneficial  owner  of  the  Shares  being repurchased and all rights and interests therein or relating thereto, and the Company shall have the right to retain and transfer to its own name the number of Shares being repurchased by the Company.

 

(e)                                   Expiration of Company’s Repurchase Right .  The Repurchase Right shall remain in effect until such time, if ever, as the Shares are transferred in accordance with Section 15 hereof.

 

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17.                                Consequences of an Acquisition . In connection with the consummation of an Acquisition, the Board of Directors of the Company or the board of directors of the surviving or acquiring entity (as used in this Section 17, also the “ Board ”), shall make appropriate provision for the continuation of this option by the Company or the assumption of this option by the surviving or acquiring entity and by substituting on an equitable basis for the shares then subject to this option either (a) the consideration payable with respect to the outstanding shares of Common Stock in connection with the Acquisition, (b) shares of stock of the surviving or acquiring corporation or (c) such other securities or other consideration as the Board deems appropriate, the fair market value of which (as determined by the Board in its sole discretion) shall not materially differ from the fair market value of the shares of Common Stock subject to this option immediately preceding the Acquisition. In addition to or in lieu of the foregoing, the Board may, upon written notice to the Optionee, provide that this option must be exercised, in whole or in part, within a specified number of days of the date of such notice, at the end of which period this option shall terminate, or provide that this option, in whole or in part, shall be terminated in exchange for a cash payment equal to the excess of the fair market value (as determined by the Board in its sole discretion) for the shares subject to this option over the exercise price thereof; provided, however, that before terminating any portion of this option that is not vested or exercisable (other than in exchange for a cash payment), the Board shall first accelerate in full the exercisability of the portion that is to be terminated. Unless otherwise determined by the Board, any repurchase rights or other rights of the Company that relate to this option shall continue to apply to consideration, including cash, that has been substituted, assumed or amended for this option pursuant to this paragraph. The Company may hold in escrow all or any portion of any such consideration in order to effectuate any continuing restrictions.

 

18.                                Early Disposition . The Optionee agrees to notify the Company in writing immediately after the Optionee transfers any Shares, if such transfer occurs on or before the later of (a) the date that is two years after the date of this agreement or (b) the date that is one year after the date on which the Optionee acquired such Shares. The Optionee also agrees to provide the Company with any information concerning any such transfer required by the Company for tax purposes.

 

19.                                Lock-up Agreement . The Optionee agrees that in the event that the Company effects an initial underwritten public offering of Common Stock registered under the Securities Act, the Shares may not be sold, offered for sale or otherwise disposed of, directly or indirectly, without the prior written consent of the managing underwriter(s) of the offering, for such period of time after the execution of an underwriting agreement in connection with such offering that all of the Company’s then directors and executive officers agree to be similarly bound.

 

20.                                Arbitration . Any dispute, controversy, or claim arising out of, in connection with, or relating to the performance of this agreement or its termination shall be settled by arbitration in the State of Connecticut, pursuant to the rules then obtaining of the American Arbitration Association.  Any award shall be final, binding and conclusive upon the parties and a judgment rendered thereon may be entered in any court having jurisdiction thereof.

 

21.                                Provision of Documentation to Optionee . By signing this agreement the Optionee acknowledges receipt of a copy of this agreement and a copy of the Plan.

 

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22.                                Miscellaneous .

 

(a)                                  Notices . All notices hereunder shall be in writing and shall be deemed given when sent by mail, if to the Optionee, to the address set forth on the cover page hereof or at the address shown on the records of the Company, and if to the Company, to the Company’s principal executive offices, to the attention of the Secretary of the Company.

 

(b)                                  Entire Agreement; Modification . This agreement constitutes the entire agreement between the parties relative to the subject matter hereof, and supersedes all proposals, written or oral, and all other communications between the parties relating to the subject matter of this agreement. This agreement may be modified, amended or rescinded only by a written agreement executed by both parties.

 

(c)                                   Fractional Shares . If this option becomes exercisable for a fraction of a Share because of the adjustment provisions contained in the Plan, such fraction shall be rounded down.

 

(d)                                  Issuances of Securities; Changes in Capital Structure . Except as expressly provided herein or in the Plan, no issuance by the Company of shares of stock of any class, or securities convertible into shares of stock of any class, shall affect, and no adjustment by reason thereof shall be made with respect to, the number or exercise price of Shares subject to this option. No adjustments need be made for dividends paid in cash or in property other than securities of the Company. If there shall be any change in the Common Stock of the Company through merger, consolidation, reorganization, recapitalization, stock dividend, stock split, combination or exchange of shares, spin-off, split-up or other similar change in capitalization or event, the restrictions contained in this agreement shall apply with equal force to additional and/or substitute securities, if any, received by the Optionee in exchange for, or by virtue of his or her ownership of, Shares, except as otherwise determined by the Board.

 

(e)                                   Severability . The invalidity, illegality or unenforceability of any provision of this agreement shall in no way affect the validity, legality or enforceability of any other provision.

 

(f)                                    Successors and Assigns . This agreement shall be binding upon and inure to the benefit of the parties hereto and their respective permitted successors and assigns.

 

(g)                                   Governing Law .  This agreement shall be governed by and interpreted in accordance with the laws of the State of Delaware, without giving effect to the principles of the conflicts of laws thereof.

 

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EXHIBIT 10.3

 

EMPLOYMENT AGREEMENT

 

EMPLOYMENT AGREEMENT effective as of November 2, 2012 between Marinus Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (the “Company”), a Delaware corporation, and Christopher M. Cashman (the “Employee”).

 

Recital:

 

The parties hereto desire to enter into this Agreement to provide for the employment of the Employee by the Company and for certain other matters in connection with such employment, all as set forth more fully in this Agreement.

 

NOW, THEREFORE, in consideration of the premises and covenants set forth herein, and intending to be legally bound hereby, the parties to this Agreement hereby agree as follows:

 

1.                                       Duties.   The Company agrees that the Employee shall be employed by the Company to serve as Chief Executive Officer of the Company and to devote 80% of his business time (subject to time off for vacation, holidays and sick days).  The Employee shall report to the Board of Directors of the Company.  The Employee agrees to be so employed by the Company and to devote his best efforts to advance the interests of the Company and to perform such executive, managerial, administrative and financial functions as are required to develop the Company’s business and to perform other duties assigned to the Employee by the Board of Directors of the Company that are consistent with the Employee’s position as Chief Executive Officer.  The Employee will consider increasing his employment to full-time if requested by the Company.  The Employee may work from home and otherwise outside the Company’s offices in Branford, Connecticut to the extent his duties permit.

 

2.                                       Term.   The Employee’s employment under this Agreement shall continue in effect until terminated pursuant to Section 4 of this Agreement.

 

3.                                       Compensation.

 

(a)                                  Salary.   During the term of the Employee’s employment under this Agreement, the Employee shall be paid an annual salary at the rate of not less than $260,000 (the “Base Salary”); provided, however, that the Base Salary shall be increased to $325,000 if the Employee becomes a full-time employee of the Company.  The Base Salary may be increased from time to time by the Board of Directors (the “Board”).  The Board shall review the Base Salary at least annually at the end of each fiscal year of the Company.  The Base Salary shall be paid in accordance with the Company’s regular payroll practices.

 

(b)                                  Annual Bonus.   At the end of each fiscal year of the Company that ends during the term of this Agreement, the Board shall consider the award of a performance bonus to the Employee for such fiscal year in an amount of up to 40% of the Employee’s Base Salary based upon the achievement of performance objectives established annually by the Board or its Compensation Committee.  Whether the performance objectives for any year have been achieved by the Employee shall be determined by the Board or its Compensation Committee.

 



 

Notwithstanding the foregoing, all bonuses shall be paid within two and one-half months after the close of each year.

 

(c)                                   Management Incentive Plan.   The Employee shall be eligible to participate in the Company’s 2012 Management Incentive Plan.  Further, subject to the approvals of the 2012 Extended MIP (as defined below), and/or any other such incentive plan, by the Board and the requisite stockholders of the Company, the Employee will be eligible to participate in any (i) extension, expansion or amendment of the 2012 Management Incentive Plan, or (ii) additional or supplemental management incentive plan of the Company that is intended to incentivize plan participants in the event the Company engages in certain identified transactions that do not constitute a Sale of the Company as currently defined in the 2012 Management Incentive Plan (such extended, amended plan or supplemental plan, the “2012 Extended MIP” and, together with the 2012 Management Incentive Plan, the “MIP Plans”).

 

(d)                                  Special Incentive Bonus.  Within 30 days after the date of this Agreement, the Employee and the Board, or its designee, will agree on the terms of a mutually acceptable special incentive bonus for the Employee.

 

(e)                                   Equity Incentive Programs.   The Company agrees that, on or promptly after the date of this Agreement, the Employee shall be granted stock options under the Company’s 2005 Stock Option and Incentive Plan exercisable for the purchase of 1,097,652 shares of the Company’s Common Stock at an exercise price equal to the fair market value per share of the Company’s Common Stock, as determined by the Board, which shall vest in 48 monthly installments on the last day of each calendar month beginning November 30, 2012 and continuing through October 31, 2016, with such vesting to accelerate upon a change of control of the Company.  The Employee shall also be eligible to participate in other equity incentive programs established by the Company from time to time to provide stock options and other equity-based incentives to key employees of the Company in accordance with the terms of those programs.  All stock options and restricted stock awards granted to the Employee shall vest in full upon a change of control of the Company (as defined in the stock option agreements covering such grants).

 

(f)                                    Fringe Benefits.   The Employee shall be entitled to participate in all insurance, vacation and other fringe benefit programs of the Company to the extent and on the same terms and conditions as are accorded to other officers and key employees of the Company.

 

(g)                                  Reimbursement of Expenses.   The Employee shall be reimbursed for all normal items of travel, entertainment and miscellaneous business expenses reasonably incurred by the Employee on behalf of the Company, provided that such expenses are documented and submitted in accordance with the reimbursement policies of the Company as in effect from time to time.

 

(h)                                  Entire Compensation.   The compensation provided for in this Agreement shall constitute full payment for the services to be rendered by the Employee to the Company hereunder.

 

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4.                                       Termination.

 

(a)                                  Death.   This Agreement shall automatically terminate effective as of the date of the Employee’s death, in which event the Company shall not have any further obligation or liability under this Agreement except that the Company shall pay to the Employee’s estate:  (i) any portion of the Employee’s Base Salary for the period up to the Employee’s date of death that has been earned but remains unpaid; and (ii) any benefits that have accrued to the Employee under the terms of the employee benefit plans of the Company, which benefits shall be paid in accordance with the terms of those plans.

 

(b)                                  Total Disability.   The Company may terminate the employment of the Employee immediately upon written notice to the Employee in the event of the Disability (as that term is hereinafter defined) of the Employee, in which event, the Company shall not have any further obligation or liability under this Agreement except that the Company shall pay to the Employee:  (i) any portion of the Employee’s Base Salary for the period up to the date of termination that has been earned but remains unpaid; and (ii) any benefits that have accrued to the Employee under the terms of the employee benefit plans of the Company, which benefits shall be paid in accordance with the terms of those plans.  The term “Disability,” when used herein, shall mean an illness, incapacity or a mental or physical condition that renders the Employee unable or incompetent to carry out the job responsibilities that the Employee held or the tasks that he was assigned at the time the disability commenced, as determined by the Board and supported by the opinion of a physician.  The Employee shall fully cooperate with the physician retained to furnish such opinion, including submitting to such examinations and tests as may be requested by the physician.

 

(c)                                   Termination by the Company for Cause.   The Company may terminate the Employee’s employment hereunder upon written notice to the Employee for any of the following reasons:  (i) habitual intoxication; (ii) abuse of a controlled substance; (iii) conviction of a felony involving moral turpitude; (iv) adjudication as an incompetent; (v) a breach by the Employee of any material term of this Agreement, including the Employee’s failure to faithfully, diligently and adequately perform his duties under this Agreement, that is not corrected within ten days after written notice from the Company, which notice shall set forth the nature of the breach; (vi) violation in any material respect of any of the Company’s rules, regulations or policies; (vii) gross insubordination by the Employee in the performance of his duties under this Agreement; (viii) engaging in any conduct, action or behavior that, in the reasonable opinion of the Board, has had a material adverse effect on the reputation of the Company or the Employee; (ix) any continued or repeated absence from the Company, unless the absence is approved or excused by the Board or the result of the Employee’s illness, disability or incapacity (in which event the provisions of Section 4(b) hereof shall control); or (x) misappropriation of any funds or property of the Company, theft, embezzlement or fraud.  In the event that the Company shall discharge the Employee pursuant to this Section 4(c), the Company shall not have any further obligation or liability under this Agreement, except that the Company shall pay to the Employee:  (i) any portion of the Employee’s Base Salary for the period up to the date of termination that has been earned but remains unpaid; and (ii) any benefits that have accrued to the Employee under the terms of the employee benefit plans of the Company, which benefits shall be paid in accordance with the terms of those plans.

 

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(d)                                  Other Termination by the Company.   The Company may terminate the employment of the Employee for any reason other than one specified in Section 4(b) or 4(c) hereof immediately upon written notice to the Employee, in which event the Company shall pay to the Employee:  (i) any portion of the Employee’s Base Salary for the period up to the date of termination that has been earned but remains unpaid; (ii) any benefits that have accrued to the Employee under the terms of any employee benefit plans of the Company, which benefits shall be paid in accordance with the terms of those plans; and (iii) subject to the execution by the Employee of a release satisfactory to the Company and the compliance by the Employee with all terms and provisions of this Agreement that survive the termination of the Employee’s employment by the Company, the Employee’s Base Salary for a period of nine months after the effective date of the release, payable in accordance with the Company’s regular payroll practices.

 

(e)                                   Termination by the Employee for Good Reason.   The Employee may terminate his employment by providing written notice to the Company of a breach constituting Good Reason.  “Good Reason” shall be deemed to exist with respect to any termination of employment by the Employee for any of the following reasons: (i) a reassignment of the Employee to a location outside the Greater Philadelphia area; (ii) any material failure by the Company to comply with any material term of this Agreement; or (iii) the demotion of the Employee to a lesser position than described in Section 1 hereof or a substantial diminution of the Employee’s authority, duties or responsibilities as in effect on the date of this Agreement or as hereafter increased; provided, however, that Good Reason shall not include a termination of the Employee’s employment pursuant to Section 4(b) or 4(c) hereof or, following a change of control of the Company, a reduction in title, position, responsibilities or duties solely by virtue of the Company being acquired and made part of a larger entity or operated as a subsidiary.  If the Employee shall terminate his employment hereunder for Good Reason, the Employee shall be entitled to be paid: (i) any portion of the Employee’s Base Salary for the period up to the date of termination that has been earned but remains unpaid; (ii) any benefits that have accrued to the Employee under the terms of any employee benefit plans of the Company, which benefits shall be paid in accordance with the terms of those plans; and (iii) subject to the execution by the Employee of a release satisfactory to the Company and the compliance by the Employee with all terms and provisions of this Agreement that survive the termination of the Employee’s employment by the Company, the Employee’s Base Salary for a period of nine months after the effective date of the release, payable in accordance with the Company’s regular payroll practices.  The Employee may not resign with Good Reason pursuant to this Section 4(e), and shall not be considered to have done so for any purpose of this Agreement, unless (A) the Employee, within 60 days after the initial existence of the act or failure to act by the Company that constitutes “Good Reason” within the meaning of this Agreement, provides the Company with written notice that describes, in particular detail, the act or failure to act that the Employee believes to constitute “Good Reason” and identifies the particular clause of this Section 4(e) that the Employee contends is applicable to such act or failure to act; (B) the Company, within 30 days after its receipt of such notice, fails or refuses to rescind such act or remedy such failure to act so as to eliminate “Good Reason” for the termination by the Employee of his employment relationship with the Company, and (C) the Employee actually resigns from his employment with the Company on or before that date that is six calendar months after the initial existence of the act or failure to act by the Company that constitutes “Good Reason.”  If the requirements of the preceding sentence are not fully satisfied on a timely basis, then the resignation by the Employee from his employment with the Company shall not be deemed to have been for “Good

 

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Reason,” the Employee shall not be entitled to any of the benefits to which he would have been entitled if he had resigned his employment with the Company for “Good Reason,” and the Company shall not be required to pay any amount that would otherwise have been due to the Employee under this Section 4(e) had the Employee resigned with “Good Reason.”

 

(f)                                    Other Termination by the Employee.   The Employee may terminate his employment for any reason other than one specified in Section 4(e) hereof upon at least 30 days’ prior written notice to the Company, which notice shall specify the effective date of the termination.  In the event that the Employee shall terminate his employment pursuant to this Section 4(f), the Company shall not have any further obligation or liability under this Agreement, except that the Company shall pay to the Employee:  (i) any portion of the Employee’s Base Salary for the period up to the date of termination that has been earned but remains unpaid; and (ii) any benefits that have accrued to the Employee under the terms of the employee benefit plans of the Company, which benefits shall be paid in accordance with the terms of those plans

 

(g)                                  Determination of Accrued Bonus.   For purposes of this Section 4, upon the termination of the Employee’s employment, the Board or its Compensation Committee shall consider whether all or any portion of the Employee’s bonus has accrued based upon a review and determination of the Employee’s progress toward achieving the performance objectives on which his bonus is based.  All decisions regarding the achievement of the performance objectives and the accrual of all or any portion of the bonus shall be in the absolute discretion of the Board or Compensation Committee, as the case may be.

 

(h)                                  Parachute Provisions.   In the event the Company determines in good faith that any payments or benefits (whether made or provided pursuant to this Agreement or otherwise) provided to the Employee constitute “parachute payments” (“Parachute Payments”) within the meaning of Section 280G of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended (the “Code”) and may be subject to an excise tax imposed pursuant to Section 4999 of the Code, the Parachute Payments will be reduced to an amount determined by the Company in good faith to be the maximum amount that may be provided to the Employee without resulting in any portion of such Parachute Payments being subject to such excise tax (the amount of such reduction, the “Cutback Benefits”).  The Employee shall be entitled to select which Parachute Payments (of those that are not considered to be deferred compensation under Section 409A of the Code) shall be reduced hereunder; provided that if the Employee fails to so select promptly, the Company shall select which Parachute Payments (of those that are not considered to be deferred compensation under Section 409A of the Code) will be reduced.  Parachute Payments that are considered to be deferred compensation under Section 409A of the Code shall be reduced only to the extent that the complete reduction of the Parachute Payments in the preceding sentence is insufficient to eliminate the imposition of the excise tax imposed under Section 4999 of the Code.  Notwithstanding the foregoing, the Company shall use reasonable efforts to obtain the approval of the Cutback Benefits by the Company’s stockholders in the manner contemplated by Q&A 7 of Treas. Reg. Section 1.280G, it being understood and agreed that the Company does not guarantee that such approval will be obtained.  If, and only if, the Company determines that such approval is obtained, the Employee shall be entitled to receive the Cutback Benefits without regard to the first sentence of this Section 4(h).

 

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(i)                                     Base Salary Continuation.  The Base Salary continuation set forth in Sections 4(d) and (e) above shall be intended either (i) to satisfy the safe harbor set forth in the regulations issued under section 409A of the Code (Treas. Regs. 1.409A-1(n)(2)(ii)) or (ii) be treated as a Short-term Deferral as that term is defined under Code section 409A (Treas. Regs. 1.409A-1(b)(4)).  To the extent such continuation payments exceed the applicable safe harbor amount or do not constitute a Short-term Deferral, the excess amount shall be treated as deferred compensation under Code section 409A and as such shall be payable pursuant to the following schedule: such excess amount shall be paid via standard payroll in periodic installments in accordance with the Company’s usual practice for its senior executives.  Notwithstanding any provision in this Agreement to the contrary, in the event that the Employee is a “specified employee” as defined in Section 409A, any continuation payment, continuation benefits or other amounts payable under this Agreement that would be subject to the special rule regarding payments to “specified employees” under Section 409A(a)(2)(B) of the Code shall not be paid before the expiration of a period of six months following the date of the Employee’s termination of employment or before the date of the Employee’s death, if earlier.

 

5.                                       Non-Disclosure and Non-Competition.

 

(a)                                  Non-Disclosure.   The Employee acknowledges that in the course of performing services for the Company, the Employee will obtain knowledge of the Company’s business plans, products, processes, software, know-how, trade secrets, formulas, methods, models, prototypes, discoveries, inventions, improvements, disclosures, names and positions of employees and/or other proprietary and/or confidential information (collectively the “Confidential Information”).  The Employee agrees to keep the Confidential Information secret and confidential and not to publish, disclose or divulge to any other party, and the Employee agrees not to use any of the Confidential Information for the Employee’s own benefit or to the detriment of the Company without the prior written consent of the Company, whether or not such Confidential Information was discovered or developed by the Employee.  The Employee also agrees not to divulge, publish or use any proprietary and/or confidential information of others that the Company is obligated to maintain in confidence.

 

(b)                                  Non-Competition.  The Employee agrees that, during his employment by the Company hereunder and for an additional period of one year after the termination of the Employee’s employment hereunder, neither the Employee nor any corporation or other entity in which the Employee may be interested as a partner, trustee, director, officer, employee, agent, shareholder, lender of money or guarantor, or for which he performs services in any capacity (including as a consultant or independent contractor) shall at any time during such period (i) be engaged, directly or indirectly, in any Competitive Business (as that term is hereinafter defined) or (ii) solicit, hire, contract for services or otherwise employ, directly or indirectly, any of the employees of the Company.  For purposes of this Section 5(b) the term “Competitive Business” shall mean any firm or business organization that competes with the Company in the development and/or commercialization of drugs that prevent or treat partial complex seizures, post-traumatic stress disorder or fragile-x syndrome or any other Ganaxolone-related technology, product or service being developed, manufactured, marketed, distributed or planned in writing by the Company at the time of termination of the Employee’s employment with the Company. The foregoing prohibition shall not prevent any employment or engagement of the Employee, after termination of employment with the Company, by any company or business organization not

 

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substantially engaged in a Competitive Business as long as the activities of any such employment or engagement, in any capacity, do not involve work on matters related to any product or service being developed, manufactured, marketed, distributed or planned in writing by the Company at the time of termination of Employee’s employment with the Company.  The Employee’s ownership of no more than 5% of the outstanding voting stock of a publicly traded company shall not constitute a violation of this Section 5(b).

 

6.                                       Inventions and Discoveries.

 

(a)                                  Disclosure.   The Employee shall promptly and fully disclose to the Company, with all necessary detail, all developments, know-how, discoveries, inventions, improvements, concepts, ideas, formulae, processes and methods (whether copyrightable, patentable or otherwise) made, received, conceived, acquired or written by the Employee (whether or not at the request or upon the suggestion of the Company, solely or jointly with others), during the period of his employment with the Company that (i) result from, arise out of, or relate to any work, assignment or task performed by the Employee on behalf of the Company, whether undertaken voluntarily or assigned to the Employee within the scope of his responsibilities to the Company, or (ii) were developed using the Company’s facilities or other resources or in Company time, or (iii) result from the Employee’s use or knowledge of the Company’s Confidential Information, or (iv) relate to the Company’s business or any of the products or services being developed, manufactured or sold by the Company or that may be used in relation therewith (collectively referred to as “Inventions”).  The Employee hereby acknowledges that all original works of authorship that are made by the Employee (solely or jointly with others) within the above terms and that are protectable by copyright are “works made for hire,” as that term is defined in the United States Copyright Act.  The Employee understands and hereby agrees that the decision whether or not to commercialize or market any Invention developed by the Employee solely or jointly with others is within the Company’s sole discretion and for the Company’s sole benefit and that no royalty shall be due to the Employee as a result of the Company’s efforts to commercialize or market any such Invention.

 

(b)                                  Assignment and Transfer.   The Employee agrees to assign and transfer to the Company all of the Employee’s right, title and interest in and to the Inventions, and the Employee further agrees to deliver to the Company any and all drawings, notes, specifications and data relating to the Inventions, and to sign, acknowledge and deliver all such further papers, including applications for and assignments of copyrights and patents, and all renewals thereof, as may be necessary to obtain copyrights and patents for any Inventions in any and all countries and to vest title thereto in the Company and its successors and assigns and to otherwise protect the Company’s interests therein.  The Employee shall not charge the Company for time spent in complying with these obligations.  If the Company is unable because of the Employee’s mental or physical incapacity or for any other reason to secure the Employee’s signature to apply for or to pursue any application for any United States or foreign patents or copyright registrations covering Inventions or original works of authorship assigned to the Company as above, then the Employee hereby irrevocably designates and appoints the Company and its duly authorized officers and agents as the Employee’s agent and attorney in fact, to act for and in the Employee’s behalf and stead to execute and file any such applications and to do all other lawfully permitted acts to further the prosecution and issuance of letters patent or copyright registrations thereon with the same legal force and effect as if executed by the Employee.

 

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(c)                                   Records.   The Employee agrees that in connection with any research, development or other services performed for the Company, the Employee will maintain careful, adequate and contemporaneous written records of all Inventions, which records shall be the property of the Company.

 

7.                                       Company Documentation.   The Employee shall hold in a fiduciary capacity for the benefit of the Company all documentation, disks, programs, data, records, drawings, manuals, reports, sketches, blueprints, letters, notes, notebooks and all other writings, electronic data, graphics and tangible information and materials of a secret, confidential or proprietary information nature relating to the Company or the Company’s business that are in the possession or under the control of the Employee.

 

8.                                       Injunctive Relief.   The Employee acknowledges that his compliance with the agreements in Sections 5, 6 and 7 hereof is necessary to protect the good will and other proprietary interests of the Company and that he is one of the principal executives of the Company and conversant with its affairs, its trade secrets and other proprietary information.  The Employee acknowledges that a breach of any of his agreements in Sections 5, 6 and 7 hereof will result in irreparable and continuing damage to the Company for which there will be no adequate remedy at law; and the Employee agrees that in the event of any breach of the aforesaid agreements, the Company and its successors and assigns shall be entitled to injunctive relief and to such other and further relief as may be proper.

 

9.                                       Supersedes Other Agreements.   This Agreement supersedes and is in lieu of any and all other employment arrangements between the Employee and the Company, but shall not supersede any existing confidentiality, nondisclosure, invention assignment or non-compete agreement between the Employee and the Company.

 

10.                                Amendments.   Any amendment to this Agreement shall be made in writing and signed by the parties hereto.

 

11.                                Enforceability.   If any provision of this Agreement shall be invalid or unenforceable, in whole or in part, then such provision shall be deemed to be modified or restricted to the extent and in the manner necessary to render the same valid and enforceable, or shall be deemed excised from this Agreement, as the case may require, and this Agreement shall be construed and enforced to the maximum extent permitted by law as if such provision had been originally incorporated herein as so modified or restricted or as if such provision had not been originally incorporated herein, as the case may be.

 

12.                                Construction.   This Agreement shall be construed and interpreted in accordance with the internal laws of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania.

 

13.                                Assignment.

 

(a)                                  By the Company.   The rights and obligations of the Company under this Agreement shall inure to the benefit of, and shall be binding upon, the successors and assigns of the Company.  This Agreement may be assigned by the Company without the consent of the Employee.

 

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(b)                                  By the Employee.   This Agreement and the obligations created hereunder may not be assigned by the Employee, but all rights of the Employee hereunder shall inure to the benefit of and be enforceable by his heirs, devisees, legatees, executors, administrators and personal representatives.

 

14.                                Notices.   All notices required or permitted to be given hereunder shall be in writing and shall be deemed to have been given when mailed by certified mail, return receipt requested, or delivered by a national overnight delivery service addressed to the intended recipient as follows:

 

If to the Company:

 

Marinus Pharmaceuticals, Inc.
21 Business Park Drive

Branford CT  06405
Attention:  Chairman of the Board

 

If to the Employee:

 

Christopher M. Cashman

1502 East Grand Oak Lane

West Chester, PA 19380

 

Any party may from time to time change its address for the purpose of notices to that party by a similar notice specifying a new address, but no such change shall be deemed to have been given until it is actually received by the party sought to be charged with its contents.

 

15.                                Waivers.   No claim or right arising out of a breach or default under this Agreement shall be discharged in whole or in part by a waiver of that claim or right unless the waiver is supported by consideration and is in writing and executed by the aggrieved party hereto or his or its duly authorized agent.  A waiver by any party hereto of a breach or default by the other party hereto of any provision of this Agreement shall not be deemed a waiver of future compliance therewith, and such provisions shall remain in full force and effect.

 

16.                                Section 409A.   It is intended that this Agreement be drafted and administered in compliance with section 409A of the Code, including, but not limited to, any future amendments to Code section 409A, and any other Internal Revenue Service or other governmental rulings or interpretations (together, “Section 409A”) issued pursuant to Section 409A so as not to subject the Employee to payment of interest or any additional tax under Code section 409A.  The parties intend for any payments under this Agreement to either satisfy the requirements of Section 409A or to be exempt from the application of Section 409A, and this Agreement shall be construed and interpreted accordingly.  In furtherance thereof, if payment or provision of any amount or benefit hereunder that is subject to Section 409A at the time specified herein would subject such amount or benefit to any additional tax under Section 409A, the payment or provision of such amount or benefit shall be postponed to the earliest commencement date on which the payment or provision of such amount or benefit could be made without incurring such additional tax.  In addition, to the extent that any Internal Revenue Service guidance issued under Section 409A would result in

 

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the Employee being subject to the payment of interest or any additional tax under Section 409A, the parties agree, to the extent reasonably possible, to amend this Agreement in order to avoid the imposition of any such interest or additional tax under Section 409A, which amendment shall have the minimum economic effect necessary and be reasonably determined in good faith by the Company and the Employee.

 

17.                                Survival of Covenants.   The provisions of Sections 5, 6, 7 and 8 hereof shall survive the termination of this Agreement.  Furthermore, any other provision of this Agreement that, by its terms, is intended to continue beyond the termination of the Employee’s employment shall continue in effect thereafter.

 

(Signature page follows.)

 

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IN WITNESS WHEREOF, this Agreement has been executed by the parties as of the date first above written.

 

 

MARINUS PHARMACEUTICALS, INC.

 

 

 

 

 

By:

/s/ Timothy M. Mayleben

 

 

 

 

Title:

Director

 

 

 

 

 

/s/ Christopher M. Cashman

 

Christopher M. Cashman

 

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EXHIBIT 10.4

 

EMPLOYMENT AGREEMENT

 

EMPLOYMENT AGREEMENT effective as of November 22, 2013 between Marinus Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (the “Company”), a Delaware corporation, and Edward F. Smith (the “Employee”).

 

Recital:

 

The parties hereto desire to enter into this Agreement to provide for the employment of the Employee by the Company and for certain other matters in connection with such employment, all as set forth more fully in this Agreement.

 

NOW, THEREFORE, in consideration of the premises and covenants set forth herein, and intending to be legally bound hereby, the parties to this Agreement hereby agree as follows:

 

1.                                       Duties.   The Company agrees that the Employee shall be employed by the Company to serve as Chief Financial Officer of the Company.  The Employee shall report to the Chief Executive Officer of the Company (the “CEO”).  The Employee agrees to be so employed by the Company and to devote his best efforts to advance the interests of the Company and to perform the duties customarily incident to the position of Chief Financial Officer and such other duties assigned to the Employee by the CEO, provided such other duties are commensurate with the Employee’s employment level at the Company.  Notwithstanding anything in this Agreement to the contrary, the Employee shall be permitted to serve of the board of directors (or equivalent governing bodies) of one company that is unrelated to, and not competitive with the business of, the Company, provided such service does not materially interfere with his duties and responsibilities to the Company.  Participation on more than one board shall be subject to the approval by the CEO.

 

Mutually acceptable flexible work options shall be implemented and periodically reviewed and agreed by the Company and the CEO.

 

2.                                       Term.   The Employee’s employment under this Agreement shall continue in effect until terminated pursuant to Section 4 of this Agreement.

 

3.                                       Compensation.

 

(a)                                  Salary.   During the term of the Employee’s employment under this Agreement, the Employee shall be paid an annual salary at the rate of not less than $300,000 (the “Base Salary”).  The Base Salary may be increased from time to time by the Board of Directors (the “Board”).  The Base Salary shall be paid in accordance with the Company’s regular payroll practices.

 

(b)                                  Annual Bonus.   At the end of each fiscal year of the Company beginning in 2014 that ends during the term of this Agreement, the Board shall consider the award of a performance bonus to the Employee for such fiscal year in an amount of up to 35% of the Employee’s Base Salary based upon the achievement of performance objectives established annually by the Board or its Compensation Committee.  Whether the performance objectives for any year have been achieved by the Employee shall be determined by the Board or its

 



 

Compensation Committee.  Notwithstanding the foregoing, all bonuses shall be paid within two and one-half months after the close of each year.

 

(c)                                   Management Incentive Plan.   The Employee shall be eligible to participate in the Company’s 2013 Management Incentive Plan offered by the Company.  The plan shall be amended such that the Employee receives the same benefits under such plan as the other executive officers of the Company.

 

(d)                                  Equity Incentive Programs.   The Company agrees that, on or promptly after the date of this Agreement, the Employee shall be granted stock options exercisable for the purchase of 934,096 shares of the Company’s Common Stock under the Company’s 2005 Stock Option and Incentive Plan (the “Plan”) at an exercise price equal to the fair market value per share of the Company’s Common Stock, as determined by the Board and estimated to be $0.16 per share, of which 25% shall vest on the first anniversary of the effective date of the Employee’s employment by the Company and the remaining 75% shall vest in 36 consecutive monthly installments beginning one month after the first anniversary of the effective date of the Employee’s employment by the Company.  Such stock options shall become fully vested upon the occurrence of a Change in Control of the Company (as defined in the Plan).  The Employee shall also be eligible to participate in equity incentive programs established by the Company from time to time to provide stock options and other equity-based incentives to key employees of the Company in accordance with the terms of those programs.

 

The term “Change in Control” shall mean: (1) an acquisition by an individual, entity or group (excluding a corporation controlled by the existing stockholders of the Company as of such date) of outstanding voting stock or voting securities of the Company representing more than 50% of the voting power of the then outstanding securities of the Company; provided that a Change of Control shall not be deemed to occur as a result of (A) a transaction in which the stockholders of the Company, immediately prior to the transaction, will beneficially own, immediately after the transaction, shares entitling such stockholders to more than 50% of all votes to which all stockholders of the parent corporation would be entitled in the election of directors, or (B) but excluding any sale of stock directly by the Company to a third-party investor; or (2) the consummation of (A) a merger or consolidation of the Company with another corporation where the stockholders of the Company, immediately prior to the merger or consolidation, will not beneficially own, immediately after the merger or consolidation, shares entitling such stockholders to more than 50% of all votes to which all stockholders of the surviving corporation would be entitled in the election of directors, or (B) a sale or other disposition of all or substantially all of the assets of the Company.

 

(e)                                   Vacation and Fringe Benefits.   The Employee shall be entitled to 20 days’ paid vacation, plus an additional two floating holidays and two personal days, as per Company policy to be established.  The Employee shall be entitled to participate in all insurance and other fringe benefit programs of the Company to the extent and on the same terms and conditions as are accorded to other officers and key employees of the Company.

 

(f)                                    Reimbursement of Expenses.   The Employee shall be reimbursed for all normal items of travel, entertainment and miscellaneous business expenses reasonably incurred by the Employee on behalf of the Company, provided that such expenses are documented and

 

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submitted in accordance with the reimbursement policies of the Company as in effect from time to time.

 

(g)                                  Compensation Committee Review . Within 90 days of public quotation or listing of the company’s securities on the OTC Bulletin Board or National Security Exchange the compensation package contemplated by this Agreement (including the severance benefits described in Section 4) will be reviewed by the Compensation Committee and benchmarked against the compensation for chief financial officers of public companies identified by the Compensation Committee to be in the Company’s peer group.  The Compensation Committee will determine if any increases in any or all of the individual components of the compensation package are needed based upon peer group analysis and/or amount of money raised in the public financing.

 

4.                                       Termination.

 

(a)                                  Death.   This Agreement shall automatically terminate effective as of the date of the Employee’s death, in which event the Company shall not have any further obligation or liability under this Agreement except that the Company shall pay to the Employee’s estate:  (i) any portion of the Employee’s Base Salary for the period up to the Employee’s date of death that has been earned but remains unpaid; and (ii) any benefits that have accrued to the Employee under the terms of the employee benefit plans of the Company, which benefits shall be paid in accordance with the terms of those plans.

 

(b)                                  Total Disability.   The Company may terminate the employment of the Employee immediately upon written notice to the Employee in the event of the Disability (as that term is hereinafter defined) of the Employee, in which event, the Company shall not have any further obligation or liability under this Agreement except that the Company shall pay to the Employee:  (i) any portion of the Employee’s Base Salary for the period up to the date of termination that has been earned but remains unpaid; and (ii) any benefits that have accrued to the Employee under the terms of the employee benefit plans of the Company, which benefits shall be paid in accordance with the terms of those plans.  For purposes of this Agreement, the term “Disability” shall mean an illness, incapacity or a mental or physical condition that renders the Employee unable or incompetent to carry out the job responsibilities that the Employee held or the tasks that he was assigned at the time the disability commenced, as determined by the Board and supported by the opinion of a physician.  The Employee shall fully cooperate with the physician retained to furnish such opinion, including submitting to such examinations and tests as may be requested by the physician.

 

(c)                                   Termination by the Company for Cause.   The Company may terminate the Employee’s employment hereunder upon written notice to the Employee for any of the following reasons:  (i) the Employee’s substantial and continuing failure, as determined by the Board of Directors in good faith, to carry out the reasonable instructions of the Board of Directors, after reasonable notice thereof and opportunity to cure; (ii) embezzlement or misappropriation of assets or property (tangible or intangible) of the Company; (iii) gross negligence, breach of fiduciary duty to the Company or fraud; (iv) the commission of an act that constitutes unfair competition with the Company or which induces any customer or supplier to breach a contract with the Company; or (v)  conviction of a felony. For the avoidance of doubt,

 

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“Cause” shall not mean a failure to achieve scientific goals, financial goals or forecasted timelines.  In the event that the Company shall discharge the Employee pursuant to this Section 4(c), the Company shall not have any further obligation or liability under this Agreement, except that the Company shall pay to the Employee:  (i) any portion of the Employee’s Base Salary for the period up to the date of termination that has been earned but remains unpaid; and (ii) any benefits that have accrued to the Employee under the terms of the employee benefit plans of the Company, which benefits shall be paid in accordance with the terms of those plans.

 

(d)                                  Other Termination by the Company or Termination by the Employee for Good Reason.   The Company may terminate the employment of the Employee for any reason other than one specified in Section 4(b) or 4(c) hereof immediately upon written notice to the Employee and the Employee may resign his employment with the Company for Good Reason in accordance with prior written notice to the Company as specified below, in which event the Company shall pay to the Employee:  (i) any portion of the Employee’s Base Salary for the period up to the date of termination that has been earned but remains unpaid; (ii) any benefits that have accrued to the Employee under the terms of any employee benefit plans of the Company, which benefits shall be paid in accordance with the terms of those plans; and (iii) subject to the execution by the Employee of a release of employment-related claims reasonably satisfactory to the Company (the “Release”) and the compliance by the Employee with all terms and provisions of this Agreement that survive the termination of the Employee’s employment by the Company, (A) the Employee’s Base Salary for a period of six months after the effective date of the Release, payable in accordance with the Company’s regular payroll practices. The Employee may not resign with Good Reason pursuant to this Section 4(d), and shall not be considered to have done so for any purpose of this Agreement, unless (A) the Employee, within 60 days after the initial existence of the act or failure to act by the Company that constitutes “Good Reason” within the meaning of this Agreement, provides the Company with written notice that describes, in particular detail, the act or failure to act that the Employee believes to constitute “Good Reason” and identifies the particular clause of this Section 4(d) that the Employee contends is applicable to such act or failure to act; (B) the Company, within 30 days after its receipt of such notice, fails or refuses to rescind such act or remedy such failure to act so as to eliminate “Good Reason” for the termination by the Employee of his employment relationship with the Company, and (C) the Employee actually resigns from his employment with the Company on or before that date that is six calendar months after the initial existence of the act or failure to act by the Company that constitutes “Good Reason.”  If the requirements of the preceding sentence are not fully satisfied on a timely basis, then the resignation by the Employee from his employment with the Company shall not be deemed to have been for “Good Reason,” the Employee shall not be entitled to any of the benefits to which he would have been entitled if he had resigned his employment with the Company for “Good Reason,” and the Company shall not be required to pay any amount that would otherwise have been due to the Employee under this Section 4(d) had the Employee resigned with “Good Reason.”

 

For purposes of this Agreement, “Good Reason” means (i) a material reduction in the responsibilities or title of the Employee; (ii) a material reduction by the Company in the Employee’s annual base salary; or (iii) a relocation of the Company’s business requiring the Employee to commute greater than 50 miles from his current residence; provided, however, that Good Reason shall not include a termination of the Employee’s employment pursuant to Section

 

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4(b) or 4(c) hereof or, following a change of control of the Companysolely by virtue of the Company being acquired and made part of a larger entity or operated as a subsidiary.

 

(e)                                   Termination by the Employee Without Good Reason.   The Employee may terminate his employment without Good Reason upon at least 30 days’ prior written notice to the Company, which notice shall specify the effective date of the termination.  In the event that the Employee shall terminate his employment pursuant to this Section 4(e), the Company shall not have any further obligation or liability under this Agreement, except that the Company shall pay to the Employee:  (i) any portion of the Employee’s Base Salary for the period up to the date of termination that has been earned but remains unpaid; and (ii) any benefits that have accrued to the Employee under the terms of the employee benefit plans of the Company, which benefits shall be paid in accordance with the terms of those plans.

 

(f)                                    Parachute Provisions.   In the event the Company determines in good faith that any payments or benefits (whether made or provided pursuant to this Agreement or otherwise) provided to the Employee constitute “parachute payments” (“Parachute Payments”) within the meaning of Section 280G of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended (the “Code”) and may be subject to an excise tax imposed pursuant to Section 4999 of the Code, the Parachute Payments will be reduced to an amount determined by the Company in good faith to be the maximum amount that may be provided to the Employee without resulting in any portion of such Parachute Payments being subject to such excise tax (the amount of such reduction, the “Cutback Benefits”).  The Employee shall be entitled to select which Parachute Payments (of those that are not considered to be deferred compensation under Section 409A of the Code) shall be reduced hereunder; provided that if the Employee fails to so select promptly, the Company shall select which Parachute Payments (of those that are not considered to be deferred compensation under Section 409A of the Code) will be reduced.  Parachute Payments that are considered to be deferred compensation under Section 409A of the Code shall be reduced only to the extent that the complete reduction of the Parachute Payments in the preceding sentence is insufficient to eliminate the imposition of the excise tax imposed under Section 4999 of the Code.  Notwithstanding the foregoing, if applicable to the Company at that time, the Company shall use reasonable efforts to obtain the approval of the Cutback Benefits by the Company’s stockholders in the manner contemplated by Q&A 7 of Treas. Reg. Section 1.280G, it being understood and agreed that the Company does not guarantee that such approval will be obtained.  If, and only if, the Company determines that such approval is obtained, the Employee shall be entitled to receive the Cutback Benefits without regard to the first sentence of this Section 4(f).

 

(g)                                  Base Salary Continuation.  The Base Salary continuation set forth in Section 4(d) above shall be intended either (i) to satisfy the safe harbor set forth in the regulations issued under section 409A of the Code (Treas. Regs. 1.409A-1(n)(2)(ii)) or (ii) be treated as a Short-term Deferral as that term is defined under Code section 409A (Treas. Regs. 1.409A-1(b)(4)).  To the extent such continuation payments exceed the applicable safe harbor amount or do not constitute a Short-term Deferral, the excess amount shall be treated as deferred compensation under Code section 409A and as such shall be payable pursuant to the following schedule: such excess amount shall be paid via standard payroll in periodic installments in accordance with the Company’s usual practice for its senior executives.  Notwithstanding any provision in this Agreement to the contrary, in the event that the Employee is a “specified employee” as defined in Section 409A, any continuation payment, continuation benefits or other

 

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amounts payable under this Agreement that would be subject to the special rule regarding payments to “specified employees” under Section 409A(a)(2)(B) of the Code shall not be paid before the expiration of a period of six months following the date of the Employee’s termination of employment or before the date of the Employee’s death, if earlier.

 

5.                                       Non-Disclosure and Non-Competition.

 

(a)                                  Non-Disclosure.   The Employee acknowledges that in the course of performing services for the Company, the Employee will obtain knowledge of the Company’s business plans, products, processes, software, know-how, trade secrets, formulas, methods, models, prototypes, discoveries, inventions, improvements, disclosures, names and positions of employees and/or other proprietary and/or confidential information (collectively the “Confidential Information”).  The Employee agrees to keep the Confidential Information secret and confidential and not to publish, disclose or divulge to any other party, and the Employee agrees not to use any of the Confidential Information for the Employee’s own benefit or to the detriment of the Company without the prior written consent of the Company, whether or not such Confidential Information was discovered or developed by the Employee.  The Employee also agrees not to divulge, publish or use any proprietary and/or confidential information of others that the Company is obligated to maintain in confidence.

 

(b)                                  Non-Competition.   The Employee agrees that, during his employment by the Company hereunder and for an additional period of six months after the termination of the Employee’s employment hereunder, neither the Employee nor any corporation or other entity in which the Employee may be interested as a partner, trustee, director, officer, employee, agent, shareholder, lender of money or guarantor, or for which he performs services in any capacity (including as a consultant or independent contractor) shall at any time during such period (i) be engaged, directly or indirectly, in any Competitive Business (as that term is hereinafter defined) or (ii) solicit, hire, contract for services or otherwise employ, directly or indirectly, any of the employees of the Company.  For purposes of this Section 5(b) the term “Competitive Business” shall mean any firm or business organization that competes with the Company in the development and/or commercialization of drugs that prevent or treat partial complex seizures, post-traumatic stress disorder or fragile-x syndrome or any other Ganaxolone-related technology, product or service being developed, manufactured, marketed, distributed or planned in writing by the Company at the time of termination of the Employee’s employment with the Company. The foregoing prohibition shall not prevent any employment or engagement of the Employee, after termination of employment with the Company, by any company or business organization not substantially engaged in a Competitive Business as long as the activities of any such employment or engagement, in any capacity, do not involve work on matters related to any product or service being developed, manufactured, marketed, distributed or planned in writing by the Company at the time of termination of Employee’s employment with the Company.  The Employee’s ownership of no more than 5% of the outstanding voting stock of a publicly traded company shall not constitute a violation of this Section 5(b).

 

6.                                       Inventions and Discoveries.

 

(a)                                  Disclosure.   The Employee shall promptly and fully disclose to the Company, with all necessary detail, all developments, know-how, discoveries, inventions,

 

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improvements, concepts, ideas, formulae, processes and methods (whether copyrightable, patentable or otherwise) made, received, conceived, acquired or written by the Employee (whether or not at the request or upon the suggestion of the Company, solely or jointly with others), during the period of his employment with the Company that (i) result from, arise out of, or relate to any work, assignment or task performed by the Employee on behalf of the Company, whether undertaken voluntarily or assigned to the Employee within the scope of his responsibilities to the Company, or (ii) were developed using the Company’s facilities or other resources or in Company time, or (iii) result from the Employee’s use or knowledge of the Company’s Confidential Information, or (iv) relate to the Company’s business or any of the products or services being developed, manufactured or sold by the Company or that may be used in relation therewith (collectively referred to as “Inventions”).  The Employee hereby acknowledges that all original works of authorship that are made by the Employee (solely or jointly with others) within the above terms and that are protectable by copyright are “works made for hire,” as that term is defined in the United States Copyright Act.  The Employee understands and hereby agrees that the decision whether or not to commercialize or market any Invention developed by the Employee solely or jointly with others is within the Company’s sole discretion and for the Company’s sole benefit and that no royalty shall be due to the Employee as a result of the Company’s efforts to commercialize or market any such Invention.

 

(b)                                  Assignment and Transfer.   The Employee agrees to assign and transfer to the Company all of the Employee’s right, title and interest in and to the Inventions, and the Employee further agrees to deliver to the Company any and all drawings, notes, specifications and data relating to the Inventions, and to sign, acknowledge and deliver all such further papers, including applications for and assignments of copyrights and patents, and all renewals thereof, as may be necessary to obtain copyrights and patents for any Inventions in any and all countries and to vest title thereto in the Company and its successors and assigns and to otherwise protect the Company’s interests therein.  The Employee shall not charge the Company for time spent in complying with these obligations.  If the Company is unable because of the Employee’s mental or physical incapacity or for any other reason to secure the Employee’s signature to apply for or to pursue any application for any United States or foreign patents or copyright registrations covering Inventions or original works of authorship assigned to the Company as above, then the Employee hereby irrevocably designates and appoints the Company and its duly authorized officers and agents as the Employee’s agent and attorney in fact, to act for and in the Employee’s behalf and stead to execute and file any such applications and to do all other lawfully permitted acts to further the prosecution and issuance of letters patent or copyright registrations thereon with the same legal force and effect as if executed by the Employee.

 

(c)                                   Company Documentation .  The Employee shall hold in a fiduciary capacity for the benefit of the Company all documentation, disks, programs, data, records, drawings, manuals, reports, sketches, blueprints, letters, notes, notebooks and all other writings, electronic data, graphics and tangible information and materials of a secret, confidential or proprietary information nature relating to the Company or the Company’s business that are in the possession or under the control of the Employee.  The Employee agrees that in connection with any research, development or other services performed for the Company, the Employee will maintain careful, adequate and contemporaneous written records of all Inventions, which records shall be the property of the Company.

 

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7.                                       Supersedes Other Agreements.   This Agreement supersedes and is in lieu of any and all other service arrangements between the Employee and the Company, but shall not supersede any confidentiality, nondisclosure, invention assignment or non-compete agreement between the Employee and the Company.

 

8.                                       Amendments.   Any amendment to this Agreement shall be made in writing and signed by the parties hereto.

 

9.                                       Enforceability.   If any provision of this Agreement shall be invalid or unenforceable, in whole or in part, then such provision shall be deemed to be modified or restricted to the extent and in the manner necessary to render the same valid and enforceable, or shall be deemed excised from this Agreement, as the case may require, and this Agreement shall be construed and enforced to the maximum extent permitted by law as if such provision had been originally incorporated herein as so modified or restricted or as if such provision had not been originally incorporated herein, as the case may be.

 

10.                                Construction.   This Agreement shall be construed and interpreted in accordance with the internal laws of the State of Connecticut.

 

11.                                Assignment.

 

(a)                                  By the Company.   The rights and obligations of the Company under this Agreement shall inure to the benefit of, and shall be binding upon, the successors and assigns of the Company.  This Agreement may be assigned by the Company without the consent of the Employee.

 

(b)                                  By the Employee.   This Agreement and the obligations created hereunder may not be assigned by the Employee, but all rights of the Employee hereunder shall inure to the benefit of and be enforceable by her heirs, devisees, legatees, executors, administrators and personal representatives.

 

12.                                Notices.   All notices required or permitted to be given hereunder shall be in writing and shall be deemed to have been given when mailed by certified mail, return receipt requested, or delivered by a national overnight delivery service addressed to the intended recipient as follows:

 

If to the Company:

 

Marinus Pharmaceuticals, Inc.
142 Temple Street, Suite 205

New Haven, CT 06510
Attention:  Chairman of the Board

 

If to the Employee, to address stated on the signature page to this Agreement.

 

Any party may from time to time change its address for the purpose of notices to that party by a similar notice specifying a new address, but no such change shall be deemed to have been given until it is actually received by the party sought to be charged with its contents.

 

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13.                                Waivers.   No claim or right arising out of a breach or default under this Agreement shall be discharged in whole or in part by a waiver of that claim or right unless the waiver is supported by consideration and is in writing and executed by the aggrieved party hereto or her or its duly authorized agent.  A waiver by any party hereto of a breach or default by the other party hereto of any provision of this Agreement shall not be deemed a waiver of future compliance therewith, and such provisions shall remain in full force and effect.

 

14.                                Section 409A.   It is intended that this Agreement be drafted and administered in compliance with section 409A of the Code, including, but not limited to, any future amendments to Code section 409A, and any other Internal Revenue Service or other governmental rulings or interpretations (together, “Section 409A”) issued pursuant to Section 409A so as not to subject the Employee to payment of interest or any additional tax under Code section 409A.  The parties intend for any payments under this Agreement to either satisfy the requirements of Section 409A or to be exempt from the application of Section 409A, and this Agreement shall be construed and interpreted accordingly.  In furtherance thereof, if payment or provision of any amount or benefit hereunder that is subject to Section 409A at the time specified herein would subject such amount or benefit to any additional tax under Section 409A, the payment or provision of such amount or benefit shall be postponed to the earliest commencement date on which the payment or provision of such amount or benefit could be made without incurring such additional tax.  In addition, to the extent that any Internal Revenue Service guidance issued under Section 409A would result in the Employee being subject to the payment of interest or any additional tax under Section 409A, the parties agree, to the extent reasonably possible, to amend this Agreement in order to avoid the imposition of any such interest or additional tax under Section 409A, which amendment shall have the minimum economic effect necessary and be reasonably determined in good faith by the Company and the Employee.

 

15.                                Survival of Covenants.   All provisions of this Agreement that, by its terms, is intended to continue beyond the termination of the Employee’s employment shall continue in effect thereafter.

 

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IN WITNESS WHEREOF, this Agreement has been executed by the parties as of the date first above written.

 

 

MARINUS PHARMACEUTICALS, INC.

 

 

 

 

 

 

By:

/s/ Christopher M. Cashman

 

 

 

 

Title:

CEO

 

 

 

 

 

/s/ Edward F. Smith

 

Edward F. Smith

 

 

 

 

 

Employee’s Address:

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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EXHIBIT 10.5

 

EMPLOYMENT AGREEMENT

 

EMPLOYMENT AGREEMENT effective as of November 2, 2012 between Marinus Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (the “Company”), a Delaware corporation, and Gail M. Farfel, Ph.D. (the “Employee”).

 

Recital:

 

The parties hereto desire to enter into this Agreement to provide for the employment of the Employee by the Company and for certain other matters in connection with such employment, all as set forth more fully in this Agreement.

 

NOW, THEREFORE, in consideration of the premises and covenants set forth herein, and intending to be legally bound hereby, the parties to this Agreement hereby agree as follows:

 

1.                                       Duties.   The Company agrees that the Employee shall be employed by the Company to serve as Chief Development and Regulatory Affairs Officer of the Company.  The Employee shall report to the Chief Executive Officer of the Company.  The Employee agrees to be so employed by the Company and to devote her best efforts to advance the interests of the Company and to perform the duties stated on Exhibit A hereto and such other duties assigned to the Employee by the Chief Executive Officer.  The Employee shall be based in the Company’s Branford, Connecticut office.  Mutually acceptable flexible work options shall be implemented and periodically reviewed and agreed by the Company and the Chief Executive Officer.

 

2.                                       Term.   The Employee’s employment under this Agreement shall continue in effect until terminated pursuant to Section 4 of this Agreement.

 

3.                                       Compensation.

 

(a)                                  Salary.   During the term of the Employee’s employment under this Agreement, the Employee shall be paid an annual salary at the rate of not less than $290,000 (the “Base Salary”).  The Base Salary may be increased from time to time by the Board of Directors (the “Board”).  The Board shall review the Base Salary at least annually at the end of each fiscal year of the Company.  The Base Salary shall be paid in accordance with the Company’s regular payroll practices.

 

(b)                                  Annual Bonus.   At the end of each fiscal year of the Company that ends during the term of this Agreement, the Board shall consider the award of a performance bonus to the Employee for such fiscal year in an amount of up to 25% of the Employee’s Base Salary based upon the achievement of performance objectives established annually by the Board or its Compensation Committee.  Whether the performance objectives for any year have been achieved by the Employee shall be determined by the Board or its Compensation Committee.  Notwithstanding the foregoing, all bonuses shall be paid within two and one-half months after the close of each year.

 

(c)                                   Management Incentive Plan.   The Employee shall be eligible to participate in the Company’s 2012 Management Incentive Plan.  Further, subject to the approvals

 



 

of the 2012 Extended MIP and/or any other such plan, by the Board and the requisite stockholders of the Company, the Employee will be eligible to participate in any extension, expansion or amendment of the 2012 Management Incentive Plan.

 

(d)                                  Equity Incentive Programs.   The Company agrees that, on or promptly after the date of this Agreement, the Employee shall be granted stock options exercisable for the purchase of 277,000 shares of the Company’s Common Stock at an exercise price equal to the fair market value per share of the Company’s Common Stock, as determined by the Board, of which 25% shall vest on the first anniversary of the effective date of the Employee’s employment by the Company and the remaining 75% shall vest in 36 consecutive monthly installments beginning one month after the first anniversary of the effective date of the Employee’s employment by the Company.  The Employee shall also be eligible to participate in equity incentive programs established by the Company from time to time to provide stock options and other equity-based incentives to key employees of the Company in accordance with the terms of those programs.

 

(e)                                   Vacation and Fringe Benefits.   The Employee shall be entitled  to 20 days’ paid vacation, plus an additional two floating holidays and two personal days, as per Company policy to be established.  The Employee shall be entitled to participate in all insurance and other fringe benefit programs of the Company to the extent and on the same terms and conditions as are accorded to other officers and key employees of the Company.

 

(f)                                    Reimbursement of Expenses.   The Employee shall be reimbursed for all normal items of travel, entertainment and miscellaneous business expenses reasonably incurred by the Employee on behalf of the Company, provided that such expenses are documented and submitted in accordance with the reimbursement policies of the Company as in effect from time to time.

 

(g)                                  Entire Compensation.   The compensation provided for in this Agreement shall constitute full payment for the services to be rendered by the Employee to the Company hereunder.

 

4.                                       Termination.

 

(a)                                  Death.   This Agreement shall automatically terminate effective as of the date of the Employee’s death, in which event the Company shall not have any further obligation or liability under this Agreement except that the Company shall pay to the Employee’s estate:  (i) any portion of the Employee’s Base Salary for the period up to the Employee’s date of death that has been earned but remains unpaid; and (ii) any benefits that have accrued to the Employee under the terms of the employee benefit plans of the Company, which benefits shall be paid in accordance with the terms of those plans.

 

(b)                                  Total Disability.   The Company may terminate the employment of the Employee immediately upon written notice to the Employee in the event of the Disability (as that term is hereinafter defined) of the Employee, in which event, the Company shall not have any further obligation or liability under this Agreement except that the Company shall pay to the Employee:  (i) any portion of the Employee’s Base Salary for the period up to the date of

 

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termination that has been earned but remains unpaid; and (ii) any benefits that have accrued to the Employee under the terms of the employee benefit plans of the Company, which benefits shall be paid in accordance with the terms of those plans.  For purposes of this Agreement, the term “Disability” shall mean an illness, incapacity or a mental or physical condition that renders the Employee unable or incompetent to carry out the job responsibilities that the Employee held or the tasks that she was assigned at the time the disability commenced, as determined by the Board and supported by the opinion of a physician.  The Employee shall fully cooperate with the physician retained to furnish such opinion, including submitting to such examinations and tests as may be requested by the physician.

 

(c)                                   Termination by the Company for Cause.   The Company may terminate the Employee’s employment hereunder upon written notice to the Employee for Cause.  For purposes of this Agreement, the term “Cause” shall mean a vote of the Board resolving that this Agreement should be terminated as a result of (i) any material breach by the Employee of any agreement to which the Consultant and the Company are parties which, if curable, is not cured within 30 days following written notice thereof by the Company, (ii) any commission of a crime constituting a felony, or (iii) repeated, willful failure to perform any duties reasonably assigned to the Employee or other such insubordination, which failure is not cured within 30 days following written notice thereof by the Company.  In the event that the Company shall discharge the Employee pursuant to this Section 4(c), the Company shall not have any further obligation or liability under this Agreement, except that the Company shall pay to the Employee:  (i) any portion of the Employee’s Base Salary for the period up to the date of termination that has been earned but remains unpaid; and (ii) any benefits that have accrued to the Employee under the terms of the employee benefit plans of the Company, which benefits shall be paid in accordance with the terms of those plans.

 

(d)                                  Other Termination by the Company.   The Company may terminate the employment of the Employee for any reason other than one specified in Section 4(b) or 4(c) hereof immediately upon written notice to the Employee, in which event the Company shall pay to the Employee:  (i) any portion of the Employee’s Base Salary for the period up to the date of termination that has been earned but remains unpaid; (ii) any benefits that have accrued to the Employee under the terms of any employee benefit plans of the Company, which benefits shall be paid in accordance with the terms of those plans; and (iii) subject to the execution by the Employee of a release satisfactory to the Company and the compliance by the Employee with all terms and provisions of this Agreement that survive the termination of the Employee’s employment by the Company, the Employee’s Base Salary for a period of six months after the effective date of the release, payable in accordance with the Company’s regular payroll practices.

 

(e)                                   Termination by the Employee.   The Employee may terminate her employment for any reason upon at least 30 days’ prior written notice to the Company, which notice shall specify the effective date of the termination.  In the event that the Employee shall terminate her employment pursuant to this Section 4(e), the Company shall not have any further obligation or liability under this Agreement, except that the Company shall pay to the Employee:  (i) any portion of the Employee’s Base Salary for the period up to the date of termination that has been earned but remains unpaid; and (ii) any benefits that have accrued to the Employee under the terms of the employee benefit plans of the Company, which benefits shall be paid in accordance with the terms of those plans

 

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(f)                                    Parachute Provisions.   In the event the Company determines in good faith that any payments or benefits (whether made or provided pursuant to this Agreement or otherwise) provided to the Employee constitute “parachute payments” (“Parachute Payments”) within the meaning of Section 280G of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended (the “Code”) and may be subject to an excise tax imposed pursuant to Section 4999 of the Code, the Parachute Payments will be reduced to an amount determined by the Company in good faith to be the maximum amount that may be provided to the Employee without resulting in any portion of such Parachute Payments being subject to such excise tax (the amount of such reduction, the “Cutback Benefits”).  The Employee shall be entitled to select which Parachute Payments (of those that are not considered to be deferred compensation under Section 409A of the Code) shall be reduced hereunder; provided that if the Employee fails to so select promptly, the Company shall select which Parachute Payments (of those that are not considered to be deferred compensation under Section 409A of the Code) will be reduced.  Parachute Payments that are considered to be deferred compensation under Section 409A of the Code shall be reduced only to the extent that the complete reduction of the Parachute Payments in the preceding sentence is insufficient to eliminate the imposition of the excise tax imposed under Section 4999 of the Code.  Notwithstanding the foregoing, the Company shall use reasonable efforts to obtain the approval of the Cutback Benefits by the Company’s stockholders in the manner contemplated by Q&A 7 of Treas. Reg. Section 1.280G, it being understood and agreed that the Company does not guarantee that such approval will be obtained.  If, and only if, the Company determines that such approval is obtained, the Employee shall be entitled to receive the Cutback Benefits without regard to the first sentence of this Section 4(f).

