Attached files
file |
filename |
S-1 - REGISTRATION STATEMENT ON FORM S1 - Signal Advance Inc | RS_S1_SAI.txt |
EX-10 - PROMISSORY NOTE - Signal Advance Inc | EX-10.2_Promissory_Note.txt |
EX-10 - LEASE AGREEMENT - Signal Advance Inc | EX-10.1_Lease_Agrmt.txt |
EX-10 - INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY ASSIGNMENT - Signal Advance Inc | EX-10.4_IP_Assignment.txt |
EX-10 - CONSULTING AGREEMENT - Signal Advance Inc | EX-10.3_Consulting_Agreement.txt |
EX-23 - CONSENT - AUDITOR, BOBBY J HUTTON - Signal Advance Inc | EX-23.1_Consent_Auditor.txt |
EX-14 - CODE OF ETHICS - Signal Advance Inc | EX-14.1_Code_of_Ethics.txt |
EX-23 - CONSENT - ATTORNEY, RICHARD C SELTZER - Signal Advance Inc | EX-23.2_Consent_Atty.txt |
EX-23 - CONSENT - CONSULTANT, DR RUSSELL - Signal Advance Inc | EX-23.3_Consent_Consultant.txt |
EX-23 - CONSENT - PATENT ATTORNEY, DAVID HENRY - Signal Advance Inc | EX-23.4_Consent_Patent_Atty.txt |
EX-3 - ARTICLES OF INCORPORATION - JUL02 - Signal Advance Inc | EX-3.1_Art_of_Inc_JUL_92.txt |
EX-3 - ARTICLES OF AMENDMENT - SEP04 - Signal Advance Inc | EX-3.2_Art_of_Amend_SEP_04.txt |
EX-3 - ARTICLES OF AMENDMENT - JUL05 - Signal Advance Inc | EX-3.3_Art_of_Amend_JUL_05.txt |
EX-3 - ARTICLES OF AMENDMENT - JUN07 - Signal Advance Inc | EX-3.4_Art_of_Amend_JUN_07.txt |
EX-3 - CORPORATE BYLAWS - Signal Advance Inc | EX-3.6_Bylaws_of_Registrant.txt |
EX-99 - EXPERT OPINION, DAVID HENRY - Signal Advance Inc | EX-99.1_Opinion_DG_Henry.txt |
EX-99 - EXPERT OPINION, DR RUSSELL - Signal Advance Inc | EX-99.2_Opinion_H_Russell.txt |
EX-99 - LETTER OF COLLABORATION - DR MICHELETTI - Signal Advance Inc | EX-99.3_Collab_UTMB_Health.txt |
EX-99 - LETTER OF COLLABORATION - DR SINENCIO- SANCHEZ - Signal Advance Inc | EX-99.4_Collab_TAMU_ECE.txt |
EX-99 - LETTER OF COLLABORATION - DR SHIH - Signal Advance Inc | EX-99.5_Collab_Dr_Shih.txt |
EX-3 - ARTICLES OF AMENDMENT - JUL11 - Signal Advance Inc | EX-3.5_Art_of_Amend_JUL_11.txt |
EX-99 - 5TH DRAFT - CONFIDENTIAL DRAFT REGISTRATION STATEMENT ON FORM S1 FOR SIGNAL ADVANCE, INC. WITH EXHIBITS - Signal Advance Inc | EX-99.10_5th_Draft_Reg_Stmt.txt |
EX-99 - 2ND DRAFT - CONFIDENTIAL DRAFT REGISTRATION STATEMENT ON FORM S1 FOR SIGNAL ADVANCE, INC. WITH EXHIBITS - Signal Advance Inc | EX-99.7_2nd_Draft_Reg_Stmt.txt |
EX-99 - 3RD DRAFT - CONFIDENTIAL DRAFT REGISTRATION STATEMENT ON FORM S1 FOR SIGNAL ADVANCE, INC. WITH EXHIBITS - Signal Advance Inc | EX-99.8_3rd_Draft_Reg_Stmt.txt |
EX-99 - 4TH DRAFT - CONFIDENTIAL DRAFT REGISTRATION STATEMENT ON FORM S1 FOR SIGNAL ADVANCE, INC. WITH EXHIBITS - Signal Advance Inc | EX-99.9_4th_Draft_Reg_Stmt.txt |
EX-99 - 6TH DRAFT - CONFIDENTIAL DRAFT REGISTRATION STATEMENT ON FORM S1 FOR SIGNAL ADVANCE, INC. WITH EXHIBITS - Signal Advance Inc | EX-99.11_6th_Draft_Reg_Stmt.txt |
EX-5 - LEGAL OPINION - VALIDITY OF STOCK - RICHARD C SELTZER - Signal Advance Inc | EX-5.1_Legal_Opinion_Stock.txt |
EXHIBIT 99.6 - First Confidential Draft Registration Statament on Form S-1
with Exhibits
As filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission on xxxx
Registration No. xxxx
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UNITED STATES SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
Washington, D.C. 20549
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
FORM S-1
REGISTRATION STATEMENT UNDER THE SECURITIES ACT OF 1933
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SIGNAL ADVANCE, INC.
(Exact name of registrant as specified in its charter)
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Texas 8731 76-0373052
(State or other Jurisdiction (Primary Standard (I.R.S. Employer
of incorporation or Industrial Classification Identification No.)
Organization) Code Number)
2520 County Road 81
Rosharon, Texas 77583
(713) 510-7445
(Address, including zip code, and telephone number, including area code,
of the registrant's principal executive offices)
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Chris Hymel
President
Signal Advance, Inc.
2520 County Road 81
Rosharon, Texas 77583
(713) 510-7445
(Name, address, including zip code, and telephone number, including area code,
of agent for service)
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Copy to:
Law Offices of Richard C. Seltzer,
Attorney at Law
2211 Norfolk, Suite 400
Houston, Texas 77098
(713) 522-7333
Approximate date of commencement of proposed sale to the public:
From time to time after this Registration Statement becomes effective.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
1
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, check the following box.[X]
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 registra-
tion statement for the same offering.[ ]
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 regis-
tration statement number of the earlier effective registration statement for the
same offering.[ ]
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 regis-
tration statement number of the earlier effective registration statement for the
same offering.[ ]
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
definitions of "large accelerated filer," "accelerated filer," and "smaller
reporting company" in Rule 12b-2 of the Exchange Act:
Large accelerated Filer [ ] Accelerated Filer [ ]
Non-accelerated Filer [ ] Smaller reporting company [X]
(Do not check if a smaller reporting company)
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CALCULATION OF REGISTRATION FEE
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Title of Each Class Amount to be Proposed Maximum Proposed Maximum Amount of
of Securities to be Registered Offering price Aggregate Offer- Registration
Registered (1) Per Share ing Price (2) Fee(2)
------------------- ------------ ---------------- ---------------- ------------
Common Stock 1,648,044 $2.00 $3,296,088 $377.73
no par value
Total $3,296,088 $377.73
(1) This is an initial offering and no current trading market exists for the
company's common stock.
(2) The registrant has valued the common stock in good faith and for purposes of
calculating the registration fee pursuant to Rule 457.
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 SECURI-
TIES ACT OF 1933 OR UNTIL THE REGISTRATION STATEMENT SHALL BECOME EFFECTIVE ON
SUCH DATE AS THE SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION, ACTING PURSUANT TO SUCH
SECTION 8(A), MAY DETERMINE.
2
CAUTIONARY STATEMENTS ABOUT FORWARD-LOOKING STATEMENTS
There are statements in this registration statement that are not historical
facts. These "forward-looking statements" can be identified by use of termino-
logy such as "believe," "hope," "may," "anticipate," "should," "intend," "plan,"
"will," "expect," "estimate," "project," "positioned," "strategy" and similar
expressions. You should be aware that these forward-looking statements are sub-
ject to risks and uncertainties that are beyond our control. For a discussion of
these risks, you should read this entire Registration Statement carefully,
especially the risks discussed under "Risk Factors."
Although management believes that the assumptions underlying the forward looking
statements included in this Registration Statement are reasonable, they do not
guarantee our future performance, and actual results could differ from those
contemplated by these forward looking statements. The assumptions used for
purposes of the forward-looking statements specified in the following
information represent estimates of future events and are subject to uncertainty
as to possible changes in economic, legislative, industry, and other circum-
stances. As a result, the identification and interpretation of data and other
information and their use in developing and selecting assumptions from and among
reasonable alternatives require the exercise of judgment.
To the extent that the assumed events do not occur, the outcome may vary sub-
stantially from anticipated or projected results, and, accordingly, no opinion
is expressed on the achievability of those forward-looking statements. In the
light of these risks and uncertainties, there can be no assurance that the
results and events contemplated by the forward-looking statements contained in
this Registration Statement will in fact transpire. You are cautioned not to
place undue reliance on these forward-looking statements, which speak only as of
their dates. We do not undertake any obligation to update or revise any forward-
looking statements.
All dealers that effect transactions in these securities, whether or not parti-
cipating in this offering, may be required to deliver a prospectus. This is in
addition to the dealers' obligation to deliver a prospectus when acting as
underwriters and with respect to their unsold allotments or subscriptions.
3
Part 1 - Information Required in Prospectus
THE INFORMATION IN THIS PROSPECTUS IS NOT COMPLETE AND MAY BE CHANGED. THE SELl-
ING SHAREHOLDERS NAMED IN THIS PROSPECTUS MAY NOT SELL THESE SECURITIES UNTIL
THE REGISTRATION STATEMENT FILED WITH THE SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION IS
EFFECTIVE. THIS PROSPECTUS IS NOT AN OFFER TO SELL THESE SECURITIES AND NEITHER
WE NOR THE SELLING SHAREHOLDERS NAMED IN THIS PROSPECTUS ARE SOLICITING OFFERS
TO BUY THESE SECURITIES IN ANY JURISDICTION WHERE THE OFFER OR SALE IS NOT
PERMITTED.
SIGNAL ADVANCE, INC.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
1,648,044 Shares of Common Stock
$2.00 per Share
This prospectus relates to the offering and resale by the selling shareholders
identified herein of up to 1,648.044 shares of common stock, no par value. These
shares were privately issued to the selling shareholders in connection with
private placements or privately negotiated transactions. The company will not
receive any proceeds from the sale of these shares by the selling shareholders.
The selling shareholders may sell the shares as set forth herein under "Plan of
Distribution."
Signal Advance, Inc. qualifies as an Emerging Growth Company. There is not
currently, and there has never been, any market for any of the company's
securities. The securities are not currently eligible for trading on any
national securities exchange, NASDAQ or any over-the-counter markets, including
the OTC Bulletin Board, and the company cannot assure you that they will become
eligible. In connection with this offering, the Company has arranged for a
registered broker-dealer to apply to have our common stock quoted on the OTC
Bulletin Board. Until such time as our common stock is quoted on the OTC
Bulletin Board or another public trading market otherwise develops, the selling
shareholders identified herein may only sell their shares of our common stock
pursuant to this prospectus at a fixed price of $2.00. At and after such time,
the selling shareholders may sell all or a portion of their shares through
public or private transactions at prevailing market prices or at privately
negotiated prices.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Investing in our common stock involves a high degree of risk.
See 'Risk Factors' beginning on page 10.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Neither the Securities and Exchange Commission nor any state securities
commission has approved or disapproved these securities or determined if this
prospectus is truthful or complete. Any representation to the contrary is a
criminal offense.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
The date of this prospectus is ____________, 2012 (subject to completion).
================================================================================
4
Table of Contents
SUMMARY INFORMATION AND RISK FACTORS (Item 3)................................6
Prospectus Summary...........................................................6
Risk Factors................................................................10
USE OF PROCEEDS (Item 4)....................................................17
DETERMINATION OF OFFERING PRICE (Item 5)....................................17
DILUTION (Item 6)...........................................................17
SELLING SECURITY HOLDERS (Item 7)...........................................17
PLAN OF DISTRIBUTION (Item 8)...............................................21
DESCRIPTION OF SECURITIES TO BE REGISTERED (Item 9).........................22
INTERESTS OF NAMED EXPERTS AND COUNSEL (Item 10)............................24
INFORMATION WITH RESPECT TO REGISTRANT (Item 11)............................25
Description of Business (Item 11a)..........................................25
Description of Property (Item 11b)..........................................35
Legal Proceedings (Item 11c)................................................35
Market price of and dividends on the registrant's common equity and
related shareholder matters (Item 11d)...................................35
Financial Statements (Item 11e).............................................36
Selected financial data (Item 11f)..........................................69
Supplementary financial information (Item 11g)..............................69
Management's discussion and analysis of financial condition and results
of operations (Item 11h).................................................69
Changes in and disagreements with accountants on accounting and financial
disclosure (Item 11i)....................................................73
Quantitative and Qualitative disclosures about market risk (Item 11j).......73
Directors and Executive Officers (Item 11k).................................73
Executive Compensation and Other Information (Item 11l).....................75
Security Ownership of Certain Beneficial Owners (Item 11m)..................76
Transactions with Related Persons and Corporate Governance (Item 11n).......77
INCORPORATION OF CERTAIN INFORMATION BY REFERENCE (Item 12).................77
OTHER EXPENSES OF ISSUANCE AND DISTRIBUTION (Item 13).......................78
INDEMNIFICATION OF OFFICERS AND DIRECTORS (Item 14).........................78
RECENT SALES OF UNREGISTERED SECURITIES (Item 15)...........................79
EXHIBITS AND FINANCIAL STATEMENT SCHEDULES (Item 16)........................79
UNDERTAKINGS (Item 17)......................................................80
5
SUMMARY INFORMATION AND RISK FACTORS (Item 3)
Prospectus Summary
The following summary highlights selected information contained elsewhere in
this prospectus. This summary is not complete and does not contain all the
information that should be considered before investing in our common stock.
Before making an investment decision, investors should carefully read the entire
prospectus, paying particular attention to the risks referred to under the
headings "Risk Factors" and "Cautionary Statement Regarding Forward-Looking
Statements" and our financial statements and the notes to those financial
statements. As used in this prospectus, unless the context requires otherwise,
the terms "Company," "we," "our" and "us" refer to Signal Advance Inc. a Texas
corporation formed on June 4, 1992.
OVERVIEW: Signal Advance, Inc. (SAI) has been developing and is now commercial-
izing its proprietary Signal Advance Technology (SAT) which can significantly
reduce signal detection delays associated with a variety of physical sensors and
thereby improve performance in control, intervention, and/or signal transmission
systems.
CHALLENGE: In interventional medical devices or non-medical responsive control
and signal transmission systems, delays in detection, processing and response to
various signals negatively affects overall performance.
In certain types of biomedical signals (e.g. heart, brain) the greater the delay
in responding to anomalous signals, the more difficult it is to successfully
intervene in order to contain or limit a pathological process such as cardiac
fibrillation or an epileptic seizure. The earlier the intervention is
initiated, the greater the probability of success.
In non-medical applications (e.g. industrial process, equipment, engine control,
military), control response signal transmission delays impact performance
effecting safety, product yield, fuel efficiency and emissions. In military ap-
plications, signal detection and response delays affect reaction effectiveness.
SOLUTION: SAT can offset these signal detection and processing delays and
thereby improve performance. The technology is based on "negative group delay"
a well documented phenomenon in wave propagation physics. SAT can be applied in
conjunction with other approaches such as faster electronics to reduce these
delays to maximally enhance system performance. SAT may also enable the
development of novel control or interventional approaches. The technology was
recently proven in a university study in the Texas medical Center and the
results published in a peer-reviewed feature article.
MARKET: SAl identified multiple classes of sensors with signal characteristics
suitable for the application of SAT, and thus, a variety of potential licensing
targets. The markets/industries include biomedical (e.g. cardiac rhythm manage-
ment, neurostimulation) and commercial, industrial, transportation and military
applications (e.g. process control, engine control, vehicular/flight control,
and weaponry).
In interventional medical devices, SAT can be used to reduce response delays and
improve performance Market growth in cardiac rhythm management market is esti-
mated at 3% per year over the next several years with sales expected to exceed
$11.5B by 2013. Revenues in the neurostimulation market (yet in its infancy)
are expected to exceed $10B by 2014. For these devices, improved performance
translates directly to increased value thus providing a significant opportunity
for revenue generation.
There are also a wide range of non-biomedical markets for SAT. Revenues in the
global sensors/controls market are projected to exceed $70B by 2015. Demand for
industrial controls in U.S. markets likely surpassed $15B in 2011. In the trans-
portation/ automotive sector, sales of various types of sensors alone exceeded
$9B in 2009 and are projected to increase at a rate of nearly 12% annually
through 2014. SAT could potentially improve accident avoidance, safety/security,
engine performance and vehicular control, and thus improve fuel economy and save
lives. In high performance aircraft engines, SAT could increase stability,
reduce stall margins improve performance and fuel efficiency. Industrial
examples include improved compressor performance and increased petrochemical
yields. In military applications, SAT could enhance response effectiveness
6
The addressable markets are estimated to be in the billions of dollars. As with
any new or disruptive technology, recognition and acceptance will gain momentum
over time.
INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY: Steven Weeks, Ph.D. (physics), First Principals, Inc.
performed an independent intellectual property (IP) valuation based solely on
the cardiac rhythm management and neurostimulation segments of the biomedical
markets and drew the following conclusions:
"VALUE: Including the projected, risk-adjusted licensing royalties, we project
A NET PRESENT VALUE OF UP TO ~$10.4 MILLION. This valuation will increase
rapidly as the technology is proven and then successfully applied to products
in this very large market. ...IT IS, HOWEVER, DELIBERATELY CONSERVATIVE."
Patent applications have been filed in the U.S. Patent Office (USPTO) and for-
eign counterparts. Amendments were submitted in the domestic and international
filings. Claims amendment and prior art distinctions have been submitted in
response to the office actions from the US, Europe and China. The Chinese Patent
Office has since issued a Notice of Allowance providing patent protection in
China. Additional patent submissions related to specific applications, various
circuit configurations, and signal processing techniques to improve signal
fidelity are being drafted.
IP defense strategy is based on the fact that SAT designs are application-
specific, enabling novelty and non-obviousness in patent claims with the assoc-
iated analytical methods remaining trade secrets. Potential infringers would
have to expend undue time and money to develop such methods to pursue individual
applications. This application-specific approach gives SAI a significant compet-
itive advantage. Each application will have its own patent filing and stand
independently. An attack on any one will not affect others. SAI will work with
licensees to determine which international patent applications to pursue.
Licensees will assume patent costs and be required to participate in the defense
of licensed IP.
COMPETITION: Indirect competition exists as in the form of ever faster
electronics used to improve signal detection and processing performance. In
addition, alternate control strategies, (e.g. predictive feedback and feed-
forward) are often used to improve performance but also have significant draw-
backs. Faster electronics alone will reduce, but never eliminate, circuit
delays. For a number of applications, some of these techniques may be adequate.
SAT can be used in conjunction with all of these methods to further improve
performance.
While SAI is not aware of any direct competition, its own success will likely
precipitate competition as SAT gains recognition and acceptance. This will
include potential infringement and legal machinations based on a larger,
financially successful firms' capability to engage in lengthy and expensive
litigation. Searches and analyses of the patent and scientific literature have
not revealed any prior art that would negate the utility and novelty of SAT and
no combination of the references sees to render the technology obvious to a
person skilled in this area. However, the defensive strategies, outlined above,
and constant vigilance are required.
REVENUE GENERATION: While the addressable market is in the billions, it is
expected that many licensees will require exclusivity which would limit SAI to a
single license in a given application area. Therefore, SAI will target multiple
application areas to generate revenue. Revenue is generated by: 1) licensing
intellectual property to product manufacturers, 2) consulting with licensees on
implementation of the technology in target applications, and 3) participating in
joint ventures.
MARKETING STRATEGY: To gain exposure and acceptance of SAT, the Company will
participate in trade shows, present in scientific and technical meetings and
publish application-specific articles. SAI's marketing approach includes the
following steps: 1) identify application targets and develop application-
specific SAI circuitry, 2) protect the intellectual property, 3) approach
manufacturer and demonstrate performance improvement, and, 4) secure licensing/
consulting agreements.
Target application selection is based on: 1) intervention/control impact, 2)
signal parameters, 3) market size, 4) major suppliers, 5) competition, and 6)
regulations. The approach is to identify applications and protect IP; then
consult with market-specific clients to develop SAT for their specific
application and demonstrate improved product performance. Later strategy will
shift development costs to the client.
7
RECENT PROGRESS: The Company has developed proprietary Signal Advance techno-
logy which operates on broadband analog signals (over a specified frequency
range) with minimal signal distortion. Prototype SA circuits have been developed
for various application-specific signals and a number of SA circuit designs have
been tested using a range of analog test signals. The company is located near
the Texas Medical Center in Houston and has broad contacts in a number of its
research institutions. SAI has recently established collaborations with research
institutions and private companies to pursue development of SAT for 1) engine
combustion control to improve fuel economy and reduce emissions, and 2) EEG
signal detection to improve neuro-therapeutic applications
Independent validations of Signal Advance technology have been established in
the following areas:
Scientific: Prototype circuit design developed for ECG signals was rigorously
tested using a range of simulated signals and actual ECG signals from cardiac
patients. This development activity and experimentation resulted in completion
of a successful doctoral dissertation study at the University of Texas Health
Science Center at Houston in the Texas Medical Center;
Technical: A peer-reviewed feature article summarizing the technology, study
results, and broad range of potential SAT applications was published in the
IEEE Circuits and Systems Magazine in 2011;
Commercial: SAI was awarded first place in the 2011 Goradia Innovation Prize
competition. The selection was based on: 1) the commercial potential of the
technology, 2) the soundness of the business plan, 3) the potential for job
growth within the region, and 4) the likelihood of significant long-term
success.
Innovation: The Intellectual Property Section of the Oklahoma Bar Association
named Dr. Chris Hymel, the company's president, the 2012 Innovator of the Year
for his development work on Signal Advance technology.
BROAD RISKS AFFECTING THE COMPANY: The Company is subject to numerous risks,
which are more fully discussed in the section of this prospectus entitled
'Risk Factors'. Some of the more significant risks included the following:
* The Company is undercapitalized and has limited liquidity
* The Company is in the development/early commercialization stage
* The technology is novel and thus requires recognition and acceptance in
various markets.
* If the Company does not successfully license its technology, it may never
achieve profitability
* As a result of the industry competition, the Company may not gain enough
market share to be profitable
* If the Company fails to protect its proprietary technology, its competitive
position may be impaired
* There will be a limited trading market for the Company's common stock
* The market price of our common stock my fluctuate significantly and may
decline
In addition, we qualify as an "emerging growth company" as defined in Section
2(a)(19) of the Securities Act of 1933 and, as such, are allowed to provide in
this prospectus more limited disclosures than an issuer that would not so
qualify. Furthermore, for as long as we remain an emerging growth company, we
will qualify for certain limited exceptions from investor protection laws such
as the Sarbanes Oxley Act of 2002 and the Investor Protection and Securities
Reform Act of 2010. Please read "Risk Factors" and 'Emerging Growth Company
Status."
CORPORATE INFORMATION: Our principal executive offices are located at 2520
County Road 81, Rosharon, Texas 77583. Our website is www.signaladvance.com.
Information contained on our website is not incorporated by reference into,
and should not be considered a part of, this prospectus.
EMERGING GROWTH COMPANY STATUS: The Company qualifies as an "emerging growth
company" as defined in the Jumpstart Our Business Startups Act, or "JOBS Act."
For as long as we are an emerging growth company, unlike other public companies,
we will not be required to:
- provide an auditor's attestation report on management's assessment of the
effectiveness of our system of internal control over financial reporting
pursuant to Section 404(b) of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002;
8
- comply with any new requirements adopted by the Public Company Accounting
Oversight Board (PCAOB), requiring mandatory audit firm rotation or a supple-
ment to the auditor's report in which the auditor would be required to
provide additional information about the audit and the financial statements
of the issuer;
- comply with any new audit rules adopted by the PCAOB after April 5, 2012,
unless the Securities and Exchange Commission determines otherwise;
- provide certain disclosure regarding executive compensation required of larger
public companies; or
- obtain shareholder approval of any golden parachute payments not previously
approved.
We will cease to be an "emerging growth company" upon the earliest of:
- when we have $1.0 billion or more in annual revenues;
- when we have at least $700 million in market value of our common units held by
non-affiliates;
- when we issue more than $1.0 billion of non-convertible debt over a three-year
period; or
- the last day of the fiscal year following the fifth anniversary of our initial
public offering.
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 are electing to take advantage of the extended transition
period, and as a result, we will not be required to comply with new or revised
accounting standards on the relevant dates on which adoption of such standards
is required for non-emerging growth companies.
THE OFFERING: The following is a summary of the shares being offered
by the selling shareholders
Common stock offered by
selling shareholders: 1,648,044 shares
Common stock outstanding
prior to the Offering: 8,334,159 shares(1)
Use of Proceeds: We will not receive any proceeds from the sale of the
shares of common stock offered by the selling
shareholders.
Offering Price: The selling shareholders may only sell their shares of
our common stock pursuant to this prospectus at a
fixed price of $2.00 per share until such time as our
common stock is quoted on the OTC Bulletin Board or
another public trading market for our common stock
otherwise develops. At and after such time, the sell-
ing shareholders may sell all or a portion of their
shares through public or private transactions at pre-
vailing market prices or at privately negotiated
prices.
Market for our shares There is not now and never has been any market for our
securities and an active market may never develop.
(1) Based upon the total number of issued and outstanding shares as of
August 15, 2012
9
Risk Factors
Investing in our common stock involves a high degree of risk. In addition to the
other information set forth in this prospectus, you should carefully consider
the factors discussed below when considering an investment in our common stock.
If any of the events contemplated by the following discussion of risks should
occur, our business, results of operations and financial condition could suffer
significantly. As a result, you could lose some or all of your investment in our
common stock. Additional risks and uncertainties not presently known to us or
that we currently deem immaterial may also impair our business.
This Offering entails a high degree of risk and entails a possible loss of all
of one's investment. The ownership of Shares involves certain risk factors,
including lack of liquidity and economic and market risks. Therefore, prospec-
tive investors should carefully consider the following:
AN INVESTMENT IN THESE SHARES IS A HIGH-RISK INVESTMENT. THE PURCHASE OF THESE
SECURITIES IS SUITABLE ONLY FOR INVESTORS OF SUFFICIENT FINANCIAL MEANS WHO HAVE
NO NEED FOR LIQUIDITY TO THE EXTENT OF THEIR INVESTMENT IN THE COMPANY AND WHO
ARE ABLE TO SUSTAIN A COMPLETE LOSS OF THEIR INVESTMENT. THE COMPANY HAS LIMITED
OPERATING HISTORY AND THERE IS NO ASSURANCE THAT IT CAN MEET ANY OF THE GOALS
AND OBJECTIVES OF MANAGEMENT. IN ADDITION TO THE FACTORS SET FORTH ELSEWHERE
HEREIN, PROSPECTIVE INVESTORS ARE ADVISED TO CAREFULLY CONSIDER THE FOLLOWING
MATTERS AND SHOULD CONSULT THEIR OWN LEGAL, TAX AND FINANCIAL ADVISORS WITH
RESPECT THERETO. THE RISK FACTORS SET FORTH HEREIN AND THROUGHOUT THIS
MEMORANDUM ARE NOT INTENDED TO BE, AND ARE NOT, AN EXHAUSTIVE LIST OF ALL
POSSIBLE GENERAL OR SPECIFIC RISKS.
Risks Related to the Company's Business
The independent auditor has raised doubt about the company's ability to continue
as a going concern. The Independent Auditor's Report to the audited financial
statements for the period ended December 31, 2011, indicates that there are a
number of factors that raise substantial doubt about the Company's ability to
continue as a going concern. Such doubts identified in the report include the
fact that the Company currently has insufficient sources of revenue and the need
to obtain adequate financing. If the Company is unable to continue as a going
concern, investors could lose all or a part of their investment.
The Company is undercapitalized and has limited liquidity.
The Company has financed the majority of its operations from the sale of its
equity securities. As of the interim period ending June 30, 2012, the Company
did not yet have sufficient working capital to fund operations for the subse-
quent six months. As such, the Company will need to raise additional capital to
fund its working capital needs. The Company does not currently have any firm
commitments from investors or any credit facilities available with financial
institutions or any other third parties. Therefore, it is expected that it will
need to enter into agreements with investors or engage in best efforts sales of
its securities to raise needed working capital. There is no assurance the
Company will be successful in any funding effort. Failure to raise sufficient
capital may necessitate the curtailment of operations and delay of start of any
additional development activities.
The Company is in the development/early commercialization stage.
The Company is currently in the development/early commercialization stage and is
continuing to develop its latest intellectual property and beginning commercial-
ization activities. The Company's "proposed" and "intended," business purpose is
to collaborate with and market its intellectual property rights to major client
companies. As of the date of this prospectus, the Company has obtained an
assignment of intellectual property described in a patent application (See
"Intellectual Property"). The Company currently lacks sufficient capital to
generate revenue or operate the business in a profitable manner. As a develop-
ment/early commercialization stage Company, its prospects are subject to all of
the risks, expenses, and uncertainties frequently encountered by companies in
the technology development business and will likely encounter all of the same
risks, uncertainties, expenses, delays, problems, and difficulties typically
encountered in the establishment of a new business. Unanticipated expenses,
problems, and technical difficulties may result in material delays in the
development of its technology and products and, thus, may not obtain sufficient
capital or achieve a significant level of operations. Even with sufficient
capital, the Company may not be able to conduct such operations on a profitable
basis.
10
A significant portion of our total assets are comprised of intangible assets
subject to periodic review to determine whether impairment of these assets is
required.
The Company is required under generally accepted accounting principles to review
its intangible assets for impairment whenever events or changes in circumstances
indicate that the carrying values may not be recoverable. If management deter-
mines that impairment exists, the Company will be forced to record a significant
charge to expense in its financial statements for the period in which any
impairment of its intangible assets is determined.
If the Company does not successfully license its technology, it may never
achieve profitability.
The Company's research and development programs are at an intermediate stage. If
the Company is unable to develop its intellectual property into a commercially
viable product, it may never achieve profitability, and can make no assurance as
to future profitability.
Due to the competitive nature of the industry, the Company may not gain enough
market share to be profitable.
The technology development industry is intensely competitive. There may be
numerous competitors in the United States and elsewhere capable of similar
technology development. Because the Company is pursuing potentially large
markets, its competitors include major, multi-national companies, specialized
technology firms, universities and other research institutions. These competi-
tors may successfully develop market and commercialize competitive products.
Most of the competitors have greater financial resources, larger research and
development staffs and more effective marketing and manufacturing organizations.
In addition, academic and government institutions have become increasingly aware
of the commercial value of their research findings. These institutions are now
more likely to enter into exclusive licensing agreements with commercial enter-
prises, including competitors, to develop and market commercial products.
Competitors may succeed in developing or licensing technologies that are more
effective or less costly. If successful, these companies may compete success-
fully with the Company's planned products. If the Company is unable to compete
successfully, it will not be able to sell enough products at a price sufficient
to generate profits.
The Company's ability to achieve any significant revenue will depend on its
ability to establish effective sales and marketing capabilities.
The efforts of the Company, to date, have focused on the development and evalua-
tion of its intellectual property. As the Company continues to development its
technology, and prepares for commercialization, it may need to build a sales and
marketing infrastructure; an area in which the Company has limited experience.
Failure to establish a sufficient marketing and sales force or to make alterna-
tive arrangements to have its products marketed and sold by others on attractive
terms, will impair the Company's ability to commercialize its technology and to
enter new or existing markets. The inability to effectively enter these markets
would materially and adversely affect the Company's ability to generate
significant revenues.
We depend on market acceptance to license our technology and a lack of
acceptance would depress our sales.
SAT can reduce response time and potentially improve performance in a broad
range of applications. However, the technology is novel and not well understood.
Deployment in a wide variety of technical environments will require significant
training and, if our products are not used correctly or as intended, performance
gains may not be realized. Incorrect or improper use of our technology or
failure to properly provide training, consulting, and implementation assistance
could result in losses suffered by our clients, which could result in negative
publicity, product liability or other legal claims against us. We depend on our
reputation for quality products and services and injurious negative publicity
could have a negative impact on our Company.
The Company is heavily dependent on the management team and its consultants.
The Company's business strategy and success is dependent on the skills and
knowledge of its management team. Operations will also be dependent on the
efforts, ability and experience of key members of the prospective management
staff and, to a lesser degree, on a small number of advisors and consultants.
Therefore, the Company has little backup capability for their activities. The
loss of services of one or more members of the management team or, to a lesser
extent, the loss of one or more of the advisors, could significantly weaken
management expertise and the Company's ability to efficiently run its business.
The Company does not currently maintain key man life insurance policies on any
of its officers, although it intends to obtain such insurance policies in the
future.
11
The Company may face product liability claims related to the use or misuse of
its products, which may results in significant losses.
If the Company is able to commercialize its products, it will also be subject
to the risk of losses in the future due to product liability claims in the event
that the use or misuse of its commercial products results in injury or death.
The Company will seek to mitigate this potential liability by implementing
indemnification means in the licenses it executes. The Company currently does
not maintain liability insurance. In the event the Company chooses to purchase
liability insurance, it cannot predict the magnitude or the number of claims
that could be brought against the Company in the future. Accordingly, it is
difficult to know what coverage limits would be adequate. In addition, such
insurance may be expensive, difficult to obtain and may not be available in the
future on acceptable terms or at all. Any claims against the Company, regardless
of their merit, could substantially increase costs and cause the Company to
incur significant losses.
The marketability and profitability of the Company's technology is subject to
unknown economic conditions.
The marketability and profitability of the Company's technology may be adversely
affected by local, regional, national and international economic conditions
beyond its control. Favorable changes may not necessarily enhance the market-
ability or profitability. Even under the most favorable market conditions, there
is no guarantee that the Company's technology will be licensed or, if licensed,
that such licensure will be made with favorable fees and terms.
Risks Related to Intellectual Property
If the Company fails to protect its proprietary technology, then its
competitive position may be impaired.
The Company has filed and is in the process of completing additional United
States and foreign patent applications for its products. The Company has been
granted a patent in the Peoples' Republic of China. Success will depend in part
on the Company's ability to obtain additional United States and foreign patent
protection for its technology and processes, preserve its trade secrets and
operate without infringing the proprietary rights of others. The Company places
considerable importance on obtaining patent protection for significant new
technologies, products and processes. Legal standards relating to the validity
of patents covering these inventions and the scope of claims made under such
patents are still developing. In some of the countries in which the Company
intends to market its products, obtaining intellectual property protection may
be difficult or impossible. Past enforcement of intellectual property rights in
many of these countries has been limited or non-existent. Future enforcement of
patents and proprietary rights in many other countries may be problematic or
unpredictable. Moreover, the issuance of a patent in one country does not assure
the issuance of a similar patent in another country. Claim interpretation and
infringement laws vary by nation, so the extent of any patent protection is
uncertain and may vary in different jurisdictions.
The Company's patent position (one issued and other patents pending) involves
complex legal and factual questions. Inventors of subject matter covered by
patent applications or patents owned or licensed by the Company may not have
been the first to invent or the first to file patent applications for such
inventions. Due to uncertainties regarding patent law and the circumstances
surrounding the Company's patent applications, the pending or future patent
applications owned by the Company, may not result in the issuance of any
patents. Existing or future patents owned by the Company may be challenged,
infringed upon, invalidated, found to be unenforceable or circumvented by
others. Further, any rights the Company may have under any issued patents may
not provide sufficient protection against competitive products or otherwise
cover commercially valuable products or processes.
Litigation or other disputes regarding patents and other proprietary rights may
be expensive, cause delays in bringing products to market and harm the
Company's ability to operate.
There is always a risk that the manufacture, use, marketing or sale of the
Company's products could infringe on the patent rights of others. If the Company
is unable to avoid infringement of the patent rights of others, it may be
required to seek a license, defend an infringement action or challenge the
validity of the patents in court. The Company may not have sufficient resources
to resolve such matters as patent litigation can be costly and time consuming.
In addition, if the Company does not obtain a license, develop or obtain non-
infringing technology, or fail to successfully defend an infringement action or
have the patents that the Company is alleged to infringe declared invalid, the
Company may:
* incur substantial money damages;
* encounter significant delays in bringing its products to market;
* be precluded from the use or licensing of SA technology without first
obtaining licenses to do so; and/or
12
* be unable to obtain any required license on favorable terms, if at all.
In addition, if another party claims the same subject matter or subject matter
overlapping with the subject matter that the Company has claimed in a United
States patent application or patent, it may decide or be required to participate
in interference proceedings in the United States Patent and Trademark Office in
order to determine the priority of invention. Loss of such an interference
proceeding would deprive the Company of patent protection sought or previously
obtained and could prevent the Company from commercializing its products.
Participation in such proceedings could result in substantial costs, whether or
not the eventual outcome is favorable. These additional costs could adversely
affect the Company's financial results.
Confidentiality agreements with employees and others may not adequately prevent
disclosure of trade secrets and other proprietary information.
In order to protect its proprietary technology and processes, the Company must
also rely in part on confidentiality agreements with its employees, consultants,
outside scientific collaborators, sponsored researchers, other advisors and
other companies negotiating or licenses. These agreements may not effectively
prevent disclosure of confidential information and may not provide an adequate
remedy in the event of unauthorized disclosure of confidential information. In
addition, others may independently discover trade secrets and proprietary infor-
mation. Costly and time-consuming litigation could be necessary to enforce and
determine the scope of the Company's proprietary rights and failure to obtain
or maintain trade secret protection could adversely affect the Company's
competitive business position.
Risks related to the Company's financial reporting and auditing
As long as the Company qualifies as an emerging growth company, it is not be
required to comply with certain reporting requirements, including those
relating to accounting standards and disclosure about our executive compensa-
tion, that apply to other public companies.
In April 2012, President Obama signed into law the Jumpstart Our Business Start-
ups Act, or the JOBS Act. The JOBS Act contains provisions that, among other
things, relax certain reporting requirements for "emerging growth companies,"
including certain requirements relating to accounting standards and compensation
disclosure. We are classified as an emerging growth company. For as long as we
are an emerging growth company, which may be up to five full fiscal years,
unlike other public companies, we will not be required to, among other things,
(1)provide an auditor's attestation report on management's assessment of the
effectiveness of our system of internal control over financial reporting pur-
suant to Section 404(b) of the Sarbanes Oxley Act of 2002, (2)comply with any
new requirements adopted by the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board, or
the PCAOB, requiring mandatory audit firm rotation or a supplement to the
auditor's report in which the auditor would be required to provide additional
information about the audit and the financial statements of the issuer, (3)
comply with any new audit rules adopted by the PCAOB after April 5, 2012 unless
the SEC determines otherwise, (4)provide certain disclosure regarding executive
compensation required of larger public companies or (5) hold shareholder
advisory votes on executive compensation.
The Company has provided less than three years of audited financial reports
This prospectus includes audited financial statements only as of and for the
period ended December 31, 2011 and 2010 and unaudited financial information as
of and for the six-month periods ended June 30, 2012 and 2011. Only two years of
audited financial statements are required to be included in a prospectus forming
part of an SEC registration statement filed by an emerging growth company.
The Company does not currently have an independent audit or compensation
committee
The audit and compensation committees of the Company currently include members
of the board of directors that are not considered independent. The absence of
completely independent audit and compensation committee could lead to conflicts
of interest between committee members and the officers and directors, which
could work to the detriment to the Company's shareholders.
With respect to the audit committee, to be deemed "independent" under the audit
committee rules, an audit committee member must not: 1) accept any consulting,
advisory or compensatory fee from the issuer or any subsidiary, other than in
the member's capacity as a member of the board or any board committee; and 2) be
13
an affiliated person of the issuer or any subsidiary apart from serving as a
member of the board or any board committee. An exception provided for a new is-
suer that is a smaller reporting company requires at least one fully independent
member at the time of an issuer's initial listing, a majority of independent
members within 90 days, and a fully independent committee within one year.
Currently, one of the three members of the audit committee meets the criteria
to be deemed "independent".
The Company will extend the period for adopting new and revised accounting
standards
The Company qualifies as an "emerging growth company" pursuant to the provisions
of the JOBS Act, enacted on April 5, 2012. Section 102 of the JOBS Act 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.
The Company is not required to make a formal assessment of the effectiveness of
our internal control over financial reporting
The Company is not currently required to comply with the SEC rules implementing
Section 404 of the Sarbanes Oxley Act of 2002, and is therefore not required
to make a formal assessment of the effectiveness of our internal control over
financial reporting for that purpose. Upon becoming a publicly traded partner-
ship, we will be required to comply with the SEC rules implementing Sections
302 and 404 of the Sarbanes Oxley Act of 2002, which will require our management
to certify financial and other information in our quarterly and annual reports
and provide an annual management report on the effectiveness of our internal
control over financial reporting. Though we will be required to disclose mater-
ial changes made to our internal controls and procedures on a quarterly basis,
we will not be required to make our first annual assessment of our internal
control over financial reporting pursuant to Section 404 until the year
following our first annual report required to be filed with the SEC. To comply
with the requirements of being a publicly traded partnership, we will need to
implement additional internal controls, reporting systems and procedures and
hire additional accounting, finance and legal staff. Furthermore, while we
generally must comply with Section 404 of the Sarbanes Oxley Act of 2002 for
our fiscal year, ending December 31, 2012, we are not required to have our
independent registered public accounting firm attest to the effectiveness of
our internal controls until our first annual report subsequent to our ceasing
to be an "emerging growth company" within the meaning of Section 2(a)(19) of
the Securities Act. Accordingly, we may not be required to have our independent
registered public accounting firm attest to the effectiveness of our internal
controls until our annual report for the fiscal year ending December 31, 2017.