 

(g)                                  Base Salary Continuation.  The Base Salary continuation set forth in Section 4(d) above shall be intended either (i) to satisfy the safe harbor set forth in the regulations issued under section 409A of the Code (Treas. Regs. 1.409A-1(n)(2)(ii)) or (ii) be treated as a Short-term Deferral as that term is defined under Code section 409A (Treas. Regs. 1.409A-1(b)(4)).  To the extent such continuation payments exceed the applicable safe harbor amount or do not constitute a Short-term Deferral, the excess amount shall be treated as deferred compensation under Code section 409A and as such shall be payable pursuant to the following schedule: such excess amount shall be paid via standard payroll in periodic installments in accordance with the Company’s usual practice for its senior executives.  Notwithstanding any provision in this Agreement to the contrary, in the event that the Employee is a “specified employee” as defined in Section 409A, any continuation payment, continuation benefits or other amounts payable under this Agreement that would be subject to the special rule regarding payments to “specified employees” under Section 409A(a)(2)(B) of the Code shall not be paid before the expiration of a period of six months following the date of the Employee’s termination of employment or before the date of the Employee’s death, if earlier.

 

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5.                                       Restrictive Covenant Agreement.   The Non-Competition, Non-Solicitation, Confidentiality and Assignment executed by Consultant on April 9, 2010 (the “Restrictive Covenant Agreement”) shall remain in full force and effect in accordance with its terms and shall survive the termination of the Employee’s Amended and Restated Consulting Agreement dated as of June 28, 2011 with the Company (the “2011 Consulting Agreement”) and this Agreement in accordance with the terms of the Restrictive Covenant Agreement.    .

 

6.                                       Supersedes Other Agreements.   This Agreement supersedes and is in lieu of the 2011 Consulting Agreement and any and all other employment arrangements between the Employee and the Company, but shall not supersede the Restrictive Covenant Agreement or any other confidentiality, nondisclosure, invention assignment or non-compete agreement between the Employee and the Company.

 

7.                                       Amendments.   Any amendment to this Agreement shall be made in writing and signed by the parties hereto.

 

8.                                       Enforceability.   If any provision of this Agreement shall be invalid or unenforceable, in whole or in part, then such provision shall be deemed to be modified or restricted to the extent and in the manner necessary to render the same valid and enforceable, or shall be deemed excised from this Agreement, as the case may require, and this Agreement shall be construed and enforced to the maximum extent permitted by law as if such provision had been originally incorporated herein as so modified or restricted or as if such provision had not been originally incorporated herein, as the case may be.

 

9.                                       Construction.   This Agreement shall be construed and interpreted in accordance with the internal laws of the State of Connecticut.

 

10.                                Assignment.

 

(a)                                  By the Company.   The rights and obligations of the Company under this Agreement shall inure to the benefit of, and shall be binding upon, the successors and assigns of the Company.  This Agreement may be assigned by the Company without the consent of the Employee.

 

(b)                                  By the Employee.   This Agreement and the obligations created hereunder may not be assigned by the Employee, but all rights of the Employee hereunder shall inure to the benefit of and be enforceable by her heirs, devisees, legatees, executors, administrators and personal representatives.

 

11.                                Notices.   All notices required or permitted to be given hereunder shall be in writing and shall be deemed to have been given when mailed by certified mail, return receipt requested, or delivered by a national overnight delivery service addressed to the intended recipient as follows:

 

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If to the Company:

 

Marinus Pharmaceuticals, Inc.
21 Business Park Drive

Branford CT  06405
Attention:  Chairman of the Board

 

If to the Employee, to address stated on the signature page to this Agreement.

 

Any party may from time to time change its address for the purpose of notices to that party by a similar notice specifying a new address, but no such change shall be deemed to have been given until it is actually received by the party sought to be charged with its contents.

 

12.                                Waivers.   No claim or right arising out of a breach or default under this Agreement shall be discharged in whole or in part by a waiver of that claim or right unless the waiver is supported by consideration and is in writing and executed by the aggrieved party hereto or her or its duly authorized agent.  A waiver by any party hereto of a breach or default by the other party hereto of any provision of this Agreement shall not be deemed a waiver of future compliance therewith, and such provisions shall remain in full force and effect.

 

13.                                Section 409A.   It is intended that this Agreement be drafted and administered in compliance with section 409A of the Code, including, but not limited to, any future amendments to Code section 409A, and any other Internal Revenue Service or other governmental rulings or interpretations (together, “Section 409A”) issued pursuant to Section 409A so as not to subject the Employee to payment of interest or any additional tax under Code section 409A.  The parties intend for any payments under this Agreement to either satisfy the requirements of Section 409A or to be exempt from the application of Section 409A, and this Agreement shall be construed and interpreted accordingly.  In furtherance thereof, if payment or provision of any amount or benefit hereunder that is subject to Section 409A at the time specified herein would subject such amount or benefit to any additional tax under Section 409A, the payment or provision of such amount or benefit shall be postponed to the earliest commencement date on which the payment or provision of such amount or benefit could be made without incurring such additional tax.  In addition, to the extent that any Internal Revenue Service guidance issued under Section 409A would result in the Employee being subject to the payment of interest or any additional tax under Section 409A, the parties agree, to the extent reasonably possible, to amend this Agreement in order to avoid the imposition of any such interest or additional tax under Section 409A, which amendment shall have the minimum economic effect necessary and be reasonably determined in good faith by the Company and the Employee.

 

14.                                Survival of Covenants.   All provisions of this Agreement that, by its terms, is intended to continue beyond the termination of the Employee’s employment shall continue in effect thereafter.

 

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IN WITNESS WHEREOF, this Agreement has been executed by the parties as of the date first above written.

 

 

MARINUS PHARMACEUTICALS, INC.

 

 

 

 

 

By:

/s/ Christopher M. Cashman

 

 

 

 

Title:

Chief Executive Officer

 

 

 

 

 

/s/ Gail M. Farfel

 

Gail M. Farfel, Ph.D.

 

 

 

 

 

Employee’s Address:

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

7


 

EXHIBIT A

 

Duties and Responsibilities

 

Lead and manage the development and execution of the Company’s clinical development plans through registration, ensuring delivery of all elements of the clinical development plan including: clinical trial feasibility, set-up, conduct and reporting; support of regulatory activities and other project responsibilities as required.

 

Lead cross-functional teams to create comprehensive clinical development plans; protocols and supporting plans and coordinate clinical plan activities (protocol development, statistical analysis plan, data monitoring guidelines, clinical study reports, scientific presentations, regulatory adherence and strategy, etc.) coordinating efforts by team members, vendors and collaboration partners across functional areas.

 

Specifically the Employee will continue as the primary interface with the PTSD consortium and Fragile X collaboration with the responsibility for oversight of clinical and monitoring activities and ensuring recruitment activities and enrollment timelines are met with the target patients. Leadership of the Company’s clinical operations and close collaboration with finance and CMC/Manufacturing are required. Regular updates to the CEO and the Board of Directors on the status of these programs (including timelines, recruitment, enrollment, completers and budget variances) are required. Continued support of the Company’s partnering and M&A activities are required.

 

Additional department responsibilities include: developing and updating project activity plans, GANNT charts and program budgets and ensuring uniform processes/project documentation including: agendas, meeting minutes, status reports, product development plans and other project documentation as required

 

The Employee’s duties and responsibilities will evolve with the needs of the development projects and will be reviewed periodically.

 

This position may require domestic or international travel, as needed.

 

A-1




EXHIBIT 10.6

 

THIS DOCUMENT HAS BEEN REDACTED AND IS THE SUBJECT OF A CONFIDENTIAL TREATMENT REQUEST PURSUANT TO RULE 406 UNDER THE SECURITIES ACT OF 1933, AS AMENDED. REDACTED MATERIAL IS MARKED WITH [XXXXXXXXX] AND HAS BEEN FILED SEPARATELY WITH THE SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION.

 

4 December 2012

 

TECHNOLOGY TRANSFER AGREEMENT

 

Dated  4 December 2012

 

By and Between

 

DOMAIN RUSSIA INVESTMENTS LIMITED

 

And

 

MARINUS PHARMACEUTICALS, INC.

 

1



 

TECHNOLOGY TRANSFER AGREEMENT

 

THIS TECHNOLOGY TRANSFER AGREEMENT (the “Agreement”) is dated as of  4 December 2012 (the “Effective Date”), by and between Domain Russia Investments Limited, a private limited company incorporated and existing under the laws of England and Wales with registration number 7899075, having its registered office at The Broadgate Tower, Third Floor, 20 Primrose Street, City of London, EC2A 2RS, United Kingdom (“ DRI ”), and Marinus Pharmaceuticals, Inc., a corporation organized under the laws of the State of Delaware, USA, and having its place of business at 21 Business Park Drive, Branford, Connecticut 06405, USA (“ Company ”).  DRI and Company may each be referred to herein as a “Party” or, collectively, as “Parties.”

 

RECITALS:

 

WHEREAS, Company is a development-stage company engaged in the discovery and development of certain Product(s) (defined below), including the Covered Products (defined below); and

 

WHEREAS, Company, on the one hand, and one or more funds affiliated with DRI, including RMI Investments S.á r.l. (“ RMI ”), a private limited liability company organized under the laws of Luxemburg, with an address at 17 Rue Des Jardiniers L-1835 Luxemburg and certain other investors (collectively the “ Investors ”), on the other hand, have entered into a Series C Preferred Stock Purchase Agreement dated as of 4 December 2012 (the “ Stock Purchase Agreement ”), pursuant to which Company will issue and sell, and the Investors will purchase, shares of capital stock of Company with an aggregate purchase price of up to approximately twenty-one million two hundred seventy-four thousand seven hundred ninety-three U.S. dollars (US$21,274,793) (the “ Investment ”); and

 

WHEREAS, in connection with the Investment and the other transactions relating thereto, DRI desires to acquire exclusive rights from Company in the Field in the Territory in order to transfer such exclusive rights to NovaMedica (defined below), and Company wishes to exclusively transfer to NovaMedica, through DRI, the right to Develop and Commercialize (defined below) Covered Products throughout the Territory (as defined below); and

 

WHEREAS, immediately following execution of this Agreement DRI shall enter into two Assignment and Assumption Agreements with NovaMedica, pursuant to which DRI shall assign all rights and obligations under this Agreement and the Sublicense Agreement (defined below), respectively, to NovaMedica, and NovaMedica shall accept such assignment of rights and agreed to assume such obligations.  The term “Transferee,” as used in this Agreement (a) shall refer to DRI immediately upon execution and delivery of this Agreement, and (b) from and after DRI’s assignment to NovaMedica, pursuant to Assignment and Assumption Agreement, of the rights transferred to DRI by Company pursuant this Agreement, shall refer to DRI and/or NovaMedica, as applicable in the specific context.

 

NOW, THEREFORE , in consideration of the various promises and undertakings set forth herein, and other good and valuable consideration the receipt and sufficiency of which is hereby acknowledged, the Parties agree as follows:

 

ARTICLE 1
DEFINITIONS

 

Unless otherwise specifically provided herein, the following capitalized terms used in the Agreement its appended Schedules shall have the following meanings:

 

2



 

1.1                                “Acquirer” means, in a Change of Control (as defined below) with respect to Company, NovaMedica or a Permitted Transferee, the acquiring entity in such Change of Control.

 

1.2                                “Affiliate” shall mean, in relation to any Party, NovaMedica or any Permitted Transferee, any Person who directly or indirectly controls, is controlled by, or is under common control with, such Party, NovaMedica or Permitted Transferee.  For purposes of this definition of Affiliate, “control” means: (a) ownership of more than fifty percent (50%) of the voting rights, shares or other equity interest of the applicable entity; and/or (b) the power to direct or cause direction of all aspects of the management and policies of the applicable entity (directly or indirectly, whether through ownership of securities or partnership or other ownership interests, by contract or otherwise).

 

1.3                                “Ancillary Agreements” means the Assignment and Assumption Agreement, the Clinical Development and Collaboration Agreement, any Supply Agreement, and the Pharmacovigilance Agreement.

 

1.4                                “Assigned IP” means Company Patents in the Territory assigned or to be assigned to the Transferee pursuant to this Agreement, including Company Improvement Patent Rights.  The Assigned IP as of the date of this Agreement is listed in Schedule 1.1 attached hereto.

 

1.5                                “Assignment and Assumption Agreements” means those certain agreements between DRI and NovaMedica referenced above in the “Recitals” section.

 

1.6                                “Clinical Development and Collaboration Agreement” shall have the meaning set forth in Section 5.1, below.

 

1.7                                “Clinical Trial” means an a adequate and well-controlled clinical trial, investigation, or study in human subjects (as defined in 21 CFR 314.126) that has been approved by a Regulatory Authority and is designed to measure the safety and/or efficacy of a Covered Product in humans.

 

1.8                                “Change of Control” means (a) a transaction or series of related transactions that results in the sale, exclusive license in the US or other major country or other disposition of all or substantially all of a Party’s assets; or (b) a merger or consolidation in which a Party is not the surviving corporation or in which, if a Party is the surviving corporation, the shareholders of such Party immediately prior to the consummation of such merger or consolidation do not, immediately after consummation of such merger or consolidation, own stock or other securities of the Party that possess a majority of the voting power of all of the Party’s outstanding stock and other securities and the power to elect a majority of the members of the Party’s board of directors; or (c) a transaction or series of related transactions (which may include a tender offer for a Party’s stock or the issuance, sale, or exchange of stock of a Party) if the shareholders of such Party immediately prior to the initial such transaction do not, immediately after consummation of such transaction or any of such related transactions, own, directly or indirectly through a parent, stock or other securities of the Party that possess a majority of the voting power of all of the Party’s outstanding stock and other securities and the power to elect a majority of the members of the Party’s board of directors; provided, however, that a Change of Control excludes (A) any transaction (or series of related transactions) in which the pre-transaction shareholders of the applicable Party own more than 50% of the outstanding capital stock or equity interests of the surviving or acquiring entity or its parent, and (B) bona fide equity financings of Company by financial investors.

 

1.9                                “Commercialization” or “Commercialize” means any and all activities that relate to the Manufacture, packaging, marketing, promoting, distributing, importing, offering for sale, selling, or

 

3



 

having sold Covered Products and interacting with Regulatory Authorities.  Commercialization shall also include conducting Phase IV Studies.

 

1.10                         “Commercially Reasonable Efforts” means, (a) with respect to the efforts to be expended by any Party with respect to any objective, such reasonable, diligent, and good faith efforts not less than a company similar to such Party would devote to accomplish a similar objective under similar circumstances, and (b) with respect to any objective relating to Development or Commercialization of a Covered Product by the Transferee (or a Permitted Transferee), the application by the Transferee (or a Permitted Transferee), consistent with the exercise of its prudent scientific and business judgment, of diligent and good faith efforts and resources to fulfill the obligation in issue, consistent with the level of efforts a company similar to the Transferee (or a Permitted Transferee), as the case may be, would devote to a product at a similar stage in its product life as the Covered Product and having profit potential and strategic value comparable to that of the Covered Product, taking into account the following factors: scientific, development, technical, commercial, and regulatory factors, target product profiles, product labeling, past performance, the regulatory environment and competitive market conditions in therapeutic area safety and efficacy of a subject product, and the strength of its proprietary position, all based on conditions then prevailing. Commercially Reasonable Efforts will not mean that the Transferee, alone or through one or more Permitted Transferees, commits that it will actually accomplish the applicable task.

 

1.11                         Company Improvement Know-How” means an Improvement Controlled by Company other than Company Improvement Patent Rights, whether patentable or not, that is necessary or useful for the use, Development or Commercialization of a Covered Product, or otherwise for the practice of the Assigned IP or Company Patent Rights, or any of them, in the Field and in the Territory.

 

1.12                         “Company Improvement Patent Rights” means any Company Patent Right(s) obtained in the Field and in the Territory during the Term that claims an Improvement.

 

1.13                         “Company Indemnitees” shall have the meaning set forth in Section 10.1, below.

 

1.14                         “Company IP” means Company Patents, Company Know-How, and Company Materials.

 

1.15                         “Company Know-How ” means all Know-How, including Company Improvement Know How, that is Controlled by the Company as of the Effective Date or thereafter during the Term of this Agreement that is reasonably necessary or useful in the Development or Commercialization of Covered Product(s) in the Field, but excluding Know-How Controlled by Company pursuant to the License Agreement or any other Third Party Agreement unless and until the Transferee elects to include in the Licensed IP pursuant to Section 2.1(f) of this Agreement.

 

1.16                         “Company Materials” means all Materials Controlled by the Company that are necessary or useful in the Development or Commercialization of the Covered Product(s).

 

1.17                         “Company Patents” or “Company Patent Rights” means any Patent Rights that are Controlled by the Company, including any Improvement Patent Rights, that are necessary or useful for the Development or Commercialization of Covered Products in the Territory, but excluding any Patent Right Controlled by the Company pursuant to the License Agreement or any other Third Party Agreement unless the Transferee elects to include in the Licensed IP pursuant to Section 2.1(f) of this Agreement.

 

1.18                         “Compound” means ganaxolone (3 a -hydroxy-3 b -methyl-5 a -pregnan-20-one), the chemical structure of which is described in Schedule 1.3, in any formulation, the use, Development or

 

4



 

Commercialization of which in the absence of this Agreement, a sublicense to a Permitted Transferee  or other ownership, assignment or license of applicable rights, would infringe at least one Valid Claim of the Assigned IP or Company Patent Rights, or that is manufactured or otherwise produced, at least in part, using Company Know-How.

 

1.19                         “Confidential Information” of a Party means such Party’s confidential information relating to its business, operations and products, including but not limited to any technical information, formulae, processes, techniques, preclinical information, toxicology information, clinical, non-clinical, or pre-clinical information, regulatory information, Manufacturing information, formulation information, packaging information, dosing information, dose regimen information, target patient information, marketing information, sales information, pricing information, reimbursement information, Know-How, trade secrets, or inventions (whether patentable or not) that is disclosed to or learned by the other Party in connection with this Agreement. All Company Know-How shall be deemed Confidential Information of the Company.

 

1.20                         “Control” or “Controlled ” means, with respect to (a) Patent Rights, (b) Know-How, or (c) Materials, in each case that Company, a Transferee, an Acquirer, or an Affiliate of a Party or an Acquirer owns or has a license or sublicense to such Patent Rights, Know-How, or Materials (and additionally, in the case of Materials, has the right to physical possession of such Materials) and has the ability to assign or grant a license or sublicense to such Patent Rights, Know-How, or Materials as provided for in this Agreement.

 

1.21                         “Cover” , “Covering” or “Covered” means, with respect to a Covered Product, that the Development or Commercialization of such Covered Product would, but for ownership of, or assignment of rights under this Agreement to, the relevant Assigned IP or Company Patent Rights, infringe a Valid Claim of the relevant Company Patent Rights in the country in which the activity occurs.

 

1.22                         “Covered Product” means any pharmaceutical product (including, without limitation, any diagnostic product or therapeutic product) that (a) contains or comprises the Compound in any formulation designed and intended for use in and for the Field, whether or not combined with other compounds, (b) in the absence of this Agreement, a sublicense to the Permitted Transferee or other ownership, assignment or license of applicable rights, would infringe at least one Valid Claim of the Assigned IP or Company Patent Rights, or (c) is manufactured or otherwise produced, at least in part, using Company Know-How.

 

1.23                         “Cure Period” shall have the meaning set forth in Section 11.3(b), below.

 

1.24                         “Development” or “Develop” means the performance of all development activities, including any pre-clinical and clinical development activities, including, without limitation, toxicology, pharmacology, test method development and stability testing, process development, formulation development, quality control development, statistical analysis, Clinical Trials, and manufacturing and regulatory activities or any similar activities that are useful or otherwise required to obtain Regulatory Approval of a Covered Product, including interacting with any Regulatory Authorities regarding the foregoing.

 

1.25                         “Development Disputes” shall have the meaning set forth in Section 12.1, below.

 

1.26                         “Development Support” shall have the meaning set forth in Section 3.4(b), below.

 

1.27                         “EMA” means the European Medicines Agency or any successor agency.

 

5



 

1.28                         “Excluded Field” means and includes the treatment of any unpleasant sensory or emotional experience associated with actual or potential tissue damage, or described in terms of such damage, including discomfort, either acute or chronic, caused by a primary lesion or dysfunction in the peripheral or central nervous system (e.g., neuropathic pain, post-herpetic neuralgia, trigeminal neuralgia), phantom pain, back pain, surgical pain, cancer pain, and pain associated with inflammation or damage of any tissues (e.g., muscle, bone, organs, tendons, nerves, and skin) by disease, injury, infection, surgery, or at birth.  For avoidance of doubt, the Transferee (or any Permitted Transferee) shall not be permitted hereunder to pursue or obtain any Regulatory Approval or labeling for a Covered Product as an analgesic or anesthetic agent or for the treatment of pain as a result of contractual restrictions imposed on Company by the License Agreement.

 

1.29                         “FDA” means the United States Food and Drug Administration, or a successor federal agency thereto.

 

1.30                         “Field” means any and all prophylactic, palliative, therapeutic, and diagnostic uses for any human or animal disease or condition, other than diseases, disorders and conditions that are in the Excluded Field; provided, however, that during the Term should any Excluded Field limitations imposed on Company by the License Agreement expire or be expanded, the “Field” under this Agreement shall thereafter be expanded on an equivalent basis.

 

1.31                         “First Commercial Sale” means, with respect to a Covered Product in any country in the Territory, the first commercial transfer, or disposition, for value of such Covered Product in such country to a Third Party after all Regulatory Approvals for an NDA (and/or other required approvals) have been obtained in such country.

 

1.32                         Fixed Payment ” has the payment to be paid by DRI to Company pursuant to Section 6.1, below.

 

1.33                         “Fundamental Breach” has the meaning provided in Section 11.3(e), below.

 

1.34                        “Governmental Body” means any: (a) nation, principality, state, commonwealth, province, territory, county, municipality, district, or other jurisdiction of any nature; (b) federal, state, local, municipal, foreign, or other government; (c) governmental or quasi-governmental authority of any nature (including any governmental division, subdivision, department, agency, bureau, branch, office, commission, council, board, instrumentality, officer, official, representative, organization, unit, body, or entity and any court or other tribunal); (d) multi-national or supranational organization or body; or (e) individual, entity, or body exercising, or entitled to exercise, any executive, legislative, judicial, administrative, regulatory, police, military, or taxing authority or power of any nature.

 

1.35                         “Improvement” means any improvement, alteration, or modification to a Covered Product, Company IP, Assigned IP or Licensed IP or to any prior Improvement that is made, conceived, reduced to practice, discovered, or otherwise discovered after the Effective Date and during the Term, including methods of synthesis, Manufacture, or use, compositions, Know-How, statistically significant or repeatable observations, protocols, inactive ingredients, presentation, means of delivery, dosage, formulation, or analysis, whether or not patentable.

 

1.36                         “IND” means an investigational new drug application filed with the FDA or the equivalent application or filing filed with any equivalent agency or Governmental Body outside the United States (including any supra-national entity such as in the European Union) for approval to commence a Clinical Trial in such jurisdiction.

 

6



 

1.37                         “Indication” means a generally acknowledged disease or condition, a significant manifestation of a disease or condition, or symptoms associated with a disease or condition or a risk for a disease or condition.  For the avoidance of doubt, all variants of a single disease or condition (whether classified by severity or otherwise) shall be treated as the same Indication.

 

1.38                         “Initial Closing of the Investment Transaction” means Initial Closing under the Stock Purchase Agreement, which is referenced in the “Recitals,” above.

 

1.39                         “Intellectual Property” or “Intellectual Property Rights” or “IP” means, collectively, all intellectual property and similar proprietary rights, including: (i) Patent Rights; (ii) Know-How and non-public business or technical information; (iii) copyrights and copyrightable works; (iv) software, including data files, source code, object code, application programming interfaces, databases and other software-related specifications and documentation; (v) designs; (vi) domain names; and (vii) claims, causes of action, and defenses relating to the enforcement of any of the foregoing; in each of the foregoing cases (i) to (vii), including any registrations or applications to register, and renewals and extensions of, and of the foregoing, with any Governmental Body in any jurisdiction.

 

1.40                         “Joint Commercialization Committee” or “JCC” shall have the meaning as set forth in Section 5.3, below.

 

1.41                         “Joint Development Committee” or “JDC” shall have the meaning as set forth in Section 5.3, below.

 

1.42                         “Joint Invention” means any discovery, invention, innovation, or other technological advance, whether or not patentable, jointly conceived or discovered by at least one Person who is an employee, officer, director, agent, or contractor of Company while acting for or on behalf of Company and at least one Person who is an employee, officer, director, agent, or contractor of the Transferee or a Permitted Transferee.

 

1.43                         “Joint Patent” shall have the meaning as set forth in Section 1(e) of attached Schedule 4.

 

1.44                         “Joint Steering Committee” or “JSC” shall have the meaning as set forth in Section 5.3, below .

 

1.45                         “Know-How” means any scientific or technical information, results and data of any type whatsoever, in any tangible or intangible form whatsoever, that is not in the public domain or otherwise publicly known, including, without limitation, Improvements, discoveries, inventions (whether patentable or not), trade secrets, databases, practices, protocols, regulatory filings, methods, processes, techniques, information concerning reagents and biological and other materials, specifications, formulations, formulae, data (including pharmacological, biological, chemical, toxicological and clinical) analytical, quality control, and stability data), dosing and target patient information, studies and procedures, and Manufacturing process, and Covered Product Development information, results and data, whether or not patentable, in each of the foregoing cases to the extent not claimed or disclosed in any Patent Rights; provided, however, that “Know How” excludes Patent Rights and Materials.

 

1.46                         “Knowledge” means, with respect to a matter that is the subject of a given representation or warranty, the knowledge, information or belief that any officer, director, or other employee of a Party who would reasonably be expected to have knowledge of the matter in question, has, or should reasonably be expected to have, with respect to the relevant subject matter.  “ Knowingly ” means with Knowledge.

 

7



 

1.47                         “Law” or “Laws” means all applicable laws, statutes, rules, regulations, ordinances and other pronouncements having the binding effect of law of any Governmental Body.

 

1.48                         “License Agreement” means Amended and Restated Agreement dated May 23, 2008, by and between Purdue Neuroscience and Company, the true and accurate copy of which has been delivered to DRI and NovaMedica.

 

1.49                         Licensed IP ” means all Company IP Controlled by Company other than by ownership or assignment and that is licensed or sublicensed or to be licensed or sublicensed by Company to Transferee, including Company Improvement Know-How, pursuant to this Agreement, other than IP subject to the License Agreement.  The Licensed IP as of the date of this Agreement is as indicated in Schedule 1.2 attached to this Agreement.

 

1.50                         “Losses” shall have the meaning as set forth in Section 10.1, below.

 

1.51                        Manufacture ” or “ Manufacturing ” shall mean all activities related to the manufacturing of the Compound or a Covered Product, or any ingredient thereof, including but not limited to test method development and stability testing, formulation, process development, manufacturing scale-up, manufacturing quality assurance/quality control development, quality control testing (including in-process release and stability testing), packaging, release of product or any component or ingredient thereof, quality assurance activities related to manufacturing and release of product, and regulatory activities related to all of the foregoing.

 

1.52                         “Materials” means chemical materials.

 

1.53                         “NDA” means a New Drug Application filed pursuant to the requirements of the FDA, a Biologics License Application filed pursuant to the requirements of the FDA, and any equivalent application filed in any country outside of the Territory, together, in each case, with all additions, deletions, or supplements thereto.

 

1.54                         “NovaMedica” refers to that certain entity incorporated in Russia as NovaMedica LLC, a limited liability company organized under the laws of the Russian Federation with an address 107113, bldg. 38, Sokolnichesky Val Street, Moscow, Russian Federation.

 

1.55                         Out-of-Pocket Expenses ” means documented reasonable expenses actually paid by Company to any Third Party that is either (i) not an Affiliate of Company, or (ii) is an Affiliate of Company where such payment is limited to reimbursing such Affiliate for expenses actually paid by such Affiliate to a Third Party that is not, in turn, an Affiliate.

 

1.56                         “Patent Right” means: (a) an issued or granted patent, including any extension, supplemental protection certificate, registration, confirmation, reissue, reexamination, extension, or renewal thereof; (b) a pending patent application, including any continuation, request for continued examination, divisional, continuation-in-part, substitute, or provisional application thereof; (c) all pending or issued counterparts or foreign equivalents of any of the foregoing; or (d) a patent application in preparation.

 

1.57                         “Permitted Transferee” means an assignee, licensee, or sublicensee of a Transferee (as permitted by Section 2.3, below) of any the rights assigned to or licensed by Company to the Transferee under Section 2.1 below, pursuant to a written instrument meeting the requirements of this Agreement, including but not limited to Sections 2.1(d), 2.3, 2.5 and 9.4 hereof.

 

8



 

1.58                         “Person” means any natural person, corporation, limited liability company, firm, business trust, joint venture, association, organization, company, partnership, or other business entity, or any government or agency or political subdivision thereof.

 

1.59                         “Pharmacovigilance Agreement” refers to that form of agreement set forth in Schedule 6 hereto.

 

1.60                         Prosecution and Maintenance ” or “ Prosecute and Maintain ” means, with regard to a Patent Right, the preparing, filing, prosecuting, and maintenance of a patent or patent application, as well as re-examinations, reissues, requests for patent term extensions, and the like, together with the conduct of interferences, the initiation and defense of oppositions and other similar proceedings with respect to the particular patent or patent application.

 

1.61                         Purdue Neuroscience ” means Purdue Neuroscience Company, a partnership formed under the laws of the State of Delaware.

 

1.62                         “Regulatory Approval” means, with respect to a particular Covered Product, any and all approvals, licenses, registrations, or authorizations of a relevant Regulatory Authority (including Price Approvals) necessary for the Development, Manufacture and/or Commercialization of such Covered Product in a particular country or jurisdiction.  For the avoidance of doubt, Regulatory Approval in the United States shall be deemed to occur upon approval of the applicable NDA (as defined above) in the United States, and shall not be construed to require a determination or approval of reimbursements of any type.

 

1.63                         “Regulatory Authority” means (a) the FDA, (b) the EMA, (c) any successor or equivalent of the foregoing; or (d) any regulatory body with regulatory authority or oversight over pharmaceutical or biotechnology products in any other jurisdiction anywhere in the world, or whose review or approval is necessary for the Development, Manufacture and/or Commercialization of a Covered Product in a particular country or jurisdiction in the Territory.

 

1.64                         RMI ” shall have the meaning set forth in the Recitals section.

 

1.65                         “Rospatent” shall have the meaning set forth in Section 2.3(b), below.

 

1.66                         Second Closing of the Investment Transaction ” means any subsequent Closing under the Stock Purchase Agreement, which is referenced in the “Recitals,” above.

 

1.67                         “Sublicense Agreement” refers to that certain Sublicense Agreement in form and substance mutually satisfactory to the Parties and approved by Purdue Neuroscience to be entered into by and between Company and NovaMedica as promptly as practicable after the written request of NovaMedica to Company, pursuant to which Company will sublicense to NovaMedica rights to certain Purdue Neuroscience know-how licensed to Company under the License Agreement in accordance with the terms and provisions this Agreement.

 

1.68                         “Supply Agreement” means an agreement to manufacture (or cause to be manufactured) and supply and sell the Compound and/or Covered Product(s) to NovaMedica or any Permitted Transferee for Development or Commercialization in the Territory, as set forth in Section 3.5, below.

 

1.69                         “Term” shall have the meaning set forth in Section 11.1, below.

 

1.70                         “Territory” means all countries listed in Schedule 2 hereto.

 

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1.71                        “Third Party” means any Person other than Company, Transferee a Permitted Transferee or an Affiliate of Company, Transferee or a Permitted Transferee.

 

1.72                         “Third Party Agreements” means the License Agreement, together with all other future agreements, if any, between Company and any Third Party pursuant to which the Company in-licenses rights under Intellectual Property rights owned or Controlled by a Third Party that are necessary or useful for Development or Commercialization of a Covered Product in the Territory in the Field.

 

1.73                         “Transfer ” has the meaning defined in Section 2.3(a), below.

 

1.74                         “Transferee ” has the meaning defined in the Recitals section of this Agreement.

 

1.75                         Transfer Registration ” has the meaning defined in Section 2.3(b), below.

 

1.76                         “Transferee Improvement Know-How” means an Improvement Controlled by a Transferee or a Permitted Transferee other than Transferee Improvement Patent Rights, whether patentable or not, that is necessary or useful for the use, Development or Commercialization of a Covered Product, or otherwise for the practice of the Assigned IP or Company Patent Rights, or any of them, in the Field.

 

1.77                         “Transferee Improvement Patent Rights” means any Patent Right(s) Controlled by a Transferee or a Permitted Transferee that claims an Improvement.

 

1.78                         Valid Claim ” means (a) a claim in the Territory of an issued and unexpired patent that has not lapsed or been revoked, abandoned, or held unenforceable or invalid by a final decision of a court or governmental or supra-governmental agency of competent jurisdiction, unappealable or unappealed within the time allowed for appeal, and which has not been disclaimed, denied or admitted to be invalid or unenforceable through reissue, reexamination or disclaimer or otherwise or (b) a claim in the Territory of a pending patent application that has not been abandoned or finally rejected without the possibility of appeal or refiling and that has been pending for less than seven (7) years from its priority date.

 

1.79                         Interpretation .  The captions and headings to this Agreement are for convenience only, and are to be of no force or effect in construing or interpreting any of the provisions of this Agreement.  Unless specified to the contrary, references to Articles, Sections, or Schedules mean the particular Articles, Sections or Schedules to this Agreement and references to this Agreement include all Schedules hereto.  Unless context otherwise clearly requires, whenever used in this Agreement:  (i) “include” or “including” shall be construed as if followed by the words “but not limited to” or “without limitation” or words of similar import; (ii) the word “or” shall be construed as the inclusive meaning identified with the phrase “and/or;” (iii) provisions that require that a Party or the Parties to “agree,” “consent” or “approve” or the like shall require that such agreement, consent, or approval be specific and in writing, whether by written agreement, letter, written approval of minutes or otherwise; and (iv) references to any specific Law or article, section, or other division thereof shall be deemed to include then-current amendments thereto or any replacement Law thereof.  This Agreement was prepared in the English language, which language shall govern the interpretation of, and any dispute regarding, the terms of this Agreement.

 

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ARTICLE 2
TRANSFER OF RIGHTS

 

2.1                                Transfer of Rights to Transferee.

 

(a)                                  Licensed IP .  Subject to the terms and conditions of this Agreement, Company hereby provides to Transferee an exclusive (even as to Company), fully paid up and royalty free license (except for the Fixed Payment), which shall be irrevocable except as set forth in Section 11 below, and including the right to grant and authorize sublicenses (subject to the provisions of the License Agreement) and other Third Party Agreement and Section 2.1(f), below under the Licensed IP to Develop and Commercialize Covered Products in and for the Field solely in the Territory.

 

(b)                                  Assigned IP Subject to the terms and conditions of this Agreement, Company hereby grants, assigns, and transfers to the Transferee, and the Transferee hereby accepts, all of Company’s right, title, and interest in and to the Assigned IP.  For clarity, Company’s obligation to assign shall be limited to only Company IP in the Field in the Territory; Company shall have no obligation to grant, assign, or transfer any right, title, or interest in any Company IP outside of the Territory or outside the Field.

 

Company shall assign the Assigned IP to the Transferee in accordance with Section 2.2, below.  Company shall assist the Transferee and any Permitted Transferee to evidence, record, and perfect the foregoing assignment in accordance with Section 2.2 of this Agreement below.

 

(c)                                   Non-Commercial Research and Development .  Unless expressly permitted by this Section 2.1(c), neither Transferee shall have (and neither Transferee shall transfer to any Permitted Transferee) any right or license to, and shall not, export, or assist with or participate in any way in the exportation of, any assigned, licensed, or sublicensed property, including the Compound or Covered Products, outside the Territory.  Notwithstanding the foregoing, nothing in this Agreement shall preclude Transferee or a Permitted Transferee from importing or exporting the Compound or Covered Products to Third Parties outside the Territory solely for non-clinical Development (i.e., Development that is not a Clinical Trial or that otherwise involves administration of the Compound or Covered Product to a human subject, including preclinical studies), but in each case only with the prior written permission of Company, which permission shall not be unreasonably refused, conditioned, delayed or withheld.  In the context of academic or university research supported by Transferee or a Permitted Transferee, it is agreed that such research shall be conducted pursuant to a written materials transfer agreement (“ MTA ”) (i) that specifically prescribes the non-clinical Development to be conducted; (ii) the Transferee or the Permitted Transferee provides only quantities of the Compound or Covered Product sufficient to conduct the research described in the corresponding MTA; (iii) the MTA provides that Company shall have an irrevocable, royalty-free, fully paid-up worldwide exclusive license, including the right to grant and authorize sublicenses, to any discovery, invention, or other technological advance that results from research using a Compound or a Covered Product, for any and all purposes outside the Territory; and (iv) Company (and the successors and assigns of Company) is designated in the MTA as an intended third party beneficiary having the right and authority to independently and without prior notice or permission, enforce all rights of Company pursuant to the applicable MTA.

 

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(d)                                  Rights in Improvements .

 

i.                                           Company Improvements .  During the Term, Company shall promptly inform Transferee in writing of any Improvement Controlled by Company, and any such Improvement, Company Improvement Patent Rights, and Company Improvement Know-How directly related to such Improvement in the Field and in the Territory shall then, if the Company has the right to do so, automatically be included within the Company IP and, if Company holds Company Improvement Patent Rights to the respective Improvement, Company shall take the action required by Section 2.2(c) below; otherwise, any Company Improvement Know- How Controlled by Company shall be Licensed IP under this Agreement.  Such transfer of Company Improvement Patent Rights and Company Improvement Know How shall require no additional payments by Transferee (or any Permitted Transferee) to Company beyond the payments set forth in Article 6 and the reimbursement of Out-of-Pocket Expenses pursuant to Section 2.2, below, except as expressly applicable under the Sublicense Agreement or any other Third Party Agreement to which the Transferee acquires a sublicense pursuant to Section 2.1(f) below, as to which, in each case, the Transferee shall be fully responsible for the payment of all fees, costs and royalties required thereunder with respect to the sublicense of rights and/or sale of Covered Products in the Territory.

 

ii.                                        Improvements by Transferee or Permitted Transferee .  During the Term the Transferee agrees to inform Company of any Improvement developed by Transferee and each Affiliate and Permitted Transferee, and, to the extent it has the right to do so, the Transferee hereby agrees to provide, or cause the respective Affiliate and/or Permitted Transferee to provide, to Company (or Company’s assignee or other successor) an exclusive, fully paid up, irrevocable, royalty-free license any and all Improvements Controlled by a Transferee and/or any Permitted Transferee solely for the purpose of Developing and/or Commercializing Covered Products anywhere outside the Territory.  Furthermore, each Transferee agrees that an agreement with or between each Permitted Transferee, or between Permitted Transferees, shall require that each Permitted Transferee grant to Company (and Company’s assignee or other successor) a royalty-free, fully paid up, irrevocable, exclusive (even as to Transferee and any and all Permitted Transferees) license in and to any and all Improvements Controlled by a Transferee and/or any Permitted Transferee, Transferee Improvement Patent Rights, and Transferee Improvement Know-How anywhere outside of the Territory, with the exclusive right to sublicense or assign in any part of the world outside of the Territory.

 

(e)                                   Non-competition Covenant .  As this Agreement conveys exclusive rights to the Transferee to the Assigned IP and to use Licensed IP for the Development and Commercialization of Covered Products in the Field in the Territory, it is understood and agreed that during any unexpired or non-terminated term of the licenses and sublicenses granted under this Agreement only the Transferee and Permitted Transferees will be permitted to Develop and Commercialize Covered Products in the Field in the Territory, and that, during any unexpired or non-terminated term of the licenses and sublicenses granted under this Agreement, Company will not directly or indirectly use any of the Assigned IP or Licensed IP to Develop or Commercialize any Covered Products in the Field in the Territory, excepting only as is expressly authorized by a written authorization or agreement signed by the Transferee. The Company (its Affiliates, licensees or sublicenses outside the Territory, successors and assignees) will not prevent, directly or indirectly the Transferee and Permitted

 

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Transferees from Development and Commercialization of the Covered Product or Compound in the Field and in the Territory.  Further, to enable the Transferee to realize the intended benefits of this Agreement, Company will not engage, directly or indirectly, in any competition within the Territory with the Development or Commercialization of any Covered Product ( “non-competition covenant” ).  After a Change of Control of Company, the Acquirer of Company and any of the Acquirer’s Affiliates shall be bound by this non-competition covenant; provided however that the foregoing non-competition covenant shall not prohibit, limit or restrict such Acquirer or any of the Acquirer’s Affiliates from using, developing, manufacturing, having manufactured, marketing, selling or otherwise commercializing in the Territory any product that is not a Covered Product.

 

Furthermore, for the avoidance of doubt and to fully realize the territorial restrictions intended by this Agreement, each Transferee agrees (and agrees on behalf of itself and all Permitted Transferees and Affiliates, which will also be bound by this non-competition covenant) that neither Transferee nor any Permitted Transferee(s) will engage, directly or indirectly, in any competition outside the Territory with any of the Covered Products.  In the event NovaMedica is acquired by a Third Party, said Acquirer and its Affiliates shall be bound by this non-competition covenant.

 

(f)                                    Third Party Agreements .

 

i.                                           If, any time during the Term, Company holds or acquires any Third Party IP under any agreement other than the Sublicense Agreement or under the License Agreement, and such IP includes Valid Claims or other IP rights in the Territory, the Company shall use Commercially Reasonable Efforts to obtain any consents or approvals necessary or required to transfer such IP rights to Transferee for use in the Territory.  If Company obtains such required consents and approvals, Company shall promptly notify the Transferee to that effect, together with notification of any applicable pass-through fees, royalties and other payments, and the Transferee may, in its sole discretion, provide written confirmation to Company that the Transferee wishes such Third Party IP to be included in the Licensed IP.  Effective upon such confirmation, such Licensed IP shall be sublicensed by Company to the Transferee pursuant to this Agreement and the Transferee shall be responsible for all pass-through fees, royalties and other pass-through consideration in connection with such Third Party IP.  No sublicense shall be effective if Transferee does not provide such confirmation.

 

ii.                                        It is understood and agreed that with respect to any Third Party Agreements under which Company has less than fully exclusive, worldwide rights (e.g., co-exclusive, non-exclusive, limited territorial, and/or otherwise restricted rights), the rights provided in Section 2.2(g) above, shall be limited to the scope of those rights in the Field and in the Territory that Company and/or its Affiliates Controls and has the right to provide to Transferee.

 

iii.                                     In the event that Company is relieved in whole or in part of any obligation under any or all of the Third Party Agreements for any reason, the Transferee shall automatically be relieved of its obligation to Company under the applicable sublicense agreement in the Territory to the same extent as Company (or its successor or any affiliate of its successor under common control of such successor) is relieved of its obligation(s) under the corresponding Third Party Agreement(s).  Company (or its successor or any affiliate of its successor under common control of

 

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such successor) shall as soon as possible notify the Transferee in writing about such relief.

 

iv.                                    Company shall promptly notify in writing the Transferee of any notice of default under, or termination or amendment of, the License Agreement or any other Third Party Agreement to which the Transferee obtains rights under Section 2.1(f).  Company shall not take any action that would lead to the amendment of any Transferee obligations or rights or termination of the License Agreement or any other Third Party Agreements to which the Transferee obtains rights pursuant to Section 2.1(f), without first obtaining Transferee’s explicit prior written consent.

 

v.                                       If after the Effective Date of this Agreement the Company agrees to any amendment of the Sublicense Agreement or any other Third Party Agreement that increases any obligations of the Transferee under the Sublicense Agreement and any other Third Party Agreement , the Transferee’s obligations under such amendment will apply only to the extent of Transferee obligation under the pre-amended Sublicense Agreement and other Third Party Agreement, and the Company will bear any increase in such obligations due to such amendment.

 

2.2                                Registration of Transfers in the Territory.

 

(a)                                  Each of DRI and NovaMedica shall take all actions required of it, and Company shall take all actions reasonably requested of it by the respective Transferee, to ensure that the assignment of the Assigned IP to DRI and from DRI to NovaMedica (collectively, the “ Transfers ”) are approved, registered, recorded, or noticed with the applicable Governmental Bodies in each country in the Territory where such approval, registration, recordation, or notice is required, and that all other actions required under applicable Laws are taken to ensure that such Transfers are fully effective and enforceable.  The Transferee and Company shall each use Commercially Reasonable Efforts to ensure that such actions are completed as soon as practicable after the date of this Agreement.  Specifically, DRI and Company shall use their respective Commercially Reasonable Efforts to complete the initial Transfers of the Assigned IP within ninety (90) calendar days of the Effective Date of this Agreement.  Company as soon as practicable after the Effective Date of this Agreement or upon the Transferee’s reasonable request shall file applications to issue and register Company Patents with Government Bodies in the Territory and immediately thereafter assign such applications to Transferee.

 

(b)                                  Without limiting the foregoing, Company and Transferee shall submit an application for registration of each Transfer to the Russian Federation with the Russian Federal Service for Intellectual Property, Patents and Trademarks (“ Rospatent ”) (with respect to any Company Patent Rights requiring such registration under applicable Russian Law) and similar Governmental Bodies in other countries in the Territory (with respect to any Company Patent Rights requiring such registration under applicable Laws of such countries) (collectively, the “ Transfer Registrations ”) as soon as practicable after the Effective Date of this Agreement and thereafter during the Term, and shall use all reasonable efforts to ensure that such registration is completed as soon as practicable.  The Transferee shall provide such assistance as Company may reasonably require in completing such Transfer Registration.

 

(c)                                   Company shall provide to the Transferee all such assistance as the Transferee shall reasonably request in connection with any subsequent Transfer of Company IP to the

 

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Transferee as a Permitted Transferee, including but not limited to evidence, record, and perfect the foregoing assignment and to apply for and from time to time enforce, maintain and defend the assigned rights, including by entering into one or more assignment of Patent Rights agreements, to be registered with applicable Governmental Bodies in the Territory.  Company shall, upon the Transferee’s request, promptly provide Transferee with all information and signs all documents reasonably requested in order to complete any such subsequent Transfer or Transfer Registration of any subsequent assignment, license, or sublicense of rights in Company IP.

 

(d)                                  DRI or NovaMedica, as applicable, shall reimburse Company promptly for all Out-of-Pocket Expenses incurred by Company in performing its obligations under this Section 2.2.

 

(e)                                   Survival of Sublicense .  In the event that this Agreement is terminated by the Transferee for convenience pursuant to Section 11.2, below, subject to the Company’s prior written consent, which may be withheld by Company in its sole discretion, a sublicense of any Licensed IP granted by the Transferee to a Permitted Transferee shall, at the written election of such Permitted Transferee that is communicated to Company within thirty (30) days after the effective date of the termination of this Agreement, survive such termination, provided that such Permitted Transferee is at the time in full compliance with the terms of the applicable sublicense agreement. In such event, Company shall enter into a license agreement with such Permitted Transferee to grant a license under Company IP (a “ Direct License ”) directly to such Permitted Transferee.  Subject in all respects to the prior written consent of Company, each Direct License shall be subject to the same terms and conditions as those in such sublicense agreement, including but not limited to scope, sublicense territory, duration of sublicense grant, financial and diligence obligations, in each case to the extent that such sublicense agreement provisions are not in conflict with the terms of this Agreement or applicable federal, state or local laws or regulations.  In no event shall Company (a) be liable to Permitted Transferee for any actual or alleged breach of such sublicense agreement by the Transferee or (b) have any obligations to such Permitted Transferee other than Company’s obligations to the Transferee as set forth herein.

 

2.3                                Transfers by the Transferee .  The Transferee shall have the right to grant and authorize granting rights under this Agreement to Permitted Transferees, subject to the satisfaction in full of the following conditions:

 

(a)                                  The Transferee shall, and shall require any Permitted Transferee to, promptly (and in any event no later than thirty (30) days) inform Company of the transfer or granting of any assignment, license, or sublicense of any portion of the Company IP in the Field in the Territory to any Permitted Transferee, and together with such information shall provide Company a true and complete copy of the applicable transfer agreement, provided that the Transferee (or a Permitted Transferee, as the case may be) shall have the right to redact from such copies portions thereof that are unrelated to the Company IP and the Covered Products or are not necessary for Company to verify the consistency of the particular transfer, license, or sublicense agreement with the terms and conditions of this Agreement.

 

(b)                                  Each such transfer agreement shall be in writing and shall be expressly subject to, and require full compliance with, the material terms and provisions of, this Agreement.

 

(c)                                   Each transfer, license or provision of rights by the Transferee or a Permitted Transferee with respect to the rights granted under the Agreement shall be subordinate to, consistent with, and subject to the terms and conditions of this Agreement (and, in the case of such rights

 

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subject to any Third Party Agreements, the terms and conditions of such Third Party Agreements).

 

(d)                                  Unless expressly stated in this Agreement, the transfer or other provision of rights to another Person by the Transferee of any of the rights provided to the Transferee by Company under this Agreement, the Sublicense Agreement or the sublicense of any Other Third Party Agreement shall not relieve the Transferee of any of its obligations hereunder, except for the assignment of such rights to the Third Party in whole or in part if such assignment to the Transferee’s assignee was approved in writing by the Company.

 

2.4                                Retained Rights; No Implied Rights .  Company expressly retains all rights with respect to the Development, Manufacture, and Commercialization of all Covered Products in all fields and for all uses and Indications in all countries and other jurisdictions and political subdivisions outside of the Territory, and under this Agreement does not grant, assign, or otherwise convey any right, title, or interest to the Transferee with respect to the foregoing except to the extent expressly provided in this Agreement or expressly agreed in writing by Company.  Each Party acknowledges that the rights and licenses granted under this Article 2 and elsewhere in this Agreement are limited to the scope, including Field and Territory, expressly granted and all other requirements of this Agreement.

 

2.5                                Territorial Limitation.

 

(a)                                  For the avoidance of doubt, it is understood and agreed that neither a Transferee nor any Permitted Transferee shall have any right to, and shall not under any circumstances, to Develop or Commercialize the Compound or any Covered Product outside the Territory, and neither Company nor any assignees, licensees and sublicensees, other than the Transferee, ( “Company’s Transferees” ) shall have any right to, and shall not under any circumstances, to Develop or Commercialize the Compound and Covered Product in the Field and in the Territory.

 

(b)                                  To ensure that neither the Compound or any Covered Product is exported from the Territory for Commercialization and Development, the Transferee shall use, and shall require each Permitted Transferee to use, its Commercially Reasonable Efforts to diligently monitor Development and Commercialization activities throughout the Territory in respect of the Covered Products.  To ensure that neither the Compound nor any Covered Product is imported to the Territory for Commercialization and Development other than as contemplated by this Agreement, Company shall use Commercially Reasonable Efforts to diligently monitor Development and Commercialization activities outside the Territory in respect of the Covered Products.  Such monitoring activities shall include the generation and maintenance of written records in sufficient detail so as to allow the production, distribution, and final disposition of units of Covered Products, and research, development and manufacture involving Covered Products and/or the Compound, to be accurately monitored, tracked, and logged.  Each Transferee and Company shall keep and retain, and each Transferee shall require each Permitted Transferee to keep and retain, such written records and all supporting data during the Term.

 

(c)                                   In the event Company, a Transferee, or a Permitted Transferee becomes aware of the export or import for Development or Commercialization from or into the Territory of the Covered Products, the Party becoming aware of such exportation or importation shall so inform the other Party in writing, including the provision of any supporting documentation or other information relating to such exportation .  The Transferee shall require each Permitted Transferee by contract to promptly and concurrently inform Company and the Transferee in

 

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the event the Permitted Transferee becomes aware of the export from the Territory or the import into the Territory of the Covered Products for Development or Commercialization, including the provision of any supporting documentation or other information relating to such exportation or importation.  Promptly after receipt of such information, but in no event later than ten (10) business days, an executive officer of each of Company and the Transferee (and, if applicable, a Permitted Transferee) shall confer in person or by telephone with regard to such exportation or importation and how to abate it to the reasonable satisfaction of Company and the Transferee.  In the event Company reasonably suspects based on competent evidence that a Transferee or a Permitted Transferee has violated this Section 2.5, after the chief executive officers of Company and Transferee (and, if appropriate, a particular Permitted Transferee) have conferred, Company (or its successor) shall have the right, upon ten (10) business days after advance notice to the Transferee and/or the applicable Permitted Transferee(s), as the case may be, to request from the Transferee and/or the applicable Permitted Transferee(s), whereupon the Transferee and/or the applicable Permitted Transferee(s), as the case may be, shall promptly furnish to Company all information and documents that are useful for Company’s research and inspection, including those documents described in Section 2.5(b), above, for the purpose of verifying compliance with the territorial limitations on the rights granted under this Agreement. In the event Transferee reasonably suspects based on competent evidence that a Company or a Company’s Transferee has violated Section 2.5(a), above, after the chief executive officers of Company and Transferee (and, if appropriate, a particular Permitted Transferee or Company’s Transferee) have conferred, Transferee (or its successor) shall have the right, upon ten (10) Business days after advance notice to the Company and/or the applicable Company Transferee(s), as the case may be, to request from the Company and/or the applicable Company Transferee(s) all information and documents, whereupon the Company and/or the applicable Company Transferee(s), as the case may be, shall promptly furnish to Transferee and Permitted Transferee(s) all information and documents that are useful for Company’s research and inspection, including those documents described in Section 2.6(b), above, for the purpose of verifying compliance with the territorial limitations on the rights granted under this Agreement.

 

ARTICLE 3
PRODUCT DEVELOPMENT AND COMMERCIALIZATION

 

3.1                                Ancillary Agreements .  Company and Transferee shall enter into the Sublicense Agreement, Clinical Development and Collaboration Agreement, Supply Agreements for clinical and commercial supplies of Covered Products, and Pharmacovigilance Agreement, as provided herein.  The Parties agree to enter into the Sublicense Agreement not later than sixty (60) days after the written request of the Transferee.

 

3.2                                Development and Commercialization in the Territory .  The Transferee, either itself or through one or more Permitted Transferees operating within the Territory, shall have the sole authority and the exclusive right to Develop and Commercialize any and all Covered Products in the Field in the Territory, including the sole and exclusive right to conduct all Clinical Trials and non-clinical studies appropriate to obtain Regulatory Approvals for the Covered Product(s) in the Territory in one or more Indications within the Field, and pursuant to the terms of the Clinical Development and Collaboration Agreement that shall be concluded by the Parties not later than 60 (sixty) calendar days from the Effective Date of this Agreement.

 

3.3                                Materials Transfer Requests .  The Transferee shall have the right, any time prior to the submission of the first NDA in the Territory in respect of a Covered Product, to request from Company in writing

 

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(the “Material Transfer Request”) that Company transfer Company Materials to Transferee in the Territory for Transferee’s reasonable needs.  Subject to reasonable availability of Company Materials, within thirty (30) calendar days of after the date of the Material Transfer Request, the Company shall transfer Company Materials requested by the Transferee subject to the payment to Company of all Out-of-Pocket Expenses incurred by Company in connection with the provision and transfer of the Company Materials to Transferee or information regarding obtaining such Material supply or source from a Third Party.  Company shall thereafter deliver the Company Materials, or information regarding Material supply or source, in accordance the terms of the Technology Transfer Outline attached as Schedule 3 to this Agreement.

 

3.4                                Knowledge Transfer Procedures.

 

(a)                                  Company shall within thirty (30) Business Days from the Effective Date of this Agreement, transfer to the Transferee such Company Know-How, including any preclinical data, clinical data, assays and associated materials, protocols, procedures, and any other information in Company’s Control, as is reasonably necessary or useful to continue or initiate Development and Commercialization of a Covered Products in the Field in the Territory , including by providing electronic copies of any tangible embodiments thereof.  The Transferee shall have a right from time to time request from the Company such additional information as is reasonably necessary or useful to continue or initiate Development and Commercialization of a Covered Products in the Field in the Territory and, in accordance with the terms and conditions of the Clinical Development and Collaboration Agreement, Company shall deliver such information and documents to Transferee as soon as reasonably practicable Transferee shall reimburse Company for all Out-of-Pocket Expenses in connection with the foregoing.

 

(b)                                  In the event that Transferee or a Permitted Transferee desires to obtain support for the Development or Commercialization of the Compound or a Covered Product, during the Transfer Period, Company agrees, upon reasonable notice and pre-arrangement, to make its employees that are knowledgeable of Covered Product (or the Compound), its properties, and functions, reasonably available via telephone and electronic communications to the Transferee and appropriate Permitted Transferees for scientific and technical explanations, advice, and support, that may reasonably be requested by the Transferee, relating to the Development and registration of a Covered Product (and/or such Compound) (the foregoing activities being referred to as “ Development Support ” or “ Commercialization Support ”) . The Transferee shall reimburse Company for the reasonable costs of making its personnel available to provide such support as well as Company’s Out-of-Pocket Expenses incurred in providing the Development and Commercialization Support, subject to Company providing documented evidence of such Out-of-Pocket Expenses having been incurred and the time incurred by Company personnel in providing such support.

 

(c)                                   In the event that Transferee or Permitted Transferee wishes to utilize the personnel of Company for support in connection with training, set-up, or other assistance in establishing Transferee or Permitted Transferee or an in-Territory manufacturer’s procedures, facility and capabilities for the Manufacture or supply of Covered Products for the Territory, the Company shall promptly upon Transferee or Permitted Transferee request shall assist and support the Transferee and Permitted Transferee in establishing Manufacturing in the Territory.  Transferee or Permitted Transferee shall reimburse the Company for the reasonable costs of making its personnel available to provide such assistance as well as Company’s Out-of-Pocket Expenses, subject to Company providing documented evidence of

 

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such Out-of-Pocket Expenses having been incurred and the time incurred by Company personnel in providing such assistance.

 

3.5                                Manufacturing and Supply.

 

(a)                                  During the Term and thereafter, Company shall have no right to Manufacture the Covered Products (or the Compound) in the Territory.

 

(b)                                  Transferee shall have the exclusive right within the Territory to Manufacture the Covered Products (and any corresponding Compound) solely for Development and Commercialization in the Territory within the Field, itself or through one or more Affiliates or Permitted Transferees, or other Third Parties located in the Territory selected by Transferee.

 

(c)                                   Until the First Commercial Sale of a Covered Product within the Territory, Transferee and any Permitted Transferee shall have the right to purchase supplies of Compound and/or Covered Product from Company as are reasonably available to Company and as are reasonable and necessary to conduct Clinical Trials of Covered Product in the Territory within the Field, provided that any such purchase does not reasonably interfere with Company having sufficient supplies of Compound and/or Covered Products on hand for use in Development (including the conduct of Clinical Trials) or Commercialization outside of the Territory .  Such purchases will be made on a cost-plus basis, not to exceed [XXXXXXXXX] above Company’s reasonable documented cost, to be negotiated in good faith by the Parties The Parties shall enter into the Supply Agreement to supply Compound and/or Covered Product for Development in the Territory within sixty (60) calendar days from the Transferee’s request Delivery terms specified in the Supply Agreement shall be construed in accordance with Incoterms 2010.

 

(d)                                  At least thirty six (36) months prior to the planned First Commercial Sale by the Transferee of a Covered Product in the Territory, the Parties shall negotiate in good faith a Supply Agreement pursuant to which Company, itself or through a Third Party contract manufacturer authorized by Company to manufacture and supply the Covered Products, shall supply needed quantities of Covered Product to Transferee and Permitted Transferees solely for Commercialization of Covered Products in the Field in the Territory, on commercially fair and reasonable terms .  Such Supply Agreement negotiations shall be in good faith and on an arm’s length basis Such purchases will be made on a cost-plus basis, not to exceed [XXXXXXXXX]  above Company’s reasonable documented cost, to be negotiated in good faith by the Parties In the event the Parties are unable to agree on pricing under the Supply Agreement, they shall engage an internationally recognized consulting firm reasonably acceptable to both Parties to perform an analysis to determine final pricing under the Supply Agreement, which decision shall be binding upon the Parties Delivery terms specified in the Supply Agreement shall be construed in accordance with Incoterms 2010.

 

(e)                                   In the event that (i) the parties are unable to reach a reasonably acceptable Supply Agreement pursuant to Section 3 .5(c) or 3.5(d) of this Agreement, or (ii) Company is unable to supply

 


[XXXXXXXXX]

 

REPRESENTS CONFIDENTIAL MATERIAL WHICH HAS BEEN REDACTED AND FILED SEPARATELY WITH THE COMMISSION PURSUANT TO A REQUEST FOR CONFIDENTIAL TREATMENT IN ACCORDANCE WITH RULE 406 UNDER THE SECURITIES ACT OF 1933, AS AMENDED. A COMPLETE VERSION OF THIS SCHEDULE HAS BEEN FILED SEPARATELY WITH THE SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION.

 

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the Compound or Covered Products to the Transferee under a Supply Agreement entered into pursuant to Section 3.5(c) or 3.5(d) of this Agreement for a period of at least sixty (60) calendar days after the specified delivery date and Company thereafter fails to cure such failure within sixty (60) days after written notice from the Transferee, Company shall cooperate with the Transferee to identify a mutually acceptable alternative source of supply and shall provide the necessary consents to allow such alternative source of supply to provide the needed quantities of the Compound and/or the Covered Products to NovaMedica.  The terms of the alternative source of supply would be negotiated directly by the Transferee with the supplier.

 

ARTICLE 4
REGULATORY MATTERS

 

4.1                                Regulatory Filings .  The Transferee shall solely own and maintain all regulatory filings and Regulatory Approvals for the Covered Products in the Territory.  It is understood and agreed that nothing herein shall preclude the Transferee or any Permitted Transferee, from referencing any IND or NDA Controlled by Company (or a Company Affiliate, successor, or licensee outside of the Territory) in respect of a Covered Product Developed or Commercialized outside of the Territory, or using data therein in support of regulatory filings for Covered Products in the Territory, or from authorizing Third Parties to do so.  Company shall provide reasonable assistance to Transferee, and its Permitted Transferees, in the preparation of and filing of any IND, IND amendment, or NDA with respect to any Covered Product for use in any Indication in the Territory.  Such assistance shall include, in particular, Company providing the Transferee with a complete electronic copies (including serial submissions) of all relevant documentation submitted to the FDA or EMA in respect of any Clinical Trial for any Covered Product that would be necessary or useful to the Transferee in preparing its own IND for a particular Covered Product for use in the Territory, and, to the extent necessary or useful, to allow the Transferee to cross-reference any such IND, IND amendment, or NDA held by Company (or its Affiliate, successor, or licensee outside of the Territory).  The Transferee shall provide, and shall require any Permitted Transferee to provide, Company with complete electronic copies of filings (including serial submissions) submitted by the Transferee and all Permitted Transferees to a Regulatory Authority in the Territory in respect of Development or Commercialization of any Covered Product, and Company shall have the right to use the data generated by the Transferee (and its and Permitted Transferees) in support of Development and Commercialization (including use in regulatory filings) of Covered Products for any Indication outside of the Territory.  The Transferee shall reimburse Company for Company’s Out-of-Pocket Expenses providing such documents and information.

 

4.2                                Communications with Authorities .  The Transferee (or a Permitted Transferee) shall be responsible for and act as the sole point of contact for communications with Regulatory Authorities in the Territory in connection with the Development and Commercialization of Covered Products in the Territory.  To the extent Company or the Transferee (or a Permitted Transferee) receives any written or oral communication from any Regulatory Authority relating to a Covered Product in the Field, as soon as reasonably practicable the Party receiving such communication shall notify the other Party thereof, which notice shall include a copy of any written communication received or, if applicable, complete and accurate minutes of such oral communication.

 

4.3                                English Language Requirement .  Subject to the payment by Company to the Transferee or a Permitted Transferee, as applicable, of its reasonable Out-of-Pocket Expenses with respect to the English language translation hereunder that may be provided by a contract research organization, the Transferee shall provide to Company, and shall require any Permitted Transferee to provide to Company, English language translations of any and all documents delivered in accordance with

 

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Section 4.1 or 4.2, above, that are not otherwise provided in English for use by some or all members of the Joint Steering Committee, Joint Development Committee, and/or Joint Development Committee, or either of the Parties pursuant to the Clinical Development and Collaboration Agreement.  In the event that the Transferee or a Permitted Transferee uses a third party clinical research organization to provide the documents delivered in accordance with Section 4.1 and 4.2, above, and to provide the English translation required by this Section 4.3, Company shall reimburse Transferee or a Permitted Transferee, as the case may be, for the reasonable costs of such translation billed on an hourly basis and not on a cost-per-page or cost-per-word basis.

 

4.4                                Pharmacovigilance .  The Parties agree, within four (4) weeks after the date of the first Material Transfer Request or such other time-frame as shall be approved by the JDC, to conclude a detailed Pharmacovigilance Agreement in a form substantially as contemplated by Schedule 6 hereof, or such other form as is mutually satisfactory to the Parties.  Such Pharmacovigilance Agreement shall provide for the exchange by the Parties of any information of which a Party becomes aware in the Territory concerning any side effect, injury, toxicity, or sensitivity reaction, or any unexpected incident, in or involving a research patient or subject or, in the case of non-clinical studies, an animal in a toxicology study, and the seriousness thereof, whether or not determined to be attributable to any Covered Product or Compound, including any such information received by either Party from a Third Party.  It is understood that each of Company and its Affiliates and the Transferee and its Permitted Transferees shall have the right to disclose such information as reasonably necessary to comply with Regulatory Authorities within its respective territory with respect to its filings and activities related to Compounds and Covered Products.

 

ARTICLE 5
GOVERNANCE AND SUPPORT ENGAGEMENTS

 

5.1                                Clinical Development and Collaboration Agreement .  The Parties understand that assistance from Company will be needed and accepted in connection with the Development and Commercialization of the Compound and Covered Products in the Field in the Territory.  With regard to Development, the Parties agree that within ninety (90) calendar days after the Effective Date (or such longer period as the Parties may agree in writing), the Transferee and Company will enter into a mutually acceptable “Clinical Development and Collaboration Agreement” regarding Development of the Compound and Covered Product(s) in the Territory.

 

5.2                                Clinical Trials and Non-Clinical Studies .  The Clinical Development and Collaboration Agreement shall, among other things, provide that all Clinical Trials necessary to register a Covered Product for any Indication in the Field in any country or jurisdiction within the Territory shall be the sole obligation and responsibility of the Transferee.  Transferee and any Permitted Transferee shall be entitled at no cost to access, use, and reference the data and results from any Company Clinical Trial of a Covered Product in any Indication outside of the Territory for their own Regulatory Approval, Development, and Commercialization purposes in the Field in the Territory.  Company shall be entitled at no cost to access, use, and reference the data and results from any Transferee or Permitted Transferee Clinical Trial of a Covered Product in any Indication in the Territory or otherwise under the Clinical Development and Collaboration Agreement for the Company’s own regulatory approval, development, and commercialization purposes outside of the Territory.

 

5.3                                Development and Commercialization .  The Clinical Development and Collaboration Agreement shall, among other things, require that Company and the Transferee establish a Joint Steering Committee (“Joint Steering Committee” or “JSC”) to oversee Development of Covered Products until the First Commercial Sale of a Covered Product in the Territory, unless otherwise agreed in writing by Company and the Transferee.  The JSC will be comprised of an equal number of members

 

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appointed by the Transferee and by Company.  The JSC shall oversee the Development of Covered Products in the Field in the Territory, and shall plan, implement, and oversee activities relating thereto, including the preparation and implementation of a development plan.  All JSC decisions will be made by unanimous vote, with the JSC representatives of Company collectively having one vote and the JSC representatives of Transferee collectively having one vote.  If the JSC is unable to decide or resolve unanimously any matter properly presented to it for action, then such matter shall be resolved as provided in the definitive Clinical Development and Collaboration Agreement.

 

The Clinical Development and Collaboration Agreement shall, among other things, require that for so long as the Transferee (and/or one or more Permitted Transferees) is Developing a Covered Product(s) for use in the Field in the Territory, the day-to-day Development work shall be conducted under the direction of the Joint Development Committee (“ Joint Development Committee ” or “ JDC ”) comprised of an equal number of representatives from Transferee and Company.  All JDC decisions will be made by unanimous vote.  If the JDC is unable to decide or resolve any matter properly presented to it for action, then the decision of Company shall be final and shall be in compliance with the terms and conditions of this Agreement, the Clinical Development and Collaboration Agreement and Law.  The JDC will be responsible for coordinating amendments to any plan for Development in respect of a Covered Product for use in the Field in the Territory for review and approval by the JSC, for overseeing such Development work, and for making operational decisions related to such Development work.  Unless otherwise agreed in writing by the Transferee and Company, until the First Commercial Sale of a Covered Product in the Territory, the JDC will meet on a regular basis, at such times and in such manner as provided in Clinical Development and Collaboration Agreement.

 

The Clinical Development and Collaboration Agreement shall, among other things, require that for so long as the Transferee (or a Permitted Transferee) is preparing to Commercialize a Covered Product(s) in the Territory, the day-to-day Commercialization preparation work shall be conducted under the direction of a Joint Commercialization Committee (“ Joint Commercialization Committee ” or “ JCC ”) and supply chain audit procedures.  The JCC shall be comprised of an equal number of representatives from the Transferee and Company.  All JCC decisions will be made by unanimous vote.  If the JCC is unable to decide or resolve any matter properly presented to it for action, then the decision of the Transferee shall be final and in compliance with the terms and conditions of this Agreement and Law.  Prior to the First Commercial Sale of a Covered Product (or such longer period as the Parties may agree in writing), the JCC will be responsible for coordinating any amendments to the plan for Commercialization of Covered Product(s) in the Territory, for overseeing performance of the Commercialization program, and for making operational decisions related to that program.  Periodically, a member of the JCC for each party shall provide to the other party a reasonably detailed summary of the Commercialization activities conducted in the Territory.  The JCC will jointly prepare and provide to each Party on at least a Calendar Quarter basis a report, via e-mail, regarding the status of Commercialization activities hereunder.

 

ARTICLE 6
FINANCIAL PROVISIONS

 

6.1                                Consideration Payable by Transferee .  DRI shall pay Company the Fixed Payment, in the amount of One Hundred Thousand U.S. Dollars (US$100,000), in full consideration for all rights and licenses granted by Company pursuant hereto, and Company’s performance of all its obligations hereunder.

 

6.2                                Payment of Fixed Payment .  The Fixed Payment shall be paid by DRI to Company by wire transfer concurrently with or prior to the Initial Closing of the Investment Transaction.

 

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6.3                                Third Party Agreements .  Company shall maintain each Third Party Agreement at its own cost and expense, and shall continue to be responsible for making payments, if any, to each licensor in a timely manner and to the extent set forth in each of the respective Third Party Agreement, subject to the Transferee meeting its obligations to pay all license fees, royalties and other payments under each Third Party Agreement arising from or relating to the sublicense or transfer of rights thereunder to the Transferee and/or the Development or Commercialization of Covered Products in the Territory.  Any payment due by Company to a Third Party under a Third Party License Agreement shall be paid by the Transferee in a timely manner.  In the event that Company shall fail to make any payment when due under the Third Party License Agreement with respect to the activities of the Transferee or the Permitted Transferee and does not do so promptly (and in any event within fifteen (15) days) after receiving notice of such failure, Company shall so notify the Transferee and the Transferee shall thereafter have the right to make such payment directly to such Third Party on behalf of Company.  The Transferee shall promptly notify Company in writing of any such payment, and notwithstanding anything to the contrary in this Agreement.

 

6.4                                Taxes .  Company shall be responsible for the payment of any and all income taxes levied on account of royalties and other payments paid to Company by a Transferee or any Permitted Transferee, but not for any value added tax or similar tax.  If applicable Law requires that taxes be deducted and withheld from royalties or other payments paid pursuant to this Agreement, Transferee shall (a) deduct those taxes from the payment; (b) pay the taxes to the proper Governmental Body; (c) send evidence of the obligation together with proof of payment to Company within ninety (90) days following such payment; (d) remit to Company the net amount, after deductions or withholding made under this Section 6.4; and (e) cooperate with Company in any way reasonably requested by Company, to obtain available reductions, credits, or refunds of such taxes.

 

ARTICLE 7
INVENTIONS AND PATENTS

 

7.1                                Title to Inventions .  Except for the Company Patent Rights and the Company Improvement Patent Rights that shall be assigned by Company to the Transferee pursuant to Section 2.1(b), above, Company retains ownership of all Company Know-How, Company Materials, Company Patents, and other Company IP and Company Confidential Information in and outside of the Territory of or after the Effective Date, and Transferee retains ownership of all Patent Rights, Know-How, Materials, and Confidential Information owned by Transferee as of or after the Effective Date.

 

7.2                                Patent Prosecution and Maintenance .  Each Party shall have the right to control the Prosecution and Maintenance of Patent Rights such Party Controls at such Party’s expense in accordance with the provisions of appended Schedule 4 .

 

7.3                                Patent Enforcement and Defense .  Enforcement and defense of Company Patents and Joint Patents shall be governed by the provisions of appended Schedule 5 .

 

ARTICLE 8
CONFIDENTIALITY

 

8.1                                Confidentiality; Exceptions .  Except to the extent authorized by this Agreement or otherwise agreed in writing, the Parties agree that the receiving Party (the “ Receiving Party ”) shall keep confidential and shall not publish or otherwise disclose or use for any purpose other than as provided for in this Agreement Confidential Information in any form (written, oral, photographic, electronic, magnetic, or otherwise) which is disclosed to it by the other Party (the “ Disclosing Party ”) or otherwise received or accessed by a Receiving Party in the course of performing its obligations or exercising its

 

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rights under this Agreement, except to the extent that it can be established by the Receiving Party that such Confidential Information:

 

(a)                                  was in the lawful knowledge and possession of the Receiving Party prior to the time it was disclosed to, or learned by, the Receiving Party, or was otherwise developed independently by the Receiving Party, as evidenced by written records kept in the ordinary course of business, or other documentary proof of actual use by the Receiving Party;

 

(b)                                  was generally available to the public or otherwise part of the public domain at the time of its disclosure to the Receiving Party;

 

(c)                                   became generally available to the public or otherwise part of the public domain after its disclosure and other than through any act or omission of the Receiving Party in breach of this Agreement; or

 

(d)                                  was disclosed to the Receiving Party, other than under an obligation of confidentiality, by a Third Party who had no obligation to the Disclosing Party not to disclose such information to others .

 

8.2                                Authorized Disclosure .  Except as expressly provided otherwise in this Agreement, including but not limited to the restrictions set forth in Section 2.5 above, a Receiving Party may use and disclose Confidential Information of the Disclosing Party as follows:  (a) in connection with the performance of its obligations or exercise of rights granted or reserved in this Agreement (including the rights to Develop and Commercialize the Covered Products); or (b) to the extent such disclosure is reasonably necessary in filing or prosecuting patent, copyright and trademark applications, prosecuting or defending litigation, complying with applicable governmental regulations, obtaining regulatory approval, conducting Clinical Trials, Developing and/or Commercializing Covered Products, or otherwise required by Law; provided, however , that if a Receiving Party is required in litigation or by Law or regulation to make any such disclosure of a Disclosing Party’s Confidential Information it shall give reasonable advance notice to the Disclosing Party of such disclosure requirement and, except to the extent inappropriate in the case of patent applications, shall use its reasonable efforts to secure confidential treatment of such Confidential Information required to be disclosed; or (c) to the extent mutually agreed to in writing by the Parties; provided, however, that, in each of the above situations, the Receiving Party shall remain responsible for any failure by any Person who receives the Confidential Information from the Receiving Party pursuant to this Section 8.2 to treat such Confidential Information as required under this Section 8.2.

 

In addition, a Receiving Party may disclose Confidential Information of the Disclosing Party to (i) any of its Affiliates and Permitted Transferees, or in connection with due diligence investigations by or on behalf of a Third Party in connection with a potential license, collaboration, investment, merger, or acquisition with or by such Third Party, and (ii) in the case of Company, to Third Parties in connection with due diligence investigations by or on behalf of a Third Party in connection with a potential license, collaboration, investment or other financing, merger, or acquisition with or by such Third Party, provided in each of the foregoing cases that such Third Party that reasonably needs to have access to such Confidential Information agrees to be bound by reasonable terms of confidentiality and non-use at least as stringent as those set forth in this Article 8, to limit such disclosure to only personnel having a need to know such information, and to return or certify to the Receiving Party as to the destruction of such Confidential Information promptly after completing the due diligence investigation, negotiation, or transaction, as the case may be.

 

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8.3                                Disclosure of Agreement .  No Party shall issue any press release or other public disclosure regarding this Agreement or the Parties’ activities hereunder, or any results or data arising hereunder, except with all the other Party’s prior written consent.  Except to the extent required by Law or as otherwise permitted in accordance with this Section 8.3, neither Party shall make any public announcements concerning this Agreement or the subject matter hereof without the prior written consent of the other, which shall not be unreasonably withheld, conditioned, or delayed.  Notwithstanding the foregoing, to the extent information regarding this Agreement has already been publicly disclosed other than through any act or omission of a Party in breach of this Agreement, a Party may subsequently disclose the same information to the public without the consent of the other Party.  Each Party shall be permitted to disclose the terms of this Agreement, in each case under appropriate confidentiality provisions no less stringent than those of this Agreement, to any actual or potential acquirers, merger partners, financing sources, and professional advisors.

 

8.4                                Remedies .  Each Party shall be entitled to seek, in addition to any other right or remedy it may have, at law or in equity, a temporary or preliminary injunction, without the posting of any bond or other security, enjoining or restraining the other Party from any violation or threatened violation of this Article 8.

 

ARTICLE 9
REPRESENTATIONS, WARRANTIES, AND COVENANTS

 

9.1                                Representations and Warranties .  Each Party represents and warrants to the other Party that, as of the Effective Date:

 

(a)                                  such Party is duly organized and validly existing under the Laws of the jurisdiction of its incorporation or organization;

 

(b)                                  such Party has taken all actions necessary to authorize the execution and delivery of this Agreement and the performance of its obligations under this Agreement;

 

(c)                                   this Agreement is a legal and valid obligation of such Party, binding upon such Party, and enforceable against such Party in accordance with the terms of this Agreement;

 

(d)                                  the execution, delivery, and performance of this Agreement by such Party does not conflict with, breach, or create in any Third Party the right to accelerate, terminate, or modify any agreement or instrument to which such Party is a party or by which such Party is bound, and does not violate any Law of any Governmental Body having authority over such Party;

 

(e)                                   no consent by any Third Party or Governmental Body is required with respect to the execution and delivery of this Agreement by either Party or the consummation by either Party of the transactions contemplated hereby; and

 

(f)                                    such Party has all right, power, and authority to enter into and to perform its obligations under this Agreement .

 

9.2                                Additional Representations and Warranties of Company .  Company represents, warrants and covenants to Transferee that:

 

(a)                                  to Company’s knowledge, all of the Licensed IP and Assigned IP is valid, subsisting, and enforceable;

 

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(b)                                  the Assigned IP is not encumbered, with liens, mortgages, security interests or otherwise, and Company will not encumber, with liens, mortgages, security interest or otherwise, any Assigned IP;

 

(c)                                   the Licensed IP is not encumbered, with liens, mortgages, security interests or otherwise, and Company will not encumber, with liens, mortgages or security interests, any Licensed IP without prior written notification to the Transferee;

 

(d)                                  Company has not entered, and will not enter, into any contract or agreement that is inconsistent with or conflicts with the terms of this Agreement, nor has the Company taken or failed to take any action that might reasonably be expected to have the effect of waiving any rights granted or licensed to the Transferee under this Agreement;

 

(e)                                   Company has not entered into any agreement other than this Agreement that grants any interest in, or any right to use or exploit, any of the Assigned IP in the Territory otherwise than in favor of Transferee;

 

(f)                                    except for the Assigned IP and the Licensed IP, neither Company nor its Affiliates own or control any Intellectual Property that is necessary or useful for the Development and Commercialization of the Covered Products in the Field in the Territory;

 

(g)                                   except as contemplated by this Agreement and the Sublicense Agreement, the Company has not entered into any agreement that grants any interest in, or any right to use or exploit, any of the Assigned IP and Licensed IP, nor is Company is under any obligation to enter into such agreement or grant (whether or not contingent on any future event or state of affairs) any such rights;

 

(h)                                  the Company will not entered into any agreement other than this Agreement or the Assignment and Assumption Agreement that grants any interest in, or any right to use or exploit, any of Licensed IP in the Territory, nor is Company is under any obligation to enter into such agreement or grant (whether or not contingent on any future event or state of affairs) any such rights;

 

(i)                                      no claims have been asserted or threatened against the Company in writing by any Person challenging the validity, effectiveness, enforceability, or ownership of the Licensed IP or the Assigned IP , and, to Company’s Knowledge, there is no reasonable basis for any such challenge;

 

(j)                                     to Company’s Knowledge, Company’s activities prior to the Effective Date , and Company’s expected activities subsequent to the Effective Date, in connection with the Development and contemplated Commercialization of Covered Products in the Field and in the Territory do not and will not infringe or misappropriate any Patent Right, Know-How, or Mark of any Person or than Company, and to Company’s Knowledge, no claims have been asserted or threatened against the Company in writing by any Person with respect to the foregoing ; and, to Company’s Knowledge, there is no reasonable basis for any such challenge;

 

(k)                                  to Company’s Knowledge, there is no material unauthorized use, infringement, or misappropriation of any Company IP related to Development and Commercialization of any Covered Products in the Field in the Territory by any employee or former employee, or by any other Third Party;

 

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(l)                                      to Company’s Knowledge, none of the Licensed IP or Assigned IP is the subject of any litigation or dispute resolution procedure, discovery process, interference, reissue, reexamination, opposition, appeal proceedings, or any other legal dispute;

 

(m)                              Company has no Knowledge of any Patent Rights Controlled by Company as of the Effective Date, other than Company Patents, that relate to, and are necessary or useful for, the Development and/or Commercialization of Covered Products in the Field in the Territory;

 

(n)                                  Company has no Knowledge of any Know-How Controlled by Company as of the Effective Date, other than Company Know-How, that relates to, and is necessary or useful for, the Development and/or Commercialization of Covered Products in the Field in the Territory;

 

(o)                                  Company has the right to provide Company Materials to Transferee and to grant to Transferee the right and license to use Company Materials for Development and/or Commercialization of Covered Products in the Field in the Territory;

 

(p)                                  Company has no Knowledge that any Covered Product or any Company Materials infringe, or may infringe, any intellectual property right of any Third Party;

 

(q)                                  all employees of Company who have performed any activities on its behalf in connection with research regarding any Company IP, Covered Product (or the Compound ) have assigned to Company the whole of their rights in any discovery, invention, improvement, or other technical advance, whether or not patentable, and any corresponding intellectual property, conceived, made, discovered, or otherwise developed by them as a result of such research, and , to Company’s Knowledge, no Third Party has any rights to any such intellectual property;

 

(r)                                     prior to any assignment to DRI of any Patent Right within the Assigned IP in contemplation of or pursuant to this Agreement, Company owns (or owned) all right, title, and interest in and to such Patent Right;

 

(s)                                    Company has sufficient right, title, and interest in and to Company IP, by ownership or license, to convey to Transferee the licenses and rights as set forth herein;

 

(t)                                     licenses and rights of the Company IP under this Agreement do not conflict with any other agreement between the Company and any Third Party, subject, however, to the applicable provisions of each Third Party Agreement;

 

(u)                                  subject to the approval of Purdue Neuroscience, Company has the right, power, and authority to grant to Transferee the rights granted to Transferee with respect to the License Agreement;

 

(v)                                  the License Agreement is in full force and effect and Company is not in breach or default in the performance of its obligations under the License Agreement, and Company has not received any notice from Purdue Neuroscience of any breach, default, or non-compliance of Company under the terms of the License Agreement;

 

(w)                                Company has provided to Transferee an accurate, true, and complete copy of the License Agreement.  There have been no amendments or other modification to the License Agreement, except as have been disclosed to Transferee in writing;

 

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(x)                                  the Company is not under obligation to obtain consent of any Third Party to convey to Transferee the licenses and rights as set forth in this Agreement, except as under License Agreement and as may be required by a future Third Party Agreement;

 

(y)                                  Company has provided to Transferee or made available for Transferee’s review all material information and data in Company’s Control relating to Company Materials and Covered Products and the transactions contemplated under this Agreement that might reasonably be expected to be relevant to Transferee’s decision to enter into this Agreement;

 

(z)                                   with respect to any Patent Rights Controlled by Company, to Company’s Knowledge Company has complied with all applicable Laws, rules, and regulations, including any information disclosure requirements, in connection with the filing, prosecution, and maintenance of such Company Patents in the Territory;

 

(aa)                           unless specifically indicated in a patent application or patent within Patent Rights Controlled by Company, to Company’s Knowledge none of the inventions claimed in such Patent Rights were conceived or first reduced to practice using funding from the United States government or any other Governmental Body;

 

(bb)                           with respect to any Patent Rights Controlled by Company, to Company’s knowledge, assignments of all inventorship rights from all Persons listed as inventors on such Patent Rights, and all such assignments of inventorship rights relating to such Patent Rights, have been obtained and, for those patent applications within the Patent Rights that have been filed in the United States, such assignments have been recorded at the United States Patent and Trademark Office and, to the knowledge of Company, are valid and enforceable;

 

(cc)                             with respect to any Patent Rights Controlled by Company, to Company’s Knowledge, all provisions of any Laws, foreign or domestic, related to the rights as inventors or Persons that are named as inventors on such Patent Rights have been complied with;

 

(dd)                           Company has disclosed or made available to Transferee all material scientific and technical information and all information relating to safety and efficacy known to Company or its Affiliates with respect to the Covered Product(s) and Compound(s), and Company undertakes to promptly update Transferee during the Term with any additional material scientific or technical information or any other information relating to safety and efficacy of the Covered Product(s) and Compound(s) in the Field that becomes known to Company or its Affiliates; and

 

(ee)                             Company has disclosed to the Transferee all material correspondence and contact information between Company and the FDA, EMA, or other Governmental Body regarding the Covered Product(s) and Compound(s), and, until such time as a Change of Control of the Company shall occur, Company undertakes to promptly update Transferee during the Term with any additional material scientific or technical information or any other information relating to safety and efficacy of the Covered Product(s) and Compound that becomes known to Company or its Affiliates .

 

9.3                                Company Covenants.   Company covenants to the Transferee that:

 

(a)                                  Company shall fulfill all of its obligations, including but not limited to its payment obligations, under any Third Party Agreement, throughout the term of this Agreement provided that the Transferee and any Permitted Transferee shall make all payments and

 

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perform all obligations required on the party of the Transferee or Permitted Transferee under the Sublicense Agreement or any other Third Party Agreement;

 

(b)                                  Company shall not amend, waive, or otherwise alter any of Company’s rights under any Third Party Agreement in any manner without prior written consent of the Transferee that adversely affects the rights transferred to the Transferee pursuant to this Agreement that flow from such Third Party Agreement;

 

(c)                                   Company shall promptly notify Transferee of any notice of default under, or termination or amendment of, the License Agreement or any Third Party Agreement;

 

(d)                                  Company shall not, for as long as Transferee enjoys rights with respect to Company IP and Covered Products under this Agreement, grant rights within the Territory in or with respect to any Company IP or Covered Product to any Third Party, in a manner inconsistent with the grants and other rights assigned to Transferee under this Agreement; and

 

(e)                                   For so long as Transferee retains its license under this Agreement , Company shall not provide Covered Products or the Compound to any Third Party in, or for importation into, the Territory for any purpose without the prior consent of, or pursuant to a written agreement with, the Transferee .

 

9.4                                Transferee Covenants .  Transferee covenants to Company that:

 

(a)                                  Transferee shall not, and shall require in all agreements with or including as a party Permitted Transferees that the Permitted Transferee shall not, directly or indirectly, alone or in conjunction with one or more Third Parties, distribute, export, or facilitate or assist in exportation of the Compound or any Covered Products outside of the Territory or outside the Field; and

 

(b)                                  Transferee shall, and shall require in the all other agreements with or including as a party Transferee or any Permitted Transferees, that Transferee and any Permitted Transferee conduct all activities in connection with Development, Manufacture, and Commercialization of the Compound and/or Covered Products in compliance with applicable Laws .

 

9.5                                Disclaimer .  EXCEPT AS EXPRESSLY SET FORTH IN THIS AGREEMENT, OR ANY OTHER AGREEMENT CONTEMPLATED HEREUNDER, NEITHER PARTY MAKES ANY REPRESENTATIONS OR EXTENDS ANY WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EITHER EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, AND EACH PARTY EXPRESSLY DISCLAIMS ALL IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND OF FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE, THE PROSPECTS OR LIKELIHOOD OF DEVELOPMENT OR COMMERCIAL SUCCESS OF ANY COVERED PRODUCT, AND ASSUMES NO LIABILITIES WHATSOEVER WITH RESPECT TO THE COMPOUND, ANY COVERED PRODUCT, OR COMPANY IP.

 

ARTICLE 10
INDEMNIFICATION AND INSURANCE

 

10.1                         Indemnification by Transferee .  Each Transferee hereby does, and shall cause each Permitted Transferee to, indemnify, defend, and hold Company and its Affiliates, and each of their respective employees, officers, directors, agents, successors and assigns (individually or collectively, the “ Company Indemnitees ”) harmless from and against any and all liability, damage, loss, cost, or expense (including reasonable attorneys’ fees) (collectively, “ Losses ”) arising out of Third Party

 

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claims and all other Losses arising out of or related to (a) a breach of a representation, warranty, covenant or other obligation of such Transferee or any of its Affiliates, Permitted Transferees or subcontractors under this Agreement or the Assignment and Assumption Agreement; (b) any negligent or reckless act or omission to act or willful misconduct by such Transferee or any of its Affiliates, Permitted Transferees or subcontractors; and (c) any act or omission of such Transferee or any of its Affiliates, Permitted Transferees or their respective employees, Affiliates, agents or subcontractors in connection with the Development, Manufacturing, Commercialization, use, consumption, sale, lease, license, sublicense or other disposition of the Compound or a Covered Product, including but not limited to product liability claims, except in cases where, and to the extent that, such Losses result directly from the breach of this Agreement, negligence or willful misconduct by or on the part of any of the Company Indemnitees and/or any misrepresentation by Company under this Agreement.  For clarity, it is understood and agreed that the provisions of Section 10.1(c), above, shall not apply to DRI for so long as DRI does not hold any rights under the Assigned IP or the Licensed IP.

 

10.2                         Indemnification by Company .  Company shall indemnify, defend, and hold Transferee,  and any Permitted Transferee, Affiliates, and each of their respective agents, employees, officers, and directors, agents, successors and assigns (individually or collectively, the “ Transferee Indemnitees ”) harmless from and against any and all Losses arising out of Third Party claims and all other Losses to the extent arising out of or related to (a) a breach of a representation, warranty, covenant or other obligation of Company or any of its Affiliates, licensees (other than a Transferee) or subcontractors under this Agreement; (b) any negligent or reckless act or omission to act or willful misconduct by Company or any of its Affiliates, licensees (other than a Transferee) or subcontractors; and (c) any act or omission of Company or any of its Affiliates, licensees (other than a Transferee) or their respective employees, Affiliates, agents or subcontractors in connection with the Development, Manufacturing, Commercialization, use, consumption, sale, lease, license, sublicense or other disposition of the Compound or a Covered Product, including but not limited to product liability claims, except in cases where, and to the extent that, such Losses result directly from the breach of this Agreement, negligence or willful misconduct by or on the part of any of the Transferee Indemnitees and/or any misrepresentation by a Transferee under this Agreement.

 

10.3                         No Consequential Damages .  EXCEPT FOR LIABILITY FOR BREACH OF ARTICLE 8 and SECTION 2.5, IN NO EVENT SHALL EITHER PARTY (OR ANY OF ITS AFFILIATES, ASSIGNEES, LICENSEES, OR SUCCESSORS) BE LIABLE TO THE OTHER PARTY (OR ANY OF THE OTHER PARTY’S AFFILIATES, ASSIGNEES, LICENSEES, OR SUCCESSORS) FOR SPECIAL, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, CONSEQUENTIAL, OR PUNITIVE DAMAGES, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, WARRANTY, TORT, NEGLIGENCE, STRICT LIABILITY, OR OTHERWISE, ARISING OUT OF OR RELATING TO THIS AGREEMENT OR ANY BREACH THEREOF; PROVIDED, HOWEVER, THAT THIS SECTION 10.3 SHALL NOT BE CONSTRUED TO LIMIT EITHER PARTY’S INDEMNIFICATION OBLIGATIONS WITH RESPECT TO THIRD PARTY CLAIMS UNDER SECTION 10.1 OR 10.2, ABOVE.

 

10.4                         Notification of Claims; Conditions to Indemnification Obligations .  As a condition to a Company Indemnitee’s or a Transferee Indemnitee’s right to receive indemnification under this Article 10, such Indemnitee shall (a) promptly notify the other party as soon as it becomes aware of any Third Party claim or suit for which indemnification may be sought hereunder, (b) reasonably cooperate, and cause the individual indemnitees to cooperate, with the indemnifying party in the defense, settlement, or compromise of such claim or suit, and (c) permit the indemnifying party to control the defense, settlement, or compromise of such claim or suit, including the right to select defense counsel; provided, however, the indemnified party shall have the right to join any defense with its own counsel at its own expense, or if the indemnifying party declines or fails to assert its intention to

 

30



 

defend such action within sixty (60) days of receipt/sending of notice under this Section 10.4, then the indemnified party shall have the right, but not the obligation, to defend such action. In no event, however, may the indemnifying party compromise or settle any claim or suit in a manner that admits fault or negligence on the part of the indemnified party (or any indemnitee) without the prior written consent of the indemnified party.  The indemnifying party shall have no liability under this Article 10 with respect to claims or suits settled or compromised by the indemnified party without the indemnifying party’s its prior written consent.

 

ARTICLE 11
TERM AND TERMINATION

 

11.1                         Term and Expiration .  The term of this Agreement (the “Term”) shall commence on the Effective Date and, unless earlier terminated as expressly provided in this Article 11, shall continue in full force and effect until the later of (i) expiration of the last to expire of a Company Patent in the Territory assigned to the Transferee under this Agreement or (ii) ten (10) years after the date of the First Commercial Sale in the Territory, at which time this Agreement shall expire.  After expiration of this Agreement, Transferee’s license to Licensed IP shall become exclusive, fully paid-up, irrevocable, non-terminable, and perpetual, subject to the territorial limitations set forth in Section 2.5 of this Agreement.

 

11.2                         Revocation of the Agreement for Convenience .  NovaMedica shall have the right, any time during the Term and at its convenience, to terminate this Agreement in its entirety upon thirty (30) days’ notice to Company.  Company shall have no right during the Term to unilaterally terminate the Agreement, in whole or in part, for convenience.

 

11.3                         Termination upon Fundamental Breach.

 

(a)                                  Company shall have the right to give to a Transferee a notice of termination in the event of Fundamental Breach by the Transferee .

 

(b)                                  Any notice of termination given pursuant to Section 11 .3(a), above, shall specify the nature of the Fundamental Breach, require that the Fundamental Breach be cured, and state Company’s intention to terminate this Agreement if such Fundamental Breach is not cured or disputed with competent evidence reasonably acceptable to Company within six (6) months from the date such notice of termination is given (the “Cure Period” ).

 

(c)                                   In order to constitute a notice of termination under Section 11.3(a), above, such notice shall identify the nature of the alleged breach and shall also include documentary information to substantiate the breach allegation.  The Transferee shall have twenty (20) business days following the date of such notice to request in writing such additional supporting information from Company as the Transferee reasonably believes is necessary to allow evaluation of the breach allegation, in response to which Company shall have up to thirty (30) days to provide such additional supporting information in writing .

 

(d)                                  During the Cure Period, Transferee shall have the right to attempt to cure such Fundamental Breach.  If Transferee does not use at least Commercially Reasonable Efforts to cure such Fundamental Breach and such Fundamental Breach is not cured or disputed during the Cure Period, Company shall have the right, at its sole discretion, to terminate this Agreement.  Notwithstanding anything to the contrary set forth in this Agreement, upon the occurrence of a Fundamental Breach, Company shall have the right, in its sole discretion and at any time, to seek injunctive relief (including permanent, preliminary and temporary injunctive relief)

 

31



 

against the Transferee and/or any Permitted Transferee.  In any request by Company for injunctive relief (whether permanent, preliminary, or temporary injunctive relief) pursuant to this Section 11.3(d), Transferee agrees (for itself and on behalf of any and all Permitted Transferees) that it (they) shall only be entitled to contest likelihood of success on the merits, and shall not be entitled to the contest the propriety of an injunction by arguing a balance of hardships in its favor or the lack of irreparable injury to Company.  The balance of hardships in favor of Company and irreparable injury to Company shall be conclusively presumed if the court or other tribunal was not to grant the injunction (whether by a permanent injunction, preliminary injunction, or temporary restraining order) .

 

(e)                                   For the avoidance of doubt, only a breach as described below by or on behalf of the Transferee (including any conduct by or on behalf of a Permitted Transferee that, if committed by Transferee, would constitute such a breach) of this Agreement shall constitute a “ Fundamental Breach ”: (i) knowing exportation of any Covered Product or the Compound outside the Territory, including any willful transfers of Company Know-How for manufacturing or commercialization of Covered Product outside the Territory, or any other violation of Section 2.5 of this Agreement that resulted in the exportation of any Covered Product or the Compound outside the Territory,  (ii) a breach by Transferee or any Permitted Transferee or any of their respective Affiliates of the provisions of Section 8 of this Agreement that resulted in unauthorized use of the Assigned IP, Company Patent Rights and/or Company Know-How for manufacture or otherwise produce the Compound or Covered Products outside the Territory by the Third Parties, or (iii) unless authorized in writing in advance by Company, initiation anywhere in the world of any judicial and administrative action or proceeding that challenges the validity or enforceability of any Company Patent, or any claim of a Company Patent, inside of the Territory, which action or proceeding is not expressly abandoned or withdrawn, dismissed with prejudice, or otherwise terminated with prejudice within the Cure Period.

 

(f)                                    Any dispute regarding an alleged Fundamental Breach of this Agreement shall be resolved in accordance with Article 12, below .  In the event that the Party that has allegedly materially breached this Agreement disputes such breach, then any consequences of termination described in this Article 11 shall apply only from and after such time as such termination has been upheld in a final judgment or arbitral decision from which no appeal can be taken, or that is unappealed with the time allowed for appeal, or such time as the Party allegedly in material breach is no longer disputing such termination.

 

11.4                         Termination by Company with Immediate Effect .  Company shall have the right to terminate this Agreement immediately upon written notice to the Transferee if RMI shall breach its obligations to invest the full amount required to be invested by it at the Second Closing of the Investment Transaction in a timely manner, provided that all conditions to and covenants relating to the Second Closing have been satisfied by Company and the other investors.

 

11.5                         Effects of Termination.

 

(a)                                  Termination of Rights .  Upon any termination of this Agreement pursuant to Section 11.2, 11.3 or 11.4, above, (i) all Company Improvement Know-How shall automatically revert to Company, and the Transferee shall promptly execute (and shall require each Permitted Transferee to execute) whatever documents Company reasonably requests be executed in order to convey and reconvey and vest all right, title, and interest in and to the Company Improvement Know How, (ii) all sublicenses and license rights granted by Company under this Agreement (and any and all licenses and sublicenses granted by Transferees and/or any

 

32



 

Permitted Transferee(s)) to Company shall terminate immediately, and all rights in and to the Licensed IP under this Agreement (and any related licenses and sublicenses) shall revert automatically to Company, and (iii) immediately and without further action on the party of Company, the Transferee or any Third Party, Company is hereby granted an exclusive, irrevocable, fully paid up, royalty-free license to all Assigned IP.  Additionally, (i) Transferee and any Permitted Transferee(s) shall thereafter be without any rights to Develop, Commercialize and/or if applicable, Manufacture, the Compound or Covered Products, and (ii) Transferee and any Permitted Transferee(s) shall promptly cease and desist all such activities and all activities related thereto.

 

(b)                                  Return of Confidential Information .  Upon termination, but not expiration, of this Agreement, each Party shall promptly return to the other Party, or delete or destroy, all relevant records and materials in such Party’s possession or control containing Confidential Information of the other Party; provided, however , that each Party shall be entitled to retain one (1) copy of the other Party’s Confidential Information (subject to a continuing obligation of confidentiality) for the sole purpose of monitoring compliance with the terms of this Agreement, and all Confidential Information received by Company may continue to be used by it insofar as it relates to the Company, any Covered Product or any Improvement.

 

(c)                                   Accrued Obligations .   Expiration or termination of this Agreement for any reason shall not release either Party from any obligation or liability which, at the time of such expiration or termination, has already accrued to the other Party or which is attributable to a period prior to such expiration or termination.

 

(d)                                  Non-Exclusive Remedy .   Termination of this Agreement by a Party shall be without prejudice to other remedies such Party may have at law or equity.

 

(e)                                   General Survival The provisions of Articles 1, 8, 10, and 12, and Sections 2.1(c) 2.1(e), 2.5, 6.4, 7.1, 11.5(a), 11.5(b), 11.5(c), 11.5(d), 11.5(e), 13.4, 13.8, 13.10, 13.11, 13.12, 13.13, and 13.15, shall survive expiration or termination of this Agreement.  Furthermore, any other provision that by its nature is intended to survive expiration and/or termination of this Agreement shall survive such expiration or termination, as the case may be.

 

ARTICLE 12
DISPUTE RESOLUTION

 

12.1                         Disputes .  The Parties recognize that disputes as to certain matters may from time to time arise under this Agreement that relate to either Party’s rights and/or obligations hereunder.  It is the objective of the Parties to establish procedures to facilitate the resolution of disputes relating to or arising under this Agreement in an expedient manner by mutual cooperation and without resort to litigation.  In the event that the Parties are unable to resolve such dispute within thirty (30) days from the day that one Party had designated to the other an issue as a dispute, then either Party shall have the right to escalate such issue to senior management as set forth in Section 12.2, below.  Notwithstanding the foregoing, disputes between the Parties with respect to the subject matter of the Clinical Development and Collaboration Agreement (“ Development Disputes ”) shall be resolved in accordance with dispute resolution procedures in the Clinical Development and Collaboration Agreement for Development Disputes.

 

12.2                         Escalation to Senior Representatives .  Either Company or the Transferee may, by written notice to the other, request that a dispute that remained unresolved for a period of thirty (30) days as set forth in Section 12.1, above, be resolved by the chief executive officer of the Transferee (or such person’s designee) (the “ Transferee Representative ”) and the chief executive officer of Company (or such person’s

 

33


 

designee) (the “ Company Representative ”) (collectively, the “ Representatives ”) within sixty (60) days of the Representatives’ first consideration of such dispute, but in all cases within ninety (90) days after a Party’s written request for resolution by the Representatives.  If the Representatives cannot resolve such dispute within such ninety (90) day period, either Party may proceed to enforce any and all of its rights with respect to such dispute in accordance with Section 12.3, 12.4, or 12.5, below, as applicable.

 

12.3                         Arbitration.

 

(a)                                  Any dispute, controversy or claim arising out of, relating to or in connection with, this Agreement, including any dispute regarding the interpretation, validity or termination or the performance or breach of this Agreement, as well as any non-contractual obligation arising out of or in connection with this Agreement, which is not resolved by mutual agreement, above, shall be finally settled by binding arbitration under the Rules of the London Court of International Arbitration (the “LCIA” ) then in effect.

 

(b)                                  The arbitration shall be conducted by arbitrators, of whom one shall be nominated by the Transferee and one shall be nominated by Company.  The two arbitrators so appointed shall nominate the third arbitrator, who shall act as chairman of the Arbitral Tribunal.  In the event that an arbitrator is not appointed pursuant to the foregoing provisions within the time period prescribed under the Rules of the LCIA or within the time-period agreed upon by the parties to the arbitration, upon request of either party to the arbitration, such arbitrator shall instead be appointed by the Court of the LCIA.

 

(c)                                   The Parties shall use good faith efforts to complete arbitration under this Section 12.3 within one hundred eighty (180) days following the initiation of such arbitration.  The Arbitral Tribunal shall permit full and complete discovery, both written and oral by deposition and shall establish reasonable additional procedures to facilitate and complete such arbitration within such one hundred eighty (180) day period.  The place of arbitration will be London, England.  The language of the arbitration, and all proceedings thereunder, including all discovery (both written and oral) will be English.

 

(d)                                  By agreeing to arbitration, the Parties do not intend to deprive any court of competent jurisdiction of its ability to issue any form of provisional remedy, including but not limited to a preliminary injunction or attachment in aid of the arbitration, or order any interim or conservatory measure.  A request for such provisional remedy or interim or conservatory measure by a Party to a court or other government entity shall not be deemed a waiver of this agreement to arbitrate.

 

(e)                                   The award rendered by the Arbitral Tribunal, which shall cover which party shall bear the costs of the arbitration in accordance with subsection (f) below, shall be final and binding on the parties.  Judgment on the award may be entered in any court of competent jurisdiction.

 

(f)                                    The costs of such arbitration, including administrative and fees of the arbitrators comprising the arbitration panel, shall be shared equally by the Transferee and Company, and each Party shall bear its own expenses and attorney’s fees incurred in connection with the arbitration; provided, however, that the arbitration panel may direct that the costs and attorney fees paid by one party be reimbursed by the other party.  The arbitration panel shall consider the following factors in determining whether to award costs and attorney fees to be paid by one party to another party: (i) the conduct of the Parties in the transactions or occurrences that

 

34



 

gave rise to the dispute or claim, including any conduct of a party that was reckless, willful, malicious, in bad faith or illegal; (ii) the objective reasonableness of the claims and defenses asserted by a Party; (iii) the extent to which an award of costs and attorney fees would deter future bad faith claims or defenses; (iv) the objective reasonableness of the Parties and the diligence of the Parties and their attorneys during the proceedings; (v) the objective reasonableness of the Parties and the diligence of the parties in pursuing settlement of the dispute; and (vi) such other factors as the arbitration panel may consider appropriate under the circumstances.

 

12.4                         Provisional Remedies .  Nothing in this Agreement shall limit the right of either Party to seek to obtain in any court of competent jurisdiction any equitable or interim relief or provisional remedy, including injunctive relief, pending resolution under Section 12.1, 12.2, or 12.3, above, as applicable, that may be necessary to protect the rights or property of that Party.  Seeking or obtaining such equitable or interim relief or provisional remedy in a court shall not be deemed a waiver of the agreement to arbitrate.  For clarity, any such equitable remedies shall be cumulative and not exclusive and are in addition to any other remedies that either Party may have under this Agreement or applicable Law.

 

12.5                         Remedies .  In the event a Party is in breach of its obligations under this Agreement, and the breach is not remedied in accordance with the terms of this Agreement, the other Party shall be entitled to all remedies available in law or equity, consistent with the terms of this Agreement, including without limitation, collection of damages, injunctive relief, and specific performance.

 

ARTICLE 13
MISCELLANEOUS PROVISIONS

 

13.1                         Relationship of the Parties .  Nothing in this Agreement is intended or shall be deemed to constitute a partnership, agency, joint venture, or other relationship between the Parties.

 

13.2                         Third Party Beneficiaries .  NovaMedica is hereby designated as an intended third party beneficiary under this Agreement, and may independently and without prior notice or permission, enforce all rights and obligations of Transferee pursuant to this Agreement.  Further, Company shall be deemed a third party beneficiary of any agreement between DRI and NovaMedica and/or between NovaMedica and any Permitted Transferee relating to this Agreement, the Assigned IP, the Licensed IP and/or any Improvements thereto, and Company may enforce the provisions of this Agreement and all such other agreements against NovaMedica and/or any such Permitted Transferee to the same extent that the Company may enforce the provisions of this Agreement against Transferee.  Except as provided in the preceding sentence and as expressly provided elsewhere in this Agreement with respect to Company Indemnitees and Transferee Indemnitees, this Agreement is neither expressly nor impliedly made for the benefit of any Person other than Company or NovaMedica, or Transferee.

 

13.3                         Assignment.

 

(a)                                  Except as expressly provided herein, neither this Agreement nor any interest hereunder shall be assignable, nor any other obligation delegable, by either Party without the prior written consent of the other Party (not to be unreasonably withheld or delayed).  Notwithstanding the foregoing, each Party shall have the right to assign this Agreement in whole without the consent of the other Party to (X) any Affiliate or (Y) an Acquirer, whether by merger, sale of stock, sale of assets or similar transaction, operation of law, or otherwise; provided, however , that such Affiliate must accept all rights and obligations under this Agreement as well as

 

35



 

those in any Ancillary Agreements, including the Clinical Development and Collaboration Agreement and any Supply Agreement, or (Z), in the case of DRI, to NovaMedica.

 

(b)                                  Any permitted assignment under this Section 13.3 shall relieve the assigning Party of any and all of its responsibilities or obligations hereunder, provided that, as a condition of such assignment, the assignee agrees in writing to be bound by all obligations of the assigning Party hereunder.

 

(c)                                   This Agreement shall be binding upon the successors and permitted assigns of the Parties.

 

(d)                                  Any assignment not in accordance with this Section 13.3 shall be void.

 

13.4                         Performance by Transferee and Permitted Transferees .  Notwithstanding anything to the contrary in this Agreement, the Transferee shall have the right to have any of its obligations hereunder performed, or its rights hereunder exercised, by one or more Permitted Transferees, and the performance of such obligations by the Transferee or a Permitted Transferee shall be deemed to be performance by Transferee and, provided that (a) the Transferee or any Permitted Transferee that agrees to perform or exercise on the Transferee’s behalf any of the Transferee’s obligations or rights under this Agreement agrees that Company is an intended third party beneficiary of any such performance or exercise, (b) the Transferee provides Company with a copy of such agreement between the Transferee or a Permitted Transferee, and (c) all other provisions of this Agreement relating to such transfer shall apply.

 

13.5                         Protection under Section 365(n) US Bankruptcy Code .  All rights granted under or pursuant to this Agreement by Company are, and shall otherwise be deemed to be, for purposes of Section 365(n) of the U.S. Bankruptcy Code, if applicable, grants of rights in and to “intellectual property” as defined under Section 101 of the U.S. Bankruptcy Code.  The Parties agree that the Transferee, as grantee of such rights under this Agreement, shall retain and may fully exercise all of its rights and elections under the U.S. Bankruptcy Code.  The Parties further agree that, in the event of the commencement of a bankruptcy proceeding by or against Company under the U.S. Bankruptcy Code, the Transferee shall be entitled to a complete duplicate of (or complete access to, as appropriate) any such intellectual property and all embodiments of such intellectual property, which, if not already in the Transferee’s possession, shall be promptly delivered to it (or its designee) (a) upon any such commencement of a bankruptcy proceeding upon the Transferee’s written request thereof, or (b) if not delivered under clause (a), following the rejection of this Agreement by Company upon written request thereof by the Transferee.

 

13.6                         Further Actions .  Each Party agrees to execute, acknowledge, and deliver such further instruments and to do all such other acts as may be necessary or appropriate in order to carry out the purposes and intent of this Agreement.

 

13.7                         Force Majeure .  Neither Party shall be liable to the other for failure or delay in the performance of any of its obligations under this Agreement for the time and to the extent such failure or delay is caused by acts of God, earthquake, riot, civil commotion, terrorism, war, strikes or other labor disputes, fire, flood, failure or delay of transportation, default by suppliers or unavailability of raw materials, governmental acts or restrictions or any other reason which is beyond the control of the respective Party.

 

13.8                         Entire Agreement of the Parties; Amendments .  This Agreement and the schedules hereto constitute and contain the entire understanding and agreement of the Parties respecting the subject matter hereof and cancel and supersede any and all prior negotiations, correspondence,

 

36



 

understandings, and agreements between the Parties, whether oral or written, regarding such subject matter.  No waiver, modification, or amendment of any provision of this Agreement shall be valid or effective unless made in a writing referencing this Agreement and signed by a duly authorized officer of each Party.

 

13.9                         Captions .  The captions to this Agreement are for convenience only, and are to be of no force or effect in construing or interpreting any of the provisions of this Agreement.

 

13.10                  Governing Law .  This Agreement shall be governed by and interpreted in accordance with the Laws of the State of New York, USA, excluding the application of any conflict of laws principles that would require application of the Law of another jurisdiction; provided , however , that matters of intellectual property law shall be determined in accordance with the national intellectual property laws relevant to the intellectual property at issue.

 

13.11                  Notices and Deliveries .  Any notice, request, approval, or consent required or permitted to be given under this Agreement shall be in writing and shall be deemed to have been sufficiently given if delivered in person, transmitted, by facsimile (receipt verified), or by express courier service (signature required) to the Party to which it is directed at its address or facsimile number shown below or such other address or facsimile number as such Party shall have last given by notice to the other Party.

 

If to DRI, addressed to:

 

Domain Russia Investments Limited
c/o Reed Smith LLP
The Broadgate Tower, Third Floor
20 Primrose Street
City of London, EC2A 2RS
United Kingdom
Attention:  President & CEO
Facsimile:  +44-20-3116-3999

 

With a copy to:

 

Reed Smith, LLP
1901 Avenue of the Stars, Suite 700
Los Angeles, CA 90067
Fax: 310-734-5299
Attention: Michael Sanders/Ramsey Hanna

 

If to Company, addressed to:

 

Marinus Pharmaceuticals, Inc.
21 Business Park Drive
Branford, Connecticut 06405 USA
Attention:  President and CEO
Facsimile: 203-3150565

 

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With a copy to:

 

Duane Morris LLP
30 South 17th Street
Philadelphia, PA 19103-4196
Attention:  Kathleen M. Shay
Facsimile: (215) 689-4382

 

13.12                  Waiver .  A waiver by either Party of any of the terms and conditions of this Agreement in any instance shall not be deemed or construed to be a waiver of such term or condition for the future, or of any other term or condition hereof.  All rights, remedies, undertakings, obligations, and agreements contained in this Agreement shall be cumulative and none of them shall be in limitation of any other remedy, right, undertaking, obligation, or agreement of either Party.

 

13.13                  Severability .  When possible, each provision of this Agreement will be interpreted in such manner as to be effective and valid under applicable Law, but if any provision of this Agreement is held to be prohibited by or invalid under applicable Law, such provision will be ineffective only to the extent of such prohibition or invalidity, without invalidating the remainder of this Agreement.  The Parties shall make a good faith effort to replace the invalid or unenforceable provision with a valid one that in its economic effect is most consistent with the invalid or unenforceable provision.

 

13.14                  Assumptions .  The terms and provisions in this Agreement have been negotiated and drafted on the assumption by the Parties that there are no laws or regulations in the Territory that will prevent or significantly hinder Transferee (or Permitted Transferees) or Company from performing their obligations and realizing their benefits as set forth in this Agreement.  If this assumption ultimately proves to be untrue, the Parties will use good faith efforts to make such revisions as are reasonable and equitable to the Parties and are in compliance with the laws and regulations of the Territory.

 

13.15                  English as the Controlling Language for all Agreements .  All notices and other communications under this Agreement and any related agreements, including assignments, licenses, and/or sublicenses with Transferee and/or a Permitted Transferee, shall be in the English language.  Transferee shall, furthermore, require that any assignment, license, sublicense, or other agreement (i) having Transferee or a Permitted Transferee as a party and (ii) a copy of which is required by this Agreement to be provided a Party, shall be prepared in the English language, which language shall govern the interpretation of, and any dispute regarding, the terms of that agreement.

 

13.16                  Counterparts .  This Agreement may be executed in one or more counterparts, each of which will be deemed an original, and all of which together will be deemed to be one and the same instrument.  A facsimile copy of this Agreement, including the signature pages, will be deemed an original.

 

(Signature page follows.)

 

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IN WITNESS WHEREOF, the Parties have caused this Agreement to be executed and delivered by their respective duly authorized officers as of the day and year first above written, each copy of which shall for all purposes be deemed to be an original.

 

MARINUS PHARMACEUTICALS, INC.

 

DOMAIN RUSSIA INVESTMENTS LIMITED

 

 

 

 

 

 

By:

/s/ Christopher M. Cashman

 

By:

/s/ Tatiana Saribekian

 

 

 

 

 

Name:

Christopher M. Cashman

 

Name:

Tatiana Saribekian

 

 

 

 

 

Title:

CEO

 

Title:

CEO

 

39



 

Schedule 1.1 — Assigned IP

 

CIS/EA/RU Patent Rights

 

Patent/App

 

Title

 

Description

 

Status

 

Filing
Date

 

Expiration
(projected)

 

Assignee

EA200801468
(Eurasia)

 

 

 

 

 

Pending
(active prosecution)

 

28 Nov 2006

 

28 Nov 2026

 

Marinus

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

EA201270241
(Eurasia)

 

Method for Making Ganaxolone

 

efficient ganaxolone synthesis methods

 

pending

 

11 Aug 2010

 

11 Aug 2030

 

Marinus

 



 

Schedule 1.2 — Licensed IP

 

All Company Know-How existing on the Effective Date.

 



 

Schedule 1.3 — Compound

 

ganaxolone (3 a -hydroxy-3 b -methyl-5 a -pregnan-20-one), having the chemical structure:

GRAPHIC

 



 

Schedule 2 — Territory

 

CIS states:

 

1.                                       Armenia

2.                                       Azerbaijan

3.                                       Belarus

4.                                       Kazakhstan

5.                                       Kyrgyzstan

6.                                       Moldova

7.                                       Russia

8.                                       Tajikistan

9.                                       Ukraine

10.                                Uzbekistan

 

Non-CIS states:

 

11.                                Georgia

12.                                Turkmenistan

 



 

Schedule 3 — Technology Transfer Outline

 

The following database has been organized to support the transfer of Confidential data and information to NovaMedica.

 

1.                                       Non-clinical and Clinical Data

 

2.                                       CMC and Manufacturing Know How

 

a.                                       Drug substance API

 

b.                                       Drug product

 

3.                                       Ganaxolone Patents and Applications

 

4.                                       Regulatory correspondence

 

After the Effective Date of the Assignment and Assumption Agreement, NovaMedica will be granted access to the information above in a “Dropbox” folder, with the right to download copies of the documents subject to the provisions of Article 8 of this Agreement.  After review the appropriate members of the Marinus Team will be available by phone to address any questions.

 


 

Schedule 4 — Prosecution and Maintenance of Patent Rights

 

1.                                       Patent Prosecution and Maintenance.  The provisions of this Schedule 4 concern the Prosecution and Maintenance of Patent Rights subject to this Agreement, in accordance with the terms of its Section 7.2.

 

(a)                                  Each Party’s Patents .  Subject to Sections 1(b) and 1(c), below, each Party shall Prosecute and Maintain the Patent Rights such Party Controls in the Territory (including in the case of the Transferee, the Patents included in the Assigned IP), at its expense before the date of registration of assignment of such Patent Rights with the Government Bodies on the name of the Transferee; and the Transferee shall Prosecute and Maintain the Company Patent Rights assigned to Transferee after such registration  The Prosecuting Party shall provide the other Party a reasonable opportunity prior to a priority filing, but in no event less than thirty (30) days, to review and comment upon the content and text of any new application within such Party’s Patent Rights that contains at least one claim covering a Compound or a Covered Product, or a method of making or using the Compound or a Covered Product.  The Prosecuting Party shall provide the other Party with an electronic copy of each patent application within such Party’s Patent Rights in the Territory.  The Prosecuting Party shall keep the other Party advised of the status of all material communications to and from applicable patent offices, actual, and prospective filings or submissions regarding the Prosecuting Party’s Patent Rights in the Territory, and shall give the other Party an opportunity to review and comment in advance on any such communications, filings, and submissions proposed to be sent to any patent office in the Territory.  Each Party agrees to provide the other Party with all information necessary or desirable to enable the other Party to comply with the duty of candor/duty of disclosure requirements of any patent authority in the Territory.  Each Party shall provide to the other with an annual update of the patent status of the updating Party’s Patent Rights in the Territory relating to the Compound or any Covered Product.

 

(b)                                  Transferee Patents .  In addition to the provisions of Section 1(a), above, Company and the Transferee agree that Company shall have a reasonable opportunity to review and comment, either directly or indirectly through outside patent counsel selected by Company, on the design and implementation of strategy regarding all Patent Rights of the Transferee and all Permitted Transferees relating to the Compound or any Covered Product, and Transferee shall reasonably consider such comments.

 

(c)                                   Election Not To Prosecute or Maintain Patents Rights .  If any Party elects not to Prosecute or Maintain any Patent Right that such Party Controls in any country or jurisdiction within the Territory, then it shall notify the other Party in writing at least ninety (90) days before any final deadline applicable to the filing, prosecution, or maintenance of such the Patent Right, as the case may be, or any other date by which an action must be taken to establish or preserve such the Patent Right in such country or possession.  In such case, by no later than thirty (30) days before any final deadline applicable to the filing, prosecution, or maintenance of such the Patent Right, or any other date by which an action must be taken to establish or preserve such Patent Right in such country or possession, the other Party (or its assignee) shall have the right, but not the obligation, to pursue the filing or support the continued Prosecution and Maintenance of such the Patent Right, at such other

 



 

Party’s (or its assignee’s) expense, and the Party shall use Commercially Reasonable Efforts assist and perform all actions to ensure that the other Party has all powers, authority and ability that are necessary to Prosecute and Maintain the  in accordance with this Agreements.

 

(d)                                  Joint Patents .  With respect to any potentially patentable Joint Invention, the Transferee (or its designee(s)) shall have the first right to be responsible for, and control the Prosecution and Maintenance of Patents covering such Joint Invention (“ Joint Patent ”) throughout the Territory, and Company shall have the first right to be responsible for, and control the Prosecution and Maintenance of Joint Patent throughout the rest of the world outside the Territory.  If the Transferee (or its designee(s)) elects in its sole discretion not to Prosecute and Maintain a Joint Patent in any country or jurisdiction in the Territory, then it shall notify Company in writing at least ninety (90) days before any deadline applicable to the filing, prosecution, or maintenance of such Joint Patent, as the case may be, or any other date by which an action must be taken to establish or preserve such Joint Patent in such country or jurisdiction, and in such case Company shall have the right, but not the obligation, to pursue the filing or support the continued Prosecution or Maintenance of such Joint Patent in the Territory.  The prosecuting party for any Joint Patent shall provide the other an opportunity to review and comment upon the content and text of the applications within the Joint Patents filed after the Effective Date at least thirty (30) days before filing with any patent office.  The prosecuting party shall provide the other Party with an electronic copy of each patent application within the Joint Patents as filed, together with notice of its filing date and serial number.  The prosecuting party of any Joint Patent shall keep the other Party advised of the status of all material communications to and from applicable patent offices, actual, and prospective filings or submissions regarding Joint Patents, and shall give the other Party an opportunity to review and comment in advance on any such communications, filing, and submissions proposed to be sent to any patent office.  Each Party agrees to provide the other Party with all information reasonably necessary or desirable to enable the prosecuting party for any Joint Patent to comply with the duty of candor/duty of disclosure requirements of any patent authority.

 

(e)                                   Patent Term Restoration .  Company and Transferee (or, as the case may be, Permitted Transferee) will cooperate with each other in obtaining patent term restoration or supplemental protection certificates or their equivalents in any country in the Territory where applicable to Company Patents assigned to the Transferee hereunder and Joint Patents.

 

(f)                                    Expenses .  Notwithstanding anything to the contrary set forth in this Agreement, the Transferee shall reimburse Company for all Out-of-Pocket Expenses incurred by Company in connection with the Prosecution and Maintenance of Assigned IP in the Territory.

 



 

Schedule 5 — Enforcement and Defense of Patent Rights

 

1.                                       Patent Enforcement and Defense.  The provisions of this Schedule 5 concern the Enforcement and Defense of Patent Rights subject to this Agreement, in accordance with the terms of its Section 7.3.

 

2.                                       Enforcement of Patent Rights .

 

(a)                                  Notice .  If either Party believes that a Company Patent assigned to the Transferee hereunder or a Joint Patent is being infringed in the Territory by a Third Party or if a Third Party claims that any Company Patent assigned to the Transferee hereunder or a Joint Patent within the Territory is invalid or unenforceable (collectively, “ Infringing Activities ”), the Party possessing such knowledge or belief shall notify the other Party and provide it with details of such infringement or claim that are known by such Party.  As between the Parties, the right to enforce such Company Patent or Joint Patent with respect to such infringement, or to defend any declaratory judgment action with respect thereto, or to compromise or settle such infringement claim or declaratory judgment action, in each case to the extent the same pertains to Infringing Activities (each, an “ Enforcement Action ”) shall be as set forth in this Section 2.  For purposes of this Agreement, “ Initiating ” or to “ Initiate ”, with respect to an Enforcement Action, refers to bringing an infringement claim or defending a declaratory judgment action, or compromising or settling such infringement claim or allegation or declaratory judgment action, within any country or jurisdiction in the Territory.