Once it is required to do so, our independent registered public accounting firm
may issue a report that is adverse in the event it is not satisfied with the
level at which our controls are documented, designed, operated or reviewed.
Risks Related to an Investment in the Company's Securities
The market price of our common stock may fluctuate significantly and may
decline.
The market price and liquidity of the market for shares of our common stock may
be significantly affected by numerous factors, some of which are beyond our
control and may not be directly related to our operating performance. These
factors, may adversely affect our ability to raise capital through future equity
financings. These factors include:
* significant volatility in the market price and trading volume of securities of
companies in our industry, which are not necessarily related to the operating
performance of these companies;
* changes in regulatory policies, particularly with respect to industry targets
for our products and services included in our business model;
* our common stock is unlikely to be followed by any market analysts in the
immediate future, and there may be few institutions acting as market makers
for the common stock which can adversely affect its price (and the lack of
additional information and opinions coming from institutions and analysts may
act to discourage investors from investing in our stock);
* changes in earnings or variations in operating results and information about
earnings or operating performance released by us or companies comparable to
us;
* changes in the value of assets held by us or changes in perceptions of such
values;
* any shortfall in revenue or net income or any increase in losses from levels
expected or predicted by investors;
* departure of one or more of the Company's key personnel;
14
* announcements or other information regarding of technological innovations or
new products by us or our competitors;
* potential legal and regulatory matters (including development of or disputes
concerning our intellectual property rights);
* changes in prevailing interest rates;
* announcements or other information regarding customer orders or, currency
exchange rate fluctuations;
* market conditions in the industry and the general state of the securities
markets, with particular emphasis on the technology sectors of the securities
markets and other general economic trends and other external factors; and
* the loss of a major funding source.
There will be a limited trading market for the Company's common stock
The Company's common stock is not currently traded on any securities exchange.
The Company will be seeking clearance to have shares of common stock quoted and
traded on the OTC Bulletin Board, however, there can be no assurance that its
shares of common stock will be quoted for trading on the OTC Bulletin Board or,
if quoted, that there will be sufficient liquidity in the shares. If no market
develops for its shares of common stock or there is insufficient liquidity in
the shares, it will be difficult for shareholders to sell their stock, if at
all.
There are risks associated with the volatility of stock pricing associated with
newer, smaller companies and limited markets
We are a relatively new Company entering a highly competitive marketplace. Con
sequently, this investment may be marketable only to a limited segment of the
investing public. The Company believes those similar small companies which are
newer and have a small capitalization offer significant potential for growth,
although such companies generally have more limited product lines, markets,
market share and financial resources than larger or more established companies.
The securities of such companies, if traded in the public market, may trade less
frequently and in more limited volume than those of more established or larger
companies due to lack of acceptance by many of the investing public. Addition-
ally, in recent years, the stock market has experienced a high degree of price
and volume volatility for the securities of newer companies with small capital-
ization. In particular, newer companies with small capitalization, that trade in
the over-the-counter markets, have experienced wide price fluctuations not
necessarily related to the operating performance of such companies. As we are
such a Company, our Common Stock may experience the volatility associated with
newer, smaller companies.
The Company's common stock may be considered a "penny stock" and, as such, the
market for the common stock may be further limited by certain sec rules
applicable to penny stocks.
As long as the price of the Company's common stock remains below $5.00 per share
or the Company has net tangible assets of $2,000,000 or less, its shares of
common stock are likely to be subject to certain "penny stock" rules promulgated
by the SEC. Those rules impose certain sales practice requirements on brokers
who sell penny stock to persons other than established customers and accredited
investors (generally, an institution with assets in excess of $5,000,000 or an
individual with a net worth in excess of $1,000,000). For transactions covered
by the penny stock rules, the broker must make a special suitability determina-
tion for the purchaser and receive the purchaser's written consent to the
transaction prior to the sale. Furthermore, the penny stock rules generally
require, among other things, that brokers engaged in secondary trading of penny
stocks provide customers with written disclosure documents, monthly statements
of the market value of penny stocks, disclosure of the bid and asked prices and
disclosure of the compensation to the brokerage firm and disclosure of the
sales person(s) working for the brokerage firm. These rules and regulations make
it more difficult for brokers to sell shares of the Company's common stock and
limit the liquidity of its shares. See "Plan of Distribution" for a more detail-
ed discussion of the penny stock rules and related broker-dealer restrictions.
Trading in the Company's securities could be subject to extreme price fluctua-
tions that could adversely affect your investment
The market prices for securities of technology companies, particularly those
that are not profitable, have been highly volatile, especially recently.
Publicized events and announcements may have a significant impact on the market
price of the Company's common stock. Any of the following could have the effect
of temporarily or permanently driving down the price of the Company's common
stock:
15
* Technological discoveries by competitors;
* Unfavorable results from on-going research and development;
* Unfavorable developments concerning patents or other proprietary rights; or
* Unfavorable economic market developments;
In addition, the stock market from time to time experiences extreme price and
volume fluctuations which particularly affect the market prices for emerging
technology companies, such as this Company, and which are often unrelated to
the operating performance of the affected companies.
Substantial sales of the Company's stock may impact the market price of its
common stock
Future sales of substantial amounts of the Company's common stock, including
shares that the Company may issue upon exercise of options and warrants, could
adversely affect the market price of our common stock. Further, if the Company
raises additional funds through the issuance of common stock or securities
convertible into, or exercisable for, common stock, the percentage ownership of
the Company's shareholders will be diluted and the price of the common stock may
fall.
The Company does not expect to pay dividends for the foreseeable future
The Company plans to use any earnings generated from its operations to finance
its business and will likely pay any cash dividends to its shareholders in the
foreseeable future.
With the filing of this registration statement, the Company is undertaking to
commence filing periodic reports and other reports with the SEC.
We will incur additional expenses as a result of being a reporting public
company, which may further strain our limited resources. If we cease filing
periodic reports with the SEC, the ability of broker-dealers to sell our
securities and the ability of shareholders to sell their securities in the
secondary market would be negatively impacted.
There are significant costs associated with operating as a public Company which
will be borne by the Company but will not likely be recouped from additional
sales. Our status as a reporting Company is not expected to impact the decision
of potential licensees to license our technology. The Company will be obligated
to meet certain disclosure requirements such as presenting audited financial
statements and preparing periodic reports, cost of which will be significant.
There are significant costs associated with compliance and reporting in order
to be a reporting public Company. These costs depend on a number of factors such
as complexity of accounting and corporate organization. As the Company grows,
these costs will likely grow and the Company will be required to pay costs and
professional fees associated with reporting. There can be no assurance that the
Company will have sufficient resources to be able to continue to pay all of the
costs and professional fees associated with being a reporting Company as well as
the costs associated with executing on its business model. If we do not incur
these costs, we would be in violation of our obligations as a reporting Company
and the ability of shareholders to sell or resell our securities would be
affected. If we cease filing periodic reports with the SEC, it could result in
certain listing services refusing to publish information about our Company or
prices for our Common Stock, This will, in turn, affect the ability of our
shareholders to access trading information about our Common Stock, which could
negatively impact our stock price and the liquidity of our Common Stock.
Risks Associated with Forward-Looking Statements
This document contains certain forward-looking statements regarding management's
plans and objectives for future operations including plans and objectives
relating to its planned marketing efforts and future economic performance. The
forward-looking statements and associated risks set forth in this document
include or relate to, among other things, (a) projected sales and profitability,
(b) growth strategies, (c) anticipated trends in the industry, (d) ability to
obtain and retain sufficient capital for future operations, and (e) anticipated
needs for working capital. These statements may be found under "Management's
Plan of Operations" and "Business," as well as elsewhere in the document,
generally. Actual events or results may differ materially from those discussed
in forward-looking statements as a result of various factors, including, without
limitation, the risks outlined under "Risk Factors" and matters described in
this prospectus, generally. In light of these risks and uncertainties, there can
be no assurance that the forward-looking statements contained in this document
will, in fact, occur.
16
USE OF PROCEEDS (Item 4)
The Company will not receive any proceeds from the resale of any of the shares
offered by this prospectus by the selling shareholders.
DETERMINATION OF OFFERING PRICE (Item 5)
The selling shareholders may only sell their shares of our common stock pursuant
to this prospectus at a fixed price of $2.00 per share until such time as our
common stock is quoted on the OTC Bulletin Board or another public trading
market for our common stock otherwise develops. At and after such time, the
selling shareholders may sell all or a portion of their shares through public
or private transactions at prevailing market prices or at privately negotiated
prices. The fixed price of $2.00 at which the selling shareholders may sell
their shares pursuant to this prospectus was determined arbitrarily. All shares
being offered pursuant to this prospectus will be sold by existing shareholders
without the Issuer's involvement. There is no assurance of when, if ever, our
stock will be listed on an exchange or quotation system.
DILUTION (Item 6)
The Common Stock to be sold by the selling shareholders is Common Stock that is
currently issued and outstanding. Accordingly, there will be no dilution to our
existing shareholders.
SELLING SECURITY HOLDERS (Item 7)
This prospectus covers the resale by the selling shareholders identified below
of 1,648,044 shares of the Company's Common Stock. The following table sets
forth the number of shares of Common Stock beneficially owned by the selling
shareholders as of August 15, 2012, and, after giving effect to this offering.
None of the selling shareholders received any of our securities as compensation
for underwriting services. At the time of each purchase of the shares offered
hereby, each selling shareholder represented that the selling shareholder's
shares were purchased for the selling shareholder's own account, for investment
and not with a view to the distribution of those shares.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Number Percentage Number of Percentage
of Shares Ownership Outstanding Ownership
Owned before Shares after
Before Offering Offered by Offering
Offering (1) Selling (1)
BENEFICIAL OWNER Stockholder
----------------------------- --------- ---------- ----------- ----------
ADAIR, BRYCE DAVID 250 <1% 250 0
ADAIR, CHARLES W & 107,500 1.29% 10,000 1.17%
DIANNA S, JTWROS
ADAIR, FARRAH LEIGH 250 <1% 250 0
ADAIR, MARJORIE 2,500 <1% 2,500 0
ADAIR, PAIGE ASHLEY 250 <1% 250 0
ADAIR, ZACHERY CLINTON 250 <1% 250 0
ADAMS, RYAN 2,313 <1% 2,313 0
ALIU, CHERIE 1,250 <1% 1,250 0
ARGENTON, ANNA L 375 <1% 375 0
ARRINGTON, EUGENIA 375 <1% 375 0
ASHER, DAVID W & 9,375 <1% 9,375 0
JILL M, JTWROS
BATCHLOR, JUDITH A 375 <1% 375 0
BLACKER, H M & JEANNE F, 223,750 2.68% 75,000 1.78%
TTEES, HM & JF BLACKER TR(2)
17
BLYTHE, ADAM & LORI, JTWROS 7,000 <1% 7,000 0
BOHI, DAN 38,000 <1% 38,000 0
BOHNISCH, MONI C/F
LAUREN M GIBBONS, UGMA/TX 31,250 <1% 31,250 0
BOHNISCH, MONI C/F
IAN S GIBBONS, UGMA/TX 31,250 <1% 31,250 0
BOURNE, TOM 50,000 <1% 10,000 <1%
BOYD, STEVE 12,500 <1% 12,500 0
BRADSHAW, RICK & DIANNA, COM PROP 10,000 <1% 10,000 0
BRANDT, MICHAEL E 45,000 <1% 3,000 <1%
BURKHART, ROBERT LEWIS & 37,500 <1% 37,500 0
MELANIE, JTWROS
CHACKO, AJI & SONIA, JTWROS 5,000 <1% 5,000 0
CORDELL, KYLE THOMAS 1,500 <1% 1,500 0
CURTISS, JR JOHN & SHARON, JTWROS 25,000 <1% 25,000 0
DEWOLF, DEBORAH 500 <1% 500 0
DICKSON, ROBERT M & 2,500 <1% 2,500 0
AMMALINE, JTWROS
DULA, KIM 1,225 <1% 1,225 0
DULA, KIM & ALEX, JTWROS 135,488 1.63% 50,000 1.03%
DULA, KIM CUSTODIAN FOR 13,188 <1% 5,000 <1%
TESS DULA, UGMA/TX
EDUCATIONAL ENRICHMENT 280,174 3.36% 280,174 0
CENTER, INC.
EQUITY TRUST COMPANY FBO 10,767 <1% 10,767 0
CLIFFORD M HAYES IRA
EQUITY TRUST COMPANY FBO 28,032 <1% 28,032 0
KIM GIBSON DULA IRA
EQUITY TRUST COMPANY FBO 2,428 <1% 2,428 0
DEBORAH STINNETT IRA
EQUITY TRUST COMPANY FBO 2,428 <1% 2,428 0
ROY E STINNETT IRA
EQUITY TRUST COMPANY FBO 17,398 <1% 17,398 0
JOHN G HOWELL III IRA
EVANS, ALICIA 2,500 <1% 2,500 0
FAUX, MICHELL E 625 <1% 625 0
FAZEKAS, LISA K & ALLEN R, JTTEN 5,000 <1% 5,000 0
FULBRIGHT, JOHN & KAREN, JTWROS 14,375 <1% 14,375 0
FURR, CRAIG A & LISA S, JTWROS 5,500 <1% 5,500 0
GASAWAY, LORI 2,500 <1% 2,500 0
GIBSON,ELLIS 25,000 <1% 25,000 0
GONZALES, AMANDA KAY 250 <1% 250 0
GONZALEZ, ANDREA V & 500 <1% 500 0
GREGORIO, JTWROS
GRANT, GEORJEAN 13,000 <1% 13,000 0
GUEL, ISRAEL 6,250 <1% 6,250 0
GUEL, ISRAEL JR 2,500 <1% 2,500 0
GUEL, JAIME 2,500 <1% 2,500 0
GUEL, MARIO 2,500 <1% 2,500 0
GUEL, VIRGIL 2,500 <1% 2,500 0
HAILEY, RENEE G & DAVID H, JTWROS 3,200 <1% 3,200 0
HAYES, CLIFFORD M 7,178 <1% 7,178 0
HAYES, CLIFFORD M & BRENDA, 1,000 <1% 1,000 0
COM PROP
HENRY, DAVID G 6,250 <1% 6,250 0
HILL, PATRICK 6,250 <1% 6,250 0
18
HOWELL, III JOHN G & 11,599 <1% 11,599 0
NANCY, JTWROS
HUCK, GERRI 2,000 <1% 2,000 0
HUNTER, SCOTT 6,250 <1% 6,250 0
HYMEL, ASHLEY 66,250 <1% 25,000 <1%
HYMEL, KATHRYN 2,500 <1% 2,500 0
HYMEL, KENT 2,500 <1% 2,500 0
HYMEL, KENT P & 8,000 <1% 8,000 0
JANET M KINAMORE, JTWROS
HYMEL, M DOUGLAS 2,500 <1% 2,500 0
HYMEL, MARC A 118,750 1.42% 25,000 1.12%
HYMEL, MARC A & JANET G, JTTEN 6,250 <1% 6,250 0
HYMEL, RACHEL 2,500 <1% 2,500 0
HYMEL, SHELLEY 27,500 <1% 27,500 0
HYMEL, TERRI 10,000 <1% 10,000 0
HYMEL, TERRI C/F 66,250 <1% 25,000 <1%
EMMA G HYMEL UGMA/TX
HYMEL, TERRI C/F 66,250 <1% 25,000 <1%
EVAN N HYMEL UGMA/TX
IVY, DENISE M THERIOT & 7,938 <1% 7,938 0
MACKLYN C JR, JTWROS
JACKSON, EDWIN L 375 <1% 375 0
JACKSON, ROBERT P 225,000 2.70% 80,000 1.74%
JACKSON, SHARON G 375 <1% 375 0
JOE, HERBERT 90,000 1.08% 90,000 0
JOE, HERBERT C/F 500 <1% 500 0
CHRISTOPHER JOE, UGMA/TX
JOE, MCKINLEY C/F 50,000 <1% 50,000 0
CHRISTOPHER JOE, UGMA/TX
KENNEY, TERESA LYNN 1,250 <1% 1,250 0
KESSEL, JOHN A & 50,000 <1% 50,000 0
ANDREA M, TENCOM
LEE, MARVIN D & TAMARA D, JTWROS 38,750 <1% 10,000 <1%
LEE, RICHARD SCOTT & 35,000 <1% 10,000 <1%
PATRICIA H, JTWROS
LONG, RYAN & CARMEN, JTWROS 3,000 <1% 3,000 0
LOPEZ, ARMANDO JR & 250 <1% 250 0
SHANNA M,JTWROS
LUETKEMEYER, CHRISTIAN 40,000 <1% 10,000 <1%
LUMB, LAURA 2,500 <1% 2,500 0
MARTIN, ROXIE J 375 <1% 375 0
MCCAIN, PETER 25,000 <1% 25,000 0
MCGEE, ROY LEE & 3,250 <1% 3,250 0
KIA BETH ELDRID, JTWROS
MCKENNA, ANDREA 44,667 <1% 12,500 <1%
MCKENNA, JOHN 12,500 <1% 12,500 0
MELINDER, ROBERT 6,250 <1% 6,250 0
MESSARRA, ANDREW & 1,250 <1% 1,250 0
CHRISTINA,JTWROS
MONTGOMERY, JAMES & CHERI, JTWROS 3,000 <1% 3,000 0
MOORE, LORI 2,500 <1% 2,500 0
NGUYEN, LANH XUAN 625 <1% 625 0
NILSSON, THOMAS 500 <1% 500 0
POOLE, DOINE H & GUADALUPE, JTWROS 7,500 <1% 7,500 0
POOLE, PEGGY 3,750 <1% 3,750 0
19
QUANTUM BIT INDUCTION 21,250 <1% 12,000 <1%
TECHNOLOGY, INC.(3)
RAFFERTY, JOHN C 1,250 <1% 1,250 0
REEDER, MARSHAL BRIAN & 9,250 <1% 9,250 0
HEATHER W, JTWROS
REEDER, PETER LINN & 1,750 <1% 1,750 0
JUDITH C, JTWROS
RUSSELL, BRENDA J 375 <1% 375 0
RUSSELL, HAROLD L 2,500 <1% 2,500 0
SCHLICHTING, DANIEL &
J SCHLICHTING, JTWROS 16,250 <1% 16,250 0
SCHLICHTING, J, CUST,
w SCHLICHTING, UGMA/TX 2,750 <1% 2,750 0
SCHLICHTING, J, CUST,
J SCHLICHTING, UGMA/TX 2,750 <1% 2,750 0
SCHLICHTING, J, CUST,
E SCHLICHTING, UGMA/TX 2,750 <1% 2,750 0
SCHNEIDER, MICHAEL 250 <1% 250 0
SKIDMORE, ERIC & 1,500 <1% 1,500 0
DEBORAH SKIDMORE, JTWROS
SKILLERN, MIKE 3,282 <1% 3,282 0
SKOLNICK, DAVID 6,250 <1% 6,250 0
SKOLNICK, JONATHAN 6,250 <1% 6,250 0
SKOLNICK, MICHAEL 6,250 <1% 6,250 0
SKOLNICK, SARA 6,250 <1% 6,250 0
SMART, HERBERT E & 2,000 <1% 2,000 0
MARTHA M, COM PROP
SMITH, DAVID A & SHIRLE M, JTWROS 10,000 <1% 10,000 0
SORIANO, CARLOS & LOUISE, JTWROS 11,875 <1% 11,875 0
STINNETT, DEBORAH 1,619 <1% 1,619 0
STINNETT, ROY E 3,619 <1% 3,619 0
STOCKIE, TONI 2,500 <1% 2,500 0
STOVALL, STEPHEN 1,000 <1% 1,000 0
STUART, CLAUDEAN A 500 <1% 500 0
TATE, MADISON A 375 <1% 375 0
TATE, MELODY H 375 <1% 375 0
TATE, RUSS 375 <1% 375 0
TIGTIG, DOUGLAS 1,250 <1% 1,250 0
TOTSKY, KIM E 93,750 1.12% 93,750 0
VILLAREAL, JOSEPH A 625 <1% 625 0
VILLAREAL, LAUREN O 625 <1% 625 0
WALLACE, CHERYL RENEE 375 <1% 375 0
WALLACE, LAMOINE & CAROL, JTWROS 17,500 <1% 17,500 0
WEISS, PHILLIP A & 10,000 <1% 10,000 0
SANDRA L, JTWROS
ZERCOE, PHYLLIS 4,344 <1% 4,344 0
ZERCOE, SHEILA A 1,250 <1% 1,250 0
ZERCOE, WALTER D 1,250 <1% 1,250 0
2,557,637 1,648,044
(1) Assumes the sale of all shares offered.
(2) The trustees of H.M. Martin, M.D. and Jeanne Foltz Blacker Revocable Living
Trust are H. Martin Blacker, M.D. and Jeanne Foltz Blacker
(3) The president of Quantumbit, Inc. is Mike Skillern
20
PLAN OF DISTRIBUTION (Item 8)
The selling shareholders, which as used herein includes donees, pledgees,
transferees or other successors-in-interest selling shares of common stock or
interests in shares of common stock received after the date of this prospectus
from a selling shareholder as a gift, pledge, partnership distribution or other
transfer, may, from time to time, sell, transfer or otherwise dispose of any or
all of their shares of common stock or interests in shares of common stock on
any stock exchange, market or trading facility on which the shares are traded or
in private transactions. The selling shareholders may only sell their shares of
our common stock pursuant to this prospectus at a fixed price of $2.00 per share
until such time as our common stock is quoted on the OTC Bulletin Board or an-
other public trading market for our common stock otherwise develops. At and
after such time, these dispositions may be at fixed prices, at prevailing market
prices at the time of sale, at prices related to the prevailing market price, at
varying prices determined at the time of sale, or at negotiated prices.
The selling shareholders may use any one or more of the following methods when
disposing of shares or interests therein:
* ordinary brokerage transactions and transactions in which the broker-dealer
solicits purchasers;
* block trades in which the broker-dealer will attempt to sell the shares as
agent, but may position and resell a portion of the block as principal to
facilitate the transaction;
* purchases by a broker-dealer as principal and resale by the broker-dealer for
its account;
* an exchange distribution in accordance with the rules of the applicable
exchange;
* privately negotiated transactions;
* short sales;
* through the writing or settlement of options or other hedging transactions,
whether through an options exchange or otherwise;
* broker-dealers may agree with the selling shareholders to sell a specified
number of such shares at a stipulated price per share;
* a combination of any such methods of sale; and
* any other method permitted pursuant to applicable law.
The selling shareholders may, from time to time, pledge or grant a security
interest in some or all of the shares of common stock owned by them and, if they
default in the performance of their secured obligations, the pledgees or secured
parties may offer and sell the shares of common stock, from time to time, under
this prospectus, or under an amendment to this prospectus under Rule 424(b)(3)
or other applicable provision of the Securities Act amending the list of selling
shareholders to include the pledgee, transferee or other successors in interest
as selling shareholders under this prospectus. The selling shareholders also may
transfer the shares of common stock in other circum-stances, in which case the
transferees, pledgees or other successors in interest will be the selling bene-
ficial owners for purposes of this prospectus.
In connection with the sale of our common stock or interests therein, the sell-
ing shareholders may enter into hedging transactions with broker-dealers or
other financial institutions, which may in turn engage in short sales of the
common stock in the course of hedging the positions they assume. The selling
shareholders may also sell shares of our common stock short and deliver these
securities to close out their short positions, or loan or pledge the common
stock to broker-dealers that in turn may sell these securities. The selling
shareholders may also enter into option or other transactions with broker-
dealers or other financial institutions or the creation of one or more deriva-
tive securities which require the delivery to such broker-dealer or other
financial institution of shares offered by this prospectus, which shares such
broker-dealer or other financial institution may resell pursuant to this
prospectus (as supplemented or amended to reflect such transaction).
The aggregate proceeds to the selling shareholders from the sale of the common
stock offered by them will be the purchase price of the common stock less dis-
counts or commissions, if any. Each of the selling shareholders reserves the
right to accept and, together with their agents from time to time, to reject,
in whole or in part, any proposed purchase of common stock to be made directly
or through agents. The Company will not receive any of the proceeds from this
offering.
21
The selling shareholders and any underwriters, broker-dealers or agents that
participate in the sale of the common stock or interests therein may be
"underwriters" within the meaning of Section 2(11) of the Securities Act. Any
discounts, commissions, concessions or profit they earn on any resale of the
shares may be underwriting discounts and commissions under the Securities Act.
Selling shareholders who are "underwriters" within the meaning of Section 2(11)
of the Securities Act will be subject to the prospectus delivery requirements
of the Securities Act. To the extent required, the shares of our common stock
to be sold, the names of the selling shareholders, the respective purchase
prices and public offering prices, the names of any agents, dealer or under-
writer, any applicable commissions or discounts with respect to a particular
offer will be set forth in an accompanying prospectus supplement or, if
appropriate, a post-effective amendment to the registration statement that
includes this prospectus.
In order to comply with the securities laws of some states, if applicable, the
common stock may be sold in these jurisdictions only through registered or li-
censed brokers or dealers. In addition, in some states the common stock may not
be sold unless it has been registered or qualified for sale or an exemption
from registration or qualification requirements is available and is complied
with.
The Company will make copies of this prospectus (as it may be supplemented or
amended from time to time) available to the selling shareholders for the purpose
of satisfying the prospectus delivery requirements of the Securities Act. The
selling shareholders may indemnify any broker-dealer that participates in tran-
sactions involving the sale of the shares against certain liabilities, including
liabilities arising under the Securities Act.
The Company expects to keep the registration statement of which this prospectus
constitutes a part effective until the earlier of the second anniversary of the
date the registration statement is declared effective by the SEC and such time
as all of the shares covered by this prospectus have been disposed of pursuant
to and in accordance with the registration statement or Rule 144 of the
Securities Act.
DESCRIPTION OF SECURITIES TO BE REGISTERED (Item 9)
Common Stock Stock Symbol: SIGL CUSIP Number: 82662L 20 9
The Company has 8,334,159 shares of its common stock issued and outstanding as
of August 15, 2012. The Company is authorized to issue up to 100,000,000 shares
of common stock, with no par value. Holders of our common stock are entitled to
one vote for each share in the election of directors and on all matters submit-
ted to a vote of shareholders. There is no cumulative voting in the election of
directors.
The holders of the common stock are entitled to receive dividends, when and as
declared, from time to time, by our board of directors, in its discretion, out
of any of our assets legally available. Upon the liquidation, dissolution or
winding up of the Company, the remaining assets of the Company available for
distribution to shareholders will be distributed among the holders of common
stock, pro rata based on the number of shares of common stock held by each.
Holders of common stock generally have no preemptive, subscription, redemption
or conversion rights.
This stock may be considered a penny stock. As such, Penny Stocks must, brokers
must, among other things, provide customers with a risk disclosure statement,
setting forth certain specified information prior to a purchase transaction;
* Disclose to the customer inside bid quotation and outside offer quotation for
this Penny Stock, or, in a principal transaction, the broker-dealer's offer
price for the Penny Stock;
* Disclose the aggregate amount of any compensation the broker-dealer receives
in the transaction;
* Disclose the aggregate amount of the cash compensation that any associated
person of the broker-dealer, who is a natural person, will receive in
connection with the transaction;
* Deliver to the customer after the transaction certain information concerning
determination of the price and market trading activity of the Penny Stock.
Non-stock exchange and non-NASDAQ stocks would not be covered by the
definition of Penny Stock for:
(i) issuers who have $2,000,000 tangible assets ($5,000,000 if the issuer
has not been in continuous operation for 3 years);
(ii) transactions in which the customer is an institutional accredited
investor; and
(iii) transactions that are not recommended by the broker-dealer.
22
Penny Stock Rules
The Securities and Exchange Commission has adopted regulations which generally
define "penny stock" to be any equity security that has a market price (as
defined) less than $5.00 per share or an exercise price of less than $5.00 per
share, subject to certain exceptions. Our securities are covered by the penny
stock rules, which impose additional sales practice requirements on broker-
dealers who sell to persons other than established customers and "accredited
investors". The term "accredited investor" refers generally to institutions with
assets in excess of $5,000,000 or individuals with a net worth in excess of
$1,000,000 or annual income exceeding $200,000 or $300,000 jointly with their
spouse. The penny stock rules require a broker-dealer, prior to a transaction in
a penny stock not otherwise exempt from the rules, to deliver a standardized
risk disclosure document in a form prepared by the SEC which provides informa-
tion about penny stocks and the nature and level of risks in the penny stock
market. The broker-dealer also must provide the customer with current bid and
offer quotations for the penny stock, the compensation of the broker-dealer and
its salesperson in the transaction and monthly account statements showing the
market value of each penny stock held in the customer's account. The bid and
offer quotations, and the broker-dealer and salesperson compensation informa-
tion, must be given to the customer orally or in writing prior to effecting the
transaction and must be given to the customer in writing before or with the
customer's confirmation. In addition, the penny stock rules require that prior
to a transaction in a penny stock, not otherwise exempt from these rules, the
broker-dealer must make a special written determination that the penny stock is
a suitable investment for the purchaser and receive the purchaser's written
agreement to the transaction. These disclosure requirements may have the effect
of reducing the level of trading activity in the secondary market for the stock
that is subject to these penny stock rules. Consequently, these penny stock
rules may affect the ability of broker-dealers to trade our securities. We
believe that the penny stock rules discourage investor interest in and limit
the marketability of our common stock.
Preferred Stock
The Company has not authorized any preferred stock and has no plans to do so in
the foreseeable future.
Warrants/Options
The Company has never issued any warrants or options for its common stock
Certain Anti-Takeover Provisions
Shareholders' rights and related matters are governed by the Texas Business
Corporation Act, General Corporation Law, our articles of incorporation and our
bylaws. Certain provisions of the Texas Business Corporation Act may discourage
or have the effect of delaying or deferring potential changes in our control.
The cumulative effect of these terms may be to make it more difficult to acquire
and exercise control of the Company and to make changes in management.
Furthermore, these provisions may make it more difficult for shareholders to
participate in a tender or exchange offer for common stock and in so doing may
diminish the market value of the common stock.
The existence of authorized but unissued shares of our common stock may enable
the Company's Board of Directors to render it more difficult or to discourage an
attempt to obtain control of the Company and thereby protect the continuity of
or entrench our management, which may adversely affect the market price of its
common stock. If in the due exercise of its fiduciary obligations, for example,
the Board of Directors were to determine that a takeover proposal is not in the
best interests of the Company, such shares could be issued by the Board of
Directors without shareholder approval in one or more private placements or
other transactions that might prevent, render more difficult or make more
costly, the completion of any attempted takeover transaction by diluting voting
or other rights of the proposed acquirer or insurgent shareholder group, by
creating a substantial voting bloc in institutional or other hands that might
support the position of the incumbent board of directors, by effecting an
acquisition that might complicate or preclude the takeover, or otherwise.
23
Dividends
Dividends, if any, will be contingent upon the Company's revenues and earnings,
if any, capital requirements and financial conditions. The payment of dividends,
if any, will be within the discretion of the Company's Board of Directors. The
Company presently intends to retain all earnings, if any, for use in its busi-
ness operations and accordingly, the Board of Directors does not anticipate
declaring any dividends prior to a business combination.
Trading of Securities in Secondary Market
There is currently no trading of the securities in any market.
Registered Offering
The Company has no specific plans to conduct a registered offering of its
securities other than for its "Selling Shareholders" at this time.
Transfer Agent
Nevada Agency and Transfer Company (NATCO)
50 West Liberty St., Suite 880,
Reno, Nevada 89501
(775) 323 0626
Debt Securities
None
Other Securities To Be Registered
None
INTERESTS OF NAMED EXPERTS AND COUNSEL (Item 10)
The following individuals have rendered opinions that are referenced in this
registration statement and own shares of the common stock of the Company. While
none of the stock issuances were made on a contingent basis, in the interest of
full disclosure, the following information is provided.
Richard C. Seltzer, attorney-at-law, provided a legal opinion regarding the
validity of common stock owned by Selling Shareholders listed in this regis-
tration statement. Mr. Seltzer serves as a member of the Company's Board of
Directors and, as of the date of this registration statement, owns less than 1%
of the Company's total issued and outstanding common stock (See Item 11m -
Security Ownership of Certain Beneficial Owners).
David G. Henry, a registered patent attorney, provided his opinion regarding
the intellectual property of the Company. As of the date of this registration
statement, Mr. Henry owns less than 0.1% of the Company's total issued and
outstanding common stock.
Harold L. Russell, Ph.D., provided an opinion regarding the proprietary techno-
logy of the Company. As of the date of this registration statement, Dr. Russell
owns less than 0.03% of the Company's total issued and outstanding common stock.
24
INFORMATION WITH RESPECT TO REGISTRANT (Item 11)
Description of Business (Item 11a)
The Company
Signal Advance, Inc. was initially incorporated in Texas in June, 1992 as
Biodyne, Inc., an engineering product and procedure development and consulting
firm focused on the implementation of emerging technologies for biomedical
applications. The Company has significant experience in computer technology,
distributed information systems, and data acquisition and analysis systems, as
well as and medical-legal and other litigation support. The Company developed
and produced over sixty (60) computer-generated animation/graphics projects over
the next several years - most of which were used in support of litigation and
medical risk management. In addition, the firm provided technical consulting for
a number of medical and legal professionals and institutions in and around the
Texas Medical Center in Houston.
The Company experienced steady growth through the subsequent 8 years. In 2000,
the Company focused on the development and application of emerging technologies
in biomedical applications. This "refocus" of the Company's mission was largely
determined by the president's doctoral studies in the biomedical field which
suggested a number of development and commercialization opportunities in bio-
medical instrumentation and technology. These projects effectively exploited and
focus the Company's unique combination of computer, engineering, and biomedical
experience and development capabilities.
In 2005, the Company changed its name to Biodyne Development Company, Inc to
more accurately reflect its mission and current activities. The Company
continued to provide engineering and consulting services, primarily in the
Houston area. "In-house" research and development efforts focused on proprietary
intellectual property referred to as Signal Advance technology (SAT). In 2007,
the Company applied for patent protection for SA technology, changed its name to
Signal Advance, Inc. (SAI) and continues to develop and refine SAT to expand the
range of potential markets while targeting specific applications for which SAI
is now pursuing commercialization.
The Technology
Overview
Sensors are used to detect various physical or physiological properties (e.g.
pressure, temperature, speed, heart rate) and convert these properties into
analog electrical signals. Typically, these signals are then digitized and
processed to generate an output which can be used for monitoring, intervention,
process control or similar functions. SAT acts to temporally advance the
detection of these analog electrical signals thereby offsetting or even
eliminating circuit transmission and/or processing delays in responsive (control
/interventional) type systems. This technology can potentially improve the
performance of a wide range of devices that process analog signals in areas such
as interventional medical devices, industrial process control, alarm/detection
systems, vehicular and flight control, and military targeting and weaponry.
One of the most promising application areas (of which there are many) is that of
medical intervention devices in which a small increase in signal detection time
(on the order of fractions of a second) could have a major impact on the
efficacy of the device.
Problem, Solution, and Value
In state-of-the-art interventional medical or industrial devices, time delays
due to signal detection, processing and generating a response reduce the
likelihood of successful intervention. This applies, for instance, to contain-
ing or limiting a life-threatening patho-physiological event such as cardiac
ventricular fibrillation or an epileptic seizure. The earlier the intervention
is initiated, the greater the chance for successful remediation.
Currently, hybrid predictive feedback and feed-forward control systems are used
to improve control response performance. Approaches to improving systems that
rely on increasingly faster electronics can reduce, but never completely elimi-
nate, these delays, nor provide a net temporal advance. SAT achieves the latter
by exploiting "negative group delay", a somewhat counterintuitive, yet empiri-
cally verified, wave propagation phenomenon in physics. The "negative delay"
(temporal advance) of the analog signals achieved with SAT was demonstrated in
peer reviewed and published university study with bioelectric signals. The
technology has the potential to markedly improve system performance. Further-
more, SAT may yield entirely new control or interventional approaches.
25
SAI's initial R&D focus is the application of SAT to the detection of bioelec-
tric signals (e.g. the ECG or EEG) for potential use in interventional medical
applications. However, the Company has identified whole classes of physical
analog signal sensors that operate within a an optimal frequency range for
signal detection temporal advancement, along with a host of probable licensing
targets. These include biomedical (e.g. cardiac rhythm management, neurostimu-
lation and neuroprosthetics) as well as commercial, industrial, military and
transportation applications (e.g. industrial process control, alarm/detection
systems, vehicular/flight control, and military targeting/weaponry). In indus-
trial process control, response delays can negatively impact product yield,
safety, fuel use and waste. In transportation, engine combustion control delays
affect performance, fuel efficiency and exhaust pollutants. In defense oriented
systems, feedback delays reduce response effectiveness.
Summary and Status
From January 1, 2011 to June 30, 2012, the Company has invested approximately
$280,000 on research, development and protection of its proprietary intellectual
property (referred to as signal advance technology). Cash and equity were paid
for this activity with the result that none of these costs were borne by
customers.
SAI has developed a number prototype of SA circuit designs that operate over
various frequency ranges. Circuit transfer functions have been analyzed and
their performance modeled and the circuit designs have been tested using a range
of test signals. Circuitry designed specifically for electrocardiology, the
electrical functioning of the heart, has recently completed rigorous refinement,
testing and evaluation in a successful research study conducted at the
University of Texas - Houston, in the Texas Medical Center.
The study results exceeded all of its objectives including the successful demon-
stration of temporally advanced detection of 'standard' constructed signals
(pulses and sine waves) and human electrocardiographic (ECG) signals (heart
beats) from cardiac patients. This development activity and experimentation
resulted in completion of a successful Ph.D. dissertation study (Hymel CM,
Application of Signal Advance Technology to Electrophysiology, University of
Texas Health Science Center at Houston, Graduate School of Biomedical Sciences,
August 2010). An comprehensive review article describing SAT, summarizing the
study results and discussing potential applications will be published in the
IEEE Circuits and Systems Magazine in the third quarter of 2011 (October 2011).
Differentiation
Current approaches to improving the performance of signal transmission and
responsive systems rely solely on the development of increasingly faster elec-
tronics that can merely reduce the total time delay through the device but not
eliminate it entirely nor provide a net temporal advance. In addition, hybrid
predictive feedback and feed-forward control systems (often implemented digital-
ly) are employed to improve signal response performance. These approaches may
be adequate for a number of control systems.
SAT however, achieves performance improvements using unique, engineering,
physics-based technology implemented in analog circuitry. By reducing or
eliminating signal detection/processing delays, this technology improves the
performance of a wide variety of biomedical and industrial intervention and
control systems. Success in this endeavor has potential application across a
broad range of systems that rely on the detection of a wide variety of analog
signals and may in turn lead to a new class of proactive rather than reactive
intervention and control. In addition, SAT can be applied in conjunction with
these conventional methods to further improve system performance.
In an independent patent valuation performed, Steven Weeks, Ph.D., First
Principals, Inc., came to the following conclusions:
"...there were no patents found that linked the concept of 'signal advance'
to applications in cardiovascular or neurostimulation applications ... Signal
Advance's penetration into these applications would be 100%, as SA has no
current competition. Other patents were identified which deal with other as-
pects of implantable medical devices, but none cite the use of 'signal ad-
vance' techniques to achieve their goals. Signal Advance's patent application
represents a new and unique application of the concept of 'signal advance' to
26
medical applications. The patent is seminal in concept. No other patents were
discovered that prevent Signal Advance from practicing its technology, or
that offer superior solutions to the issues addressed by Signal Advance."
David G. Henry, an intellectual property attorney with over 25 years of experi-
ence, taught patent law courses at the Baylor University Law School and lectures
in Baylor's Hankamer School of Business Entrepreneurship program. Mr. Henry made
the following observations regarding SAI's intellectual property:
"Despite dealing with hundreds of patent matters (as someone in my position
inevitably does), one rarely comes across truly 'pioneering' or 'landmark'
...inventions. Chris Hymel's systems and methods...appear to be just such an
invention (or family of inventions)...I expect to see Mr. Hymel's methods and
related systems come to underlie groundbreaking advances in fields which range
from psychiatry to law enforcement to combat training and weaponry to
biomechanical prosthetics."
Harold L. Russell, Ph.D. a principal with NeuroMedics Technology, Inc., in
assessing the potential for SAT to enhance the performance of their patented
technology, drew the following conclusions:
"It is my belief that Signal Advance technology will likely be seen as a
disruptive technology that forces rapid change in the field of biomedical
instrumentation with early adopters of this technology gaining a significant
commercial advantage over later adopters in the same field."
Validation
Proprietary signal advance (SA) circuitry operates on broadband analog signals
(over a specified frequency range) and produces minimal distortion in the cir-
cuit output relative to its input. Prototype SA circuits have been developed for
various frequency ranges consistent with application-specific signal require-
ments. Circuit transfer functions have been analyzed and their performances
modeled. Several SA circuit designs have been tested using a range of analog
test signals.
Scientific: In Dr. Hymel's doctoral dissertation study (Hymel CM, Application
of Signal Advance Technology to Electrophysiology, University of Texas Health
Science Center - Houston, Graduate School of Biomedical Sciences, August 2010),
prototype SA technology developed for ECG signals was extensively tested using a
range of simulated signals as well as actual ECG signals from cardiac patients.
This study successfully demonstrated and quantified the temporal advancement of
ECG signals and analyzed the fidelity of the circuit output relative to the
original input signal. Dr. Hymel's Ph.D. supervisory committee was tasked with
oversight, critical review, and ultimate approval of the multi-year research
project. An absolute requirement for that approval of such a dissertation is
novelty. The supervisory committee that reviewed (in detail) and confirmed the
study results and ultimately approved the dissertation was comprised of faculty
that included two electrical engineers, two physicists, a neurophysiologist and
a biomedical scientist.