 

(b)                                  Right to bring an Action .  The Transferee, or a Transferee Assignee or Permitted Transferee, as applicable, shall have the first right to attempt to abate Infringing Activities within the Territory, including by taking and controlling an Enforcement Action with respect to Company Patents assigned to the Transferee hereunder and Joint Patents.  If the Transferee (or a Transferee Assignee or Permitted Transferee) does not intend to prosecute or defend an Enforcement Action, the Transferee shall promptly inform Company.  If the Transferee (or a Transferee Assignee or Permitted Transferee) does not take an Enforcement Action with respect to such an infringement or claim within one hundred twenty (120) days following notice thereof or a request by Company to do so, Company shall have the right, but not the obligation, to take and control an Enforcement Action in the name of either or both Parties.  The Party taking such Enforcement Action shall have the sole and exclusive right to select counsel for any suit it initiates pursuant to this Section 2 of Schedule 5.

 

(c)                                   Costs of an Action .  Subject to the respective indemnity obligations of the Parties set forth in Article 10 of the Agreement, the Party (or its Affiliate or Permitted Transferee or successor) taking an Enforcement Action under Section 2(b) of this Schedule 5 shall pay all reasonable and incurred costs associated with such Enforcement Action, other than (subject to Section 2(e), below) the expenses of the other Party if the other Party elects to join such Enforcement Action.  Each Party (or an Affiliate or Permitted Transferee or successor of such Party) shall, at its own expense, have the right to join an Enforcement Action taken by the other Party.

 

(d)                                  Settlement .  Neither Party (nor an Affiliate or Permitted Transferee or successor of a Party) shall settle or consent to any judgment or otherwise compromise any

 



 

Enforcement Action by admitting that any Company Patent assigned to the Transferee hereunder or Joint Patent is invalid or unenforceable without the other Party’s prior written consent, which consent shall not be unreasonably conditioned, refused, withheld or delayed, and, (i) in the case of Company, Company may not settle or otherwise compromise an Enforcement Action in a way that adversely affects or would be reasonably expected to adversely affect the Transferee’s rights or benefits hereunder in the Territory with respect to the Covered Product in the Field, without the Transferee’s) prior written consent, which consent shall not be unreasonably withheld or delayed, and (ii) in the case of the Transferee, the Transferee  may not settle or otherwise compromise an Enforcement Action in a way that adversely affects or would be reasonably expected to adversely affect Company’s rights or benefits outside of the Territory without Company’s prior written consent, which consent shall not be unreasonably withheld or delayed.

 

(e)                                   Reasonable Assistance .  The Party not taking an Enforcement Action shall provide reasonable assistance to the other Party, including providing access to relevant documents and other evidence and making its employees available, subject to the other Party’s (or the other Party’s Affiliate’s) reimbursement of any Out-of-Pocket Expenses incurred by the non-enforcing or non-defending Party in providing such assistance.

 

(f)                                    Distribution of Amounts Recovered .  Any amounts recovered by the Party (or its Affiliate or Permitted Transferee or successor) taking an Enforcement Action pursuant to this Section 2, whether by settlement or judgment, shall first be applied reimbursement of all reasonable costs and expenses of the Parties that conducted an Enforcement Action, including to pro-rata reimbursement of the unreimbursed reasonable legal fees and expenses incurred by the Parties in such Enforcement Action, and any remainder shall be received by the Party initiating and conducting the Enforcement Action.

 

3.                                       Defense of Patent Rights .

 

(a)                                  Notice .  If a Party becomes aware of any claim or action by a Third Party against either Party that claims that the Covered Product, or its use, Development, Manufacture, Commercialization or sale, in the Territory infringes such Third Party’s intellectual property rights in the Territory (each, a “ Third Party Action ”), such Party shall promptly notify the other Party of all details regarding such claim or action that is reasonably available to such Party.

 

(b)                                  Right to Defend .  The Transferee, or a Transferee Assignee or Permitted Transferee, shall have the first right, at its sole expense, but not the obligation, to defend a Third Party Action through counsel of its choosing, subject to Section 3(c), below.  Company shall have the right to join any defense brought by the Transferee (or a Transferee Assignee or Permitted Transferee), with its own counsel at its own expense, or in the event that the Transferee (or a Transferee Assignee or Permitted Transferee) declines or fails to assert its intention to defend such Third Party Action within sixty (60) days of receipt/sending of notice under Section 3(a), above, then Company shall have the right, but not the obligation, to defend such Third Party Action to the extent legally permissible.  The Party defending such Third Party Action shall have the sole and exclusive right to select its counsel for such Third Party Action.

 



 

(c)                                   Consultation .  The Party (including a Permitted Transferee) defending a Third Party Action pursuant to Section 3(b) shall be the “ Controlling Party .”  The Controlling Party shall consult with the non-Controlling Party on all material aspects of the defense.  The non-Controlling Party shall have a reasonable opportunity for meaningful participation in decision-making and formulation of defense strategy.  The Parties shall reasonably cooperate with each other in all such actions or proceedings.  The non-Controlling Party will be entitled to be represented by independent counsel of its own choice at its own expense.

 

(d)                                  Appeal .  In the event that a judgment in a Third Party Action is entered against the Controlling Party and an appeal is available, the Controlling Party shall have the first right, but not the obligation, to file such appeal.  In the event the Controlling Party does not desire to file such an appeal, it will promptly, within a reasonable time period (i.e., with sufficient time for the non-Controlling Party to take whatever action may be necessary) prior to the date on which such right to appeal will lapse or otherwise diminish, permit the non-Controlling Party to pursue such appeal at such non-Controlling Party’s own cost and expense.  If applicable Law requires the other Party’s involvement in an appeal, the other Party shall be a nominal party of the appeal and shall provide reasonable cooperation to the appealing Party at the appealing Party’s expense.

 

(e)                                   Costs of an Action .  Subject to the respective indemnity obligations of the Parties set forth in Article 10 of this Agreement, the Controlling Party shall pay all costs associated with a Third Party Action, other than the expenses of the other Party if the other Party elects to join such Action.  Each Party shall have the right to join a Third Party Action defended by the other Party, at its own expense.

 

(f)                                    No Settlement Without Consent .  A Controlling Party shall not settle or otherwise compromise any Third Party Action by admitting that any Company Patent assigned to the Transferee hereunder or Joint Patent is invalid or unenforceable without the non-Controlling Party’s prior written consent, and, (i) in the case of Company, Company may not settle or otherwise compromise a Third Party Action in a way that adversely affects or would reasonably be expected to adversely affect the Transferee’s rights and benefits hereunder with respect to Development and Commercialization of Covered Products within the Territory without the Transferee’s prior written consent, which consent shall not be unreasonably withheld, refused, conditioned or delayed and (ii) in the case of the Transferee, the Transferee may not settle or otherwise compromise an Enforcement Action in a way that adversely affects or would reasonably be expected to adversely affect Company’s rights or benefits outside of the Territory without Company’s prior written consent, which consent shall not be unreasonably withheld, conditioned, refused or delayed.

 



 

Schedule 6 — Form Pharmacovigilance Agreement

 

This Pharmacovigilance Agreement (this “PV Agreement”) is dated as of                   201   (the “Effective Date”), by and between NovaMedica LLC, a limited liability company organized under the laws of the Russian Federation with an address 10113, bldg. 38, Sokolnichesky Val Street, Moscow, Russian Federation (“NovaMedica”), and Marinus Pharmaceuticals, Inc., a corporation organized under the laws of the State of Delaware and having its place of business at 21 Business Park Drive, Branford, Connecticut 06405, USA (“Marinus”).  NovaMedica and Marinus may each be referred to herein as a “Party” or, collectively, as “Parties.”

 

RECITALS:

 

WHEREAS, Domain Russia Investments Limited, a limited company organized under the laws of England and Wales with registration number 7899075, having its registered office at The Broadgate Tower, Third Floor, 20 Primrose Street, City of London, EC2A 2RS, United Kingdom (“DRI”), and Marinus entered into a Technology Transfer Agreement (“TTA”) on December 4, 2012, whereby Marinus licensed to DRI the sole and exclusive right to itself or through Permitted Transferees (as defined in the TTA) to Develop and Commercialize in the Territory certain products in exchange for the consideration specified in the TTA;

 

WHEREAS, pursuant to Section 4.3 of the TTA, NovaMedica and Marinus wish to conclude the terms governing pharmacovigilance in respect of the Covered Products subject to the TTA and NovaMedica-DRI Assignment and Assumption Agreement.

 

NOW, THEREFORE, in consideration of the various promises and undertakings set forth herein, the Parties agree as follows:

 

ARTICLE 1
DEFINITIONS

 

Unless otherwise specifically provided herein or in the TTA, the following terms shall have the following meanings, and other capitalized terms used herein shall have the meanings as set forth in the TTA:

 

1.1                                “Adverse Event” (also referred to in the ICH guidance as an “Adverse Experience”) means any untoward medical occurrence in a patient or clinical investigation subject administered a Covered Product and which does not necessarily have to have a causal relationship with this treatment.

 

1.2                                “Serious Adverse Event” means any Adverse Event that is (a) associated with the use of a Covered Product or has occurrence in a blinded study that included Covered Product and (b) serious, including death, a life-threatening event (at immediate risk of death from the event as it occurs), an event that requires inpatient hospitalization or prolongation of existing hospitalization, a persistent or significant disability/incapacity, a congenital anomaly/birth defect, or is an important medical event that may not result in any of the above outcomes, but, based upon appropriate medical judgment, may jeopardize the patient or subject and may require medical or surgical intervention to prevent any such the outcome.

 

1.3                                Interpretation .  The captions and headings to this PV Agreement are for convenience only, and are to be of no force or effect in construing or interpreting any of the provisions of this Agreement.  Unless context otherwise clearly requires, whenever used in this PV Agreement: 

 



 

(i) “include” or “including” shall be construed as if followed by the words “but not limited to” or “without limitation” or words of similar import; (ii) the word “or” shall be construed as the inclusive meaning identified with the phrase “and/or;” (iii) provisions that require that a Party, the Parties, or any committee or team hereunder “agree,” “consent” or “approve” or the like shall require that such agreement, consent, or approval be specific and in writing, whether by written agreement, letter, written approval of minutes, or otherwise; and (iv) references to any specific Law or article, section, or other division thereof shall be deemed to include the then-current amendments thereto or any replacement Law thereof.  This Agreement was prepared in the English language, which language shall govern the interpretation of, and any dispute regarding, the terms of this PV Agreement.

 

ARTICLE 2
POLICIES

 

2.1                                Existing Procedures . Each Party shall ensure that its existing procedures for intake, review, and reporting of Adverse Events and Serious Adverse Events comply with ICH Guidance E2A on Clinical Data Safety Data Management.

 

2.2                                Document Maintenance .  Each Party shall maintain the original source documents with regard to any Adverse Event, and Serious Adverse Event in accordance with current Law and regulatory requirements of the Regulatory Authority(ies) in its respective territory.

 

2.3                                Information Exchange .  The Parties shall exchange Adverse Event and Serious Adverse Event information as set forth in Article 3 and exchange any other safety information as appropriate.

 

2.4                                Review . The Parties shall review this PV Agreement periodically, but in no event less than annually, and revise and/or update it as necessary in order to ensure the complete and timely exchange of safety information.

 

2.5                                Central Database . Marinus shall maintain a central international Adverse Event database of Adverse Event and Serious Adverse Event reports associated with the Compound or a Covered Product (the “Central Database”).  Not later thirty (30) days after the first clinical site initiation of a clinical study of Covered Product, Marinus shall provide NovaMedica with a copy of Marinus’s standard operating procedure (“SOP”) for safety-related reporting, including a detailed technical description of any data or information intended for inclusion and storage in, and retrieval from, the Central Database. Marinus shall periodically, but less than annually, review its SOP to ensure adequacy and compliance with then-applicable United States FDA and EMEA regulatory reporting requirements.

 

2.6                                Data Use .  NovaMedica shall have the right to obtain data from the central database within a reasonable time frame to meet requirements for providing such data and information to any Regulatory Authority in the Territory as may be required by Law or as otherwise may be reasonably necessary to comply with requirements of a Regulatory Authority within the Territory.

 

ARTICLE 3
ADVERSE EXPERIENCES

 

3.1                                Adverse Event Reporting .  With respect to Adverse Events, in the event either Party becomes aware through its own Development or Commercialization activities or receives a

 



 

report of an Adverse Event from a Third Party, the Party receiving such report shall enter the adverse report information according to SOPs into the Central Database. Marinus will run periodic safety reports at intervals to be determined and to be shared with NovaMedica. With respect to Serious Adverse Events, in the event either Party becomes aware of through its own Development or Commercialization activities or receives a report of a Serious Adverse Event from a Third Party, the Party receiving such report shall provide initial case notification to the other Party via electronic communication within one (1) calendar day for death and life threatening, and five (5) calendar days for all other, Serious Adverse Event reports.  Marinus shall have the right to review all applicable data, records and reports regarding all Adverse Events and Serious Adverse Events reported by NovaMedica and to fully investigate such Adverse Events and Serious Adverse Events at the sites and locations thereof including conducting such personnel interviews as needed so that Marinus may comply with applicable regulations by regulatory agencies outside the Territory.

 

3.2                                Reporting Procedures .  Procedures regarding initial exchange safety data and frequency thereafter will be determined via the Joint Development Committee in accordance with requirements to support development activities.

 

3.3                                Regulatory Filings in the Territory .  With respect to regulatory filings filed by or on behalf of Marinus (or NovaMedica, as the case may be) in the Territory, the party designated by Marinus and NovaMedica to report to Regulatory Authorities in the Territory shall be responsible for reporting to such Regulatory Authorities any Adverse Event required to be reported, whether in non-clinical or clinical studies for or during Development or Commercialization of any Covered Product.  The filing party shall promptly provide the other party with a complete and true copy of any Adverse Event report filed with a Regulatory Authority within the Territory.

 

3.4                                Communication . Information exchanged by the Parties pursuant to this PV Agreement can be transmitted by a secure internet-based interface, e-mail, facsimile, overnight courier, or any other means the Parties agree.  Communications hereunder shall be directed as follows:

 

If to NovaMedica:
[insert point of contact name and contact information]

 

If to Marinus:
[insert point of contact name and contact information]

 

ARTICLE 4
MISCELLANEOUS

 

4.1                                Term .  Following execution, this PV Agreement shall remain in full force and effect until expiration or termination of the TTA, unless terminated earlier by mutual written agreement between the Parties.

 

4.2                                No Consequential Damages .  IN NO EVENT SHALL EITHER PARTY OR ANY OF ITS AFFILIATES OR SUBLICENSEES BE LIABLE TO THE OTHER PARTY OR ANY OF ITS AFFILIATES OR SUBLICENSEES FOR SPECIAL, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, CONSEQUENTIAL, OR PUNITIVE DAMAGES, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, WARRANTY, TORT, NEGLIGENCE, STRICT LIABILITY, OR OTHERWISE ARISING OUT OF OR RELATING TO THIS AGREEMENT OR ANY BREACH THEREOF.

 



 

4.3                                Additional Signatories .  In the event that NovaMedica shall transfer any rights to Covered Products to a Permitted Transferee, then NovaMedica shall require such Permitted Transferee to become a signatory hereto and subject to the same rights and obligations as NovaMedica hereunder.

 

4.4                                Entire Agreement; Amendments .  This PV Agreement, the TTA, and any other agreement appended thereto as a schedule or exhibit, constitute and contain the entire understanding and agreement of the Parties respecting the subject matter hereof and cancel and supersede any and all prior negotiations, correspondence, understandings, and agreements between the Parties, whether oral or written, regarding such subject matter.  No waiver, modification, or amendment of any provision of this PV Agreement shall be valid or effective unless made in a writing referencing this PV Agreement and signed by a duly authorized officer of each Party.

 

4.5                                Captions .  The captions to this PV Agreement are for convenience only, and are to be of no force or effect in construing or interpreting any of the provisions hereof.

 

4.6                                Force Majeure .  Neither Party shall be liable to the other for failure or delay in the performance of any of its obligations under this PV Agreement for the time and to the extent such failure or delay is caused by acts of God, earthquake, riot, civil commotion, terrorism, war, strikes or other labor disputes, fire, flood, failure or delay of transportation, default by suppliers or unavailability of raw materials, governmental acts or restrictions, or any other reason which is beyond the control of the respective Party

 

4.7                                Governing Law .  This PV Agreement shall be governed by and interpreted in accordance with the Laws of the State of Delaware, U.S.A., excluding the application of any conflict of laws principles that would require application of the Law of another jurisdiction.

 

4.8                                Waiver .  A waiver by either Party of any of the terms and conditions of this PV Agreement in any instance shall not be deemed or construed to be a waiver of such term or condition for the future, or of any other term or condition hereof.  All rights, remedies, undertakings, obligations, and agreements contained in this PV Agreement shall be cumulative and none of them shall be in limitation of any other remedy, right, undertaking, obligation, or agreement of either Party.

 

4.9                                Severability .  When possible, each provision of this PV Agreement will be interpreted in such manner as to be effective and valid under applicable Law, but if any provision of this PV Agreement is held to be prohibited by or invalid under applicable Law, such provision will be ineffective only to the extent of such prohibition or invalidity, without invalidating the remainder of this PV Agreement.  The Parties shall make a good faith effort to replace the invalid or unenforceable provision with a valid one that in its economic effect is most consistent with the invalid or unenforceable provision.

 

4.10                         Counterparts .  This Agreement may be executed in one or more counterparts, each of which will be deemed an original, and all of which together will be deemed to be one and the same instrument.  A facsimile copy of this Agreement, including the signature pages, will be deemed an original.

 



 

IN WITNESS WHEREOF, the Parties have caused this PV Agreement to be executed and delivered by their respective duly authorized officers as of the day and year first above written, each copy of which shall for all purposes be deemed to be an original.

 

Marinus Pharmaceuticals, Inc.

 

NovaMedica LLC

 

 

 

 

 

 

By:

 

 

By:

 

 

 

 

 

 

Name:

 

 

Name:

 

 

 

 

 

 

Title:

 

 

Title:

 

 




EXHIBIT 10.7

 

ASSIGNMENT AND ASSUMPTION AGREEMENT

 

This Assignment and Assumption Agreement (“ Agreement ”), signed as of December 4, 2012, is made by and among Domain Russia Investments Limited, a limited company organized under the laws of England and Wales with registration number 7899075, having its registered office at The Broadgate Tower, Third Floor, 20 Primrose Street, City of London, EC2A 2RS, United Kingdom (“ DRI ”), Marinus Pharmaceuticals, Inc., a corporation organized under the laws of the State of Delaware, USA, and having its place of business at 21 Business Park Drive, Branford, Connecticut 06405, USA (“ Marinus ” or “Company” ), and NovaMedica LLC, a limited liability company organized under the laws of the Russian Federation with an address of 10113, bldg. 38, Sokolnichesky Val Street, Moscow, Russian Federation (“ NovaMedica ” and, together with DRI and Marinus, the “ Parties ”, and each of NovaMedica, Marinus, and DRI, a “ Party ”).

 

WITNESSETH:

 

WHEREAS, Marinus and DRI entered into that certain Technology Transfer Agreement on December 4, 2012 (the “TTA” ).

 

WHEREAS, DRI has agreed to assign the TTA in full, including all rights and obligations thereunder, to NovaMedica, and NovaMedica has agreed to accept such assignment of rights and agrees to assume such obligations.

 

WHEREAS, the assignments and assumptions effected by this Agreement are consistent with the terms of the TTA, and Marinus has consented to these assignments and assumptions.

 

WHEREAS, DRI and NovaMedica intend that the assignment of Intellectual Property Rights under the TTA to NovaMedica be effected as a contribution to the charter capital and to the additional paid-in capital of NovaMedica, in accordance with the terms of the Investment Agreement dated February 15, 2012 (the “Investment Agreement” ) among Domain Associates, L.L.C., RUSNANO OJSC, RusnanoMedInvest LLC ( “RMI” ), DRI, and NovaMedica and the Assignment and Contribution Agreement dated December 4, 2012 among RMI, DRI,  NovaMedica and Marinus.  Towards that end, NovaMedica is engaging a licensed appraiser (the “Appraiser” ) to perform an appraisal of the value of the Assigned IP and the Licensed IP (as such terms are defined in the TTA) to be contributed to NovaMedica, in accordance with Article III, Section 2.1(c)-(f) of the Investment Agreement.

 

WHEREAS, in accordance with the terms and provisions of the TTA, DRI shall cause to be filed with the Eurasian Patent Office ( “EAPO” ) a registration of the Assigned IP assigned pursuant to the TTA, as further specified herein.

 

NOW, THEREFORE, for good and valuable consideration, the receipt and sufficiency of which is hereby acknowledged, the Parties hereby agree as follows:

 



 

AGREEMENT

 

SECTION 1.  Assignment and Assumption . DRI hereby assigns, transfers, and conveys to NovaMedica all of DRI’s rights and obligations (including all license, sublicense, and assignment rights) under the TTA, and NovaMedica accepts and assumes from DRI such assignment, transfer, and conveyance; provided however that rights with respect to EA Patent Application № EA201270241 (the “ Second EA Patent Application ”) shall be addressed pursuant to a separate Assignment and Contribution Agreement amongst the Parties (the “ ACA ”).  NovaMedica shall be deemed a party to the TTA substituted in the place of DRI, and NovaMedica shall become, and shall have all the rights and obligations of “Transferee” (as defined in the TTA) thereunder and at the same time also retain and have all the obligations of the entity separately identified in the TTA as those of “NovaMedica”.  NovaMedica shall benefit from all of the rights of, and shall be bound by and perform all of the obligations, representations, and warranties of, Transferee under the TTA as if NovaMedica were originally named in place of DRI in the TTA. NovaMedica hereby assumes and agrees to pay, perform, fulfill, and discharge, within the time such payment is due, and in such a manner as may be required by the TTA, and to indemnify and hold harmless DRI against, all liabilities and obligations under the TTA of DRI, NovaMedica, and Transferee, except such liabilities and obligations specified in Section 3(a) of this Agreement. This Agreement shall not relieve DRI of any currently outstanding or accrued obligations under the TTA directly applicable to DRI, if any, and the indemnification obligation pursuant to this sentence shall not apply to any such outstanding or accrued obligations. Marinus and DRI acknowledge that DRI has paid Marinus the up-front fee of $100,000 as set forth in Section 6.1 of the TTA. For the avoidance of doubt, as of the Effective Date, NovaMedica shall automatically and immediately become the “Transferee” and a “Party” to the TTA and at the same time also retains all the rights and has all the obligations of the entity separately identified in the TTA as “NovaMedica.” Marinus and NovaMedica shall have the right to amend and/or terminate the TTA without DRI’s consent.  Neither NovaMedica nor DRI shall be liable to Marinus for any direct or indirect action, inaction, or omission of the other, or for breach of a representation, warranty, covenant, or other obligation of the other, under the TTA or this Agreement.

 

SECTION 2.  Acknowledgement of the TTA .  The Parties agree that, except as explicitly stated herein, all of the terms and conditions of the TTA, remain unchanged and in full force and effect throughout the term of the TTA.

 

SECTION 3.  Certain Obligations of DRI under the TTA .

 

(a)                                  For the avoidance of doubt, the assignment of all rights and obligations under the TTA to NovaMedica by DRI shall not release DRI from any obligation or liability which, at the time of such assignment, has already accrued to DRI or which is attributable to a period prior to such assignment.

 

(b)                                  Marinus has previously assigned to DRI EA Patent Application EA200801468, and such assignment has been recorded with the EAPO (the “ EA Patent Application ”).  The EAPO has issued notice of a formal decision to allow a patent (an “ EA Patent ”) under the EA Patent Application, and the Parties have received a true and complete copy of such notice. The Parties anticipate that such EA Patent will be formally issued in the next sixty (60) calendar days

 

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from the date of this Agreement.  DRI shall assign EA Patent to NovaMedica pursuant to Section 4 below.

 

(c)                                   Marinus currently owns the Second EA Patent Application.  The Second EA Patent Application shall be registered in the name of NovaMedica pursuant to the ACA.

 

SECTION 4.  Registration of Assignment by DRI .

 

(a)                                  DRI hereby grants, assigns, and transfers to NovaMedica, and NovaMedica hereby accepts DRI’s right to receive the EA Patent and to be properly registered with the EAPO as the assignee and owner of the EA Patent.  For the clarity, the assignment of the EA Patent to NovaMedica shall be immediately effective on the date of issuance of the EA Patent by the EAPO.  For the EA Patent, DRI shall take all actions required of it to ensure that the registration of such assignment to NovaMedica is registered, recorded, and noticed with EAPO, and that all other actions required under applicable Law are taken to ensure that any such assignment and registration of assignment is fully effective and enforceable.

 

(b)                                  Within twenty (20) calendar days after issuance to DRI of the EA Patent, as evidenced by publication of a notice of registration by the EAPO or by issuance of a certificate or official correspondence providing such official notice, DRI shall (subject to the provision by NovaMedica of the necessary documents and assistance as may be reasonably required and subject to Marinus providing such information and assistance as may be required in accordance with Section 2.2 of the TTA) file with the EAPO an application for the registration of the assignment of such EA Patent to NovaMedica and shall undertake all measures to ensure that the assignment is registered within the statutory sixty (60) calendar days or such other term that is provided by the applicable regulation ( “EA Patent Registration” ).  Until the date of EA Patent Registration, DRI shall be fully r esponsible for prosecution and maintenance of the EA Patent Application.

 

(c)                                   DRI and NovaMedica shall provide each other with all information and assistance as may be required to complete any EA Patent Registration as soon as practicable but in no event later than seven (7) calendar days from the date of the request for further information and/or assistance. DRI and NovaMedica shall execute such documents as are reasonable and necessary to effect registration of assignment of the EA Patent.  DRI and NovaMedica will work together to make such amendments (if required by the EAPO) to the EA Patent Registration, as the case may be, and resubmit the EA Patent Registration at such time as the EAPO is expected to accept the submission of such application.  DRI and NovaMedica shall each bear its own expenses for all such actions.

 

(d)                                  In the event that DRI fails to complete the EA Patent Registration within the time frames set forth above (including any extension thereof occasioned by resubmission of an application for the EA Patent Registration), then DRI shall be deemed to have irrevocably granted to NovaMedica the power of attorney to file the EA Patent Registration application for the EA Patent with the EAPO, and to execute and file such documents and papers as necessary with respect thereto and to do all other lawfully permitted acts as may be reasonably necessary to complete the EA Patent Registration with the EAPO, in each case in the name and on behalf of DRI as DRI’s agent and attorney-in-fact or otherwise.

 

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(e)                                   DRI shall comply with its obligations under Chapter III, Sections 3.6 and 3.7 of the Investment Agreement.  This Section 4 is not intended to alter or restrict DRI’s rights or obligations under the foregoing provisions of the Investment Agreement.

 

(f)                                    DRI’s breach of any of its respective obligations herein or its respective obligations under Chapter III, Section 3.6 and 3.7 of the Investment Agreement will cause irreparable damage to NovaMedica which cannot adequately be remedied in an action at law and in the event of such a breach, NovaMedica shall be entitled to seek equitable relief in the nature of specific performance as well as other remedies available at law.

 

SECTION 5.  Representations and Warranties of NovaMedica to Marinus and DRI .

 

NovaMedica hereby represents, and warrants to Marinus and DRI that, as of the date hereof:

 

(a)                                  NovaMedica is duly organized and validly existing under the Laws of the jurisdiction of its incorporation or organization;

 

(b)                                  NovaMedica has taken all actions necessary to authorize the execution and delivery of this Agreement and the performance of its obligations under this Agreement and the TTA, except for receiving of NovaMedica’s corporate approval, which corporate approval shall be obtained as soon as practicable;

 

(c)                                   each of this Agreement and the TTA (once assumed by NovaMedica) and is a legal and valid obligation of NovaMedica, binding upon NovaMedica, and enforceable against NovaMedica in accordance with the terms of this Agreement;

 

(d)                                  the execution, delivery, and performance of this Agreement by NovaMedica and the performance by NovaMedica of its obligations as the Transferee under this Agreement or the TTA does not conflict with, breach, or create in any Third Party the right to accelerate, terminate, or modify any agreement or instrument to which NovaMedica is a party or by which NovaMedica is bound, and, to NovaMedica’s knowledge, does not violate any Law of any Governmental Body having authority over NovaMedica;

 

(e)                                   to NovaMedica’s knowledge, no consent by any Third Party or Governmental Body is required with respect to the execution and delivery of this Agreement by NovaMedica or the consummation by NovaMedica of the transactions contemplated hereby or under the TTA; and

 

(f)                                    NovaMedica has all right, power, and authority to enter into and to perform its obligations under this Agreement and the TTA.

 

SECTION 6.  Representations and Warranties of DRI to NovaMedica and Marinus .

 

DRI hereby represents, warrants and covenants to NovaMedica and Marinus that, as of the date hereof:

 

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(a)                                  DRI is duly organized and validly existing under the Laws of the jurisdiction of its incorporation or organization;

 

(b)                                  DRI has taken all actions necessary to authorize the execution and delivery of this Agreement and the performance of its obligations under this Agreement;

 

(c)                                   this Agreement is a legal and valid obligation of DRI, binding upon DRI, and enforceable against DRI in accordance with the terms of this Agreement;

 

(d)                                  the execution, delivery, and performance of this Agreement by DRI, and the performance by DRI of its obligations under this Agreement, does not conflict with, breach, or create in any Third Party the right to accelerate, terminate, or modify any agreement or instrument to which DRI is a party or by which DRI is bound, and, to DRI’s knowledge, does not violate any Law of any Governmental Body having authority over DRI;

 

(e)                                   to DRI’s knowledge, no consent by any Third Party or Governmental Body is required with respect to the execution and delivery of this Agreement by DRI or the consummation by DRI of the transactions contemplated hereby; and

 

(f)                                    DRI has all right, power, and authority to enter into and to perform its obligations under this Agreement.

 

SECTION 7. Miscellaneous . This Agreement shall be governed by and construed in accordance with the laws of the State of California, USA, irrespective of the choice of laws principles thereof.  If any provision of this Agreement is unenforceable at law, the remainder shall remain in effect.  No person that is not a Party to this Agreement shall have any rights or obligations pursuant to this Agreement, unless otherwise provided in this Agreement.  No amendment or waiver of any provision of this Agreement shall be effective unless in writing signed by each of the Parties.  The headings used in this Agreement are for the purpose of reference only and shall not affect the meaning or interpretation of any provision of this Agreement.  This Agreement and any amendments hereto may be executed in one or more counterparts, each of which shall be deemed an original but all of which together will constitute one and the same instrument This Agreement is not transferable or assignable, and neither DRI nor NovaMedica shall have the power or right to assign any of its rights or obligations hereunder, whether by operation of law or otherwise.  DRI and NovaMedica each agrees to execute any additional documents and take any other actions necessary or appropriate to carry out the intents and purposes of this Agreement.  DRI shall promptly provide NovaMedica all documents and correspondence received from or provided to the EAPO, Marinus, or any Third Party that relate to any EA Patent or Transferred EA Patent Application, the TTA, or this Agreement. Any dispute, controversy or claim arising out of, relating to or in connection with, this Agreement, including any dispute regarding its validity or termination or the performance or breach of this Agreement, as well as any non-contractual obligation arising out of or in connection with it, shall be finally settled by arbitration under the Rules of the London Court of International Arbitration (the “LCIA”) then in effect, except as they may be modified by agreement of the Parties.  The place of arbitration will be London, England. The language of the arbitration will be English. All capitalized terms shall have the same meaning as set forth in the TTA, unless otherwise stated.

 

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This Agreement shall enter into full force and effect from the date of NovaMedica’s Board of Directors approval (the “Effective Date”).

 

[Signature page follows]

 

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IN WITNESS WHEREOF , this Agreement is executed as of the date first written above on behalf of the Parties by their duly authorized representatives.

 

 

DOMAIN RUSSIA INVESTMENTS LIMITED

 

 

Signature:

/s/ Tatiana Saribekian

 

 

 

 

Name:

Tatiana Saribekian

 

 

 

 

Title:

CEO

 

 

 

 

 

 

MARINUS PHARMACEUTICALS, INC.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Signature:

/s/ Christopher M. Cashman

 

 

 

 

Name:

Christopher M. Cashman

 

 

 

 

Title:

CEO

 

 

 

 

 

 

NOVAMEDICA LLC

 

 

 

 

 

 

Signature:

/s/ Vladimir Gurdus

 

 

 

 

Name:

Vladimir Gurdus

 

 

 

 

Title:

General Director, CEO of LLC “D-Pharma”, Managing Company

 

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EXHIBIT 10.8

 

CLINICAL DEVELOPMENT AND COLLABORATION AGREEMENT

 

THIS CLINICAL DEVELOPMENT AND COLLABORATION AGREEMENT (the “ Agreement ”) is made effective as of the 25th day of June, 2013 (the “ Effective Date ”), by and between NovaMedica, LLC (“ NovaMedica ”), a limited liability company organized under the laws of the Russian Federation with an address of 10113 bldg 38, Sokolnichesky Val Street Moscow Russian Federation, and Marinus Pharmaceuticals, Inc. ( “Marinus” or “Company” ), a corporation organized under the laws of the State of Delaware, USA, and having its place of business at 142 Temple Street, Suite 205, New Haven, Connecticut 06510, USA.  For the purposes of this Agreement, “ Party ” means NovaMedica and Marinus, individually, and “ Parties ” means NovaMedica and Marinus, collectively.

 

WHEREAS , NovaMedica is engaged in the business of the research, development and commercialization of pharmaceutical products in the Territory (as hereinafter defined); and

 

WHEREAS , Marinus is a development stage company engaged in the research, development and commercialization of certain products, including the Covered Products (as hereinafter defined); and

 

WHEREAS , Marinus and Domain Russia Investments Limited (“ DRI ”) entered into a Technology Transfer Agreement (“ TTA ”) dated as of December 4, 2012, pursuant to which Marinus transferred certain Marinus IP (as defined therein) to DRI; and

 

WHEREAS , on December 4, 2012, Marinus, DRI and NovaMedica entered into an Assignment and Assumption Agreement, pursuant to which DRI assigned the TTA in full to NovaMedica and under which NovaMedica agreed to accept such assignment of rights and to assume substantially all of DRI’s rights and obligations under the TTA; and

 

W HEREAS , pursuant to the TTA, the Parties are required to enter into this Agreement under which Marinus shall assist NovaMedica in the Development and Commercialization of the Covered Product in the Territory;

 

NOW, THEREFORE , in consideration of the foregoing and the mutual covenants and agreements set forth in this Agreement, and for other good and valuable consideration, the receipt and sufficiency of which are hereby acknowledged, the Parties, intending to be legally bound hereby, hereby agree as follows.

 

1.                                       DEFINITIONS

 

1.1                                “Clinical Data” shall have the meaning set forth in Section 4.2.3 (b) .

 

1.2                                “Commercial Supplies” shall mean supplies of the Covered Products in suitable final packaged form, as specified under the Supply Agreement between the Parties, manufactured in compliance with GMP, and ready to be offered for commercial sale for use in the Field in the Territory by NovaMedica and/or Permitted Transferees.

 



 

1.3                                Compound ” means ganaxolone (3α-hydroxy-3β-methyl-5α-pregnan-20-one), the chemical structure of which is described in Schedule 1, in any formulation, the use, Development or Commercialization of which in the absence of the TTA, a sublicense to a Permitted Transferee or other ownership, assignment or license of applicable rights, would infringe at least one Valid Claim of the Assigned IP or Company Patent Rights, or that is manufactured or otherwise produced, at least in part, using Company Know-How.

 

1.4                                “Confidential Information” of a Party means such Party’s confidential information relating to its business, operations and products, including but not limited to any technical information, formulae, processes, techniques, preclinical information, toxicology information, clinical, non-clinical, or pre-clinical information, regulatory information, Manufacturing information, formulation information, packaging information, dosing information, dose regimen information, target patient information, marketing information, sales information, pricing information, reimbursement information, Know-How, trade secrets, or inventions (whether patentable or not) that is disclosed to or learned by the other Party in connection with this Agreement. All Company Know-How shall be deemed Confidential Information of the Company.

 

1.5                                “Covered Product” means any pharmaceutical product (including, without limitation, any diagnostic product or therapeutic product) that (a) contains or comprises the Compound in any formulation designed and intended for use in and for the Field, whether or not combined with other compounds, (b) in the absence of the TTA, a sublicense to the Permitted Transferee or other ownership, assignment or license of applicable rights, would infringe at least one Valid Claim of the Assigned IP or Company Patent Rights, or (c) is manufactured or otherwise produced, at least in part, using Company Know-How.

 

1.6                                “Development” or “Develop” means the performance of all development activities, including any pre-clinical and clinical development activities, including, without limitation, toxicology, pharmacology, test method development and stability testing, process development, formulation development, quality control development, statistical analysis, Clinical Trials, and manufacturing and regulatory activities or any similar activities that are useful or otherwise required to obtain Regulatory Approval of a Covered Product in the Territory, including interacting with any Regulatory Authorities in the Territory regarding the foregoing.

 

1.7                                Development Plan ” shall have the meaning set forth in Section 3.2 .

 

1.8                                Drug Approval Application” shall mean an application to a Regulatory Authority for Regulatory Approval of the Covered Product in the Territory.

 

1.9                                EMA ” means the European Medicines Agency or any successor agency.

 

1.10                         “Excluded Field” means and includes the treatment of any unpleasant sensory or emotional experience associated with actual or potential tissue damage, or described in terms of such damage, including discomfort, either acute or chronic, caused by a primary lesion or dysfunction in the peripheral or central nervous system (e.g., neuropathic pain, post-herpetic neuralgia, trigeminal neuralgia), phantom pain, back pain, surgical pain, cancer pain, and pain associated with inflammation or damage of any tissues (e.g., muscle, bone, organs,

 

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tendons, nerves, and skin) by disease, injury, infection, surgery, or at birth.  For avoidance of doubt, neither NovaMedica (nor any Permitted Transferee) shall be permitted hereunder to pursue or obtain any Regulatory Approval or labeling for a Covered Product as an analgesic or anesthetic agent or for the treatment of pain as a result of contractual restrictions imposed on Company by the License Agreement.

 

1.11                         “Field” means any and all prophylactic, palliative, therapeutic, and diagnostic uses for any human or animal disease or condition other than diseases, disorders and conditions that are in the Excluded Field; provided, however, that during the Term should any Excluded Field limitations imposed on Company by the License Agreement expire or be expanded, the “Field” under this Agreement shall thereafter be expanded on an equivalent basis.

 

1.12                         “IND” means an investigational new drug application filed with the FDA or the equivalent application or filing filed with any equivalent agency or Governmental Body outside the United States (including any supra-national entity such as in the European Union) for approval to commence a Clinical Trial in such jurisdiction.

 

1.13                         “Indication” means a generally acknowledged disease or condition, a significant manifestation of a disease or condition, or symptoms associated with a disease or condition or a risk for a disease or condition.  For the avoidance of doubt, all variants of a single disease or condition (whether classified by severity or otherwise) shall be treated as the same Indication.

 

1.14                         Joint Commercialization Committee ” or “ JCC ” has the meaning given in Section 3.3 , below.

 

1.15                         Joint Development Committee ” or “ JDC ” has the meaning given in Section 3.2 , below.

 

1.16                         “J oint Steering Committee ” or “ JSC ” has the meaning given in Section 3.1 , below.

 

1.17                         Law ” or “ Laws ” means all applicable laws, statutes, rules, regulations, ordinances, and other pronouncements having the binding effect of law of any Governmental Body.

 

1.18                         “NDA” means a New Drug Application filed pursuant to the requirements of the FDA, a Biologics License Application filed pursuant to the requirements of the FDA, and any equivalent application filed in any country outside of the Territory, together, in each case, with all additions, deletions, or supplements thereto.

 

1.19                         Permitted Transferee ” means an assignee, licensee or sublicensee of NovaMedica of any of the rights and licenses assigned to NovaMedica under the TTA in accordance with the terms of the TTA.

 

1.20                         “Regulatory Authority” means (a) the FDA, (b) the EMA, (c) any successor or equivalent of the foregoing; or (d) any regulatory body with regulatory authority or oversight over pharmaceutical or biotechnology products in any other jurisdiction anywhere in

 

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the world, or whose review or approval is necessary for the Development, Manufacture and/or Commercialization of a Covered Product in a particular country or jurisdiction in the Territory.

 

1.21                         “Regulatory Approval” means, with respect to a particular Covered Product, any and all approvals, licenses, registrations, or authorizations of a relevant Regulatory Authority (including price approvals) necessary for the Development, Manufacture and/or Commercialization of such Covered Product in a particular country or jurisdiction.  For the avoidance of doubt, Regulatory Approval in the United States shall be deemed to occur upon approval of the applicable NDA (as defined above) in the United States, and shall not be construed to require a determination or approval of reimbursements of any type.

 

1.22                         Territory ” means all countries listed in Schedule 2 hereto.

 

1.23                         Third Party ” means any Person other than Marinus or NovaMedica.

 

1.24                         “Third Party Agreements” shall have the meaning set forth in Section 4.7.1 .

 

1.25                         Interpretation .  The captions and headings to this Agreement are for convenience only, and are to be of no force or effect in construing or interpreting any of the provisions of this Agreement.  Unless specified to the contrary, references to Articles, Sections, or Schedules mean the particular Articles, Sections or Schedules to this Agreement and references to this Agreement include all Schedules hereto.  Unless context otherwise clearly requires, whenever used in this Agreement:  (i) “include” or “including” shall be construed as if followed by the words “but not limited to” or “without limitation” or words of similar import; (ii) the word “or” shall be construed as the inclusive meaning identified with the phrase “and/or;” (iii) provisions that require that a Party or the Parties to “agree,” “consent” or “approve” or the like shall require that such agreement, consent, or approval be specific and in writing, whether by written agreement, letter, written approval of minutes or otherwise; and (iv) references to any specific Law or article, section, or other division thereof shall be deemed to include then-current amendments thereto or any replacement Law thereof.  This Agreement was prepared in the English language, which language shall govern the interpretation of, and any dispute regarding, the terms of this Agreement.

 

In this Agreement, unless the context requires otherwise:

 

(a)                                  the headings are included for convenience only and shall not affect the construction of this Agreement;

 

(b)                                  words denoting the singular shall include the plural and vice versa;

 

(c)                                   words denoting one gender shall include each gender and all genders;

 

(d)                                  the words “include” or “including” shall mean “include, without limitation” or “including, without limitation,” as the case may be, and the language following “include” or “including” shall not be deemed to set forth an exhaustive list; and

 

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(e)                                   any reference to an enactment or statutory provision is a reference to it as it may have been, or may from time to time be amended, modified, consolidated or reenacted.

 

(f)                                    any Capitalized Terms not specifically defined herein shall have the meaning set forth in the TTA.

 

The Schedules to this Agreement comprise part of and shall be construed in accordance with the terms of this Agreement.

 

2.                                       SCOPE OF THE COLLABORATION

 

2.1                                Collaboration Goals . Pursuant and subject to the terms of this Agreement, within the Field and the Territory, the Parties agree to collaborate in the Development and Commercialization of Covered Product each supporting the Joint Steering, Development and Commercialization Team activities as outlined in Section 3.  All other advice and assistance shall be mutually agreed by the Parties.  NovaMedica shall promptly reimburse Marinus for all Out-of-Pocket Expenses incurred by Marinus in performing its obligations under this Agreement according to its terms.

 

Notwithstanding anything in this Agreement to the contrary, NovaMedica shall be free to work alone or with Third Parties to research, develop, manufacture and/or commercialize any product that is not a Covered Product in or outside the Field in the Territory in accordance with the TTA, and Marinus shall be free to work alone or with Third Parties to research, develop, manufacture and/or commercialize any Covered Product outside the Territory and any and all products that are not a Covered Product anywhere in the world.  Consistent with the TTA, Marinus shall have no obligation to perform any clinical trials in the Territory, except to the extent expressly agreed in writing by the Parties.

 

2.2                                Assistance by Marinus .  In connection with NovaMedica’s Development and/or Commercialization of the Compound and/or any of the Covered Product in the Territory, and in furtherance of such efforts, the Parties agree to form the committees specified in Section 2 of this Agreement to oversee the Development and Commercialization of the Covered Products in the Territory.

 

3.                                       MANAGEMENT OF COLLABORATION

 

3.1                                Joint Steering Committee .  Promptly after the Effective Date, the Parties shall establish a Joint Steering Committee (“ JSC ”) to oversee Development of Covered Products until the First Commercial Sale of a Covered Product in the Territory, unless otherwise agreed in writing by Marinus and NovaMedica.  The JSC will be comprised of an equal number of members appointed by NovaMedica and Marinus.  The JSC shall oversee the Development of Covered Products in the Field in the Territory by NovaMedica and its Permitted Transferees (“ Development Plan ”).  All JSC decisions will be made by unanimous vote, with the JSC representatives of Marinus collectively having one vote and the JSC representatives of NovaMedica collectively having one vote.  If the JSC is unable to decide or resolve unanimously any matter properly presented to it for action, then such matter shall be resolved as provided in Section 3.1.3 below.

 

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3.1.1                      Chairmanship .  One JSC representative from a Party shall chair the JSC (the “ Chairperson ”) on a rotating annual calendar year basis, alternating between a representative from NovaMedica and a representative from Marinus, with the initial Chairperson to be from NovaMedica.  The Chairperson shall send notices and agendas for all JSC meetings to all JSC members and ensure review and approval of the minutes of each JSC meeting within thirty (30) calendar days of adjournment of a JSC meeting.

 

3.1.2                      Meetings .  Unless otherwise agreed in writing by NovaMedica and Marinus, the JSC will meet as needed upon request from at least one of the Parties to the then-current Chairperson.  At each meeting, the Parties shall provide updates on the status of their respective responsibilities.  Meetings may be held by teleconference, videoconference or in person, as mutually agreed upon by the Parties.  At each meeting, a secretary shall by appointed by the Chairperson to record meeting minutes.  Within ten (10) calendar days after a meeting, the Chairperson shall circulate draft minutes to the Parties for review, comment and distribution, in order to finalize the minutes within thirty (30) calendar days of such meeting.

 

3.1.3                      Dispute Resolution .  If a dispute arises in connection with the Development Plan, Commercialization of the Covered Product in the Field and in the Territory or any other issue addressed by the JSC, the JSC shall confer immediately and use Commercially Reasonable Efforts to resolve the dispute or issue within ten (10) calendar days of their initial conference.  No such dispute or issue shall be considered resolved until the JSC has unanimously agreed to the resolution; provided, however, that if the JSC does not reach consensus, within a thirty (30) calendar day period, the resolution of the dispute or issue if it relates to Development shall be made by the JSC representatives of Marinus or if it relates to Commercialization in the Territory shall be made by the JSC Representative of NovaMedica unless such resolution in the opinion of any member of the JSC would be reasonably expected to be adverse to, materially conflict with, or interfere with the regulatory approval, manufacture, marketing authorization or marketing efforts for Covered Products outside of the Territory (in the case of Marinus) or inside the Territory (in the case of NovaMedica), in which case such dispute will be escalated and otherwise handled in accordance with Section 12 of this Agreement.

 

3.2                                Joint Development Committee .  Promptly after the Effective Date, the Parties shall establish a Joint Development Committee (“ JDC ”), which shall continue in existence during the term of this Agreement for so long as NovaMedica (and/or one or more Permitted Transferees) is Developing a Covered Product(s) for use in the Field in the Territory.  All day-to-day Development work shall be conducted under the direction of the JDC, which shall be comprised of an equal number of representatives from NovaMedica and Marinus.  All JDC decisions will be made by unanimous vote.  The JDC will be responsible for drafting the Development Plan for submission to the JSC, coordinating amendments to the Development Plan in respect of a Covered Product for use in the Field in the Territory, overseeing compliance with all safety requirements regarding the Covered Product in the Field and in the Territory for overseeing such Development work, and for making operational decisions related to such Development work.  Notwithstanding anything to the contrary set forth in this Agreement, NovaMedica and its Permitted Transferees shall bear full responsibility for complying with all safety and other regulatory requirements, laws and regulations regarding the Development of the Covered Product in the Field and in the Territory.

 

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3.2.1                      Chairmanship .  One JDC representative from a Party shall chair the JDC (the “ Chairperson ”) on a rotating annual calendar year basis, alternating between a representative from NovaMedica and a representative from Marinus, with the initial Chairperson to be from Marinus.  The Chairperson shall send notices and agendas for all JDC meetings to all JDC members and ensure review and approval of the minutes of each JDC meeting within thirty (30) calendar days of adjournment of a JSC meeting.

 

3.2.2                      Meetings .  The JDC will meet as needed upon request from at least one of the Parties to the then-current Chairperson in accordance with a schedule to be established by the JDC from time to time.  At each meeting, the Parties shall provide updates on the status of their respective responsibilities.  Meetings may be held by teleconference, videoconference or in person, as mutually agreed upon by the Parties.  At each meeting, a secretary shall by appointed by the Chairperson to record meeting minutes.  Within ten (10) calendar days after a meeting, the Chairperson shall circulate draft minutes to the Parties for review, comment and distribution, in order to finalize the minutes within thirty (30) calendar days of such meeting.

 

3.2.3                      Dispute Resolution .  If a dispute arises in connection with the Development Plan or Development of the Covered Products or any other issue addressed by the JDC, the JDC shall confer immediately and use Commercially Reasonable Efforts to resolve the dispute or issue within ten (10) calendar days of their initial conference.  No such dispute or issue shall be considered resolved until the JDC has unanimously agreed to the resolution; provided, however, that if the JDC does not reach consensus, within a thirty (30) calendar day period, the resolution of the dispute or issue shall be made by the JSC representatives of Marinus unless such resolution in the opinion of any member of the JSC would be reasonably expected to be adverse to, materially conflict with the Development or regulatory approval for Covered Products in the Territory, in which case such dispute will be handled in accordance with Section 12 of this Agreement.

 

3.3                                Joint Commercialization Committee . Promptly after the Effective Date, the Parties shall establish a Joint Commercial Committee (“ JCC ”) which shall remain in existence during the term of this Agreement for so long as NovaMedica (or a Permitted Transferee) is preparing to Commercialize a Covered Product(s) in the Territory, the day-to-day Commercialization preparation work and supply chain audit procedures shall be conducted under the direction of the JCC.  The JCC shall be comprised of an equal number of representatives from the NovaMedica and Marinus.  All JCC decisions will be made by unanimous vote.  Prior to the First Commercial Sale of a Covered Product (or such longer period as the Parties may agree in writing), the JCC will be responsible for coordinating any amendments to the plan for Commercialization of Covered Product(s) in the Territory, for overseeing performance of the Commercialization program, and for making operational decisions related to that program.  Periodically, a member of the JCC for each party shall provide to the other party a reasonably detailed summary of the Commercialization activities conducted in the Territory.  The JCC will jointly prepare and provide to each Party on at least a Calendar Quarter basis a report, via e-mail, regarding the status of Commercialization activities hereunder.

 

3.3.1                      Chairmanship .  One JCC representative from a Party shall chair the JCC (the “ Chairperson ”) on a rotating annual calendar year basis, alternating between a representative from NovaMedica and a representative from Marinus, with the initial Chairperson

 

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to be from NovaMedica.  The Chairperson shall send notices and agendas for all JCC meetings to all JCC members and ensure review and approval of the minutes of each JCC meeting within thirty (30) calendar days of adjournment of a JSC meeting.

 

3.3.2                      Meetings .  The JCC will meet as needed upon request from at least one of the Parties to the then-current Chairperson, in accordance with a schedule to be established by the JDC from time to time.  At each meeting, the Parties shall provide updates on the status of their respective responsibilities.  Meetings may be held by teleconference, videoconference or in person, as mutually agreed upon by the Parties.  At each meeting, a secretary shall by appointed by the Chairperson to record meeting minutes.  Within ten (10) calendar days after a meeting, the Chairperson shall circulate draft minutes to the Parties for review, comment and distribution, in order to finalize the minutes within thirty (30) calendar days of such meeting.

 

3.3.3                      Dispute Resolution.   If a dispute arises in connection with the Commercialization of the Covered Products or any other issue addressed by the JCC, the JCC shall confer immediately and use Commercially Reasonable Efforts to resolve the dispute or issue within ten (10) calendar days of their initial conference.  No such dispute or issue shall be considered resolved until the JCC has unanimously agreed to the resolution; provided, however, that if the JCC does not reach consensus, within a thirty (30) calendar day period, the resolution of the dispute or issue shall be made by the JCC representatives of NovaMedica unless such resolution in the opinion of any member of the JSC would be reasonably expected to be adverse to, materially conflict with, or interfere with the regulatory approval, manufacture, marketing authorization or marketing efforts for Covered Products outside of the Territory, in which case such dispute will be handled in accordance with Section 12 of this Agreement.

 

4.                                       DEVELOPMENT

 

4.1                                Development Efforts Through the JDC, Marinus and NovaMedica each agree to use Commercially Reasonable Efforts to collaborate with each other in the Development of the Covered Products in the Field in the Territory in accordance with this Agreement.

 

4.2                                Development Plan and Marinus’s Assistance .

 

4.2.1                      Initial Development Plan .   Initial Development Plan shall be prepared by the JDC, which shall be reasonably acceptable to Marinus.

 

4.2.2                      The Development Plan shall have the following goals:

 

(a)                                  the Development of the Covered Products specified in the Development Plan in accordance with all safety and other regulations as required to obtain Regulatory Approval in each country within the Territory as promptly as commercially and technically practicable, or as otherwise deemed appropriate by the JSC;

 

(b)                                  knowledge transfer and support by Marinus to NovaMedica and support to initiate or continue Development of, or in seeking Regulatory Approvals for, or to Commercialize the Covered Products in the Territory, by participation in the JDC; and

 

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(c)                                   the identification, selection and co-development of additional products if appropriate.

 

4.2.3                      Assistance of Marinus. Consistent with its responsibilities under this Agreement, the TTA and the Development Plan, and subject in all respects to the terms and provisions of the TTA, as recognized by and stated in Section 13.12 hereof, Marinus shall:

 

(a)                                  the formation and transfer to NovaMedica of the information and capabilities necessary to Manufacture and supply Clinical Supplies and Commercial Supplies of the Covered Products, for such Development and Commercialization.

 

(b)                                  transfer to NovaMedica all Know-how, including but not limited to preclinical data, assays and associated materials, protocols and procedures, provided that, the initial transfer of Know-how from Marinus to NovaMedica shall include, but shall not be limited to, all manufacturing Know-how, reasonable quantities of the Covered Product and/or Compound for research, Development and Manufacturing scale-up work, all existing preclinical data, regulatory filings, and all existing clinical trial protocols and data;

 

(c)                                   make available to NovaMedica copies of any and all documentation in possession of Marinus related to the Covered Products and/or Compound, including but not limited to research data and reports, regulatory materials and correspondence (including INDs and NDAs in U.S.), clinical and preclinical data (including all raw data), chemistry, manufacturing and controls (CMC) data, relevant to conducting clinical studies and obtaining Regulatory Approval in the Field in the Territory (collectively, the “ Clinical Data ”), and NovaMedica shall have the right to use the Clinical Data solely in connection with, and as necessary for, the Development and Commercialization of the Covered Products in the Field and in the Territory.  NovaMedica and any Permitted Transferee shall be entitled at no cost to access, use, and reference the data and results from any Clinical Trial conducted by Marinus of a Covered Product in any Indication for their own Regulatory Approval, Development, and Commercialization purposes in the Field in the Territory;

 

(d)                                  provide reasonable scientific and technical explanations and advice that may reasonably be required by NovaMedica, relating to the Development and Commercialization of the Covered Product;

 

(e)                                   provide reasonable consultation with NovaMedica (and NovaMedica shall reimburse for Out-of-Pocket Expenses) in the preparation of and filing of any IND, IND amendment, or NDA with respect to any Covered Product in the Field and in the Territory.  Such assistance shall include, in particular, Company (or its Affiliate, successor, or licensee outside of the Territory) providing NovaMedica, to the extent an electronic copy is available or in possession of Company,  with a complete electronic copy of all relevant documentation submitted to the FDA or EMA in respect of any Clinical Trial for any Covered Product and/or Compound that would be necessary or useful to NovaMedica in preparing its own IND for a particular Covered Product for use in the Territory, and, to the extent necessary or useful, to allow NovaMedica to cross-reference any such IND, IND amendment, or NDA held by Company (or its Affiliate, successor, or licensee outside of the Territory); and

 

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(f)                                    perform such other obligations set forth in this Agreement and the TTA.

 

4.2.4                      Reimbursement of Out-of-Pocket Expenses .  NovaMedica shall promptly reimburse Marinus for all Out-of Pocket Expenses incurred by Marinus in performing its obligations under this Agreement with exception obligations related to Marinus participation in JSC, JDC and JCC.

 

4.2.5                      Responsibilities of NovaMedica .  With coordination of the JSC, JDC or JCC, if applicable, NovaMedica shall:

 

(a)                                  at its sole cost and expense and using Commercially Reasonable Efforts, be responsible for Development conducting by NovaMedica of Covered Products in the Field and in the Territory in accordance with the Development Plan approved by the JSC;

 

(b)                                  be responsible for the preparation and filing at its sole cost and expense of any applications to register or obtain the Regulatory Approvals for the Covered Products in the Field in the Territory;

 

(c)                                   be responsible at its sole cost and expense for the performance of all activities and undertakings as may be required by any Regulatory Authorities to register or obtain the Regulatory Approval in the Field in the Territory for its own purposes;

 

(d)                                  at its sole cost and expense, be responsible for the Commercialization of the Covered Products in the Field in the Territory, including all sales and marketing activities, in the Field in the Territory;

 

(e)                                   following receipt of Regulatory Approval, be responsible at its sole cost and expense for the maintenance and updating of all Regulatory Approvals as may be required by any Regulatory Authorities, including any post approval studies required by any Regulatory Authorities and pharmacovigilance;

 

(f)                                    perform such other obligations contemplated by this Agreement and the TTA;

 

(g)                                   in cases specified in the TTA, reimburse Marinus all Out-of-Pocket expenses incurred by Marinus in performing its obligations hereunder; and

 

(h)                                  such other activities requested by the JSC, JDC or JCC.

 

4.3                                Clinical Trials in the Territory NovaMedica, itself or through one or more Third Parties selected by NovaMedica, shall have the sole authority and the exclusive right to conduct, in the Territory, all Clinical Trials and non-clinical studies NovaMedica believes appropriate to obtain Regulatory Approvals for the Covered Product in the Territory, subject to, and in accordance with the provisions of the TTA, including, but not limited to, Section 2.1(c) thereof.  Marinus shall use Commercially Reasonable Efforts to include sites in the Russian Federation in its Phase IIb Clinical Trial for its first Indication of the Covered Product in order to obtain a Regulatory Approval of such Covered Product outside the Territory and conduct such

 

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Clinical Trial at its own costs.  All clinical data and reports related to Clinical Trials conducted by NovaMedica for the Covered Products in the Territory shall be owned by NovaMedica, and NovaMedica shall have full use, for any purpose consistent with this Agreement, of all such data and reports related to Clinical Trials for the Covered Products, and NovaMedica shall provide Marinus with all such clinical data and reports for use by Marinus in a timely manner, as provided herein and in the TTA.  All clinical data and reports related to Clinical Trials conducted by Marinus for the Covered Products in the Territory shall be owned by Marinus, and Marinus shall provide NovaMedica with all such clinical data and reports for NovaMedica’s use, for any purpose consistent with this Agreement, of all such data and reports related to Clinical Trials for the Covered Products in the Territory.

 

4.4                                Clinical Supplies .  NovaMedica will have the right to purchase Clinical Supplies of the Covered Products and/or Compound in accordance with Section 3.5(c) of the TTA.

 

4.5                                Drug Approval Applications . NovaMedica shall be entitled to file Drug Approval Applications and seek Regulatory Approvals for the Covered Products in the Territory, provided that such filing shall be subject to the oversight of the JDC. Prior to submitting any clinical trial application or Drug Approval Application, the Parties, through the JDC, shall consult regarding the preparation of such filings, their content and scope. NovaMedica shall own all regulatory submissions, including all clinical trial applications, Drug Approval Applications and associated government licenses, approvals, and certificates for the Covered Products and/or Compound in the Territory.

 

4.6                                Regulatory Meetings and Communications .

 

4.6.1                      Upon agreement by the JSC, Marinus will participate in substantive discussions around and meetings with Regulatory Authorities in the Territory which relate to the Covered Products and/or Compound, including, but not limited to, with respect to any Drug Approval Applications.

 

4.6.2                      The JDC shall develop processes and procedures for the conduct and reporting to the Parties of telephone communications and written correspondence with Regulatory Authorities in the Territory related to the Covered Products and/or Compound.

 

4.6.3                      Within sixty (60) days after the Effective Date, the Parties’ respective regulatory affairs or other applicable departments, including the members of the JDC with regulatory and drug safety expertise, shall meet and agree upon processes and procedures to recommend to the JDC for sharing information needed to support each Party’s respective regulatory responsibilities, including without limitation, development of appropriate safety databases relating to Covered Products.  The processes and procedures adopted by the JDC under this Section for sharing of information and adverse event reporting shall be consistent with Section 8 .

 

4.6.4                      The Parties shall cooperate in good faith with respect to the conduct of any inspections by any Regulatory Authority of a Party’s site and facilities related to the Development of the Covered Products in the Territory, and each Party shall at a minimum be

 

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given the opportunity to attend the summary, or wrap up, meeting related to the Covered Products with such Regulatory Authority at the conclusion of such site inspection.

 

5.                                       COMMERCIALIZATION

 

5.1                                Product Trademarks . The Covered Products shall be sold in the Territory only under the NovaMedica TradeMarks ( the “Product Trademarks” ). The term “Product Trademarks” shall also include any service marks for use in connection with services related to the Covered Products. In the event of a Third Party challenge of NovaMedica’s right to commercialize the Covered Products under Product Trademarks, the JSC shall consider the grounds for such challenge and recommend to the JCC a course of action in the affected market based on an assessment of the legal merits of such Third Party claim.

 

5.2                                Commercial Supplies .  Commercial Supplies of the Covered Product shall be governed by Sections 3.5(d) and (e) of the TTA.

 

5.3                                Recalls . Decisions with respect to recalls, withdrawals or corrections of the Covered Products in the Territory related to manufacturing or product quality issues shall be handled in accordance with the respective Supply Agreements. The JSC shall have decision-making authority with respect to issuing all recall, market withdrawal or correction of any the Covered Products in the Territory related to safety issues. Each Party shall delegate its appropriate executive officers in their respective regulatory departments who shall develop appropriate standard operating procedures with respect to such recalls at the time of commercialization. To the extent regulatory timeframes or public safety considerations require immediate action, a telephone conference of the JSC’s designees under this Section shall be called within the required timeframe to consider the action and make a decision. Each Party shall notify the other Party promptly (and in any event within twenty-four (24) hours of receipt of written notice) if the Covered Product is alleged or proven to be the subject of a recall, market withdrawal or correction in any country in the Territory. Marinus will make available to NovaMedica, upon request, all of the other Party’s pertinent records that NovaMedica may reasonably request to assist it in effecting any recall or market withdrawals.

 

6.                                       INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY.   The invention, ownership, development, prosecution, maintenance and enforcement of, and all other matters relating to, the Intellectual Property of the respective Parties shall be governed by the applicable terms and provisions of the TTA, and such terms and provisions are incorporated by reference into this Agreement.

 

7.                                       INFORMATION AND ADVERSE DRUG EVENTS AND REPORTS

 

7.1                                Information . Marinus and NovaMedica shall disclose and make available to each other in a timely manner all non-clinical, preclinical, clinical, regulatory, commercial and other information concerning the Covered Products and/or Compound and constituting Know-how, known by Marinus and NovaMedica at any time during the Term of this Agreement. Each Party will use Commercially Reasonable Efforts to disclose to the other Party all significant information related to the Covered Products and/or Compound and Development activity inside and outside of the Territory promptly after it is learned or its significance is appreciated.

 

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Notwithstanding the foregoing, neither Party shall be obligated to disclose to the other Party confidential information about its products other than the Covered Products and/or Compound.

 

7.2                                Compliance . Each Party shall maintain a record of all non-medical and medical product-related reports it receives with respect to any Covered product and/or Compound. Each Party shall notify the other Party of any report received by it in sufficient detail and in accordance with the timeframes and procedures for reporting established by the JSC, and in any event in sufficient time to allow the Party that holds the applicable regulatory filing to comply with any and all regulatory requirements imposed upon it in any country. The Party that holds the applicable regulatory filing in a particular country shall investigate and respond to all such reports in such country with respect to any Covered Product as soon as reasonably practicable in accordance with regulatory requirements. All such responses shall be made in accordance with the procedures established by the JSC. The Party responsible for responding to such report shall promptly provide the other Party a copy of any such response.

 

7.3                                Adverse Drug Events . Each Party shall be responsible for the safety surveillance and pharmacovigilance regulatory obligations with respect to the Covered Product in those territories where it is the sponsor of non-clinical or clinical development,. T he Parties agree to provide each other with Adverse Event information and product complaint information relating to Covered Products as compiled and prepared by the Parties in the normal course of business in connection with the Development, Commercialization or sale of the Covered Products, within time frames consistent with reporting obligations under applicable Law and regulatory requirements.  All reports, updates, Adverse Events, product complaint and other information provided by one Party to the other Party under this Agreement (including under this Section 7.3 ), shall be considered Confidential Information of the disclosing Party, subject to the terms of Section 8 hereof it being understood that the FDA or other applicable Regulatory Authority may publish information relating to Adverse Events on its website. The Parties agree that the groups responsible for the safety surveillance and pharmacovigilance of the Covered Product at each company shall meet at a mutually agreed upon time following the Effective Date to develop detailed procedures regarding the format, timing, and content of the safety information to be exchanged between the Parties, and shall meet periodically thereafter to update the procedures.

 

7.4                                Pharmacovigilance . The Parties agree that Marinus and NovaMedica will, within one hundred eighty (180) days after the date of the first Regulatory Approval in the Territory, conclude a Pharmacovigilance Agreement substantially in the form as provided in Schedule 4.6 to the TTA.

 

8.                                       TREATMENT OF CONFIDENTIAL INFORMATION

 

8.1                                Confidentiality; Exceptions .  Except to the extent authorized by this Agreement or otherwise agreed in writing, the Parties agree that the receiving Party (the “ Receiving Party ”) shall keep confidential and shall not publish or otherwise disclose or use for any purpose other than as provided for in this Agreement, Confidential Information in any form (written, oral, photographic, electronic, magnetic, or otherwise) which is disclosed to it by the other Party (the “ Disclosing Party ”) or otherwise received or accessed by a Receiving Party in

 

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the course of performing its obligations or exercising its rights under this Agreement, except to the extent that it can be established by the Receiving Party that such Confidential Information:

 

(a)                                  was in the lawful knowledge and possession of the Receiving Party prior to the time it was disclosed to, or learned by, the Receiving Party, or was otherwise developed independently by the Receiving Party, as evidenced by written records kept in the ordinary course of business, or other documentary proof of actual use by the Receiving Party;

 

(b)                                  was generally available to the public or otherwise part of the public domain at the time of its disclosure to the Receiving Party;

 

(c)                                   became generally available to the public or otherwise part of the public domain after its disclosure and other than through any act or omission of the Receiving Party in breach of this Agreement; or

 

(d)                                  was disclosed to the Receiving Party, other than under an obligation of confidentiality, by a Third Party who had no obligation to the Disclosing Party not to disclose such information to others.

 

8.2                                Authorized Disclosure .  Except as expressly provided otherwise in this Agreement, a Receiving Party may use and disclose Confidential Information of the Disclosing Party as follows:  (a) in connection with the performance of its obligations or exercise of rights granted or reserved in this Agreement (including the rights to Develop and Commercialize the Covered Products); (b) to the extent such disclosure is reasonably necessary in filing or prosecuting patent, copyright and trademark applications, prosecuting or defending litigation, complying with applicable governmental regulations, obtaining regulatory approval, conducting Development, Commercialization, Clinical Trial Investigations, marketing Covered Products, or otherwise required by Law; or (c) to the extent mutually agreed to in writing by the Parties; provided, however, that if a Receiving Party is required in litigation or by Law or regulation to make any such disclosure of a Disclosing Party’s Confidential Information it shall give reasonable advance notice to the Disclosing Party of such disclosure requirement and, except to the extent inappropriate in the case of patent applications, shall use its reasonable efforts to secure confidential treatment of such Confidential Information required to be disclosed; further provided, however, that, in each of the above situations, the Receiving Party shall remain responsible for any failure by any Person who receives the Confidential Information from the Receiving Party pursuant to this Section 8.2 to treat such Confidential Information as required under this Section 8.2.  In addition, a Receiving Party may disclose Confidential Information of the Disclosing Party to any of its Affiliates and Permitted Transferees, or in connection with due diligence investigations by or on behalf of a Third Party in connection with a potential license, collaboration, investment, merger, or acquisition with or by such Third Party, and, in the case of Marinus, to Third Parties in connection with due diligence investigations by or on behalf of a Third Party in connection with a potential license, collaboration, investment or other financing, merger, or acquisition with or by such Third Party; provided, however, in each of the foregoing cases, that such Third Party reasonably needs to have access to such Confidential Information agrees to be bound by reasonable terms of confidentiality and non-use at least as stringent as those set forth in this Article 8, to limit such disclosure to only personnel having a need to know such information, and to return or certify to the Receiving Party as to the destruction of such

 

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Confidential Information promptly after completing the due diligence investigation, negotiation, or transaction, as the case may be.

 

8.3                                Disclosure of Agreement .  No Party shall issue any press release or other public disclosure regarding this Agreement or the Parties’ activities hereunder, or any results or data arising hereunder, except with all the other Party’s prior written consent.  Except to the extent required by Law or as otherwise permitted in accordance with this Section 8.3 , neither Party shall make any public announcements concerning this Agreement or the subject matter hereof without the prior express written consent of the other, which shall not be unreasonably withheld, conditioned or delayed.  Notwithstanding the foregoing, to the extent information regarding this Agreement has already been publicly disclosed other than through any act or omission of a Party in breach of this Agreement, a Party may subsequently disclose the same information to the public without the consent of the other Party.  Each Party shall be permitted to disclose the terms of this Agreement, in each case under appropriate confidentiality provisions that are no stringent to those of this Agreement, to any actual or potential acquirers, merger partners, financing sources and professional advisors.

 

8.4                                Remedies .  Each Party shall be entitled to seek, in addition to any other right or remedy it may have, at law or in equity, a temporary injunction, without the posting of any bond or other security, enjoining or restraining the other Party from any violation or threatened violation of this Section 8.

 

9.                                       REPRESENTATIONS, WARRANTIES AND COVENANTS

 

9.1                                Representations, Warranties and Covenants .  Each Party hereby represents, warrants and covenants to the other Party as of the Effective Date, as follows:

 

9.1.1                      Such Party (i) has the power and authority and the legal right to enter into this Agreement and to perform its obligations hereunder, and (ii) has taken all necessary action on its part required to authorize the execution and delivery of this Agreement.  This Agreement has been duly executed and delivered on behalf of such Party and constitutes a legal, valid and binding obligation of such Party and is in accordance with its terms subject to the effects of bankruptcy, insolvency or other laws of general application affecting the enforcement of creditor rights and judicial principles affecting the availability of specific performance and general principles of equity, whether enforceability is considered a proceeding at law or equity.

 

9.1.2                      Such Party is not aware of any pending or threatened litigation (and has not received any communication) that alleges that such Party’s activities related to this Agreement have violated, or that by conducting the activities as contemplated in this Agreement such Party would violate, any of the intellectual property rights of any Person.

 

9.1.3                      All necessary consents, approvals and authorizations of all regulatory and governmental authorities and other Persons required to be obtained by such Party in connection with the execution and delivery of this Agreement and the performance of its obligations under this Agreement have been obtained (other than such consents, approvals and authorizations that the Parties will obtain in the course of performing their obligations under this Agreement).

 

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9.1.4                      The execution and delivery of this Agreement the performance of such Party’s obligations hereunder (i) do not conflict with or violate in any material way any requirement of applicable Law, (ii) do not conflict with or violate any provision of the articles of incorporation, bylaws, limited partnership agreement or any similar instrument of such Party, and (iii) do not conflict with, violate, or breach or constitute a default or require any consent under, any contractual obligation or court or administrative order by which such Party is bound.

 

10.                                INDEMNIFICATION

 

10.1                         Indemnification by NovaMedica . NovaMedica shall indemnify, defend, and hold Marinus and its Affiliates, and each of their respective employees, officers, directors, and agents (individually or collectively, the “ Marinus Indemnitee(s)”) harmless from and against any and all liability, damage, loss, cost, or expense (including reasonable attorneys’ fees) resulting from Third Party claims against Marinus Indemnitee(s) arising out of or resulting from (a) any breach by NovaMedica or Permitted Transferee of any of the terms or provisions of this Agreement; (b) any breach of the representations, warranties, or covenants made by NovaMedica; (c) willful misconduct or negligence of NovaMedica, Permitted Transferee or any subcontractors or sublicensees; and (d) any act or omission of NovaMedica or any of its Affiliates, Permitted Transferees or their respective employees, Affiliates, agents or subcontractors in connection with the Development, Manufacturing, Commercialization, including but not limited to product liability claims; provided, however, that such obligations pursuant to this Section 10.1 shall not apply to the extent such claim (i) arise out of breach by the Marinus of its representations, warranties, or covenants set forth in Section 9, above; or (ii) are based on actions taken or omitted to be taken by Marinus in breach of its obligations under this Agreement; or (iii) result from the negligence or willful misconduct of any of the Marinus Indemnitee(s).

 

10.2                         Indemnification by Marinus . Marinus shall indemnify, defend, and hold each NovaMedica and any Permitted Transferee, and each of their respective agents, employees, officers, and directors (individually or collectively, the “ NovaMedica Indemnitee(s)” ), harmless from and against any and all from and against any and all liability, damage, loss, cost, or expense (including reasonable attorneys’ fees) resulting from Third Party claims against NovaMedica Indemnitee(s) arising out of or resulting from any (a) breach by Marinus of any of the terms or provisions of this Agreement; (b) any breach of the representations, warranties, or covenants made by Marinus; or (c) willful misconduct or negligence of Marinus or any of its Affiliates; (d) any act or omission of Marinus or any of its Affiliates, sublicenses, or their respective employees, Affiliates, agents or subcontractors in connection with the Development, Manufacturing, Commercialization, including but not limited to product liability claims; provided, however, that such obligations pursuant to this Section 10.2 shall not apply to the extent such Third Party claim (i) arises out of breach by NovaMedica of its representations, warranties, or covenants set forth in Section 9, above; or (ii) are based on actions taken or omitted to be taken by such NovaMedica in breach of its obligations under this Agreement; or (iii) result from the negligence or willful misconduct of any of NovaMedica Indemnitee(s).

 

10.3                         No Consequential Damages . EXCEPT FOR LIABILITY FOR BREACH OF SECTION 8, IN NO EVENT SHALL EITHER PARTY (OR ANY OF ITS AFFILIATES, ASSIGNEES, LICENSEES, OR SUCCESSORS) BE LIABLE TO THE OTHER PARTY (OR

 

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ANY OF THE OTHER PARTY’S AFFILIATES, ASSIGNEES, LICENSEES, OR SUCCESSORS) FOR SPECIAL, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, CONSEQUENTIAL, OR PUNITIVE DAMAGES, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, WARRANTY, TORT, NEGLIGENCE, STRICT LIABILITY, OR OTHERWISE, ARISING OUT OF OR RELATING TO THIS AGREEMENT OR ANY BREACH THEREOF; PROVIDED, HOWEVER, THAT THIS SECTION 10.3 SHALL NOT BE CONSTRUED TO LIMIT EITHER PARTY’S INDEMNIFICATION OBLIGATIONS WITH RESPECT TO CLAIMS UNDER SECTION 10.1 OR 10.2, ABOVE.

 

10.4                         Notification of Claims; Conditions to Indemnification Obligations .  As a condition to a Party’s (or, as the case may be, a NovaMedica Indemnitee’s or a the Marinus Indemnitee’s) right to receive indemnification under this Section 10 , it shall (a) promptly notify the other party as soon as it becomes aware of any Third Party claim or suit for which indemnification may be sought hereunder, (b) reasonably cooperate, and make Commercially Reasonable Efforts to cause the individual indemnitees to cooperate, with the indemnifying party in the defense, settlement, or compromise of such claim or suit, and (c) permit the indemnifying party to control the defense, settlement, or compromise of such claim or suit, including the right to select defense counsel; provided, however, the indemnified party shall have the right to join any defense with its own counsel at its own expense, or if the indemnifying party declines or fails to assert its intention to defend such action within sixty (60) days of receipt/sending of notice under this Section 10.4 , then the indemnified party shall have the right, but not the obligation, to defend such action.  In no event, however, may the indemnifying party compromise or settle any claim or suit in a manner that admits fault or negligence on the part of the indemnified party (or any indemnitee) without the prior written consent of the indemnified party.  The indemnifying party shall have no liability under this Section 6 with respect to claims or suits settled or compromised by the indemnified party without the indemnifying party’s prior written consent.

 

11.                                TERM AND TERMINATION

 

11.1                         Term and Expiration .  The term of this Agreement (the “ Term ”) shall commence on the Effective Date and, unless earlier terminated as expressly provided in this Section 11 , shall remain in full force and effect during three (3) years after the First Commercial Sale in the Territory.

 

11.2                         This Agreement shall automatically terminate upon termination of the TTA.

 

11.3                         Termination of the Agreement for Convenience . NovaMedica shall have the right, any time during the Term and at its convenience, to terminate this Agreement in its entirety upon ninety (90) calendar days prior written notice to Marinus.  Except as otherwise provided in this Agreement, Marinus shall have no right during the Term to revoke or unilaterally terminate the Agreement, in whole or in part.

 

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11.4                         Effects of Termination .

 

(a)                                  Return of Confidential Information .   Upon termination, but not expiration, of this Agreement, each Party shall promptly return to the other Party, or delete or destroy, all relevant records and materials in such Party’s possession or control containing Confidential Information of the other Party; provided, however, that each Party shall be entitled to retain one (1) copy of the other Party’s Confidential Information (subject to a continuing obligation of confidentiality) for the sole purpose of monitoring compliance with the terms of this Agreement, and all Confidential Information received by Marinus may continue to be used by it insofar as it relates to the Marinus or any Covered Product.

 

(b)                                  Accrued Obligations .  Termination of this Agreement for any reason shall not release either Party of any obligation or liability which, at the time of such termination, has already accrued to the other Party or which is attributable to a period prior to such termination.

 

(c)                                   Non-Exclusive Remedy .  Termination of this Agreement by a Party shall be without prejudice to other remedies such Party may have at law or equity.

 

(d)                                  Survival .  The provisions of Sections 1, 4.2.4, 6, 8, 11.4, 12 and 13 shall survive termination of this Agreement. Furthermore, any other provision that by its nature is intended to survive expiration and/or termination of this Agreement shall survive.

 

12.                                DISPUTE RESOLUTION

 

The provisions of this Section 12 concern resolution of disputes between the Parties, which shall be resolved in accordance with dispute resolution procedures set forth below:

 

12.1                         Disputes .  The Parties recognize that disputes as to certain matters may from time to time arise during the Term that relate to either Party’s rights and/or obligations hereunder.  It is the objective of the Parties to establish procedures to facilitate the prompt resolution of disputes relating to or arising under this Agreement in an expedient manner by mutual cooperation and without resort to litigation.  In the event that the Parties are unable to resolve such dispute within thirty (30) days from the day that one Party had designated to the other an issue as a dispute, then either Party shall have the right to escalate such issue to senior management as set forth in Section 12.2, below.

 

12.2                         Escalation to Senior Representatives .  Either Party may, by written notice to the other Party, request that a dispute that remained unresolved for a period of thirty (30) days, as set forth in Section 12.1 above, be resolved by the Chief Executive Officer of NovaMedica (or such person’s designee) (the “ NovaMedica Representative ”) and the Chief Executive Officer of Marinus (or such person’s designee) (the “ Marinus Representative ”) (collectively, the “ Representatives ”) within sixty (60) days of the Representatives’ first consideration of such dispute, but in all cases within ninety (90) days after a Party’s written request for resolution by the Representatives.  Upon receipt of any such notice, a Party shall inform its Board of Directors thereof. If the Representatives cannot resolve such dispute within such ninety (90)-day period, either Party may proceed to enforce any and all of its rights with respect to such dispute in accordance with Section 12.3 or Section 12.4 , below, as applicable.

 

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12.3                         Arbitration .

 

(a)                                  Any dispute, controversy or claim arising out of, relating to or in connection with, this Agreement, including any dispute regarding the interpretation, validity or termination or the performance or breach of this Agreement, as well as any non-contractual obligation arising out of or in connection with it, which is not resolved by mutual agreement, above, shall be finally settled by binding arbitration under the Rules of the London Court of International Arbitration (the “LCIA”) then in effect.

 

(b)                                  The arbitration shall be conducted by arbitrators, of whom one shall be nominated by NovaMedica and one shall be nominated by Marinus. The two arbitrators so appointed shall nominate the third arbitrator, who shall act as chairman of the Arbitral Tribunal.  In the event that an arbitrator is not appointed pursuant to the foregoing provisions within the time period prescribed under the Rules of the LCIA or within the time-period agreed upon by the parties to the arbitration, upon request of either party to the arbitration, such arbitrator shall instead be appointed by the Court of the LCIA.

 

(c)                                   The Parties shall use good faith efforts to complete arbitration under this Section 8.3 within one hundred eighty (180) days following the initiation of such arbitration.  The Arbitral Tribunal shall permit full and complete discovery, both written and oral by deposition and shall establish reasonable additional procedures to facilitate and complete such arbitration within such one hundred eighty (180) day period. The place of arbitration will be London, England.  The language of the arbitration, and all proceedings thereunder, including all discovery (both written and oral) will be English.

 

(d)                                  By agreeing to arbitration, the Parties do not intend to deprive any court of competent jurisdiction of its ability to issue any form of provisional remedy, including but not limited to a preliminary injunction or attachment in aid of the arbitration, or order any interim or conservatory measure.  A request for such provisional remedy or interim or conservatory measure by a Party to a court or other government entity shall not be deemed a waiver of this agreement to arbitrate.

 

(e)                                   The award rendered by the Arbitral Tribunal, which shall cover which party shall bear the costs of the arbitration in accordance with subsection (f) below, shall be final and binding on the parties.  Judgment on the award may be entered in any court of competent jurisdiction.

 

(f)                                    The costs of such arbitration, including administrative and fees of the arbitrators comprising the arbitration panel, shall be shared equally by the Parties, and each Party shall bear its own expenses and attorney’s fees incurred in connection with the arbitration; provided, however, that the arbitration panel may direct that the costs and attorney fees paid by one party be reimbursed by the other party.  The arbitration panel shall consider the following factors in determining whether to award costs and attorney fees to be paid by one party to another party: (i) the conduct of the parties in the transactions or occurrences that gave rise to the dispute or claim, including any conduct of a party that was reckless, willful, malicious, in bad faith or illegal; (ii) the objective reasonableness of the claims and defenses asserted by a party; (iii) the extent to which an award of costs and attorney fees would deter future bad faith

 

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claims or defenses; (iv) the objective reasonableness of the parties and the diligence of the parties and their attorneys during the proceedings; (v) the objective reasonableness of the parties and the diligence of the parties in pursuing settlement of the dispute; and (vi) such other factors as the arbitration panel may consider appropriate under the circumstances.

 

12.4                         Provisional Remedies .  Nothing in this Agreement shall limit the right of either Party to seek to obtain in any court of competent jurisdiction any equitable or interim relief or provisional remedy, including injunctive relief, pending resolution under Sections 12.2 or 12.3 , above, as applicable, that may be necessary to protect the rights or property of that Party.  Seeking or obtaining such equitable or interim relief or provisional remedy in a court shall not be deemed a waiver of the agreement to arbitrate.  For clarity, any such equitable remedies shall be cumulative and not exclusive and are in addition to any other remedies that either Party may have under this Agreement or applicable Law.

 

12.5                         Remedies . In the event a Party is in breach of its obligations under this Agreement, and the breach is not remedied in accordance with the terms of this Agreement, the other Party shall be entitled to all remedies available in law or equity, consistent with the terms of this Agreement, including without limitation, collection of damages, injunctive relief, and specific performance.

 

13.                                MISCELLANEOUS

 

13.1                         Relationship of the Parties .  Nothing in this Agreement is intended or shall be deemed to constitute a partnership, agency, joint venture, or other relationship between the Parties.

 

13.2                         Assignment .

 

(a)                                  Except as expressly provided herein, neither this Agreement nor any interest hereunder shall be assignable nor any other obligation delegable, by either Party without the prior written consent of the other Party (not to be unreasonably withheld or delayed).  Notwithstanding the foregoing, each Party shall have the right to assign this Agreement in whole without the consent of the other Party to (X) any Affiliate (Y) Permitted Transferee or (Y) a successor to substantially all of the business of the assigning Party to which this Agreement relates ( “Successor” ), whether by merger, sale of stock, sale of assets or similar transaction, operation of law, or otherwise; provided, however, that an Affiliate or Successor must accept all rights and obligations under this Agreement and the Ancillary Agreements.

 

(b)                                  Any permitted assignment under this Section 13.2 shall relieve the assigning Party of any and all of its responsibilities or obligations hereunder, provided that, as a condition of such assignment, the assignee agrees in writing to be bound by all obligations of the assigning Party hereunder.

 

(c)                                   This Agreement shall be binding upon the successors and permitted assigns of the Parties.

 

(d)                                  Any assignment not in accordance with this Section 13.2 shall be void.

 

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13.3                         Performance by NovaMedica and Permitted Transferee .  Notwithstanding anything to the contrary in this Agreement, NovaMedica shall have the right to have any of its obligations hereunder performed, or its rights hereunder exercised, by, any of its Affiliates or Permitted Transferees, and the performance of such obligations by any such Affiliate(s) or Permitted Transferee(s) shall be deemed to be performance by NovaMedica and, provided that (a) any NovaMedica or Permitted Transferee that agrees to perform or exercise on NovaMedica behalf any of NovaMedica’s obligations or rights under this Agreement agrees that Marinus is an intended third party beneficiary of any such performance or exercise; (b) NovaMedica provides Marinus with a copy of such agreement between NovaMedica and the Permitted Transferee; and (c) thereafter NovaMedica shall continue to be responsible to Marinus for performance of such obligation(s) under this Agreement.

 

13.4                         Actions .  Each Party agrees to execute, acknowledge, and deliver such further instruments and to do all such other acts as may be necessary or appropriate in order to carry out the purposes and intent of this Agreement.

 

13.5                         Force Majeure .  Neither Party shall be liable to the other for failure or delay in the performance of any of its obligations under this Agreement for the time and to the extent such failure or delay is caused by acts of God, earthquake, riot, civil commotion, terrorism, war, strikes or other labor disputes, fire, flood, failure or delay of transportation, default by suppliers or unavailability of raw materials, governmental acts or restrictions or any other reason which is beyond the control of the respective Party.

 

13.6                         Amendments .  No waiver, modification or amendment of any provision of this Agreement shall be valid or effective unless made in a writing referencing this Agreement and signed by a duly authorized officer of each Party.

 

13.7                         Captions .  The captions to this Agreement are for convenience only, and are to be of no force or effect in construing or interpreting any of the provisions of this Agreement.

 

13.8                         Governing Law .  This Agreement shall be governed by and interpreted in accordance with the Laws of the State of New York, USA, excluding the application of any conflict of laws principles that would require application of the Law of another jurisdiction; provided, however, that matters of intellectual property law shall be determined in accordance with the national intellectual property laws relevant to the intellectual property at issue.

 

13.9                         Notices and Deliveries .  Any notice, request, approval, or consent required or permitted to be given under this Agreement shall be in writing and shall be deemed to have been sufficiently given if delivered in person, transmitted, by facsimile (receipt verified), or by express courier service (signature required) to the Party to which it is directed at its address or facsimile number shown below or such other address or facsimile number as such Party shall have last given by notice to the other Party.

 

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If to Company, addressed to:

Marinus Pharmaceuticals, Inc.

142 Temple Street, Suite 205

New Haven, CT 06510 USA

Attention: President and CEO

Facsimile: 203-3150565

 

With a copy to:

Duane Morris LLP

30 South 17th Street

Philadelphia, PA 19103-4196

Attention: Kathleen M. Shay

Facsimile: (215) 689-4382

 

If to NovaMedica, addressed to:

NovaMedica, LLC

125047 bldg 29/22

1st Brestskaya Street

Moscow

Russian Federation

Attention: CEO of LLC “D-Pharma”, Managing Company

Vladimir Gurdus

Facsimile:

 

 

 

13.10                  Waiver .  A waiver by either Party of any of the terms and conditions of this Agreement in any instance shall not be deemed or construed to be a waiver of such term or condition for the future, or of any other term or condition hereof.  All rights, remedies, undertakings, obligations, and agreements contained in this Agreement shall be cumulative and none of them shall be in limitation of any other remedy, right, undertaking, obligation, or agreement of either Party.

 

13.11                  Severability .  When possible, each provision of this Agreement will be interpreted in such manner as to be effective and valid under applicable Law, but if any provision of this Agreement is held to be prohibited by or invalid under applicable Law, such provision will be ineffective only to the extent of such prohibition or invalidity, without invalidating the remainder of this Agreement.  The Parties shall make a good faith effort to replace the invalid or unenforceable provision with a valid one that in its economic effect is most consistent with the invalid or unenforceable provision.

 

13.12                  Transfer and Technology Agreement . The terms and conditions of the TTA are not changed, amended or modified through this Agreement and shall remain unchanged and in full force and effect. All rights, powers and privileges of the Parties under this Agreement are in addition to any rights, powers and privileges granted to the Parties by the TTA.

 

13.13                  Assumptions .  The terms and provisions in this Agreement have been negotiated and drafted on the assumption by the Parties that there are no laws or regulations in the Territory that will prevent or significantly hinder NovaMedica or Permitted Transferees or

 

22



 

Marinus from performing their obligations and realizing their benefits as set forth in this Agreement.  If this assumption ultimately proves to be untrue, the Parties will use good faith efforts to make such revisions as are reasonable and equitable to the Parties and are in compliance with the laws and regulations of the Territory.

 

13.14                  English as the Controlling Language for all Agreements .  All notices and other communications under this Agreement and any related agreements, including assignments, licenses, and/or sublicenses with NovaMedica and/or a Permitted Transferee, shall be in the English language.  NovaMedica shall, furthermore, require that any assignment, license, sublicense, or other agreement (i) having NovaMedica or a Permitted Transferee as a party and (ii) a complete and accurate copy of which is required by this Agreement to be provided a Party, shall be prepared in the English language, which language shall govern the interpretation of, and any dispute regarding, the terms of that agreement.

 

13.15                  Counterparts .  This Agreement may be executed in one or more counterparts, each of which will be deemed an original, and all of which together will be deemed to be one and the same instrument.  An electronic or facsimile copy of this Agreement, including the signature pages, will be deemed an original.

 

[Remainder of page intentionally left blank]

 

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IN WITNESS WHEREOF , each of the Parties have caused this Clinical Development and Collaboration Agreement to be executed by its duly authorized representative as of the Effective Date.

 

 

MARINUS PHARMACEUTICALS, INC.

 

NOVAMEDICA, LLC

 

 

 

 

 

 

By:

/s/ Christopher M. Cashman

 

By:

/s/ Vladimir Gurdus

 

 

 

Name: Christopher M. Cashman

 

Name: Vladimir Gurdus

Title: Chief Executive Officer

 

Title: CEO of LLC “D-Pharma”

 

 

Managing Company

 

24



 

Schedule 1-Compound

 

ganaxolone (3α-hydroxy-3β-methyl-5α-pregnan-20-one), having the chemical structure:

 

25



 

Schedule 2 – Territory

 

CIS states :

 

1.

Armenia

2.

Azerbaijan

3.

Belarus

4.

Kazakhstan

5.

Kyrgyzstan

6.

Moldova

7.

Russia

8.

Tajikistan

9.

Ukraine

10.

Uzbekistan

 

 

Non-CIS states :

 

11.

Georgia

12.

Turkmenistan

 

26




Exhibit 10.9

 

MARINUS PHARMACEUTICALS, INC.

 

LOAN AND SECURITY AGREEMENT

 

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This LOAN AND SECURITY AGREEMENT (the “Agreement”) is entered into as of April 2, 2014, by and between Square 1 Bank (“Bank”) and Marinus Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (“Borrower”).

 

RECITALS

 

Borrower wishes to obtain credit from time to time from Bank, and Bank desires to extend credit to Borrower. This Agreement sets forth the terms on which Bank will advance credit to Borrower, and Borrower will repay the amounts owing to Bank.

 

AGREEMENT

 

The parties agree as follows:

 

1.                                       DEFINITIONS AND CONSTRUCTION .

 

1.1                                Definitions . As used in this Agreement, all capitalized terms shall have the definitions set forth on Exhibit A. Any term used in the Code and not defined herein shall have the meaning given to the term in the Code.

 

1.2                                Accounting Terms . Any accounting term not specifically defined on Exhibit A shall be construed in accordance with GAAP and all calculations shall be made in accordance with GAAP (except for non-compliance with FAS 123R (or any subsequent FASB ASC Topics that supplement or supersede FAS 123R) in monthly reporting). The term “financial statements” shall include the accompanying notes and schedules.

 

2.                                       LOAN AND TERMS OF PAYMENT .

 

2.1                                Credit Extensions .

 

(a)                      Promise to Pay . Borrower promises to pay to Bank, in lawful money of the United States of America, the aggregate unpaid principal amount of all Credit Extensions made by Bank to Borrower, together with interest on the unpaid principal amount of such Credit Extensions at rates in accordance with the terms hereof.

 

(b)                      Term Loans .

 

(i)                         Term Loans A . Subject to and upon the terms and conditions of this Agreement, Bank agrees to make one (1) or more term loans to Borrower in an aggregate principal amount not to exceed One Million Five Hundred Thousand Dollars ($1,500,000) (each a “Term Loan A” and collectively the “Term Loans A”). Borrower may request Term Loans A at any time from the date hereof through the Availability End Date. The proceeds of the Term Loans A shall be used for general working capital purposes.

 

(ii)                     Term Loans B . Subject to and upon the terms and conditions of this Agreement, Bank agrees to make one (1) or more term loans to Borrower in an aggregate principal amount not to exceed Five Hundred Thousand Dollars ($500,000) (each a “Term Loan B” and collectively the “Term Loans B”, and together with the Term Loans A, each a “Term Loan” and collectively the “Term Loans”).  Borrower may request Term Loans

 

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B at any time after the achievement of the Clinical Trial Milestone but on or before the Availability End Date. The proceeds of the Term Loans B shall be used for general working capital purposes.

 

(iii)                 Interest shall accrue from the date of each Term Loan at the rate specified in Section 2.3(a), and through the Interest-Only End Date for the applicable Term Loan, shall be payable monthly beginning on the 2nd day of the month next following the date of such Term Loan, and continuing on the same day of each month thereafter. Any Term Loans that are outstanding at the close of business on the Interest-Only End Date shall be payable in equal monthly installments of principal, with each such installment calculated according to a 36-month amortization schedule, plus all accrued and unpaid interest, beginning on the date that is one month immediately following the Interest-Only End Date, and continuing on the same day of each month thereafter through the Term Loan Maturity Date, at which time all amounts due in connection with the Term Loans and any other amounts due under this Agreement shall be immediately due and payable. Term Loans, once repaid, may not be reborrowed.  Borrower may prepay any Term Loan without penalty or premium.

 

(iv)                  When Borrower desires to obtain a Term Loan, Borrower shall notify Bank (which notice shall be irrevocable) by facsimile transmission to be received no later than 3:30 p.m. Eastern time on the day on which the Term Loan is to be made. Such notice shall be substantially in the form of Exhibit C. The notice shall be signed by an Authorized Officer.

 

(c)                       Usage of Credit Card Services Under the Credit Card Line .

 

(i)                         Usage Period . Subject to and upon the terms and conditions of this Agreement, at any time from the Closing Date through the Credit Card Maturity Date, Borrower may use the Credit Card Services (as defined below) in amounts and upon terms as provided in Section 2.1(c)(ii) below.

 

(ii)                     Credit Card Services . Subject to and upon the terms and conditions of this Agreement, Borrower may request corporate credit cards and standard and e-commerce merchant account services from Bank (collectively, the “Credit Card Services”). The aggregate limit of the corporate credit cards and merchant credit card processing reserves shall not exceed the Credit Card Line. The terms and conditions (including repayment and fees) of such Credit Card Services shall be subject to the terms and conditions of Bank’s standard forms of application and agreement for the Credit Card Services, which Borrower hereby agrees to execute.

 

(iii)                 Collateralization of Obligations Extending Beyond Maturity . If Borrower has not cash secured its obligations with respect to any Credit Card Services by the Credit Card Maturity Date, then, effective as of such date, the balance in any deposit accounts held by Bank and the certificates of deposit or time deposit accounts issued by Bank in Borrower’s name (and any interest paid thereon or proceeds thereof, including any amounts payable upon the maturity or liquidation of such certificates or accounts), in an amount not to exceed 200% (the “Collateral Coverage”) of the aggregate obligations outstanding, and such deposits shall automatically secure such obligations to the extent of the

 

2



 

then continuing or outstanding Credit Card Services. Borrower authorizes Bank to hold such balances in pledge and to decline to honor any drafts thereon or any requests by Borrower or any other Person to pay or otherwise transfer any part of such balances for so long as the applicable Credit Card Services are outstanding or continue, unless after honoring such draft or request there shall be the requisite Collateral Coverage. For the avoidance of doubt, if Borrower’s obligations with respect to the Credit Card Services remain outstanding or continue beyond the Credit Card Maturity Date, Bank will not release its liens in the Collateral until Borrower executes an agreement and establishes a segregated cash collateral account to formally cash-secure such obligations.

 

2.2                                Intentionally Left Blank .

 

2.3                                Interest Rates, Payments, and Calculations .

 

(a)                      Interest Rates .

 

(i)                         Term Loans . Except as set forth in Section 2.3(b), the Term Loans shall bear interest, on the outstanding daily balance thereof, at a variable annual rate equal to the greater of: (A) 2.25% above the Prime Rate then in effect; or (B) 5.50%.

 

(b)                      Late Fee; Default Rate . If any payment is not made within 15 days after the date such payment is due, Borrower shall pay Bank a late fee equal to the lesser of (i) 5% of the amount of such late payment or (ii) the maximum amount permitted to be charged under applicable law. All Obligations shall bear interest, from and after the occurrence and during the continuance of an Event of Default, at a rate equal to 5 percentage points above the interest rate applicable immediately prior to the occurrence of the Event of Default.

 

(c)                       Payments . Bank shall charge all interest, all Bank Expenses, and all Periodic Payments against any of Borrower’s deposit accounts. Any interest not paid when due shall be compounded by becoming a part of the Obligations, and such interest shall thereafter accrue interest at the rate then applicable hereunder.

 

(d)                      Computation . In the event the Prime Rate is changed from time to time hereafter, the applicable rate of interest hereunder shall be increased or decreased, effective as of the day the Prime Rate is changed, by an amount equal to such change in the Prime Rate. All interest chargeable under the Loan Documents shall be computed on the basis of a 360 day year for the actual number of days elapsed.

 

2.4                                Crediting Payments . Prior to the occurrence of an Event of Default, Bank shall credit a wire transfer of funds, check or other item of payment to such deposit account or Obligation as Borrower specifies. After the occurrence and during the continuance of an Event of Default, Bank shall have the right, in its sole discretion, to immediately apply any wire transfer of funds, check, or other item of payment Bank may receive to conditionally reduce Obligations, but such applications of funds shall not be considered a payment on account unless such payment is of immediately available federal funds or unless and until such check or other item of payment is honored when presented for payment. Notwithstanding anything to the contrary contained herein, any wire transfer or payment received by Bank after 5:30 p.m. Eastern time shall be deemed to have been received by Bank as of the opening of business on the

 

3



 

immediately following Business Day. Whenever any payment to Bank under the Loan Documents would otherwise be due (except by reason of acceleration) on a date that is not a Business Day, such payment shall instead be due on the next Business Day, and additional fees or interest, as the case may be, shall accrue and be payable for the period of such extension.

 

2.5                                Fees . Borrower shall pay to Bank the following:

 

(a)                      Facility Fee . On or before the Closing Date, a fee equal to $3,000, which shall be nonrefundable;

 

(b)                      Bank Expenses . On the Closing Date, all unreimbursed Bank Expenses incurred through the Closing Date, with legal expenses to equal no more than $10,000, provided that there are no more than two turns of the Loan Documents drafts and that UCC, intellectual property and corporate good standing search and filing fees will not be subject to the aforementioned $10,000 limit. After the Closing Date, all Bank Expenses, as and when they become due.

 

2.6                                Term . This Agreement shall become effective on the Closing Date and, subject to Section 12.7, shall continue in full force and effect for so long as any Obligations remain outstanding or Bank has any obligation to make Credit Extensions under this Agreement. Notwithstanding the foregoing, Bank shall have the right to terminate its obligation to make Credit Extensions under this Agreement immediately and without notice upon the occurrence and during the continuance of an Event of Default.

 

3.                                       CONDITIONS OF LOANS .

 

3.1                                Conditions Precedent to Closing . The agreement of Bank to enter into this Agreement on the Closing Date is subject to the condition precedent that Bank shall have received, in form and substance satisfactory to Bank, each of the following items and completed each of the following requirements:

 

(a)                      this Agreement;

 

(b)                      an officer’s certificate of Borrower with respect to incumbency and resolutions authorizing the execution and delivery of this Agreement;

 

(c)                       a financing statement (Form UCC-1);

 

(d)                      Borrower shall have opened and funded not less than $50,000 in deposit accounts held with Bank;

 

(e)                       payment of the fees and Bank Expenses then due specified in Section 2.5, which may be debited from any of Borrower’s accounts with Bank;

 

(f)                        current SOS Reports indicating that except for Permitted Liens, there are no other security interests or Liens of record in the Collateral;

 

4



 

(g)                      current financial statements, including audited statements (or such other level required by the Investment Agreement) for Borrower’s most recently ended fiscal year, together with an unqualified opinion (or an opinion qualified only for going concern so long as Borrower’s investors provide additional equity as needed), company prepared consolidated and consolidating balance sheets, income statements, and statements of cash flows for the most recently ended month in accordance with Section 6.2, and such other updated financial information as Bank may reasonably request;

 

(h)                      a current Compliance Certificate in accordance with Section 6.2;

 

(i)                         a warrant exercisable for the Company’s Series C Preferred Stock, duly executed by Borrower;

 

(j)                         a Borrower Information Certificate; and

 

(k)                      such other documents or certificates, and completion of such other matters, as Bank may reasonably request.

 

3.2                                Conditions Precedent to all Credit Extensions . The obligation of Bank to make each Credit Extension, including the initial Credit Extension, is contingent upon Borrower’s compliance with Section 3.1 above, and is further subject to the following conditions:

 

(a)                      timely receipt by Bank of the Loan Advance/Paydown Request Form as provided in Section 2.1;

 

(b)                      Borrower shall have transferred substantially all of its Cash assets (or, if Borrower’s Cash exceeds $12,500,000, at least 50% of Borrower’s Cash) into operating accounts held with Bank; and

 

(c)                       the representations and warranties contained in Section 5 shall be true and correct in all material respects on and as of the date of such Loan Advance/Paydown Request Form and on the effective date of each Credit Extension as though made at and as of each such date, and no Event of Default shall have occurred and be continuing, or would exist after giving effect to such Credit Extension (provided, however, that those representations and warranties expressly referring to another date shall be true, correct and complete in all material respects as of such date). The making of each Credit Extension shall be deemed to be a representation and warranty by Borrower on the date of such Credit Extension as to the accuracy of the facts referred to in this Section 3.2.

 

4.                                       CREATION OF SECURITY INTEREST .

 

4.1                                Grant of Security Interest . Borrower grants and pledges to Bank a continuing security interest in the Collateral to secure prompt repayment of any and all Obligations and to secure prompt performance by Borrower of each of its covenants and duties under the Loan Documents. Except for Permitted Liens or as disclosed in the Schedule, such security interest constitutes a valid,  first priority security interest in the presently existing Collateral,  and will constitute a valid,  first priority security interest in later-acquired

 

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Collateral. Borrower also hereby agrees not to sell, transfer, assign, mortgage, pledge, lease, grant a security interest in, or encumber any of its Intellectual Property. Notwithstanding any termination of this Agreement or of any filings undertaken related to Bank’s rights under the Code, Bank’s Lien on the Collateral shall remain in effect for so long as any Obligations are outstanding.

 

4.2                                Perfection of Security Interest . Borrower authorizes Bank to file at any time financing statements, continuation statements, and amendments thereto that (i) either specifically describe the Collateral or describe the Collateral as all assets of Borrower of the kind pledged hereunder, and (ii) contain any other information required by the Code for the sufficiency of filing office acceptance of any financing statement, continuation statement, or amendment, including whether Borrower is an organization, the type of organization and any organizational identification number issued to Borrower, if applicable. Borrower shall have possession of the Collateral, except where expressly otherwise provided in this Agreement or where Bank chooses to perfect its security interest by possession in addition to the filing of a financing statement. Where Collateral is in possession of a third party bailee, Borrower shall take such steps as Bank reasonably requests for Bank to (i) subject to Section 7.10 below, obtain an acknowledgment, in form and substance satisfactory to Bank, of the bailee that the bailee holds such Collateral for the benefit of Bank, and (ii) obtain “control” of any Collateral consisting of investment property, deposit accounts, letter-of-credit rights or electronic chattel paper (as such items and the term “control” are defined in Revised Article 9 of the Code) by causing the securities intermediary or depositary institution or issuing bank to execute a control agreement in form and substance satisfactory to Bank. Borrower will not create any chattel paper without placing a legend on the chattel paper acceptable to Bank indicating that Bank has a security interest in the chattel paper. Borrower from time to time may deposit with Bank specific cash collateral to secure specific Obligations; Borrower authorizes Bank to hold such specific balances in pledge and to decline to honor any drafts thereon or any request by Borrower or any other Person to pay or otherwise transfer any part of such balances for so long as the specific Obligations are outstanding. Borrower shall take such other actions as Bank requests to perfect its security interests granted under this Agreement.

 

5.                                       REPRESENTATIONS AND WARRANTIES .

 

Borrower represents and warrants as follows:

 

5.1                                Due Organization and Qualification . Borrower and each Subsidiary is a corporation duly existing under the laws of the state in which it is organized and qualified and licensed to do business in any state in which the conduct of its business or its ownership of property requires that it be so qualified, except where the failure to do so would not reasonably be expected to cause a Material Adverse Effect.

 

5.2                                Due Authorization; No Conflict . The execution, delivery, and performance of the Loan Documents are within Borrower’s powers, have been duly authorized, and are not in conflict with nor constitute a breach of any provision contained in Borrower’s Certificate of Incorporation or Bylaws, nor will they constitute an event of default under any material agreement by which Borrower is bound.  Borrower is not in default under any

 

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agreement by which it is bound, except to the extent such default would not reasonably be expected to cause a Material Adverse Effect.

 

5.3                                Collateral . Borrower has rights in or the power to transfer the Collateral, and its title to the Collateral is free and clear of Liens, adverse claims, and restrictions on transfer or pledge except for Permitted Liens. Other than movable items of personal property such as laptop computers, drug substance and drug product used in clinical trials or at vendor facilities in the normal course of business, all Collateral having an aggregate book value not in excess of $500,000 is located solely in a Collateral State. All Inventory is in all material respects of good and merchantable quality, free from all material defects, except for Inventory for which adequate reserves have been made. Except as set forth in the Schedule, none of Borrower’s Cash is maintained or invested with a Person other than Bank or Bank’s affiliates.

 

5.4                                Intellectual Property . Borrower is the sole owner of the intellectual property created or purchased by Borrower, except for licenses granted by Borrower to its customers in the ordinary course of business and Eurasian Patents transferred by Borrower prior to the date hereof. To the best of Borrower’s knowledge, each of the Copyrights, Trademarks and Patents created or purchased by Borrower is valid and enforceable, and no part of the intellectual property created or purchased by Borrower has been judged invalid or unenforceable, in whole or in part, and no claim has been made to Borrower that any part of the intellectual property created or purchased by Borrower violates the rights of any third party except to the extent such claim would not reasonably be expected to cause a Material Adverse Effect.

 

5.5                                Name; Location of Chief Executive Office . Except as disclosed in the Schedule, Borrower has not done business under any name other than that specified on the signature page hereof, and its exact legal name is as set forth in the first paragraph of this Agreement. The chief executive office of Borrower is located at the address indicated in Section 10 hereof.

 

5.6                                Litigation . Except as set forth in the Schedule, there are no actions or proceedings pending by or against Borrower or any Subsidiary before any court or administrative agency in which a likely adverse decision would reasonably be expected to have a Material Adverse Effect.

 

5.7                                No Material Adverse Change in Financial Statements . All consolidated and consolidating financial statements related to Borrower and any Subsidiary that are delivered by Borrower to Bank fairly present in all material respects Borrower’s consolidated and consolidating financial condition as of the date thereof and Borrower’s consolidated and consolidating results of operations for the period then ended. There has not been a material adverse change in the consolidated or in the consolidating financial condition of Borrower since the date of the most recent of such financial statements submitted to Bank.

 

5.8                                Solvency, Payment of Debts . Borrower is able to pay its debts (including trade debts) as they mature; the fair saleable value of Borrower’s assets (including goodwill minus disposition costs) exceeds the fair value of its liabilities; and Borrower is not left with unreasonably small capital after the transactions contemplated by this Agreement.

 

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5.9                                Compliance with Laws and Regulations . Borrower and each Subsidiary have met the minimum funding requirements of ERISA with respect to any employee benefit plans subject to ERISA. No event has occurred resulting from Borrower’s failure to comply with ERISA that is reasonably likely to result in Borrower’s incurring any liability that could have a Material Adverse Effect. Borrower is not an “investment company” or a company “controlled” by an “investment company” within the meaning of the Investment Company Act of 1940. Borrower is not engaged principally, or as one of its important activities, in the business of extending credit for the purpose of purchasing or carrying margin stock (within the meaning of Regulations T and U of the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System). Borrower has not violated any statutes, laws, ordinances or rules applicable to it, the violation of which would reasonably be expected to have a Material Adverse Effect. Borrower and each Subsidiary have filed or caused to be filed all tax returns required to be filed, and have paid, or have made adequate provision for the payment of, all taxes reflected therein except those being contested in good faith with adequate reserves under GAAP or where the failure to file such returns or pay such taxes would not reasonably be expected to have a Material Adverse Effect.

 

5.10                         Subsidiaries . Borrower does not own any stock, partnership interest or other equity securities of any Person, except for Permitted Investments.

 

5.11                         Government Consents . Borrower and each Subsidiary have obtained all consents, approvals and authorizations of, made all declarations or filings with, and given all notices to, all governmental authorities that are necessary for the continued operation of Borrower’s business as currently conducted, except where the failure to do so would not reasonably be expected to cause a Material Adverse Effect.

 

5.12                         Inbound Licenses . Except as disclosed on the Schedule, Borrower is not a party to, nor is bound by, any material license or other agreement important for the conduct of Borrower’s business that prohibits or otherwise restricts Borrower from granting a security interest in Borrower’s interest in such license or agreement or any other property important for the conduct of Borrower’s business, other than this Agreement or the other Loan Documents.

 

5.13                         Full Disclosure . No representation, warranty or other statement made by Borrower in any certificate or written statement furnished to Bank taken together with all such certificates and written statements furnished to Bank contains any untrue statement of a material fact or omits to state a material fact necessary in order to make the statements contained in such certificates or statements not misleading in light of the circumstances in which they were made, it being recognized by Bank that the projections and forecasts provided by Borrower in good faith and based upon reasonable assumptions are not to be viewed as facts and that actual results during the period or periods covered by any such projections and forecasts may differ from the projected or forecasted results.

 

6.                                       AFFIRMATIVE COVENANTS .

 

Borrower covenants that, until payment in full of all outstanding Obligations, and for so long as Bank may have any commitment to make a Credit Extension hereunder, Borrower shall do all of the following:

 

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6.1                                Good Standing and Government Compliance . Borrower shall maintain its and each of its Subsidiaries’ corporate existence and good standing in their respective states of formation, shall maintain qualification and good standing in each other jurisdiction in which the failure to so qualify would reasonably be expected to have a Material Adverse Effect, and shall furnish to Bank the organizational identification number issued to Borrower by the authorities of the state in which Borrower is organized, if applicable. Borrower shall meet, and shall cause each Subsidiary to meet, the minimum funding requirements of ERISA with respect to any employee benefit plans subject to ERISA. Borrower shall comply, and shall cause each Subsidiary to comply, with all statutes, laws, ordinances and government rules and regulations to which it is subject, and shall maintain, and shall cause each of its Subsidiaries to maintain, in force all licenses, approvals and agreements, the loss of which or failure to comply with which would reasonably be expected to have a Material Adverse Effect.

 

6.2                                Financial Statements, Reports, Certificates . Borrower shall deliver to Bank: (i) as soon as available, but in any event within 30 days after the end of each calendar month, a company prepared consolidated and consolidating balance sheet and income statement covering Borrower’s operations during such period, in a form reasonably acceptable to Bank and certified by a Responsible Officer; (ii) as soon as available, but in any event within 180 days after the end of Borrower’s fiscal year, audited (or such other level as is required by the Investment Agreement) consolidated and consolidating financial statements of Borrower prepared in accordance with GAAP, consistently applied, together with an opinion of an independent certified public accounting firm reasonably acceptable to Bank which is either unqualified or qualified for going concern due to Borrower’s projected need for additional financing; (iii) an annual budget approved by Borrower’s Board of Directors as soon as available but not later than 45 days after the beginning of each fiscal year of Borrower during the term of this Agreement; (iv) if applicable, copies of all statements, reports and notices sent or made available generally by Borrower to its security holders or to any holders of Subordinated Debt and all reports on Forms 10-K and 10-Q filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission; (v) promptly upon receipt of notice thereof, a report of any legal actions pending or threatened against Borrower or any Subsidiary that could reasonably be expected to result in damages or costs to Borrower or any Subsidiary of $250,000 or more; (vi) promptly upon receipt, each management letter prepared by Borrower’s independent certified public accounting firm regarding Borrower’s management control systems; and (vii) such budgets, sales projections, operating plans or other financial information generally prepared by Borrower in the ordinary course of business as Bank may reasonably request from time to time.

 

(a)                      Within 30 days after the last day of each month, Borrower shall deliver to Bank with the monthly financial statements a Compliance Certificate certified as of the last day of the applicable month and signed by a Responsible Officer in substantially the form of Exhibit D hereto, together with aged listings by invoice date of accounts receivable (if any) and accounts payable.

 

(b)                      As soon as possible and in any event within 3 Business Days after becoming aware of the occurrence or existence of an Event of Default hereunder, Borrower shall deliver to Bank a written statement of a Responsible Officer setting forth details of the Event of Default, and the action which Borrower has taken or proposes to take with respect thereto.

 

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(c)                       Bank (through any of its officers, employees, or agents) shall have the right, upon reasonable prior notice, from time to time during Borrower’s usual business hours but no more than twice a year (unless an Event of Default has occurred and is continuing), to inspect Borrower’s Books and to make copies thereof and to check, test, inspect, audit and appraise the Collateral at Borrower’s expense in order to verify Borrower’s financial condition or the amount, condition of, or any other matter relating to, the Collateral.

 

Borrower may deliver to Bank on an electronic basis any certificates, reports or information required pursuant to this Section 6.2, and Bank shall be entitled to rely on the information contained in the electronic files, provided that Bank in good faith believes that the files were delivered by a Responsible Officer. Borrower shall include a submission date on any certificates and reports to be delivered electronically.

 

6.3                                Inventory and Equipment; Returns . Borrower shall keep all Inventory and Equipment in good and merchantable condition, free from all material defects except for Inventory and Equipment (i) sold in the ordinary course of business, and (ii) for which adequate reserves have been made, in all cases in the United States and such other locations as to which Borrower gives prior written notice. Returns and allowances, if any, as between Borrower and its account debtors shall be on the same basis and in accordance with the usual customary practices of Borrower, as they exist on the Closing Date. Borrower shall promptly notify Bank of all returns and recoveries and of all disputes and claims involving inventory having a book value of more than $100,000.

 

6.4                                Taxes . Borrower shall make, and cause each Subsidiary to make, due and timely payment or deposit of all material federal, state, and local taxes, assessments, or contributions required of it by law, including, but not limited to, those laws concerning income taxes, F.I.C.A., F.U.T.A. and state disability, and will execute and deliver to Bank, on demand, proof satisfactory to Bank indicating that Borrower or a Subsidiary has made such payments or deposits and any appropriate certificates attesting to the payment or deposit thereof; provided that Borrower or a Subsidiary need not make any payment if the amount or validity of such payment is contested in good faith by appropriate proceedings and is reserved against (to the extent required by GAAP) by Borrower or such Subsidiary.

 

6.5                                Insurance . Borrower, at its expense, shall (i) keep the tangible personal property Collateral insured against loss or damage, and (ii) maintain liability and other insurance, in each case as reasonably determined by Borrower, in good faith, to be consistent with the insurance maintained by businesses similar to Borrower’s. All such policies of insurance shall be in such form, with such companies, and in such amounts as reasonably satisfactory to Bank. All policies of property insurance shall contain a lender’s loss payable endorsement, in a form satisfactory to Bank, showing Bank as an additional loss payee, and all liability insurance policies shall show Bank as an additional insured and specify that the insurer must give at least 20 days notice to Bank before canceling its policy for any reason. Within 30 days of the Closing Date, Borrower shall cause to be furnished to Bank a copy of its policies or certificate of insurance including any endorsements covering Bank or showing Bank as an additional insured. Upon Bank’s request, Borrower shall deliver to Bank certified copies of the policies of insurance and evidence of all premium payments.   Proceeds payable under any casualty policy will, at Borrower’s option, be payable to Borrower to replace the property subject to the claim, provided

 

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that any such replacement property shall be deemed Collateral in which Bank has been granted a first priority security interest, provided that if an Event of Default has occurred and is continuing, all proceeds payable under any such policy shall, at Bank’s option, be payable to Bank to be applied on account and to the extent of the Obligations.

 

6.6                                Primary Depository”. Subject to the provisions of Section 3.1(d) and 3.2(b), Borrower within 30 days of the Closing Date shall maintain all its depository and operating accounts with Bank and its primary investment accounts with Bank or Bank’s affiliates.  Notwithstanding the foregoing, at all times when Borrower’s Cash exceeds $12,500,000, (i) Borrower may keep up to 50% of Borrower’s Cash in accounts outside Bank, and (ii) Borrower shall not be required to maintain its primary investment accounts with Bank or Bank’s affiliates.

 

6.7                                Intentionally Left Blank.

 

6.8                                Consent of Inbound Licensors .                      Prior to entering into or becoming bound by any material inbound license or agreement, Borrower shall: (i) provide written notice to Bank of the material terms of such license or agreement with a description of its likely impact on Borrower’s business or financial condition; and (ii) in good faith use commercially reasonable efforts to obtain the consent of, or waiver by, any person whose consent or waiver is necessary for Borrower’s interest in such licenses or contract rights to be deemed Collateral and for Bank to have a security interest in it that might otherwise be restricted by the terms of the applicable license or agreement, whether now existing or entered into in the future, provided, however, that the failure to obtain any such consent or waiver shall not constitute a default under this Agreement.

 

6.9                                Creation/Acquisition of Subsidiaries. In the event any Borrower or any Subsidiary of any Borrower creates or acquires any Subsidiary, Borrower or such Subsidiary shall promptly notify Bank of such creation or acquisition, and Borrower or such Subsidiary shall take all actions reasonably requested by Bank to achieve any of the following with respect to such “ New Subsidiary ” (defined as a Subsidiary formed after the date hereof during the term of this Agreement): (i) to cause such New Subsidiary to become either a co-Borrower hereunder, if such New Subsidiary is organized under the laws of the United States, or a secured guarantor with respect to the Obligations; and (ii) to grant and pledge to Bank a perfected security interest in 100% of the stock, units or other evidence of ownership held by Borrower or its Subsidiaries of any such New Subsidiary which is organized under the laws of the United States, and 65% of the stock, units or other evidence of ownership held by Borrower or its Subsidiaries of any such New Subsidiary which is not organized under the laws of the United States.

 

6.10                         Further Assurances . At any time and from time to time Borrower shall execute and deliver such further instruments and take such further action as may reasonably be requested by Bank to effect the purposes of this Agreement.

 

7.                                       NEGATIVE COVENANTS .

 

Borrower covenants and agrees that, so long as any credit hereunder shall be available

 

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and until the outstanding Obligations are paid in full or for so long as Bank may have any commitment to make any Credit Extensions, Borrower will not do any of the following without Bank’s prior written consent, which shall not be unreasonably withheld:

 

7.1                                Dispositions . Convey, sell, lease, license, transfer or otherwise dispose of (collectively, to “Transfer”), or permit any of its Subsidiaries to Transfer, all or any part of its business or property, or move cash balances on deposit with Bank to accounts opened at another financial institution, other than Permitted Transfers.

 

7.2                                Change in Name, Location, Executive Office, or Executive Management; Change in Business; Change in Fiscal Year; Change in Control . Change its name or the state of Borrower’s formation or relocate its chief executive office without 30 days prior written notification to Bank; replace or suffer the departure of its chief executive officer or chief financial officer without delivering written notification to Bank within 10 days; fail to appoint an interim replacement or fill a vacancy in the position of chief executive officer or chief financial officer for more than 30 consecutive days; suffer a change on its board of directors which results in the failure of at least one partner of either Caanan Partners or its Affiliates or Domain Associates or its Affiliates to serve as a voting member (an “Investor Board Departure”), or suffer the resignation of one or more directors from its board of directors in anticipation of Borrower’s insolvency, in each case without the prior written consent of Bank which may be withheld in Bank’s sole discretion, provided that, after the initial public offering of Borrower’s equity securities or the sale of Borrower’s equity securities registered under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, an Investor Board Departure shall not be a violation of this Section 7.2 so long as Borrower provides to Bank written notice within 30 days of such Investor Board Departure; take action to liquidate, wind up, or otherwise cease to conduct business in the ordinary course; engage in any business, or permit any of its Subsidiaries to engage in any business, other than or reasonably related or incidental to the businesses currently engaged in by Borrower; change its fiscal year end; have a Change in Control.

 

7.3                                Mergers or Acquisitions. Merge or consolidate, or permit any of its Subsidiaries to merge or consolidate, with or into any other business organization (other than mergers or consolidations of a Subsidiary into another Subsidiary or into Borrower), or acquire, or permit any of its Subsidiaries to acquire, all or substantially all of the capital stock or property of another Person except where (a) each of the following conditions is applicable: (i) the consideration paid in connection with such transactions (including assumption of liabilities) does not in the aggregate exceed $250,000 during any fiscal year, (ii) no Event of Default has occurred, is continuing or would exist after giving effect to such transactions, (iii) such transactions do not result in a Change in Control, and (iv) Borrower is the surviving entity; or (b) the Obligations are repaid in full concurrently with the closing of any merger or consolidation of Borrower in which Borrower is not the surviving entity; provided, however, that Borrower shall not, without Bank’s prior written consent, enter into any binding contractual arrangement with any Person to attempt to facilitate a merger or acquisition of Borrower; provided however, Borrower may enter into any such agreement without Bank’s prior written consent so long as (i) no Event of Default exists when such agreement is entered into by Borrower, (ii) such agreement does not give such Person the right to claim any fee, payment or damages from any parties, other than from Borrower or Borrower’s investors, in connection with a sale of Borrower’s stock or assets pursuant to or resulting from an assignment for the benefit of

 

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creditors, an asset turnover to Borrower’s creditors (including, without limitation, Bank), foreclosure, bankruptcy or similar liquidation, and (iii) Borrower notifies Bank in advance of entering into such an agreement (provided, the failure to give such notification shall not be deemed a material breach of this Agreement).

 

7.4                                Indebtedness . Create, incur, assume, guarantee or be or remain liable with respect to any Indebtedness, or permit any Subsidiary so to do, other than Permitted Indebtedness, or prepay any Indebtedness or take any actions which impose on Borrower an obligation to prepay any Indebtedness, except Indebtedness to Bank.

 

7.5                                Encumbrances . Create, incur, assume or allow any Lien with respect to its property, or assign or otherwise convey any right to receive income, including the sale of any Accounts, or permit any of its Subsidiaries so to do, except for Permitted Liens, or covenant to any other Person (other than (i) the licensors of in-licensed property with respect to such property or (ii) the lessors of specific equipment or lenders financing specific equipment with respect to such leased or financed equipment) that Borrower in the future will refrain from creating, incurring, assuming or allowing any Lien with respect to any of Borrower’s property.

 

7.6                                Distributions . Pay any dividends or make any other distribution or payment on account of or in redemption, retirement or purchase of any capital stock, except that Borrower may (i) repurchase the stock of former employees pursuant to stock repurchase agreements as long as an Event of Default does not exist prior to such repurchase or would not exist after giving effect to such repurchase, and (ii) repurchase the stock of former employees pursuant to stock repurchase agreements by the cancellation of indebtedness owed by such former employees to Borrower regardless of whether an Event of Default exists.