In addition, two former University of Texas - Houston faculty members and one
former Baylor College of Medicine faculty member (a physicist, a biomedical
engineer and a neurosurgeon) who had previously served on the committee, con-
tinued to provide input, assistance and critical reviews of the research. One
of these individuals now serves as an SAI director and the other two are members
of the SAI advisory board.
Technological: The results of the study were summarized in a peer-reviewed
engineering article which discusses the theoretical basis, practical implementa-
tion and examples of potential applications for SA technology. The manuscript,
submitted for review in March 2011, was published as the feature article in the
IEEE Circuits and Systems Magazine, in September 2011 (Hymel et al, IEEE
Circuits and Systems Magazine, 3RD Qtr, 11 (3), 10-25).
Commercial: In October, 2011, SAI has awarded first place in the prestigious
Goradia Innovation Prize competition (Houston Technology Center Names 2011
Goradia Winners, Houston Business Journal, October 6, 2011). The selection of
awardees was based upon: 1) The commercial potential of the technology, 2) The
soundness of the business plan, 3) The potential for job growth within the
region, and 4) The likelihood of significant long-term success.
Innovation: The Intellectual Property Section of the Oklahoma Bar Association
named Dr. Chris Hymel, the Company's president, the 2012 Innovator of the Year
for his development work on Signal Advance technology.
27
Intellectual Property
Summary and Status
Patent applications entitled "Utility and Method for the Application of Signal
Advance Amplification to Analog Waveform or Signal Detection" describing the
broad basis of the SA process and technology were filed in the U.S. Patent and
Trademark Office (USPTO) and in foreign counterparts. The national phase for
international patent protection under the patent cooperation treaty (PCT) has
been completed. Claims amendments have been submitted in both the domestic and
international filings. In the US and Europe, the applications are under examina-
tion and claims amendments and additional prior art distinctions have been sub-
mitted. In July 2012, the Chinese Patent Office issued an Official Notification
of Allowance for the Chinese patent application entitled "Utility and Method for
the Application of Signal Advance Amplification to Analog Waveform or Signal
Detection" providing patent protection in China. Additional patent submissions
related to specific applications, various circuit configurations, and signal
processing techniques to improve signal fidelity are being drafted. In addition,
the Company has registered the trademark "Signal Advance".
The overall patent strategy is based on the fact that SA circuitry must be de-
signed to accommodate the particular signal characteristics and requirements of
each specific application. Each one will require the development of SA circuitry
and signal conditioning specific to the signal characteristics. The uniqueness
of both circuit design and analysis of circuit parameters enables novelty and
non-obviousness in patent claim construction. The very nature of the manipula-
tion of negative group delay in achieving SA ensures that the claims are not
obvious.
SAI expects each application of SAT will have its own patent filing. In
addition, intellectual property related to various SA circuit configurations as
well as signal conditioning techniques to improve temporally-advanced signal
fidelity, are being separately patented. The methods utilized to analyze the
idiosyncrasies of individual applications will be maintained as trade secrets.
These need not be licensed and may be protected separately.
Extensive searches of the patent and scientific literature have been conducted
periodically since the first patent filings in 2008. SAI has performed detailed
analyses to distinguish among various references to the art and has demonstrated
that the prior art does not negate the utility and novelty of SAT. We believe
that no combination of the references would render the technology obvious to a
person skilled in this area of the art.
SAI intellectual property strategy includes adding multiple application-specific
patents to its portfolio and each will stand independently. An attack on any one
of them will not affect the others. SAI will work with licensees to perform an
analysis of market size and penetration to decide which international applica-
tions to file and prosecute.
Profits are so substantial (particularly in medical fields) that some companies
are likely to resort to patent infringement or threats of litigation in order
to prevent smaller, more innovative companies from acquiring market share.
Further, each employee and consultant will be required to execute rigorous non-
disclosure and assignment agreements to protect Company proprietary technology.
In order to diminish the likelihood of the technology being co-opted by a market
leader:
* Specific applications of SAT will be separately patented, and multiple inde-
pendent applications of SAT will not overlap or interfere with one another,
* An attack on any one patent or application area will not affect others.
* Licensees will be required to participate in the defense of the patents they
have licensed. If any licensee fails to mount a defense for its licensed
patents, the license will terminate.
* Patent, scientific and trade publications will be monitored to identify
infringement/competition.
Competition
In the general area of signal science-technology, detection, acquisition and
processing performance of systems continues to improve, through the use of
ever-faster electronics. In addition, predictive feedback (using historical
input data) and feed-forward (open-loop) control systems are also used to
improve the performance of such systems.
28
With feed-forward methods, the control system responds directly to changes in
the input (rather than variations in the output) and is thus faster. Hybrid
predictive methods combine aspects of both feedback and feed-forward control
and may use historical data. These methods are currently used throughout the
industry and, in some systems, may be adequate. Faster electronics will reduce,
but never completely eliminate the delays, let alone temporally advance the
detection of signals. In addition, SAT can be used in conjunction with these
other approaches to further improve performance.
SAT offers unique advantages over these other methods. It can potentially elimi-
nate response delays entirely and may even yield a net temporal advance. Unlike
other methods, SAT is not implemented digitally; it operates on analog signals
using analog circuitry - thus does not rely on digital processing techniques. In
general, analog circuitry operates at much faster speeds than digital circuitry.
The analog nature of the technology also translates into lower costs of compo-
nents as well as increased reliability and longevity. Further, given its unique
mode of operation, SAT can be implemented in conjunction with more traditional
methods, and thus further increase performance gains achieved.
SAI is not currently aware of other parties commercializing this type of techno-
logy. However, the Company's own success will likely precipitate competition as
recognition and acceptance of SAT grows. This competition may include 1)
infringement in which others attempt to distinguish minor variations in the
technology and 2) legal machinations based on a largr, financially successful
firms' capability to engage in lengthy and costly litigation.
To date, searches and analyses of the patent and scientific literature have
failed to reveal any prior art that negates the utility and novelty of SAT. The
precision with which SA circuitry must be designed results from the need to
accommodate the unique signal characteristics of any particular application.
The application-specific design requirements form the basis for the claim that
specific SA circuitry designed for particular applications will be separately
patentable. However, the risk of infringement remains and constant vigilance is
required.
Defense against copying and infringement includes five strategic elements:
* Individuality of each SAT application protected by its own applicable
patent(s);
* Requirement that each licensee defend its licensed patents and patent
applications;
* Requirement that each licensee contribute to defense of the general patents
that claim the basic technology;
* A licensing strategy that initially seeks licenses with smaller companies that
are less likely to infringe and engage in litigation; and
* Maintenance of application specific methods for developing SAT for specific
sensors, signals, circuitry and operational parameters of specific applica-
tions are trade secrets held by SAI.
These methods provide SAI with a technical advantage that potential infringers
would have to overcome requiring undue time and expense. Experience has shown
that implementation of SAT can be more efficient with the provision by SAI of
appropriate levels of consulting. Given the choice of infringing and implement-
ing with no assistance versus paying a license fee and receiving assistance,
we believe most companies will choose the latter in order to decrease time to
market and avoid the possible expense of litigation, which taken together will
result in more cost effective implementation.
Dr. Hymel, the Company's CEO, is the inventor of SAT and has been working dili-
gently in this field for a number of years. SAI is positioned to be the first to
market with what the Company and others believe will prove to be disruptive
technology. His doctoral research stands as the seminal investigation of the
use of SAT with biomedical signals, specifically the human ECG. Based on its
multi-year head-start and significant, SAI has established itself as the leader
in the field thereby gaining a significant early competitive advantage.
Commercialization
Business Model
Specific applications of SAT will be licensed to product manufacturers by
emphasizing the improved performance of their products and thus providing a
competitive advantage. This approach avoids the high costs of manufacturing and
competing in the heavily dominated medical device and control/sensors markets.
Licensees, with consultation provided by SAI, will produce and market their
improved devices eliminating any reliance on raw materials.
29
Original licenses will carry provisions enabling SAI to license back further
improvements made by original licensees. This will enable SAI to leverage
technology improvements. In the case of biomedical devices, manufacturers and
their customers will assume the responsibility of obtaining any required
regulatory approvals. SAI has identified a host of companies that manufacture
devices and utilize processes that could benefit from SAT. The Company and its
consultants have extensive contacts in the biomedical community in the Texas
Medical Center in various electrophysiological applications as well as in the
oil and gas industries. These contacts include physicians, scientists and
engineers active in R&D and engineering fields pertinent to potential
applications of SAT as described previously.
A number of these contacts are active in transferring technology to industry for
commercialization and will facilitate Company outreach to appropriate personnel
in order to gauge interest in pertinent SAT applications. The strategy consists
of identifying targets, developing application-specific SAT circuitry, demon-
strating performance improvements, protecting the applicable IP and then
approaching the prospective client and securing licensing/consulting or joint
venture agreements. Each license will be accompanied by contractually specified
consulting to assist the licensee in implementing SAT.
As SAI's license base grows, the marketing and consulting staff will be expanded
to include individuals with the requisite expertise for specific applications
(i.e., biomedical, industrial, vehicular control, targeting, etc.). These
individuals will build upon SAI's efforts to identify device manufacturers and
enter into license or joint venture discussions with them. In addition, SAI's
ability to provide consulting services for implementation of the technology in
specific applications will be marketed. We anticipate SAI will ultimately become
a target for acquisition following additional technology refinement.
Market Analysis
The global cardiac rhythm management (CRM) market (which includes cardiac pac-
ing,implantable defibrillators and resynchronization therapy defibrillators)
generated revenues of over $6B in 2005 and is estimated to exceed $13.5B in
2013. In 2009, revenues in the US market alone exceeded $7.5B and growth is
projected to average 3% per year through 2016 (Millennium Research Group, Global
Markets for CRM Devices 2009, September 2008).
The neurostimulation device market includes spinal cord, deep brain, vagus
nerve, sacral nerve and gastric electrical stimulation. These devices are used
in the treatment and management of depression, dystonia, epilepsy (for seizure
suppression), essential tremors, gastro-paresis disorders, incontinence,
obsessive compulsive disorder (OCD), pain and Parkinson's disease. The global
implantable neurostimulation market, considered still in its infancy, is
projected to surpass $10B by 2014 (Global Industry Analysts, Inc., A Global
Strategic Business Report, September 2010).
Major suppliers in the CRM and neurostimulation markets include Bionet, Boston
Scientific, GE Healthcare, Guidant, Johnson & Johnson, Medtronic, Smith &
Nephew, St. Jude, Medical, Stryker, WL Gore and Zimmer.
Additional biomedical applications, in which SAT could improve performance,
include neurofeedback therapy, neuroprosthetics, neural/man-machine interfaces,
physiologically gated imaging and radiotherapy as well as real-time artifact
detection/rejection for a broad range of physiological signals. For these
applications, improved performance translates directly to increased value and
thus may provide SAI the greatest opportunity to maximize revenue generation.
Further, in biomedical applications, this means that the improved devices and
processes would most likely be subject to FDA 510K or hybrid 510K approvals
rather than the more expensive and time-consuming Pre-Market Approval process
As with any new technology, recognition and acceptance will increase momentum
over time.
For a host of non-biomedical applications (including literally hundreds of
sensor types), reducing or eliminating signal transmission and control system
delays could significantly reduce response times resulting in improved perform-
ance and increased efficiency/productivity as well as safety. In industrial
process control, physical parameters such as temperature, pressure, flow, etc.
provide input data for closed-loop computer control systems that optimize
production yields. In the petrochemical industry (for example, distillation),
the transient response times (measured in seconds/minutes) make these processes
good candidates for the application of SAT. Faster, closed-loop response
provides better disturbance rejection and thus increased production yield.
Additional application examples include high performance aircraft engine
control, in which SAT could increase stability and performance, reduce stall
30
margins and decrease fuel use. For compressors, used in hundreds of industrial
applications, reduced control loop delays would improve performance by reducing
probability of stalls/surges, thus extending stable operating ranges.
Industry analysts project that the global sensors/controls market will exceed
$70B by 2015 (Global Industry Analysts, Inc., Sensors: A Global Strategic
Business Report, October 2010). Demand for industrial controls in U.S. markets
likely exceeded $15B in 2011. (Freedonia - Industrial Controls to 2011 - Market
Research, Market Share, Market Size, Sales, Demand Forecast, Market Leaders,
Company Profiles, Industry Trends, November 2007). In transportation, the auto-
motive sensor market alone exceeded $9B in 2009 (Freedonia - World Automotive
Sensors to 2014 - Demand and Sales Forecasts, Market Share, Market Size, Market
Leaders, June 2010) and is projected to grow at a rate of nearly 12% annually
through 2014 representing the fastest growing segment in the sensors/controls
market. The fastest growing segment of this market is in crash avoidance and
safety and security systems, followed by drive-train systems and vehicle con=
trol. Additional increases in automotive sensor demand will be derived from
hybrid and hydrogen fuel cell vehicles. SAT could potentially improve accident
avoidance, safety/security, drive-train performance, and overall vehicular
control. The major suppliers in the sensors/controls market include Honeywell
International, Rockwell Automation, Eaton, Schneider Electric, and General
Electric.
SAT can improve performance of existing technological applications without
otherwise altering their functionality - a key market driver. The addressable
markets are estimated to be in the billions of dollars. As with any new
technology, recognition and acceptance will increase momentum over time.
The following is excerpted from the patent valuation report's executive summary
(2007):
Market: The addressable market for SIGNAL ADVANCE totals approximately $3B in 20
years time, to be penetrated to levels of ~4% with slow initial impact. SIGNAL
ADVANCE will compete based on superior technology and performance across a range
of products.
Marketing Strategy
To gain exposure and acceptance of SAT, the Company will participate in trade
show, present in scientific and technical meeting and publish application-
specific articles. SAI's initial marketing approach includes the following
steps:
* Identify application targets.
* Develop application-specific SA circuitry.
* Demonstrate performance improvement.
* Protect intellectual property.
* Approach manufacturer.
* Secure licensing, consulting and/or joint venture agreements.
As with all new (and in particular with disruptive) technology, especially that
considered disruptive, there is a need to educate prospective clients. The Com-
pany has begun to address this need through such activities as completion of the
scientific study in the Texas Medical Center and the publication of a feature
article in the IEEE Circuits and Systems magazine. This educational process will
continue through presentations at scientific and engineering meetings, partici-
pation at trade shows and additional publications to facilitate recognition and
acceptance of SAT.
Initially, SAI will concentrate on smaller companies where implementation of SAT
can have a large impact on commercial return. Smaller companies present a less
formal and structured approach to licensing. While smaller companies are also
less likely to consider infringement and oppressing SAI with litigation, they
may also be less able or willing to pay SAI to investigate the application of
our technology at their expense. As licensees are required to participate in
IP defense, initially licensing SAT to a number of smaller firms is a facet of
an overall defensive strategy for protecting SA's IP against larger, potentially
predatory companies.
As SAI establishes the value of its technology in the marketplace, the approach
will shift to application identification followed by intellectual property
protection. SAI will then approach market-specific clients to work with them at
theirexpense, in developing applications of SAT and demonstrating the improved
performance of their
31
product. This strategy will shift the development costs to the client and make
more efficient use of investment capital and staff while enhancing revenues.
The selection criteria used to identify application targets include:
* Control/Interventional Applications - SAT could improve the performance of a
wide range of interventional or control applications by offsetting and thus
reducing or eliminating signal acquisition and processing delays thereby
improving response times.
* Signal Characteristics/Operating Frequency Range - there is a relationship
between the frequency content of the signal to which SAT is applied and the
temporal advance achieved per SA circuit stage. The characteristics of the
signal components of interest determine the complexity of the SA circuitry.
* Commercial Potential (Market Size/Impact) - Our primary focus is on large
commercial markets in which SA can have a significant impact in terms of
performance improvement and increased commercial value and thus maximize
revenues from licensing and royalties.
* Major Market Supplier(s) - We are seeking major suppliers in the various
markets through our existing network of biomedical, scientific and industrial
contacts in order to maximize revenues. In addition, we will pursue multiple
suppliers in the same market in order to strengthen our position with respect
to intellectual property protection.
* Potential Competition - At present we have found no competition in this
market, however, as we begin to reveal SAT publicly and educate potential
clients (through scientific/industrial publications, engineering presenta-
tions, etc.), SAI anticipates competition and will vigorously defend our
intellectual property.
* Government and Regulatory Requirements - We will consider the effects of any
government and regulatory requirements applicable to licensees which may
impact taking applications to market and revenue generation.
Revenue Generation
The Company revenues are generated by:
* Licensing SA intellectual property,
* Providing consulting services to licensees to facilitate implementation,
* Participating in joint ventures.
SAI will pursue a vigorous licensing strategy to develop relationships with
companies that can develop and market selected applications. Each of the filed
and/or patented applications will serve as a license vehicle to approach a
particular Company or set of companies. The typical license will call for an
initiation fee, escalating minimum royalties to be paid before a given product
is marketed, and continuing royalties based on gross sales once marketing has
begun, confirmed by annual audits. The license will also include a set amount
of time for consulting. Licensees will also be required to participate in
patent maintenance/defense.
It is expected that while some licenses may be worldwide and exclusive within
specific applications, SAI will be flexible in considering non-exclusivity and/
or regional licensing. If a license for a given application is executed early
enough in the prosecution of a particular patent application, the licensee may
be given the right to file international counterparts in countries said
licensee deems profitable.
The royalty structure for each licensee will vary based on the answers to the
following questions:
* What product(s) is/are SAT going to improve?
* What is the market for these products?
* What is the nature of the competition in these markets?
* Does the application of SAT either expand existing or open new markets?
* What was the income from these products?
* How much will client revenues increase with the addition of SAT?
SAI will seek to obtain a significant share of the enhanced revenue - projected
at 15-20% over the life of the license (conservatively, 10-12 years). This
figure will form a foundation for proffering a figure for the percentage of
gross (preferably) or net revenue on which running royalties will be based. The
license initiation fee is based on a number
32
of application specific details, including the market size of and SAI's relative
contribution to specific applications. These fees may vary from $100K to over
$1M and should cover costs incurred to execute the license, preliminary analysis
of particular application parameters and features, initial patent costs and
initial consulting fees. Smaller initiation fees may be more advantageous for
smaller companies who may be less likely to consider infringing the intellectual
property. Minimum (maintenance) royalties, based on milestones achieved by the
licensee, would be approximately 15%, 25%, 40% and 50% of the average running
royalty per year taken in the first four years of the license unless the running
royalty kicks in. In this case SAI takes the greater of the minimum vs. the
running royalty.
Alternatively, license terms may contain a citation of milestones of achievement
by the licensee. Each milestone may be tied to an increase in the minimum
royalty. For example, biomedical milestones may include completion of animal
trials, submission and then approval of 510K applications or pre-market approval
by the FDA. Each licensee pursuing a biomedical application will be expected to
develop its own clinical data to secure such pre-market notification (510k) or
approval.
Finally, SAI may enter into joint ventures, participating in the development of
applications and sharing in subsequent revenue generation.
Government, Regulatory and Environmental Considerations
Based on Company's business model, licensing its proprietary technology to manu-
facturers, government regulations and approvals would apply to our licensees.
SAI is unaware of any environmental, compliance or government approval or
regulations which are applicable to the Company.
Valuation
SAI has raised just over $650,000 in cash from private placements since its
inception. As of June 30, 2012, the Company is carrying debt of under $35,000.
The current book value of the equity is approximately $1,900,000, the majority
of which is intellectual property acquired through an assignment agreement in
exchange for equity.
The following conclusion, excerpted from the 2007 patent valuation report's
Executive Summary. This valuation was based solely on only two biomedical appli-
cations (cardiac rhythm management and neurostimulation) for the Signal Advance
technology.
VALUE: Including the projected, risk-adjusted licensing royalties, we project
A NET PRESENT VALUE OF UP TO ~$10.4 MILLION. This valuation will increase
rapidly as the technology is proven and then successfully applied to products
in this very large market.
N.B. THE ABOVE VALUATION IS ONLY AN ESTIMATE WITH NO GUARANTEES OF FUTURE
OUTCOME. IT IS, HOWEVER, DELIBERATELY CONSERVATIVE. WE HAVE INCLUDED ONLY
THOSE MARKET SECTORS FOR WHICH RELIABLE DATA CAN BE CITED. WE HAVE USED
CONSERVATIVE ESTIMATES OF MARKET SHARE AND OF MARKET GROWTH RATES. THERE MAY
BE A NUMBER OF OTHER MARKET SEGMENTS ACCESSIBLE BY THE SUBJECT PATENTS, AS
NOTED IN THE TEXT. THEIR ADDITION WOULD ADD TO THE STATED VALUE. THUS, WE
REGARD THE ABOVE VALUE AS A CONSERVATIVE VALUE FOR THE PATENT(S).
Since this valuation, considerable development and validation progress has been
made including the successful completion of the University of Texas study in the
Texas Medical Center, the publication of the peer-reviewed feature journal
article in the IEEE Circuit and Systems magazine, the Goradia Innovation prize
first place award, China patent allowance, and the recognition of Dr. Hymel as
the 2012 Innovator of the year by the Oklahoma Bar Association.
33
Staffing Requirements
SAI currently has one full-time consultant, the President/Treasurer. Additional
director and officer positions are filled by highly qualified individuals in
their respective fields. All of these individuals accept equity in the Company
in exchange for their services and are ideal candidates to fill senior manage-
ment positions in the engineering/ development and legal (including intellectual
property) departments. These individuals have expressed an interest in serving
in certain positions and having consulted with SAI for a number of years, are
already quite familiar with SAT and its development. In addition, the Company
has initiated searches for qualified individuals to fill the positions of Sales
/Licensing VP and CFO.
Additional staffing requirements in engineering/development include analog and
digital electronics engineers, a scientist/ engineer, electronics technicians
and software developers. In sales/licensing, in addition to its VP, positions
will include marketing, and sales engineering (preferably with background/
experience in specific application areas). In addition, a number of
administrative staff positions will need to be filled.
Organizational Chart
Board of ------>President
Directors & CEO
|
|
_____________________________|________________
| | | |
| | | |
v v v v
Science __ __ Appl. Sales* Legal Finance*
Engrg R&D | | & Licensing & IP &Acctng
| | | |
| | | |
___________|__|___________ | |
| Appl.#1 | | | | |
Client 1-------->| | | |<---------| |
| R&D*<--| |--> Lic.* | | |
Consultant 1---->| Staff | | Staff |<---------|-------------|
|___________|__|___________| | |
| | | |
| | | |
___________|__|___________ | |
| Appl.#2 | | | | |
Client 2-------->| | | |<---------| |
| R&D*<--' '--> Lic.* | | |
Consultant 2---->| Staff Staff |<---------|-------------|
|__________________________| | |
| | | |
| | | |
| | | |
v v v v
* to be indentified
34
Description of Property (Item 11b)
SAI occupies approximately 900 square feet of office/laboratory space located at
2520 County Road 81, Rosharon, Texas 77583 which is leased from the Company
president on a month to month basis for $700 per month and is renewable. Manage-
ment believes this space is sufficient for the current operations. However,
given sufficient capital to hire additional staff office expansion and likely
relocation is anticipated.
Legal Proceedings (Item 11c)
Presently, there are no pending legal proceedings to which the Registrant is a
party or as to which any of its property is subject, and the Registrant does not
know nor is it aware of any legal proceedings threatened or contemplated against
it.
Further, there have been no events under any bankruptcy act, criminal proceed-
ings and judgments, injunctions, orders or decrees material to the evaluation
of the ability and integrity of any director, executive officer, promoter or
control person of Registrant during the past five years.
Market price of and dividends on the registrant's common equity and related
shareholder matters (Item 11d)
Market Information
There is no established public trading market for our common stock.
As of the date hereof, there are no outstanding options or warrants to purchase,
or securities convertible into, common equity of the Company.
The Company's common stock is currently not quoted on OTC Markets or the OTC
Bulletin Board or any other information services or exchange. Therefore, there
is no market information.
Holders
As of August 15, 2012, there were 156 holders of record of the Company's common
stock.
Dividends
The Registrant has not paid any cash dividends to date and does not anticipate
or contemplate paying dividends in the foreseeable future. It is the present
intention of management to utilize all available funds for the development of
the Registrant's business.
Securities Authorized for Issuance under Equity Compensation Plans
No warrants or option have been issued for any securities and none is antici
pated in the foreseeable future. Securities have been issued in exchange for
services, as described previously; however, there are no securities are author-
ized for issuance under any equity compensation plans.
35
Financial Statements (Item 11e)
SIGNAL ADVANCE, INC.
FINANCIAL STATEMENTS AND SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION
Report Period Page
1 For Six Month Period Ended June 30, 2012 (Unaudited) 34
2 Year Ended December 31, 2011 (Audited) 44
3 Year Ended December 31, 2010 (Audited) 55
36
SIGNAL ADVANCE, INC.
FINANCIAL STATEMENTS AND SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION
(Unaudited)
Six Month Period Ended June 30, 2012
TABLE OF CONTENTS Page No.
ACCOUNTANT'S REPORT.....................................................F 1
FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
Balance Sheet.........................................................F 2
Statements of Income and Retained Earnings (Accumulated Deficit)......F 3
Statement of Cash Flows.................................................F 4
Notes to Financial Statements.........................................F 5-8
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION
Schedule of Selling and Administrative Expenses.........................F 9
37
Bobby J. Hutton
Certified Public Accountant
4824 Courtside Drive
Fort Worth, TX 76133
Report of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm
The Board of Directors
Signal Advance, Inc.
2520 CR 81
Rosharon, TX 77583
We have reviewed the accompanying balance sheet of Signal Advance, Inc. (A
Texas Corporation) as of June 30, 2012, and the related statements of income
andretained earnings (accumulated deficit), and cash flows for the six-month
period then ended. These interim financial statements are the responsibility
of management. Our responsibility is to express an opinion on these financial
statements based on our review.
We conducted our review in accordance with the standards of the Public Company
Accounting Oversight Board (United States). A review of interim financial
information consists principally of applying analytical procedures and making
inquiries of persons responsible for financial and accounting matters. It is
substantially less in scope than an audit conducted in accordance with the
standards of the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board, the objective of
which is the expression of an opinion regarding the financial statements taken
as a whole. Accordingly, we do not express such an opinion.
Based on our review, we are not aware of any material modifications that should
be made to the accompanying interim financial statements for them to be in
conformity with accounting principles generally accepted in the United States.
The accompanying financial statements have been prepared assuming that the
Company will continue as a going concern. As discussed in Note A in the
financial statements, the Company's operating losses raise substantial doubt
about its ability to continue as a going concern. The financial statements do
not include any adjustments that might result from this uncertainty.
Very truly yours,
/s/ Bobby J. Hutton
Bobby J. Hutton
Certified Public Accountant
Fort Worth, Texas
July 30, 2012
F 1
38
Signal Advance, Inc.
Balance Sheets
As of June 30, 2012, 2011, December 31, 2011
(Unaudited)
Jan-Jun '12 Jan-Jun '11 Dec. 31, 2011
ASSETS
Current Assets
Cash $25,033 $6,650 $12,918
Accounts Receivable -0- 109 -0-
----------- ----------- -------------
Total Current Assets $25,033 6,759 12,918
Fixed Assets 9,339 16,331 8,887
Intellectual Property - Note B 1,878,094 1,770,332 1,845,294
Long-Term Investments 21,438 21,369 21,369
Marketable Securities - Note C 417 25,000 25,000
---------- ----------- -------------
TOTAL ASSETS $1,934,321 $1,839,781 $1,913,467
LIABILITIES & EQUITY
Current Liabilities
Short Term Loans $36,206 $41,725 $33,269
---------- ---------- -------------
Total Current Liabilities 36,206 41,725 33,269
Long Term Liabilities
Trade Payable - Note H 90,000 120,000
---------- ----------- -------------
Total Long Term Liabilities 90,000 120,000
Total Liabilities $36,206 $131,725 $153,369
Shareholders' Equity
Capital Investment $2,991,084 $2,691,667 $2,768,334
Comprehensive Gain/(Loss) (71,208) (46,625) (46,625)
Retained Earnings (961,511) (922,188) (922,188)
Net Income (60,250) (14,798) (39,232)
---------- ----------- -------------
Total Shareholders' Equity $1,898,115 $1,708,056 $1,760,198
TOTAL LIABILITIES & EQUITY $1,934,321 $1,839,781 $1,913,467
========== =========== =============
See Accompanying Notes and Accountant's Report F 2
39
Signal Advance, Inc.
Statements of Income and Expense Distribution
Six month periods ending June 30, 2012, 2011 and year ending December 31, 2011
(Unaudited)
Jan-Jun '12 Jan-Jun '11 Jan-Dec '11
Ordinary Income/Expense
Income $4,025 $45,000 $80,000
----------- ----------- -----------
Gross Profit 4,025 45,000 80,000
Expense
General and Administrative 18,044 14,425 34,035
Professional Services 31,300 15,374 32,237
Research and Development 15,000 30,000 45,000
Depreciation 8,052
----------- ----------- -----------
Total Expense $64,344 $59,798 $119,323
Net Ordinary Income $(60,319) $(14,798) (39,323)
Other Income (Schedule K-1) 69 -0- -0-
Net Income $(60,250) $(14,798) $(39,323)
Beginning Accumulated Deficit (961,511) (968,813) (922,188)
----------- ----------- ------------
Ending Accumulated Deficit $(1,021,761) $(983,611) $(961,511)
Net loss per common share
- basic and diluted - Note G (0.1226) (0.1217) (0.1185)
Shares used to calculate net loss 8,334,159 8,081,409 8,111,409
per common share - basic & diluted
(total issued & outstanding,less treasury)
See Accompanying Notes and Accountant's Report F 3
40
Signal Advance, Inc.
Statement of Cash Flow
Six month periods ending June 30, 2012, 2011 and year ending December 31, 2011
(Unaudited)
Jan-Jun '12 Jan-Jun '11 Jan-Dec '11
OPERATING ACTIVITIES
Net Income $(60,250) $(14,798) $(39,323)
Adjustments to reconcile Net Income
to net cash provided by operations:
Accounts Receivable 109
Cash (709)
Short Term Loans 2,937 450 (8,005)
---------- ----------- -----------
Net cash provided by Operating Activities $(57,313) $(15,057) $(47,219)
INVESTING ACTIVITIES
Fixed Assets $(453) (607)
Depreciation 8,051
Intellectual Property (32,800) (46,380) (121,351)
Long-Term Investments (69)
Marketable Securities 24,583 (25,000) (25,000)
---------- ----------- -----------
Net cash provided by Investing Activities $(8,739) $(71,380) $(138.907)
FINANCING ACTIVITIES
Trade Payable - Note H $(120,000) $90,000 $120,000
Capital Investment 222,750 76,667
Comprehensive Gain/(Loss) (24,583)
----------- ----------- -----------
Net cash provided by Financing Activities $78,167 $90,000 $196,667
Net cash increase/(decrease) for period $12,115 $3,564 $10,541
Cash at beginning of period 12,918 2,378 2,378
----------- ----------- -----------
Cash at end of period $25,033 $5,941 $12,918
=========== =========== ===========
See Accompanying Notes and Accountant's Report F 4
41
NOTE A - SUMMARY OF SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES
Nature of Operations and Organization Signal Advance, Inc. (the Company) is
currently conducting operations. Signal Advance, Inc., incorporated in Texas on
June 4, 1992, is an engineering product and procedure development and consulting
firm focused on the application of emerging technologies for biomedical applica-
tions. The Company has significant experience in computer technology, distribu-
ted information systems, and data acquisition and analysis systems, as well as,
medical education and medical-legal litigation support. Recently, the Company
has been engaged in two fields of endeavor. The Company has developed and con-
tinues to refine electrophysiological signal acquisition systems as well as
developing and refining its proprietary "Signal Advance technology" which has
potential application in a wide range of additional biomedical applications, as
well as, applications outside of biomedicine.
Impairment The Company amortizes intangible assets over their estimated useful
lives unless such lives are deemed indefinite. Amortized intangible assets are
tested for impairment based on undiscounted cash flows, and, if impaired,
written down to fair value based on either discounted cash flows or appraised
values. Intangible assets with indefinite lives are tested annually for impair-
ment and written down to fair value as required. No impairment of intangible
assets has been identified during any of the periods presented.
Cash and Cash Equivalents The Company considers all highly liquid investments
pur chased with an original maturity of three months or less to be cash
equivalents.
Marketable Securities The Company holds certain investments that are treated as
available for sale securities under Statement of Financial Accounting Standards
No. 115, "Accounting for Certain Investments in Debt and Equity Securities" and
stated at their fair market values. All investments are available for current
operations and are classified as other assets in the balance sheet. Unrealized
holding gains and losses are included as a component of other comprehensive
income until realized. Realized gains and losses are determined by the specific
identification method and are included in "Other Income" in the income
statement.
Research and Development Research and development expenses are expensed as
incurred until technological feasibility can be determined as per FASB No. 86.
Upfront and milestone payments made to third parties in connection with research
and development collaborations are expensed as incurred up to the point of reg-
ulatory approval, marketability, licensing, lease, or sale when the net present
value and useful life is able to be determined. Payments made to third parties
subsequent to the aforementioned events are capitalized. Amounts capitalized for
such payments are included in other intangibles, net of the accumulated amorti-
zation, if their useful lives can be determined.
Revenue Recognition As part of the Company's business model and as a result
of the company's on-going investment in research and development, the company
licenses and sells the rights to certain of its intellectual property (IP)
including internally developed patents, trade secrets and technological know-
how. Certain transfers of IP to third parties may be licensing/royalty-based,
transaction-based, or other forms of transfer. Licensing/royalty-based fees
involve transfers in which the company earns the income over time, as a lump-
sum payment or the amount of income is not fixed or determinable until the
licensee sells future related products (i.e., variable royalty, based upon
licensee's revenue). Consulting Income is recognized when the revenue is
realized or realizable, and has been earned.
Accompanying Notes are an Integral Part of the Financial Statements F 5
42
Property, Plant and Equipment Land, buildings and equipment are carried at
cost less accumulated depreciation. Depreciation is based on the estimated ser-
vice lives of depreciable assets and is generally provided using the Modified
Accelerated Cost Recovery System (MACRS) method. In the case of disposals,
assets and related depreciation are removed from the accounts, and the net
amounts, less proceeds from disposal, are included in income.
Income Taxes The Company has adopted SEAS No.109, "Accounting for Income Taxes",
which requires an asset and liability approach to financial accounting and
reporting for income taxes. The difference between the financial statement and
tax basis of assets and liabilities is determined annually. Deferred income tax
assets and liabilities are computed for those differences that have future tax
consequences using the currently enacted tax laws and rates that apply to the
periods in which they are expected to affect taxable income. Valuation allow=
ances are established, if necessary, to reduce the deferred tax asset to the
amount that will assure full realization, As of December 31, 2011, the Company
recorded a valuation allowance that reduced its deferred tax assets to zero.
Concentrations of Credit Risk Financial instruments which potentially subject
the Company to significant concentrations of credit risk consist primarily of
investment securities. Investment securities are exposed to various risks, such
as interest rate, market and credit risks. Due to the level of risk associated
with certain investment securities, it is reasonably possible that changes in
the values of investment securities can occur in the near term and that each
change could materially affect the amounts reported in the financial statement.
Going Concern While the Company is currently conducting operations, it has not
yet generated sufficient operating revenue to fund its development activities to
date. As such, the Company has relied on funding by the Company's President and
the sale of its common stock. There is a substantial doubt that the Company will
generate sufficient revenues in future years to meet its operating cash require-
ments. Accordingly, the Company's ability to continue operations in the short-
term depends on its success in obtaining equity or debt financing in an amount
sufficient to support its operations. This could raise doubt as to its ability
to continue as a going concern. The financial statements do not include any
adjustments that might result from this uncertainty.
NOTE B - INTANGIBLE PROPERTY
As of June 30, 2012, the balance of intangible property was $1,878,094.
$1,250,000 of this balance was due to an assignment of intellectual property
(intangible property) related to "Signal Advance technology", transferred from
the inventor to the Company in 2008. This technology can enhance the performance
of a wide variety of signal detection, interventional and control applications.
The Company is currently seeking intellectual property protection for internally
developed intellectual property referred to as "Signal Advance Technology" which
resulted from the company's research and development activities. Actual costs
incurred in relation to the intellectual property protection of this intangible
asset were capitalized. There are patents pending on the intellectual property
and any patent infringement case may hinder the Company's ability to generate
revenues.
The Company's carrying value is included in "Intellectual Property" on the
balance sheet. This intangible asset is not amortized because its useful life
cannot be determined. In accordance with SFAS No.142, no amortization was
recorded for goodwill and/or intangible assets deemed to have indefinite or
indeterminate lives.
Accompanying Notes are an Integral Part of the Financial Statements F 6
43
NOTE C - MARKETABLE SECURITIES
Cost and fair value of marketable equity securities at June 30, 2012 is as
follows:
Cost Gross Unrealized Loss Fair Value
------- --------------------- ----------
Securities Available for Sale $71,625 ($71,208) $417
NOTE D - EQUIPMENT
Property and equipment are summarized as follows:
Machinery and Equipment $ 119,636
Furniture and Fixtures 3,588
Cost 123,225
Less: Accumulated Depreciation (113,885)
Net Book Value $ 9,339
Depreciation expense in the year ending December 31, 2011 was $8,052.
NOTE E - INCOME TAXES
Operating Loss Carry-forwards - As of December 31, 2011 the Company has a net
operating tax loss carry-forward of $ 39,323. Other loss carry-forwards from
previous periods may be offset against future federal income taxes. If not used,
loss carry-forwards will expire as follows:
Year Operating Losses Year Operating Losses
---- ---------------- ---- ----------------
16 $ 114,901 20 -0-
17 46,917 21 250,180
18 107,676 22 15,377
19 39,720 23 39,323
Deferred Tax Asset A valuation allowance was recognized for the full amount of
the deferred tax asset because, based on the weight of available evidence, it is
more likely than not that some portion or the entire deferred tax asset will not
be realized.
Tax Depreciation - The Company uses the Modified Accelerated Cost Recovery
System MACRS) for depreciation of property for tax purposes.
NOTE F - RELATED PARTY TRANSACTIONS
The Company was been assigned intangible property in 2008 from the inventor
(assignor) who is also the President of the Company. The Company leases office
and warehouse space from the President of the Company. See Note I for details.
Accompanying Notes are an Integral Part of the Financial Statements F 7
44
NOTE G - NET EARNINGS PER SHARE
Basic earnings per share is computed by dividing net income available to common
shareholders by the weighted average number of common shares outstanding for the
period. A diluted earnings per share reflects the potential dilution that could
occur if securities or other contracts to issue common stock were exercised or
converted into common stock.
NOTE H - TRADE PAYABLE
President of the Company has provided on-going services-for-equity reflected by
the trade payable. The conversion of the debt to equity in the company will be
at a conversion rate negotiated and approved by the Board of Directors.
NOTE I - FACILITIES LEASE
The Company currently leases office space, from its President, on a month to
month basis at a rate of $700 per month. The following is a schedule of future
minimum payments for 4 years under the above operating lease as of June 30,
2012.
Year Amount
---- ---------
2012 $ 4,200
2013 8,400
2014 8,400
2015 8,400
---------
$33,600
Rental expense amounted to $4,200 for the six month period ending June 30, 2012.
45
Accompanying Notes are an Integral Part of the Financial Statements F 8
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATIOn
Six month periods ending June 30, 2012, 2011
(Unaudited)
Signal Advance, Inc.
Schedules of General and Administrative Expenses
Six month period ending June 30, 2012
(Unaudited)
Jan-Jun '12 Jan-Jun '11
----------- -----------
Advertising/Marketing $400 $400
Automobile Expense 1,122 88
Bank Service Charges 54 35
Dues/Subscriptions 35 0
Employee Benefits 4,683 41
Insurance 422 0
Interest Expense 1,392 2,122
Maintenance and Repairs 332 302
Meals/Entertainment 340 82
Office Supplies 76 16
Postage and Delivery 160 138
Rent - Note I 4,200 4,200
Taxes 100 0
Telephone 1,245 2,200
Travel 2,356 3,435
Utilities 1,125 1,365
----------- -----------
$18,044 $14,025
See Accompanying Notes and Accountant's Report F 9
46
SIGNAL ADVANCE, INC.
AUDITED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS AND
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION
Year Ended December 31, 2011
TABLE OF CONTENTS Page No.
ACCOUNTANT'S REPORT.......................................................F 1
FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
Balance Sheet...........................................................F 2
Statements of Income and Retained Earnings (Accumulated Deficit)........F 3
Statement of Cash Flows.................................................F 4
Statement of Changes in Stockholder's Equity............................F 5
Notes to Financial Statements.........................................F 6-9
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION
Schedule of Selling and Administrative Expenses........................F 10
47
Bobby J. Hutton
Certified Public Accountant
4824 Courtside Drive
Fort Worth, TX 76133
Report of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm
The Board of Directors
Signal Advance, Inc.
2520 CR 81
Rosharon, TX 77583
We have audited the accompanying balance sheet of Signal Advance, Inc. (A Texas
Corporation) as of December 31, 2011, and the related statements of income and
retained earnings (accumulated deficit), cash flows and changes in stockholders'
equity for the year then ended. The financial statements are the responsibility
of management. Our responsibility is to express an opinion on these financial
statements based on our audit.
We conducted our audit in accordance with the standards of the Public Company
Accounting Oversight Board (United States). These standards require that we
plan and perform the audit to obtain reasonable assurance about whether the
financial statements are free of material misstatements. An audit includes
examining, on a test basis, evidence supporting the amounts and disclosures in
the financial statements. An audit also includes assessing the accounting
principles used and significant estimates made by management, as well as
evaluating the overall financial statements presentation. We believe that our
audit provides 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 Signal Advance, Inc. as of
December 31, 2011 and the results of its operations and its cash flows for the
year then ended in conformity with account principles generally accepted in the
United States.
The accompanying financial statements have been prepared assuming that the
Company will continue as a going concern. As discussed in Note A in the
financial statements, the Company's operating losses raise substantial doubt
about its ability to continue as a going concern. The financial statements do
not include any adjustments that might result from this uncertainty.
Very truly yours,
/s/ Bobby J. Hutton
Bobby J. Hutton
Certified Public Accountant
Fort Worth, Texas
April 26, 2012
F 1
48
Signal Advance, Inc.
Balance Sheet
December 31, 2011
ASSETS
Current Assets
Cash $ 12,918
-----------
Total Current Assets 12,918
Equipment (net accumulated depreciation) - Note D 8,887
Intellectual Property - Note B 1,845,294
Long-term Investments 21,369
Marketable Securities 25,000
-----------
TOTAL ASSETS $1,913,467
===========
LIABILITIES & SHAREHOLDERS' EQUITY
Current Liabilities
Loan from Shareholder 33,269
-----------
Total Current Liabilities 33,269
Long Term Liabilities
Trade Payable - Note H 120,000
-----------
Total Long Term Liabilities 120,000
Total Liabilities $ 153,269
-----------
Shareholders' Equity
Common stock - $0 par value, 8,111,409 shares -
issued and outstanding as of 2011 - Note J
Paid-in Capital in excess of par 2,768,334
Net Other Comprehensive Gain/(Loss) - Note C (46,625)
Accumulated Deficit (961,511)
-----------
Total Shareholders' Equity 1,760,198
-----------
TOTAL LIABILITIES & SHAREHOLDERS' EQUITY $1,913,467
===========
See Accompanying Notes and Accountant's Report F2
49
Signal Advance, Inc.
Statements of Income and Retained Earnings (Accumulated Deficit)
Year Ended December 31, 2011
REVENUES
Consulting $ 45,000
Other income 35,000
COST OF SALES -
---------
GROSS PROFIT 80,000
EXPENSES
Professional Services 32,237
Selling and Administrative 34,035
Research and Development 45,000
Depreciation 8,052
---------
TOTAL EXPENSES $ 119,323
---------
NET LOSS (39,323)
BEGINNING ACCUMULATED DEFICIT (922,188)
ENDING ACCUMULATED DEFICIT $(961,511)
---------
Net loss per common share - basic and diluted - Note F $ (0.1185)
Shares used to calculate net loss per common share 8,111,409
- basic and diluted (total Issued and outstanding
less treasury)- Note J
See Accompanying Notes and Accountant's Report F 3
50
Signal Advance, Inc.
Statement of Cash Flow
Year Ended December 31, 2011
OPERATING ACTIVITIES
Net Income (39,323)
Adjustments to reconcile Net Income to net cash
provided by operations:
Accounts Receivable 109
Short Term Loan (8,005)
Net cash provided by Operating Activities (47,219)
INVESTING ACTIVITIES
5-Year Assets: Cost/Basis (607)
5-Year Assets: Depreciation 7,967
7-Year Assets: Depreciation 84
Intellectual Property: Cost/Basis (121,351)
Long-Term Investments (25,000)
Net cash provided by Investing Activities (138,907)
FINANCING ACTIVITIES
Trade Payable 120,000
Capital Investment 76,667
Net cash provided by Financing Activities (196,667)
Net cash increase for period 10,541
Cash at beginning of period 2,378
Cash at end of period 12,918
SUPPLEMENTAL DISCLOSURES FOR CASH FLOW INFORMATION
Cash Paid for:
Interest Expense 3,942
See Accompanying Notes and Accountant's Report F 4
51
Signal Advance, Inc.
Statement of Changes in Shareholders' Equity
Year Ended December 31, 2011
Common Stock Additional Net Other Total
Paid-in Comprehensive Accumulated Shareholders
Shares Amount Capital Gain/(Loss) Deficit Equity
---------- ------ ---------- ------------- ----------- ------------
Balance as of
Dec. 31, 2010 32,325,409 - 2,691,667 (46,625) (922,188) 1,722,855
========== ====== ========== ============= =========== ============
Shares Issued 120,000 - 76,667 - - 76,667
Net Other
Comprehensive
Loss
Net Loss (39,323) (39,323)
Treasury Stock - - - - - -
---------- ------- --------- ------------- ----------- ------------
Balance as of
Aug. 30, 2011 32,445,603
---------- ------- --------- ------------- ------------ ------------
Balance as of
Aug. 30, 2011
(post - 4/1
Rev Split)* 8,111,409
---------- ------- --------- ------------- ------------ ------------
Balance as of
Dec. 31, 2011 8,111,409 2,768,334 (46,625) (961,511) 1,760,198
========== ======= ========= ============= ============ ============
* NOTE J
See Accompanying Notes and Accountant's Report F 5
52
NOTE A - SUMMARY OF SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES
Nature of Operations and Organization Signal Advance, Inc. (the Company) is
currently conducting operations. Signal Advance, Inc., incorporated in Texas on
June 4, 1992, is an engineering product and procedure development and consulting
firm focused on the application of emerging technologies for biomedical applica-
tions.The Company has significant experience in computer technology, distributed
information systems, and data acquisition and analysis systems, as well as,
medical education and medical-legal litigation support. Recently, the Company
has been engaged in two fields of endeavor. The Company has developed and
continues to refine electrophysiological signal acquisition systems as well as
developing and refining its proprietary "Signal Advance technology" which has
potential application in a wide range of additional biomedical applications, as
well as, applications outside of biomedicine.
Impairment The Company amortizes intangible assets over their estimated useful
lives unless such lives are deemed indefinite. Amortized intangible assets are
tested for impairment based on undiscounted cash flows, and, if impaired,
written down to fair value based on either discounted cash flows or appraised
values. Intangible assets with indefinite lives are tested annually for impair-
ment and written down to fair value as required. No impairment of intangible
assets has been identified during any of the periods presented.
Cash and Cash Equivalents The Company considers all highly liquid investments
purchased with an original maturity of three months or less to be cash
equivalents.
Use of Estimates in Financial Statement Preparation The preparation of
financial statements in conformity with accounting principles generally accepted
in the United States of America requires the use of estimates and assumptions
that affect the reported amounts of assets and liabilities, the 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. The
Company's financial statements include amounts that are based on management's
best estimates and judgments. Actual results could differ from those estimates.
Marketable Securities The Company holds certain investments that are treated as
available for sale securities under Statement of Financial Accounting Standards
No. 115, "Accounting for Certain Investments in Debt and Equity Securities" and
stated at their fair market values. All investments are available for current
operations and are classified as other assets in the balance sheet. Unrealized
holding gains and losses are included as a component of other comprehensive
income until realized. Realized gains and losses are determined by the specific
identification method and are included in "Other Income" in the income
statement.
Research and Development Research and development expenses are expensed as
incurred until technological feasibility can be determined as per FASB No. 86.
Upfront and milestone payments made to third parties in connection with research
and development collaborations are expensed as incurred up to the point of reg-
ulatory approval, marketability, licensing, lease, or sale when the net present
value and useful life is able to be determined. Payments made to third parties
subsequent to the aforementioned events are capitalized. Amounts capitalized for
such payments are included in other intangibles, net of the accumulated amorti-
zation, if their useful lives can be determined.
Revenue Recognition As part of the Company's business model and as a result of
the company's on-going investment in research and development, the company
licenses and sells the rights to certain of its intellectual property (IP)
including internally developed patents, trade secrets and technological know-
how. Certain transfers of IP to third parties may be licensing/royalty-based,
transaction-based, or other forms of transfer. Licensing/royalty-based fees
involve transfers in which the company earns the income over time, as a lump-
sum payment or the amount of income is not fixed or determinable until the
licensee sells future related products (i.e., variable royalty, based upon
licensee's revenue). Consulting Income is recognized when the revenue is
realized or realizable, and has been earned.
Accompanying Notes are an Integral Part of the Financial Statements F 6
53
Property, Plant and Equipment Land, buildings and equipment are carried at cost
less accumulated depreciation. Depreciation is based on the estimated service
lives of depreciable assets and is generally provided using the Modified
Accelerated Cost Recovery System (MACRS) method. In the case of disposals,
assets and related depreciation are removed from the accounts, and the net
amounts, less proceeds from disposal, are included in income.
Income Taxes The Company has adopted SEAS No.109, "Accounting for Income Taxes",
which requires an asset and liability approach to financial accounting and
reporting for income taxes. The difference between the financial statement and
tax basis of assets and liabilities is determined annually. Deferred income tax
assets and liabilities are computed for those differences that have future tax
consequences using the currently enacted tax laws and rates that apply to the
periods in which they are expected to affect taxable income. Valuation allow-
ances are established, if necessary, to reduce the deferred tax asset to the
amount that will assure full realization, As of December 31, 2011, the Company
recorded a valuation allowance that reduced its deferred tax assets to zero.
Concentrations of Credit Risk Financial instruments which potentially subject
the Company to significant concentrations of credit risk consist primarily of
investment securities. Investment securities are exposed to various risks, such
as interest rate, market and credit risks. Due to the level of risk associated
with certain investment securities, it is reasonably possible that changes in
the values of investment securities can occur in the near term and that each
change could materially affect the amounts reported in the financial statement.
Going Concern While the Company is currently conducting operations, it has not
yet generated sufficient operating revenue to fund its development activities to
date. As such, the Company has relied on funding by the Company's President and
the sale of its common stock. There is a substantial doubt that the Company will
generate sufficient revenues in future years to meet its operating cash require-
ments. Accordingly, the Company's ability to continue operations in the short-
term depends on its success in obtaining equity or debt financing in an amount
sufficient to support its operations. This could raise doubt as to its ability
to continue as a going concern. The financial statements do not include any
adjustments that might result from this uncertainty.
NOTE B - INTANGIBLE PROPERTY
As of December 31, 2011, the balance of intangible property was $1,845.294.
$1,250,000 of this balance was due to an assignment of intellectual property
(intangible property) related to "Signal Advance technology", transferred from
the inventor to the Company in 2008. This technology can enhance the performance
of awide variety of signal detection, interventional and control applications
The Company is currently seeking intellectual property protection for internally
developed intellectual property referred to as "Signal Advance technology" which
resulted from the company's research and development activities. Actual costs
incurred in relation to the intellectual property protection of this intangible
asset were capitalized. There are patents pending on the intellectual property
and any patent infringement case may hinder the Company's ability to generate
revenues.
The Company's carrying value is included in "Intellectual Property" on the
balance sheet. This intangible asset is not amortized because its useful life
cannot be determined. In accordance with SFAS No.142, no amortization was
recorded for goodwill and/or intangible assets deemed to have indefinite or
indeterminate lives.
NOTE C - MARKETABLE SECURITIES
Cost and fair value of marketable equity securities at December 31, 2011 are as
follows:
Cost Gross Unrealized Loss Fair Value
------- --------------------- ----------
Equity Securities Available for Sale $46,625 (46,625) $ 0
Accompanying Notes are an Integral Part of the Financial Statements F 7
54
NOTE D - EQUIPMENT
Property and equipment are summarized as follows:
Machinery and Equipment $ 119,183
Furniture and Fixtures 3,589
Cost 122,772
Less: Accumulated Depreciation (113,885)
Net Book Value $ 8,887
Depreciation expense in the year ending December 31, 2011 was $8,052.
NOTE E - INCOME TAXES
Operating Loss Carry-forwards As of December 31, 2011 the Company has a net
operating tax loss carry-forward of $ 39,323. Other loss carry-forwards from
previous periods may be offset against future federal income taxes. If not
used, loss carry-forwards will expire as follows:
Year Operating Losses Year Operating Losses
---- ---------------- ---- ----------------
16 114,901 20 -0-
17 46,917 21 250,180
18 107,676 22 15,377
19 39,720 23 39,323
Deferred Tax Asset A valuation allowance was recognized for the full amount of
the deferred tax asset because, based on the weight of available evidence, it is
more likely than not that some portion or the entire deferred tax asset will not
be realized.
Tax Depreciation The Company uses the Modified Accelerated Cost Recovery
System (MACRS) for depreciation of property for tax purposes.
NOTE F - NET EARNINGS PER SHARE
Basic earnings per share is computed by dividing net income available to common
shareholders by the weighted average number of common shares outstanding for the
period. A diluted earnings per share reflects the potential dilution that could
occur if securities or other contracts to issue common stock were exercised or
converted into common stock.
NOTE G - RELATED PARTY TRANSACTIONS
The Company was been assigned intangible property in 2008 from the inventor
(assignor) who is also the President of the Company. The Company leases office
and warehouse space from the President of the Company. See Note I for details.
NOTE H - TRADE PAYABLE
President of the Company has provided on-going services-for-equity reflected by
the trade payable. The conversion of the debt to equity in the company will be
at a conversion rate negotiated and approved by the Board of Directors.
Accompanying Notes are an Integral Part of the Financial Statements F 8
55
NOTE I - FACILITIES LEASE
The Company currently leases office space, from its president, on a month to
month basis at a rate of $700 per month. The following is a schedule of future
minimum payments for 4 years under the above operating lease as of December 31,
2011.
Year Amount
---- --------
2012 $ 8,400
2013 8,400
2014 8,400
2015 8,400
--------
$33,600
Rental expense amounted to $8,400 for the year ending December 31, 2011.
NOTE J:
In July, 2011 (following approval by the Shareholders in May, 2011) the Board of
Directors voted to affect a four for one (4/1) reverse split of its common
shares and a "Resolution Relating to a Series of Shares" was submitted to the
Texas Secretary of State, pursuant to The Texas Business Organizations Code,
section 21.115. The reverse split became effective on September 1, 2011.
Fractional shares were rounded up to whole shares. Prior to the reverse split,
the common stock shares issued and outstanding totaled 32,603,325. As of
December 31, 2011, following the four for one (4/1) reverse split, 8,111,409
shares of common stock were issued and outstanding.
Accompanying Notes are an Integral Part of the Financial Statements F 9
56
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION
Year Ended December 31, 2011
Signal Advance, Inc.
Schedules of Selling and Administrative Expenses
Year Ended December 31, 2011
Automobile Expense $ 88
Bank Service Charges 94
Dues and Subscriptions 100
Education/Training 2,969
Employee Benefits 2,661
Fees/Licenses 351
Interest Expense 3,942
Maintenance and Repairs 759
Marketing/Advertising 650
Meals/Entertainment 281
Office Supplies 120
Postage and Delivery 249
Rent 8,400
Telephone 3,995
Travel 6,701
Utilities 2,676
----------
$ 34,035
See Accompanying Notes and Accountant's Report F 10
57
SIGNAL ADVANCE, INC.
AUDITED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS AND
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION
Year Ended December 31, 2010
TABLE OF CONTENTS Page No.
ACCOUNTANT'S REPORT...................................................... F 1
FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
Balance Sheet...........................................................F 2
Statements of Income and Retained Earnings (Accumulated Deficit)........F 3
Statement of Cash Flows.................................................F 4
Statement of Changes in Stockholders' Equity............................F 5
Notes to Financials Statements........................................F 6-9
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION
Schedule of Selling and Administrative Expenses........................F 10
58
Bobby J. Hutton
Certified Public Accountant
4824 Courtside Drive
Fort Worth, TX 76133
Report of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm
The Board of Directors
Signal Advance, Inc.
2520 CR 81
Rosharon, TX 77583
We have audited the accompanying balance sheet of Signal Advance, Inc. (A Texas
Corporation) as of December 31, 2010, and the related statements of income and
retained earnings (accumulated deficit), cash flows and changes in stockholders'
equity for the year then ended. The financial statements are the responsibility
of management. Our responsibility is to express an opinion on these financial
statements based on our audit.
We conducted our audit in accordance with the standards of the Public Company
Accounting Oversight Board (United States). These standards require that we plan
and perform the audit to obtain reasonable assurance about whether the financial
statements are free of material misstatements. An audit includes examining, on a
test basis, evidence supporting the amounts and disclosures in the financial
statements. n audit also includes assessing the accounting principles used and
significant estimates made by management, as well as evaluating the overall
financial statements presentation. We believe that our audit provides 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 Signal Advance, Inc. as of
December 31, 2010 and the results of its operations and its cash flows for the
year then ended in conformity with account principles generally accepted in the
United States.
The accompanying financial statements have been prepared assuming that the
Company will continue as a going concern. As discussed in Note A in the finan-
cial statements, the Company's operating losses raise substantial doubt about
its ability to continue as a going concern. The financial statements do not
include any adjustments that might result from this uncertainty.
Very truly yours,
/s/ Bobby J. Hutton
Bobby J. Hutton
Certified Public Accountant
Fort Worth, Texas
April 16, 2012
F 1
59
Signal Advance, Inc.
Balance Sheets
Year Ended December 31, 2010
ASSETS
Current Assets
Cash $ 2,378
Accounts Receivable 109
----------
Total Current Assets 2,487
Equipment (net accumulated depreciation) - Note D 16,331
Intellectual Property - Note B 1,723,943
Long-term Investments 21,369
----------
TOTAL ASSETS $1,764,129
==========
LIABILITIES & SHAREHOLDERS' EQUITY
Current Liabilities
Loan from Shareholder 41,275
----------
Total Current Liabilities 41,275
Long Term Liabilities
Trade Payable - Note H -0-
----------
Total Long Term Liabilities -0-
----------
Total Liabilities $ 41,275
----------
Shareholders' Equity
Common stock - $0 par value, 32,325,603 shares
issued and outstanding as of 2010
Paid-in Capital in excess of par 2,691,667
Net Other Comprehensive Gain/(Loss) - Note C (46,625)
Accumulated Deficit (922,188)
----------
Total Shareholders' Equity 1,722,855
----------
TOTAL LIABILITIES & SHAREHOLDERS' EQUITY $1,764,129
==========
See Accompanying Notes and Accountant's Report F 2
60
Signal Advance, Inc.
Statements of Income and Retained Earnings (Accumulated Deficit)
Year Ended December 31, 2010
REVENUES
Consulting $ -0-
Licensing 100,000
COST OF SALES -
-----------
GROSS PROFIT 100,000
EXPENSES
Professional Services 20,350
Selling and Administrative 23,452
Research and Development 38,000
Depreciation 10,025
----------
TOTAL EXPENSES $ 91,827
----------
Net Operating Gain(Loss) 8,173
OTHER INCOME AND (EXPENSES)
Interest Expense (15,028)
Other Regular Income 109
Gain (Loss) on Equity Investments - Note I (8,631)
NET LOSS $ (15,377)
==========
BEGINNING ACCUMULATED DEFICIT (906,811)
ENDING ACCUMULATED DEFICIT $(922,188)
==========
Net loss per common share - basic and diluted $ (0.0285)
- Note F
Shares used to calculate net loss per common share 32,325,603
- basic and diluted
(total Issued and outstanding less treasury)
See Accompanying Notes and Accountant's Report F 3
61
Signal Advance, Inc.
Statements of Cash Flow
Year Ended December 31, 2010
OPERATING ACTIVITIES
Net Income (15,377)
Adjustments to reconcile Net Income to net cash
provided by operations:
Accounts Receivable (109)
Short Term Loan 15,842
Net cash provided by Operating Activities 356
INVESTING ACTIVITIES
5-Year Assets: Cost / Basis (1,489)
5-Year Assets: Depreciation 9,941
7-Year Assets: Depreciation 84
Intellectual Property: Cost/basis (25,400)
Long-Term Investments 8,631
Net cash provided by Investing Activities (8,232)
FINANCING ACTIVITIES
Note Payable (344,017)
Capital Investment 337,468
Net cash provided by Financing Activities (6,549)
Net cash increase for period (14,426)
Cash at beginning of period 16,803
Cash at end of period 2,378
SUPPLEMENTAL DISCLOSURES FOR CASH FLOW INFORMATION
Cash Paid for:
Interest 15,028
See Accompanying Notes and Accountant's Report F 4
62
Signal Advance, Inc.
Statements of Changes in Shareholders' Equity
Years Ended December 31, 2010
Common Stock Additional Net Other Total
Paid-in Comprehensive
Accumulated
Shareholders
Shares Amount
Capital Gain/(Loss) Deficit Equity
---------- ------ ---------- ------------- ----------- ------------
Balance as of
Dec. 31, 2009 29,725,603 - 2,354,199 (46,625) (906,811) 1,400,763
========== ====== ========== ============= =========== ============
Shares Issued 2,600,000 - 337,468 - - 337,468
Net Other
Comprehensive
Loss
Net Loss (15,377) (15,377)
Treasury Stock - - - - - -
---------- ------ ---------- -------------- ------------ ------------
Balance as of
Dec. 31, 2010 32,325,603 - 2,691,667 (46,625) (922,188) 1,722,855
========== ====== ========== ============== ============ ============
See Accompanying Notes and Accountant's Report F 5
63
NOTE A - SUMMARY OF SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES
Nature of Operations and Organization Signal Advance, Inc. (the Company) is
currently conducting operations. Signal Advance, Inc., incorporated in Texas on
June 4, 1992, is an engineering product and procedure development and consulting
firm focused on the application of emerging technologies for biomedical
applications. The Company has significant experience in computer technology,
distributed information systems, and data acquisition and analysis systems, as
well as, medical education and medical-legal litigation support. Recently, the
Company has been engaged in two fields of endeavor. The Company has developed
and continues to refine electrophysiological signal acquisition systems as well
as developing and refining its proprietary "Signal Advance technology" which
has potential application in a wide range of additional biomedical applications,
as well as, applications outside of biomedicine.
Impairment The Company amortizes intangible assets over their estimated useful
lives unless such lives are deemed indefinite. Amortized intangible assets are
tested for impairment based on undiscounted cash flows, and, if impaired,
written down to fair value based on either discounted cash flows or appraised
values. Intangible assets with indefinite lives are tested annually for impair-
ment and written down to fair value as required. No impairment of intangible
assets has been identified during any of the periods presented.
Cash and Cash Equivalents The Company considers all highly liquid investments
purchased with an original maturity of three months or less to be cash
equivalents.
Use of Estimates in Financial Statement Preparation The preparation of finan-
cial statements in conformity with accounting principles generally accepted in
the United States of America requires the use of estimates and assumptions that
affect the reported amounts of assets and liabilities, the disclosure of contin-
gent assets and liabilities at the date of the financial statements, and the
reported amounts of revenues and expenses during the reporting period. The
Company's financial statements include amounts that are based on management's
best estimates and judgments. Actual results could differ from those estimates.
Marketable Securities The Company holds certain investments that are treated as
available for sale securities under Statement of Financial Accounting Standards
No. 115, "Accounting for Certain Investments in Debt and Equity Securities" and
stated at their fair market values. All investments are available for current
operations and are classified as other assets in the balance sheet. Unrealized
holding gains and losses are included as a component of other comprehensive
income until realized. Realized gains and losses are determined by the specific
identification method and are included in "Other Income" in the income
statement.
Research and Development Research and development expenses are expensed as
incurred until technological feasibility can be determined as per FASB No. 86.
Upfront and milestone payments made to third parties in connection with research
and development collaborations are expensed as incurred up to the point of regu-
latory approval, marketability, licensing, lease, or sale when the net present
value and useful life is able to be determined. Costs associated with intellec-
tual property protection are capitalized. Amounts capitalized for such payments
are included in intellectual property other intangibles, net of the accumulated
amortization, if their useful lives can be determined.
Revenue Recognition As part of the Company's business model and as a result of
the company's on-going investment in research and development, the company li-
censes and sells the rights to certain of its intellectual property (IP)
including internally developed patents, trade secrets and technological know-
how. Certain transfers of IP to third parties may be licensing/royalty-based,
transaction-based, or other forms of transfer. Licensing/royalty-based fees
involve transfers in which the company earns the income over time, as a lump-sum
payment or the amount of income is not fixed or determinable until the licensee
sells future related products (i.e., variable royalty, based upon licensee's
revenue). Consulting Income is recognized when the revenue is realized or
realizable, and has been earned.
Accompanying Notes are an Integral Part of the Financial Statements F 6
64
Property, Plant and Equipment Land, buildings and equipment are carried at cost
less accumulated depreciation. Depreciation is based on the estimated service
lives of depreciable assets and is generally provided using the Modified
Accelerated Cost Recovery System (MACRS) method. In the case of disposals
assets and related depreciation are removed from the accounts, and the net
amounts, less proceeds from disposal, are included in income.
Income Taxes The Company has adopted SEAS No.109, "Accounting for Income Taxes",
which requires an asset and liability approach to financial accounting and
reporting for income taxes. The difference between the financial statement and
taxbasis of assets and liabilities is determined annually. Deferred income tax
assets and liabilities are computed for those differences that have future tax
consequences using the currently enacted tax laws and rates that apply to the
periods in which they are expected to affect taxable income. Valuation allow-
ances are established, if necessary, to reduce the deferred tax asset to the
amount that will assure full realization, As of December 31, 2010, the Company
recorded a valuation allowance that reduced its deferred tax assets to zero.
Concentrations of Credit Risk Financial instruments which potentially subject
the Company to significant concentrations of credit risk consist primarily of
investment securities. Investment securities are exposed to various risks, such
as interest rate, market and credit risks. Due to the level of risk associated
with certain investment securities, it is reasonably possible that changes in
the values of investment securities can occur in the near term and that each
change could materially affect the amounts reported in the financial statement.
Going Concern While the Company is currently conducting operations, it has not
yet generated sufficient operating revenue to fund its development activities
to date. As such, the Company has relied on funding by the Company's President
and the sale of its common stock. There is a substantial doubt that the Company
will generate sufficient revenues in future years to meet its operating cash
requirements. Accordingly, the Company's ability to continue operations in the
short-term depends on its success in obtaining equity or debt financing in an
amount sufficient to support its operations. This could raise doubt as to its
ability to continue as a going concern. The financial statements do not include
any adjustments that might result from this uncertainty.
NOTE B - INTANGIBLE PROPERTY
As of December 31, 2010, the balance of intangible property was $1,723.943.
$1,250,000 of this balance was due to an assignment of intellectual property
(intangible property) related to "Signal Advance technology", transferred from
the inventor to the Company in 2008. This technology, which continues to be
developed and refined, will be used to enhance the performance of the company's
advanced bio-signal detection systems already under development
The Company is currently seeking intellectual property protection for refine-
ments to its iintellectual property referred to as "Signal Advance Technology"
which resulted from the company's research and development activities. Actual
costs incurred in relation to the intellectual property protection of this
intangible asset were capitalized. There are patents pending on the intellectual
property and any patent infringement case may hinder the Company's ability to
use this software license.
The Company's carrying value is included in "Intellectual Property" on the
balance sheet. This intangible asset is not amortized because its useful life
cannot be determined. In accordance with SFAS No. 142, no amortization was
recorded for goodwill and/or intangible assets deemed to have indefinite or
indeterminate lives.
NOTE C - MARKETABLE SECURITIES
Cost and fair value of marketable equity securities at December 31, 2010 are as
follows:
Gross Cost Unrealized Loss Fair Value
---------- --------------- ----------
Available for Sale Equity Securities $46,625 (46,625) $ 0
Accompanying Notes are an Integral Part of the Financial Statements F 7
65
NOTE D - EQUIPMENT
Property and equipment are summarized as follows:
Machinery and Equipment $ 118,577
Furniture and Fixture 3,588
Cost 122,165
Less: Accumulated Depreciation (105,534)
Net Book Value $16,331
Depreciation expense in the year ending December 31, 2010 was 10,025.
NOTE E - NCOME TAXES
Operating Loss Carry-forwards As of December 31, 2010 the Company does not have
a net operating tax loss carry-forward. Other loss carry-forwards from previous
periods may be offset against future federal income taxes. If not used, loss
carry-forwards will expire as follows:
Year Operating Losses Year Operating Losses
---- ---------------- ---- ----------------
16 114,901 20 -0-
17 46,917 21 250,180
18 107,676 22 15,377
19 39,720
Deferred Tax Asset A valuation allowance was recognized for the full amount of
the deferred tax asset because, based on the weight of available evidence, it is
more likely than not that some portion or the entire deferred tax asset will not
be realized.
Tax Depreciation The Company uses the Modified Accelerated Cost Recovery
System (MACRS) for depreciation of property for tax purposes.
NOTE F - NET EARNINGS PER SHARE
Basic earnings per share is computed by dividing net income available to common
shareholders by the weighted average number of common shares outstanding for the
period. A diluted earnings per share reflects the potential dilution that could
occur if securities or other contracts to issue common stock were exercised or
converted into common stock.
NOTE G - RELATED PARTY TRANSACTIONS
The Company was been assigned intangible property in 2008 from the inventor
(assignor) who is also the President of the Company. The Company leases office
and warehouse space from the President of the Company. See note J for details.
NOTE H - TRADE PAYABLE
Note to the President of the Company was paid-in-full through the conversion of
the debt to equity in the company at a conversion rate negotiated and approved
by the Board of Directors.
Accompanying Notes are an Integral Part of the Financial Statements F 8
66
NOTE I - OTHER INCOME (EXPENSE)
Other (income) and expense includes interest income, gains and losses from
securities and other investments.
NOTE J - FACILITIES LEASE
The Company currently leases office space, from its president, on a month to
month basis at a rate of $700 per month. The following is a schedule of future
minimum payments for 4 years under the above operating lease as of December 31,
2010.
Year Amount
---- --------
2011 $ 8,400
2012 8,400
2013 8,400
2014 8,400
--------
$33,600
Rental expense amounted to $8,400 for the year ending December 31, 2010.
Accompanying Notes are an Integral Part of the Financial Statements F 9
67
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION
Year Ended December 31, 2010
Signal Advance, Inc.
Schedules of Selling and Administrative Expenses
Year Ended December 31, 2010
Automobile Expense $ 90
Bank Service Charges 166
Education/Training 2,979
Employee Benefits 137
Maintenance and Repairs 902
Marketing/Advertising 250
Meals/Entertainment 238
Office Supplies 112
Postage and Delivery 118
Rent 8,400
Telephone 3,219
Travel 4,872
Utilities 1,969
---------
$ 23,452
See Accompanying Notes and Accountant's Report F I0
68
Selected financial data (Item 11f)
Not required for smaller reporting companies
Supplementary financial information (Item 11g)
Not required for smaller reporting companies
Management's discussion and analysis of financial condition and results of
operations (Item 11h)
The following discussion should be read in conjunction with our Financial State-
ments and notes thereto appearing elsewhere in this prospectus. The following
discussion contains forward-looking statements, including, but not limited to,
statements concerning our plans, anticipated expenditures, the need for
additional capital and other events and circumstances described in terms of our
expectations and intentions. Forward-looking statements are statements not based
on historical information and which relate to future operations, strategies,
financial results or other developments. Forward-looking statements are based
upon estimates, forecasts, and assumptions that are inherently subject to signi-
ficant business, economic and competitive uncertainties and contingencies, many
of which are beyond our control and many of which, with respect to future
business decisions, are subject to change. These uncertainties and contingencies
can affect actual results and could cause actual results to differ materially
from those expressed in any forward-looking statements made by us, or on our
behalf. We disclaim any obligation to update forward-looking statements. You are
urged to review the information set forth under the captions for factors that
may cause actual events or results to differ materially from those discussed
below.
Overview
Signal Advance, Inc. (SAI) emerged in 2007 to develop and refine its most
important and promising proprietary Signal Advance technology (SAT) for which
the Company is now pursuing commercialization. Ongoing R&D activities have
greatly expanded SAI's range of potential applications while targeting specific
ones. SAI's goals over the last two fiscal years have been to validate SA
technology and the Company's plan for commercialization. Scientific validation
was achieved through the successful completion, in 2010, of a University of
Texas dissertation study. Following rigorous review and approval by an indepen-
dent faculty committee, a doctorate degree was subsequently awarded to the
Company's president. Technical validation was achieved through the publication
of a peer-reviewed feature article in the IEEE Circuits and System magazine.
In 2011, the Company was awarded the first place Goradia Innovation Prize
providing commercial validation. In addition, The Intellectual Property Section
of the Oklahoma Bar Association named Dr. Chris Hymel, the Company's president,
the 2012 Innovator of the Year for his development work on Signal Advance
technology.
Our auditors have issued a going concern opinion as the Company has generated
insufficient revenues to fund planned R&D, marketing and intellectual protection
inthe near-term. SAI will continue to rely, at least partially, upon capital
investment to cover the projected costs of executing the Company's business plan
and effectively commercialize its proprietary signal advance technology. The
Company does not currently have firm commitments with respect to, or sources of,
additional financing, thus there is no assurance that the Company will have
sufficient capital which would require operation to be scaled back accordingly.
Results from Operations
Income
Historically, the majority of income was derived from consulting services. SAI's
business plan is to license its proprietary SA technology to manufacturers to
improve their product performance and derive revenues from royalties and con-
sulting with licensees. Initially, SAI's marketing strategy is the development
and testing of application-specific SA circuit designs in order to demonstrate
performance improvements to prospective licensees.
69
Income Revenues for fiscal years ending 2011 and 2010 were $45,000 and $100,109
respectively. For the interim period ending June 30, 2012, revenues were $4,025.
This underscores the Company's on-going reliance on capital investment to
continue operations.
Other Income
In 2011, SAI placed first in the Goradia Innovation prize competition and was
awarded a $35,000 prize.
Expenses
Expenses are classified into the following four broad categories: Depreciation,
Professional Services, Research and Development and Selling, General and Admin-
istrative. SAI has engaged consultants to accomplish its goals over the last two
years. With sufficient capitalization, the majority of these consultants have
expressed interest in working full-time for the Company. Professional Services
includes expenses for legal, accounting, transfer agent and director's fees. The
increase seen in the interim period ending June 30, 2012 and 2011 expenses for
Professional Services reflect fees to attorneys and auditors for preparation to
become registered and reporting with the Securities and Exchange Commission.
Research and Development expenses reflect the Company's increased focus on
scientific, technical and commercial validation. Expenses for the interim period
ending June 30, 2012 and fiscal years ending 2011 and 2010 were as follows:
Expenses Six Month Period
Ending June 30, 2012 2011 2010
-------------------- -------- --------
Depreciation: - 8,051 10,025
Professional Services: 31,300 32,237 20,350
Research and Development: 15,000 45,000 38,000
Selling, General
and Administrative: 18,044 34,035 38,479
Other Income/Expense
Other Income was $69 during the interim period ending June 30, 2012, zero in
2011 and $8,631 in 2010. This expense resulted from losses incurred by a firm
in which the Company had invested (in exchange for services) prior to 2010 and
was also reflected in the reduction in Long Term Investments from $30,000 in
2009 to $21,269 in 2010 and $21,438 on June 30, 2012 on the balance sheet.
Liquidity and Capital Assets
Current Assets
As of June 30, 2012, SAI and cash and cash equivalents of $25,033 and marketable
securities of $417 as compared to $12,918 and $25,000, as of December 31, 2011
and $2,278 and -0-, respectively as of December 31, 2010. These assets will be
used as working capital to execute the Company's business plan. As such, the
Company anticipates the need to raise additional capital through debt or equity
financings to fund operations over the next 12 months.
Fixed assets (office/laboratory equipment) were $8.887 in 2011 and $16,331 in
2010 due to depreciation expense. As of June 30, 2012, no depreciation has been
applied.
Other Assets
In 2011, and during the interim period ending June 30, 2012, significant
resources were applied to the protection of intellectual property (IP). This
includes 1) responses to preliminary searches and initial office actions in
the national phase of some of the international filings, 2) preparation and
submission of amendments and additional disclosures in the US Patent and Trade-
mark Office (USPTO) as well as the European (EPO) and Chinese (CPO) Patent
Offices and 3) reviews of, and responses to, the first office actions from the
USPTO, CPO and EPO. The CPO has since issued a Notice of Allowance in providing
patent protection in China. The Company is encouraged by the action by the CPO,
based on the similarity of the content of the USPTO, EPO and CPO office actions
as the claims amendments are similar in all three venues and the Company has
confidence in the its responses to questions raised as well as distinctions
between SAI's intellectual property and the prior art cited in the respective
USPTO and EPO office actions.
70
The direct expenses related to IP protection are capitalized. In 2011 Intellec-
tual Property increased to $1,878,094 during the period ending June 30, 2012
from $1,845,294 and 1,723,943, in years ending 2011 and 2101, respectively.
$1,250,000 of this balance resulted from the assignment of the "Signal Advance"
IP to SAI from the Company's president in 2008.
Results for a single long term investment were discussed previously under "OTHER
INCOME/EXPENSE", l Marketable securities acquired in 2011 lost most of their
value by June 30, 2012 decreasing from $25,000 at acquisition to $417 by June
30, 2012.
Liabilities
Liabilities include a short-term loan to SAI from its President which decreased
to $36,206 by June 30, 2012 from $41,275 in 2010. In additional a trade payable,
representing compensation due the Company's president, of $120,000 at year-end
2011 was paid in full by issuing equity in exchange for these services.
Shareholders' Equity
The accumulated deficit on June 30, 2012 was $1,021,781, compared to $ 965,511
and $922,188 at year end 2011 and 2010, respectively. In 2011, the shareholders
approved and the board executed a corporate action to reverse split the common
stock at a ratio of 4 for 1 yielding a total for shares issued and outstanding
of 8,111,409 at year end, 2011. As of June 30, 2012, 8,334,159 shares were
issued and outstanding yielding a loss per share of $0.1226. The losses per
share for years ending 2011 and 2010 were $0.1185 and $0.1141 respectively.
Off-Balance Sheet Transactions
There are no off-balance sheet items, and all transactions are in U.S. dollars,
and SAI is not subject to currency fluctuations or similar market risks.
Significant Accounting Policies
Cash And Cash Equivalents
The Company considers all highly liquid investments purchased with an original
maturity of three months or less to be cash equivalents.
Marketable Securities
The Company holds certain investments that are treated as available for sale
securities under Statement of Financial Accounting Standards No. 115, "Account-
ing for Certain Investments in Debt and Equity Securities" and stated at their
fair market values. All investments are available for current operations and
are classified as other assets in the balance sheet. Unrealized holding gains
and losses are included as a component of other comprehensive income until
realized. Realized gains and losses are determined by the specific identifica-
tion method and are included in "Other Income" in the income statement.
Research And Development
Research and development expenses are expensed as incurred until technological
feasibility can be determined as per FASB No. 86. Upfront and milestone payments
made to third parties in connection with research and development collaborations
are expensed as incurred up to the point of regulatory approval, marketability,
licensing, lease, or sale when the net present value and useful life is able to
be determined. Payments made to third parties subsequent to the aforementioned
events are capitalized. Amounts capitalized for such payments are included in
other intangibles, net of the accumulated amortization, if their useful lives
can be determined.
Revenue Recognition
As part of the Company's business model and as a result of the Company's on-
going investment in research and development, the Company licenses and sells the
rights to certain of its intellectual property (IP) including internally
developed patents, trade secrets and technological know-how. Certain transfers
of IP to third parties may be licensing/royalty-based, transaction-based, or
other forms of transfer. Licensing/royalty-based fees involve transfers in which
the Company earns the income over time, as a lump-sum payment or the amount of
income is not fixed or determinable until the licensee sells future related
products (i.e., variable royalty, based upon licensee's revenue). Consulting
Income is recognized when the revenue is realized or realizable, and has been
earned.
71
Property, Plant And Equipment
Land, buildings and equipment are carried at cost less accumulated depreciation.
Depreciation is based on the estimated service lives of depreciable assets and
is generally provided using the Modified Accelerated Cost Recovery System
(MACRS) method. In the case of disposals, assets and related depreciation are
removed from the accounts, and the net amounts, less proceeds from disposal,
are included in income.
Income Taxes
The Company has adopted SEAS No. 109, "Accounting for Income Taxes", which
requires an asset and liability approach to financial accounting and reporting
for income taxes. The difference between the financial statement and tax basis
of assets and liabilities is determined annually. Deferred income tax assets
and liabilities are computed for those differences that have future tax conse-
quences using the currently enacted tax laws and rates that apply to the periods
in which they are expected to affect taxable income. Valuation allowances are
established, if necessary, to reduce the deferred tax asset to the amount that
will assure full realization, As of December 31, 2011, the Company recorded a
valuation allowance that reduced its deferred tax assets to zero.
Concentrations of Credit Risk
Financial instruments which potentially subject the Company to significant
concentrations of credit risk consist primarily of investment securities.
Investment securities are exposed to various risks, such as interest rate,
market and credit risks. Due to the level of risk associated with certain
investment securities, it is reasonably possible that changes in the values of
investment securities can occur in the near term and that each change could
materially affect the amounts reported in the financial statement.
Intangible Property
As of June 30, 2012 the balance of intangible property was $1,878,094, compared
to balances for years ending 2011 and 2010 of $1,845.294 and 1,723,943, respec-
tively. The Company continues to pursuing intellectual property protection for
refinements to the technology which resulted from the Company's research and
development activities. Actual costs incurred in relation to the intellectual
property protection of this intangible asset were capitalized. The Company's
carrying value is included in "Intellectual Property" on the balance sheet. This
intangible asset is not amortized because its useful life cannot be determined.
In accordance with SFAS No.142, no amortization was recorded for goodwill and/or
intangible assets deemed to have indefinite or indeterminate lives
Impairment
The Company amortizes intangible assets over their estimated useful lives unless
such lives are deemed indefinite. Amortized intangible assets are tested for
impairment based on undiscounted cash flows, and, if impaired, written down to
fair value based on either discounted cash flows or appraised values. Intangible
assets with indefinite lives are tested annually for impairment and written down
to fair value as required. No impairment of intangible assets has been
identified during any of the periods presented.