 

7.7                                Investments . Other than as permitted pursuant to Section 6.6, directly or indirectly acquire or own, or make any Investment in or to any Person, or permit any of its Subsidiaries so to do, other than Permitted Investments, or maintain or invest any of its Investment Property with a Person other than Bank or Bank’s Affiliates or permit any Subsidiary to do so unless such Person has entered into a control agreement with Bank, in form and substance satisfactory to Bank, or suffer or permit any Subsidiary to be a party to, or be bound by, an agreement that restricts such Subsidiary from paying dividends or otherwise distributing property to Borrower.

 

7.8                                Transactions with Affiliates . Directly or indirectly enter into or permit to exist any material transaction with any Affiliate of Borrower except for transactions that are in the ordinary course of Borrower’s business, upon fair and reasonable terms that are no less favorable to Borrower than would be obtained in an arm’s length transaction with a non-affiliated Person.

 

7.9                                Subordinated Debt . Make any payment in respect of any Subordinated Debt, or permit any of its Subsidiaries to make any such payment, except in compliance with the terms of such Subordinated Debt, or amend any provision affecting Bank’s rights contained in any documentation relating to the Subordinated Debt without Bank’s prior written consent.

 

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7.10                         Inventory and Equipment . Store the Inventory or the Equipment of a book value in excess of $100,000 with a bailee, warehouseman, collocation facility or similar third party unless the third party has been notified of Bank’s security interest and Bank (a) has received an acknowledgment from the third party that it is holding or will hold the Inventory or Equipment for Bank’s benefit or (b) is in possession of the warehouse receipt, where negotiable, covering such Inventory or Equipment. Except for Inventory sold in the ordinary course of business, drug substance and drug product used in clinical trials or at vendor facilities in the normal course of business and for movable items of personal property having an aggregate book value not in excess of $100,000, and except for such other locations as Bank may approve in writing, Borrower shall keep the Inventory and Equipment only at the location set forth in Section 10 and such other locations of which Borrower gives Bank prior written notice and as to which Bank is able to take such actions as may be necessary to perfect its security interest or to obtain a bailee’s acknowledgment of Bank’s rights in the Collateral. Notwithstanding the foregoing, with respect to drug substance and drug product used in clinical trials or at vendor facilities, Borrower shall give prompt written notice to Bank of any location where the book value of such items at such location exceeds $300,000.

 

7.11                         No Investment Company; Margin Regulation . Become or be controlled by an “investment company,” within the meaning of the Investment Company Act of 1940, or become principally engaged in, or undertake as one of its important activities, the business of extending credit for the purpose of purchasing or carrying margin stock, or use the proceeds of any Credit Extension for such purpose.

 

8.                                       EVENTS OF DEFAULT .

 

Any one or more of the following events shall constitute an Event of Default by Borrower under this Agreement:

 

8.1                                Payment Default .   If Borrower fails to pay any of the Obligations when due;

 

8.2                                Covenant Default .

 

(a)                      If Borrower fails to perform any obligation under Sections 6.2 (financial reporting), 6.4 (taxes), 6.5 (insurance), 6.6 (primary accounts) or 6.7 (financial covenants), or violates any of the covenants contained in Article 7 of this Agreement; or

 

(b)                      If Borrower fails or neglects to perform or observe any other material term, provision, condition, or covenant contained in this Agreement, in any of the Loan Documents, or in any other present or future agreement between Borrower and Bank and as to any default under such other term, provision, condition or covenant that can be cured, has failed to cure such default within 15 days after Borrower receives notice thereof or any officer of Borrower becomes aware thereof; provided, however, that if the default cannot by its nature be cured within the 15 day period or cannot after diligent attempts by Borrower be cured within such 15 day period, and such default is likely to be cured within a reasonable time, then Borrower shall have an additional reasonable period (which shall not in any case exceed 30 additional days) to attempt to cure such default, and within such reasonable time period the

 

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failure to have cured such default shall not be deemed an Event of Default but no Credit Extensions will be made.

 

8.3                                Material Adverse Change . If there occurs any circumstance or any circumstances which would reasonably be expected to have a Material Adverse Effect;

 

8.4                                Attachment . If any material portion of Borrower’s assets is attached, seized, subjected to a writ or distress warrant, or is levied upon, or comes into the possession of any trustee, receiver or person acting in a similar capacity and such attachment, seizure, writ or distress warrant or levy has not been removed, discharged or rescinded within 10 days, or if Borrower is enjoined, restrained, or in any way prevented by court order from continuing to conduct all or any material part of its business affairs, or if a judgment or other claim becomes a lien or encumbrance upon any material portion of Borrower’s assets, or if a notice of lien, levy, or assessment is filed of record with respect to any material portion of Borrower’s assets by the United States Government, or any department, agency, or instrumentality thereof, or by any state, county, municipal, or governmental agency, and the same is not paid within ten days after Borrower receives notice thereof, provided that none of the foregoing shall constitute an Event of Default where such action or event is stayed or an adequate bond has been posted pending a good faith contest by Borrower (provided that no Credit Extensions will be made during such cure period);

 

8.5                                Insolvency . If Borrower becomes Insolvent, or if an Insolvency Proceeding is commenced by Borrower, or if an Insolvency Proceeding is commenced against Borrower and is not dismissed or stayed within 60 days (provided that no Credit Extensions will be made prior to the dismissal of such Insolvency Proceeding);

 

8.6                                Other Agreements . If there is a default or other failure to perform in any agreement to which Borrower is a party with a third party or parties (a) resulting in a right by such third party or parties, whether or not exercised, to accelerate the maturity of any Indebtedness in an amount in excess of $200,000, (b) in connection with any lease of real property material to the conduct of Borrower’s business, if such default or failure to perform results in the right of another party to terminate such lease, or (c) that would reasonably be expected to have a Material Adverse Effect;

 

8.7                                Judgments . If a final, uninsured judgment or judgments for the payment of money in an amount, individually or in the aggregate, of at least $200,000 shall be rendered against Borrower and shall remain unsatisfied and unstayed for a period of 10 days (provided that no Credit Extensions will be made prior to the satisfaction or stay of the judgment); or

 

8.8                                Misrepresentations . If any material misrepresentation or material misstatement exists now or hereafter in any warranty or representation set forth herein or in any certificate delivered to Bank by any Responsible Officer pursuant to this Agreement or to induce Bank to enter into this Agreement or any other Loan Document.

 

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9.                                       BANK’S RIGHTS AND REMEDIES .

 

9.1                                Rights and Remedies . Upon the occurrence and during the continuance of an Event of Default, Bank may, at its election, without notice of its election and without demand, do any one or more of the following, all of which are authorized by Borrower:

 

(a)                      Declare all Obligations, whether evidenced by this Agreement, by any of the other Loan Documents, or otherwise, immediately due and payable (provided that upon the occurrence of an Event of Default described in Section 8.5 (insolvency), all Obligations shall become immediately due and payable without any action by Bank);

 

(b)                      Demand that Borrower (i) deposit cash with Bank in an amount equal to the amount of any Letters of Credit remaining undrawn, as collateral security for the repayment of any future drawings under such Letters of Credit, and (ii) pay in advance all Letter of Credit fees scheduled to be paid or payable over the remaining term of the Letters of Credit, and Borrower shall promptly deposit and pay such amounts;

 

(c)                       Cease advancing money or extending credit to or for the benefit of Borrower under this Agreement or under any other agreement between Borrower and Bank;

 

(d)                      Settle or adjust disputes and claims directly with account debtors for amounts, upon terms and in whatever order that Bank reasonably considers advisable;

 

(e)                       Make such payments and do such acts as Bank considers necessary or reasonable to protect its security interest in the Collateral. Borrower agrees to assemble the Collateral if Bank so requires, and to make the Collateral available to Bank as Bank may designate. Borrower authorizes Bank to enter the premises where the Collateral is located, to take and maintain possession of the Collateral, or any part of it, and to pay, purchase, contest, or compromise any encumbrance, charge, or lien which in Bank’s determination appears to be prior or superior to its security interest and to pay all expenses incurred in connection therewith. With respect to any of Borrower’s owned premises, Borrower hereby grants Bank a license to enter into possession of such premises and to occupy the same, without charge, in order to exercise any of Bank’s rights or remedies provided herein, at law, in equity, or otherwise;

 

(f)                        Set off and apply to the Obligations any and all (i) balances and deposits of Borrower held by Bank, and (ii) indebtedness at any time owing to or for the credit or the account of Borrower held by Bank;

 

(g)                      Ship, reclaim, recover, store, finish, maintain, repair, prepare for sale, advertise for sale, and sell (in the manner provided for herein) the Collateral. Bank is hereby granted a license or other right, solely pursuant to the provisions of this Section 9.1, to use, without charge, Borrower’s labels, patents, copyrights, rights of use of any name, trade secrets, trade names, trademarks, service marks, and advertising matter, or any property of a similar nature, as it pertains to the Collateral, in completing production of, advertising for sale, and selling any Collateral and, in connection with Bank’s exercise of its rights under this Section 9.1, Borrower’s rights under all licenses and all franchise agreements shall inure to Bank’s benefit;

 

(h)                      Sell the Collateral at either a public or private sale, or both, by way of one or more contracts or transactions, for cash or on terms, in such manner and at such

 

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places (including Borrower’s premises) as Bank determines is commercially reasonable, and apply any proceeds to the Obligations in whatever manner or order Bank deems appropriate. Bank may sell the Collateral without giving any warranties as to the Collateral. Bank may specifically disclaim any warranties of title or the like. This procedure will not be considered adversely to affect the commercial reasonableness of any sale of the Collateral. If Bank sells any of the Collateral upon credit, Borrower will be credited only with payments actually made by the purchaser, received by Bank, and applied to the indebtedness of the purchaser. If the purchaser fails to pay for the Collateral, Bank may resell the Collateral and Borrower shall be credited with the proceeds of the sale;

 

(i)                         Bank may credit bid and purchase at any public sale;

 

(j)                         Apply for the appointment of a receiver, trustee, liquidator or conservator of the Collateral, without notice and without regard to the adequacy of the security for the Obligations and without regard to the solvency of Borrower, any guarantor or any other Person liable for any of the Obligations; and

 

(k)                      Any deficiency that exists after disposition of the Collateral as provided above will be paid immediately by Borrower.

 

Bank may comply with any applicable state or federal law requirements in connection with a disposition of the Collateral and compliance will not be considered adversely to affect the commercial reasonableness of any sale of the Collateral.

 

9.2                                Power of Attorney . Effective only upon the occurrence and during the continuance of an Event of Default, Borrower hereby irrevocably appoints Bank (and any of Bank’s designated officers, or employees) as Borrower’s true and lawful attorney to: (a) send requests for verification of Accounts or notify account debtors of Bank’s security interest in the Accounts; (b) endorse Borrower’s name on any checks or other forms of payment or security that may come into Bank’s possession; (c) sign Borrower’s name on any invoice or bill of lading relating to any Account, drafts against account debtors, schedules and assignments of Accounts, verifications of Accounts, and notices to account debtors; (d) dispose of any Collateral; (e) make, settle, and adjust all claims under and decisions with respect to Borrower’s policies of insurance; (f) settle and adjust disputes and claims respecting the accounts directly with account debtors, for amounts and upon terms which Bank determines to be reasonable; and (g) file, in its sole discretion, one or more financing or continuation statements and amendments thereto, relative to any of the Collateral; provided Bank may exercise such power of attorney to sign the name of Borrower on any of the documents described in clause (g) above, regardless of whether an Event of Default has occurred. The appointment of Bank as Borrower’s attorney in fact, and each and every one of Bank’s rights and powers, being coupled with an interest, is irrevocable until all of the Obligations have been fully repaid and performed and Bank’s obligation to provide advances hereunder is terminated.

 

9.3                                Accounts Collection . At any time after the occurrence and during the continuation of an Event of Default, Bank may notify any Person owing funds to Borrower of Bank’s security interest in such funds and verify the amount of such Account.   Borrower shall collect all amounts owing to Borrower for Bank, receive in trust all payments as Bank’s trustee,

 

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and immediately deliver such payments to Bank in their original form as received from the account debtor, with proper endorsements for deposit.

 

9.4                                Bank Expenses . If Borrower fails to pay any amounts or furnish any required proof of payment due to third persons or entities, as required under the terms of this Agreement, then Bank may do any or all of the following after reasonable notice to Borrower: (a) make payment of the same or any part thereof; and/or (b) obtain and maintain insurance policies of the type discussed in Section 6.5 of this Agreement, and take any action with respect to such policies as Bank deems prudent. Any amounts so paid or deposited by Bank shall constitute Bank Expenses, shall be immediately due and payable, and shall bear interest at the then applicable rate hereinabove provided, and shall be secured by the Collateral. Any payments made by Bank shall not constitute an agreement by Bank to make similar payments in the future or a waiver by Bank of any Event of Default under this Agreement.

 

9.5                                Bank’s Liability for Collateral . Bank has no obligation to clean up or otherwise prepare the Collateral for sale. All risk of loss, damage or destruction of the Collateral shall be borne by Borrower.

 

9.6                                No Obligation to Pursue Others . Bank has no obligation to attempt to satisfy the Obligations by collecting them from any other person liable for them and Bank may release, modify or waive any collateral provided by any other Person to secure any of the Obligations, all without affecting Bank’s rights against Borrower. Borrower waives any right it may have to require Bank to pursue any other Person for any of the Obligations.

 

9.7                                Remedies Cumulative . Bank’s rights and remedies under this Agreement, the Loan Documents, and all other agreements shall be cumulative. Bank shall have all other rights and remedies not inconsistent herewith as provided under the Code, by law, or in equity. No exercise by Bank of one right or remedy shall be deemed an election, and no waiver by Bank of any Event of Default on Borrower’s part shall be deemed a continuing waiver. No delay by Bank shall constitute a waiver, election, or acquiescence by it.  No waiver by Bank shall be effective unless made in a written document signed on behalf of Bank and then shall be effective only in the specific instance and for the specific purpose for which it was given. Borrower expressly agrees that this Section 9.7 may not be waived or modified by Bank by course of performance, conduct, estoppel or otherwise.

 

9.8                                Demand; Protest . Except as otherwise provided in this Agreement, Borrower waives demand, protest, notice of protest, notice of default or dishonor, notice of payment and nonpayment and any other notices relating to the Obligations.

 

10.                                NOTICES .

 

Unless otherwise provided in this Agreement, all notices or demands by any party relating to this Agreement or any other agreement entered into in connection herewith shall be in writing and (except for financial statements and other informational documents which may be sent by first-class mail, postage prepaid) shall be personally delivered or sent by a recognized overnight delivery service, certified mail, postage prepaid, return receipt requested, or by telefacsimile to Borrower or to Bank, as the case may be, at its addresses set forth below:

 

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If to Borrower:

Marinus Pharmaceuticals, Inc.

142 Temple Street, Suite 205

New Haven, CT 06510

 

Attn:

Edward Smith

 

FAX:

(203) 315-0565

 

 

If to Bank:

Square 1 Bank

 

406 Blackwell Street, Suite 240 

Durham, North Carolina 27701 

 

Attn:

Loan Operations Manager

 

FAX:

(919) 314-3080

 

 

with a copy to:

Square 1 Bank

 

500 Fifth Avenue, 46th Floor

New York, NY 10110

 

Attn:

Bill Stickle

 

FAX:

(646) 336-4961

 

The parties hereto may change the address at which they are to receive notices hereunder, by notice in writing in the foregoing manner given to the other.

 

11.                                CHOICE OF LAW AND VENUE; JURY TRIAL WAIVER .

 

This Agreement shall be governed by, and construed in accordance with, the internal laws of the State of North Carolina, without regard to principles of conflicts of law. Jurisdiction shall lie in the State of North Carolina. All disputes, controversies, claims, actions and similar proceedings arising with respect to Borrower’s account or any related agreement or transaction shall be brought in the General Court of Justice of North Carolina sitting in Durham County, North Carolina or the United States District Court for the Middle District of North Carolina, except as provided below with respect to arbitration of such matters. BANK AND BORROWER EACH ACKNOWLEDGE THAT THE RIGHT TO TRIAL BY JURY IS A CONSTITUTIONAL ONE, BUT THAT IT MAY BE WAIVED. EACH OF THEM, AFTER CONSULTING OR HAVING HAD THE OPPORTUNITY TO CONSULT WITH COUNSEL OF THEIR CHOICE, KNOWINGLY, VOLUNTARILY AND INTENTIONALLY WAIVES ANY RIGHT ANY OF THEM MAY HAVE TO A TRIAL BY JURY IN ANY LITIGATION BASED UPON OR ARISING OUT OF THIS AGREEMENT OR ANY RELATED INSTRUMENT OR LOAN DOCUMENT OR ANY OF THE TRANSACTIONS CONTEMPLATED BY THIS AGREEMENT OR ANY COURSE OF CONDUCT, DEALING, STATEMENTS (WHETHER ORAL OR WRITTEN), OR ACTION OF ANY OF THEM. THESE PROVISIONS SHALL NOT BE DEEMED TO HAVE BEEN MODIFIED IN ANY RESPECT OR RELINQUISHED BY BANK OR BORROWER, EXCEPT BY A WRITTEN INSTRUMENT EXECUTED BY EACH OF THEM. If the jury waiver set forth in this Section 11 is not enforceable, then any dispute, controversy, claim, action or similar proceeding arising out of or relating to this Agreement, the Loan Documents or any of the transactions contemplated therein shall be settled by final and binding arbitration held in Durham County, North Carolina in accordance with the then current Commercial Arbitration Rules of the American Arbitration Association by one

 

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arbitrator appointed in accordance with those rules. The arbitrator shall apply North Carolina law to the resolution of any dispute, without reference to rules of conflicts of law or rules of statutory arbitration. Judgment upon any award resulting from arbitration may be entered into and enforced by any state or federal court having jurisdiction thereof. Notwithstanding the foregoing, the parties may apply to any court of competent jurisdiction for preliminary or interim equitable relief, or to compel arbitration in accordance with this Section. The costs and expenses of the arbitration, including without limitation, the arbitrator’s fees and expert witness fees, and reasonable attorneys’ fees, incurred by the parties to the arbitration may be awarded to the prevailing party, in the discretion of the arbitrator, or may be apportioned between the parties in any manner deemed appropriate by the arbitrator. Unless and until the arbitrator decides that one party is to pay for all (or a share) of such costs and expenses, both parties shall share equally in the payment of the arbitrator’s fees as and when billed by the arbitrator.

 

12.                                GENERAL PROVISIONS .

 

12.1                         Successors and Assigns . This Agreement shall bind and inure to the benefit of the respective successors and permitted assigns of each of the parties and shall bind all persons who become bound as a debtor to this Agreement; provided, however, that neither this Agreement nor any rights hereunder may be assigned by Borrower without Bank’s prior written consent, which consent may be granted or withheld in Bank’s sole discretion. Bank shall have the right without the consent of or notice to Borrower to sell, assign, transfer, negotiate, or grant participation in all or any part of, or any interest in, Bank’s obligations, rights and benefits hereunder.

 

12.2                         Indemnification . Borrower shall defend, indemnify and hold harmless Bank and its officers, employees, and agents against: (a) all obligations, demands, claims, and liabilities claimed or asserted by any other party in connection with the transactions contemplated by this Agreement; and (b) all losses or Bank Expenses in any way suffered, incurred, or paid by Bank, its officers, employees and agents as a result of or in any way arising out of, following, or consequential to transactions between Bank and Borrower whether under this Agreement, or otherwise (including without limitation reasonable attorneys fees and expenses), except, in each case, for losses caused by Bank’s gross negligence or willful misconduct.

 

12.3                         Time of Essence . Time is of the essence for the performance of all obligations set forth in this Agreement.

 

12.4                         Severability of Provisions . Each provision of this Agreement shall be severable from every other provision of this Agreement for the purpose of determining the legal enforceability of any specific provision.

 

12.5                         Amendments in Writing, Integration. All amendments to or terminations of this Agreement or the other Loan Documents must be in writing. All prior agreements, understandings, representations, warranties, and negotiations between the parties hereto with respect to the subject matter of this Agreement and the other Loan Documents, if any, are merged into this Agreement and the Loan Documents.

 

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12.6                         Counterparts . This Agreement may be executed in any number of counterparts and by different parties on separate counterparts, each of which, when executed and delivered, shall be deemed to be an original, and all of which, when taken together, shall constitute but one and the same Agreement. Executed copies of the signature pages of this Agreement sent by facsimile or transmitted electronically in Portable Document Format (“PDF”), or any similar format, shall be treated as originals, fully binding and with full legal force and effect, and the parties waive any rights they may have to object to such treatment.

 

12.7                         Survival . All covenants, representations and warranties made in this Agreement shall continue in full force and effect so long as any Obligations remain outstanding or Bank has any obligation to make any Credit Extension to Borrower. The obligations of Borrower to indemnify Bank with respect to the expenses, damages, losses, costs and liabilities described in Section 12.2 shall survive until all applicable statute of limitations periods with respect to actions that may be brought against Bank have run.

 

12.8                         Confidentiality . In handling any confidential information, Bank and Borrower and all employees and agents of such party shall exercise the same degree of care that such party exercises with respect to its own proprietary information of the same types to maintain the confidentiality of any non-public information thereby received or received pursuant to this Agreement except that disclosure of such information may be made (i) in the case of Bank, to the subsidiaries or Affiliates of Bank or Borrower in connection with their present or prospective business relations with Borrower, (ii) in the case of Bank, to prospective transferees or purchasers of any interest in the Credit Extensions, provided that they have entered into a comparable confidentiality agreement in favor of Borrower and have delivered a copy to Borrower, (iii) as required by law, regulations, rule or order, subpoena, judicial order or similar order, (iv) in the case of Bank, as may be required in connection with the examination, audit or similar investigation of Bank, and (v) as Bank may determine in connection with the enforcement of any remedies hereunder. Confidential information hereunder shall not include information that either: (a) is in the public domain or in the knowledge or possession of the receiving party when disclosed to such party, or becomes part of the public domain after disclosure to such receiving party through no fault of such receiving party; or (b) is disclosed to such receiving party by a third party, provided such receiving party does not have actual knowledge that such third party is prohibited from disclosing such information.

 

********

 

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IN WITNESS WHEREOF, the parties hereto have caused this Agreement to be executed as of the date first above written.

 

 

 

MARINUS PHARMACEUTICALS, INC.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

By:

/s/ Edward Smith

 

 

 

 

Name:

Edward Smith

 

 

 

 

Title:

Chief Financial Officer

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

SQUARE 1 BANK

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

By:

/s/ Zach Robbins

 

 

 

 

Name:

Zach Robbins

 

 

 

 

Title:

Assistant Vice President

 

22



 

EXHIBIT A

 

DEFINITIONS

 

“Accounts” means all presently existing and hereafter arising accounts, contract rights, payment intangibles and all other forms of obligations owing to Borrower arising out of the sale or lease of goods (including, without limitation, the licensing of software and other technology) or the rendering of services by Borrower and any and all credit insurance, guaranties, and other security therefor, as well as all merchandise returned to or reclaimed by Borrower and Borrower’s Books relating to any of the foregoing.

 

“Affiliate” means, with respect to any Person, any Person that owns or controls directly or indirectly such Person, any Person that controls or is controlled by or is under common control with such Person, and each of such Person’s senior executive officers, directors, and general partners.

 

“Authorized Officer” means someone designated as such in the corporate resolution provided by Borrower to Bank in which this Agreement and the transactions contemplated hereunder are authorized by Borrower’s board of directors. If Borrower provides subsequent corporate resolutions to Bank after the Closing Date, the individual(s) designated as “Authorized Officer(s)” in the most recently provided resolution shall be the only “Authorized Officers” for purposes of this Agreement.

 

“Availability End Date” means April 2, 2015.

 

“Bank Expenses” means all reasonable costs or expenses (including reasonable attorneys’ fees and expenses) incurred in connection with the preparation, negotiation, administration, and enforcement of the Loan Documents; reasonable Collateral audit fees; and Bank’s reasonable attorneys’ fees and expenses (whether generated in-house or by outside counsel) incurred in amending, enforcing or defending the Loan Documents (including fees and expenses of appeal), incurred before, during and after an Insolvency Proceeding, whether or not suit is brought.

 

“Borrower’s Books” means all of Borrower’s books and records including: ledgers; records concerning Borrower’s assets or liabilities, the Collateral, business operations or financial condition; and all computer programs, or tape files, and the equipment, containing such information.

 

“Business Day” means any day that is not a Saturday, Sunday, or other day on which banks in the State of North Carolina are authorized or required to close.

 

“Cash” means unrestricted cash and cash equivalents.

 

“Change in Control” means a transaction (other than a bona fide equity financing or series of financings on terms and from investors reasonably acceptable to Bank) in which any “person” or “group” (within the meaning of Section 13(d) and 14(d)(2) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934) becomes the “beneficial owner” (as defined in Rule 13d-3 under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934), directly or indirectly, of a sufficient number of shares of all classes of stock then outstanding of Borrower ordinarily entitled to vote in the election of directors, empowering such “person” or “group” to elect a majority of the Board of Directors of Borrower, who did not have such power before such transaction.

 

“Clinical Trial Milestone” means Borrower’s achievement of both of the following milestones, concerning Borrower’s Phase 2b epilepsy trial, on or before June 30, 2014:

 

(a)                                  30 or more enrolled subjects; and

 

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(b)                                  20 or more test sites contracted to enroll patients.

 

“Closing Date” means the date of this Agreement.

 

“Code” means the North Carolina Uniform Commercial Code as amended or supplemented from time to time.

 

“Collateral” means the property described on Exhibit B attached hereto and all Negotiable Collateral to the extent not described on Exhibit B, except to the extent any such property (i) is non-assignable by its terms without the consent of the licensor thereof or another party (but only to the extent such prohibition on transfer is enforceable under applicable law, including, without limitation, §25-9-406 and §25-9-408 of the Code), (ii) is property for which the granting of a security interest therein is contrary to applicable law, provided that upon the cessation of any such restriction or prohibition, such property shall automatically become part of the Collateral, (iii) constitutes the capital stock of a controlled foreign corporation (as defined in the IRC), in excess of 65% of the voting power of all classes of capital stock of such controlled foreign corporations entitled to vote, or (iv) is property (including any attachments, accessions or replacements) that is subject to a Lien that is permitted pursuant to clause (c) of the definition of Permitted Liens, if the grant of a security interest with respect to such property pursuant to this Agreement would be prohibited by the agreement creating such Permitted Lien or would otherwise constitute a default thereunder, provided, that such property will be deemed “Collateral” hereunder upon the termination and release of such Permitted Lien.

 

“Collateral State” means a state or states where the Collateral is located, which is currently Connecticut and will include Pennsylvania in the event that Borrower establishes a Pennsylvania location.

 

“Contingent Obligation” means, as applied to any Person, any direct or indirect liability, contingent or otherwise, of that Person with respect to (i) any indebtedness, lease, dividend, letter of credit or other obligation of another, including, without limitation, any such obligation directly or indirectly guaranteed, endorsed, co-made or discounted or sold with recourse by that Person, or in respect of which that Person is otherwise directly or indirectly liable; (ii) any obligations with respect to undrawn letters of credit, corporate credit cards or merchant services issued for the account of that Person; and (iii) all obligations arising under any interest rate, currency or commodity swap agreement, interest rate cap agreement, interest rate collar agreement, or other agreement or arrangement designated to protect a Person against fluctuation in interest rates, currency exchange rates or commodity prices; provided, however, that the term “Contingent Obligation” shall not include endorsements for collection or deposit in the ordinary course of business. The amount of any Contingent Obligation shall be deemed to be an amount equal to the stated or determined amount of the primary obligation in respect of which such Contingent Obligation is made or, if not stated or determinable, the maximum reasonably anticipated liability in respect thereof as determined by such Person in good faith; provided, however, that such amount shall not in any event exceed the maximum amount of the obligations under the guarantee or other support arrangement.

 

“Copyrights” means any and all copyright rights, copyright applications, copyright registrations and like protections in each work or authorship and derivative work thereof, whether published or unpublished and whether or not the same also constitutes a trade secret, now or hereafter existing, created, acquired or held.

 

“Credit Card Line” means a Credit Extension of up to $50,000, to be used exclusively for the provision of Credit Card Services.

 

“Credit Card Maturity Date” means April 1, 2015.

 

“Credit Extension” means each Term Loan, the Credit Card Services provided under the Credit Card Line, or

 

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any other extension of credit, by Bank to or for the benefit of Borrower hereunder.

 

“Equipment” means all present and future machinery, equipment, tenant improvements, furniture, fixtures, vehicles, tools, parts and attachments in which Borrower has any interest.

 

“ERISA” means the Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974, as amended, and the regulations thereunder.

 

“Event of Default” has the meaning assigned in Article 8.

 

“GAAP” means generally accepted accounting principles, consistently applied, as in effect from time to time in the United States.

 

“Indebtedness” means (a) all indebtedness for borrowed money or the deferred purchase price of property or services, including without limitation reimbursement and other obligations with respect to surety bonds and letters of credit, (b) all obligations evidenced by notes, bonds, debentures or similar instruments, (c) all capital lease obligations, and (d) all Contingent Obligations, including but not limited to any sublimit contained herein.

 

“Insolvency Proceeding” means any proceeding commenced by or against any Person or entity under any provision of the United States Bankruptcy Code, as amended, or under any other bankruptcy or insolvency law, including assignments for the benefit of creditors, formal or informal moratoria, compositions, extension generally with its creditors, or proceedings seeking reorganization, arrangement, or other relief.

 

“Interest-Only End Date” means April 2, 2015; except that, if Borrower achieves the Clinical Trial Milestone, then the term “Interest-Only End Date” shall instead mean October 2, 2015.

 

“Inventory” means all present and future inventory in which Borrower has any interest.

 

“Investment” means any beneficial ownership of (including stock, partnership or limited liability company interest or other securities) any Person, or any loan, advance or capital contribution to any Person.

 

“Investment Agreement” means, collectively, Borrower’s stock purchase and other agreement(s) pursuant to which Borrower most recently issued its preferred stock.

 

“IRC” means the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended, and the regulations thereunder.

 

“Letter of Credit” means a commercial or standby letter of credit or similar undertaking issued by Bank at Borrower’s request.

 

“Lien” means any mortgage, lien, deed of trust, charge, pledge, security interest or other encumbrance.

 

“Loan Documents” means, collectively, this Agreement, any note or notes executed by Borrower, and any other document, instrument or agreement entered into in connection with this Agreement, all as amended or extended from time to time.

 

“Material Adverse Effect” means a material adverse effect on: (i) the operations, business or financial condition of Borrower and its Subsidiaries taken as a whole; (ii) the ability of Borrower to repay the Obligations or otherwise perform its obligations under the Loan Documents; or (iii) Borrower’s interest in, or the value, perfection or priority of Bank’s security interest in the Collateral.   For clarification purposes, the occurrence of either of the following may not necessarily be deemed to have caused a Material Adverse Effect:

 

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(i)                                      the failure of any nonclinical or clinical trial to demonstrate the desired safety or efficacy for a drug candidate, or

 

(ii)                                   the denial, delay or limitation of approval of, or taking of any other regulatory action by the United States Food and Drug Administration or any other governmental entity with respect to any drug candidate.

 

“Negotiable Collateral” means all of Borrower’s present and future letters of credit of which it is a beneficiary, drafts, instruments (including promissory notes), securities, documents of title, and chattel paper, and Borrower’s Books relating to any of the foregoing.

 

“Obligations” means all debt, principal, interest, Bank Expenses and other amounts owed to Bank by Borrower pursuant to this Agreement or any other agreement, whether absolute or contingent, due or to become due, now existing or hereafter arising, including any interest that accrues after the commencement of an Insolvency Proceeding and including any debt, liability, or obligation owing from Borrower to others that Bank may have obtained by assignment or otherwise.

 

“Patents” means all patents, patent applications and like protections including without limitation improvements, divisions, continuations, renewals, reissues, extensions and continuations-in-part of the same.

 

“Periodic Payments” means all installments or similar recurring payments that Borrower may now or hereafter become obligated to pay to Bank pursuant to the terms and provisions of any instrument, or agreement now or hereafter in existence between Borrower and Bank.

 

“Permitted Indebtedness” means:

 

(a)          Indebtedness of Borrower in favor of Bank arising under this Agreement or any other Loan Document;

 

(b)          Indebtedness existing on the Closing Date and disclosed in the Schedule;

 

(c)           Indebtedness not to exceed $200,000 in the aggregate at any time secured by a lien described in clause (c) of the defined term “Permitted Liens,” provided such Indebtedness does not exceed at the time it is incurred the lesser of the cost or fair market value of the property financed with such Indebtedness;

 

(d)          Subordinated Debt;

 

(e)           Indebtedness to trade creditors incurred in the ordinary course of business; and

 

(f)            Extensions, refinancings and renewals of any items of Permitted Indebtedness, provided that the principal amount is not increased or the terms modified to impose more burdensome terms upon Borrower or its Subsidiary, as the case may be.

 

“Permitted Investment” means:

 

(a)          Investments existing on the Closing Date disclosed in the Schedule;

 

(b)          (i) Marketable direct obligations issued or unconditionally guaranteed by the United States of America or any agency or any State thereof maturing within one year from the date of acquisition thereof, (ii) commercial paper maturing no more than one year from the date of creation thereof and currently having rating

 

4



 

of at least A-2 or P-2 from either Standard & Poor’s Corporation or Moody’s Investors Service, (iii) Bank’s certificates of deposit maturing no more than one year from the date of investment therein, (iv) Bank’s money market accounts, (v) Investments in regular deposit or checking accounts held with Bank or subject to a control agreement in favor of Bank, and (vi) Investments consistent with any investment policy adopted by Borrower’s board of directors;

 

(c)           Repurchases of stock from former employees or directors of Borrower under the terms of applicable repurchase agreements (i) in an aggregate amount not to exceed $200,000 in any fiscal year, provided that no Event of Default has occurred, is continuing or would exist after giving effect to the repurchases, or (ii) in any amount where the consideration for the repurchase is the cancellation of indebtedness owed by such former employees to Borrower regardless of whether an Event of Default exists;

 

(d)          Investments accepted in connection with Permitted Transfers;

 

(e)           Investments of Subsidiaries in or to other Subsidiaries or Borrower and Investments by Borrower in Subsidiaries not to exceed $200,000 in the aggregate in any fiscal year;

 

(f)            Investments not to exceed $200,000 outstanding in the aggregate at any time consisting of (i) travel advances and employee relocation loans and other employee loans and advances in the ordinary course of business, and (ii) loans to employees, officers or directors relating to the purchase of equity securities of Borrower or its Subsidiaries pursuant to employee stock purchase plan agreements approved by Borrower’s board of directors;

 

(g)          Investments in unfinanced capital expenditures in any fiscal year, not to exceed $200,000;

 

(h)          Investments (including debt obligations) received in connection with the bankruptcy or reorganization of customers or suppliers and in settlement of delinquent obligations of, and other disputes with, customers or suppliers arising in the ordinary course of Borrower’s business;

 

(i)             Investments consisting of notes receivable of, or prepaid royalties and other credit extensions, to customers and suppliers who are not Affiliates, in the ordinary course of business, provided that this subparagraph (i) shall not apply to Investments of Borrower in any Subsidiary;

 

(j)             Joint ventures or strategic alliances in the ordinary course of Borrower’s business consisting of the non-exclusive licensing of technology, the development of technology or the providing of technical support, provided that any cash Investments by Borrower do not exceed $200,000 in the aggregate in any fiscal year; and

 

(k)          Investments permitted under Section 7.3.

 

“Permitted Liens” means the following:

 

(a)          Any Liens existing on the Closing Date and disclosed in the Schedule (excluding Liens to be satisfied with the proceeds of the Credit Extensions) or arising under this Agreement, the other Loan Documents, or any other agreement in favor of Bank;

 

(b)          Liens for taxes, fees, assessments or other governmental charges or levies, either not delinquent or being contested in good faith by appropriate proceedings and for which Borrower maintains adequate reserves;

 

(c)           Liens not to exceed $200,000 in the aggregate at any time (i) upon or in any Equipment (other than Equipment financed by a Credit Extension) acquired or held by Borrower or any of its Subsidiaries to secure the

 

5



 

purchase price of such Equipment or indebtedness incurred solely for the purpose of financing the acquisition or lease of such Equipment, or (ii) existing on such Equipment at the time of its acquisition, in each case provided that the Lien is confined solely to the property so acquired and improvements thereon, and the proceeds of such Equipment;

 

(d)          Liens incurred in connection with the extension, renewal or refinancing of the indebtedness secured by Liens of the type described in clauses (a) through (c) above, provided that any extension, renewal or replacement Lien shall be limited to the property encumbered by the existing Lien and the principal amount of the indebtedness being extended, renewed or refinanced does not increase;

 

(e)           Liens arising from judgments, decrees or attachments in circumstances not constituting an Event of Default under Sections 8.4 (attachment) or 8.7 (judgments); and

 

(f)            Liens securing Subordinated Debt.

 

“Permitted Transfer” means the conveyance, sale, lease, transfer or disposition by Borrower or any Subsidiary of:

 

(a)          Inventory in the ordinary course of business;

 

(b)          licenses and similar arrangements for the use of the property of Borrower or its Subsidiaries in the ordinary course of business;

 

(c)           worn-out, surplus or obsolete Equipment not financed with the proceeds of Credit Extensions;

 

(d)          grants of security interests and other Liens that constitute Permitted Liens; and

 

(e)           other assets of Borrower or its Subsidiaries that do not in the aggregate exceed $200,000 during any fiscal year.

 

“Person” means any individual, sole proprietorship, partnership, limited liability company, joint venture, trust, unincorporated organization, association, corporation, institution, public benefit corporation, firm, joint stock company, estate, entity or governmental agency.

 

“Prime Rate” means the variable rate of interest, per annum, most recently announced by Bank, as its “prime rate,” whether or not such announced rate is the lowest rate available from Bank.

 

“Responsible Officer” means each of the Chief Executive Officer, the Chief Operating Officer, the Chief Financial Officer, Vice President of Finance and the Controller of Borrower, as well as any other officer or employee identified as an Authorized Officer in the corporate resolution delivered by Borrower to Bank in connection with this Agreement.

 

“Schedule” means the schedule of exceptions attached hereto and approved by Bank, if any.

 

“SOS Reports” means the official reports from the Secretaries of State of each Collateral State, the state where Borrower’s chief executive office is located, the state of Borrower’s formation and other applicable federal, state or local government offices identifying all current security interests filed in the Collateral and Liens of record as of the date of such report.

 

“Subordinated Debt” means any debt incurred by Borrower that is subordinated in writing to the debt owing by

 

6



 

Borrower to Bank on terms reasonably acceptable to Bank (and identified as being such by Borrower and Bank).

 

“Subsidiary” means any corporation, partnership or limited liability company or joint venture in which (i) any general partnership interest or (ii) more than 50% of the stock, limited liability company interest or joint venture of which by the terms thereof ordinary voting power to elect the Board of Directors, managers or trustees of the entity, at the time as of which any determination is being made, is owned by Borrower, either directly or through an Affiliate.

 

“Term Loan Maturity Date” means April 2, 2017.

 

“Trademarks” means any trademark and servicemark rights, whether registered or not, applications to register and registrations of the same and like protections, and the entire goodwill of the business of Borrower connected with and symbolized by such trademarks.

 

7


 

DEBTOR:

MARINUS PHARMACEUTICALS, INC.

 

 

SECURED PARTY:

SQUARE 1 BANK

 

EXHIBIT B

 

COLLATERAL DESCRIPTION ATTACHMENT TO LOAN AND SECURITY AGREEMENT

 

All personal property of Borrower (herein referred to as “Borrower” or “Debtor”) whether presently existing or hereafter created or acquired, and wherever located, including, but not limited to:

 

(a)                      all accounts (including health-care-insurance receivables), chattel paper (including tangible and electronic chattel paper), deposit accounts, documents (including negotiable documents), equipment (including all accessions and additions thereto), financial assets, general intangibles (including patents, trademarks, copyrights, goodwill, payment intangibles, domain names, and software), goods (including fixtures), instruments (including promissory notes), inventory (including all goods held for sale or lease or to be furnished under a contract of service, and including returns and repossessions), investment property (including securities and securities entitlements), letter of credit rights, money, and all of Debtor’s books and records with respect to any of the foregoing, and the computers and equipment containing said books and records;

 

(b)                      any and all cash proceeds and/or noncash proceeds of any of the foregoing, including, without limitation, insurance proceeds, and all supporting obligations and the security therefor or for any right to payment. All terms above have the meanings given to them in the North Carolina Uniform Commercial Code, as amended or supplemented from time to time, including revised Division 9 of the Uniform Commercial Code-Secured Transactions.

 

Notwithstanding the foregoing, the Collateral shall not include any of the intellectual property, in any medium, of any kind or nature whatsoever, now or hereafter owned or acquired or received by Borrower, or in which Borrower now holds or hereafter acquires or receives any right or interest (collectively, the “Intellectual Property”); provided, however, that the Collateral shall include all accounts and general intangibles that consist of rights to payment and proceeds from the sale, licensing or disposition of all or any part, or rights in, the foregoing (the “Rights to Payment”).

 

Notwithstanding the foregoing, if a judicial authority (including a U.S. Bankruptcy Court) holds that a security interest in the underlying Intellectual Property is necessary to have a security interest in the Rights to Payment, then the Collateral shall automatically, and effective as of April 2, 2014, include the Intellectual Property to the extent and only to the extent necessary to permit perfection of Bank’s security interest in the Rights to Payment, and further provided, however, that Bank’s enforcement rights with respect to any security interest in the Intellectual Property shall be absolutely limited to the Rights to Payment only, and Bank shall have no recourse whatsoever with respect to the underlying Intellectual Property.

 

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EXHIBIT C

 

LOAN ADVANCE/PAYDOWN REQUEST FORM

 

[Please refer to New Borrower Kit]

 

EXHIBIT D

 

COMPLIANCE CERTIFICATE

 

[Please refer to New Borrower Kit]

 

1



 

SCHEDULE OF EXCEPTIONS

 

Permitted Indebtedness   (Exhibit A) — None.

 

Permitted Investments   (Exhibit A) — None.

 

Permitted Liens   (Exhibit A) — None.

 

Prior Names   (Section 5.5) — None.

 

Litigation   (Section 5.6) — None.

 

Inbound Licenses (Section 5.12) — None.

 

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CORPORATE RESOLUTION

 

The undersigned duly elected and qualified Secretary of Marinus Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (the “Company”) does hereby certify that the following is a true and correct copy of certain resolutions adopted at a meeting of the Company’s Board of Directors held on January 28, 2014 in accordance with applicable law and the Company’s bylaws, and that such resolutions are now unmodified and in full force and effect:

 

BE IT RESOLVED , that:

 

1)              Any one (1) of the following, duly elected officers of the Company (each, an “Authorized Officer”) whose genuine original signature appears next to his or her name is authorized to act for, on behalf of, and in the name of the Company in connection with the resolutions below:

 

Title

 

Name

 

Authorized Signature

 

 

 

 

 

President and Chief Executive Officer

 

Christopher M. Cashman

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

 

Edward F. Smith

 

 

 

2)              Any Authorized Officer may:

 

(a)                                  Borrow money from time to time from Square 1 Bank (“Bank”), and may negotiate and procure loans, letters of credit, foreign exchange contracts and other financial accommodations from Bank, including without limitation, that certain Loan and Security Agreement to be dated on or about April 2, 2014, and also to execute and deliver to Bank one or more renewals, extensions, or modifications thereof;

 

(b)                                  Give security for any liabilities of the Company to Bank by grant, security interest, assignment, lien, deed of trust or mortgage upon any real or personal property, tangible or intangible of the Company;

 

(c)                                   Purchase, sell, exchange, assign, endorse for transfer and/or deliver certificates and/or instruments representing stocks, bonds, evidences of Indebtedness or other securities owned by the Company, whether or not registered in the name of the Company;

 

(d)                                  Discount with the Bank, commercial or other business paper belonging to the Company made or drawn by or upon third parties, without limit as to amount;

 

(e)                                   Authorize and direct the Bank to pay the proceeds of any such loans or discounts as directed by the persons so authorized to sign; and

 

(f)                                    Execute and deliver in form and content as may be required by the Bank any and all notes, evidences of indebtedness, applications for letters of credit, guaranties, subordination agreements, loan and security agreements, financing statements, assignments, liens, deeds of trust, mortgages, trust receipts and other agreements, instruments or documents to carry out the purposes of these resolutions, any or all of which may relate to all or to substantially all of the Company’s property and assets;

 

3)              The Authorized Officers may designate additional or alternate individuals as being authorized to request loan advances, to do and perform such other acts and things, to pay any and all fees and costs, and to execute and deliver such other documents and agreements as he or she may in his or her discretion deem reasonably necessary or proper in order to carry into effect the provisions of these resolutions.

 

4)           (a)                                      The form, terms and provisions of a proposed Warrant to Purchase Stock (the “Series C Warrant”), pursuant to

 

2



 

which the Bank will have the right to purchase up to 37,991 shares of the Company’s Series C Preferred Stock at an exercise price of $1.1845 per share, is hereby approved; and any one of the Authorized Officers is hereby authorized to execute and deliver the Series C Warrant, for and on behalf of the Company, with the corporate seal affixed thereto and attested by the Secretary or unattested or without such seal, substantially in the form submitted to Board of Directors with such changes therein and additions thereto as shall be approved by the Authorized Officer executing the same, his approval to be evidenced conclusively by his execution and delivery thereof;

 

(b)                                  There are hereby reserved out of the authorized but unissued shares of the Company’s Series C Convertible Preferred Stock 37,991 shares of Series C Preferred Stock for issuance to the Bank upon the exercise of the Series C Warrant; and upon the exercise of the Series C Warrant in accordance with the terms thereof, the proper officers of the Company are hereby authorized to issue the shares of Series C Preferred Stock for which such an exercise shall have been duly effected (the “Series C Warrant Shares”).

 

(c)                                   There are hereby reserved out of the Company’s authorized but unissued Common Stock a sufficient number of shares for issuance to the Bank upon the conversion of the Series C Warrant Shares in accordance with the terms thereof; and upon the conversion of the Series C Warrant Shares in accordance with the terms thereof, the proper officers of the Company are hereby authorized to issue the shares of Common Stock into which such Series C Warrant Shares have been converted, which shares of Common Stock, when so issued, shall be duly authorized, fully paid, validly issued and non-assessable shares of Common Stock.

 

(d)                                  The number of shares reserved for issuance upon the exercise of the Series C Warrant or the conversion of the Series C Warrant Shares shall hereafter be adjusted from time to time upon the occurrence of the events contemplated by the antidilution adjustment provisions of the Series C Warrant and the Third Restated Certificate of Incorporation of the Company, as amended.

 

(e)                                   That the Authorized Officers of the Company, and each of them, is hereby authorized and empowered, in the name of and on behalf of the Company, to make or cause to be made, and to execute and deliver, such documents of assumption and other agreements, instruments and certificates, with the corporate seal of the Company affixed thereto and attested by the Secretary of the Company or unattested, or without such seal, and to do or cause to be done all such acts and things, and to take all such steps, and to make all such payments and remittances, as any one or more of such officers may at any time or times deem necessary or desirable in connection with, or in furtherance of, the Loan and Security Agreement, the issuance and exercise of the Series C Warrant and all other documents and instruments to be delivered in connection with the Loan and Security Agreement and the Series C Warrant, including but not limited to the preparation, execution and filing of all registration statements, reports, notices and other documents under the securities laws of the United States of America and the states and jurisdictions thereof.

 

5)              Any and all acts authorized pursuant to these resolutions and performed prior to the passage of these resolutions are hereby ratified and approved, and the authority conferred herein may be exercised singly by any such officer, and these resolutions shall continue in full force and effect until written notice of modification or revocation is received and accepted by Bank (such notice to have no effect on any action previously taken by the Bank in reliance on these resolutions). Bank may rely upon any form of notice, which it in good faith believes to be genuine or what it purports to be.

 

6)              The resolutions are in full force and effect as of the date of this Certificate and are intended to replace, as of this date, any resolutions previously given by the Company to Bank in connection with the matters described herein; these resolutions and any borrowings or financial accommodations under these resolutions have been properly noted in the corporate books and records, and have not been rescinded, revoked or modified; neither the foregoing resolutions nor any actions to be taken pursuant to them are or will be in contravention of any provision of the certificate of incorporation or bylaws of the Company or of any agreement, indenture or other instrument to which the Company is a party or by which it is bound; and to the extent the certificate of incorporation or bylaws of the Company or any agreement, indenture or other instrument to which the Company is a party or by which it is bound require the vote or consent of shareholders of the Company to authorize any act, matter or thing described in the foregoing resolutions, such vote or consent has been obtained.

 

In Witness Whereof, I have affixed my name as Secretary and have caused the corporate seal (where available) of said Company to be affixed as of April 2, 2014.

 

 

 

 

 

Secretary

 

3



 

USA PATRIOT ACT

NOTICE

OF

CUSTOMER IDENTIFICATION

 

IMPORTANT INFORMATION ABOUT PROCEDURES FOR OPENING A NEW ACCOUNT

 

To help the government fight the funding of terrorism and money laundering activities, Federal law requires all financial institutions to obtain, verify, and record information that identifies each person who opens an account.

 

WHAT THIS MEANS FOR YOU:  when you open an account, we will ask your name, address, date of birth, and other information that will allow us to identify you.  We may also ask to see your driver’s license or other identifying documents.

 

4



 

SQUARE 1 BANK

 

AUTOMATIC DEBIT AUTHORIZATION

Member FDIC

 

 

To:   Square 1 Bank

 

Re:   Loan #

 

You are hereby authorized and instructed to charge account No.                                                                                in the name of Marinus Pharmaceuticals, Inc. for facility fees, principal, interest and other payments due on above referenced loan as set forth below and credit the loan referenced above.

 

x    Debit the Facility Fee as it becomes due according to the terms of the Loan and Security Agreement and any renewals or amendments thereof.

 

x    Debit each interest payment as it becomes due according to the terms of the Loan and Security Agreement and any renewals or amendments thereof.

 

x    Debit each principal payment as it becomes due according to the terms of the Loan and Security Agreement and any renewals or amendments thereof.

 

x    Debit each payment for Bank Expenses as it becomes due according to the terms of the Loan and Security Agreement and any renewals or amendments thereof.

 

This Authorization is to remain in full force and effect until revoked in writing.

 

Borrower Signature

 

Date

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

5



 

We are excited to have you as a Square 1 Bank client and want to spread the word about your success!

 

From press releases to mentions on social media sites, and all points in between, Square 1’s marketing and communications team is constantly seeking new opportunities to promote our clients and to connect them to prospects, existing customers, and the larger entrepreneurial/venture capital community.

 

If you complete the authorization below and return it to us, you are authorizing us to reference and/or include your company as part of our marketing and advertising efforts without further review or advance approval by you. Please select all areas that you approve.

 

o                                     All items listed below

o                                     List company as a Square 1 Bank customer on social media sites, including Twitter, LinkedIn, Facebook, Square 1 Bank corporate blog, or any other social media site

o                                     Press release including your company as a Square 1 Bank client (to include company name and description only ; may appear alongside other clients)

o                                     Press release including your company as a Square 1 Bank client ( general press release not focused on your company, but referring to your company as a client, and including your company’s name, description, and editorial comments; may appear alongside other clients)

o                                     Provide quote for inclusion in a Square 1 Bank press release

o                                     Use of company name and logo in Square 1 Bank marketing materials including corporate marketing collateral, website, social media sites, and other advertising campaigns

o                                     Provide quotes for inclusion in Square 1 Bank marketing materials including corporate marketing collateral, website, social media sites, and other advertising campaigns

o                                     Customer case study/application brief (success story to be posted on website, included in press kits and/or pitched to publications as potential articles)

o                                     Willing to participate in a video testimonial highlighting your banking relationship and experiences with Square 1 Bank

o                                     Other (please describe):

 

If you have questions, please contact your Square 1 banker, or our Marketing + Communications department at  marketing@square1bank.com.

 

Please acknowledge your authorization by signing below:

 

Company Name:

Marinus Pharmaceuticals, Inc.

 

 

 

 

Authorized Signer:

 

 

 

 

 

Name:

 

 

 

 

 

Title:

 

 

 

 

 

Date:

 

 

 

client marketing authorization

 

6




EXHIBIT 10.10

 

AMENDED AND RESTATED INDEMNIFICATION AGREEMENT

 

This Amended and Restated Indemnification Agreement (the “Agreement”) is entered into as of [                       ], by and among Marinus Pharmaceuticals, Inc. , a Delaware corporation (the “Company”) and the undersigned parties (each an “Indemnitee,” and, collectively, the “Indemnitees”).

 

RECITALS

 

A.             The Company and [ Director Name ] (“Director”) previously entered into that certain Indemnification Agreement dated [                         , 200  ]   (the “Original Indemnification Agreement”).

 

B.             Section 20 of the Original Indemnification Agreement provided that the Original Indemnification Agreement could be amended by written agreement executed by each of the parties hereto.

 

C.             The Company and the Director desire to amend and restate the Original Indemnification Agreement as set forth herein.

 

D.             The Company and the Indemnitees recognize the substantial increase in corporate litigation in general, subjecting directors, officers, employees, controlling persons, agents and fiduciaries to expensive litigation risks at the same time as the availability and coverage of liability insurance has been severely limited.

 

E.              The Indemnitees do not regard the current protection available as adequate under the present circumstances, and the Indemnitees and other directors, officers, employees, controlling persons, agents and fiduciaries of the Company may not be willing to serve in such capacities without additional protection.

 

F.               The Company:  (i) desires to attract and retain the involvement of highly qualified individuals and entities, such as the Indemnitees, to serve the Company and, in part, to induce the Indemnitees to be involved with the Company and (ii) wishes to provide for the indemnification and advancing of expenses to the Indemnitees to the maximum extent permitted by law.

 

G.             Although the bylaws of the Company require indemnification of the officers and directors of the Company, and the Indemnitees may also be entitled to indemnification pursuant to the General Corporation Law of the State of Delaware (the “DGCL”), the bylaws and the DGCL expressly provide that the indemnification provisions set forth therein are not exclusive, and thereby contemplate that contracts may be entered into between the Company and members of the board of directors, officers and other persons with respect to indemnification.

 

H.            Director is representative of [FUND] , (collectively, the “Fund”) and has certain rights to indemnification and/or insurance provided by the Fund, which Director and the Fund intend to be secondary to the primary obligation of the Company to indemnify the Indemnitees as provided herein, with the Company’s acknowledgement and agreement to the foregoing being a material condition.

 



 

I.                 This Agreement is a supplement to and in furtherance of the bylaws of the Company and any resolutions adopted pursuant thereto, and shall not be deemed a substitute therefor, nor to diminish or abrogate any rights of the Indemnitees thereunder.

 

J.                 In view of the considerations set forth above, the Company desires that the Indemnitees be indemnified by the Company as set forth herein.

 

NOW, THEREFORE , the Company and the Indemnitees hereby agree as follows:

 

1.                                       Indemnification .

 

a.                                       Indemnification of Expenses .  The Company shall indemnify and hold harmless the Indemnitees (including their respective directors, officers, partners, employees, agents and spouses) and each person who controls any of them or who may be liable within the meaning of Section 15 of the Securities Act of 1933, as amended (the “Securities Act”), or Section 20 of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended (the “Exchange Act”) to the fullest extent permitted by law if the Indemnitees were or are or become a party to or witness or other participant in, or are threatened to be made a party to or witness or other participant in, any threatened, pending or completed action, suit, proceeding or alternative dispute resolution mechanism, or any hearing, inquiry or investigation that the Indemnitee believes might lead to the institution of any such action, suit, proceeding or alternative dispute resolution mechanism, whether civil, criminal, administrative, investigative or other (hereinafter a “Claim”) (i) by reason of (or arising in part or in whole out of) any event or occurrence related to the fact that the Indemnitee is, was or may be deemed a director, officer, stockholder, employee, controlling person, agent or fiduciary of the Company, or any subsidiary of the Company, or is, was or may be deemed to be serving at the request or consent of the Company as a director, officer, stockholder, employee, controlling person, agent or fiduciary of another corporation, partnership, limited liability company, joint venture, trust or other enterprise, or (ii) by reason of any action or inaction on the part of such Indemnitee while serving in such capacity including, without limitation, any and all losses, claims, damages, expenses and liabilities, joint or several (including any investigation, legal and other expenses incurred in connection with, and any amount paid in settlement of, any action, suit, proceeding or any claim asserted) under the Securities Act, the Exchange Act or other federal or state statutory law or regulation, at common law or otherwise, that relate directly or indirectly to the registration, purchase, sale or ownership of any securities of the Company or to any fiduciary obligation owed or alleged to be owed to the Company or its stockholders or any other constituency of the Company with respect thereto (hereinafter an “Indemnifiable Event”), against any and all expenses (including attorneys’ fees and all other costs, expenses and obligations incurred in connection with investigating, defending a witness in or participating in (including on appeal), or preparing to defend, be a witness in or participate in, any such action, suit, proceeding, alternative dispute resolution mechanism, hearing, inquiry or investigation), judgments, fines, penalties and amounts paid in settlement (if such settlement is approved in advance by the Company, which approval shall not be unreasonably withheld) of such Claim and any federal, state, local or foreign taxes imposed on the Indemnitee as a result of the actual or deemed receipt of any payments under this Agreement (collectively, hereinafter “Expenses”), including all interest, assessments and other charges paid or payable in connection with or in respect of such Expenses.  Such payment of Expenses shall

 

2



 

be made by the Company as soon as practicable but in any event no later than twenty (20) days after written demand by the Indemnitee therefor is presented to the Company.

 

b.                                       Reviewing Party .  Notwithstanding the foregoing, (i) the obligations of the Company under Section 1(a) shall be subject to the condition that the Reviewing Party (as described in Section 10(e) hereof) shall not have determined (in a written opinion, in any case in which the Independent Legal Counsel referred to in Section 10(d) hereof is involved) that the Indemnitee would not be permitted to be indemnified under applicable law, and (ii) the Indemnitee acknowledges and agrees that the obligation of the Company to make an advance payment of Expenses to the Indemnitee pursuant to Section 2(a) (an “Expense Advance”) shall be subject to the condition that, if, when and to the extent that the Reviewing Party determines that the Indemnitee would not be permitted to be so indemnified under applicable law, the Company shall be entitled to be reimbursed by the Indemnitee (who hereby agrees to reimburse the Company) for all such amounts theretofore paid; provided , however , that if the Indemnitee has commenced or thereafter commences legal proceedings in a court of competent jurisdiction to secure a determination that the Indemnitee should be indemnified under applicable law, any determination made by the Reviewing Party that the Indemnitee would not be permitted to be indemnified under applicable law shall not be binding and the Indemnitee shall not be required to reimburse the Company for any Expense Advance until a final judicial determination is made with respect thereto (as to which all rights of appeal therefrom have been exhausted or lapsed).  The Indemnitee’s obligation to reimburse the Company for any Expense Advance shall be unsecured and no interest shall be charged thereon.  If there has not been a Change in Control (as defined in Section 10(c) hereof), the Reviewing Party shall be selected by the Board of Directors, and if there has been such a Change in Control (other than a Change in Control that has been approved by a majority of the Company’s Board of Directors who were directors immediately prior to such Change in Control), the Reviewing Party shall be the Independent Legal Counsel referred to in Section 10(d) hereof.  If there has been no determination by the Reviewing Party or if the Reviewing Party determines that the Indemnitee substantively would not be permitted to be indemnified in whole or in part under applicable law, the Indemnitee shall have the right to commence litigation seeking an initial determination by the court or challenging any such determination by the Reviewing Party or any aspect thereof, including the legal or factual bases therefor, and the Company hereby consents to service of process and to appear in any such proceeding.  Any determination by the Reviewing Party otherwise shall be conclusive and binding on the Company and the Indemnitee.

 

c.                                        Contribution .  If the indemnification provided for in Section 1(a) above for any reason is held by a court of competent jurisdiction to be unavailable to an Indemnitee in respect of any losses, claims, damages, expenses or liabilities referred to therein, then the Company, in lieu of indemnifying the Indemnitee thereunder, shall contribute to the amount paid or payable by the Indemnitee as a result of such losses, claims, damages, expenses or liabilities (i) in such proportion as is appropriate to reflect the relative benefits received by the Company and the Indemnitee, or (ii) if the allocation provided by clause (i) above is not permitted by applicable law, in such proportion as is appropriate to reflect not only the relative benefits referred to in clause (i) above but also the relative fault of the Company and the Indemnitee in connection with the action or inaction that resulted in such losses, claims, damages, expenses or liabilities, as well as any other relevant equitable considerations.  In connection with the registration of the Company’s securities, the relative benefits received by the

 

3



 

Company and the Indemnitee shall be deemed to be in the same respective proportions that the net proceeds from the offering (before deducting expenses) received by the Company and the Indemnitee, in each case as set forth in the table on the cover page of the applicable prospectus, bear to the aggregate public offering price of the securities so offered.  The relative fault of the Company and the Indemnitee shall be determined by reference to, among other things, whether the untrue or alleged untrue statement of a material fact or the omission or alleged omission to state a material fact relates to information supplied by the Company or the Indemnitee and the parties’ relative intent, knowledge, access to information and opportunity to correct or prevent such statement or omission.

 

The Company and the Indemnitees agree that it would not be just and equitable if contribution pursuant to this Section 1(c) were determined by pro rata or per capita allocation or by any other method of allocation that does not take account of the equitable considerations referred to in the immediately preceding paragraph.  In connection with the registration of the Company’s securities, in no event shall an Indemnitee be required to contribute any amount under this Section 1(c) in excess of the lesser of:  (i) that proportion of the total of such losses, claims, damages or liabilities that are indemnified against, equal to the proportion of the total securities sold under such registration statement that is being sold by the Indemnitee or (ii) the proceeds received by the Indemnitee from its sale of securities under such registration statement.  No person found guilty of fraudulent misrepresentation (within the meaning of Section 11(f) of the Securities Act) shall be entitled to contribution from any person who was not found guilty of such fraudulent misrepresentation.

 

d.                                       Survival Regardless of Investigation .  The indemnification and contribution provided for in this Section 1 will remain in full force and effect regardless of any investigation made by or on behalf of any Indemnitee or any officer, director, employee, agent or controlling person of an Indemnitee.

 

e.                                        Change in Control .  The Company agrees that if there is a Change in Control of the Company (other than a Change in Control that has been approved by a majority of the Company’s Board of Directors who were directors immediately prior to such Change in Control) then, with respect to all matters thereafter arising concerning the rights of an Indemnitee to payments of Expenses under this Agreement or any other agreement or under the Company’s certificate of incorporation or bylaws as now or hereafter in effect, Independent Legal Counsel (as defined in Section 10(d) hereof) shall be selected by the Indemnitee and approved by the Company (which approval shall not be unreasonably withheld).  Such counsel, among other things, shall render its written opinion to the Company and the Indemnitee as to whether and to what extent the Indemnitee would be permitted to be indemnified under applicable law.  The Company agrees to abide by such opinion and to pay the reasonable fees of the Independent Legal Counsel referred to above and to fully indemnify such counsel against any and all expenses (including attorneys’ fees), claims, liabilities and damages arising out of or relating to this Agreement or its engagement pursuant hereto.