Deferred Tax Asset
A valuation allowance was recognized for the full amount of the deferred tax
asset because, based on the weight of available evidence, it is more likely than
not that some portion or the entire deferred tax asset will not be realized.
Net Earnings Per Share
Basic earnings per share is computed by dividing net income available to common
shareholders by the weighted average number of common shares outstanding for
the period. Diluted earnings per share reflect the potential dilution that could
occur if securities or other contracts to issue common stock were exercised or
converted into common stock.
72
Contractual Obligations
Payments due by Period Total <1 year 1-3 years 3-5 years >5 years
--------- --------- ----------- ----------- ----------
Office Lease $8,400/yr $8,400/yr
(month-to-month)
Changes in and disagreements with accountants on accounting and financial
disclosure (Item 11i)
There have been no changes in, or disagreements with, accountants on any
accounting or financial disclosure matters.
Quantitative and Qualitative disclosures about market risk (Item 11j)
Not required for smaller reporting companies.
Directors and Executive Officers (Item 11k)
The following table sets forth the names, positions and ages of the current SAI
Directors and Officers and the date such person became a Directors and/or
Officer. Directors are elected during the annual shareholders' meeting and
serve for one year and until their successors are elected and qualify. Officers
are elected by our board of directors and their terms of office are at the
discretion of our board. There are no family relationships among our directors,
executive officers, director nominees or significant employees. Two of our
Directors are independent as determined by the NASDAQ listing standards.
Director/Officer Age Title
---------------- --- -----
Chris Hymel 54 President/Treasurer
Malcolm Skolnick 77 Secretary
Ron Stubbers 50 Vice-President
Richard Seltzer 57 None
Karl Zercoe 48 None
David Minter 48 None
All directors hold office until the next annual meeting of the shareholders of
the Company and until their successors have been duly elected and qualified.
The Company's Bylaws provide that the Board of Directors will consist of no less
than three members. Officers are elected by and serve at the discretion of the
Board of Directors.
Biographies
Chris M. Hymel, Ph.D. (President/Treasurer, Director
Dr. Hymel, an experienced entrepreneur, founded the Company in 1992 and has
served as a director and its President and Treasurer since its inception. Dr.
Hymel had previously founded CH Systems (1985), a computer systems/networking
consulting and development firm and also served on the board of a non-profit
corporation, Educational Enrichment Center through 2009. His work experience
also includes biomedical technology development in the University of Texas
Neurophysiology Research Center, control systems engineering for Shell Oil &
Shell Development Companies and Johnson Controls, Inc. Dr. Hymel holds a
doctorate in biomedical sciences from the University of Texas Health Science
Center - Houston as well as bachelors and masters degrees in electrical
engineering from Texas A&M University. He holds multiple patents and has
authored a number of scientific/technical publications. Dr. Hymel, the developer
of SAT, successfully demonstrated the temporally advanced detection of ECG
(cardiac) signals in a dissertation study completed at the University of Texas
- Houston Health Science Center in August 2010.
73
Malcolm Skolnick, Ph.D., J.D. (Secretary, Director)
Dr. Skolnick received his Ph.D. in physics from Cornell University and J.D. from
the University of Houston Law Center. He has recently retired after ten years as
a Director, President and CEO of CytoGenix, Inc., a publicly traded, development
stage biotechnology firm in Houston Texas. Prior to joining CytoGenix, Dr. Skol-
nick, a tenured professor, held academic positions in the Medical School, the
Graduate School of Biomedical Sciences and the School of Public Health (SPH) of
the University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston (UTHSC). In addition
to his service as a Department Chair in the Medical School and professorial
duties, Dr. Skolnick directed the UTHSC Office of Technology Management, over-
seeing theUniversity's activities in protecting and licensing its technology
portfolio. He also headed the Neurophysiology Research Center and served as
principal investigator of several clinical trials in pain management, smoking
cessation and reduction of withdrawal symptoms in drug addiction. Dr. Skolnick
also serves as Director and Vice President of the Southwest Health Technology
Foundation, Resolution Forum, Inc., Responsible Community Design International,
Inc., and Hudson Forest Homeowners' Association. Dr. Skolnick is a registered
patent attorney, patented inventor and is licensed to practice law in the State
of Texas. He is active in patent prosecution and licensing for selected clients
and has served as an expert witness in intellectual property, product liability,
and accident reconstruction matters.
Ron A, Stubbers, B.S. (Vice-President, Engineering)
Mr. Stubbers has been developing and manufacturing electronic biomedical devices
for over 20 years, much of it while VP of Engineering and VP of Operations for
Neuroscan, Inc., Compumedics, USA, and aDEPtas, Inc. His experience includes
development and production of medical devices ranging from neurostimulation
systems to EEG acquisition and analysis systems. He has also worked in the areas
of product design and manufacturing engineering, quality, regulatory and
technical support for startup companies. A former manager of quality and
regulatory affairs, Mr. Stubbers has experience in corporate ISO/EN/QSR quality
management systems requirements and compliance and European CE and FDA 510K
Class II and other regulatory approvals for world-wide medical device distri-
bution. Mr. Stubbers received his bachelor's degree in electrical engineering
from the University of Idaho and has completed graduate coursework at the
University of Texas, Graduate School of Biomedical Sciences and at Rice
University.
Richard C. Seltzer, J.D., LL.M. (Director)
Mr. Seltzer received his J.D. from South Texas College of Law in 1981 and his
LL.M. in Taxation from the University of Florida in 1982 He is also an approved
mediator in the State of Texas. Mr. Seltzer has been in private practice for
almost thirty years representing both established and startup businesses in
acquisitions and mergers, financial and tax issues, contractual matters, share-
holder disputes, real estate acquisitions and general business litigation in
Texas State Courts. His practice includes arranging viable capital infusions for
ongoing businesses, negotiating business and real estate related contracts. He
has handled the licensing of proprietary information for a non-profit
organization in Texas. He has also successfully represented numerous taxpayer
corporations and individuals before the Internal Revenue Service, including
both its Appellate and Collection Divisions as well as representing taxpayers
for matters filed with the U.S. Tax Court. Mr. Seltzer is a frequent invited
speaker covering general business topics at the People's Law School in con-
junction with the University ofHouston Law School. Mr. Seltzer currently serves
as a member of the Board of Directors of both Bridges to Life, a non-profit
organization in Houston and STARBASE, Inc., a federally funded educational
program in conjunction with the Department of Defense and the National Guard
that works with upper elementary school students particularly interested in
math, science, engineering and technology related programs. In addition, Mr.
Seltzer serves on the Boards of Directors of Atlas Management, Inc., Innovative
Tooling and Accessories, Inc., Intuitec, Inc., Milsob Properties, Inc., all
Texas corporations, and Delta Shaver Corporation, a Delaware corporation.
Karl Zercoe, B.S. (Director)
Mr. Zercoe, a computer programmer and experienced entrepreneur, has been
designing and implementing software applications since 1986. He founded Titanium
Software, Inc. in 1996 and is the Director, President and Owner. In 2003 his
firm focused on an application for electronic medical records and scheduling for
college counseling centers. Their software, Titanium Schedule, is now the market
leader with 650 installations in 9 countries. Titanium Software's revenues have
grown at least 16% a year, every year, for the last 5 years. Mr. Zercoe has a
B.S. in computer science with a minor in mechanical engineering from Texas A&M
University.
74
David Minter, BA (Director)
Mr. Minter founded Minter Consulting in 1998, and has provided technical and
project management consulting services through his firm to large, multinational
corporations. His background includes extensive business process development
and redesign, as well as the management of large scale software implementation
projects for such companies as Raytheon, Waste Management, Shell Oil, Tenneco
Gas, Pactiv Corporation, and Service Corporation International (SCI). Prior to
forming his consulting business, Mr. Minter spent 10 years in the energy
industry, working in various management positions in accounting, pipeline
operations, contract administration and payroll for El Paso Energy (formally
Tenneco Gas). Currently, Mr. Minter is a Director in Human Resources at Service
Corporation International. In his current capacity he manages various HR and
sales related projects and initiatives. He has extensive experience in all HR
related functions including HR compliance, payroll policy and operations, HR
systems, talent management, and benefits. Mr. Minter received his BBA from the
University of Texas in 1986, and holds a certification in project management
from the Project Management Institute (PMI).
Significant Employees
None
Family Relationship
None
Executive Compensation and Other Information (Item 11l)
We are providing compensation disclosure that satisfies the requirements applic-
able to emerging growth companies, as defined in the JOBS Act. The summary
compensation table below shows certain compensation information paid for
services rendered in all capacities to us by our principal executive officer and
by each other executive officer whose total annual salary and bonus exceeded
$100,000 during the six month interim period ending on June 30, 2012 as well as
years ending December 31, 2011 and 2010. Other than as set forth below, no
executive officer's total annual compensation exceeded $100,000 during our last
fiscal period.
Summary Compensation Table
Non-Qualified
Stock Non-Equity Deferred All Other
Principal Year or Awards Options Incentive Plan Compensation Compensation
Name Position Period Salary Bonus (1) Awards Compensation Earnings (2) Total
----------- --------- ------- ------ ------ -------- ------- -------------- ------------- ------------ --------
Chris Hymel PEO/PFO Jan-Jun -0- -0- $54,000 -0- -0- -0- $4,683 $ 59,683
2012
Chris Hymel PEO/PFO 2011 -0- -0- $120,000 -0- -0- -0- $5,630 $125,630
Chris Hymel PEO/PFO 2010 -0- -0- $120,000 -0- -0- -0- $3,117 $123,117
(1) Non-cash compensation: Equity (Common Stock) issued in exchange for services
(2) Reimbursement of medical and professional development expenses
SAI entered into a compensation agreement with Dr. Chris M. Hymel, the Company
President, whereby he is compensated at $120,000 per year plus limited
reimbursement of medial and professional development expenses. Dr. Hymel is
expected to devote essentially full-time (at least 40 hours/week) on activities
related to the Company. The term of the agreement is year-to-year but may be
terminated by giving one month's notice. Eligible medical and professional
development expenses are either paid or reimbursed in cash and annual compensa-
tion for services rendered has been in the form of equity, specifically, common
stock for years ended December 31, 2011 and 2010.
In years ending 2010, 2011 and the interim six month period ending June 30,
2012, Dr Skolnick received $25,000, $20,000 and $15,000 in the form of equity
(common stock) in exchange for services, the majority of which was related to
intellectual property protection. All other executive officers received well
under less than $10,000
75
compensation in the same periods, also in the form of equity (common stock)
in exchange for their services. No executive officers received a bonus or
deferred compensation.
Other Executive Officer Compensation:
Outstanding Equity Awards
at December 31, 2011, 2010 and as of June 30, 2012: None
Option Exercises and Stock Vested Table: None
Pension Benefits Table: None
Non-qualified Deferred Compensation Table: None
All Other Compensation Table: None
Perquisites Table: None
There are no existing or planned option/SAR grants.
Director Compensation
Other than as described above, Directors received $5,000 or less in compensation
annually, in the form of equity (common stock) in exchange for their service on
the Board the company.
There are no employment contracts, compensatory plans or arrangements (except as
referenced above for the Company President), including payments to be received
from the Company with respect to any executive officer of the Company which
would in any way result in payments to any such person because of his or her
resignation, retirement or other termination of employment with the Company or
its subsidiaries, any change in control of the Company or a change in the
person's responsibilities following a change in control of the Company. Nor are
there any agreements or understandings for any director or officer to resign at
the request of another person. None of the Company's directors or executive of-
ficers is acting on behalf of or will act at the direction of any other person.
Compensation Pursuant to Plans
There is no retirement, pension, profit sharing, or other plan covering any of
our officers and directors. The Company has adopted no formal stock option plans
for our officers, directors and/or employees. SAI reserves the right to adopt
one or more stock options plans in the future. Presently, there is no plan to
issue additional equity in the Company or options to acquire the same to our
officers, directors or their affiliates or associates except for compensation
of Director and Officers as described previously.
Corporate Governance
Currently, the Company has no formal, completely independent Audit or
Compensation Committee.
Security Ownership of Certain Beneficial Owners (Item 11m)
The Company is authorized to issue 100,000,000 shares of common stock, with no
par value. Holders of common stock are entitled to one vote per share on all
matters subject to shareholder vote. The common stock has no preemptive,
cumulative or other subscription rights. All of the presently issued shares of
common stock are fully paid and non-assessable. The Board of Directors may
declare dividends payable to holders of common stock out of legally available
funds. If the Company is liquidated or dissolved, holders of shares of common
stock will be entitled to share ratably in any assets of the Company remaining
after satisfaction of all of its liabilities.
As of August 15, 2012, 8,334,159 shares had been issued to 156 shareholders. The
following table sets forth the number of shares of common stock beneficially
owned as of August 15, 2012 by (i)each person known by us to be the beneficial
owner of more than 5% of the outstanding shares of our common stock, (ii)each
of our directors and executive officers, (iii)all officers and directors as a
group and, (iv)all officers and directors and each person known by us to be
the beneficial owner of more than 5% of the outstanding shares of our common
stock as a group. Unless otherwise indicated in the table, the persons and
entities named in the table have sole voting and sole investment power with
respect to the shares set forth opposite the stockholder's name, subject to
community property laws, where applicable.
75
Amount and Nature
Title of of Beneficial Percent
Name and Address of Beneficial Owner Class Ownership(1)
of Class
------------------------------------- -------- ----------------- --------
Chris Hymel, Director/Officer (2) Common 3,616,763 43.40%
Ray Corkran(3) Common 821,250 9.85%
Malcolm Skolnick, Director/Officer(2) Common 278,334 3.34%
Karl Zercoe, Director(2) Common 256,250 3.07%
Ron Stubbers, Officer(2) Common 198,750 2.38%
Richard C. Seltzer,Director(2) Common 76,500 0.92%
David Minter(2) Common 32,000 0.38%
Officers/Directors as a group Common 4,458,597 53.50%
(6 individuals)
Officers/Directors & >5% Shareholders Common 5,279,847 63.35%
as a group (7 individuals)
(1) Beneficial ownership is determined in accordance with SEC rules, and
includes any shares as to which the stockholder has sole or shared voting
power or investment power. The indication herein that shares are
beneficially owned is not an admission on the part of the stockholder that
he, she or it is a direct or indirect beneficial owner of those shares.
(2) The address used for all Directors/Officers is 2520 County Road 81,
Rosharon, Texas 77583
(3) The address for Ray Corkran is 321 Grand Ranch Lane, Friendswood, Texas
77546
Transactions with Related Persons and Corporate Governance (Item 11n)
Other than the President's compensation, described previously, since our incep-
tion, there has not been, nor is there currently proposed, any transaction or
series of similar transactions to which the Company was or will be a party:
1) in which the amount involved exceeds $120,000; and
2) in which any director, executive officer, shareholder who beneficially owns
5% or more of SAI common stock, or any member of their immediate family, had
or will have a direct or indirect material interest.
Director Independence
The Company has not established its own definition for determining whether its
directors and nominees for directors are "independent" nor has it adopted any
other standard of independence employed by any national securities exchange or
inter-dealer quotation system. However, as determined by the NASDAQ listing
standards, two of the Company's directors, Mr. Minter and Mr. Zercoe, are
considered independent as they are not Officers of the Company, receive no
compensation for services other than as directors and own less than 5% of the
issued and outstanding shares of the Company.
INCORPORATION OF CERTAIN INFORMATION BY REFERENCE (Item 12)
Not Applicable to Registrant
77
Part II
Information Not Required in Prospectus
OTHER EXPENSES OF ISSUANCE AND DISTRIBUTION (Item 13)
The following table indicates the expenses to be incurred in connection with the
offering described in this registration statement, all of which will be borne by
the Company. All amounts are estimates, other than the SEC registration fee.
SEC Registration Fee$ $ 351.95
Accounting/Auditing Fees $ 8,750.00
Legal Fees $ 2,500.00
Miscellaneous $ 1,000.00
Total $ 12,501.95
INDEMNIFICATION OF OFFICERS AND DIRECTORS (Item 14)
The Texas Business Corporation Act, under which the Company is organized,
permits the inclusion in the articles of incorporation of a corporation of a
provision limiting or eliminating the potential monetary liability of directors,
officers, employees and agents of the corporation to a corporation or its share-
holders by reason of their conduct as Directors. The provision would not permit
any limitation on, or the elimination of, liability of a director for disloyalty
to his or her corporation or its shareholders, failing to act in good faith,
engaging in intentional misconduct or a knowing violation of the law, obtaining
an improper personal benefit or paying a dividend or approving a stock repur-
chase that was illegal under Texas law. Accordingly, the provisions limiting or
eliminating the potential monetary liability of directors or officers permitted
by Texas law apply only to the "duty of care" of Directors, i.e., to uninten-
tional errors in their deliberations or judgments and not to any form of "bad
faith" conduct.
SAI's articles of incorporation contain a provision which eliminates the
personal monetary liability of directors and/or officers to the extent allowed
under Texas law. Accordingly, a shareholder is able to prosecute an action
against a directors and/or officers for monetary damages only if he or she can
show a breach of the duty of loyalty, a failure to act in good faith, inten-
tional misconduct, a knowing violation of law, an improper personal benefit or
an illegal dividend or stock repurchase, and not "negligence" or "gross negli-
gence" in satisfying his or her duty of care. Texas law applies only to claims
against a director and/or officer arising out of his or her role as a director
and/or officer and not in any other capacity or to his or her responsibilities
under any other law, such as the federal securities laws.
In addition, SAI's articles of incorporation and bylaws allow the Company to
indemnify its directors and officers to the fullest extent permitted by Texas
law. Insofar as indemnification for liabilities arising under the Securities Act
may be permitted to SAI's directors, officers, employees and agents of the
corporation pursuant to the foregoing provisions, or otherwise. Insofar as
indemnification for liabilities arising under the Securities Act may be permit-
ted to directors, officers, employees and agents of the corporation pursuant to
the foregoing provisions, the Company has been informed that in the opinion of
the Securities and Exchange Commission 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 Company of expenses incurred or paid by a director, officer,
employee or agent of the corporation in the successful defense of any action,
suit or proceeding) is asserted by such director, officer, employee or agent of
the corporation in connection with the securities being registered, SAI will,
unless in the opinion of legal counsel the matter has been settled by control-
ling 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.
No pending litigation or proceeding involving any director, officer, employee or
agent of the Company for which indemnification is being sought exists, and SAI
is not aware of any pending or threatened material litigation that may result in
claims for indemnification by such individual.
78
RECENT SALES OF UNREGISTERED SECURITIES (Item 15)
In December, 2010, 2,600,000 shares of common stock were issued to settle debt
to the Company's President in the amount of $256,218 and in exchange for
services rendered by the Directors, Officers and consultants.
In August of 2011, 120,000 shares of common stock were issued in exchange for
services rendered by Directors, Officers and consultants and cash investment
of $10,000 by one of the Company's Directors.
A 4 for 1 reverse split became effective on September 1, 2011. As such, the
"post" 4 for 1 reverse split equivalent number of shares of common stock issued
during 2011. 2010 were 650,000 and 30,000, respectively.
During 2012, a private placement, specifically a "rights" offering, was made
available to existing shareholders only, 48,250 shares of common stock to rights
offering participants. In addition, 164,000 shares were issued in exchange for
services rendered by four of the Company's Directors and a consultant.
These issuances of unregistered were exempt pursuant to Section 4(2) of the
Securities Act as these were private placements in which there was no adver-
tising and no commissions paid and/or privately negotiated transactions.
Accordingly, the stock certificates representing these shares were issued with
restrictive legends indicating that the shares have not been registered and may
not be traded until registered or otherwise exempt from registration.
EXHIBITS AND FINANCIAL STATEMENT SCHEDULES (Item 16)
(a) Financial Statements included in this Registration Statement are provided
on page 36: Financial Statements (Item 11e)
(b) Exhibits
Exhibit Description Reference
3.1 Articles of Incorporation of Registrant - 04JUN92 Filed herewith
3.2 Articles of Amendment of the Registrant - 22SEP04 Filed herewith
3.3 Articles of Amendment of the Registrant - 11JUL05 Filed herewith
3.4 Articles of Amendment of the Registrant - 02JUL07 Filed herewith
3.5 Resolution Relating to a Series of Shares of
the Registrant - 26JUL11 Filed herewith
3.6 Corporate Bylaws of Registrant Filed herewith
4.1 Form of Common Stock Certificate Filed herewith
5.1 Opinion of Richard C. Seltzer, Esq. Filed herewith
10.1 Commercial Lease Agreement Filed herewith
10.2 Line of Credit Promissory Note Filed herewith
10.3 Executive Compensation Agreement Filed herewith
10.4 Intellectual Property Assignment Files Herewith
14.1 Code of Ethics and Business Conduct Filed herewith
22.1 Minutes - Special Shareholders' Meeting - 10AUG12 Filed herewith
22.2 Minutes - Annual Shareholders' Meeting - 13APR12 Filed herewith
22.3 Minutes - Special Shareholders' Meeting - 10MAY11 Filed herewith
22.4 Minutes - Annual Shareholders' Meeting - 22DEC10 Filed herewith
23.1 Consent of Independent Registered Public Accountant,
Bobby J. Hutton, CPA Filed herewith
23.2 Consent of Independent Consultant,
Steven P. Weeks, Ph.D. Filed herewith
23.3 Consent of Independent Consultant,
Harold L. Russell, Ph.D. Filed herewith
23.4 Consent of Independent Consultant,
David G. Henry, Reg. Patent Atty. Filed herewith
23.5 Consent of Legal Counsel, Richard C. Seltzer, Atty. Filed herewith
99.1 Patent Valuation Summary, Steve Weeks, PhD,
First Principals, Inc. Filed herewith
99.2 Expert Opinion, David G. Henry,
Registered Patent Attorney Filed herewith
99.3 Expert Opinion Letter,
Harold Russell, PhD Filed herewith
79
UNDERTAKINGS (Item 17)
The undersigned registrant hereby undertakes:
(1) To file, during any period in which offers or sales are being made, a post-
effective amendment to this registration statement:
(i) To include any prospectus required by section 10(a)(3) of the
Securities Act of 1933;
(ii) To reflect in the prospectus any facts or events arising after the
effective date of the registration statement (or the most recent post-
effective amendment thereof) which, individually or in the aggregate,
represent a fundamental change in the information set forth in the
registration statement. Notwithstanding the foregoing, any increase or
decrease in volume of securities offered (if the total dollar value of
securities offered would not exceed that which was registered) and any
deviation from the low or high end of the estimated maximum offering
range may be reflected in the form of prospectus filed with the
Commission pursuant to Rule 424(b)(230.424(b) of the chapter) if,
in the aggregate, the changes in volume and price represent no more
than 20% change in the maximum aggregate offering price set forth in
the "Calculation of Registration Fee" table in the effective
registration statement; and
(iii) To include any material information with respect to the plan of
distribution not previously disclosed in the registration statement or
any material change to such information in the registration statement.
(2) That, for the purpose of determining any liability under the Securities Act
of 1933, each such post-effective amendment shall be deemed to be a new regis-
tration 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.
(3) To remove from registration by means of a post-effective amendment any of
the securities being registered which remain unsold at the termination of the
offering.
(4) That, for the purpose of determining liability of the registrant under the
Securities Act of 1933 to any purchaser in the initial distribution of the
ecurities:
The undersigned registrant undertakes that in a primary offering of securities
of the undersigned registrant pursuant to this registration statement, regard-
less of the underwriting method used to sell the securities to the purchaser,
if the securities are offered or sold to such purchaser by means of any of the
following communications, the undersigned registrant will be a seller to the
purchaser and will be considered to offer or sell such securities to such
purchaser:
(i) Any preliminary prospectus or prospectus of the undersigned registrant
relating to the offering required to be filed pursuant to Rule 424
(230.424 of the chapter);
(ii) Any free writing prospectus relating to the offering prepared by or on
behalf of the undersigned registrant or used or referred to by the
undersigned registrant;
(iii) The portion of any other free writing prospectus relating to the offering
containing material information about the undersigned registrant or its
securities provided by or on behalf of the undersigned registrant; and
(iv) Any other communication that is an offer in the offering made by the
undersigned registrant to the purchaser.
80
SIGNATURES
Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Act of 1933, the registrant has
duly caused this Registration Statement to be signed on its behalf by the
undersigned, thereunto duly authorized, in the City of Houston, State of Texas,
on August, 31, 2012.
Signal Advance, Inc.
By /s/ Chris M. Hymel
---------------------
Chris M. Hymel
President/Treasurer
Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Act of 1933, this
Registration Statement has been signed by the following persons in the
capacities and as of the dates indicated.
SIGNATURE TITLE DATE
/s/ Chris M. Hymel Chairman of the Board of Directors, August 31, 2012
President and Treasurer
Chris M. Hymel (Principal Executive Officer)
81
EXHIBIT 3.1 - Articles of Incorporation of Registrant, July 2, 1992
ARTICLES OF INCORPORATION OF BIODYNE, INC.
ARTICLE ONE
The name of the Corporation is Biodyne, Inc.
ARTICLE TWO
The period if its duration is perpetual.
ARTICLE THREE
The purpose for which the Corporation is organized is the transaction of
any and all lawful business for which a corporation may be incorporated
under the Texas Business Corporation Act.
ARTICLE FOUR
The aggregate number of shares which the Corporation shall have the
authority to issue is One Million (1,000,000). The shares shall have no par
value.
ARTICLE FIVE
The Corporation will not commence business until it has received
consideration equal to or exceeding the value of $1,000.00, consisting of
money, labor done, or property actually received, for the issuance of its
shares.
ARTICLE SIX
The street address of its initial Registered Office, and the name of its
initial Registered Agent at this address is as follows:
Chris M. Hymel
2520 County Road 81
Rosharon, TX 77583
ARTICLE SEVEN
The number of trustees constituting the initial Board of Directors of the
Corporation is four (4), and the names and addresses of the persons who are
to serve as the initial Directors are:
Al Davies H. Martin Blacker
12522 Bohemme 2703-1 Mid Lane
Houston, TX 77024 Houston, TX 77027
Chris M. Hymel Malcolm Skolnick
3515 County Road 81 733 Brogden
Rosharon, TX 77583 Houston, TX 77024
ARTICLE EIGHT
The name and address of the Incorporator is:
Chris H. Hymel
2520 County Road 81
Rosharon, TX 77583
(713) 431-1600
IN WITNESS HEREOF: I have hereunto set my hand this 4th day of June, 1992.
/s/ Chris M. Hymel
----------------------------------
Chris M. Hymel, Incorporator
EXHIBIT 3.2 - Articles of Amendment of the Registrant, September 15, 2005
Articles of Amendment Pursuant to Article 4.04, Texas Business Code
Article 1 - Name
The name of the corporation is as set forth below:
Biodyne, Inc.
The filing number issued to the corporation by the secretary of state is:
Charter No. 1233554-0
Article 2 - Not Applicable
Article 3 - Not Applicable
Article 4 - Other Altered, Added, or Deleted Provisions
Amendment 1: This amendment revises article four to read as follows:
The aggregate number of shares which the Corporation shall have the authority
to issue is One Hundred Million (100,000,000). The shares shall have no par
value.
Amendment 2: This amendment adds the following articles:
Article Nine: There shall be no preemptive rights.
Article Ten: The Board of Directors may repeal or mend the bylaws of the
corporation and may adopt new or additional bylaws, and the articles of
incorporation shall be amended as provided in the Texas Business
Corporation Act.
Article Eleven: There shall be no cumulative voting for directors.
Article Twelve: Any vacancy of the board of directors may be filled by the
affirmative vote of a majority of the remaining directors. Any director so
elected shall serve until the director's successor has been elected and
qualified
Article Thirteen: The corporation shall have the power to indemnify to the
fullest extent permitted by law any person who is made, or threatened to be
made, a party to any action, suit or proceeding, whether civil, criminal,
administrative, investigative or otherwise (including an action, suit or
proceeding by or in the right of the corporation) by reason of the fact that
the person is or was a director, officer, employee or agent of the
corporation, or a fiduciary within the meaning of the Employee Retirement
Security Act of 1974, as amended with respect to any employee benefit plans
of the corporation, or serves at the request of the corporation as a
director, officer, employee or agent, or as partnership, joint venture, trust
or other enterprise and their respective heirs, administrators, personal
representatives, successors and assigns. Indemnification specifically
provided by the Texas Business Corporation Act shall not be deemed exclusive
of any other rights to which such director, officer, employee, or agent may
be entitled under any bylaw, agreement, vote of shareholders, or
disinterested directors or otherwise. The corporation, its officers,
directors, employees, or agents shall be fully protected in taking any action
or making any payment under this Article or in refusing to do so upon advice
of independent counsel.
EXHIBIT 3.3 - Articles of Amendment of the Registrant, July 7, 2005
Article of Amendment Pursuant to Article 4.04, Texas Business Code
Article 1 - Name
The name of the corporation is Biodyne, Inc.
The filing number issued to the corporation by the secretary of state is:
Charter No. 1233554-0
Article 2 - Amended Name
The amendment changes the articles of incorporation to change the article
that names the corporation.
The article in the Articles of Incorporation is amended to read as follows:
The name of the corporation is Biodyne Development Company
Article 3 - Not Applicable
Article 4 - Not Applicable
Article 5 - Date of Adoption
The date of the adoption of the amendment(s) by the shareholders of the
corporation, or by the board of directors where no shares have been issued is
July 01, 2005
Article 6 - Statement of Approval
The amendments to the articles of incorporation have been approved in the
manner required by the Texas Business Corporation Act and by the
constituent documents of the corporation.
Effective Date of Filing
This document will become effective when the document is filed by the
secretary of state
Execution
The undersigned signs this document subject to the penalties imposed by law
for the submission of a false or fraudulent document
/s/ Chris M. Hymel July 1, 2005
--------------------------------- -------------------
Signature of Authorized Officer Date
EXHIBIT 3.4 - Articles of Amendment of the Registrant, June 27, 2007
ARTICLES OF AMENDMENT TO THE ARTICLES OF INCORPORATION OF BIODYNE
DEVELOPMENT COMPANY
Pursuant to the provisions of Article 4.04 of the Texas Business
Corporation Act, the undersigned corporation adopts the following Articles of
Amendment to its Articles of Incorporation:
ARTICLE ONE -
The name of the corporation is Biodyne Development Company.
ARTICLE TWO -
The following amendment to the Articles of Incorporation was adopted by the
Shareholders of the Corporation on June 27th, 2007.
Article I of the Articles of Incorporation is hereby amended so as to read as
follows:
The name of the corporation is: SIGNAL ADVANCE, INC.
ARTICLE THREE
The number of shares of the Corporation outstanding at the time of such
adoption was 25,899,650 and the number of shares entitled to vote thereon
was 21,935,526.
ARTICLE FOUR
The number of shares that voted for the Amendment was 21,935,526 and the
number of shares that voted against this Amendment was 0. This vote
constituted an affirmative vote of not less than two-thirds (2/3) of all of
the issued and outstanding shares of the Corporation entitled to vote on said
amendment.
IN WITNESS WHEREOF, I have hereunto set my hand as the President and
authorized representative of the Corporation this the 27th day of June,
2007, and effective as of the 1st day of July, 2007.
BIODYNE DEVELOPMENT COMPANY
BY: /s/ Chris M. Hymel
CHRIS HYMEL, President
EXHIBIT 3.5 - Resolution Relating to a Series of Shares
On Texas Secretary of State Form 426
Resolution Relating to a Series of Shares
Entity Information
The name of the Corporation is Signal Advance, Inc.
The file number issued to the entity by the secretary of state is:
123355400
Copy of Resolution
A copy of a resolution amending an established series is attached.
Adoption of Resolution
The resolution was adopted by all necessary action on the part of the
corporation on: July 22, 2011
Effectiveness of Filing
This document becomes effective at a later date, which is not more than
ninety (90) days from the date of signing. The delayed effective date is:
August 1. 2011
Execution
The undersigned signs this document subject to the penalties imposed by law
for the submission of a materially false or fraudulent instrument.
Date: July 2l.201l
/s/ Chris M Hymel
-----------------------------
Chris M. Hymel, President/C.E.O.
Signature and title of authorized officer
RESOLUTION Relating to a Series of Shares
for
SIGNAL ADVANCE, INC.
The members of the Board of Directors of Signal Advance, Inc., a Texas
for-profit corporation (the "Corporation"), acting by majority consent
in accordance with the Bylaws of the Corporation and applicable law,
has passed this resolution as evidenced by the attached Board resolution
- Reverse Split of Common Stock passed and July 21, 2011 and the Minutes
of the Special Shareholders' Meeting held on May 10, 2010 (both document
attached and incorporated herein by reference).
1) The name of the Corporation is Signal Advance, Inc.
2) The Corporation's Resolution Relating to a Series of Shares, revises
Article Four of the Articles of Incorporation to read as follows:
Immediately upon the effective date, August 1, 2011, of this Resolution
Relating to a Series of Shares, amending the Corporation's Articles of
Incorporation, subsequent to being filed with the Secretary of State of
the State of Texas (the "Effective Time"), each five (4) shares of Common
Stock issued and outstanding immediately prior to the Effective Time (the
"Old Common Stock") shall automatically and without any action on the part
of the respective holders thereof be combined and reclassified into one (1)
share of Common Stock (the "New Common Stock") (and such combination and
reclassification, the "Reverse Stock Split")
Notwithstanding the immediately preceding sentence, no fractional shares of
New Common Stock shall be issued in connection with the Reverse Stock Split
and the Corporation shall not recognize on its stock record books any
purported transfer of any fractional share of New Common Stock. In lieu of
issuing fractional shares in connection with the Reverse Stock Split, each
holder shall be issued one full share of New Common Stock. Each stock
certificate that immediately prior to the Effective Time represented shares
of Old Common Stock shall, from and after the Effective Time, automatically
and without the necessity of presenting the same for exchange, represent that
number of whole shares of New Common Stock into which the shares of Old
Common Stock represented by such certificate shall have been reclassified;
provided, however, that each holder of record of a certificate that
represented shares of Old Common Stock shall receive upon surrender of such
certificate a new certificate representing the number of whole shares of New
Common Stock into which the shares of Old Common Stock represented by such
certificate shall have been reclassified. From and after the Effective Time,
the term "New Common Stock" as used in this paragraph shall mean Common Stock
as otherwise used in this Certificate of Incorporation.
The aggregate number of shares which the Corporation shall have the
authority to issue remains at One Hundred Million (100,000,000). The shares
shall have no par value.
3) The foregoing Resolution Relating to a Series of Shares which amends
the Articles of Incorporation of the Corporation was duly approved by the
Board of Directors and the stockholders of the Corporation in accordance
with the provisions of Sections 21.115 of the Texas Business Organization
Code.
EXHIBIT 3.6 - Bylaws of the Registrant
BYLAWS OF BIODYHNE DEVELOPMENT COMANY
ARTICLE 1: NAME AND OFFICES
1.01 Name. The name of the Corporation is BIODYHNE DEVELOPMENT COMPANY.
1.02 Registered Office and Agent. The registered office of the Corporation
is 2520 County Road 81, Rosharon, Texas 77583. The name of the registered
agent at such address is Chris M. Hymel.
1.03 Other Offices. The Corporation may also have offices at such other
places both within and without the State of Texas as the Board of Directors
may from time to time determine or the business of the Corporation may
require.
ARTICLE 2: SHAREHOLDERS
2.01 Place of Meetings. Meetings of shareholders shall be held at the time
and place, within or without the State of Texas, stated in the notice of the
meeting or in a waiver of notice.
2.02 Annual Meetings. An annual meeting of the shareholders shall be held
each year at a time and date selected by the Board of Directors, called
pursuant to these Bylaws. At the meeting, the shareholders shall elect
directors and transact such other business as may properly be brought before
the meetings.
2.03 Voting List. At least ten (10) days before each meeting of
shareholders, a complete list of the shareholders entitled to vote at the
meeting, arranged in alphabetical order, with the address of each and the
number of voting shares held by each, shall be prepared by the office or
agent having charge of the stock transfer books. The list, for a period of
ten (10) days prior to the meeting, shall be kept on file at the registered
office of the Corporation and shall be subject to inspection by any
shareholder at any time during usual business hours. The list shall also be
produced and kept open at the time and place of the meeting during the whole
time thereof, and shall be subject to the inspection of any shareholder
during the whole time of the meeting. Failure to comply with the
requirements of this Section shall not affect the validity of any action
taken at any meeting of the shareholders.
2.04 Special Meetings. Special meetings of the shareholders, for any
purpose or purposes, unless otherwise prescribed by statute or by the
Articles of Incorporation, or by these Bylaws, may be called at any time by
the President, or in his absence, by any Vice-President, the majority of the
Board of Directors, or the holders of not less than one-tenth (1/l0) of all
the shares entitled to vote at the meetings. Business transacted at the
special meeting shall be confined to the purposes stated in the notice of the
meeting.
2.05 Notice. Written or printed notice or notice by electronic mail,
stating the place, day and hour of the meeting and, in case of a special
meeting, or where otherwise required by statute, the purpose or purposes for
which the meeting is called, shall be delivered not less than ten (l0) or
more than fifty (50) days before the date of the meeting, either personally
or by mail, by or at the direction of the President, Secretary, or the office
or person calling the meeting. If mailed, such notice shall be deemed to be
delivered when deposited in the United States mail addressed to the
shareholder at his address as it appears on the stock transfer books of the
Corporation, with postage thereon prepaid. See also Bylaw Sections 5.0l and
5.02.
2.06 Quorum. The holders of a majority of the shares issued and
outstanding and entitled to vote thereat, present in person or represented by
proxy, shall be requisite and shall constitute a quorum at meetings of the
shareholders for the transaction of business, except as otherwise provided by
statute, by the Articles of Incorporation or by these Bylaws. If a quorum is
not present or represented at a meeting of the shareholders, a majority of
the shareholders entitled to vote, present in person or represented by proxy,
shall have power to adjourn the meeting after the expiration of at least one
(l) hour to a future time which they may select not more than seven (7) days
later, without notice other than announcement at the meeting, until a quorum
is present or represented. At an adjourned meeting at which a quorum is
present or represented, any business may be transacted which might have been
transacted at the meeting as originally notified.
2.07 Majority Vote: Withdrawal of Quorum. When a quorum is present at a
meeting, the vote of the holders of a majority of the shares having voting
power, present in person or represented by proxy, shall decide any questions
brought before the meeting, unless the question is one on which by express
provision of the statutes, the Articles of Incorporation, or these Bylaws, a
higher vote is required, in which case the express provision shall govern.
The shareholders present at a duly constituted meeting may continue to
transact business until adjournment, despite the withdrawal of enough
shareholders to leave less than a quorum.
2.08 Record Date; Closing Transfer Books. If the Board of Directors does
not provide for the closing of the stock transfer books, relative to a
particular meeting, then, in such event, the record time and date for the
determination of shareholders entitled to notice of, and to vote at, the
meeting shall be the date upon which notice of the meeting is mailed or
given, or the date upon which waiver of notice, or unanimous written consent
of the shareholders, is executed. See also Bylaw Section 7.ll.
2.09 Method of Voting. Each outstanding share, regardless of class, shall
be entitled to one vote on each matter submitted to a vote at a meeting of
shareholders, except to the extent that the voting rights of the shares of
any class or classes are limited or denied by the Articles of Incorporation.
At any meeting of the shareholders, every shareholder having the right to
vote may vote either in person, or by proxy executed in writing by the
shareholder or by his duly authorized attorney-in- fact. No proxy shall be
valid after eleven (11) months from the date of its execution, unless
otherwise provided in the proxy. Each proxy shall be recoverable unless
expressly provided therein to be irrevocable and unless otherwise made
irrevocable by law. Each proxy shall be filed with the Secretary of the
Corporation prior to or at the time of the meeting. Voting for directors
shall be in accordance with Section 3.06 of these Bylaws. Any vote may be
taken by voice or by show of hands unless someone entitled to vote objects,
in which case written ballots shall be used. Treasury shares, shares of
stock owned by another corporation, the majority of the voting stock of which
is owned or controlled by this Corporation, and the shares of stock held by
this Corporation in a fiduciary capacity shall not be voted, directly or
indirectly, at any meeting and shall not be counted in determining the total
number of outstanding shares at any given time. No share of stock shall be
voted on at any election for Directors which has been transferred on the
books of the Corporation subsequent to the record date determined in
accordance with Bylaw Section 2.08 above. Shares standing in the name of
another corporation, domestic or foreign, may be voted by such officer, agent
or proxy as the Bylaws of such corporation may authorize, or in the absence
of such authorization as the Board of Directors of such corporation may
determine. Shares held by an administrator, executor, guardian or
conservator may be voted by him so long as such shares forming a part of an
estate are in the possession and forming a part of the estate being served by
him, either in person or by proxy, without a transfer of such shares into his
name. Shares standing in the name of a Trustee may be voted by him, either
in person or by proxy, but no Trustee shall be entitled to vote shares held
by him without the transfer of said shares into his name as Trustee. The
general proxy of a fiduciary shall be given the same effect as the general
proxy of an individual or corporation. Shares standing in the name of a
receiver may be voted by such receiver, and shares held by or under the
control of the receiver may be voted by such receiver, without the transfer
thereof into his name if authority so to do be contained in an appropriate
Order of the Court by which such receiver was appointed. Persons whose stock
is pledged shall be entitled to vote, unless in transfer by the pledgor on
the books of the Corporation, the pledgee is expressly empowered by the
pledgor to vote thereon, in which case only the pledgee or his proxy may
represent said shares and vote thereon. To the extent applicable, Roberts
Rules of Order shall govern the conduct of and procedure at all shareholder
meetings.
2.10 Action Without Meeting. Any action required by statute to be taken at
a meeting of the shareholders, or any action which may be taken at a meeting
of the shareholders, may be taken without a meeting if a consent in writing,
setting forth the action so taken, shall be signed by all of the shareholders
entitled to vote with respect to the subject matter thereof and such consent
shall have the same force and effect as a unanimous vote of the shareholders.
The signed consent, or a signed copy, shall be placed in the minute book.
2.11 Electronic, Telephone and Similar Meetings. Shareholders, Directors
and committee members may participate in and hold a meeting electronically by
means of a telephone, electronic mail or similar method of communication
given that a quorum participates in the meeting as specified by statutes, the
Articles of Incorporation, or these Bylaws. Further, participants may vote
via email notice to the Secretary of the Corporation. Participation in such a
meeting shall constitute presence, in person, at the meeting, except where a
person participates in the meeting for the express purpose of objecting to
the transaction of any business on the ground that the meeting is not
lawfully called or convened.
2.12 Order of Business at Meetings. The order of business at annual
meetings and so far as practicable at other meetings of shareholders shall be
as follows unless changed by the Board of Directors:
(a) call to order
(b) proof of due notice of meeting
(c) determination of quorum and examination of proxies
(d) announcement of availability of voting list (See Bylaw Section 2.03)
(e) reading and approving of minutes of last meeting of shareholders
(f) reports of officers and committees
(g) appointment of voting inspectors
(h) unfinished business
(i) new business
(j) nomination of Directors
(k) opening of polls for voting
(l) recess
(m) reconvening; closing of polls
(n) report of voting inspectors
(o) other business
(p) adjournment
ARTICLE 3: DIRECTORS
3.01 Management. The business and affairs of the Corporation shall be
managed by the Board of Directors who may exercise all such powers of the
Corporation and do all such lawful acts and things as are not by statute or
by the Articles of Incorporation or by these Bylaws directed or required to
be exercised or done by the shareholders. Without prejudice to such general
powers and the other powers conferred by statute, by the Articles of
Incorporation and by these Bylaws, it is hereby expressly declared that the
Board of Directors shall have the following powers:
(a) To purchase, or otherwise acquire for the Corporation, any property or
rights, or privileges which the Corporation is authorized to acquire, at such
price or consideration and generally on such terms and conditions as they may
think fit; at their discretion to pay therefor either wholly or partly in
money, stock, bonds, debentures or other securities of the Corporation.
(b) To create, make and issue mortgages, bonds, deeds of trust, trust
agreements and negotiable or transferable instruments and securities, secured
by mortgage or otherwise, and to do every other act and thing necessary to
effect the same.
(c) To appoint any person or corporation to accept and hold in trust for the
Corporation any property belonging to the Corporation, or in which it is
interested, or for any other purpose, and to execute such deeds and do all
things requisite in relation to any such trust.
(d) To delegate any of the powers of the Board in the course of the current
business of the Corporation to any standing or special committee, or any
other officer or agent and to appoint any persons the agents of the
Corporation, with such powers, (including the power to sub-delegate), and
upon such terms as they think fit.
(e) To determine whether any, and if any, what part of the earned surplus of
the Corporation shall be declared in dividends and paid to the shareholders,
and to direct and determine and use the disposition of any such earned
surplus.
(f) To fix, from time to time, the amount of profits of the Corporation to be
reserves as working capital or for any other lawful purpose.
(g) To establish bonus, profit-sharing, or other types of incentive or
compensation plans for the employees, (including officers and Directors), of
the Corporation, and to fix the amount of profits to be distributed or shared
and to determine the persons to participate in any such plans and the amount
of their respective participations.
(h) To enter into contracts of employment, which contracts may be for a term
longer than that for which the Directors are elected.
3.02 Number; Qualification; Election; Term. The Board of Directors shall
consist of not less than three (3) directors, none of whom need be
shareholders or residents of any particular state. The Directors shall be
elected at the annual meeting of the shareholders, except as provided by
Bylaws Sections 3.03 and 3.05, or as may be otherwise provided in these
Bylaws. Each Director elected shall hold office until his successor shall be
elected and shall qualify.
3.03 Change in Number. The number of Directors may be increased or
decreased from time to time by amendment to these Bylaws but no decrease
shall have the effect of shortening the term of any incumbent Director. Any
directorship to be filled by reason of an increase in the number of Directors
shall be filled by election at an annual meeting or at a special meeting of
shareholders called for that purpose.
3.04 Removal. Any Director may be removed either with or without cause at
any special or annual meeting of shareholders, by the affirmative vote of a
majority in number of shares of the shareholders present, in person or by
proxy, at such meeting and entitled to vote for the election of such Director
if notice of intention to act upon such matter shall have been given in the
notice calling such meeting. Any vacancy or vacancies in the Board resulting
from any such removal may be filled by such vote of such shareholders,
present in person or by proxy, at such shareholders' meeting at which a
quorum is in attendance.
3.05 Vacancies. A directorship shall be considered to be vacant upon the
happening of any one of the following events:
(a) A death of the person holding such directorship;
(b) Resignation of the person holding such directorship;
(c) The refusal of the person elected to a directorship to manifest his
assent to serve;
(d) Removal of a Director as per Bylaw Section 3.04; or
(e) Disqualification of a Director under any provision of law, the Articles
of Incorporation or by these Bylaws.
Any vacancies so occurring in the Board of Directors may be filled by an
affirmative vote of a majority of the remaining Directors though less than a
quorum of the Board of Directors. A Director elected to fill a vacancy shall
be elected for the unexpired term of his predecessor in office.
3.06 Election of Directors. Directors shall be elected by plurality vote.
Cumulative voting shall be permitted, unless otherwise denied in the Articles
of Incorporation. If cumulative voting is authorized, any shareholder who
chooses to cumulate his votes as herein authorized shall give written notice
of such intention to the Secretary of the Corporation on or before the day
preceding the election at which such shareholder intends to cumulate his
votes.
3.07 Place of Meetings. Meetings of the Board of Directors, regular or
special, may be held either within or without the State of Texas.
3.08 First Meeting. The first meeting of a newly elected board shall be
held without further notice immediately following the organizational meeting
of shareholders, and at the same place, unless by unanimous consent of the
Directors then serving the time or place is changed.
3.09 Annual Meetings. Each newly elected Board of Directors may hold their
meetings, elect officers and transact other business, if a quorum be present,
immediately after the annual meeting of the shareholders or any special
meeting of the shareholders held in lieu thereof, and no notice of such
meeting shall be necessary for any purpose; or such meeting may be held at
such place and time as may be fixed in a notice of meeting (given as though
it were to be a special meeting and otherwise in accordance with the
provision of these Bylaws) or such meeting may be held at such place and time
as shall be fixed by the consent, in writing, of all such Directors.
3.10 Regular Meetings. Regular meetings of the Board of Directors may be
held without notice at such time and place as shall from time to time be
determined by the Board.
3.11 Election of Officers. At the first meeting and each subsequent annual
meeting of the Board of Directors in each corporate year, at which a quorum
shall be present, the Board of Directors shall proceed to the election of the
officers of the Corporation.
3.12 Special Meetings.
(a) Special meetings of the Board of Directors shall be held whenever called
by the President, by a Vice-President, or by the Secretary or by a majority
of the Directors at the time being in office.
(b) The Secretary shall, and in the event of his absence, failure, refusal,
or omission to do so, any officer of the Corporation may give notice of any
special meeting of the Board of Directors, by telegraphing, mailing or
delivering the same at least three (3) days before the date of the meeting to
each Director. Unless otherwise indicated, in the notice or waiver or
waivers of notice thereof, any and all business, of any nature or character,
may be transacted at any special meeting of the Board. Each special meeting
shall be held at the principal office of the Corporation or at such other
place, within or without the State of Texas, as may be designated in the
notice or waiver or waivers of notice thereof, unless and until the Board of
Directors shall, by resolution, designate a place or places where special
meetings of the Board are to be held; and thereafter, special meetings of the
Board shall be held at such place or places so long as such resolution shall
continue in force and effect.
(c) At any meeting of the Board of Directors at which every Director shall be
present, even though held without notice or waiver or waivers of notice and
wherever held, any and all business of any nature or character may be
transacted unless otherwise provided by statute. Attendance of a Director at
a meeting shall constitute a waiver of notice of such meeting, except where a
Director attends a meeting for the express purpose of objecting to the
transaction of any business, on the ground that the meeting is not lawfully
called or convened. Neither the business to be transacted at, nor the
purpose of, any regular or special meeting of the Board of Directors need be
specified in the notice or waiver of notice of such meeting, unless otherwise
required herein.
3.13 Quorum. A majority of the Directors then in office shall constitute a
quorum for the transaction of all business; but, if at any meeting of the
Board of Directors there be less than a quorum present, a majority of these
present, or if only one (l) Director be present, then such Director, may
adjourn the meeting from time to time without notice, other than by
announcement at the meeting, until the transaction of any and all business
submitted, or proposed to be submitted, to such meeting or any adjournment or
adjournments thereof shall have been completed. The act of a majority of the
Directors present at a meeting at which a quorum or more than a quorum is in
attendance shall constitute the act of the Board of Directors, except as
otherwise provided by law, by the Articles of Incorporation, or by these
Bylaws.
3.14 Compensation. By resolution of the Board of Directors, the Directors
may be paid their expenses, if any, of attendance at each meeting of the
Board of Directors and may be paid a fixed sum for attendance at each meeting
of the Board of Directors or a stated salary as Director. No such payment
shall preclude any Director from serving the Corporation in any other
capacity and receiving compensation therefor. Members of the executive
committee or of special or standing committees may, by resolution of the
Board of Directors, be allowed like compensation for attending committee
meetings.
3.15 Procedure. The Board of Directors shall keep regular minutes of its
proceedings. The minutes shall be placed in the minute book of the
Corporation.
3.16 Action Without Meeting. Any action required or permitted to be taken
at a meeting of the Board of Directors may be taken without a meeting if a
consent in writing, setting for the action so taken, is signed by all the
members of the Board of Directors. Such consent shall have the same force
and effect as a unanimous vote at a meeting. The signed consent, or a signed
copy, shall be placed in the minute book.
3.17 Electronic, Telephone and Similar Meetings. See Bylaw Section 2.11.
3.18 Order of Business.
(a) At meetings of the Board of Directors, business shall be transacted in
such order as from time to time the Board of Directors may determine.
(b) At the meetings of the Board of Directors, the President, or in his
absence, any Vice-President who is also a Director, shall preside, and in the
absence of the President or such Vice-President, a Chairman shall be chosen
by the Board from among the Directors present.
(c) The Secretary, or in his absence any Assistant Secretary, of the
Corporation shall act as Secretary of all meetings of the Board of Directors,
but in the absence of the Secretary or an Assistant Secretary, the presiding
officer may appoint any person to act as Secretary of the meeting.
3.19 Interest of Directors in Contracts.
(a) No contract or other transaction between the Corporation and any firm of
which one (1) or more of its Directors are members or employees, or in which
they are otherwise pecuniarily interested, or between the Corporation and any
corporation or association in which one (1) or more of its Directors are
shareholders, member, Directors, officers or employees, or in which they are
otherwise interested, shall be void or voidable by reason of such
directorship in this Corporation or such interest in such other firm,
corporation or association, notwithstanding the presence of such Director or
Directors at the meeting of the Board of Directors of this Corporation which
acts upon or in reference to such contract or transaction, and
notwithstanding his or their participation in such action, if (i) the fact of
such interest shall be disclosed or known to the Board of Directors and the
Board of Directors shall authorize, approve, or ratify such contract or
transaction by vote of a majority of the Directors present, such interested
Director or Directors to be counted in determining whether a quorum is
present, but not to be counted in calculating the majority necessary to carry
such vote, or if (ii) the fact of such interest shall be disclosed or known
to the shareholders and the shareholders, by written consent or by vote of
holders of records of a majority of all the outstanding shares of stock
entitled to vote, shall authorize, approve or ratify such contract or
transaction, nor shall any Director be liable to account to this Corporation
for any profits realized by or from or through any such transaction or
contract of the Corporation so authorized, ratified or approved by reason of
such directorship or interest. Nothing herein contained shall create
liability in the events above described or prevent the authorization,
ratification or approval of such transactions or contracts in any other
manner permitted by law. This Section shall not be construed to invalidate
any contract or other transaction which would otherwise be valid under the
common and statutory law applicable thereto.
(b) Any contract, transaction or act of the Corporation or Directors which
shall be ratified by a majority of the quorum of the shareholders of the
Corporation at any annual meeting, or at any special meeting called for such
purpose, shall, insofar as permitted by law or by the Articles of
Incorporation of the Corporation, be as valid and as binding as though
ratified by every shareholder of the Corporation; provided, however, that any
failure of the shareholders to approve or ratify any such contract,
transaction, or act, when and if submitted, shall not be deemed to invalidate
in any way the same or deprive the Corporation, its Directors, officers or
employees of any of its or their rights to proceed with such transactions,
contract or act.
3.20 Liability of Directors in Certain Cases. A Director shall not be
liable for his acts as such if he is excused from liability under Section B,
Section C or Section D, of Article 2.41, of the Texas Business Corporation
Act; and, in addition, to the fullest extent permitted by the Texas Business
Corporation Act, each officer or Director or member of any Corporation
Committee shall, in the discharge of any duty imposed or power conferred upon
him by the Corporation, be fully protected if, in the exercise of ordinary
care, he acted in good faith and in reliance upon the written opinion of any
attorney for the Corporation, the books of account or reports made to the
Corporation by any of its officials, or by an Independent Certified Public
Account, or by an appraiser selected with reasonable care by the Board of
Directors or by such committee, or in reliance upon other records of the
Corporation.
3.21 Ratification by Shareholders or Directors of Certain Acts. The
Directors in their discretion may submit any contract or act for approval or
ratification at any shareholders' meeting, and any contract or acts that
shall be approved or be ratified by the vote of majority of the shareholders
represented in person or by proxy at such shareholders' meeting at which
there is a quorum, shall be as valid and binding upon the Corporation and
upon all the shareholders as if it had been approved or ratified by every
shareholder. Any transaction questioned in any shareholder's derivative suit
on the ground of lack of authority, defective or irregular execution, adverse
interest of Director, officer or Shareholder, non-disclosure, miscomputation,
or the application of improper principles or practices of accounting may be
ratified, unless prohibited by law, before or after judgment, by the Board of
Directors or by the shareholders and if so ratified, shall have the same
force and effect as if the questioned transaction had been originally duly
authorized, and said ratification shall be binding upon the Corporation and
its shareholders and shall constitute a bar to any claim or execution or any
judgment in respect of such questioned transaction.
ARTICLE 4: EXECUTIVE COMMITTEES
4.01 Designation. The Board of Directors may, by resolution adopted by a
majority of the whole board, designate an executive committee.
4.02 Number; Qualification; Term. The executive committee shall consist of
one or more Directors, one of whom shall be the President. The executive
committee shall serve at the pleasure of the Board of Directors.
4.03 Authority. The executive committee, to the extent provided in such
resolution, shall have and may exercise all of the authority of the Board of
Directors in the management of the business and affairs of the Corporation,
including authority over the use of the corporate seal. However, the
executive committee shall not have the authority of the Board in reference
to:
(a) amending the Articles of Incorporation;
(b) approving a plan of merger or consolidation;
(c) recommending to the shareholders the sale, lease or exchange of all or
substantially all of the property and assets of the Corporation otherwise
than in the usual and regular course of its business;
(d) recommending to the shareholders a voluntary dissolution of the
Corporation or a revocation thereof;
(e) amending, altering, or repealing these Bylaws or adopting new
Bylaws;
(f) filling vacancies in or removing members of the Board of
Directors or of any committee appointed by the Board of Directors;
(g) fixing the compensation of any member of such committee;
(h) altering or repealing any resolution of the Board of Directors which by
its terms provides that it shall not be so amendable or repealable;
(i) declaring a dividend; or
(j) authorizing the issuance of shares of the Corporation.
4.04 Change in Number. The number of executive committee members may be
increased or decreased from time to time by resolution adopted by a majority
of the entire Board of Directors.
4.05 Removal. Any member of the executive committee may be removed by the
Board of Directors by the affirmative vote of a majority of the whole board,
whenever in its judgment the best interests of the Corporation will be served
thereby.
4.06 Vacancies. A vacancy occurring in the executive committee (by death,
resignation, removal or otherwise) may be filled by the Board of Directors in
the manner provided for original designation in Bylaw Section 4.0l.
4.07 Meetings. Time, place and notice, (if any) of executive committee
meetings shall be determined by the executive committee. See also Bylaw
Sections 5.0l and 5.02.
4.08 Quorum; Majority Vote. At meetings of the executive committee, a
majority of the number of members designated by the Board of Directors shall
constitute a quorum for the transaction of business. The act of a majority
of the members present at any meeting at which a quorum is present shall be
the act of the executive committee, except as otherwise specifically provided
by statute, the Articles of Incorporation, or these Bylaws. If a quorum is
not present at a meeting of the executive committee, the members present may
adjourn the meeting from time to time, without notice other than an
announcement at the meeting, until a quorum is present.
4.09 Compensation. See Bylaw Section 3.14.
4.10 Procedure. The executive committee shall keep regular minutes of its
proceedings and report the same to the Board of Directors when required. The
minutes of the proceedings of the executive committee shall be placed in the
minute book of the Corporation.
4.11 Action Without Meeting. Any action required or permitted to be taken
at a meeting of the executive committee may be taken without a meeting if a
consent in writing, setting forth the action so taken, is signed by all the
members of the executive committee. Such consent shall have the same force
and effect as a unanimous vote at a meeting. The signed consent, or a signed
copy, shall be placed in the minute book.
4.12 Electronic, Telephone and Similar Meetings. See Bylaw Section 2.11.
4.13 Responsibility. The designation of an executive committee and the
delegation of authority to it shall not operate to relieve the Board of
Directors, or any member thereof, of any responsibility imposed upon it or
him by law.
ARTICLE 5: NOTICE
5.01 Method. Whenever by statute, the Articles of Incorporation, these
Bylaws, or otherwise, notice is required to be given to a Director, committee
member, or security holders, and no provision is made as to how the notice
shall be given, it shall not be construed to mean personal notice, but any
such notice may be given: (a) in writing, by mail, postage prepaid, addressed
to the Director, committee member or security holder at the address appearing
on the books of the Corporation; or (b) by electronic mail or in any other
method permitted by law. Any notice required or permitted to be given by
mail shall be deemed given at the time when the same is thus deposited in the
United States mails.
5.02 Waiver. Whenever, by statute or the Articles of Incorporation or
these Bylaws, notice is required to be given to a security holder, committee
member, or Director, a waiver thereof in writing signed by the person or
persons entitled to such notice, or by telephone or electronic mail to the
Secretary or President of the Corporation, telegraph or cable, whether before
or after the time stated in such notice, shall be equivalent to the giving of
such notice. Attendance at a meeting shall constitute a waiver of notice of
such meeting, except where a person attends for the express purpose of
objecting to the transaction of any business on the grounds that the meeting
is not lawfully called or convened.
ARTICLE 6: OFFICERS AND AGENTS
6.01 Number; Qualification; Election; Term.
(a) The Corporation shall have: (1) a President, a Vice-President, a
Secretary and a Treasurer, and (2) such other officers (including a chairman
of the Board and additional Vice-Presidents) and assistant officers and
agents as the Board of Directors may deem necessary.
(b) No officer or agent need be a shareholder, a Director or a resident of
Texas.
(c) Officers named in Bylaw Section 6.01(a)(1) shall be elected by the Board
of Directors by a majority vote of those present, with a quorum, on the
expiration of an officer's term or whenever a vacancy exists. Officers and
agents named in Bylaw Section 6.01(a)(2) may be elected by the Board at any
meeting.
(d) Unless otherwise specified by the Board at the time of election or
appointment, or in an employment contract approved by the Board, each
officer's and agent's term shall end at the first meeting of Directors after
the next annual meeting of shareholders. He shall serve until the end of his
term or, if earlier, his death, resignation, or removal.
(e) Any two or more offices may be held by the same person, except that the
President and Secretary shall not be the same person.
6.02 Removal. Any officer or agent elected or appointed by the Board of
Directors may be removed by the Board of Directors whenever in its judgment
the best interests of the Corporation will be served thereby. Such removal
shall be without prejudice to the contract rights, if any, of the person so
removed. Election or appointment of an officer or agent shall not of itself
create contract rights.
6.03 Vacancies. Any vacancy occurring in any office of the Corporation (by
death, resignation, removal or otherwise) may be filled by a majority vote of
the Board of Directors present at a meeting at which a quorum is present.
Such vacancy shall be filled for the unexpired portion of the term of such
officer, and any officer so elected shall hold office until his successor
shall be duly elected and shall qualify.
6.04 Authority. Officers and agents shall have such authority and perform
such duties in the management of the Corporation as are provided in these
Bylaws or as may be determined by resolution of the Board of Directors not
inconsistent with these Bylaws.
6.05 Compensation. The compensation of officers and agents shall be fixed
from time to time by the Board of Directors.
6.06 President. The President shall be the chief executive officer of the
Corporation; he shall preside at all meetings of the shareholders and the
Board of Directors, shall have general and active management of the business
and affairs of the Corporation, shall see that all orders and resolutions of
the Board are carried into effect. He shall perform such other duties and
have such other authority and powers as the Board of Directors may from time
to time prescribe. Further, the corporation may appoint a President of
Operations to have general and active management of the business operations
of the Corporation on a day-to-day basis. The President of Operations shall
also perform such other duties and have such other authority and powers as
the Board of Directors may from time to time prescribe.
6.07 Vice-President. The Vice-Presidents in the order of their seniority,
unless otherwise determined by the Board of Directors, shall, in the absence
or disability of the President, perform the duties and have the authority and
exercise the powers of the President. They shall perform such other duties
and have such other authority and powers as the Board of Directors may from
time to time prescribe or as the President may from time to time delegate.
6.08 Secretary.
(a) The Secretary shall attend all meetings of the Board of Directors and all
meetings of the shareholders and record all votes, actions and minutes of all
proceedings in a book to be kept for that purpose and shall perform like
duties for the executive and other committees when required.
(b) He shall give, or cause to be given, notice of all meetings of the
shareholders and special meetings of the Board of Directors.
(c) He shall keep in safe custody the seal of the Corporation and, when
authorized by the Board of Directors or the Executive committee, affix it to
any instrument requiring it. When so affixed, it shall be attested by his
signature or by the signature of the Treasurer or an Assistant Secretary.
(d) Keep a register of the post office address of each shareholder.
(e) Sign with the President certificates for shares of the Corporation.
(f) Have general charge of the stock transfer book of the Corporation.
(g) He shall be under the supervision of the President. He shall perform
such other duties and have such other authority and powers as the Board of
Directors may from time to time prescribe or as the President may from time
to time delegate.
6.09 Assistant Secretary. The Assistant Secretaries in the order of their
seniority, unless otherwise determined by the Board of Directors, shall, in
the absence or disability of the Secretary, perform the duties and have the
authority and exercise the powers of the Secretary. They shall perform such
other duties and have such other powers as the Board of Directors may from
time to time prescribe or as the President may from time to time delegate.
6.10 Treasurer.
(a) The Treasurer shall have the custody of the corporate funds and
securities and shall keep full and accurate accounts of receipts and
disbursements of the Corporation and shall deposit all moneys and other
valuables in the name and to the credit of the Corporation in depositories
designated by the Board of Directors.
(b) He shall disburse the funds of the Corporation as ordered by the Board of
Directors, and prepare financial statements as they direct.
(c) If required by the Board of Directors, he shall give the Corporation a
bond (in such from, in such sum, and with such surety or sureties as shall be
satisfactory to the Board) for the faithful performance of the duties of his
office and for the restoration to the Corporation, in case of his death,
resignation, retirement or removal from office, of all books, papers,
vouchers, money and other property of whatever kind in his possession or
under his control belonging to the Corporation.
(d) He shall perform such other duties and have such other authority and
powers as the Board of Directors may from time to time prescribe or as the
President may from time to time delegate.
6.11 Assistant Treasurer. The Assistant Treasurers in the order of their
seniority, unless otherwise determined by the Board of Directors, shall, in
the absence or disability of the Treasurer, perform the duties and have the
authority and exercise the powers of the Treasurer. They shall perform such
other duties and have such other powers as the Board of Directors may from
time to time prescribe or the President may from time to time delegate.
6.12 Returns and Statements. It shall be the duty of each officer of this
Corporation to make and file any and all returns, reports, lists, or
statements required by law to be made and filed by him, and to make full
reports to the Board of Directors respecting the affairs of the Corporation
in his charge whenever he may be requested to do so.
6.13 Absence or Inability to Act. In the case of absence or inability to
act, of any officer of the Corporation or of any person herein authorized to
act in his place, the Board of Directors may, from time to time, delegate the
powers or duties of such officer to any other officer or any Director, or any
person it may select.
6.14 Performance Bonds of Officers. The Board of Directors may, by
resolution, require any and all officers to give bonds to the Corporation,
with sufficient surety or sureties, conditioned for the faithful performance
of the duties of their respective offices, and to comply with such other
conditions as may, from time to time, be required by the Board of Directors.
6.15 Voting Securities Owned by the Corporation. Unless otherwise ordered
by the Board of Directors, the President, or in the event of his inability to
act, the Vice- President designated herein or by the Board of Directors to
act in the absence of the President, shall have full power and authority on
behalf of the Corporation to attend and to act and to vote at any meetings of
security holders of any corporation in which the Corporation may hold
securities, and at such meetings shall possess and may exercise any and all
rights and powers incident to the ownership of such securities, if present.
The Board of Directors, by resolution from time to time, may confer like
powers upon any person or persons.
ARTICLE 7: CERTIFICATES AND SHAREHOLDERS
7.01 Certificates. Certificates in the form determined by the Board of
Directors shall be delivered representing all shares to which shareholders
are entitled. Certificates shall be consecutively numbered and shall be
entered in the books of the Corporation as they are issued. Each certificate
shall state on its face the holder's name, the number and class of shares,
the par value of shares or a statement that such shares are without par
value, whether the transferability of the shares is restricted by any
agreements and such other matters as may be required by law. It shall be
signed by the President or a Vice-President, and Secretary or Assistant
Secretary and such other officer or officers as the Board of Directors shall
designate, and may be sealed with the seal of the Corporation or a facsimile
thereof. If a certificate is countersigned by a transfer agent, or an
assistant transfer agent or registered by a registrar (either of which is
other than the Corporation or an employee of the Corporation), the signature
of any officer may be a facsimile.
7.02 Issuance. Shares (both treasury and authorized but unissued) may be
issued for such consideration (not less than par value) and to such persons
as the Board of Directors may determine from time to time. Shares may not be
issued until the full amount of the consideration, fixed as provided by law,
has been paid.
7.03 Payment of Shares.
(a) Kind. The consideration for the issuance of shares shall consist of
money paid, labor done (including services actually performed for the
Corporation) or property (tangible or intangible) actually received. Neither
promissory notes nor the promise of future services shall constitute payment
for shares.
(b) Valuation. In the absence of fraud in the transaction, the judgment of
the Board of Directors as to the value of consideration received shall be
conclusive.
(c) Effect. When consideration, fixed as provided by law, has been paid, the
shares shall be deemed to have been issued and shall be considered fully paid
and nonassessable.
(d) Allocation of Consideration. The consideration received for shares shall
be allocated by the Board of Directors, in accordance with law, between
stated capital and capital surplus accounts.
7.04 Subscriptions. Unless otherwise provided in the subscription
agreement, subscriptions for shares, whether made before or after
organization of the Corporation, shall be paid in full at such time or in
such installments and at such times as shall be determined by the Board of
Directors. Any call made by the Board of Directors for payment on
subscriptions shall be uniform as to all shares of the same series. In case
of default in the payment on any installment or call when payment is due, the
Corporation may proceed to collect the amount due in the same manner as any
debt due to the Corporation.
7.05 Lien. For any indebtedness of a shareholder to the Corporation, the
Corporation shall have a first and prior lien on all shares of its stock
owned by him and on all dividends or other distributions declared thereon.
7.06 Lost, Stolen or Destroyed Certificates. The Corporation shall issue a
new certificate in place of any certificate for shares previously issued if
the registered owner of the certificate:
(a) Claim. Makes proof in affidavit form that it has been lost, destroyed or
wrongfully taken; and,
(b) Timely Request. Requests the issuance of a new certificate before the
Corporation has notice that the certificate has been acquired by the
purchaser for value in good faith and without notice of an adverse claim;
and
(c) Bond. Gives a bond in such form, and with such surety or sureties, with
fixed or open penalty, as the Corporation may direct, to indemnify the
Corporation (and its transfer agent and registrar, if any) against any claim
that may be made on account of the alleged loss, destruction, or theft of the
certificate; and
(d) Other Requirements. Satisfies any other reasonable requirements imposed
by the Corporation.
When a certificate has been lost, apparently destroyed or wrongfully taken,
and the holder of record fails to notify the Corporation within a reasonable
time after he has notice of it, and the Corporation registers a transfer of
the shares represented by the certificate before receiving such notification,
the holder of record is precluded from making any claim against the
Corporation for the transfer or for a new certificate.
7.07 Transfer of Shares. Transfer of shares of the Corporation shall be
made only on the books of the Corporation by the holder of record thereof, or
by his legal representative or by his attorney thereunto authorized by Power
of Attorney duly executed and filed with the Secretary of the Corporation, or
with the Transfer Clerk or Transfer Agent which may be appointed, and on
surrender of the certificate or certificates for such shares properly
endorsed and the payment of all taxes thereon. The person in whose name
shares stand on the books of the Corporation shall be deemed the owner
thereof for all as regards to the Corporation, provided that whenever any
transfer of shares shall be made for collateral security, and not absolutely,
such fact, if known to the Secretary of the Corporation, shall be so
expressed in the entry of transfer. The Board may, from time to time, make
such additional rules and regulations as it may deem expedient, not
inconsistent with these Bylaws concerning the issue, transfer and
registration of certificates of shares of the stock of the Corporation. The
Corporation shall not be required to transfer such shares if the signature of
such person has not been guaranteed by a national banking association or
member of the New York Exchange, and reasonable assurance is given that such
endorsements are effective; or if the Corporation has notice of an adverse
claim, provided that the Corporation shall have no duty to inquire into such
a claim.
7.08 Sale of Stock to Employees and Key Management Personnel. The Board of
Directors is authorized to enter into buy and sell agreements or stock
repurchase agreements with respect to shares of stock sold to employees and
key management personnel of the Corporation, reserving the right to the
Corporation to re-acquire and repurchase said shares in the event the
employee ceases to be employed by the Corporation, in the event of the
employee's death, in the event of divorce of employee or death of an
employee's spouse, and in the event the employee wishes to dispose of his
shares while still an employee.
7.09 Facsimile Signatures and Seals. The Certificates of stock may be
signed by the President or a Vice-President and the Secretary or an Assistant
Secretary or the Treasurer or an Assistant Treasurer, and sealed with the
Seal of the Corporation, and such seal may be a facsimile, engraved or
printed. When any such certificates are countersigned by a transfer agent,
or a transfer clerk, or registered by a registrar, either of which is other
than the Corporation itself or an employee of the Corporation, the signature
of the President or the Vice-President, and the Secretary or an Assistant
Secretary, or the Treasurer or an Assistant Secretary or the Treasurer or an
Assistant Treasurer, and sealed with the Seal of the Corporation, and such
seal may be a facsimile, engraved or printed. In case any such officer who
has signed or whose facsimile signature shall have been placed upon such
certificate shall have ceased to be such before said certificate is issued,
it may be issued by the Corporation with the same effect as if he were such
officer at the date of its issuance.
7.10 Transfer Agents and Registrars. The Board of Directors may appoint
one or more transfer agents and/or one or more registrars and may require all
certificates of stock to bear the signature or signatures of any of them.
7.11 Closing of Transfer Books. The Board of Directors shall have the
power to close the stock transfer books of the Corporation for a period not
exceeding fifty (50) days before any shareholders' meeting, or before ten
(10) days prior to such meeting, or before the last day on which the consent
or dissent of shareholders may be effectively expressed for any purpose
without a meeting, or before a date fixed for the payment of any dividend or
for the delivery of evidences of rights or evidences of interest arising out
of any changes, conversion or exchange of the Capital Stock, as the time at
which shareholders entitled to notice of, and to vote at, such meeting or
whose consent or dissent is required or may be expressed for any purpose, or
entitled to receive any such dividend, distribution, right or interest, shall
be determined; and all persons who are holders of record of voting stock at
such time, and not others, shall be entitled to notice of, and to vote at,
such meeting or to express their consent or dissent, as the case may be, and
only shareholders of record at the time so fixed shall be entitled to receive
such dividend, distribution, rights or interests.
7.12 Registered Owner. Prior to due presentment for registration of
transfer of a certificate for shares, the Corporation may treat the
registered owner as the person exclusively entitled to vote, to receive
notices and otherwise to exercise all the rights and powers of a shareholder.
7.13 Pre-emptive Rights. Shareholders or other persons shall have pre-
emptive rights, unless the same has been denied in the Articles of
Incorporation filed with the Secretary of State.
7.14 Restrictions on Transfer. If the Corporation has entered into any
agreement restricting the transferability of the shares of stock of this
Corporation, the same shall be attached to these Bylaws as Exhibit A, and
made a part hereof for all purposes.
ARTICLE 8: GENERAL PROVISIONS
8.01 Dividends and Reserves.
(a) Declaration and Payment. Subject to statute and the Articles of
Incorporation, dividends may be declared by the Board of Directors at any
regular or special meeting and may be paid in cash, in property, or in shares
of the Corporation. The declaration and payment shall be at the discretion
of the Board of Directors.
(b) Reserves. By resolution the Board of Directors may create such reserve
or reserves out of the earned surplus of the Corporation as the Directors
from time to time, in their discretion, think proper to provide for
contingencies, or to equalize dividends, or to repair or maintain any
property of the Corporation, or for any other purpose they think beneficial
to the Corporation. The Directors may modify or abolish any such reserve in
the manner in which it was created.
8.02 Books and Records. The Corporation shall keep correct and complete
books and records of account and shall keep minutes of the proceedings of its
shareholders and Board of Directors, and shall keep at its registered office
or principal place of business, or at the office of its transfer agent or
registrar, a record of its shareholders, giving the names and addresses of
all shareholders and the number and class of the shares held by each.
8.03 Checks and Notes. All checks or demands for money and notes of the
Corporation shall be signed by such office or officers or such other person
or persons as the Board of Directors may from time to time designate.
8.04 Fiscal Year. The fiscal year of the Corporation shall be fixed by
resolution of the Board of Directors.
8.05 Seal. The Corporation seal (of which there may be one or more
exemplars) shall contain the name of the Corporation and the name of the
state of incorporation. The seal may be used by impressing it or reproducing
a facsimile of it, or otherwise.
8.06 Indemnification of Officers and Directors. Each Director or officer,
whether or not then in office, subject always to the provisions of the laws
of the State of Texas, and the Articles of Incorporation, shall be
indemnified by the Corporation against all costs and expenses reasonably
incurred by or imposed upon him in connection with or arising out of any
action, suit or proceeding which he may be for any reason involved by reason
of his being or having been a Director or officer of the Corporation, such
expense to include the cost of the reasonable settlements (other than amounts
to be paid to the Corporation itself), made with the view to curtailment of
costs of litigation. The Corporation shall not, however, indemnify any
officer or Director with respect to matters as to which he shall be finally
adjudged in any such action, suit or proceeding, to have been derelict in the
performance of his duties as such Director or officer, nor in respect of any
matter on which any settlement or compromise is effected, if the total
expense, including the cost of such settlement shall substantially exceed
expenses which might reasonably be incurred by such Director or officer
conducting such litigation with final conclusion. The foregoing right of
indemnification shall not be exclusive of other rights to which any Director
or officer shall be entitled as a matter of law. Provisions of this Section
shall not be modified or repealed except by affirmative vote of a majority of
the issued and outstanding voting stock of the Corporation.
8.07 Resignation. Any Director, committee member, officer or agent may
resign by giving written notice to the President or the Secretary. The
resignation shall take effect at the time specified therein, or immediately
if no time is specified. Unless otherwise specified therein, the acceptance
of such resignation shall not be necessary to make it effective.
8.08 Amendment of Bylaws.
(a) These Bylaws may be altered, amended, or replaced at any meeting of the
Board of Directors at which a quorum is present, by the affirmative vote of a
majority of the Directors present at such meeting, provided notice of the
proposed alteration, amendment, or repeal is contained in the notice of the
meeting.
(b) These Bylaws may also be altered, amended or repealed at any meeting of
the shareholders at which a quorum is present or represented, by the
affirmative vote of the holders of a majority of the shares present or
represented at the meeting and entitled to vote The rest, provided notice of
the proposed alteration, amendment or repeal is contained in the notice of
the meeting.
8.09 Construction. Whenever the context so requires, the masculine shall
include the feminine and neuter, and the singular shall include the plural,
and conversely. If any portion of these Bylaws shall be invalid or
inoperative, then, so far as is reasonable and possible:
(a) The remainder of these Bylaws shall be considered valid and pperative;
and
(b) Effect shall be given to the intent manifested by the portion held
invalid or inoperative.
8.10 Headings. The headings are for organization, convenience and clarity.
In interpreting these Bylaws, they shall be subordinated in importance to the
other written material.
8.11 Relation to Articles of Incorporation. These Bylaws are subject to,
and governed by, the Articles of Incorporation.
8.12 Interpretation. The place of these Bylaws, their status and their
forum, shall be at all times in the State of Texas; and these Bylaws shall be
governed by the Laws of the State of Texas as to all matters relating to
their validity, construction and interpretation. In the event that any Court
of competent jurisdiction shall adjudge to be invalid or unlawful any clause,
sentence, paragraph, sub-section, section or article of these Bylaws, such
judgment or decree shall not affect, impair, invalidate or nullify the
remainder of these Bylaws, or any other provision hereof, but the effect of
such judgment or decree shall be confined to the clause, sentence, paragraph,
sub-section, section or article so adjudged to be invalid or unlawful.
In witness whereof, hereunto set our hands effective this 5th day of August,
2005.
BIODYNE DEVELOPMENT COMPANY
/s/Chris M. Hymel
------------------------------
CHRIS M. HYMEL, Director
SWORN AND SUBCRIBED before me this 5th day of August 2005.
/s/Bonnie Mayer
NOTARY PUBLIC IN AND FOR THE STATE OF TEXAS
/s/Herbert Joe
------------------------------
HERBERT JOE, Director
SWORN AND SUBCRIBED before me this 29th day of August 2005.
/s/ Bonnie Mayer
NOTARY PUBLIC IN AND FOR THE STATE OF OKLAHOMA
/s/Ron Stubbers
------------------------------
RON STUBBERS, Director
SWORN AND SUBCRIBED before me this 5Th day of August 2005.
/s/ John Mathew
NOTARY PUBLIC IN AND FOR THE STATE OF TEXAS
EXHIBIT 4.1 - Form of Common Stock Certificate
(Front of Certificate)
NOT VALID UNLESS COUNTERSIGNED BY TRANSFER AGENT
INCORPORATED UNDER THE LAWS OF THE STATE OF TEXAS
CUSIP NO. 82662L 20 9
NUMBER SIGNAL SHARES
XXXX ADVANCE XXXX
(LOGO)
THIS CERTIFIES THAT
(SHAREHOLDER NAME)
Is The Record Holder of
-----------------------------------
Shares of SIGNAL ADVANCE INC. Common Stock
Transferable on the books of the Corporation to person or duly authorized
attorney upon surrender of the Certificate properly endorsed. This Certificate
is not valid until countersigned by the Transfer Agent and registered by the
Registrar.
Witness the facsimile seal of the Corporation and the facsimile signatures of
the duly authorized officers
Dated:
/s/ Chris M. Hymel
--------------------------- (Signal Advance, Inc.
Corporate Seal)
President
/s/ Herbert Joe
---------------------------
Secretary
NOT VALID UNLESS COUNTERSIGNED BY TRANSFER AGENT
Countersigned and Registered
Nevada Agency and Trust Company
50 West Liberty * Suite 880 * Reno, Nevada, 89501
By:
-------------------------
Authorized Signature
(Back of Certificate)
NOTICE: Signature must be guaranteed by a firm which is a member of a registered
national stock exchange, or by a bank (other than saving bank), or a
trust company.
The following abbreviations, when used in the inscription on
the face of this certificate, shall be construed as though they
were written out in full according to applicable laws or
regulations:
TEN COM - as tenants in common
TEN ENT - as tenants by the entireties
JT TEN - as joint tenants with right of survivorship
and not as tenants in common
UNIF GIFT MIN ACT - Custodian
----------------- ----------------
(CUST) (MINOR)
under Uniform Gifts to Minors Act
---------------
(State)
Additional abbreviations may also be used though not in the above list.
For Value Received, __________ hereby sell, assign and transfer unto
PLEASE INSERT SOCIAL SECURITY OR OTHER
IDENTIFYING NUMBER OF ASSIGNEE
-------------------------------------
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
(PLEASE PRINT OR TYPEWRITE NAME AND ADDRESS, INCLUDING ZIP CODE, OF ASIGNEE)
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Shares
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
of the capital stock represented by the within certificate, and do hereby
irrevocably constitute and appoint
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
Attorney
to transfer the said stock on the books of the within named Corporation with
full power of substitution in the premises.