 

f.                                         Mandatory Payment of Expenses .  Notwithstanding any other provision of this Agreement, to the extent that an Indemnitee has been successful on the merits or otherwise, including, without limitation, the dismissal of an action without prejudice, in the defense of any action, suit, proceeding, inquiry or investigation referred to in Section 1(a) hereof

 

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or in the defense of any claim, issue or matter therein, the Indemnitee shall be indemnified against all Expenses incurred by the Indemnitee in connection herewith.

 

2.                                       Expenses; Indemnification Procedure .

 

a.                                       Advancement of Expenses .  The Company shall advance all Expenses incurred by an Indemnitee.  The advances to be made hereunder shall be paid by the Company to the Indemnitee as soon as practicable but in any event no later than twenty (20) days after written demand by the Indemnitee therefor to the Company.

 

b.                                       Notice/Cooperation by the Indemnitees .  Each Indemnitee shall give the Company notice in writing as soon as practicable of any Claim made against the Indemnitee for which indemnification will or could be sought under this Agreement.  Notice to the Company shall be directed to the Chief Executive Officer of the Company at the Company’s address (or such other address as the Company shall designate in writing to the Indemnitees).

 

c.                                        No Presumptions; Burden of Proof .  For purposes of this Agreement, the termination of any Claim by judgment, order, settlement (whether with or without court approval) or conviction, or upon a plea of nolo contendere, or its equivalent, shall not create a presumption that the Indemnitee did not meet any particular standard of conduct or have any particular belief or that a court has determined that indemnification is not permitted by applicable law.  In addition, neither the failure of the Reviewing Party to have made a determination as to whether the Indemnitee has met any particular standard of conduct or had any particular belief, nor an actual determination by the Reviewing Party that the Indemnitee has not met such standard of conduct or did not have such belief, prior to the commencement of legal proceedings by the Indemnitee to secure a judicial determination that the Indemnitee should be indemnified under applicable law, shall be a defense to the Indemnitee’s claim or create a presumption that the Indemnitee has not met any particular standard of conduct or did not have any particular belief.  In connection with any determination by the Reviewing Party or otherwise as to whether an Indemnitee is entitled to be indemnified hereunder, the burden of proof shall be on the Company to establish that the Indemnitee is not so entitled.

 

d.                                       Notice to Insurers .  If, at the time of the receipt by the Company of a notice of a Claim pursuant to Section 2(b) hereof, the Company has liability insurance in effect that may cover such Claim, the Company shall give prompt notice of the commencement of such Claim to the insurers in accordance with the procedures set forth in each of the policies.  The Company shall thereafter take all necessary or desirable action to cause such insurers to pay, on behalf of the Indemnitee, all amounts payable as a result of such Claim in accordance with the terms of such policies.

 

e.                                        Selection of Counsel .  If the Company shall be obligated hereunder to pay the Expenses of any Claim, the Company shall be entitled to assume the defense of such Claim, with counsel approved by the Indemnitee (which approval shall not be unreasonably withheld), upon the delivery to the Indemnitee of written notice of its election to do so.  After delivery of such notice, approval of such counsel by the Indemnitee and the retention of such counsel by the Company, the Company will not be liable to the Indemnitee under this Agreement for any fees of counsel subsequently incurred by the Indemnitee with respect to the same Claim;

 

5



 

provided that, (i) the Indemnitee shall have the right to employ the Indemnitee’s counsel in any such Claim at the Indemnitee’s expense and (ii) if (A) the employment of counsel by the Indemnitee has been previously authorized by the Company, (B) the Indemnitee shall have reasonably concluded that there is a conflict of interest between the Company and the Indemnitee in the conduct of any such defense, or (C) the Company shall not continue to retain such counsel to defend such Claim, then the fees and expenses of the Indemnitee’s counsel shall be at the expense of the Company.

 

3.                                       Additional Indemnification Rights; Nonexclusivity .

 

a.                                       Scope .  The Company hereby agrees to indemnify the Indemnitees to the fullest extent permitted by law, even if such indemnification is not specifically authorized by the other provisions of this Agreement, the Company’s certificate of incorporation, the Company’s bylaws or by statute.  In the event of any change after the date of this Agreement in any applicable law, statute or rule that expands the right of a Delaware corporation to indemnify a member of its Board of Directors or an officer, stockholder, employee, controlling person, agent or fiduciary, it is the intent of the parties hereto that the Indemnitees shall enjoy by this Agreement the greater benefits afforded by such change.  In the event of any change in any applicable law, statute or rule that narrows the right of a Delaware corporation to indemnify a member of its Board of Directors or an officer, employee, agent or fiduciary, such change, to the extent not otherwise required by such law, statute or rule to be applied to this Agreement, shall have no effect on this Agreement or the parties’ rights and obligations hereunder except as set forth in Section 8(a) hereof.

 

b.                                       Nonexclusivity .  The indemnification provided by this Agreement shall be in addition to any rights to which the Indemnitees may be entitled under the Company’s certificate of incorporation, its bylaws, any agreement, any vote of stockholders or disinterested directors, the DGCL, or otherwise.  The indemnification provided under this Agreement shall commence upon the date an Indemnitee first serves in an indemnified capacity and shall continue as to the Indemnitee for any action the Indemnitee took or did not take while serving in an indemnified capacity even though the Indemnitee may have ceased to serve in such capacity. The Company hereby acknowledges that Director has certain rights to indemnification, advancement of expenses and/or insurance provided by the Fund and certain of its affiliates and that the Indemnitees may have other sources of indemnification or insurance, whether currently in force or established in the future (collectively, the “Outside Indemnitors”).  The Company hereby agrees: (i) that it is the indemnitor of first resort (i.e., its obligations to the Indemnitees are primary and any obligation of the Outside Indemnitors to advance expenses or to provide indemnification for the same expenses or liabilities incurred by the Indemnitees are secondary); (ii) that it shall be required to advance the full amount of expenses incurred by the Indemnitees and shall be liable in full for all indemnifiable amounts to the extent legally permitted and as required by the certificate of incorporation and bylaws (or any agreement between the Company and the Indemnitees), without regard to any rights the Indemnitees may have against the Outside Indemnitors and (iii) that it irrevocably waives, relinquishes and releases the Outside Indemnitors from any and all claims against the Outside Indemnitors for contribution, subrogation or any other recovery of any kind in respect thereof.  The Company further agrees that no advancement or payment by the Outside Indemnitors on behalf of the Indemnitees with respect to any claim for which the Indemnitees have sought indemnification from the Company

 

6



 

shall affect the foregoing and the Outside Indemnitors shall have a right of contribution and/or be subrogated to the extent of such advancement or payment to all of the rights of recovery of the Indemnitees against the Company.  The Company and the Indemnitees agree that the Outside Indemnitors are express third party beneficiaries of the terms hereof.

 

4.                                       No Duplication of Payments .  Except as otherwise set forth in Section 3(b) above, the Company shall not be liable under this Agreement to make any payment in connection with any Claim made against an Indemnitee to the extent the Indemnitee has otherwise actually received payment (under any insurance policy, certificate of incorporation, bylaw or otherwise) of the amounts otherwise indemnifiable hereunder.

 

5.                                       Partial Indemnification .  If an Indemnitee is entitled under any provision of this Agreement to indemnification by the Company for any portion of Expenses incurred in connection with any Claim, but not, however, for all of the total amount thereof, the Company shall nevertheless indemnify the Indemnitee for the portion of such Expenses to which the Indemnitee is entitled.

 

6.                                       Mutual Acknowledgement .  The Company and the Indemnitees acknowledge that in certain instances, Federal law or applicable public policy may prohibit the Company from indemnifying its directors, officers, employees, controlling persons, agents or fiduciaries under this Agreement or otherwise.  The Indemnitees understand and acknowledge that the Company has undertaken or may be required in the future to undertake with the Securities and Exchange Commission to submit the question of indemnification to a court in certain circumstances for a determination of the Company’s rights under public policy to indemnify an Indemnitee.

 

7.                                       Liability Insurance .  To the extent the Company maintains liability insurance applicable to directors, officers, employees, control persons, agents or fiduciaries, the Indemnitees shall be covered by such policies in such a manner as to provide the Indemnitees the same rights and benefits as are accorded to the most favorably insured (i) of the Company’s directors, if the Indemnitee is a director, or (ii) of the Company’s officers, if the Indemnitee is not a director of the Company but is an officer; or (iii) of the Company’s key employees, controlling persons, agents or fiduciaries, if the Indemnitee is not an officer or director but is a key employee, agent, control person or fiduciary or (iv) of the Fund entities covered by such policies, if the Indemnitee is the Fund.

 

8.                                       Exceptions .  Any other provision herein to the contrary notwithstanding, the Company shall not be obligated pursuant to the terms of this Agreement:

 

a.                                       Claims Initiated by an Indemnitee .  To indemnify or advance expenses to an Indemnitee with respect to Claims initiated or brought voluntarily by the Indemnitee and not by way of defense, except:  (i) with respect to actions or proceedings to establish or enforce a right to indemnify under this Agreement or any other agreement or insurance policy or under the Company’s certificate of incorporation or bylaws now or hereafter in effect relating to Claims for Indemnifiable Events; (ii) in specific cases if the Board of Directors has approved the initiation or bringing of such Claim; or (iii) as otherwise required under Section 145 of the DGCL, regardless of whether the Indemnitee ultimately is determined

 

7



 

to be entitled to such indemnification, advance expense payment or insurance recovery, as the case may be; or

 

b.                                       Claims Under Section 16(b) .  To indemnify an Indemnitee for expenses and the payment of profits arising from the purchase and sale by the Indemnitee of securities in violation of Section 16(b) of the Exchange Act or any similar successor statute; or

 

c.                                        Claims Excluded Under Section 145 of the DGCL .  To indemnify the Indemnitee if:  (i) the Indemnitee did not act in good faith and in a manner reasonably believed to be in or not opposed to the best interests of the Company or (ii) with respect to any criminal action or proceeding, the Indemnitee had reasonable cause to believe the conduct was unlawful or (iii) the Indemnitee shall have been adjudged to be liable to the Company unless and only to the extent the court in which such action was brought shall permit indemnification as provided in Section 145(b) of the DGCL.

 

9.                                       Period of Limitations .  No legal action shall be brought and no cause of action shall be asserted by or in the right of the Company against an Indemnitee or an Indemnitee’s estate, spouse, heirs, executors or personal or legal representatives after the expiration of five (5) years from the date of accrual of such cause of action, and any claim or cause of action of the Company shall be extinguished and deemed released unless asserted by the timely filing of a legal action within such five (5)-year period; provided , however , that if any shorter period of limitations is otherwise applicable to any such cause of action, such shorter period shall govern.

 

10.                                Construction of Certain Phrases .

 

a.                                       For purposes of this Agreement, references to the “Company” shall include, in addition to the resulting corporation, any constituent corporation (including any constituent of a constituent) absorbed in a consolidation or merger that, if its separate existence had continued, would have had power and authority to indemnify its directors, officers, stockholders, employees, agents or fiduciaries, so that if an Indemnitee is, was or may be deemed a director, officer, stockholder, employee, agent, control person, or fiduciary of such constituent corporation, or is or was serving at the request of such constituent corporation as a director, officer, employee, control person, agent or fiduciary of another corporation, partnership, limited liability company, joint venture, employee benefit plan, trust or other enterprise, the Indemnitee shall stand in the same position under the provisions of this Agreement with respect to the resulting or surviving corporation as the Indemnitee would have with respect to such constituent corporation if its separate existence had continued.

 

b.                                       For purposes of this Agreement, references to “other enterprises” shall include employee benefit plans; references to “fines” shall include any excise taxes assessed on an Indemnitee with respect to an employee benefit plan; and references to “serving at the request of the Company” shall include any service as a director, officer, employee, agent or fiduciary of the Company that imposes duties on, or involves services by, such director, officer, employee, agent or fiduciary with respect to an employee benefit plan, its participants or its beneficiaries; and if an Indemnitee acted in good faith and in a manner the Indemnitee reasonably believed to be in the interest of the participants and beneficiaries of an employee

 

8



 

benefit plan, the Indemnitee shall be deemed to have acted in a manner “not opposed to the best interests of the Company” as referred to in this Agreement.

 

c.                                        For purposes of this Agreement a “Change in Control” shall be deemed to have occurred if:  (i) any “person” (as such term is used in Sections 13(d)(3) and 14(d)(2) of the Exchange Act), other than a trustee or other fiduciary holding securities under an employee benefit plan of the Company or a corporation owned directly or indirectly by the stockholders of the Company in substantially the same proportions as their ownership of stock of the Company, (A) who is or becomes the beneficial owner, directly or indirectly, of securities of the Company representing twenty percent (20%) or more of the combined voting power of the Company’s then outstanding Voting Securities, increases his beneficial ownership of such securities by five percent (5%) or more over the percentage so owned by such person, or            (B) becomes the “beneficial owner” (as defined in Rule 13d-3 under said Exchange Act), directly or indirectly, of securities of the Company representing more than thirty percent (30%) of the total voting power represented by the Company’s then outstanding Voting Securities, (ii) during any period of two (2) consecutive years, individuals who at the beginning of such period constitute the Board of Directors of the Company and any new director whose election by the Board of Directors or nomination for election by the Company’s stockholders was approved by a vote of at least two-thirds (2/3) of the directors then still in office who either were directors at the beginning of the period or whose election or nomination for election was previously so approved, cease for any reason to constitute a majority thereof, or (iii) the stockholders of the Company approve a merger or consolidation of the Company with any other corporation other than a merger or consolidation that would result in the Voting Securities of the Company outstanding immediately prior thereto continuing to represent (either by remaining outstanding or by being converted into Voting Securities of the surviving entity) at least eighty percent (80%) of the total voting power represented by the Voting Securities of the Company or such surviving entity outstanding immediately after such merger or consolidation, or the stockholders of the Company approve a plan of complete liquidation of the Company or an agreement for the sale or disposition by the Company of (in one transaction or a series of transactions) all or substantially all of the Company’s assets.

 

d.                                       For purposes of this Agreement, “Independent Legal Counsel” shall mean an attorney or firm of attorneys, selected in accordance with the provisions of Section 2(e) hereof, who shall not have otherwise performed services for the Company or the Indemnitee within the last three (3) years (other than with respect to matters concerning the right of the Indemnitee under this Agreement, or of other indemnitees under similar indemnity agreements).

 

e.                                        For purposes of this Agreement, a “Reviewing Party” shall mean any appropriate person or body consisting of a member or members of the Company’s Board of Directors or any other person or body appointed by the Board of Directors who is not a party to the particular Claim for which the Indemnitee is seeking indemnification, or Independent Legal Counsel.

 

f.                                         For purposes of this Agreement, “Voting Securities” shall mean any securities of the Company that vote generally in the election of directors.

 

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11.                                Counterparts .  This Agreement may be executed in one or more counterparts, each of which shall constitute an original.

 

12.                                Binding Effect; Successors and Assigns .  This Agreement shall be binding upon and inure to the benefit of and be enforceable by the parties hereto and their respective successors, assigns, including any direct or indirect successor by purchase, merger, consolidation or otherwise to all or substantially all of the business and/or assets of the Company, spouses, heirs and personal and legal representatives.  The Company shall require and cause any successor (whether direct or indirect by purchase, merger, consolidation or otherwise) to all, substantially all, or a substantial part, of the business and/or assets of the Company, by written agreement in form and substance satisfactory to the Indemnitees, expressly to assume and agree to perform this Agreement in the same manner and to the same extent that the Company would be required to perform if no such succession had taken place.  This Agreement shall continue in effect with respect to Claims relating to Indemnifiable Events regardless of whether the Indemnitee continues to serve as a director, officer, employee, agent, controlling person or fiduciary of the Company or of any other enterprise, including subsidiaries of the Company, at the Company’s request.

 

13.                                Attorneys’ Fees .  In the event that any action is instituted by an Indemnitee under this Agreement or under any liability insurance policies maintained by the Company to enforce or interpret any of the terms hereof or thereof, the Indemnitee shall be entitled to be paid all Expenses incurred by the Indemnitee with respect to such action if the Indemnitee is ultimately successful in such action, and shall be entitled to the advancement of Expenses with respect to such action, except, in the case of both payment and advancement of Expenses, as and solely to the extent of Expenses incurred with respect to a material assertion made by the Indemnitee as a part of such action which a court of competent jurisdiction over such action determines was not made in good faith or was frivolous.  In the event of an action instituted by or in the name of the Company under this Agreement to enforce or interpret any of the terms of this Agreement, an Indemnitee shall be entitled to be paid Expenses incurred by such Indemnitee in defense of such action (including costs and expenses incurred with respect to his or its counterclaims and cross-claims made in such action), and shall be entitled to the advancement of Expenses with respect to such action, except, in the case of both payment and advancement of Expenses, as and solely to the extent of Expenses incurred with respect to a material assertion made by the Indemnitee as a part of such action which a court of competent jurisdiction over such action determines was not made in good faith or was frivolous.

 

14.                                Notice .  All notices and other communications required or permitted hereunder shall be in writing, shall be effective when given, and shall in any event be deemed to be given:  (a) five (5) days after deposit with the U.S. Postal Service or other applicable postal service, if delivered by first class mail, postage prepaid; (b) upon delivery, if delivered by hand; (c) one (1) business day after the business day of deposit with Federal Express or similar overnight courier, freight prepaid; or (d) one (1) day after the business day of delivery by facsimile transmission, if deliverable by facsimile transmission, with copy by first class mail, postage prepaid, and shall be addressed if to an Indemnitee, at the Indemnitee’s address as set forth beneath the Indemnitee’s signature to this Agreement and if to the Company at the address of its principal corporate offices (attention: Secretary) or at such other address as such party may designate by ten (10) days’ advance written notice to the other party hereto.

 

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15.                                Consent to Jurisdiction .  The Company and the Indemnitees each hereby irrevocably consent to the jurisdiction of the courts of the State of Delaware for all purposes in connection with any action or proceeding that arises out of or relates to this Agreement and agree that any action instituted under this Agreement shall be commenced, prosecuted and continued only in the Court of Chancery of the State of Delaware in and for New Castle County, which shall be the exclusive and only proper forum for adjudicating such a claim.

 

16.                                Severability .  The provisions of this Agreement shall be severable in the event that any of the provisions hereof (including any provision within a single section, paragraph or sentence) are held by a court of competent jurisdiction to be invalid, void or otherwise unenforceable, and the remaining provisions shall remain enforceable to the fullest extent permitted by law.  Furthermore, to the fullest extent possible, the provisions of this Agreement (including, without limitations, each portion of this Agreement containing any provision held to be invalid, void or otherwise unenforceable, that is not itself invalid, void or unenforceable) shall be construed so as to give effect to the intent manifested by the provision held invalid, illegal or unenforceable.

 

17.                                Choice of Law .  This Agreement shall be governed by and its provisions construed and enforced in accordance with the laws of the State of Delaware, as applied to contracts between Delaware residents, entered into and to be performed entirely within the State of Delaware, without regard to the conflict of laws principles thereof.

 

18.                                Subrogation .  In the event of payment under this Agreement, the Company shall be subrogated to the extent of such payment to all of the rights of recovery of the Indemnitee who shall execute all documents required and shall do all acts that may be necessary to secure such rights and to enable the Company effectively to bring suit to enforce such rights.

 

19.                                Amendment and Termination .  No amendment, modification, termination or cancellation of this Agreement shall be effective unless it is in writing signed by all parties hereto.  No waiver of any of the provisions of this Agreement shall be deemed or shall constitute a waiver of any other provisions hereof (whether or not similar) nor shall such waiver constitute a continuing waiver.  Notwithstanding the foregoing, the Company may amend this Agreement without the consent of the Indemnitees solely to add additional Indemnitees hereunder.

 

20.                                Integration and Entire Agreement .  This Agreement sets forth the entire understanding between the parties hereto and supersedes and merges all previous written and oral negotiations, commitments, understandings and agreements relating to the subject matter hereof between the parties hereto.

 

21.                                No Construction as Employment Agreement .  Nothing contained in this Agreement shall be construed as giving the Indemnitees any right to be retained in the employ of the Company or any of its subsidiaries.

 

22.                                Board and Stockholder Approval.  The Company represents that this Agreement has been approved by the Company’s board of directors and stockholders.

 

23.                                Amendment and Restatement .  Effective and contingent upon execution of this Agreement, the Company and the Director agree that the Original Indemnification

 

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Agreement is hereby amended and restated in its entirety to read as set forth in this Agreement, and the Company and the parties hereto hereby agree to be bound by the provisions hereof.

 

[ Remainder of page intentionally left blank ]

 

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IN WITNESS WHEREOF, the parties hereto have executed this Amended and Restated Indemnification Agreement on and as of the day and year first above written.

 

 

 

COMPANY:

 

 

 

MARINUS PHARMACEUTICALS, INC. ,

 

a Delaware corporation

 

 

 

 

 

By:

 

 

 

 

Name:

 

 

 

 

Title:

 

 

 

 

Address:

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

INDEMNITEES:

 

 

 

 

 

[ Director Name ]

 

 

 

 

 

Address:

140 Geary Street, 10 th  Floor

 

 

San Francisco, CA 94108

 

 

 

 

 

[FUND]

 

 

 

By:

 

 

 

 

Name:

 

 

 

 

Title:

 

 

 

 

Address:

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 




EXHIBIT 10.11

 

AMENDED AND RESTATED INDEMNIFICATION AGREEMENT

 

This Amended and Restated Indemnification Agreement (the “Agreement”) is entered into as of                      , by and among Marinus Pharmaceuticals, Inc. , a Delaware corporation (the “Company”) and the undersigned party (the “Indemnitee”).

 

RECITALS

 

A.                                     The Company and                            (“Director”) previously entered into that certain Indemnification Agreement dated September 30, 2005 (the “Original Indemnification Agreement”).

 

B.                                     Section 20 of the Original Indemnification Agreement provided that the Original Indemnification Agreement could be amended by written agreement executed by each of the parties hereto.

 

C.                                     The Company and the Director desire to amend and restate the Original Indemnification Agreement as set forth herein.

 

D.                                     The Company and the Indemnitee recognize the substantial increase in corporate litigation in general, subjecting directors, officers, employees, controlling persons, agents and fiduciaries to expensive litigation risks at the same time as the availability and coverage of liability insurance has been severely limited.

 

E.                                      The Indemnitee does not regard the current protection available as adequate under the present circumstances, and the Indemnitee and other directors, officers, employees, controlling persons, agents and fiduciaries of the Company may not be willing to serve in such capacities without additional protection.

 

F.                                       The Company:  (i) desires to attract and retain the involvement of highly qualified individuals and entities, such as the Indemnitee, to serve the Company and, in part, to induce the Indemnitee to be involved with the Company and (ii) wishes to provide for the indemnification and advancing of expenses to the Indemnitee to the maximum extent permitted by law.

 

G.                                     Although the bylaws of the Company require indemnification of the officers and directors of the Company, and the Indemnitee may also be entitled to indemnification pursuant to the General Corporation Law of the State of Delaware (the “DGCL”), the bylaws and the DGCL expressly provide that the indemnification provisions set forth therein are not exclusive, and thereby contemplate that contracts may be entered into between the Company and members of the board of directors, officers and other persons with respect to indemnification.

 

H.                                    This Agreement is a supplement to and in furtherance of the bylaws of the Company and any resolutions adopted pursuant thereto, and shall not be deemed a substitute therefor, nor to diminish or abrogate any rights of the Indemnitee thereunder.

 

I.                                         In view of the considerations set forth above, the Company desires that the Indemnitee be indemnified by the Company as set forth herein.

 



 

NOW, THEREFORE , the Company and the Indemnitee hereby agree as follows:

 

1.                                       Indemnification .

 

a.                                       Indemnification of Expenses .  The Company shall indemnify and hold harmless the Indemnitee (including his or her respective directors, officers, partners, employees, agents and spouses, if any) and each person who controls any of them or who may be liable within the meaning of Section 15 of the Securities Act of 1933, as amended (the “Securities Act”), or Section 20 of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended (the “Exchange Act”) to the fullest extent permitted by law if the Indemnitee was or is or becomes a party to or witness or other participant in, or are threatened to be made a party to or witness or other participant in, any threatened, pending or completed action, suit, proceeding or alternative dispute resolution mechanism, or any hearing, inquiry or investigation that the Indemnitee believes might lead to the institution of any such action, suit, proceeding or alternative dispute resolution mechanism, whether civil, criminal, administrative, investigative or other (hereinafter a “Claim”) (i) by reason of (or arising in part or in whole out of) any event or occurrence related to the fact that the Indemnitee is, was or may be deemed a director, officer, stockholder, employee, controlling person, agent or fiduciary of the Company, or any subsidiary of the Company, or is, was or may be deemed to be serving at the request or consent of the Company as a director, officer, stockholder, employee, controlling person, agent or fiduciary of another corporation, partnership, limited liability company, joint venture, trust or other enterprise, or (ii) by reason of any action or inaction on the part of such Indemnitee while serving in such capacity including, without limitation, any and all losses, claims, damages, expenses and liabilities, joint or several (including any investigation, legal and other expenses incurred in connection with, and any amount paid in settlement of, any action, suit, proceeding or any claim asserted) under the Securities Act, the Exchange Act or other federal or state statutory law or regulation, at common law or otherwise, that relate directly or indirectly to the registration, purchase, sale or ownership of any securities of the Company or to any fiduciary obligation owed or alleged to be owed to the Company or its stockholders or any other constituency of the Company with respect thereto (hereinafter an “Indemnifiable Event”), against any and all expenses (including attorneys’ fees and all other costs, expenses and obligations incurred in connection with investigating, defending a witness in or participating in (including on appeal), or preparing to defend, be a witness in or participate in, any such action, suit, proceeding, alternative dispute resolution mechanism, hearing, inquiry or investigation), judgments, fines, penalties and amounts paid in settlement (if such settlement is approved in advance by the Company, which approval shall not be unreasonably withheld) of such Claim and any federal, state, local or foreign taxes imposed on the Indemnitee as a result of the actual or deemed receipt of any payments under this Agreement (collectively, hereinafter “Expenses”), including all interest, assessments and other charges paid or payable in connection with or in respect of such Expenses.  Such payment of Expenses shall be made by the Company as soon as practicable but in any event no later than twenty (20) days after written demand by the Indemnitee therefor is presented to the Company.

 

b.                                       Reviewing Party .  Notwithstanding the foregoing, (i) the obligations of the Company under Section 1(a) shall be subject to the condition that the Reviewing Party (as described in Section 10(e) hereof) shall not have determined (in a written opinion, in any case in which the Independent Legal Counsel referred to in Section 10(d) hereof is involved) that the Indemnitee would not be permitted to be indemnified under applicable law,

 



 

and (ii) the Indemnitee acknowledges and agrees that the obligation of the Company to make an advance payment of Expenses to the Indemnitee pursuant to Section 2(a) (an “Expense Advance”) shall be subject to the condition that, if, when and to the extent that the Reviewing Party determines that the Indemnitee would not be permitted to be so indemnified under applicable law, the Company shall be entitled to be reimbursed by the Indemnitee (who hereby agrees to reimburse the Company) for all such amounts theretofore paid; provided , however , that if the Indemnitee has commenced or thereafter commences legal proceedings in a court of competent jurisdiction to secure a determination that the Indemnitee should be indemnified under applicable law, any determination made by the Reviewing Party that the Indemnitee would not be permitted to be indemnified under applicable law shall not be binding and the Indemnitee shall not be required to reimburse the Company for any Expense Advance until a final judicial determination is made with respect thereto (as to which all rights of appeal therefrom have been exhausted or lapsed).  The Indemnitee’s obligation to reimburse the Company for any Expense Advance shall be unsecured and no interest shall be charged thereon.  If there has not been a Change in Control (as defined in Section 10(c) hereof), the Reviewing Party shall be selected by the Board of Directors, and if there has been such a Change in Control (other than a Change in Control that has been approved by a majority of the Company’s Board of Directors who were directors immediately prior to such Change in Control), the Reviewing Party shall be the Independent Legal Counsel referred to in Section 10(d) hereof.  If there has been no determination by the Reviewing Party or if the Reviewing Party determines that the Indemnitee substantively would not be permitted to be indemnified in whole or in part under applicable law, the Indemnitee shall have the right to commence litigation seeking an initial determination by the court or challenging any such determination by the Reviewing Party or any aspect thereof, including the legal or factual bases therefor, and the Company hereby consents to service of process and to appear in any such proceeding.  Any determination by the Reviewing Party otherwise shall be conclusive and binding on the Company and the Indemnitee.

 

c.                                        Contribution .  If the indemnification provided for in Section 1(a) above for any reason is held by a court of competent jurisdiction to be unavailable to an Indemnitee in respect of any losses, claims, damages, expenses or liabilities referred to therein, then the Company, in lieu of indemnifying the Indemnitee thereunder, shall contribute to the amount paid or payable by the Indemnitee as a result of such losses, claims, damages, expenses or liabilities (i) in such proportion as is appropriate to reflect the relative benefits received by the Company and the Indemnitee, or (ii) if the allocation provided by clause (i) above is not permitted by applicable law, in such proportion as is appropriate to reflect not only the relative benefits referred to in clause (i) above but also the relative fault of the Company and the Indemnitee in connection with the action or inaction that resulted in such losses, claims, damages, expenses or liabilities, as well as any other relevant equitable considerations.  In connection with the registration of the Company’s securities, the relative benefits received by the Company and the Indemnitee shall be deemed to be in the same respective proportions that the net proceeds from the offering (before deducting expenses) received by the Company and the Indemnitee, in each case as set forth in the table on the cover page of the applicable prospectus, bear to the aggregate public offering price of the securities so offered.  The relative fault of the Company and the Indemnitee shall be determined by reference to, among other things, whether the untrue or alleged untrue statement of a material fact or the omission or alleged omission to state a material fact relates to information supplied by the Company or the Indemnitee and the

 



 

parties’ relative intent, knowledge, access to information and opportunity to correct or prevent such statement or omission.

 

The Company and the Indemnitee agree that it would not be just and equitable if contribution pursuant to this Section 1(c) were determined by pro rata or per capita allocation or by any other method of allocation that does not take account of the equitable considerations referred to in the immediately preceding paragraph.  In connection with the registration of the Company’s securities, in no event shall an Indemnitee be required to contribute any amount under this Section 1(c) in excess of the lesser of:  (i) that proportion of the total of such losses, claims, damages or liabilities that are indemnified against, equal to the proportion of the total securities sold under such registration statement that is being sold by the Indemnitee or (ii) the proceeds received by the Indemnitee from its sale of securities under such registration statement.  No person found guilty of fraudulent misrepresentation (within the meaning of Section 11(f) of the Securities Act) shall be entitled to contribution from any person who was not found guilty of such fraudulent misrepresentation.

 

d.                                       Survival Regardless of Investigation .  The indemnification and contribution provided for in this Section 1 will remain in full force and effect regardless of any investigation made by or on behalf of any Indemnitee or any officer, director, employee, agent or controlling person of an Indemnitee.

 

e.                                        Change in Control .  The Company agrees that if there is a Change in Control of the Company (other than a Change in Control that has been approved by a majority of the Company’s Board of Directors who were directors immediately prior to such Change in Control) then, with respect to all matters thereafter arising concerning the rights of an Indemnitee to payments of Expenses under this Agreement or any other agreement or under the Company’s certificate of incorporation or bylaws as now or hereafter in effect, Independent Legal Counsel (as defined in Section 10(d) hereof) shall be selected by the Indemnitee and approved by the Company (which approval shall not be unreasonably withheld).  Such counsel, among other things, shall render its written opinion to the Company and the Indemnitee as to whether and to what extent the Indemnitee would be permitted to be indemnified under applicable law.  The Company agrees to abide by such opinion and to pay the reasonable fees of the Independent Legal Counsel referred to above and to fully indemnify such counsel against any and all expenses (including attorneys’ fees), claims, liabilities and damages arising out of or relating to this Agreement or its engagement pursuant hereto.

 

f.                                         Mandatory Payment of Expenses .  Notwithstanding any other provision of this Agreement, to the extent that an Indemnitee has been successful on the merits or otherwise, including, without limitation, the dismissal of an action without prejudice, in the defense of any action, suit, proceeding, inquiry or investigation referred to in Section 1(a) hereof or in the defense of any claim, issue or matter therein, the Indemnitee shall be indemnified against all Expenses incurred by the Indemnitee in connection herewith.

 

2.                                       Expenses; Indemnification Procedure .

 

a.                                       Advancement of Expenses .  The Company shall advance all Expenses incurred by an Indemnitee.  The advances to be made hereunder shall be paid by the

 



 

Company to the Indemnitee as soon as practicable but in any event no later than twenty (20) days after written demand by the Indemnitee therefor to the Company.

 

b.                                       Notice/Cooperation by the Indemnitee .  The Indemnitee shall give the Company notice in writing as soon as practicable of any Claim made against the Indemnitee for which indemnification will or could be sought under this Agreement.  Notice to the Company shall be directed to the Chief Executive Officer of the Company at the Company’s address (or such other address as the Company shall designate in writing to the Indemnitee).

 

c.                                        No Presumptions; Burden of Proof .  For purposes of this Agreement, the termination of any Claim by judgment, order, settlement (whether with or without court approval) or conviction, or upon a plea of nolo contendere, or its equivalent, shall not create a presumption that the Indemnitee did not meet any particular standard of conduct or have any particular belief or that a court has determined that indemnification is not permitted by applicable law.  In addition, neither the failure of the Reviewing Party to have made a determination as to whether the Indemnitee has met any particular standard of conduct or had any particular belief, nor an actual determination by the Reviewing Party that the Indemnitee has not met such standard of conduct or did not have such belief, prior to the commencement of legal proceedings by the Indemnitee to secure a judicial determination that the Indemnitee should be indemnified under applicable law, shall be a defense to the Indemnitee’s claim or create a presumption that the Indemnitee has not met any particular standard of conduct or did not have any particular belief.  In connection with any determination by the Reviewing Party or otherwise as to whether an Indemnitee is entitled to be indemnified hereunder, the burden of proof shall be on the Company to establish that the Indemnitee is not so entitled.

 

d.                                       Notice to Insurers .  If, at the time of the receipt by the Company of a notice of a Claim pursuant to Section 2(b) hereof, the Company has liability insurance in effect that may cover such Claim, the Company shall give prompt notice of the commencement of such Claim to the insurers in accordance with the procedures set forth in each of the policies.  The Company shall thereafter take all necessary or desirable action to cause such insurers to pay, on behalf of the Indemnitee, all amounts payable as a result of such Claim in accordance with the terms of such policies.

 

e.                                        Selection of Counsel .  If the Company shall be obligated hereunder to pay the Expenses of any Claim, the Company shall be entitled to assume the defense of such Claim, with counsel approved by the Indemnitee (which approval shall not be unreasonably withheld), upon the delivery to the Indemnitee of written notice of its election to do so.  After delivery of such notice, approval of such counsel by the Indemnitee and the retention of such counsel by the Company, the Company will not be liable to the Indemnitee under this Agreement for any fees of counsel subsequently incurred by the Indemnitee with respect to the same Claim; provided that, (i) the Indemnitee shall have the right to employ the Indemnitee’s counsel in any such Claim at the Indemnitee’s expense and (ii) if (A) the employment of counsel by the Indemnitee has been previously authorized by the Company, (B) the Indemnitee shall have reasonably concluded that there is a conflict of interest between the Company and the Indemnitee in the conduct of any such defense, or (C) the Company shall not continue to retain such counsel to defend such Claim, then the fees and expenses of the Indemnitee’s counsel shall be at the expense of the Company.

 



 

3.                                       Additional Indemnification Rights; Nonexclusivity .

 

a.                                       Scope .  The Company hereby agrees to indemnify the Indemnitee to the fullest extent permitted by law, even if such indemnification is not specifically authorized by the other provisions of this Agreement, the Company’s certificate of incorporation, the Company’s bylaws or by statute.  In the event of any change after the date of this Agreement in any applicable law, statute or rule that expands the right of a Delaware corporation to indemnify a member of its Board of Directors or an officer, stockholder, employee, controlling person, agent or fiduciary, it is the intent of the parties hereto that the Indemnitee shall enjoy by this Agreement the greater benefits afforded by such change.  In the event of any change in any applicable law, statute or rule that narrows the right of a Delaware corporation to indemnify a member of its Board of Directors or an officer, employee, agent or fiduciary, such change, to the extent not otherwise required by such law, statute or rule to be applied to this Agreement, shall have no effect on this Agreement or the parties’ rights and obligations hereunder except as set forth in Section 8(a) hereof.

 

b.                                       Nonexclusivity .  The indemnification provided by this Agreement shall be in addition to any rights to which the Indemnitee may be entitled under the Company’s certificate of incorporation, its bylaws, any agreement, any vote of stockholders or disinterested directors, the DGCL, or otherwise.  The indemnification provided under this Agreement shall commence upon the date an Indemnitee first serves in an indemnified capacity and shall continue as to the Indemnitee for any action the Indemnitee took or did not take while serving in an indemnified capacity even though the Indemnitee may have ceased to serve in such capacity. The Company hereby acknowledges that the Indemnitee may have other sources of indemnification or insurance, whether currently in force or established in the future (collectively, the “Outside Indemnitors”).  The Company hereby agrees: (i) that it is the indemnitor of first resort (i.e., its obligations to the Indemnitee are primary and any obligation of the Outside Indemnitors to advance expenses or to provide indemnification for the same expenses or liabilities incurred by the Indemnitee are secondary); (ii) that it shall be required to advance the full amount of expenses incurred by the Indemnitee and shall be liable in full for all indemnifiable amounts to the extent legally permitted and as required by the certificate of incorporation and bylaws (or any agreement between the Company and the Indemnitee), without regard to any rights the Indemnitee may have against the Outside Indemnitors and (iii) that it irrevocably waives, relinquishes and releases the Outside Indemnitors from any and all claims against the Outside Indemnitors for contribution, subrogation or any other recovery of any kind in respect thereof.  The Company further agrees that no advancement or payment by the Outside Indemnitors on behalf of the Indemnitee with respect to any claim for which the Indemnitee have sought indemnification from the Company shall affect the foregoing and the Outside Indemnitors shall have a right of contribution and/or be subrogated to the extent of such advancement or payment to all of the rights of recovery of the Indemnitee against the Company.  The Company and the Indemnitee agree that the Outside Indemnitors are express third party beneficiaries of the terms hereof.

 

4.                                       No Duplication of Payments .  Except as otherwise set forth in Section 3(b) above, the Company shall not be liable under this Agreement to make any payment in connection with any Claim made against an Indemnitee to the extent the Indemnitee has otherwise actually

 



 

received payment (under any insurance policy, certificate of incorporation, bylaw or otherwise) of the amounts otherwise indemnifiable hereunder.

 

5.                                       Partial Indemnification .  If an Indemnitee is entitled under any provision of this Agreement to indemnification by the Company for any portion of Expenses incurred in connection with any Claim, but not, however, for all of the total amount thereof, the Company shall nevertheless indemnify the Indemnitee for the portion of such Expenses to which the Indemnitee is entitled.

 

6.                                       Mutual Acknowledgement .  The Company and the Indemnitee acknowledge that in certain instances, Federal law or applicable public policy may prohibit the Company from indemnifying its directors, officers, employees, controlling persons, agents or fiduciaries under this Agreement or otherwise.  The Indemnitee understands and acknowledges that the Company has undertaken or may be required in the future to undertake with the Securities and Exchange Commission to submit the question of indemnification to a court in certain circumstances for a determination of the Company’s rights under public policy to indemnify an Indemnitee.

 

7.                                       Liability Insurance .  To the extent the Company maintains liability insurance applicable to directors, officers, employees, control persons, agents or fiduciaries, the Indemnitee shall be covered by such policies in such a manner as to provide the Indemnitee the same rights and benefits as are accorded to the most favorably insured (i) of the Company’s directors, if the Indemnitee is a director, or (ii) of the Company’s officers, if the Indemnitee is not a director of the Company but is an officer; or (iii) of the Company’s key employees, controlling persons, agents or fiduciaries, if the Indemnitee is not an officer or director but is a key employee, agent, control person or fiduciary.

 

8.                                       Exceptions .  Any other provision herein to the contrary notwithstanding, the Company shall not be obligated pursuant to the terms of this Agreement:

 

a.                                       Claims Initiated by an Indemnitee .  To indemnify or advance expenses to an Indemnitee with respect to Claims initiated or brought voluntarily by the Indemnitee and not by way of defense, except:  (i) with respect to actions or proceedings to establish or enforce a right to indemnify under this Agreement or any other agreement or insurance policy or under the Company’s certificate of incorporation or bylaws now or hereafter in effect relating to Claims for Indemnifiable Events; (ii) in specific cases if the Board of Directors has approved the initiation or bringing of such Claim; or (iii) as otherwise required under Section 145 of the DGCL, regardless of whether the Indemnitee ultimately is determined to be entitled to such indemnification, advance expense payment or insurance recovery, as the case may be; or

 

b.                                       Claims Under Section 16(b) .  To indemnify an Indemnitee for expenses and the payment of profits arising from the purchase and sale by the Indemnitee of securities in violation of Section 16(b) of the Exchange Act or any similar successor statute; or

 

c.                                        Claims Excluded Under Section 145 of the DGCL .  To indemnify the Indemnitee if:  (i) the Indemnitee did not act in good faith and in a manner reasonably

 



 

believed to be in or not opposed to the best interests of the Company or (ii) with respect to any criminal action or proceeding, the Indemnitee had reasonable cause to believe the conduct was unlawful or (iii) the Indemnitee shall have been adjudged to be liable to the Company unless and only to the extent the court in which such action was brought shall permit indemnification as provided in Section 145(b) of the DGCL.

 

9.                                       Period of Limitations .  No legal action shall be brought and no cause of action shall be asserted by or in the right of the Company against an Indemnitee or an Indemnitee’s estate, spouse, heirs, executors or personal or legal representatives after the expiration of five (5) years from the date of accrual of such cause of action, and any claim or cause of action of the Company shall be extinguished and deemed released unless asserted by the timely filing of a legal action within such five (5)-year period; provided , however , that if any shorter period of limitations is otherwise applicable to any such cause of action, such shorter period shall govern.

 

10.                                Construction of Certain Phrases .

 

a.                                       For purposes of this Agreement, references to the “Company” shall include, in addition to the resulting corporation, any constituent corporation (including any constituent of a constituent) absorbed in a consolidation or merger that, if its separate existence had continued, would have had power and authority to indemnify its directors, officers, stockholders, employees, agents or fiduciaries, so that if an Indemnitee is, was or may be deemed a director, officer, stockholder, employee, agent, control person, or fiduciary of such constituent corporation, or is or was serving at the request of such constituent corporation as a director, officer, employee, control person, agent or fiduciary of another corporation, partnership, limited liability company, joint venture, employee benefit plan, trust or other enterprise, the Indemnitee shall stand in the same position under the provisions of this Agreement with respect to the resulting or surviving corporation as the Indemnitee would have with respect to such constituent corporation if its separate existence had continued.

 

b.                                       For purposes of this Agreement, references to “other enterprises” shall include employee benefit plans; references to “fines” shall include any excise taxes assessed on an Indemnitee with respect to an employee benefit plan; and references to “serving at the request of the Company” shall include any service as a director, officer, employee, agent or fiduciary of the Company that imposes duties on, or involves services by, such director, officer, employee, agent or fiduciary with respect to an employee benefit plan, its participants or its beneficiaries; and if an Indemnitee acted in good faith and in a manner the Indemnitee reasonably believed to be in the interest of the participants and beneficiaries of an employee benefit plan, the Indemnitee shall be deemed to have acted in a manner “not opposed to the best interests of the Company” as referred to in this Agreement.

 

c.                                        For purposes of this Agreement a “Change in Control” shall be deemed to have occurred if:  (i) any “person” (as such term is used in Sections 13(d)(3) and 14(d)(2) of the Exchange Act), other than a trustee or other fiduciary holding securities under an employee benefit plan of the Company or a corporation owned directly or indirectly by the stockholders of the Company in substantially the same proportions as their ownership of stock of the Company, (A) who is or becomes the beneficial owner, directly or indirectly, of securities of

 



 

the Company representing twenty percent (20%) or more of the combined voting power of the Company’s then outstanding Voting Securities, increases his beneficial ownership of such securities by five percent (5%) or more over the percentage so owned by such person, or            (B) becomes the “beneficial owner” (as defined in Rule 13d-3 under said Exchange Act), directly or indirectly, of securities of the Company representing more than thirty percent (30%) of the total voting power represented by the Company’s then outstanding Voting Securities, (ii) during any period of two (2) consecutive years, individuals who at the beginning of such period constitute the Board of Directors of the Company and any new director whose election by the Board of Directors or nomination for election by the Company’s stockholders was approved by a vote of at least two-thirds (2/3) of the directors then still in office who either were directors at the beginning of the period or whose election or nomination for election was previously so approved, cease for any reason to constitute a majority thereof, or (iii) the stockholders of the Company approve a merger or consolidation of the Company with any other corporation other than a merger or consolidation that would result in the Voting Securities of the Company outstanding immediately prior thereto continuing to represent (either by remaining outstanding or by being converted into Voting Securities of the surviving entity) at least eighty percent (80%) of the total voting power represented by the Voting Securities of the Company or such surviving entity outstanding immediately after such merger or consolidation, or the stockholders of the Company approve a plan of complete liquidation of the Company or an agreement for the sale or disposition by the Company of (in one transaction or a series of transactions) all or substantially all of the Company’s assets.

 

d.                                       For purposes of this Agreement, “Independent Legal Counsel” shall mean an attorney or firm of attorneys, selected in accordance with the provisions of Section 2(e) hereof, who shall not have otherwise performed services for the Company or the Indemnitee within the last three (3) years (other than with respect to matters concerning the right of the Indemnitee under this Agreement, or of other indemnitees under similar indemnity agreements).

 

e.                                        For purposes of this Agreement, a “Reviewing Party” shall mean any appropriate person or body consisting of a member or members of the Company’s Board of Directors or any other person or body appointed by the Board of Directors who is not a party to the particular Claim for which the Indemnitee is seeking indemnification, or Independent Legal Counsel.

 

f.                                         For purposes of this Agreement, “Voting Securities” shall mean any securities of the Company that vote generally in the election of directors.

 

11.                                Counterparts .  This Agreement may be executed in one or more counterparts, each of which shall constitute an original.

 

12.                                Binding Effect; Successors and Assigns .  This Agreement shall be binding upon and inure to the benefit of and be enforceable by the parties hereto and their respective successors, assigns, including any direct or indirect successor by purchase, merger, consolidation or otherwise to all or substantially all of the business and/or assets of the Company, spouses, heirs and personal and legal representatives.  The Company shall require and cause any successor (whether direct or indirect by purchase, merger, consolidation or otherwise) to all, substantially all, or a substantial part, of the business and/or assets of the Company, by written

 



 

agreement in form and substance satisfactory to the Indemnitee, expressly to assume and agree to perform this Agreement in the same manner and to the same extent that the Company would be required to perform if no such succession had taken place.  This Agreement shall continue in effect with respect to Claims relating to Indemnifiable Events regardless of whether the Indemnitee continues to serve as a director, officer, employee, agent, controlling person or fiduciary of the Company or of any other enterprise, including subsidiaries of the Company, at the Company’s request.

 

13.                                Attorneys’ Fees .  In the event that any action is instituted by an Indemnitee under this Agreement or under any liability insurance policies maintained by the Company to enforce or interpret any of the terms hereof or thereof, the Indemnitee shall be entitled to be paid all Expenses incurred by the Indemnitee with respect to such action if the Indemnitee is ultimately successful in such action, and shall be entitled to the advancement of Expenses with respect to such action, except, in the case of both payment and advancement of Expenses, as and solely to the extent of Expenses incurred with respect to a material assertion made by the Indemnitee as a part of such action which a court of competent jurisdiction over such action determines was not made in good faith or was frivolous.  In the event of an action instituted by or in the name of the Company under this Agreement to enforce or interpret any of the terms of this Agreement, an Indemnitee shall be entitled to be paid Expenses incurred by such Indemnitee in defense of such action (including costs and expenses incurred with respect to his or its counterclaims and cross-claims made in such action), and shall be entitled to the advancement of Expenses with respect to such action, except, in the case of both payment and advancement of Expenses, as and solely to the extent of Expenses incurred with respect to a material assertion made by the Indemnitee as a part of such action which a court of competent jurisdiction over such action determines was not made in good faith or was frivolous.

 

14.                                Notice .  All notices and other communications required or permitted hereunder shall be in writing, shall be effective when given, and shall in any event be deemed to be given:  (a) five (5) days after deposit with the U.S. Postal Service or other applicable postal service, if delivered by first class mail, postage prepaid; (b) upon delivery, if delivered by hand; (c) one (1) business day after the business day of deposit with Federal Express or similar overnight courier, freight prepaid; or (d) one (1) day after the business day of delivery by facsimile transmission, if deliverable by facsimile transmission, with copy by first class mail, postage prepaid, and shall be addressed if to an Indemnitee, at the Indemnitee’s address as set forth beneath the Indemnitee’s signature to this Agreement and if to the Company at the address of its principal corporate offices (attention: Secretary) or at such other address as such party may designate by ten (10) days’ advance written notice to the other party hereto.

 

15.                                Consent to Jurisdiction .  The Company and the Indemnitee each hereby irrevocably consent to the jurisdiction of the courts of the State of Delaware for all purposes in connection with any action or proceeding that arises out of or relates to this Agreement and agree that any action instituted under this Agreement shall be commenced, prosecuted and continued only in the Court of Chancery of the State of Delaware in and for New Castle County, which shall be the exclusive and only proper forum for adjudicating such a claim.

 

16.                                Severability .  The provisions of this Agreement shall be severable in the event that any of the provisions hereof (including any provision within a single section,

 



 

paragraph or sentence) are held by a court of competent jurisdiction to be invalid, void or otherwise unenforceable, and the remaining provisions shall remain enforceable to the fullest extent permitted by law.  Furthermore, to the fullest extent possible, the provisions of this Agreement (including, without limitations, each portion of this Agreement containing any provision held to be invalid, void or otherwise unenforceable, that is not itself invalid, void or unenforceable) shall be construed so as to give effect to the intent manifested by the provision held invalid, illegal or unenforceable.

 

17.                                Choice of Law .  This Agreement shall be governed by and its provisions construed and enforced in accordance with the laws of the State of Delaware, as applied to contracts between Delaware residents, entered into and to be performed entirely within the State of Delaware, without regard to the conflict of laws principles thereof.

 

18.                                Subrogation .  In the event of payment under this Agreement, the Company shall be subrogated to the extent of such payment to all of the rights of recovery of the Indemnitee who shall execute all documents required and shall do all acts that may be necessary to secure such rights and to enable the Company effectively to bring suit to enforce such rights.

 

19.                                Amendment and Termination .  No amendment, modification, termination or cancellation of this Agreement shall be effective unless it is in writing signed by all parties hereto.  No waiver of any of the provisions of this Agreement shall be deemed or shall constitute a waiver of any other provisions hereof (whether or not similar) nor shall such waiver constitute a continuing waiver.

 

20.                                Integration and Entire Agreement .  This Agreement sets forth the entire understanding between the parties hereto and supersedes and merges all previous written and oral negotiations, commitments, understandings and agreements relating to the subject matter hereof between the parties hereto.

 

21.                                No Construction as Employment Agreement .  Nothing contained in this Agreement shall be construed as giving the Indemnitee any right to be retained in the employ of the Company or any of its subsidiaries.

 

22.                                Board and Stockholder Approval .  The Company represents that this Agreement has been approved by the Company’s board of directors and stockholders.

 

23.                                Amendment and Restatement .  Effective and contingent upon execution of this Agreement, the Company and the Director agree that the Original Indemnification Agreement is hereby amended and restated in its entirety to read as set forth in this Agreement, and the Company and the parties hereto hereby agree to be bound by the provisions hereof.

 

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IN WITNESS WHEREOF, the parties hereto have executed this Amended and Restated Indemnification Agreement on and as of the day and year first above written.

 

 

 

COMPANY:

 

 

 

MARINUS PHARMACEUTICALS, INC. ,

 

a Delaware corporation

 

 

 

 

 

By:

 

 

 

Chief Executive Officer and President

 

 

 

 

 

Address for Notice:

 

 

 

21 Business Park Drive

 

Branford, CT 06405

 

 

 

 

 

INDEMNITEE:

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Address:

 

 

 

 

 

 

Signature Page to Amended and Restated Indemnification Agreement

 




EXHIBIT 10.12

 

THIS DOCUMENT HAS BEEN REDACTED AND IS THE SUBJECT OF A CONFIDENTIAL TREATMENT REQUEST PURSUANT TO RULE 406 UNDER THE SECURITIES ACT OF 1933, AS AMENDED. REDACTED MATERIAL IS MARKED WITH [XXXXXXXXX] AND HAS BEEN FILED SEPARATELY WITH THE SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION.

 

AMENDED AND RESTATED AGREEMENT

 

THIS AMENDED AND RESTATED AGREEMENT (“Restated Agreement”), effective on the 23rd day of May, 2008 (“Restatement Effective Date”), is entered into by and between Purdue Neuroscience Company (“Purdue”), a partnership formed under the laws of the state of Delaware with an office address at One Stamford Forum, Stamford, CT 06901 and Marinus Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (“Marinus”), a Delaware corporation with its principal place of business at 21 Business Park Drive, Branford, CT 06405.

 

RECITALS

 

WHEREAS, Purdue is licensed by the University of Southern California (“USC”) and The Rockefeller University (“RU”) under the University Licensed Patents (as defined below) and under the Nanosizing Licensed Patents (as defined below), with the right to sublicense;

 

WHEREAS, Marinus is desirous of obtaining a sublicense under the University Licensed Patents and the Nanosizing Licensed Patents to manufacture, use, offer to sell, sell, and import Licensed Products (as defined below) in the Field (as defined below) in the Territory (as defined below) under the terms and conditions set forth herein;

 

WHEREAS, Marinus and Purdue entered into that certain License Agreement dated September 14, 2004 (the “First Agreement”) pursuant to which Marinus licensed, under certain terms and conditions, certain intellectual property from Purdue including the University Patents, the Nanosizing Patents, and the GHC Licensed Patents (as defined below);

 

WHEREAS, Marinus and Purdue entered into that certain Amendment No. 1 to License Agreement dated as of September 13, 2005 (“Amendment No. 1”);

 

WHEREAS, Marinus and Purdue entered into that certain Amendment No. 2 to License Agreement dated as of September 30, 2005 (“Amendment No. 2”);

 

WHEREAS, Marinus and Purdue entered into that certain Amendment No. 3 to License Agreement dated as of May 31, 2006 (“Amendment No. 3”) (the First Agreement and Amendment Nos. 1-3 collectively, the “Original Agreement”);

 

WHEREAS, Marinus and Purdue, concurrently herewith, entered into an Agreement to Attempt to Terminate pertaining to the possible termination of the GHC Agreement (the “Attempt Agreement”);

 

WHEREAS, Marinus and Purdue wish to amend, restate, or terminate certain of the licenses granted in the First Agreement and other terms, conditions, and obligations in the Original Agreement;

 



 

WHEREAS, Marinus is in the process of negotiating Subsequent Equity Financing (as defined below); and

 

WHEREAS, Marinus and Purdue desire to memorialize their agreement as to the number of shares of the common stock, par value $0.001 per share, of Marinus to be issued in the Subsequent Equity Financing to which Purdue shall be entitled under this Restated Agreement.

 

NOW, THEREFORE, in consideration of the mutual covenants and agreements contained herein; and for good and valuable consideration, the receipt and sufficiency of which is hereby acknowledged, the Parties (as defined herein) hereto, intending to be legally bound, agree to this Amended and Restated Agreement as follows:

 

ARTICLE 1 - DEFINITIONS

 

The terms in this Restated Agreement with initial letters capitalized, whether used in the singular or the plural, shall have the meaning set forth below or, if not listed below, the meaning designated in places throughout this Restated Agreement.

 

1.1  “ Associated Company ” means any corporation, partnership, limited liability company or other entity or combination thereof which directly or indirectly (a) owns or controls a party, (b) is owned or controlled by a party, or (c) is under common ownership or control with said party; the terms “control” and “controlled” meaning ownership of 50% or more, including ownership by trusts with substantially the same beneficial interests, of the voting and/or equity rights of such corporation, partnership, limited liability company or other entity or combination thereof or the power to direct the management of such corporation, partnership, limited liability company or other entity or combination thereof; provided however , that for purposes of this Restated Agreement, The Purdue Frederick Company Inc., a New York corporation (d/b/a The Purdue Frederick Company), shall not be considered an “Associated Company” of Purdue.

 

1.2  “ Commercial Sale ” means any arm’s length sale by Marinus, its Associated Companies, or a Third Party (as defined below) acting on behalf of or in place of either of the foregoing (for the avoidance of doubt, including a sales partner, distributor, or agent) to a Third Party other than a Third Party acting on behalf of or in place of Marinus or its Associated Companies.  Sales for clinical study purposes or compassionate, named patient, or similar use shall not constitute a Commercial Sale.

 

1.3  “ Commercially Reasonable Efforts ” means the carrying out of obligations or tasks using efforts not less than the efforts a company similar to Marinus would devote to a product having similar market potential, profit potential or strategic value as Licensed Products, (as defined below) based on conditions then prevailing.  Commercially Reasonable Efforts requires that the Party, at a minimum:  (a) determine practices with respect to the applicable activities; (b) reasonably promptly assign responsibility for such obligations to specific employee(s) who are held accountable for progress and monitor such progress on an on-going basis; (c) set and seek to achieve appropriate objectives for carrying out such obligations; and (d) make and implement decisions and allocate resources designed to advance progress with respect to such objectives.

 

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1.4  “ Confidential Information ” shall mean, with respect to either party hereto, all confidential or proprietary information, whether written or oral, which is disclosed by a party to the other party.  Notwithstanding the foregoing, Confidential Information of a party shall not include information:  (a) which was publicly known prior to initial disclosure of such information by the disclosing party to the other party as proven by prior written records in existence prior to such initial disclosure, (b) that has become publicly known, in print or other tangible form, without any act or omission of the other party, (c) received by the other party without restriction at any time from a Third Party, other than the disclosing party, rightfully having possession of and the right to disclose such information, (d) shown to have been otherwise known by the other party prior to disclosure of such information by the disclosing party to the other party as proven by prior written records in existence prior to such initial disclosure, or (e) shown to have been independently developed by employees or agents of the other party without access to or use of such information of the disclosing party as proven by the receiving party’s written records.

 

1.5  “ Effective Date ” means September 14, 2004.

 

1.6  “ Excluded Field ” means and includes the treatment of any unpleasant sensory or emotional experience associated with actual or potential tissue damage, or described in terms of such damage, including discomfort, either acute or chronic, caused by a primary lesion or dysfunction in the peripheral or central nervous system ( e.g. , neuropathic pain, post-herpetic neuralgia, trigeminal neuralgia), phantom pain, back pain, surgical pain, cancer pain, and pain associated with inflammation or damage of any tissues ( e.g. , muscle, bone, organs, tendons, nerves, and skin) by disease, injury, infection, surgery, or at birth.  For avoidance of doubt, Marinus shall not be permitted hereunder to pursue or obtain any regulatory approval or labeling for a Licensed Product as an analgesic or anesthetic agent or for the treatment of pain.

 

1.7  “ Field ” means the diagnosis, prevention and treatment of all diseases, disorders or conditions, other than those diseases, disorders or conditions which are in the Excluded Field.  Examples of diseases, disorders, or conditions that are within the Field include psychiatric and stress related disorders ( e.g. , generalized anxiety, obsessive-compulsive disorders, panic disorders, sleep disorders, depression psychoses, schizophrenia, premenstrual dysphoric disorder, posttraumatic stress disorder, and social isolation), addiction ( i.e. , alcoholism, benzodiazepine abuse, amphetamine abuse, and cocaine abuse), seizure disorders, disorders involving neurodegeneration and neuronal apoptosis where neuronal protection or neurogenesis provides a functional benefit ( e.g. , Alzheimer’s disease, pre and post-natal treatment for autism, attention deficit disorder, fragile X syndrome), lysosomal storage disorders, and atherosclerosis.

 

1.8  “ First Commercial Sale ” means, with respect each Licensed Product (as defined below), the first Commercial Sale after receipt of Regulatory Approval (as defined below) of such Licensed Product.  If Regulatory Approval is not necessary in order to sell such Licensed Product, then the First Commercial Sale shall mean the first transfer of title of the Licensed Product by or on behalf of Marinus, its Associated Companies, or its licensee to a Third Party (as defined below) other than a Third Party sales partner, distributor, or agent acting on behalf of or in place of Marinus, its Associated Companies, or its licensee, for consideration in any arm’s length transaction.  Shipments of Licensed Products for test marketing, clinical study purposes, compassionate use, named patient use, or similar uses, in each case for which no payment is charged or received, shall not constitute a Commercial Sale.

 

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1.9  “ Fully Diluted Basis ” means, with respect to shares of Marinus’s capital stock, that the total number of issued and outstanding shares of Marinus’s capital stock shall be calculated to assume (i) the conversion of all issued and outstanding securities of Marinus which are convertible into shares of common stock of Marinus, par value $0.001 per share, (ii) the exercise of all then outstanding options, warrants and any other rights to purchase shares of capital stock of Marinus (whether or not then exercisable) and (iii) the issuance or grant of all securities reserved for issuance pursuant to any stock, stock option or other rights plan in effect on the date of the calculation; provided however , that any such calculation shall, in the event of any stock split, stock dividend, recapitalization or similar event, be proportionally adjusted in accordance with the terms of Marinus’s certificate of incorporation, as amended and in effect from time to time.

 

1.10  “ Ganaxolone ” means 3-alpha-hydroxy-3-beta-methyl 5-alpha-pregnan-20-one.

 

1.11  “ GHC Agreement ” means the license to Purdue from GHC dated December 15, 1997, as amended and restated.

 

1.12  “ GHC Licensed Patents ” means:

 

·                                 U.S. Pat. No. 5,767,117 “Method for Treating Vascular Headaches”;

 

·                                 U.S. Pat. No. 5,929,061 “Method for Treating Vascular Headaches”;

 

foreign counterparts thereto, any U.S. or foreign continuation-in-part, continuation or divisional applications thereof, any patent granted on any aforesaid patent application, and any extension, re-examination, or reissue of any of such patent, and any U.S. or foreign continuations, continuations-in-part, divisionals, reissues, or extensions of any of the foregoing.