Dated
-----------------------
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
NOTICE: THE SIGNATURE TO THIS ASSIGNMENT MUST CORRESPOND WITH THE NAME AS
WRITTEN UPON THE FACE OF THE CERTIFICATE IN EVERY PARTICULAR WITHOUT
ALTERATION OR ENLARGEMENT OR ANY CHANGE WHATEVER
EXHIBIT 5.1 - Legal Opinion - Validity of Stock
On the Letterhead of the Law Offices of Richard C. Seltzer, Attorney at Law
LAW OFFICES OF RICHARD C. SELTZER
ATTORNEY AT LAW
2211 NORFOLK, SUITE 400
HOUSTON, TEXAS 77098
TELEPHONE: (713) 522-7333 EMAIL - RCS611@AOL.COM
TELECOPIER: (713) 522-4580
August 28, 2012
Signal Advance, Inc.
2520 County Road 81
Rosharon, Texas 77583
Re: Signal Advance, Inc. Registration Statement:
1,585,544 Shares of Common Stock, No Par Value
To Whom It May Concern,
I have acted as legal counsel to Signal Advance, Inc., a Texas corporation (the
"Company"), in connection with the proposed sale of up to 1,585,544 shares of
common stock, no par value per share (the "Shares"), by certain selling stock-
holders named in the "Selling Stockholders" table included in the Registration
Statement. The Shares are issued and outstanding as of the date hereof. The
Shares are included in a Registration Statement on Form S-1 under the Securi-
ties Act of 1933, as amended (the "Act"), to be filed with the Securities and
Exchange Commission (the "Commission") within the next thirty (30) days. This
opinion is being furnished in connection with the requirements of Item 601
(b)(5) of Regulation S-K under the Act, and no opinion is expressed herein as
to any matter pertaining to the contents of the Registration Statement or
related Prospectus, other than as expressly stated herein with respect to the
issue of the Shares.
As such counsel, I have examined such matters of fact and questions of law as I
have considered appropriate for purposes of this letter. With your consent, I
have relied upon certificates and other assurances of officers of the Company
and others as to factual matters without having independently verified such
factual matters. I am opining herein as to the general corporate laws of the
State of Texas, and I am expressing no opinion with respect to any other laws.
Subject to the foregoing and the other matters set forth herein, it is my
opinion that, as of the date hereof, the Shares have been duly authorized by
all necessary corporate actions of the Company, have been validly issued and
are fully paid and non-assessable.
This opinion is for your benefit in connection with the Registration Statement
and may be relied upon by you and by persons entitled to rely upon it pursuant
to the applicable provisions of the Act.
I consent to your filing this opinion as an exhibit to the Registration
Statement and to the reference to my firm in the Prospectus under the heading
"Experts." In giving such consent, I do not thereby admit that I am in the
category of persons whose consent is required under Section 7 of the Act or
the rules and regulations of the Commission thereunder.
Yours truly,
/s/ Richard Seltzer
Richard Seltzer
EXHIBIT 10.1 - Commercial Lease Agreement
COMMERCIAL LEASE AGREEMENT
1. PARTIES: This agreement is between: Chris M. Hymel, "Landlord" and
Signal Advance, Inc., "Tenant".
2. PREMISES: The Premises hereby leased by Tenant from Landlord are
described as follows: 900 Sq. ft. of Office/Lab space located at 2520 CR
81, Rosharon, Brazoria County, Texas 77573, hereinafter called "Premises".
3. TERM: The original term of this lease shall commence on the 1st day of
July, 2007, and shall expire on the last day of June, 2008, unless sooner
terminated pursuant to the terms hereof. This lease agreement will be
automatically renewed on a month-to-month basis unless written notice of
termination is given by either party at least sixty (60) days before the end
of the initial lease term of renewal or extension period or unless the
parties enter into another lease agreement.
4. USE OF PREMISES: The Premises will be occupied and used solely as a
commercial business office and electronics laboratory by Tenant.
5. PERSONAL PROPERTY: The following items of personal property are included
with the Premises: None
6. DELIVERY OF POSSESSION: Possession of the Premises (including two (2)
sets of keys to all doors on the Premises shall be delivered to Tenant on
the commencement date. Minor maintenance, cleaning or repairs to be
performed on or after commencement date shall not prevent delivery of
possession to Tenant.
7. RENT: Commencing on July 1st, 2007, through the last day of the lease
term, Tenant shall pay to Landlord, as rental for the Premises, the sum of
Seven Hundred Dollars & No Cents ($700.00) per month. If the commencement
date is not the first day of a calendar month, the prorated rental from
commencement date to the first day of next month is $23.33 per day payable on
or before the commencement date.
In addition, Tenant will have the right to extend this Lease on a month-to-
month basis after the term of this lease during which any annual increase in
the rental rate will not exceed One Hundred Dollars ($100.00) per month.
All rent payments are due in advance and without demand before the first
day of each calendar month without a grace period. If all rent is not paid on
or before the 5th day of the month, Tenant agrees to pay a late charge of
$50.00 plus a further late charge of $10.00 per day until all due rent is
paid. Tenant further agrees to pay a $50.00 charge for each rent check
returned unpaid, and delinquent charges shall accrue as if check had not been
given until such check is made good. Notwithstanding any notations on a
check all payments by Tenant shall be applied first to non-rent items due, if
any, and then to rent. If any rent check is returned unpaid, for any reason,
the Landlord may require that all subsequent payments due hereunder be paid
in cash, money order, or cashier's check. Tenant and Landlord agree that all
rights of Tenant and all duties and obligations of Landlord in this Lease are
conditioned on rent being paid on time. Tenant's right of possession and all
of Landlord's obligations are expressly conditioned on prompt payment of
rent, and use of the premises by Tenant is conditioned on prompt payment of
rent. After the term of this lease, Landlord shall provide to tenant at
least thirty (30) days written notice prior to any rent increase.
8. SECURITY DEPOSIT: The security deposit is waived. A security deposit
may be required on or before any extension of this lease (beyond June 30,
2008) in an amount not to exceed the monthly rental rate in effect for the
extension period and will be payable on or before the commencement of said
extension period.
(a) Refund - Refund of the security deposit by Landlord shall be
conditioned upon the following:
(i) All rents must be paid, in full, through the last day of the
lease term. Tenant may not apply any part of the security deposit to rent;
(ii) The term of the Lease must be ended;
(iii) Tenant must give Landlord at least 60 days written notice of
Tenant's intention to vacate the premises prior to the last day of the
lease term or any renewal or extension thereof. Verbal move-out notice is
not sufficient under any circumstances;
(iv) Tenant must vacate the premises on or before the date specified
in the notice to Landlord. Tenant agrees not to stay beyond such move-out
date;
(v) Tenant must provide Landlord, in writing, notice of the
Tenant's forwarding address.
(b) Amount of Refund and/or Charges Payable after Move-Out - Tenant
shall receive the full amount of security deposit, less damages or unpaid
obligations owed by Tenant to Landlord pursuant hereto, including, but not
limited to, unpaid delinquent rents, reasonable costs of damages or repairs
to the Premises and reasonable cleaning charges if such repairs or cleaning
charges are necessary. A charge of $20.00 shall be deducted for each key not
returned at the end of the lease term. After subtracting lawful deductions,
the security deposit balance and an itemized list of deductions shall be
mailed to Tenant within thirty (30) days after Tenant surrenders the Premises
and keys and delivers Tenant's forwarding address to Landlord in writing.
Tenant agrees to pay Landlord any excess of lawful deductions over the amount
of security deposit. Tenant is urged to make an appointment with Landlord for
a move-out inspection.
(c) Tenant Duties on Move-Out
Tenant acknowledges and agrees that it shall be responsible for all repairs
and cleaning of the premises prior to vacating same, and Tenant shall return
the Premises to Landlord in the same condition as existed at the commencement
of the terms hereof, reasonable wear and tear excepted.
Landlord acknowledges and agrees that if Tenant satisfies the requirements
for return of the security deposit set forth in subparagraph (a) hereinabove,
and in this subparagraph (c), any security deposit shall be fully refunded to
Tenant, subject to the offsets and deductions described in subparagraph (b)
hereinabove.
9. CONDITION OF THE PREMISES: Tenant has thoroughly inspected and accepts
the Premises as is except for conditions materially affecting the health or
safety of ordinary persons and Landlord has made no implied warranties as to
the condition of the Premises. Within forty-eight (48) hours after move-in,
Tenant shall note in writing any defects or damage to the Premises and
deliver or mail in to Landlord; otherwise, the Premises will be deemed to be
in clean and good condition. Tenant agrees to surrender the Premises at the
end of the term of this lease and any extension thereof in the same condition
as of the date of possession, reasonable wear and tear excepted. Reasonable
wear means wear which occurs without negligence, carelessness, accident or
abuse. If Tenant fails to thoroughly clean the Premises, including exterior
cleaning and landscape maintenance, prior to move-out, reasonable charges to
complete such cleaning shall be deducted from the security deposit. Tenant
shall make no alterations to the Premises or its contents without the prior
written permission of Landlord, provided, however, Tenant may hang pictures,
using standard picture hooks. Landlord shall furnish light bulbs at the time
of possession which will be replaced at Tenant's expense. Tenant shall not
remove any of Landlord's fixtures, furniture or any other personal property
from the Premises for any reason.
Tenant shall not paint, carpet or wall paper without the prior written
of Landlord.
10. LOCKS: Tenant has inspected the locks and agrees they are in good
working order and sufficient for the protection of his person and property.
Tenant shall not make lock changes or additions without Landlord's prior
written permission. Landlord shall change locks if Tenant requests and pays a
reasonable charge.
11. MAINTENANCE AND REPAIRS: Tenant agrees to maintain the Premises and
perform minor repairs such as leaking faucets and changing of air
conditioner filters. Tenant shall be responsible for failure to make such
repairs and shall be liable for damage resulting from such failure.
Landlord shall be responsible for major repairs.
The rights and obligations of the parties hereto regarding these repairs
are described herein:
(a) Tenant shall notify Landlord promptly by telephone, in person or in
writing upon discovery of any major item requiring repair,
(b) Landlord shall be required to complete such repair or cause such
repair to be completed within three (3) business days after receiving such
notification thereof from Tenant unless such repair cannot be reasonably
completed within such three (3) business day period for reasons beyond the
control of Landlord, in which event such repair shall be completed as soon as
practically possible, but in any event within seven (7) business days after
such notification, and
(c) Tenant shall pay the first $ 500.00 for the repair of any one item
requiring repair, or shall be entitled (but not obligated) to effect any
repair at Tenant's sole cost and expense in which case the Landlord must be
notified and may require inspection of such repairs and copies of receipts
for labor and/or materials for said repairs.
(d) In the case of emergency repairs, Landlord shall be obligated to
complete or cause same to be completed within forty-eight (48) hours after
notification of the need for such repair by Tenant. In the event Landlord
fails to complete any emergency repairs within said forty-eight (48) hours
period for any reason whatsoever, Tenant shall be entitled to effect such
repairs and Landlord shall pay all expenses (subject to limits described in
subsection (iii) hereinabove) thereby incurred by Tenant upon written
notification to Landlord by Tenant that such repairs have been effected and
following inspection of such repairs by Landlord.
(e) Tenant shall pay Landlord for any property damage and/or cost of
repairs to the Premises caused by the negligence or misuse thereof by
Tenant, or Tenant's guests and/or other occupants. At the Landlord's
discretion, such repairs may be affected by Tenant at Tenant's sole cost
and expense.
(f) Any outstanding debt for such repairs may be deducted from the
security deposit or charges to tenant.
(g)Tenant shall maintain the yard by watering, weeding, mowing the grass
and trimming the shrubs so as to maintain a good appearance. Extermination
services for all pests and insects as reasonably needed shall be arranged and
paid for by Tenant.
Both parties acknowledge that the rent would be higher if the foregoing
responsibilities were allocated differently. This assumption of
responsibility by Tenant is entered into knowingly, voluntarily, and for
consideration and is an express waiver of any statutory or common law
obligation of Landlord.
12. PETS: Tenant shall not keep any pets on premises.
13. SUBLETTING: Tenant shall not sublet, make an assignment or change co-
Tenant without the prior written consent of Landlord and Landlord shall not
be obligated to grant such consent. If Landlord grants such permission Tenant
shall remain fully liable for the terms of this Lease, but shall receive
credit for all rentals paid by succeeding Tenant.
14. NUISANCE: Tenant shall not permit any nuisance to be created on the
Premises and Landlord may prohibit or regulate motorcycles, boats,
trailers, recreational vehicles and inoperative vehicles on the Premises.
15. UTILITIES: Tenant shall pay for all utilities used on the Premises.
16. ENTRY BY LANDLORD: Landlord or other persons engaged to do so by
Landlord may enter the Premises during reasonable times only after Tenant
is notified by telephone, in person or in writing and for reasonable
purposes, including, but not limited to the following purposes:
inspections, repairs, pest extermination, preventive maintenance, emergency
safety or fire inspections, prevention of property damage, prevention of
waste of utilities furnished by Landlord (if any), enforcement of Landlord's
lien, retrieval or recovery of property belonging to a former Tenant, showing
Premises to prospective Tenant or purchasers, building inspectors, fire
marshals, lenders, appraisers or insurance agents. Landlord will make every
reasonable effort to only enter property when Tenant can be present. Unless
absolutely necessary for emergency purposes, Landlord will not disturb,
inspect, touch or otherwise tamper with any of Tenant's personal property,
books, papers, records, documents or other possessions in the event of any
entry by Landlord in Tenant's absence. Only under emergency situations will
Landlord enter Premises without making every reasonable effort to notify
Tenant in advance.
Notwithstanding the foregoing, Landlord acknowledges that he shall not
permit prospective purchasers or tenants, real estate agents, appraisers,
or other such parties to have access to the Premises except during the last
sixty 60) days of the term of this Lease.
17. NON-WAIVER: Failure by Landlord to enforce or demand performance of
any obligation of Tenant hereunder, or to seek remedy for breach thereof,
shall not operate to waive or excuse defaults of other obligations nor
further defaults of the same obligation.
18. LIABILITY AND INDEMNITY: Landlord shall not be liable to Tenant,
Tenant's guests or other occupants or persons on the Premises for personal
injury, property damage or other losses to such persons or their property
caused by other persons, theft, burglary, assault, other crimes, fire, water,
wind, rain, smoke, or any other causes.
Tenant agrees to indemnify and hold Landlord free and harmless from any and
all liability for injury to or death of any person, or for damage to
property arising from the use and occupancy of the Premises by Tenant or
from the act or omission of any person or persons, including Tenant, in or
about the leased Premises with the express or implied consent of Tenant.
Landlord recommends that Tenant secure insurance for Tenant's own account to
protect Tenant from the hazards of such losses as are described above.
Landlord shall have no duty to furnish smoke detectors or additional locks,
except as required by law. When smoke detectors are furnished, Landlord shall
test same and provide initial batteries as required by law at the time of
lease commencement, thereafter, Tenant shall pay for, test, and replace smoke
detector batteries as needed.
Landlord acknowledges and agrees that Landlord shall be liable to Tenant
for any damages to Tenant's personal property caused by the Landlord, or
Landlord's agents, employees, contractors or representatives.
In the event Tenant retains or requests Landlord's employees or contractors
to render services not contemplated in this agreement, or without prior
knowledge and consent of Landlord expressed in writing, such employees or
contractors shall be deemed the agent of the Tenant whether or not
compensated by the Tenant or by Landlord and Tenant agrees to hold harmless
and indemnify Landlord for and from all liability for the acts or omissions
of such persons
19. DEFAULT BY LANDLORD: Upon default by Landlord of any obligation
imposed hereunder, or breach of any of the covenants and/or agreements
contained herein, or if Landlord fails to satisfy any obligation or duty
imposed on Landlord hereunder and if Tenant is not currently in default
(all rent and other charges must be current, etc.), Tenant shall send
Landlord written notice of the default by United States Mail, certified
mail, return receipt requested, in accordance with paragraph 27 hereof, and
Landlord shall have ten (10) days from the date said notice is posted (the
"Notice Date") to cure said default; provided, however, if such default
cannot be cured within said ten (10) day period for reasons beyond the
control of Landlord, Landlord shall have an additional period not to exceed
thirty (30) days from the Notice Date, in which to cure such default. If
Landlord fails and/or refuses to cure such default within the time limits
specified hereinabove, Tenant may:
(a) Terminate this lease in writing, in which event, Tenant shall be
entitled to receive from Landlord, on demand, a full refund of Tenant's
security deposit, less proper charges as described in Paragraph (8)
hereinabove, and any unearned portion of any rent paid, as of the date of
the Tenant's election to terminate this Lease; or
(b) enforce specific performance hereof; or
(C) bring suit against Landlord for any and all damages incurred by
Tenant as a result of Landlord's default or negligence including reasonable
attorney's fees.
Any or all such remedies may be exercised either separately or
concurrently.
20. DEFAULT BY TENANT: Upon default by Tenant of any obligation imposed
hereunder, or breach of any of the covenants and/or agreements contained
herein, or if Tenant fails to satisfy any obligation or duty imposed on
Tenant hereunder and if Landlord is not currently in default, Landlord
shall send Tenant written notice of the default by United States Mail,
certified mail, return receipt requested, in accordance with paragraph 27
hereof, and Tenant shall have ten (10) days from the date said notice is
posted (the "Notice Date") to cure said default; provided, however, if such
default cannot be cured within said ten (10) day period for reasons beyond
the control of Tenant, Tenant shall have an additional period not to exceed
thirty (30) days from the Notice Date, in which to cure such default. If
Tenant fails and/or refuses to cure such default within the time limits
specified hereinabove, Landlord may:
(a) Terminate this Lease and may file a Forcible Entry and Detainer
suit in the proper court for possession and after giving such notice, or if
filing suit for possession, Landlord may accept payment for sums due herein
without waiving or diminishing Landlord's right to proceed against Tenant for
eviction, property damages, past or future rent, or other sums due herein,
and demand that all monthly rentals for the remainder of the lease term or
renewal or extension period shall be accelerated automatically without notice
or demand, and shall immediately become due and payable, and Report any
unpaid sums due herein, breaches of this Lease or property damages, to credit
reporting agencies for addition to Tenant's credit files, or
(b) Enforce specific performance hereof, and
(c) Bring suit against Tenant for all damages incurred by Landlord as a
result of Tenant's default or negligence, including reasonable attorney's
fees, costs of re-letting the Premises, which re-letting costs shall not
exceed one month's rent. Landlord shall make a reasonable effort to re-let
the Premises as soon as possible and all rentals received from such re-
letting, if any, shall be credited against Tenant's liability for future
rentals. Such re-letting shall not relieve Tenant of Tenant's obligation to
pay all rent due.
Any or all such remedies may be exercised either separately or concurrently.
21. HOLDOVER: If Tenant holds over and fails to vacate on or before the
contracted move-out date (end of lease term, or any renewal or extension
period, or the move-out date agreed to by the parties), Tenant shall be
liable to pay rents for the holdover at the rate of 150% of the monthly
rent due at the expiration of the term thereof.
22. ABANDONMENT: If Tenant (i) is absent from the Premises for five (5)
consecutive days while in default of this Lease, (ii) has been evicted by
judicial process or (iii) leaves personal property after the termination of
the Lease, all personal property found in the Premises may be deemed by
Landlord to be abandoned and Landlord or its representatives may peaceably
enter, remove and dispose of such personal property as Landlord sees fit
without any liability or duty to account for such personal property to Tenant
whatsoever.
23. CONTRACTUAL LIEN: All personal property on the Premises (except
property exempt by Section 54.042 of the Texas Property Code) is hereby
subjected to a contractual lien in favor of Landlord to secure payment of
rent. In order to enforce said lien, Landlord, or its representative, may
peacefully enter the Premises and remove and store all non-exempt property
therein. Landlord shall be entitled to reasonable charges for packing,
removing and storing property taken hereunder. If Tenant is not present when
property is removed hereunder, written notice of Landlord's entry shall be
left at the Premises. Landlord may sell all property subject to Landlord's
lien at public or private sale after giving Tenant thirty (30) days written
notice by certified mail of the time and place of such sale to Tenant's last
known address. Sale shall be to the highest cash bidder and Landlord shall
credit the proceeds thereof first to all costs and expenses incident to the
removal, storage and sale of the property, then rent due and any excess shall
be mailed to Tenant at such address as Tenant may furnish.
The foregoing lien rights may be exercised by Landlord with or without
resort to judicial proceedings. The contractual lien provided herein is in
addition to, and not in lieu of, any landlord's or other lien provided by
law.
24. RELEASE OF TENANT: Tenant shall have no rights of release hereunder.
25. MULTIPLE TENANTS: Each Tenant and each Tenant's share of the total
security deposit is jointly and severally liable for all obligations and
sums due pursuant to this lease agreement A lease violation by one Tenant
is a violation by all Tenants. Notice by Landlord to one Tenant is notice
to all Tenant. Entry permission or service request from one Tenant shall
be from all Tenants. Security deposit refund may be in one check jointly
payable to all Tenants and such refund check and itemization of deduction
(if applicable) may be mailed to one Tenant only.
26. SIGNS AND SHOWING: Landlord shall be entitled to display a "For Lease"
sign or "For Sale" sign during the last sixty (60) days on the Premises and
the Premises may be shown at reasonable times to prospective tenants and/or
purchasers during said period and at reasonable times, subject to the notice
requirements of Paragraph 16 hereinabove.
27. NOTICES: Except as may be otherwise required herein or specified by
law, all notices required or permitted hereunder to be given either to
Landlord or Tenant shall be in writing and delivered by United States Mail,
certified mail, return receipt requested to the party at the addresses
specified below:
If to Landlord: 3515 CR 81, Iowa Colony, TX 77583
If to Tenant: 2520 CR 81, Rosharon, TX 77583
Either party hereto may change its address for notice hereunder by
delivering written notice of such change of address to the other party in
accordance with this paragraph. Either Party may also use other means of
communicating notice, including telephone or regular mail, but no notice
shall be deemed delivered unless delivered in accordance with the
provisions of this paragraph, and in no event shall Landlord enter the
Premises solely for the purpose of delivering notice hereunder. In the
event either party gives notice in writing to the other party by personal
delivery, such delivery shall not be deemed delivered unless also sent by
United States Mail, certified mail, return receipt requested in accordance
with this paragraph.
28. SUBORDINATION: This lease and Tenant's leasehold interest hereunder
are and shall be subject, subordinate, and inferior to any lien or
encumbrance now or hereafter placed on the premises by Landlord, to all
advances made under such lien or encumbrances, to the interest payable on
any such lien or encumbrance, and to any and all renewals of any such lien or
encumbrance, and the rights of such lien holders.
29. TENANT'S AND LANDLORD'S PHONE NUMBERS: Tenant(s) shall keep Landlord
informed at all times of Tenant's phone number(s), listed or unlisted.
Landlord shall keep Tenant informed at all times of Landlord's phone number
or the phone number of any authorized property manager for said Premises.
30. GENERAL: This written agreement contains the entire agreement of the
parties. No oral agreements or representations have been made. This
agreement may be modified only in writing signed by all parties. Judicial
declaration of the invalidity of any part of this agreement or any
attachment hereto shall not invalidate the remainder. In any legal
proceeding pursuant to this lease, including a suit to enforce this lease
or to collect damages for its breach, the prevailing party shall be
entitled to recover reasonable attorney's fees, costs of court and interest
at the rate of 18% per annum upon all sums due from due date from the non-
prevailing party.
Tenant may not withhold rent or offset against rent. This agreement shall
be construed under and in accordance with the laws of the State of Texas.
This agreement shall be binding upon and inure to the benefit of the
parties hereto and their respective heirs, executors, administrators, legal
representatives, successors and assigns.
31. DOCUMENTS: This agreement is executed in duplicate copies, one for
Tenant and one for Landlord.
32. SPECIAL PROVISIONS: All Water Supply, Pumping Equipment and
Septic/Sewage Treatment Equipment and Facilities are to be maintained by
Tenant.
33. ATTORNEY'S FEES: Any signatory to this agreement who is the prevailing
party in any legal proceeding against any other signatory brought under or
with relation to this agreement or transaction shall be additionally entitled
to recover court costs and reasonable attorney's fees from the non-prevailing
party.
34. LANDLORD'S OBLIGATION AS TO MORTGAGE: At all times during the term of
this Lease, Landlord shall make timely payments of all mortgage payments,
property taxes, assessments and other amounts for which payment is secured by
a lien against the Premises or for which foreclosure of the Premises could
occur in the event of non-payment. Landlord shall also keep and perform all
of the covenants and agreements set forth in any mortgage, deed of trust
and/or other lien against the Premises. In the event Landlord fails to pay
any such amounts for any reason whatsoever, and/or fails to keep and perform
all of the said covenants and agreements and the Premises are foreclosed by a
third party, Landlord shall be obligated to refund Tenant's security
deposit(s), less proper charges as described in Paragraph (8) hereinabove,
together with any unearned portion of any rent paid.
FOR LANDLORD: /s/ Chris M. Hymel
------------------------------------
Chris M. Hymel
FOR TENANT: /s/ Herbert Joe
------------------------------------
Herbert Joe, Corporate Secretary
EXHIBIT 10.2 - Line of Credit Promissory Note
LINE OF CREDIT PROMISSORY NOTE
One Hundred Fifty Thousand Dollars ($150,000)
Effective Date: January 4, 2002
FOR VALUE RECEIVED, Biodyne, Inc., ("Borrower"), a Texas corporation,
promises to pay to the order of Chris M. Hymel, ("Lender"), the principal sum
of One Hundred Fifty Thousand Dollars ($150,000), or so much thereof as may
be disbursed to, or for, the benefit of the Borrower by Lender in Lender's
sole and absolute discretion. It is the intent of the Borrower and Lender
hereunder to create a line of credit agreement between Borrower and Lender
whereby Borrower may borrow up to $150,000 from Lender; provided, however,
that Lender has no obligation to lend Borrower any amounts hereunder and the
decision to lend such money lies in the sole and complete discretion of the
Lender.
INTEREST & PRINCIPAL: The unpaid principal of this line of credit shall bear
simple interest at the rate of 2.5 percent (2.5%) per quarter. Interest shall
be calculated based on the principal balance as may be adjusted from time to
time to reflect additional advances made hereunder. Interest on the unpaid
balance of this Note shall accrue quarterly but shall not be due and payable
until such time as when the principal balance of this Note becomes due and
payable. All outstanding and unpaid principal and all accrued and unpaid
interest shall be due and payable to Payee on the fourth (4th) anniversary
date of this Note, but in no event later than January 15, 2006. This Note may
be renewed and extended at the option of the Payee on the fourth (4th)
anniversary date. There shall be no penalty for early repayment of all or any
part of the principal.
SECURITY: To secure the indebtedness arising out of the "Line of Credit", the
Borrower grants to the Lender a lien and security interest in the corporate
assets located in Brazoria County, Texas, and rights to payment and receipt
of money relating to its accounts receivables (the "Receivables") and the
cash proceeds thereof.
DEFAULT: The Borrower shall be in default of this Note on the occurrence of
any of the following events: (i) the Borrower shall fail to meet its
obligation to make the required principal or interest payments hereunder.
(ii) the Borrower shall be dissolved or liquidated; (iii) the Borrower shall
make an assignment for the benefit of creditors or shall be unable to, or
shall admit in writing their inability to pay their debts as they become due;
(iv) the Borrower shall commence any case, proceeding, or other action under
any existing or future law of any jurisdiction relating to bankruptcy,
insolvency, reorganization or relief of debtors, or any such action shall be
commenced against the undersigned; (v) the Borrower shall suffer a receiver
to be appointed for it or for any of its property or shall suffer a
garnishment, attachment, levy or execution.
REMEDIES: Upon default of this Note, Lender may declare the entire amount due
and owing hereunder to be immediately due and payable. Lender may also use
all remedies in law and in equity to enforce and collect the amount owed
under this Note.
Borrower hereby waives demand, presentment, notice of dishonor, diligence in
collecting, grace and notice of protest.
BORROWER:
For Biodyne, Inc.
/s/ Malcolm Skolnick
-------------------------------
Malcolm Skolnick, Secretary
EXHIBIT 10.3 - Executive Compensation Agreement
EXECUTIVE CONSULTING AGREEMENT
THIS EXECUTIVE CONSULTING AGREEMENT (this "Agreement"), dated January 2, 2012,
is by and between Chris M. Hymel ("Consultant") and Signal Advance, Inc. or any
subsequent surviving entity ("Company).
R E C I T A L S:
WHEREAS, Company's board of directors (the "Board") desires to contract for
services in a Consulting capacity and the Consultant desires to be so engaged
in such capacity;
NOW THEREFORE, in consideration of the mutual covenants and conditions
hereinafter set forth and other good and valuable consideration, the receipt
and sufficiency of which are hereby acknowledged, the parties agree as follows:
ARTICLE I: Term
1.1 Consulting. Company contracts with Consultant and Consultant accepts the
consultancy under the terms and conditions of this Agreement.
1.2 Term. The term of this Agreement shall be for Twenty-Four (24) months with
an annual open option thereon as set forth herein and shall be effective as of
January 2, 2012, and shall terminate on December 31, 2014. Unless written notice
of termination is given to Consultant, or Company, not less than three (3)
months prior to the termination of this Agreement, this Agreement will be
extended for additional twelve (12) month periods.
A. Option Term. Upon the condition that there is no breach of any condition or
term of this Agreement at the time of exercise, this Agreement may be extended
annually, for an additional period of twelve (12) months, on the same terms and
conditions of this Agreement, unless modified or amended upon the written
consent of Company and Consultant.
ARTICLE II: Compensation
2.1 Compensation. For all services rendered by Consultant, Company shall pay
Consultant a base compensation commencing on January 2, 2012, of One Hundred
Eight Thousand Dollars ($108,000) per year payable in cash or equivalent value
on Corporate Securities, provided at the Consultants prevailing acquisition
rate, at the discretion of the Consultant.
A. Compensation Adjustment. Compensation is to be increased by Six Thousand
Dollars ($6,000) per year up to a maximum annual compensation of One Hundred
Twenty Thousand Dollars ($120,000). Any further compensation increases will
be determined by the Broad of Directors.
Company and Consultant recognize that certain "Events" (as defined in the
following paragraph) may occur which will give rise to an automatic
compensation increase. Upon the occurrence of any one of the Events listed in
the following paragraph, Consultant's compensation shall be increased to One
Hundred Twenty Thousand ($120,000) per year during the term of this Agreement.
Such increase shall be automatic upon the happening of any one of the Events
listed below.
B. Definition of "Events." For purposes of this Agreement and particularly, the
compensation increases described in the foregoing paragraph, any one of the
following shall be considered an "Event":
i. Merger. A merger with a third party entity, whereby at least fifty-one
percent (51%) of Company's outstanding common stock is merged with such entity.
ii. Sale/Acquisition. A sale or acquisition of at least fifty-one percent of
Company's outstanding common stock or the sale of all or substantially all of
Company's assets to a third party entity.
iii. Capital. Company's raising at least $1 million through the sale of equity
securities.
2.2 Earned Monetary Bonuses. Consultant shall be entitled to an annual bonus
as determined by the Company's Board of Directors. Consultant's performance
shall be reviewed annually to determine the payment of bonuses.
2.3 Automobile. Company will provide to Consultant the use of an automobile of
Consultant's choice at a gross purchase price not to exceed Twenty Thousand
($20,000). Company agrees to replace the automobile with a new one at
Consultant's request no more often than once every three years. Company will
pay all automobile operating and maintenance expenses and will either, procure,
and maintain in force, an automobile insurance policy which includes liability,
comprehensive and collision coverage, or reimburse Consultant the cost of
procuring said insurance coverage.
2.4 Stock Option Consideration. While currently not available, Consultant, as
partial consideration for his services, shall be entitled to participate in and
receive any Stock Options available under any future options plan as
determined by the Company's Board of Directors. Such determination shall be
made on an annual basis.
2.5 Consultant Benefits. In addition to the foregoing, Consultant shall be
entitled to the following:
A. Holidays. Consultant will be entitled to at least Ten (10) paid holidays
each calendar year and ten (10) personal days. Company will notify Consultant
on or about the beginning of each calendar year with respect to the holiday
schedule for the coming year. Personal holidays, if any, will be scheduled in
advance subject to requirements of Company. Such holidays must be taken during
the calendar year and cannot be carried forward into the next year. Consultant
is not entitled to any personal holidays during the first six months of
consultancy.
B. Vacation. Following the first six months of this contract, Consultant shall
be entitled to twenty (20) paid vacation days each year.
C. Sick Leave. Consultant shall be entitled to sick leave and emergency leave
of up to thirty (30) days. Additional sick leave or emergency leave over and
above paid leave provided by the Company, if any, shall be unpaid and shall be
granted at the discretion of the board of directors.
D. Medical Insurance. Company agrees to:
i. Provide Consultant and his immediate family medical insurance at no charge
to the Consultant, or
ii. Reimburse Consultant for acquiring such medical insurance coverage, and/or
iii. Reimburse Consultant for 'out-of-pocket' medical expenses for Consultant
and his immediate family.
The total cost of medical insurance plus reimbursement of medical expenses
shall not exceed Fifteen Percent (15%) of the base Compensation per year.
E. Pension and Profit Sharing Plans. Consultant shall be entitled to
participate in any pension or profit sharing plan or other type of plan
adopted by Company for the benefit of its officers and/or regular consultants.
F. Expense Reimbursement. Consultant shall be entitled to reimbursement for
all reasonable expenses, including travel and entertainment, incurred by
Consultant in the performance of Consultant's duties. Consultant will maintain
records and written receipts as required by the Company policy and reasonably
requested by the board of directors to substantiate such expenses.
G. Education/Professional Development Reimbursement: Consultant shall be
entitled to reimbursement for educational/professional development expenses
consistent with the goals of the Company up to an amount of Five Thousand
Dollars ($5,000) per year.
ARTICLE III: Duties of Consultant
3.1 Duties. Consultant is engaged as President and CEO; and shall have authority
over such decision-making and managerial duties regarding the business of
Company; and shall supervise and direct all of the business of Company according
to business plans and strategies provided by Company, reporting only to the
Board. The precise services of Consultant may be extended or curtailed by mutual
agreement of Company and Consultant from time to time.
3.2 Extent of Services. Consultant shall devote so much of his productive time,
ability and attention to the business of the Company as is necessary to fulfill
his duties; and shall perform all such duties in a professional, ethical and
businesslike manner. Consultant will not, either during the term of this
Agreement and for a period of twelve (12) months thereafter, directly or
indirectly engage in any other business, either as an consultant, Company,
consultant, principal, officer, director, advisor, or in any other business
capacity, which is competitive with the business of the Company, without the
express written consent of the Company. Furthermore, the Board may require that
Consultant account for his time spent performing his duties hereunder at any
time.
Upon such notice, Consultant shall account for his time and deliver such
accounting to the Board until further notified. Based upon such records, the
Board, in its sole discretion, may adjust Consultant's flexible and/or full time
off (FTO) and/or compensation during such period accordingly.
3.3 Engaging in Other Consulting. Consultant hereby agrees to undertake the
responsibilities for and devote his productive time, abilities, and attention
to the business of Company during the term of this Agreement. Any outside
consultancy in any capacity is acceptable to the extent that there is no
conflict with the duties and obligations of consultant's role as President
and CEO of Company.
3.4 Accountability. Consultant shall be directly responsible to the Board.
3.5 Code of Ethics. Consultant agrees to comply with the "Code of Ethics and
Business Conduct" in the conduct of his business on behalf of Company.
(Copy attached)
ARTICLE IV: Duties of Company
4.1 Payment of Compensation and Provision of Benefits. During the terms hereof,
Company agrees to pay all compensation, benefits, allowances and FTO due to
Consultant as set forth herein.
4.2 Working Facilities. Company shall provide offices, administrative help and
such other facilities and services as are suitable to his position and
appropriate for the performance of his duties.
ARTICLE V: Disability; Death During Consultancy
5.1 Disability. If Consultant is unable to perform his services by reason of
illness or incapacity for a period of more than one (1) month, the compensation
thereafter payable to him during the continued period of such illness or
incapacity for a period not to exceed twelve (12) months shall be sixty percent
(60%) of Consultant's then current compensation.
Consultant's full compensation shall be reinstated upon his recovery.
Notwithstanding anything to the contrary, Company may terminate this Agreement
at any time after Consultant shall be absent from his consultancy, for whatever
cause, for a continuous period of more than twelve (12) months, and the
obligations of Company shall thereupon terminate. If it is determined, pursuant
to the terms of this Agreement, that Consultant is disabled or incapacitated
and cannot discharge the duties and responsibilities contemplated hereunder,
Company shall have the right to hire an consultant to replace him in whatever
position he may have at that time.
In lieu of the foregoing, Company may obtain disability insurance for
Consultant. Should this occur, pragraph 5.1 shall be null and void and the
terms of said disability insurance shall govern, so long as the terms in such
policy are equal to or greater than the terms outlined in Section 5.1.
5.2 Death During Employment. If Consultant dies during the term of employment,
Company shall pay to the estate of Consultant the compensation which would
otherwise be payable to Consultant up to the end of the month in which death
occurs. In addition, Company shall pay a sum equal to two (2) year's
compensation payable in equal monthly installments after the death of Consultant
to the spouse of Consultant or if he is not survived by his spouse, then to
Consultant's heirs in equal shares, or if there are no such surviving heirs,
to the estate of Consultant.
ARTICLE VI: Confidential Information; Trade Secrets; Proprietary Rights,
Intellectual Property
6.1 Confidentiality. Consultant hereby acknowledges that he has received, and/or
will receive in the future, information regarding the business of Company,
including but not limited to customer lists, product information, business
strategy, consultant agreements, which information is deemed confidential
information (the "Confidential Information").
The parties hereto recognize and acknowledge that the Confidential Information
is proprietary and integral to Company's business and agrees to keep such
Confidential Information confidential and not disclose the same to any third
person, corporation and/or entity for a period of two (2) years subsequent to
the termination of this Agreement or termination of Consultant as an consultant
of Company, whether such termination is with or without cause.
6.2 Products. All products relating to Company's business, designed, improved
or enhanced by Consultant, will be the sole property of Company and Consultant
will not be allowed to possess or use them unless Company agrees in writing
thereto. Whenever requested to do so by Company, Consultant will execute any and
all applications, assignments or other instruments that Company deems necessary
to protect Company's interests therein. Consultant's obligations hereunder shall
survive the termination of Consultant's contract with respect to inventions,
discoveries and improvements conceived or made by Consultant during the term of
the Consultancy described in this Agreement.
6.3 Intellectual Property. Consultant agrees to assign to Company inventions,
trade secrets, technological improvements and any other Intellectual Property
he develops, originates, improves or discovers during his consultancy arising
in the performance of his duties, confined to the scope of his duties and that
is related to the intellectual property previously assigned by the Consultant to
the Company.
ARTICLE VII: Non-Competition
7.1 Non-Competition. During the term of Consultant's agreement set forth in
this Agreement, and for a period of one (1) year thereafter, Consultant will
not directly or indirectly be an owner, partner, director, manager, officer or
consultant or otherwise render services or be associated with any business that
competes with Company.
ARTICLE VIII: Termination / Note Purchase
8.1 Termination With Cause. With cause, Company may terminate this Agreement
upon thirty (30) days' notice to Consultant. In such event, Consultant shall
continue to render his services and shall be paid his regular compensation up to
the date of termination. Severance allowance shall be equal to six (6) month's
compensation of Consultant. For purposes of this Agreement, termination "with
cause" shall be for any of the following:
A. Any breach of any material obligations owed to Company;
B. Failure to follow the directive of the Company's board of directors; or
C. Conviction of a felony or any act involving moral turpitude.
8.2 Termination Without Cause. Company may terminate Consultant without cause
upon thirty (30) days written notice. Upon termination without cause by Company,
Consultant shall be entitled to cash compensation equal to the greater of the
following: (A) the then existing base compensation of Consultant, as defined in
Article 2.1, for the remainder of the term of this Agreement; or (B) the then
existing base compensation of Consultant, as defined in Article 2.1, for a
period of twelve (12) months from the date of termination without cause. In the
event of termination without cause, all cash compensation, as referred to above,
shall be paid to Consultant on a monthly basis.
8.3 Termination Upon Sale of Business. Notwithstanding anything to the contrary,
Company may terminate this Agreement upon thirty (30) days' written notice upon
the happening of any of the following events which any one event will be treated
as a termination without cause for purposes of severance allowance pursuant to
this Agreement.
A. The sale by Company of substantially all of its assets to a single purchaser
or a group of associated purchasers;
B. The sale, exchange or other disposition, in one transaction, of at least
fifty percent (50%) of the outstanding common shares of the Company;
C. A decision by Company to terminate its business and liquidate its assets; or
the merger or consolidation of Company in a transaction in which the
shareholders of Company receive at least fifty percent (50%) of the outstanding
voting shares of the new or continuing corporation.
D. Notwithstanding the foregoing, should Company agree to sell all or
substantially all of its assets, Company shall purchase Consultant's Shares for
an amount of the greater of the Stock Purchase Price or the same price sold by
other of Company's shareholders.
ARTICLE IX: General Provisions
9.1. Waiver of Breach. The waiver by Company of breach of any provisions of
this Agreement by Consultant shall not operate or be construed as a waiver of
any subsequent breach by Consultant. No waiver shall be valid unless in writing
and signed by an authorized officer of Company.
9.2 Assignment. Consultant acknowledges that the services to be rendered by him
are unique and personal. Accordingly, Consultant may not assign any of his
rights and obligations under this Agreement. The rights and obligations of
Company under this Agreement shall inure to the benefit of and shall be binding
upon the successors and assigns of Company.