 

1.13  “ Governmental Authority ” means any court, tribunal, arbitrator, agency, legislative body, commission, official, regulatory body, securities exchange, securities enforcement authority, government, or other instrumentality of (i) the United States government or any country, (ii) a federal, state, province, county, city or other political subdivision thereof having jurisdiction over the appropriate Party (as defined below), Person (as defined below) or subject matter or Patents (as defined below), or (iii) any supranational body.

 

1.14  “ Herein ”, “ hereof ”, and “ hereunder ” and words of like import refer to this Restated Agreement as a whole and not to any particular provision of this Restated Agreement.

 

1.15  “ Include ”, “ includes ”, or “ including ” shall be deemed to be followed by the words “without limitation”, whether or not they are in fact followed by those words or words of like import.

 

1.16  “ Kerkhof Agreement ” means the license to Purdue from Nicholas J, Kerkhof, Ph.D. effective May 22, 2002.

 

1.17  “ Know-How ” means all unpublished inventions, technology, trade secrets, physical, chemical or biological materials, assays, methods, documentation, scientific and technical data and other information.

 

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1.18  “ Law ” or “ Laws ” means all laws, statutes, rules, codes, regulations, orders, judgments, and ordinances of any Governmental Authority.

 

1.19  “ Licensed Patents ” means the University Licensed Patents, and the Nanosizing Licensed Patents.

 

1.20  “ Licensed Product ” means pharmaceutical preparations containing Ganaxolone, but not its salts, congeners or other derivatives which involve forming or breaking a covalent bond with or of Ganaxolone.

 

1.21  “ Marinus ” means Marinus Pharmaceuticals, Inc.

 

1.22  “ Marinus Know-How ” means all unpublished inventions, technology, trade secrets, physical, chemical or biological materials, assays, methods, documentation, scientific and technical data and other information of Marinus.

 

1.23  “ Nanosizing Licensed Patents ” means U.S. Provisional Pat. Application No. 60/172,573, filed December 20, 1999; and all U.S. and foreign Patents that claim priority therefrom.

 

1.24  “ Net Sales ” means, with respect to a Licensed Product, the total invoiced amount billed for sales of a Licensed Product by Marinus, its Associated Companies or its sublicensees, less the following items to the extent they are paid or allowed and included in the invoice price, whether or not such costs are invoiced separately to the customer:

 

(A) Quantity, trade, prompt payment, and/or cash discounts actually taken;

 

(B) Amounts repaid or credited and allowances given by reason of chargebacks or billing errors and rebates (including Medicare, Medicaid, managed care, hospice and government-mandated rebates), actually allowed or paid;

 

(C) Amounts refunded or credited for Licensed Products that were rejected, spoiled, damaged, outdated, recalled, or returned;

 

(D) Freight, shipment, and insurance costs incurred by Marinus, its Associated Companies, or its sublicensees in transporting Licensed Product(s) to customers;

 

(E) Taxes, tariffs, customs duties and surcharges and other governmental charges incurred in connection with the sale, exportation or importation of Licensed Product(s); and

 

Net Sales shall not include (i) the sale or transfer of a Licensed Product among Marinus, its Associated Companies or its sublicensees for later sale to an independent Third Party, provided , however , that Net Sales shall include the subsequent sale to an independent Third Party; (ii) the transfer by Marinus, its Associated Companies or its sublicensees without charge of reasonable quantities of Licensed Product as samples or as donations to non-profit institutions or government agencies for a non-commercial purpose, or (iii) the use of a Licensed Product by Marinus, its Associated Companies, or its sublicensees for research and development purposes.

 

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If Marinus, its Associated Companies or its sublicensees commercially use or dispose of any Licensed Product by itself (as opposed to a use or disposition of the Licensed Product as a component of a combination of active functional elements) other than in a bona fide sale to a bona fide customer, the Net Sales hereunder shall be the price which would be then payable in an arm’s length transaction.

 

1.25  “ Neurosteroid ” means a compound containing a steroid or nor-steroid ring system that is directly active on neurons to modulate neurotransmitters, and is pharmacologically useful as a drug for the treatment of one or more nervous system disorders agents and prodrugs and metabolites thereof.

 

1.26  “ Old Field ” means the treatment of (i) seizure disorders and (ii) vascular migraine headaches other than those associated with mood disorders, such mood disorders including, but not limited to, premenstrual syndrome or premenstrual dysphoric disorder.

 

1.27  “ Parties ” means Marinus and Purdue.

 

1.28  “ Party ” means Marinus or Purdue.

 

1.29  “ Patent ” means issued patents and patent applications including foreign counterparts thereto, any provisional applications, continuation-in-part, continuation or divisional applications thereof, and any extension, re-examination, or reissue of any of such patent, and any U.S. or foreign continuations, continuations-in-part, divisionals, reissues re-examinations or extensions of any of the foregoing.

 

1.30  “ Person ” means any natural person, corporation, firm, business trust, joint venture, association, organization, company, partnership, or other business entity, or any government, or any agency or political subdivisions thereof.

 

1.31  “ Purdue ” means Purdue Neuroscience Company.

 

1.32  “ Purdue Common Stock ” means shares of common stock of Marinus, par value $0.001 per share, issued to Purdue in connection with the Subsequent Equity Financing in an amount sufficient for Purdue to hold five percent (5%) of all of the issued and outstanding equity of Marinus, on a Fully-Diluted Basis through the Subsequent Equity Financing (as defined below), as calculated after giving effect to the dilutive issuance of any other equity in Marinus to any Person, including Purdue, as of each closing of the Subsequent Equity Financing.

 

1.33  “ Purdue Know-How ” means all unpublished inventions, technology, trade secrets, physical, chemical or biological materials, assays, methods, documentation, scientific and technical data and other information of Purdue.

 

1.34  “ Regulatory Approval ” means (i) in respect of the United States of America, the FDA’s approval of an New Drug Application (“NDA”) in respect of the Product, effective upon the date of the FDA’s letter notifying the NDA holder of such approval, (ii) in respect of any other country that is a member of the European Union, the European Commission’s approval of a Regulatory Approval Application in respect of the Product following successful completion of the European Medicines Agency (“EMEA”) centralized procedure or other successor procedure,

 

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effective upon the date of the European Commission’s Marketing Authorization Application approval letter, and (iii) in respect of each other country in the world (or in the European Union where the EMEA centralized procedure is not available), the approval of the applicable Governmental Authority in such country that is necessary to permit the Licensed Product to be commercially sold in such country, effective on the date on which such approval becomes effective.

 

1.35  “ Series A Financing ” means the round of preferred equity financing consummated by Marinus on September 30, 2005.

 

1.36  “ Series A Shares ” means the shares of preferred stock of Marinus issued in the Series A Financing received by Purdue pursuant to the Original Agreement.

 

1.37  “ Subsequent Equity Financing ” means all transactions or series of transactions commencing on the date of the first offering of the convertible promissory notes referenced in clause (i) below and terminating upon the generation of aggregate proceeds to Marinus of sixteen million dollars ($16,000,000.00) through the sale and issuance by Marinus of (i) certain convertible promissory notes convertible into shares of Marinus’s senior class of convertible preferred stock, par value $0.001 per share, as authorized by Marinus’s certificate of incorporation in effect as of the date of conversion of such notes; and (ii) shares of Marinus’s senior class of convertible preferred stock, par value $0.001 per share, as authorized by Marinus’s certificate of incorporation in effect as of the date of such transaction or transactions.  For the avoidance of doubt, the sixteen million dollars ($16,000,000.00) to be generated in the Subsequent Equity Financing shall not include any value of or imputed to the Purdue Common Stock.

 

1.38  “ Term ” means the period from September 14, 2004 until, on a country-by-country basis, the later of (i) the last to expire Licensed Patent in such country or (ii) ten (10) years from the First Commercial Sale of each Licensed Product in such country.

 

1.39  “ Territory ” means the world.

 

1.40  “ Third Party ” means any entity including, for-profit and non-profit institutions other than Purdue or Marinus.

 

1.41  “ University Agreement ” means the license to Purdue from the University of Southern California and The Rockefeller University dated August 28, 1990.

 

1.42  “ University Know-How ” means the Know-How licensed by Purdue under the University Agreement.

 

1.43  “ University Licensed Patents ” means:

 

·                                 U.S. Pat. No. 5,232,917 “Methods, Compositions and Compounds for Allosteric Modulation of the GABA receptor”;

 

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·                                 U.S. Pat. No. 5,591,733 “Methods, Compositions and Compounds for Allosteric Modulation of the GABA Receptor by Members of the Androstane and Pregnane Series”;

 

·                                 U.S. Pat. No. 5,208,227 “Method, Compositions, and Compounds for Modulating Brain Excitability”;

 

·                                 U.S. Pat. No. 5,319,115 “Method for making 3 a -Hydroxy, 3 b -Substituted Pregnanes”;

 

foreign counterparts thereto, any U.S. or foreign continuation-in-part, continuation or divisional applications thereof, any patent granted on any aforesaid patent application, and any extension, re-examination, or reissue of any of such patent, and any U.S. or foreign continuations, continuations-in-part, divisionals, reissues re-examinations or extensions of any of the foregoing.

 

1.44  “ Writing ”, “ written ”, and comparable terms refer to printing, typing and other means of reproducing words (including electronic media) in a visible form.

 

1.45  Other Terms .  Each of the following terms is defined in the Section set forth opposite such term:

 

Term

 

Section

Amendment No. 1

 

Recitals

Amendment No. 2

 

Recitals

Amendment No. 3

 

Recitals

Attempt Agreement

 

Recitals

First Agreement

 

Recitals

Indemnitee

 

9.5

Marinus

 

Preamble

Original Agreement

 

Recitals

Purdue

 

Preamble

Purdue Releasee

 

3.2

Purdue Releasor

 

3.1

 

 

 

Releasee

 

3.1

Releasor

 

3.2

Representative

 

Preamble

Restated Agreement

 

Preamble

Restatement Effective Date

 

Preamble

RU

 

Recitals

USC

 

Recitals

 

1.46  Agreement References .  References to any agreement or contract are to that agreement or contract as amended, modified or supplemented in writing from time to time in accordance with the terms hereof and thereof.

 

1.47  Ambiguities .  Ambiguities, if any, in this Restated Agreement shall not be construed against any Party, irrespective of which Party may be deemed to have authored the ambiguous provision.

 

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1.48  Capitalization .  Any capitalized terms used in any Exhibit but not otherwise defined therein shall have the meaning as defined in this Restated Agreement.

 

1.49  Date References .  References from or through any date mean, unless otherwise specified, from and including or through and including, respectively.

 

1.50  Gender .  Unless the context of this Restated Agreement otherwise requires, words of one gender include the other gender.

 

1.51  Headings .  Headings and captions of the Articles and Sections hereof are for convenience only and are not to be used in the interpretation of this Restated Agreement.

 

1.52  Joint and Several Obligations .  Unless specified otherwise in this Restated Agreement, the obligations of any Party consisting of more than one person are joint and several.

 

1.53  No Strict Construction .  This Restated Agreement has been prepared jointly and shall not be strictly construed against either Party.

 

1.54  Number of Days .  Whenever this Restated Agreement refers to a number of days, unless otherwise specified, such number shall refer to calendar days.

 

1.55  Person References .  References to any Person include the successors and permitted assigns of that Person.

 

1.56  References to Parts of this Restated Agreement .  References to Articles and Sections are to Articles and Sections of this Restated Agreement unless otherwise specified.

 

1.57  Singular/Plural .  Any singular term in this Restated Agreement shall be deemed to include the plural, and any plural term the singular.

 

ARTICLE 2 - AMENDMENT AND RESTATEMENT OF ORIGINAL AGREEMENT; GRANT OF RIGHTS

 

2.1  Grant of License to Licensed Patents .  As of the Restatement Effective Date and subject to the terms and conditions of this Restated Agreement, the University Agreement and to the extent permitted by the University Agreement, Purdue hereby grants to Marinus, for the Term, an exclusive sublicense under the University Licensed Patents, to make, have made, use, offer to sell, sell, and import Licensed Products in the Field in the Territory.  The grant of this Section 2.1 includes the right to grant sublicenses subject to prior written approval by Purdue which shall not be unreasonably conditioned, delayed, or withheld provided that such sublicense shall not impair or limit any of Purdue’s rights under this Restated Agreement.

 

2.2  Grant of License to University Know-How .  As of the Restatement Effective Date and subject to the terms and conditions of this Restated Agreement, the University Agreement, and to the extent permitted by the University Agreement, Purdue hereby grants to Marinus, for the Term, an exclusive sublicense under the University Know-How, to make, use, offer to sell, sell, and import Licensed Products in the Field in the Territory.  The grant of this Section 2.2 includes

 

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the right to grant sublicenses subject to prior written approval by Purdue which shall not be unreasonably conditioned, delayed, or withheld provided that such sublicense shall not impair or limit any of Purdue’s rights under this Restated Agreement.

 

2.3  Grant of License to Purdue Know-How .  As of the Restatement Effective Date and subject to the terms and conditions of this Restated Agreement, Purdue hereby grants to Marinus, for the Term, an exclusive license under the Purdue Know-How, to make, use, offer to sell, sell, and import Licensed Products in the Field in the Territory.  The grant of this Section 2.3 includes the right to grant sublicenses subject to prior written approval by Purdue which shall not be unreasonably conditioned, delayed, or withheld provided that such sublicense shall not impair or limit any of Purdue’s rights under this Restated Agreement.

 

2.4  Grant of License to Nanosizing Licensed Patents .  As of the Restatement Effective Date and subject to the terms and conditions of this Restated Agreement and the Kerkhof Agreement, Purdue hereby grants to Marinus, for the Term, a non-exclusive sublicense under the Nanosizing Licensed Patents, solely in conjunction with the licenses granted under Sections 2.1, 2.2, and 2.3 of this Restated Agreement, to make, use, and sell Licensed Products in the Field in the Territory.  The grant of this Section 2.4 includes the right to grant sublicenses subject to prior written approval by Purdue which shall not be unreasonably conditioned, delayed, or withheld provided that such sublicense shall not impair or limit any of Purdue’s rights under this Restated Agreement.

 

2.5  Termination of Other Licenses under the Original Agreement .  Any right, license, or sublicense granted to Marinus under the Original Agreement, other than those granted in this Restated Agreement, is hereby terminated.

 

2.6  No Other Licenses .  No right, license, or sublicense is granted hereunder, except as expressly and specifically set forth herein.

 

ARTICLE 3 - COVENANT NOT TO PROMOTE OFF LABEL USE

 

3.1  Off Label Uses .  Marinus and its Associated Company(ies), individually and jointly, hereby covenant and agree not, alone or in cooperation with any Third Party, to promote, directly or indirectly, any uses of any Licensed Product in any country that have not been finally approved by the appropriate Governmental Authority in such country, if approval in such country is required.

 

ARTICLE 4 - PAYMENTS AND ASSUMPTION OF OBLIGATIONS

 

4.1  License Fee .  In addition to the consideration paid by Marinus and received by Purdue under the Original Agreement and the Attempt Agreement, for the licenses for the Term granted hereunder, Marinus shall pay to Purdue, the following which shall accrue to Purdue on the Restatement Effective Date:

 

(A)                                Equity in Marinus as follows:

 

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(a) In connection with the Subsequent Equity Financing, Marinus will issue and deliver to Purdue or Purdue’s designee, provided such designee is either a Purdue Associated Company or any other Third Party who is not a direct competitor of Marinus, the Purdue Common Stock.  Each share of Purdue Common Stock will have the same rights and preferences as each other share of common stock of Marinus, par value $0.001 per share, in accordance with the terms of Marinus’s certificate of incorporation, as amended and in effect from time to time.  Purdue reserves the right to review and comment on any agreements or other documentation in connection with the Subsequent Equity Financing to which Purdue is a party, and Marinus will not execute any such agreements or other documentation prior to receiving such comments from Purdue, if any; provided, however, that all such comments must be delivered in writing by Purdue to Marinus within fourteen (14) days following delivery by Marinus of such agreements or other documentation to Purdue in accordance with Section 12.3 of this Restated Agreement.  For avoidance of doubt, if Purdue does not deliver its comments within the within fourteen (14) days set forth in the foregoing sentence, Marinus shall be free to proceed with the Subsequent Equity Financing.  Purdue will become a party to any definitive agreements executed in connection therewith, including, as applicable, a shareholders agreement, a registration rights agreement, and any other similar agreements, in accordance with the type of equity that Purdue is to receive in the Subsequent Equity Financing.  In such agreements, in connection with the issuance to Purdue of the Purdue Common Stock, Marinus will make representations and warranties to Purdue that are customary for an issuer of such securities; provided however , that such representations and warranties shall include (i) organization and good standing of Marinus and (ii) valid issuance by Marinus of the Purdue Common Stock.

 

(b) All rights and benefits to Purdue under Purdue Common Stock shall be in addition to any rights and benefits Purdue may have under its Series A Shares.

 

4.2  University Payments and Obligations .  In further consideration of the licenses granted hereunder, Marinus shall pay to Purdue, all payments, fees, and royalties related to a Licensed Product that are accrued and due after the Effective Date of this Restated Agreement from Purdue to USC or RU under the University Agreement.  Such royalties to USC or RU shall be calculated and paid as specified in the University Agreement.  Such payment to Purdue shall be made by Marinus at least fifteen (15) days before Purdue is required to make such payment to USC or RU.  Marinus shall, in addition to any of its obligations under this Restated Agreement, undertake all obligations, including records, product development, insurance, defense, indemnification, hold harmless, and patent marking obligations, of Purdue to USC and RU under and to the full extent as provided in the University Agreement.  To the extent that the obligation to defend, indemnify or hold harmless by Marinus is the result of actions by Purdue unrelated to the Licensed Product, Purdue would, in turn, defend, indemnify, and hold harmless Marinus to

 

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the same extent that Marinus defends, indemnifies, and holds harmless Purdue’s licensors, provided that Marinus gives Purdue prior written notice of such defense, indemnification or hold harmless obligation, and allows Purdue to control, or otherwise obtains Purdue’s prior written consent to engage in, any defense or settlement discussions, negotiations or agreements related thereto.

 

4.3  Accrued Obligations .  All obligations under the Original Agreement that accrued prior to the Restatement Effective Date shall remain in full force and effect throughout the Term of this Restated Agreement.  All obligations under the license to Marinus under the GHC Licensed Patents that accrued prior to the termination of the GHC Agreement and the licenses and sublicenses thereunder shall remain in full force and effect throughout the Term of this Restated Agreement.  Nothing in this Restated Agreement shall excuse either Party from any such accrued obligation and nothing in this Restated Agreement shall constitute or be deemed or construed a waiver by either Party of the other Party’s performance of such accrued obligation.

 

4.4  Royalties .  The royalties of this Article are in addition to any payments due by Marinus under Sections 4.1 and 4.2.  Royalties shall be paid quarterly on a calendar year basis on annual Net Sales, based on a calendar year, of each Licensed Product invoiced as follows:

 

(A) [XXXXXXXXXX] of that portion of annual worldwide Net Sales that is up to [XXXXXXXXXX] of each Licensed Product in countries in which the manufacture, use, offer for sale, sale, or importation of the Licensed Product would infringe a Licensed Patent in absence of this Restated Agreement;

 

(B) [XXXXXXXXXX] of that portion of annual worldwide Net Sales that is from [XXXXXXXXXX] of each Licensed Product in countries in which the manufacture, use, offer for sale, sale, or importation of the Licensed Product would infringe a Licensed Patent in absence of this Restated Agreement;

 

(C) [XXXXXXXXXX] of that portion of annual worldwide Net Sales that is from [XXXXXXXXXX] of each Licensed Product in countries in which the manufacture, use, offer for sale, sale, or importation of the Licensed Product would infringe a Licensed Patent in absence of this Restated Agreement; and

 

(D) [XXXXXXXXXX] of that portion of annual worldwide Net Sales that is from [XXXXXXXXXX] of each Licensed Product in countries in which the manufacture, use, offer for sale, sale, or importation of the Licensed Product would infringe a Licensed Patent in absence of this Restated Agreement; or

 

(E) In consideration of Purdue’s Know-How, [XXXXXXXXXX] of annual worldwide Net Sales of each Licensed Product in countries in which the manufacture, use, offer for sale, sale, or importation of the Licensed Product would not infringe a Licensed Patent in the absence of this Restated Agreement.

 


[XXXXXXXXX]

REPRESENTS CONFIDENTIAL MATERIAL WHICH HAS BEEN REDACTED AND FILED SEPARATELY WITH THE COMMISSION PURSUANT TO A REQUEST FOR CONFIDENTIAL TREATMENT IN ACCORDANCE WITH RULE 406 UNDER THE SECURITIES ACT OF 1933, AS AMENDED. A COMPLETE VERSION OF THIS SCHEDULE HAS BEEN FILED SEPARATELY WITH THE SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION.

 

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For avoidance of doubt:  (i) only one royalty, at the applicable rate set forth above, shall become due and payable hereunder in connection with the sale of a unit of Licensed Product and (ii) the highest rate payable hereunder shall be [XXXXXXXXXX] of Net Sales.

 

4.5  Other Consideration Received by Marinus .  If Marinus or any of its Associated Companies enters into any agreement with a Third Party (other than an agreement in which a Third Party acquires ownership of more than 50%, including ownership by trusts with substantially the same beneficial interests, of the voting rights, equity rights, or a combination thereof, of Marinus or the power to direct the management of Marinus) and such agreement relates, in whole or in part, to the research, development, Regulatory Approval, or commercialization of Ganaxolone in the Field, Marinus or such Associated Company shall require such Third Party to convey to Purdue (i) [XXXXXXXXXX] of any and all consideration, in whatever form, other than annual running royalties and milestone payments due to Marinus or such Associated Company by or on behalf of such Third Party under such agreement directly to Purdue simultaneously with the conveyance of any such consideration to Marinus or such Associated Company and (ii) [XXXXXXXXXX] of any and all milestone payments, in whatever form, due to Marinus or such Associated Company under such agreement in connection with activities relating to indications that are within the Field but which were not within the Old Field, by or on behalf of such Third Party under such Agreement, directly to Purdue simultaneously with conveyance of any such milestone payment to Marinus or such Associated Company.  For the avoidance of doubt, such consideration shall include all such licensing fees; advances; upfront fees; option fees; license maintenance fees; reimbursement of development costs; the total cash value of any forgiven loans, equity interests, options, or warrants; and tangible and intangible property including licensed or sublicensed tangible or intangible property but shall exclude any payments based on sales of a product, including earned royalties or milestones triggered by the achievement of specified amounts of proceeds from such sales and research and development funding for bona fide research and development activities to be conducted by Marinus in connection with such Third Party agreement (excluding reimbursement for any activities undertaken by Marinus prior to the effective date of the relevant Third Party agreement) to the extent such funding does not exceed the actual cost to Marinus to perform such research and development activities (any such excess amount shall be considered to be a milestone payment for purposes of this Section 4.6).  If such consideration is in a form other than cash, such non-cash consideration shall be valued at its fair market value, and the Third Party shall convey to Purdue, as applicable:  (i) in cash, [XXXXXXXXXX] of such fair market value of such consideration simultaneously with conveyance of the remaining consideration to Marinus or such Associated Company or (ii) in cash, [XXXXXXXXXX] of such fair market value of such consideration simultaneously with conveyance of the remaining milestone payments to Marinus or such Associated Company.  If the fair market value of such non-cash consideration can not be determined by the Parties, the Parties shall jointly select and appoint an independent appraiser to determine the value of such non-cash consideration.  The determination by such independent appraiser shall be binding upon the Parties and the Third Party.

 


[XXXXXXXXX]

REPRESENTS CONFIDENTIAL MATERIAL WHICH HAS BEEN REDACTED AND FILED SEPARATELY WITH THE COMMISSION PURSUANT TO A REQUEST FOR CONFIDENTIAL TREATMENT IN ACCORDANCE WITH RULE 406 UNDER THE SECURITIES ACT OF 1933, AS AMENDED. A COMPLETE VERSION OF THIS SCHEDULE HAS BEEN FILED SEPARATELY WITH THE SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION.

 

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4.6  Expenses .  Except as otherwise expressly set forth herein or in the Agreement to Attempt to Terminate, each Party shall bear its own costs and expenses related to revising the Original Agreement to this Restated Agreement.

 

4.7  Interest on Late Payments .  Any payments by Marinus to Purdue that are not paid on the date such payments are due under this Restated Agreement, if accepted by Purdue, shall bear interest at a rate equal to the lesser of (a) the highest rate allowable under applicable Law, and (b) at one and one half percent (1.5%) per month, calculated on the total number of days that payment is delinquent.

 

4.8  Foreign Currency .  Whenever conversion from any foreign currency shall be required, such conversion shall be at the rate of exchange thereafter published in the Wall Street Journal (New York City edition) for the business day closest to the end of the applicable accounting period.

 

4.9  No Refunds .  All consideration received by Purdue under the Original Agreement and the Attempt Agreement is non-refundable and non-creditable.

 

4.10  Observer Seat .  Purdue or its designee shall have one (1) observer seat on the Board of Directors of Marinus and Associated Company, successor, or assignee of Marinus or any Marinus-related Person in which Purdue has any equity interest as a result of the Original Agreement or this Restated Agreement.  As an observer, Purdue will have the right to attend meetings of the Board of Directors, subject to exclusion from such meetings or portions thereof for attorney/client privilege waiver issues, confidentiality issues, proprietary information issues, and conflict of interest issues applicable to Board observers, and, for avoidance of doubt, Purdue’s observer shall not have the right to vote or the right to receive compensation for Board service.  Marinus shall indemnify, defend, and hold harmless Purdue and its Board Observer from and against any and all claims arising out of such Board Observer’s attendance or participation in any meeting of the Marinus’ Board of Directors, or arising out of such Board Observer’s status as an observer of Marinus’ Board of Directors.  Purdue or Purdue’s Board Observer shall provide prompt notice to Marinus of any claim for which Purdue or Purdue’s Board Observer seek indemnification hereunder.  Marinus shall control the defense of any such claim and shall be permitted to settle any such claim provided that Purdue and Purdue’s Board Observer are not obligated to admit any wrongdoing and that they receive a full release of claims as part of such settlement.  Purdue and Purdue’s Board Observer reserve the right to participate in Purdue’s defense with counsel of their own choosing at Purdue’s own cost and expense.

 

ARTICLE 5 - DILIGENCE

 

5.1  Diligence .  Marinus (directly and with and through its sublicensees) shall use Commercially Reasonable Efforts to develop and commercialize at least one (1) Licensed Product during the Term of this Restated Agreement.

 

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ARTICLE 6 - REPORTS

 

6.1  Data .  Marinus shall maintain records in sufficient detail and in good scientific manner and as will properly reflect all work done and results achieved in the performance of the activities contemplated by this Restated Agreement (including all data in the form required to be maintained under any applicable governmental regulations).  Such records shall include books, records, reports, research notes, charts, graphs, comments, computations, analyses, recordings, photographs, computer programs and documentation thereof, computer information storage means, samples of materials, and other graphic or written data generated in connection with the activities contemplated by this Restated Agreement.  Upon termination of this Restated Agreement in accordance with Sections 10.6 or 10.7, Purdue shall have the right to inspect such records, and Marinus shall provide copies of all requested records, which shall become Purdue Confidential Information.

 

6.2  Semi-Annual Reports .  Within thirty (30) days following the end of each calendar half during the Term, commencing with the calendar half commencing July 1, 2008, Marinus shall provide to Purdue a written report which shall describe, in reasonable detail, the status of Marinus’s efforts in the preceding calendar half to develop and commercialize Licensed Products and Marinus’s financial efforts, including without limitation information that may be relevant to an assessment of Marinus’s compliance with the diligence requirements of Article 5.

 

ARTICLE 7 - ENFORCEMENT OF LICENSED PATENT RIGHTS

 

7.1  Notification of Third Party Infringement .  Each Party shall promptly notify the other in writing of any claim or evidence of possible Third Party infringement of any Licensed Patents.

 

7.2  First Right to Respond .  If permitted under the University Agreement, Marinus shall have the first right to respond to infringement of the University Licensed Patents by the manufacture, use, offer to sell, sale, or import of a Licensed Product in the Field by a Third Party at Marinus’s own expense and with counsel of Marinus’s choice.  Purdue shall be permitted to retain its own counsel in such a response and Marinus shall reimburse Purdue for all expenses, costs, fees, judgments, and settlements incurred by Purdue in such a response, including, Purdue’s reasonable independent attorney’s fees.

 

7.3  Recovery of Costs .  If Marinus recovers monetary damages from a Third Party in connection with any action described in Section 7.2, and after RU and USC are reimbursed for costs and expenses and such damages are paid to RU and USC as provided in the University Agreement, such damages shall be applied in the following manner:  (i) first, Marinus and Purdue shall be reimbursed, on a pro rata basis, for all costs and expenses incurred by them, including, each Party’s reasonable independent attorney’s fees; (ii) second, Marinus and Purdue shall recover, on a pro rata basis all lost profits or reasonable royalties, whichever is appropriate, and (iii) third, any remaining recovery shall be divided equally between Marinus and Purdue.

 

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ARTICLE 8 - CONFIDENTIALITY

 

8.1  Nondisclosure Obligations .  Except as otherwise provided in this Article 8, for a period from the Effective Date to the later of:  (a) ten (10) years after the Effective Date or (b) two (2) years after expiration or termination of this Restated Agreement, the Parties shall maintain in confidence and use only for purposes specifically authorized under this Restated Agreement, Confidential Information of the other Party.  To the extent it is reasonably necessary or appropriate to fulfill its obligations or exercise its rights under this Restated Agreement:  (i) a Party may disclose Confidential Information it is otherwise obligated under this Article 8 not to disclose to its Associated Companies, its and their respective officers, directors, employees, sublicensees, consultants, outside contractors, clinical investigators, and other Third Parties, on a need-to-know basis and on the condition that such entities or persons agree to use the Confidential Information only for purposes specifically authorized by this Restated Agreement and keep the Confidential Information confidential for the same time periods and to the same extent as such Party is required to keep the Confidential Information confidential hereunder; and (ii) a Party or its sublicensees may disclose such Confidential Information to government or other regulatory authorities to the extent that such disclosure is reasonably necessary to obtain patents or authorizations to conduct clinical trials or to develop or commercially market Licensed Products, or as otherwise may be required by Law or pursuant to legal or regulatory process; and (iii) a Party or its sublicensees may disclose such Confidential Information to its attorneys, accountants, lenders, insurers, and advisors who are bound by a professional duty of confidentiality.

 

8.2  Assignment of Employees .  Section 8.1 notwithstanding but subject to the patent rights and copyrights of each Party, each Party understands and agrees that its respective employees during the course of performing activities under this Restated Agreement may further develop their knowledge, skill, and experience retained in the unaided memories (that is, not intentionally memorized) of employees, and the subsequent use of such knowledge, skill, and experience in the ordinary course of business does not constitute a breach of this Restated Agreement.  It is understood that receipt of Confidential Information under this Restated Agreement will not limit the recipient Party from assigning its employees to any particular job or task in any way it may choose, subject to this Restated Agreement.

 

8.3  Regulatory Filing of the Agreement .  Marinus further agrees to seek confidential treatment for the filing of this Restated Agreement or any portion thereof with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission and any other applicable regulatory authority or securities exchange (the “Authority”) and to cooperate with Purdue with regard to identifying the terms of this Restated Agreement that are confidential and that are to be redacted in any filing with the Authority.

 

8.4  Nondisclosure of the Agreement .  Except as permitted by the other Sections of this Article 8 or as otherwise required by Law, the Parties each agree not to disclose any terms or conditions of this Restated Agreement to any Third Party without the prior written consent of the other Party; provided that (i) each Party shall be entitled to disclose the terms of this Restated Agreement without such consent to (x) existing and potential investors or other financing sources on the condition that such entities or persons agree in writing to keep such terms confidential for the same time periods and to the same extent as such Party is required to keep such terms

 

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confidential, and that the names of USC, RU, and GHC are redacted from any such disclosure and (y) to its attorneys, accountants and advisors who are bound by a professional duty of confidentiality, (ii) Purdue shall be entitled to disclose the terms of this Restated Agreement without such consent to USC, RU, and Nicholas J. Kerkhof, and (iii) each Party shall be entitled to disclose publicly the existence of a license agreement between the Parties and the identity of the Parties.

 

8.5  Non-Disclosure of Names of USC, RU, and Nicholas J. Kerkhof .  Marinus shall not use the names of USC, RU, or Nicholas J. Kerkhof or of any staff member, officer, employee, or student of any of USC, RU, or Nicholas J. Kerkhof or any adaptation thereof in any advertising, promotional, or sales literature, publicity, or in any document employed to obtain funds or financing.  Marinus shall not use the name of Purdue, or any adaptation thereof, or of any officer, employee or agent of Purdue in any advertising, promotional, sales literature or publicity without Purdue’s prior written consent.

 

8.6  Press Releases .  No public announcement or press release containing the terms of this Restated Agreement shall be made or issued, directly or indirectly, by either Party without first obtaining the prior written approval of the other Party except as otherwise required by law.  The Parties agree that any Party preparing any such press release shall provide the other Party with a draft thereof reasonably in advance of disclosure so as to permit the other Party to review and comment on such press release prior to any dissemination of such release.

 

8.6 Injunctive Relief .  The Parties hereby acknowledge that a breach of their respective obligations in this Article 8 may cause irreparable harm and that the remedy or remedies at law for any such breach may be inadequate.  The Parties hereby agree that, in the event of any such breach, in addition to all other available remedies hereunder, the non-breaching Party shall have the right to obtain equitable relief to enforce the provisions of this Article 8.

 

ARTICLE 9 - REPRESENTATIONS, WARRANTIES, DISCLAIMERS, LIABILITY

 

9.1  Marinus’s Representations and Warranties .  Marinus represents and warrants, that:

 

(A) Marinus is a corporation duly organized, validly existing, and in good standing under the laws of the State of Delaware;

 

(B) Marinus has the legal right, authority, and power to enter into this Restated Agreement;

 

(C) Marinus has taken all necessary action to authorize the execution, delivery, and performance of this Restated Agreement;

 

(D) upon the execution and delivery of this Restated Agreement, this Restated Agreement shall constitute a valid and binding obligation of Marinus, enforceable in accordance with its terms;

 

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(E) the performance of Marinus’s obligations under this Restated Agreement will not conflict with its certificate of incorporation, as amended, or by-laws, or result in a breach of any agreements, contracts, or other arrangements to which it is a party;

 

(F) Marinus has not and will not during the term of this Restated Agreement enter into any agreements, contracts, or other arrangements that will be inconsistent with its obligations under this Restated Agreement;

 

(G) this Restated Agreement is fully binding and enforceable in accordance with its terms;

 

(H) Marinus has not breached and is not in breach of any of the provisions of the Original Agreement as of the Restatement Effective Date; and

 

(I) Marinus’s capitalization table as of the Restatement Effective Date is completely and accurately set forth on Schedule 9.1(I) hereto.

 

9.2  Purdue’s Representations, and Warranties .  Purdue represents and warrants that:

 

(A) Purdue is a limited partnership duly organized, validly existing, and in good standing under the laws of the State of Delaware;

 

(B) Purdue has the legal right, authority, and power to enter into this Restated Agreement;

 

(C) Purdue has taken all necessary partnership action to authorize the execution, delivery, and performance of this Restated Agreement;

 

(D) upon the execution and delivery of this Restated Agreement, this Restated Agreement shall constitute a valid and binding obligation of Purdue, enforceable against Purdue in accordance with its terms;

 

(E) the performance of Purdue’s obligations under this Restated Agreement will not conflict with its organizational documents or result in a breach of any agreements, contracts, or other arrangements to which it is a party;

 

(F) Purdue has not and will not during the term of this Restated Agreement enter into any agreements, contracts or other arrangements that would be inconsistent with its obligations under this Restated Agreement;

 

(G) this Restated Agreement is fully binding and enforceable in accordance with its terms;

 

(H) Purdue and its Associated Companies will not, directly or indirectly, develop, including have developed or sublicense, Ganaxolone for any uses during any unexpired or non-terminated term of this Restated Agreement;

 

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(I) Purdue and its Associated Companies will not prevent, directly or indirectly, Marinus from manufacturing Ganaxolone;

 

(J) As of the Restatement Effective Date, Purdue is not in breach of the University Agreement or this Restated Agreement; and

 

(K) If Purdue agrees to any amendment of the University Agreement that increases any obligation of Marinus under this Restated Agreement, Marinus’s obligations under such amendment will survive only to the extent of Marinus’s obligation under the pre-amendment University Agreement, and Purdue will bear any increase in such obligation due to such amendment.

 

Purdue further represents that, as of the Effective Date and to the best of Purdue’s knowledge, Purdue knows of no Purdue-owned (including intellectual property owned by Purdue’s Associated Companies but to the exclusion of intellectual property to which Purdue or its Associated Companies have rights other than through ownership) intellectual property, other than such Purdue-owned intellectual property licensed herein, that will be infringed by Marinus’s manufacture, use, offer for sale, sale, or importation of the Licensed Product in the Field in the Territory.  If such other Purdue-owned intellectual property exists, such other Purdue-owned intellectual property is and will be considered as having been licensed in this Restated Agreement at no additional cost to Marinus.  If such other Purdue-Associated Company owned intellectual property exists, Purdue shall use its best efforts to have such other Purdue-Associated Company owned intellectual property licensed to Marinus under terms and conditions similar to those of this Restated Agreement, but at no additional cost to Marinus.

 

9.3  WARRANTY DISCLAIMER; EXCLUSION OF DAMAGES .  EXCEPT AS EXPRESSLY SET FORTH IN THIS RESTATED AGREEMENT, PURDUE MAKES NO REPRESENTATIONS AND EXTENDS NO WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EITHER EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE WITH RESPECT TO THE LICENSED PATENTS OR ANY LICENSE OR SUBLICENSE GRANTED BY PURDUE HEREUNDER, OR ANY MATERIALS OR INFORMATION PROVIDED TO MARINUS UNDER THIS RESTATED AGREEMENT, OR WITH RESPECT TO ANY PRODUCTS OR SERVICES OF MARINUS OR ITS ASSOCIATED COMPANIES.  FURTHERMORE, NOTHING IN THIS RESTATED AGREEMENT SHALL BE CONSTRUED AS A WARRANTY THAT ANY PATENT OR OTHER PROPRIETARY RIGHTS INCLUDED IN THE LICENSED PATENTS ARE VALID OR ENFORCEABLE OR THAT USE BY MARINUS OR ITS ASSOCIATED COMPANIES OF THE LICENSED PATENTS OR ANY OTHER RIGHTS LICENSED OR SUBLICENSED HEREIN, OR ANY MATERIALS OR INFORMATION PROVIDED TO MARINUS UNDER THIS RESTATED AGREEMENT, DOES NOT INFRINGE ANY PATENT RIGHTS OR OTHER INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY RIGHTS OF ANY THIRD PARTY.

 

ANY MATERIAL THAT HAS BEEN PROVIDED TO MARINUS UNDER THE ORIGINAL AGREEMENT WAS PROVIDED ON AN “AS IS” BASIS, WITHOUT ANY WARRANTIES, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING ANY WARRANTY OF MERCHANTABILITY OR

 

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FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.  FURTHERMORE, NOTHING IN THIS RESTATED AGREEMENT SHALL BE CONSTRUED AS A WARRANTY THAT ANY MATERIAL TRANSFERRED TO MARINUS UNDER THE ORIGINAL AGREEMENT DOES NOT INFRINGE ANY PATENT RIGHTS OR OTHER INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY RIGHTS OF ANY THIRD PARTY.

 

WITHOUT LIMITING THE PARTIES’ OBLIGATIONS UNDER ARTICLES 9.4, 9.5 AND 9.10 REGARDING INDEMNIFICATION AND INSURANCE, NEITHER PARTY SHALL BE LIABLE TO THE OTHER PARTY FOR SPECIAL, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, PUNITIVE OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING WITHOUT LIMITATION, DAMAGES RESULTING FROM LOSS OF USE, LOSS OF PROFITS, INTERRUPTION OR LOSS OF BUSINESS OR OTHER ECONOMIC LOSS) ARISING OUT OF THIS RESTATED AGREEMENT OR WITH RESPECT TO A PARTY’S PERFORMANCE OR NON-PERFORMANCE HEREUNDER.

 

The foregoing exclusion of damages (i) applies even if a Party had or should have had knowledge, actual or constructive, of the possibility of such damages, (ii) is a fundamental element of the basis of the bargain between the Parties and this Restated Agreement would not be entered into without such limitations and exclusions, and (iii) shall apply whether a claim is based on breach of contract, breach of warranty, tort (including negligence), product liability, strict liability or otherwise, and notwithstanding any failure of essential purpose of any limited remedy herein.  The foregoing exclusion of damages is intended to apply even if there is a total and fundamental breach of this Restated Agreement.  The essential purpose of the exclusion of damages clause is to limit the Parties’ respective liabilities to each other hereunder.

 

9.4  Liability .  Marinus shall bear all risk and responsibility and liability for all of its acts or omissions in exercising its rights and its use of any materials or information transferred to Marinus under the Original Agreement or this Restated Agreement and shall hold Purdue, any of its Associated Companies, and their respective officers, directors, employees, agents, representatives, distributors, salespersons, customers, licensees, and/or end-users harmless from and against any and all claims, demands, losses, costs, expenses (including reasonable attorney’s fees), damages and judgments whatsoever, arising out of or resulting from acts or omissions of Marinus or its Associated Companies in connection with the exercise of its rights or its use of any materials or information transferred to Marinus under the Original Agreement or this Restated Agreement.  Purdue, any of its Associated Companies, and their respective officers, directors, employees, agents, representatives, distributors, salespersons, customers, licensees, and/or end-users shall not be liable to Marinus or its Associated Companies because of the infringement of any patent rights of any Third Party by Marinus or its Associated Companies in the exercise of any rights granted in the Original Agreement or this Restated Agreement or the use of any materials or information transferred to Marinus by Purdue.

 

9.5  Indemnification .  Marinus hereby agrees to defend, indemnify and hold Purdue, any of its Associated Companies, and their respective officers, directors, employees, agents, representatives, distributors, salespersons, customers, licensees, and/or end-users (each an “ Indemnitee ”) harmless from and against any Third Party or Marinus-Associated Company loss, claim, damage, or liability resulting, in whole or in part, directly or indirectly, from this Restated Agreement, Licensed Products, the Purdue Material, any activities contemplated by this Restated

 

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Agreement, or any information transferred under this Restated Agreement, except to the extent such Third Party or Marinus-Associated Company loss, claim, damage or liability is the direct and sole result of Purdue’s breach of this Restated Agreement or is caused directly and solely by an Indemnitee’s gross negligence.

 

9.6  Indemnification Procedure .  If an Indemnitee intends to claim indemnification under this Article 9, the Indemnitee shall promptly notify Marinus of any loss, claim, damage, liability or action in respect of which the Indemnitee intends to claim such indemnification, and Marinus shall assume the sole defense thereof with counsel selected by Marinus; provided , however , that an Indemnitee shall have the right to retain its own counsel, with the fees and expenses to be paid by the Indemnitee.  The failure or delay to deliver notice to Marinus within a reasonable time after the commencement of any such action, if irreparably prejudicial to Marinus’s ability to defend such action, shall relieve Marinus of any liability to the Indemnitee under this Article 9 to the extent that is directly attributable in its entirety to such failure or delay, but the omission to deliver notice to Marinus will not relieve Marinus of any liability that Marinus may have to any Indemnitee otherwise.  The Indemnitee(s) shall cooperate fully with Marinus and its legal representatives in the investigation of any loss, action, claim, damage, or liability covered by this indemnification.

 

9.7  Exports .  Marinus acknowledges that Marinus’s export of technical data, materials, or products is subject to Marinus’s receiving any necessary export licenses and that Purdue cannot be responsible for any delays attributable to export controls.  Marinus agrees not to export or re-export, directly or indirectly, any information, technical data, the direct product of such data, samples or equipment received or generated under this Restated Agreement in violation of any applicable export control laws or governmental regulations.  Marinus agrees to obtain similar covenants from its sublicensees and contractors with respect to the subject matter of this Section 9.7.

 

9.8  Compliance with Law .  Each Party shall comply, and shall require its Associated Companies and sublicensees to comply, with all applicable laws and regulations relative to its obligations hereunder.

 

9.9  Broker’s Fees .  Neither Party has incurred or agreed to pay any broker’s commission or finder’s fee relating to or in connection with the transactions contemplated by this Restated Agreement.

 

9.10  Insurance .  For as long as Marinus manufactures, uses, offers to sell, sells, or imports a Licensed Product, and thereafter for so long as Marinus maintains insurance for itself covering such manufacture, use, offers for sale, sales, or importation, Marinus shall maintain at its own cost with a reputable insurance company or companies, product liability and commercial general liability insurance covering the development, manufacture, use, offer for sale, sale, and import of Licensed Products, in amounts at least as high as Marinus will customarily maintain with respect to sales of its other comparable products, in no event for an amount less than five million dollars ($5,000,000.00) per occurrence and ten million dollars ($10,000,000.00) annual aggregate.  Upon execution of this Restated Agreement and annually thereafter upon insurance renewals, Marinus will furnish Purdue with a certificate(s) from an insurance carrier showing all insurance

 

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set forth above and naming Purdue, its Associated Companies, USC, and RU as additional insureds.

 

ARTICLE 10 - TERM AND TERMINATION

 

10.1  Date of Accrual of Rights .  Unless stated expressly stated otherwise in this Restated Agreement, all rights and obligations of a Party in this Restated Agreement have accrued as of the Effective Date.

 

10.2  Diligence .  If Marinus does not meet its obligations under Section 5.1, Purdue may terminate the Agreement.

 

10.3  License Term .  The Licenses granted by this Restated Agreement, unless terminated earlier, shall expire at the end of the Term, subject to Section 10.6(A).

 

10.4  Termination by Purdue .

 

(A)    Financial .  Purdue shall have the right to terminate this Restated Agreement immediately, at Purdue’s sole discretion, if Marinus (i) applies for or consents to the appointment of a receiver, trustee, liquidator or custodian on behalf of itself or for all or a substantial part of its property, (ii) becomes unable, or admits in writing its inability, to pay its debts generally as they mature, (iii) makes a general assignment for the benefit of its creditors, (iv) is dissolved or liquidated in full or in part, (v) commences a voluntary case or other proceeding seeking liquidation, reorganization or other relief with respect to itself or its debts under any bankruptcy, insolvency or other similar law now or hereafter in effect or consents to any such relief or to the appointment of or taking possession of its property by any official in an involuntary case or other proceeding commenced against it, (vi) takes any action for the purpose of effecting any of the foregoing, or (vii) becomes the subject of an involuntary case or other proceeding seeking liquidation, reorganization or other relief with respect to itself or its debts under any bankruptcy, insolvency or other similar law now or hereafter in effect that is not dismissed within ninety (90) calendar days of commencement.

 

(B)    Breach and Cure .  Purdue shall also have the right to terminate this Restated Agreement, at Purdue’s sole discretion, upon Marinus’ receipt of thirty (30) days written notice in the event that any provision of this Restated Agreement, other than the provisions of Sections 4.1(A), 4.2, 4.4, and 10.4(A), shall have been breached by Marinus and in the event that Marinus shall have failed to remedy such breach within such thirty (30) day notice period, or if such breach cannot be cured within such thirty (30) day notice period, Marinus has failed to take such steps to cure such breach to be completed within an additional thirty (30) days.  Any notice served by Purdue pursuant to this Section 10.4(B) shall specify the nature of the breach and the recommended remedy by Marinus.

 

(C)    Breach - No Cure Available .  Purdue shall also have the right to terminate this Restated Agreement, at Purdue’s sole discretion, immediately in the event that any provision of Sections 4.1(A), 4.2, 4.4, and 10.4(A) shall have been breached by Marinus.

 

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Such breach shall not be subject to cure unless otherwise expressly provided for in the respective Section of this Restated Agreement.

 

(D)    Termination with Respect to a Specific Licensed Product .  Notwithstanding any of the preceding Sections of this Article 10, if there is a breach by Marinus which relates primarily to a specific Licensed Product, and if such breach is amenable to cure under Section 10.4(B), and Marinus has failed to take steps to cure, and is not cured as set forth in Section 10.4(B) with respect to such specific Licensed Product or such breach is not amenable to cure under Section 10.4(B), Purdue, at its sole discretion, may terminate this Restated Agreement with respect only to the specific Licensed Product for which the breach is not or cannot be cured.  This Restated Agreement will thereafter continue in effect for all other Licensed Products.

 

(E)    Effect of Termination by Purdue .  Upon termination by Purdue, all rights, data, information, Know-How, and material licensed or transferred to Marinus under this Restated Agreement will revert to Purdue at no cost to Purdue and with Purdue having no obligations to Marinus.  All rights, data, information, Know-How, material, records, and registrations developed or made by Marinus that relate, in whole or in part, to the activities contemplated by this Restated Agreement or Licensed Product(s) will be transferred to Purdue at no cost to Purdue and with Purdue having no obligations to Marinus.  Purdue shall retain all payments and stock issuances made by Marinus to Purdue.

 

10.5  Cure by Purdue .  Purdue shall have the right to remedy any breach by Purdue of this Restated Agreement.  Marinus shall provide Purdue with notice of any breach by Purdue and Purdue will have thirty (30) days from receipt by Purdue of such notice to remedy such breach.  If such breach cannot be cured within such thirty (30) day period, but Purdue has taken steps to cure such breach, Purdue shall have an additional thirty (30) days to complete such cure.  Any notice served by Marinus pursuant to this Section 10.5 shall specify the nature of the breach and the recommended remedy by Purdue.  If Purdue fails to cure any such curable breach within the applicable cure period, Marinus shall have the right to terminate this Restated Agreement upon the expiration of such cure period.

 

10.6  General Effect of Termination .  In addition to any other rights or obligations upon termination specified in this Restated Agreement:

 

(A)    In the event of termination of this Restated Agreement for any reason, all rights and licenses granted to Marinus hereunder shall terminate and Marinus shall cease all activities licensed in this Restated Agreement.  In the event of expiration of the Term of this Restated Agreement, the licenses granted for Purdue Know-How and the sublicenses granted for University Know-How shall become perpetual and fully paid-up.

 

(B)    Termination or expiration of this Restated Agreement for any reason shall not affect the accrued rights of Purdue or Marinus arising in any way out of the Original Agreement or this Restated Agreement and shall not release either Marinus or Purdue from any liability which, at the time of such termination or expiration, has already accrued to Purdue or Marinus, as applicable, or which is attributable to a period prior to such

 

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termination or expiration, nor preclude Purdue or Marinus, as applicable, from pursuing any rights and remedies it may have hereunder or at law or in equity which accrued or are based upon any event occurring prior to such termination or expiration.

 

10.7  Termination by Marinus and Effect .  Marinus shall have the right to terminate this Agreement without cause on one hundred and eighty (180) days prior written notice to Purdue.  Upon termination by Marinus, all rights, data, information, Know-How, and material licensed or transferred to Marinus under this Restated Agreement will revert to Purdue at no cost to Purdue and with Purdue having no obligations to Marinus.  All rights, data, information, Know-How, material, records, inventions, applications including applications for regulatory or marketing approval, approvals including regulatory or marketing approvals, and registrations including registrations for regulatory or marketing approval, developed or made by Marinus that relate, in whole or in part, to the activities contemplated by this Restated Agreement or Licensed Product(s) will be transferred to Purdue at no cost to Purdue and with Purdue having no obligations to Marinus.  Marinus shall also permit Purdue access to and grant Purdue the right to reference and use, in association with any materials or products transferred to Marinus under this Restated Agreement or Licensed Products developed or made by Marinus that relate, in whole or in part, to the activities contemplated by this Restated Agreement, all data, regulatory filings, and regulatory communications associated with any submissions for regulatory or marketing approval or other issues associated with such materials or products, that is or would be relevant to the development or commercialization of a Licensed Product in the Territory.  To the extent that any such data, applications, approvals, or communications are held by a Third Party, then Marinus shall endeavor to arrange direct access to the portions thereof that are relevant to the activities described in this Section.  Additionally, Marinus shall, at Purdue’s sole option and at no cost to Purdue, transfer to Purdue, without Purdue assuming any responsibility or obligations accruing before such transfer, any licenses, contracts, covenants, or agreements between Marinus and any Third Party relating, in whole or in part, to the development or commercialization of a Licensed Product in the Territory.  Furthermore, Purdue shall retain all payments and stock issuances made by Marinus to Purdue.

 

10.8  Survival .  The expiration or termination of this Restated Agreement shall not affect any rights or obligations of either Party to the extent that such obligations or rights have accrued or matured prior to expiration or termination.  Articles 3, 8, and 11 and Sections 4.2, 4.5-4.9, 9.1, 9.2(A)-(H), 9.3, 9.4, 9.5, 9.6, 9.10, 10.6, 10.7, 12.4, 12.6, and 12.10 of this Restated Agreement shall survive the termination or expiration of this Restated Agreement.

 

ARTICLE 11 - DISPUTE RESOLUTION

 

11.1  Negotiation .  The Parties hereby agree that they will attempt in good faith to resolve promptly by negotiations, any controversy or claim between the Parties arising out of or relating to this Restated Agreement.  If a controversy or claim should arise hereunder, the matter shall be referred to a senior executive of Marinus and a senior executive of Purdue (the “Representatives”).  If the matter has not been resolved within fifteen (15) days of the referral to the Representatives, subject to rights to injunctive relief and specific performance, and unless otherwise specifically provided for herein, any controversy or claim arising out of or relating to

 

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this Restated Agreement, or the breach thereof, may be brought in a court of competent jurisdiction as specified in Section 11.3.

 

11.2  Governing Law .  The validity, construction, and interpretation of this Restated Agreement and any determination of the performance which this Restated Agreement requires will be governed by and construed in accordance with the laws of the State of Delaware applicable to contracts made and performed wholly within the State of Delaware.

 

11.3  Jurisdiction .  Each Party hereby irrevocably and unconditionally submits, for itself and its property, to the non-exclusive jurisdiction of any Delaware State or Federal court sitting in New Castle County, Delaware and any appellate court from any thereof; in any suit, action, or proceeding arising out of or relating to this Restated Agreement, or for recognition or enforcement of any judgment, and each of the Parties hereto hereby irrevocably and unconditionally agrees that all claims in respect of any such action or proceeding may be heard and determined in such Delaware State court, or, to the extent permitted by law, in such Federal court.  Each of the Parties hereto agrees that a final judgment in any such action or proceeding shall be conclusive and may be enforced in other jurisdictions by suit on the judgment or in any other manner provided by law.

 

11.4  Venue .  Each of the Parties hereby irrevocably and unconditionally waives, to the fullest extent it may legally and effectively do so, any objection which it may now or hereafter have to the laying of venue of any suit, action or proceeding arising out of or relating to this Restated Agreement in any court referred to in Section 11.3.

 

11.5  Inconvenient Forum .  Each of the Parties hereby irrevocably waives, to the fullest extent it may legally and effectively do so, the defense of an inconvenient forum to the maintenance of such suit, action, or proceeding in any such court, and agrees not to plead the same, and agrees that nothing herein will limit the right to sue in any other jurisdiction if a Delaware State or Federal court of competent jurisdiction sitting in New Castle County, Delaware rules or orders that it will not exercise jurisdiction over any such action or proceeding.

 

11.6  Immunity Waiver .  To the extent that a Party has or hereafter may acquire any immunity from jurisdiction of any court or from any legal process (whether through service of notice, attachment prior to judgment, attachment in aid of execution or execution, on the ground of sovereignty or otherwise) with respect to itself or its property, it hereby irrevocably waives, to the fullest extent it may legally and effectively do so, such immunity in respect of its obligations under this Restated Agreement.

 

11.7  Equitable Relief .  Each of the Parties hereby acknowledges that a breach of their respective obligations under this Restated Agreement may cause irreparable harm and that the remedy or remedies at law for any such breach may be inadequate.  Each of the Parties hereby agrees that, in the event of any such breach, in addition to all other available remedies hereunder, the non-breaching Party shall have the right to obtain equitable relief to enforce the provisions of this Restated Agreement.

 

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ARTICLE 12 - OTHER PROVISIONS

 

12.1  Headings .  Headings and captions of the Articles and Sections hereof are for convenience only and are not to be used in the interpretation of this Restated Agreement.

 

12.2  Assignment .  This Restated Agreement may not be assigned or transferred (by operation of law or otherwise), in whole or in part, by Marinus without prior written consent of Purdue; provided , however , that in the event that Marinus requests consent to an assignment of this Restated Agreement, or any part of its rights hereunder, and to delegate its obligations or any part thereof hereunder, to any successor in interest by reason of any merger, acquisition, sale of all or substantially all of its assets, sale of stock, partnership, or corporate reorganization Purdue shall grant such consent if such successor in interest meets all of the requirements for an assignee or sublicensee under the University Agreement, including (a) complying with any net worth requirements as may be required under the University Agreement, (b) complying with any notice requirements of any assignment or sublicense under the University Agreement, (c) agreeing to indemnify licensor to the same extent provided for in the University Agreement, and (d) agreeing to maintain insurance coverage to the same extent provided for in the University Agreement.  Any permitted assignee or sublicensee of Marinus hereunder will succeed to such rights, and will assume such obligations, of Marinus under this Restated Agreement as fully and to the same extent as if the assignee, instead of Marinus, were the original party to this Restated Agreement with respect to such rights and obligations.  Purdue will have the right, without the consent of Marinus, to assign this Restated Agreement, or any part of its rights hereunder, and to delegate its obligations or any part thereof hereunder, to (i) any Associated Company of Purdue, (ii) any successor in interest by reason of any merger, acquisition, sale of all or substantially all of its assets, sale of stock, partnership, license agreement or corporate reorganization, or (iii) any other Third Party, whereupon the assignee will succeed to such rights, and will assume such obligations, of Purdue under this Restated Agreement as fully and to the same extent as if the assignee, instead of Purdue, were the original party to this Restated Agreement with respect to such rights and obligations.  Any assignment or attempted assignment in contravention of the provisions of this Section 12.2 shall be null and void.

 

12.3  Notices .  Any notice or other communication pursuant to this Restated Agreement shall be sufficiently made or given on the date of mailing if sent to such party by facsimile, with confirmation of transmission, on such date, with paper copy being sent by certified first class mail, postage prepaid, or by next day express delivery service, addressed to it at its address below (or such address as it shall designate by written notice given to the other party).

 

If to Marinus:

 

Marinus Pharmaceuticals, Inc.
21 Business Park Drive
Branford, CT  06405
Attn:  President

 

With a copy to:

 

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Goodwin Procter, LLP.
53 State Street
Boston, MA  02109
Attn:  Stuart Cable, Esq.

 

If to Purdue:

 

Purdue Pharma L.P.
One Stamford Forum
Stamford, CT  06901-3431
Attn:  General Counsel

 

With a copy to:

 

Chadbourne & Parke LLP
30 Rockefeller Plaza
New York, New York  10112
Attn:  Stuart D. Baker, Esq.

 

12.4  Agreement not to Solicit Employees .  During the unexpired or non-terminated term of this Restated Agreement and for a period of two (2) years thereafter, each Party agrees not to seek to persuade or induce any employee of the other Party to discontinue his or her employment with his or her employer in order to become employed by such Party or its Associated Companies, without the present employing Party’s consent.

 

12.5  Force Majeure .  Neither Party shall be held liable or responsible to the other Party nor be deemed to have defaulted under or breached this Restated Agreement for failure or delay in fulfilling or performing any term of this Restated Agreement when such failure or delay is caused by or results from causes beyond the reasonable control of the affected Party, including without limitation, fire, floods, embargoes, war, acts of war (whether war is declared or not), insurrections, riots, civil commotions, strikes, lockouts or other labor disturbances, acts of God or acts, omissions or delays in acting by any governmental authority or the other Party; provided , however , that the Party so affected shall use commercially reasonable and diligent efforts to avoid or remove such causes of non-performance, and shall continue performance hereunder with reasonable dispatch wherever such causes are removed.  Each Party shall provide the other Parties with prompt written notice of any delay or failure to perform that occurs by reason of force majeure .  The Parties shall mutually seek a resolution of the delay or the failure to perform in good faith.

 

12.6  Waivers and Modifications .  The failure of any Party to insist on the performance of any obligation hereunder shall not be deemed to be a waiver of such obligation.  Waiver of any breach of any provision hereof shall not be deemed to be a waiver of any other breach of such provision or any other provision.  No waiver, modification, release or amendment of any obligation under or provision of this Restated Agreement shall be valid or effective unless in writing and signed by both Parties hereto.

 

12.7  Relationship of the Parties .  It is expressly agreed that the relationship between Marinus and Purdue shall not constitute a partnership, joint venture or agency.  Marinus and Purdue are

 

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independent contractors.  Neither Marinus nor Purdue shall have the authority to make any statements, representations or commitments of any kind, or to take any action, which shall be binding on the other, without the prior consent of the other Party to do so.

 

12.8  Counterparts .  This Restated Agreement may be executed in counterparts with the same effect as if both Parties had signed the same document.  All such counterparts shall be deemed an original, shall be construed together and shall constitute one and the same instrument.

 

12.9  Severability .  In performing this Restated Agreement, the Parties shall comply with all applicable laws.  Wherever there is any conflict between any provision of this Restated Agreement and any law, the law shall prevail, but in such event the affected provision of this Restated Agreement shall be limited or eliminated only to the extent necessary, and the remainder of this Restated Agreement shall remain in full force and effect.  In the event the terms of this Restated Agreement are materially altered as a result of the foregoing, the parties shall renegotiate in good faith the terms of this Restated Agreement to resolve any inequities.

 

12.10  Entire Agreement .  This Restated Agreement constitutes the entire agreement between the parties with respect to the subject matter hereof, and supersedes any and all oral and/or written communications or understandings relating to the subject matter hereof.

 

[SIGNATURE PAGE FOLLOWS NEXT]

 

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IN WITNESS WHEREOF, the parties have caused their duly authorized officers to execute and deliver this License Agreement as of the Restatement Effective Date.

 

MARINUS PHARMACEUTICALS, INC.

 

 

 

 

 

By:

/s/ Stephen Bloch, M.D

 

 

Name:

Stephen Bloch, M.D

 

 

 

 

 

 

Title:

Chairman

 

 

 

 

 

PURDUE NEUROSCIENCE COMPANY 

 

 

 

by a general partner, Purdue Pharma, L.P.

 

by its general partner, Purdue Pharma Inc.

 

 

 

 

 

By:

/s/ James J. Dolan

 

 

Name:

James J. Dolan

 

 

 

 

 

 

Title:

Senior Vice-President

 

 

[Signature Page to Amended and Restated Agreement]

 




Exhibit 23.2

 

Consent of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm

 

The Board of Directors

Marinus Pharmaceuticals, Inc.:

 

We consent to the use of our report included herein and to the reference to our firm under the heading “Experts” in the prospectus.

 

/s/ KPMG LLP

 

Philadelphia, Pennsylvania

May 12, 2014