9.3 Modification. This Agreement may not be modified, changed or altered orally
but only by an agreement in writing signed by the party against an enforcement
of any waiver, change, modification, extension or discharge as sought.
9.4. Governing Law. This Agreement shall be governed by and construed under the
laws of the State of Texas without regard to Conflict of Laws.
9.5 Integration Clause. This instrument contains the entire agreement between
the parties hereto and supersedes any and all prior written and/or oral
agreements. This Agreement may be altered or modified only in writing signed by
the parties hereto.
9.6 Notices. Any notice required or desired to be given under this Agreement
shall be deemed given if in writing sent by certified mail to the parties at
each party's last known address.
9.7 Attorneys' Fees. Should any party seek the enforcement of any term of this
Agreement, the prevailing party thereunder shall be entitled to attorneys' fees
and costs for the enforcement of such term or provision.
9.8 Arbitration. In the event of any dispute arising under this Agreement,
including any dispute regarding the nature, scope or quality of services
provided by either party hereto, its is hereby agreed that such dispute shall
be resolved by binding arbitration to be conducted through the American
Arbitration Association, to be arbitrated in accordance with its rules and
regulations and procedures in Houston, Texas. In the event of any such
arbitration, pending resolution of the arbitration and the award of costs by the
arbitrator, each party hereto shall advance one-half of the amounts, if any,
requested by the arbitrator and/or the sponsoring organization.
IN WITNESS WHEREOF, the parties executed this Agreement as of the effective date
indicated above.
Consultant: /s/ Chris M. Hymel
______________________________
Chris M. Hymel
For Signal Advance, Inc. (Company): /s/ Malcolm Skolnick
______________________________
Malcolm Skolnick, Corporate Secretary
EXHIBIT 10.4 - Intellectual Property Assignment
INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY ASSIGNMENT AGREEMENT
BY AND BETWEEN
MR. CHRIS M. HYMEL
AND
SIGNAL ADVANCE, INC.
This INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY ASSIGNMENT AGREEMENT, dated as of February 15, 2008,
is entered into by and between CHRIS M. HYMEL ("Assignor" or "Inventor"), an
individual, 3515 County Road 81, Iowa Colony, TX, 77583, and SIGNAL ADVANCE,
INC., a company registered with the State of Texas ("Assignee"), 2520 County
Road 81, Rosharon, TX 77583. Assignor or Inventor and Assignee are each
sometimes referred to herein as a "Party" and collectively as the "Parties" to
this Agreement.
WHEREAS, Assignor has the right to assign the "U.S. Patent Application" as
defined below and Assignee desires to acquire an ownership interest in the U.S.
Patent Application at issue, subject to, inter alia, license back;
WHEREAS, Assignor desires and agrees to irrevocably assign to Assignee all of
its rights, title and interest, on a worldwide basis, of its U.S. patent
application, as set forth herein, that otherwise have not been transferred and
assigned to Assignee, as well as certain and related trademark rights as set
forth herein;
WHEREAS, except for any ownership interest already held by Assignee, Assignor
is the sole owner of all rights, title and interest, including, without
limitation, all intellectual property rights, in and to such proprietary
products, patents and trademarks; and, with respect to the trademarks,
Assignee is a successor to a portion of the business of the Assignor to which
these trademarks pertain;
WHEREAS, Assignor has agreed to assign to Assignee all of its rights, title and
interest on a worldwide basis, all intellectual property rights of said U.S.
Patent Application, to the full extent that Assignor has such rights and subject
to and contingent upon Assignor having the right and necessary consents
to assign such license; and
WHEREAS, to enable Assignor to continue its current use of certain proprietary
products, Assignee is willing to grant to Assignor a license back to certain
rights in such proprietary products as set forth herein;
NOW, THEREFORE, for good and valuable consideration, the receipt and sufficiency
of which are hereby acknowledged, the Parties hereby agree as follows:
1. DEFINITIONS
For the purposes of this Agreement, the following terms will have the meanings
ascribed to them as follows:
1.1 "Intellectual Property" means the Proprietary Products, Proprietary Business
Information, Proprietary Information, Third Party Products, Trademarks and
Patents and/or Patent Applications.
1.2 "Patent" or "Patent Application'" means the U.S. patent application entitled
"Utility and Method for the Application of Signal Advance Amplification to
Analog Waveform Signal Detection, Acquisition and Processing" plus any and all
subsequent Continuation-in-Part Application(s).
1.3 "Price" means milestone-based payments or equity value increase totaling
$3.5M, as described under Section 2.7(b) and Section 2.7(c) (Royalty payments).
1.4 "Proprietary Business Information" means any confidential or proprietary
information, know-how, or trade secret described or comprised in or relating to
the general business operations of Assignee, excluding Proprietary Information,
that exists as of the Effective Date or that is subsequently provided by
Assignor to Assignee at its sole discretion, and that is not in the public
domain or regularly disclosed by Assignor to third parties without
confidentiality restrictions.
1.5 "Proprietary Information" means any confidential or proprietary information,
know-how, or trade secret described or comprised in or relating to the Assigned
Property that is not in the public domain or regularly disclosed by Assignee to
third parties without confidentiality restrictions.
1.6 "Proprietary Products" means the products, such as including but without
limitation, all user manuals, reference manuals and other documentation and
materials relating thereto; and any derivative works, foreign language versions,
fixes, upgrades, updates, enhancements, new versions or previous versions
thereof.
1.7 "Trademarks" means the product marks and logos and all rights and goodwill
associated therewith.
1.8 "Third Party Products" means a mutually agreed upon or to be mutually agreed
upon subset of products selected by the Parties, including, without limitation,
any software and firmware relating thereto; all user manuals, reference manuals
and other documentation and materials relating thereto; and any derivative
works, foreign language versions, fixes, upgrades, updates, enhancements, new
versions or previous versions thereof provided by the third-party licensor of
such products to Assignor.
2. ASSIGNMENT
Assignor hereby assigns, conveys, sells, grants and transfers and agrees to
assign, convey, sell, grant and transfer to Assignee the following rights
(collectively, the "Rights"):
2.1 Proprietary Products. Subject to the terms and conditions of this
Assignment, Assignor hereby assigns, conveys, sells, grants and transfers and
agrees to assign, convey, sell, grant and transfer to Assignee, its successors
and assigns all of its rights, title and interest of every kind and character
throughout the world in and to the U.S. Patent Application to the full extent
of its ownership or interest therein; including, without limitation, all
federal, state, foreign, statutory and common law and other rights in the U.S.
patent application and related trademark. Upon Assignee's reasonable request,
Assignor will promptly take such actions, including, without limitation, the
prompt execution and delivery of documents in recordable form, as may be
reasonably necessary to vest, secure, perfect, protect or enforce the rights
and interests of Assignee in and to the Proprietary Products.
2.2 Proprietary Information. Subject to the terms and conditions of this
Assignment, Assignor hereby assigns, conveys, sells, grants and transfers and
agrees to assign, convey, sell, grant and transfer to Assignee, its successors
and assigns all of its rights, title and interest of every kind and character
throughout the world in and to the Proprietary Information to the full extent
of its ownership or interest therein.
2.3 Third Party Products. Subject to the terms and conditions of this
Assignment, and subject to and contingent upon Assignor obtaining any necessary
and applicable third party consents, Assignor hereby assigns, conveys, sells,
grants and transfers and agrees to assign, convey, sell, grant and transfer to
Assignee, its successors and assigns all rights, title and interest of every
kind and character throughout the world in and to the Third Party Products and
any license agreements related thereto to the full extent of Assignor's rights
or interest therein (if any). Upon Assignee's request, Assignor will promptly
take such actions, including, without limitation, the prompt execution and
delivery of documents in recordable form, as may be reasonably necessary to
vest, secure, perfect, protect or enforce the rights and interests of Assignee
in and to the Third Party Products and any license agreements related thereto.
2.4 Patents. Subject to the terms and conditions of this Agreement, Assignor
hereby assigns, conveys, sells, grants and transfers and agrees to assign,
convey, sell, grant and transfer to Assignee, its successors and assigns all of
its rights, title and interest of every kind and character throughout the world,
in and to the relevant Patent to the full extent of its ownership or interest
therein of the Patent Application, entitled "Utility and Method for the Signal
Advance Amplification to Analog Waveform Signal Detection,Acquisition and
Processing," plus any and all Continuation-in-Part Application(s). More
specifically and subject to Section 3, below, the scope of this assignment
covers all electrophysiological applications of Signal Advance Amplification to
Analog Waveform Signal Detection, Acquisition and Processing, but does not
extend beyond the same.
Even applications that are not primarily electrophysiological in nature but
incorporates electrophysiological applications are within the scope of this
Assignment. Also, assignor hereby assigns, conveys, sells, grants and transfers
and agrees to assign, convey, sell, grant and transfer to Assignee, its
successors and assigns all rights to causes of action and remedies related
thereto (including, without limitation, the right to sue for past,present or
future infringement, misappropriation or violation of rights related to the
foregoing); and any and all other rights and interests arising out of, in
connection with or in relation to the Patent Application, and the Patent should
it issue. Upon Assignee's request, Assignor will promptly take such actions,
including, without limitation, the prompt execution and delivery of documents
in recordable form, as may be reasonably necessary to vest, secure, perfect,
protect or enforce the rights and interests of Assignee in and to the Patent
Application, and the Patent should it issue.
2.5 Trademarks. Subject to the terms and conditions of this Agreement, Assignor
hereby assigns, conveys, sells, grants and transfers and agrees to assign,
convey, sell, grant and transfer to Assignee, its successors and assigns all of
its rights, title and interest of every kind and character throughout the world,
in and to the related Trademarks to the full extent of its ownership or interest
therein; including, without limitation, all federal, state, foreign, statutory
and common law and other rights; all domestic and foreign trademark applications
and registrations therefor (and all extensions and renewals of such applications
and registrations, and the right to apply for any of the foregoing); all
goodwill associated therewith symbolized by the Trademarks and the portion of
the business of the Assignor to which the Trademarks pertain; all rights to
causes of action and remedies related thereto (including, without limitation,
the right to sue for past, present or future infringement, misappropriation or
violation of rights related to the foregoing); and any and all other rights and
interests arising out of, in connection with or in relation to the Trademarks.
Upon Assignee's request, Assignor will promptly take such other actions,
including, without limitation, the prompt execution and delivery of documents
in recordable form, as may be reasonably necessary to vest, secure, perfect,
protect or enforce the rights and interests of Assignee in and to the
Trademarks.
2.6 Further Assurances For Third Party Products. Assignor and Assignee will use
their respective reasonable best efforts to obtain any consent, approval or
amendment required to novate and/or assign the Third Party Products; provided,
however, that, except for filing and other administrative charges, Assignee
shall not be obligated to pay any consideration therefor to the third party from
whom such consents, approvals and amendments are requested. In the event and to
the extent that Assignee and Assignor are unable to obtain any such required
consent, approval or amendment, or if any attempted assignment would be
ineffective or would adversely affect the rights of Assignor with respect to any
Third Party Product so that Assignee would not in fact receive all the rights
with respect to such Third Party Product, Assignor and Assignee will cooperate
(to the extent permitted by law or the terms of any applicable agreement) in a
mutually agreeable arrangement under which Assignee would, to the extent
possible and permissible under any applicable agreement, obtain the benefits and
assume the obligations with respect to such Third Party Product, in accordance
with this Agreement, including sub-contracting, sub-licensing, or sub-leasing to
Assignee, or under which Assignor would enforce for the benefit of Assignee,
with Assignee assuming Assignor's obligations, any and all rights of Assignor
against a third party thereto. Assignor shall, without further consideration
therefor, pay and remit to Assignee promptly all monies, rights and other
considerations received in respect to Assignee's performance of such obligations
and Assignee shall remit to Assignor (or pay directly) all amounts due with
respect to such Third Party Products to such third parties. If and when any such
consent shall be obtained or such Third Party Product shall otherwise become
assignable or able to be novated, Assignor shall promptly assign and novate all
of its rights and obligations thereunder to Assignee without payment of further
consideration and Assignee shall, without the payment of any further
consideration therefor, assume such rights and obligations and Assignor shall be
relieved of any and all liability hereunder.
2.7 ASSIGNEE Responsibilities. In addition to its other obligations under this
Agreement, ASSIGNEE shall have the following responsibilities:
(a) Development. ASSIGNEE will be responsible for funding and executing of all
its activities required for any regulatory approval, development, implementation
and commercialization of any Assigned Product or Service within the Assigned
Field, including but not limited to, research, manufacturing, clinical trials,
Regulatory Filings, governmental approvals (including, but not limited to,
Regulatory Approvals), sales and marketing. In fulfilling its responsibilities,
ASSIGNEE shall assume and incur all costs and expenses with the research and
development activities which are necessary to obtain any Regulatory Approval for
the Assigned Product or Service and shall diligently pursue and conduct such
activities as may be reasonably and commercially necessary in order to obtain
Regulatory Approval for the Assigned Product or Service. Except as otherwise
provided herein, ASSIGNEE shall own and control all documents and information it
generates in the course of the preceding activities and under this Agreement.
When commercially prudent, ASSIGNEE will proceed with the Regulatory Approval
and development of the Assigned Product or Service for all feasible
applications of the technology.
Thereafter, ASSIGNEE shall use all reasonable effort to effect introduction of
Assigned Products or Services which incorporate the Patent Pending or Patented
Technology into the commercial market as soon as practicable, consistent with
sound and reasonable business practices and judgment. Also, ASSIGNEE shall exert
its best efforts to develop and market Assigned Products and Services, and shall
further exert its best efforts to increase and extend the commercialization of
Assigned Products in the United States and such other countries as ASSIGNEE
shall in its sole discretion, deem of economic interest. ASSIGNEE shall commence
advertising and marketing Assigned Products and Services not later than 24
months following the granting of the patent at issue.
(b) Payment/Milestone Schedule. ASSIGNEE agrees to pay to ASSIGNOR an amount of
Three Million Five Hundred Thousand Dollars ($3.500,000) total. Partial payments
amounts are contingent upon the following:
1) Upon execution of this assignment agreement...........................$0.50M
2) Upon conversion of the Provisional patent application to the
Nonprovisional Patent Application.....................................$0.75M
3) Upon the receipt of the Notice of Allowance for the patent application
entitled "Utility and Method for the Application of Signal Advance
Amplification to Analog Waveform signal detection, Acquisition and
Processing"...........................................................$1.00M
4) Upon the Issuance of the Patent entitled "Utility and Method for the
Application of Signal Advance Amplification to Analog Waveform signal
detection, Acquisition and Processing"................................$1.25M
The preceding payments would be superseded by an increase in ASSIGNOR's equity
value equivalent to Three Million Five Hundred Thousand Dollars ($3,500,000) or
greater in total, or an incremental increase by the date of each milestone in
an amount equal to or greater than the amount indicated in the payment schedule
based on the ASSIGNOR's equity value on the effective date of this assignment.
The basis for this Equity value as of the effective date of this agreement is
$4 million (e.g. 10 million shares at $0.40/share). No payments would be due on
achieving these milestones if ASSIGNOR has already realized an equivalent
increase or greater in the value of ASSIGNOR's equity in Signal Advance, Inc.
on the date on which each milestone is achieved.
For example, if milestones 1 and 2 have already been achieved and paid in full
in either cash or equity. The amounts due when milestones 3 and 4 are achieved
will be reduced or eliminated, (but not increased), if the ASSIGNOR's equity
value in the company increases relative to the basis defined previously due to a
change in stock price. Thus, for the $1.00M payment due on achieving milestone
3, if the stock price is $0.40/share or lower then there is no increase in
ASSIGNOR's equity value so a payment of $1.00M would be required. If the stock
price is $0.50/share or higher then no payment to ASSIGNOR will be required
because ASSIGNOR's equity increased by at least $1.00M. If the stock price is
$0.46/share then the ASSIGNOR's equity will have increased by $600K so a payment
of either cash of equity of the reminder, $400K, would be required.
(c) Royalties.
ASSIGNEE shall pay ASSIGNOR the following Royalties on the Net Sales/License
Fees during the Royalty Period with respect to all Products or Licenses derived
from INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY.
Covered Net Sales During Calendar Year Royalty Rate
$0 to $10 Million 6%
Incremental sales $10 to $25 Million 8%
Incremental sales above $25 Million 10%
For example, if Net Sales or License Fees during a calendar year of all Licensed
Products are $35 million, the total Royalties to be paid would be $2.8 million
(6% of the first $10 million equals $0.6 Million; plus 8% of the next $15
million equals $1.2 million; plus 10% of the next incremental $10 million equals
$1.0.million). Royalty rates under this Sub-Section 2.7(c) will be based upon
the cumulative volume of Net Sales and/or License Fees derived from INTELLECTUAL
PROPERTY.
(d) Automatic Termination For Non-Payment. If payments are not made according to
the payment schedule above (in cash or equivalent equity) or should the value of
the ASSIGNOR's equity stake in Signal Advance, Inc. not increase by $3.5M over
the same time period, notwithstanding an amount equal to or greater than the
amount due on the date on which each milestone is achieved, notwithstanding
anything to the contrary in this Agreement, this Assignment Agreement and the
assignment granted to the ASSIGNEE shall forthwith terminate and be of no
further force and effect and the assignment and all other rights granted
Assignee hereunder shall terminate if, after the 60th day after each milestone
above has been achieved, the respective payment has not been paid in full to
ASSIGNOR and ASSIGNOR not have received total royalty payments accordingly.
(e) Indemnification. Assignee agrees that it will defend, indemnify and hold
harmless Assignor, its employees, officers, and agents and each of them (the
"Indemnified Parties") from and against any and all claims and causes of action
of any nature made or lawsuits or other proceedings filed or otherwise
instituted against the Indemnified parties relating directly or indirectly to or
arising out of the resign, manufacture and the sale of License Products by
Assignee or its Affiliates or any of their assignees even though such claims,
causes of action, lawsuits or other Proceedings result in whole or in part from
the negligence of any or all of the Indemnified Parties.
Assignee will assume responsibility of all costs and expenses related to such
claims and lawsuits for which it shall indemnify the Indemnified Parties,
including, but not limited to, the payment of all attorneys' fees and costs of
litigation or other defense.
(f) Third-party infringement. Assignor expressly agrees to assume full
responsibility for taking all action with respect to filing and obtaining
patents and other suitable forms of protection in the United States. Assignor
also has the primary option to file and obtain patents and other suitable forms
of protection in any foreign country in which Assignor desires to perfect such
right, at ASSIGNOR's sole expense from and after the Agreement Date. If Assignor
does not exercise the above option, then Assignee has the right to file and
obtain patents and other suitable forms of protection in any foreign country at
its sole expense. Further, if Assignee has exercised its right with respect to
foreign patents, then Assignor shall cooperate fully with Assignee in the
preparation, filing and prosecution of all foreign patent applications filed
pursuant to this paragraph, which cooperation shall include, but not be limited
to, execution by Assignor and its faculty and other employees of any and all
such papers and instruments as are necessary or helpful to Assignee in
preparing, filing and prosecuting all foreign patent applications.
If any Assigned Patent is infringed by a third party, the Party to this
Agreement first having knowledge of such infringement shall promptly notify the
other in writing, which notice shall set forth the facts of such infringement
in reasonable detail. Assignor shall have the primary right, but not the
obligation, to institute, prosecute, and control any action or proceeding with
respect to such infringement, through counsel of its own choice, and Assignee
shall have the right, at its own expense, to be represented in such action by
counsel of its own choice. If Assignor shall fail to bring such action or
proceeding within a period of one hundred twenty (120) days after receiving
written notice from Assignee or otherwise having knowledge of such infringement,
Assignee shall have the right to bring and control any such action by counsel of
its own choice, and Assignor shall have the right, at its own expense, to be
represented in any such action or proceeding. In any event, the second Party
agrees to be joined as a party plaintiff and to give the first Party reasonable
assistance and authority to file and to prosecute such suit. The costs and
expenses of all suits brought by Assignor under this section shall be reimbursed
to both parties out of any damages or other monetary awards recovered therein in
favor of Assignor and/or Assignee. Any remaining damages awarded shall then be
provided fifty percent (50%) to the Assignor and fifty percent (50%) to
Assignee. All costs and expenses associated with any action brought by Assignee
under this section shall be the responsibility of Assignee alone, and, in such
an event, all damages or other monetary awards shall belong to Assignee alone.
No settlement or consent judgment or other voluntary final disposition of a suit
under this Section may be entered into without the joint consent of Assignor and
Assignee (which consent shall not be withheld unreasonably).
Each Party shall promptly inform the other of any suspected infringement of any
Assigned Patent Rights or misuse, misappropriation, theft or breach of
confidence of other Proprietary Rights in the Technology by a third party, and
with respect to such activities as are suspected, Assignor and Assignee each
shall have the right to institute an action for infringement, misuse,
misappropriation, theft or breach of confidence of the Proprietary Rights
against such third party in accordance with the following:
(i) If Assignor and Assignee agree to institute suit jointly, the suit shall
be brought in both their names, the out-of-pocket costs thereof shall be borne
equally, and recoveries, if any, whether by judgment, award, decree or
settlement, shall be shared equally. Assignee shall exercise control over such
action, provided, however, that Assignee may if it so desires, be represented
by counsel of its own selection, the fees for which counsel shall be paid by
Assignee.
(ii) In the absence of an agreement to institute a suit jointly, Assignor may
institute suit, and, at its option, join Assignee as a plaintiff. Assignor
shall bear the entire cost of such litigation and shall be entitled to retain
the entire amount of any recovery by way of judgment, award, decree or
settlement.
(iii) In the absence of an agreement to institute a suit jointly and if Assignor
determines not to institute a suit as provided in (b) above, Assignee may
institute a suit and, at its option, join Assignor as a plaintiff. Assignor
shall bear the entire cost of such litigation and shall be entitled to retain
the entire amount of any recovery by way of judgment, award, decree or
settlement.
(iv) Should either Assignor or Assignee commence a suit under the provisions
of this Article and thereafter elect to abandon the same, it shall give timely
notice to the other Party who may, if it so desires, continue prosecution of
such suit. If the other Party desires to continue prosecution it shall bear the
entire cost of continuation of such suit and shall be entitled to retain the
entire amount of any recovery by way of judgment, award, decree or settlement
in such suit.
Neither ASSIGNOR or ASSIGNEE shall settle any actions covered by this Article
without first obtaining the consent of the other party, which consent will not
be unreasonably withheld. The Assignor shall not be liable for any losses
incurred as the result of an action for infringement brought against the
Assignee as the result of Assignee's exercise of any right granted under this
Agreement. The decision to defend or not defend shall be in Assignee's sole
discretion.
(g) Abandonment. If as to a Assigned Product or Service, ASSIGNEE either (i)
fails to commence the development of a Assigned Product or Service, as provided
above, or (ii) does not fully develop and commercialize any other Assigned
Product or Service hereunder as to which development has commenced or which is
scheduled to commence, then as to such Assigned Product or Service, the license
herein granted shall cease, and all data, reports, and information developed by
ASSIGNEE with respect to such Assigned Product or Service shall be provided to
ASSIGNOR so that it or its subASSIGNEE or sublicense may file for or continue
to obtain Regulatory Approval, and ASSIGNEE shall assign to ASSIGNOR all rights
of ASSIGNEE in and to any Regulatory Approval applications made with respect to
such Assigned Product or Service.
(h) i) If ASSIGNEE shall become bankrupt or insolvent, or shall file a petition
in bankruptcy, or if the business of ASSIGNEE shall be placed in the hands of a
receiver, assignee or trustee for the benefit of creditors, whether by the
voluntary act of ASSIGNEE or otherwise, this Agreement shall automatically
terminate, inasmuch as permitted under applicable and prevailing law.
ii) Notwithstanding any other provisionof this Agreement, should ASSIGNSEE fail
in its payment to ASSIGNOR of money due in accordance with the terms of this
Agreement, ASSIGNOR shall have the right to serve notice upon ASSIGNEE by
certified mail of its intention to terminate this Agreement within thirty (30)
days after receipt of said notice of termination unless ASSIGNEE shall pay to
ASSIGNOR, within the thirty (30) day period, all such money due and payable.
Upon the expiration of the thirty (30) day period, if ASSIGNEE shall not have
paid all such money due and payable, the rights, privileges and license granted
hereunder may be immediately terminated by ASSIGNOR. If the parties dispute the
amount or existence of any underpayment, either party may invoke the provisions
of Article 8 within the thirty (30) day period.
iii) Upon any material breach or default of this Agreement by ASSIGNEE, other
than those occurrences set out in paragraphs 3.4, 7.1 and 7.2 hereinabove,
which shall always take precedence over any material breach or default referred
to in this paragraph 7.3, ASSIGNOR shall have the right to terminate this
Agreement and the rights, privileges and license granted hereunder by ninety
(90) days' notice by certified mail to ASSIGNEE. Such termination shall become
effective unless ASSIGNEE shall have cured any such breach or default prior to
the expiration of the ninety (90) day period from receipt of ASSIGNOR'S notice
of termination. If such breach or default cannot be cured within said ninety
(90) day period, the terminated party may invoke the provisions of Article 8,
if it disputes such termination.
iv) Upon termination of this Agreement for any reason, nothing herein shall be
construed to release either party from any obligation that matured prior to the
effective date of such termination. ASSIGNEE and/or any sub-ASSIGNEE thereof
may, however, after the effective date of such termination, sell all Licensed
Products, complete Licensed Products in the process of manufacture at the time
of such termination and sell the same, and complete all existing contracts to
provide Licensed Products and Licensed Services provided that ASSIGNEE shall
pay to ASSIGNOR the royalties thereon as required by Article 4 of this Agreement
and shall submit the reports required by Article 5 hereof.
v) Unless earlier terminated as herein provided, this Agreement shall expire
simultaneously with the last to expire of the Patent Rights.
3. LICENSE
3.1 Subject to the terms and conditions of this Agreement, Assignor hereby
grants and agrees to grant to Assignee a worldwide, royalty-free, fully paid up,
perpetual, irrevocable, nonexclusive, transferable right and license (with the
right to sublicense) to copy and use Proprietary Business Information for the
purposes of conducting Assignee's business; provided, however, Assignee takes
such steps as are reasonably necessary to protect Assignor's rights in the
Proprietary Business Information, including by providing the same protection
that Assignor affords to Proprietary Business Information and by treating
Proprietary Business Information as confidential information, if appropriate.
3.2 Subject to the terms and conditions of this Agreement, Assignee hereby
grants and agrees to grant to Assignor a worldwide, royalty-free, fully paid up,
perpetual, irrevocable, non-exclusive license to make, use, sell or offer to
sell the ASSIGNOR's Proprietary Information and related intellectual property
in areas of research & development, marketing and sales i) beyond any electro-
physiological applications relative to Signal Advance Amplification to Analog
Waveform Signal Detection, Acquisition and Processing, and ii) any electro-
physiological applications relative to Signal Advance Amplification to Analog
Waveform Signal Detection, Acquisition and Processing, in which Assignee is not
actively pursuing, have sought patent protection or not actively marketing.
Furthermore, in addition to and without limiting the foregoing, the ASSIGNOR
shall have the royalty-free right to use in its business, and to use, make and
sell Product, processes, and/or services derived from any Inventions, as well as
to assign and/or license such rights to others without any or further
compensation to ASSIGNEE.
4. PAYMENT
As payment for the assignment of Rights and the assignment granted in this
Agreement, Assignee will pay to Assignor the Price, per the terms of this
assignment agreement for intellectual property described in the patent
application entitled "Utility and Method for the Application of Signal Advance
Amplification to Analog Waveform Signal Detection, Acquisition and Processing"
the receipt and full satisfaction of which is hereby acknowledged by the
Parties.
5. REPRESENTATIONS AND WARRANTIES
UNLESS EXPLICITLY STATED OTHERWISE IN THIS AGREEMENT, THE ASSIGNED PROPERTY AND
PROPRIETARY BUSINESS INFORMATION ARE PROVIDED "AS IS" AND THE PARTIES HEREBY
DISCLAIM ALL WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND WITH RESPECT TO ANY OF THE ASSIGNED PROPERTY
OR PROPRIETARY BUSINES INFORMATION, INCLUDING, WITHOUT LIMITATION, ANY IMPLIED
WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.
6. LIMITATION OF LIABILITY
IN NO EVENT WILL EITHER PARTY BE LIABLE FOR ANY CONSEQUENTIAL, INCIDENTAL,
SPECIAL, INDIRECT, EXEMPLARY OR PUNITIVE DAMAGES, OR DAMAGES FOR ANY LOSS OF
PROFITS, REVENUE OR BUSINESS, EVEN IF SUCH PARTY IS NOTIFIED OF THE POSSIBILITY
OF SUCH DAMAGES. The Parties acknowledge that the limitation of liability in
this Agreement and the allocation of risk that it implements is an essential
element of the bargain agreed to by the Parties, without which the Parties
would not have entered into this Agreement.
7. GENERAL
7.1 This Agreement, and all disputes, claims or controversies arising under or
relating to this Agreement or the breach, termination or validity hereof, or
any transaction contemplated hereby shall be governed by and settled in
accordance with the laws of the State of Texas.
7.2 If either Party commences any action or proceeding against the other Party
to enforce this Agreement or any of such Party's rights hereunder, the
prevailing Party will be entitled to its reasonable expenses related to such
action or proceeding, including reasonable attorneys' and expert fees.
7.3 No delay, failure or waiver by either Party to exercise any right or remedy
under this Agreement, and no partial or single exercise, will operate to limit,
preclude, cancel, waive or otherwise affect such right or remedy, nor will any
single or partial exercise limit, preclude, impair or waive any further exercise
of such right or remedy or the exercise of any other right or remedy.
7.4 If any provision of this Agreement is determined to be invalid or
unenforceable, the validity or enforceability of the other provisions or of this
Agreement as a whole will not be affected; and, in such event, such provision
will be changed and interpreted so as best to accomplish the objectives of such
provision within the limits of applicable law or applicable court decision.
7.5 Except as provided above, this Agreement serves to document formally the
entire understanding between the Parties relating to the subject matter hereof,
and supersedes and replaces any prior or contemporaneous agreements,
negotiations or understandings (whether oral or written), relating generally to
the same subject matter.
7.6 No amendment or modification of any provision of this Agreement will be
effective unless in writing and signed by a duly authorized signatory of the
Party against which enforcement of the amendment or modification is sought.
IN WITNESS WHEREOF, the Parties have caused this Agreement to be executed by
their duly authorized representatives as of the Effective Date.
CHRIS M. HYMEL SIGNAL ADVANCE, INC.
3515 County Road 81 2520 County Road 81
Iowa Colony, TX, 77583 Rosharon, TX 77583
By Signature: /s/ Chris M. Hymel By Signature: /s/ Herbert Joe
____________________ ____________________
Name (Print): Chris M. Hymel Name (Print): Herbert Joe
Title: SELF Title: Secretary
EXHIBIT 22.1 Minutes - Special Shareholders' Meeting - August 10, 2012
MINUTES
SIGNAL ADVANCE, INC.
Shareholder Meeting
August 10, 2012
The meeting was opened at 10:15 am by President Dr. Chris M. Hymel.
The following shareholders were in attendance: Chris M. Hymel, Milinda Hymel,
Andrea McKenna
The meeting was opened to questions from the attendees regarding:
1) the process of becoming a reporting company and registering shares
with the SEC, and
2) pursuing clearance from FINRA for SAI Common Stock to be quoted and
trade publicly.
Discussion included the effect of registration of shares, possibility of
subsequent registration following FINRA clearance and sale of share under Rule
144. Attendees voted on the resolution their shares and indicated the number
shares they wished to have registered in with the SEC in the registration
statement on Form S-1.
The Shareholder votes (from both attendees and proxies) for 1) confirmation of
the setting of the stock price at $2.00/share, and 2) the number of shares to
register with the SEC, were tallied. The totals were as follows:
7,042,007 votes cast (84.5%), unanimous "FOR" the following resolution:
To confirm the price per share for SAI Common Stock will be fixed at $2.00 for
shares registered by "Selling Shareholders" during the interim period between
the effective date of the SEC registration and a broker-dealer obtaining
clearance from FINRA to trade SAI common stock publicly.
Twenty five (25) shareholders requested that their shares be registered as
"Selling Shareholders" for a total of 422,003 shares. This represents 5.06%
of total of 8,334,159 issued & outstanding shares as of June 30, 2012.
There were no additional issues discussed or motions to be considered.
The meeting was moved closed at 10:30 am, peace and harmony prevailing.
/s/ Malcolm Skolnick
Malcolm Skolnick
Secretary
EXHIBIT 22.1 Minutes - Annual Shareholders' Meeting - April 10, 2012
SIGNAL ADVANCE, INC.
Shareholder Meeting Minutes
13 April, 2012
Directors/Officers present: Chris Hymel, Richard Seltzer, Malcolm Skolnick, and
Karl Zercoe
Directors/Officers represented by Proxy: Ron Stubbers
The meeting called to order 10:12 AM by Dr. Hymel
Reading of the minutes was waived.
Examination was made for the material provided including the shareholders'
notice and proxy, audited financials (for years-ending 2010/2011), and
attestation was made as to the proper delivery and form of the materials
(incorporated herein by reference).
The proxies which were properly executed and received timely were examined and,
in conjunction with the shares represented by the attendees, attestation as to
the presence of a quorum was made.
A current shareholders list, from the transfer agent, was present and examined.
Mr. Zercoe was appointed to as the Inspector of Elections.
Annual Report & Discussion:
Dr. Hymel reviewed highlights from the company update that had been provided to
the shareholders and solicited questions from the shareholders in attendance.
Mention was made that Dr. Hymel received a call from the FBI indicating the
Bureau was interested in assisting companies to protect their Intellectual
Property. They had purportedly taken notice of the company and its technology
due to the Goradia Innovation prize award.
Dr. Hymel summarized the meeting and described collaborations with:
1) University of Houston, Dept. of Mechanical Engineering, Engine Research
Facility: Interest in development collaboration related to the use of Signal
Advance technology (SAT) to improve engine efficiency/emissions. Note was
taken of a contact with, and of potential applications for SAT in, the Texas
Heart Institute from one of the individuals in the meeting.
2) Dr. Larry Michelletti of University of Texas Medical Branch (UTMB),
Galveston: Application of SA to reduce EEG detection delay - for use in
neurotherapy research for which a grant application to the National Institute
of Health is to be will be prepared for submission.
3) Steve Gonzalez, Gulf Coast Regional Center of Innovation and Commercializa-
tion (GCRCIC) NASA liaison - indicated that there may be a number of potential
application for SAT and wishes to schedule meetings/presentations at the
Johnson Space Center in order for SAI to explain the technology and explore
potential applications with various groups within NASA.
Additional discussion ensued on the following topics:
1) Shareholder "Rights Offering"; Explanation was made as to the ability
to transfer the rights, and the investment/time limits of the offer.
It was confirmed that there are already SH's taking advantage of the
offering.
2) Capital funding required and potential to raise funds through various
grants.
3) Becoming eligible to be quoted and traded publicly and option of using
exemptions to trade as a "PinkSheet" company, vs. registration with SEC
to become a reporting company and the related costs, including
regulatory and compliance requirements as well as the auditing process.
4) Summarized the relationship with Bobby Hutton as Auditor.
5) Advantages and possible drawbacks related to Signal advance technology
complexity. Ensuing discussion related to the difficulty in explaining
the technology and SAI's business model, vs. pursuit of singular
development targeting individual product development.
6) The possibility of contacting Medtronics, Inc. as a significant
potential licensee, as well as their reputation as a rapacious
infringer of others' intellectual property was discussed.
This concluded the question/discussion portion of the meeting.
The votes for Board Directors and the three resolutions were tabulated.
The following individuals were elected:
Chris Hymel, David Minter, Malcolm Skolnick, Richard Seltzer, Karl Zercoe
The following resolutions passed unanimously:
1. To ratify the appointment of Bobby J. Hutton as the company's
independent registered public accountant for fiscal year 2012.
2. To approve minutes of previous annual shareholders' meeting
3. To ratify all proceedings of the corporation and actions of the
Officers since the last shareholders' meeting.
Other discussion ensued regarding the on-going need for financing, and
assistance in the company.
Additional discussion centered on the criteria for choosing market makers.
Meeting adjourned at 11:45 AM peace and harmony prevailing.
Subsequent to the Shareholder's meeting, a board meeting was called to
appoint the following officers:
Chris M. Hymel, President/Treasurer
Malcolm Skolnick, Secretary
Ron Stubbers, Vice President
Respectfully submitted
/s/ Malcolm Skolnick
Malcolm Skolnick, Secretary
EXHIBIT 22.3 Minutes - Special Shareholders' Meeting - May 10, 2011
MINUTES OF THE SPECIAL SHAREHOLDERS' MEETING
for
SIGNAL ADVANCE, INC.
In a special meeting of the shareholders of Signal; Advance, Inc., held on
May 10, 2011, at 2:00 pm, the following resolutions were passed:
1) The Board of Directors has been provided the discretionary authority
to effect forward or reverse stock splits.
2) The Board of Directors has been provided the discretionary authority
to change to number of shares the corporation is authorized to issue.
With respect to the first resolution, "The Board of Directors has been
provided the discretionary authority to effect forward or reverse stock
splits", of the 32,325,603 shares issued and outstanding and, thus, eligible
to vote, the number of shares that voted on this resolution was 28,202,218 of
which number of shares that voted FOR this amendment was 28,202,218 and the
number of shares voted AGAINST this amendment was 0. This vote constituted an
affirmative vote of not less than 2/3's of all of the issued and outstanding
shares of the Corporation entitled to vote on said amendment.
With respect to the second resolution, "The Board of Directors has been
provided the discretionary authority to change the number of shares the
corporation is authorized to issue." of the 32,325,603 shares issued and
outstanding and, thus, eligible to vote, the number of shares that voted on
this resolution was 28,202,218 of which number of shares that voted FOR this
amendment was 27,827,218 and the number of shares voted AGAINST this amend-
ment was 375,000. This vote constituted an affirmative vote of not less than
2/3's of all of the issued and outstanding shares of the Corporation
entitled to vote on said amendment.
I hereby certify that the attached is a true copy of the shareholder
resolutions passed in the manner authorized by law at a meeting of the
shareholders held on May 10, 2011 and that the shareholder resolutions are
in full force and effect.
/s/ Richard C. Seltzer
Richard C. Seltzer, Secretary
Signal Advance, Inc.
EXHIBIT 22.4 Minutes - Annual Shareholders' Meeting - December 22, 2010
MINUTES OD THE ANNUAL MEETING OF
THE SHAREHOLDERS OF
SIGNAL ADVANCE, INC.
Held on December 22, 2010
The annual meeting of the Shareholders of the above captioned corporation was
held on the date and at the time and place set forth in the written notice
properly distributed to all of the Shareholders of record of the corporation,
fixing such time and place, and prefixed to the minutes of this meeting for the
purpose of considering the annual reports of the affairs of the corporation,
and transacting other business within the powers of the Shareholders.
There were present the following: Dr. Chris Hymel, Richard Seltzer, Esq. and
Dr. Malcolm Skolnick being all members of the Board of Directors of the
corporation. Ronald Stubbers and Karl Zercoe, additional board members were
unable to attend the meeting. Each such named individual is also a shareholder
of record of the corporation.
Upon motion duly made, seconded, and unanimously adopted, the reading of the
role of the Shareholders was dispensed with. It was, however, noted that
approximately eighty five percent (84.67%) of all of the issued and
outstanding shares of stock of the corporation were represented by signed
proxies, properly submitted by shareholders not in attendance per the
instructions provided in the shareholder meeting notice, and by those in
attendance at the meeting.
The meeting was called to order and presided upon by the Chairman of the Board,
Chris Hymel. It was moved, seconded and unanimously carried by those in
attendance that Mr. Hymel act as Chairman of the meeting and that Mr. Seltzer
act as Secretary of the meeting and record the minutes.
The meeting being held in accordance with the terms of the Bylaws of the
Corporation, the Chairman declared that as a quorum was present, the meeting
was lawfully and properly convened.
The Chairman discussed the annual report of the corporation for the prior
fiscal year and presented a copy of the report to those in attendance at the
meeting. A motion was duly made, seconded and unanimously carried waiving the
reading of the annual report. The report was accepted and ordered filed with
the Secretary of the corporation.
The Chairman then reported to the meeting the activities of the corporation for
the prior year as conducted by the officers for the corporation in accordance
with the laws of the State of Texas as they apply to such corporations, and
proposed that the Shareholders formally ratify those actions of the
corporation. Upon motion duly made, seconded and carried by a vote of 84.67%
of the issued and outstanding shares of the corporation entitled to vote on
such matters, it was:
RESOLVED, that all proceedings of the corporation as determined by the share-
holders in accordance with the laws of the State of Texas as they apply to
corporations since the last l meeting of the Shareholders, and all acts taken
by officers of this corporation, are hereby ratified and approved in all
respects.
There were no dissenting votes recorded by the Secretary regarding this
resolution.
The Chairman noted that it was in order for the Shareholder to consider
electing a Board of Directors for the ensuing year. Upon nominations duly made,
seconded and carried by a vote of 84.67% of the issued and outstanding shares
of the corporation entitled to vote on such matters. There were 375,000
dissenting votes with regard to Malcolm Skolnick and Richard C. Seltzer,
serving as Directors. The following persons were elected as Directors of the
corporation, to serve for a period of one (1) year and until such time as their
successors are elected and qualify:
CHRIS HYMEL
RONALD STUBBERS
KARL ZERCOE
MALCOLM SKOLNICK
RICHARD SELTZER
There being no further business to come before the meeting, on motion duly
made, seconded, and unanimously adopted, the meeting was adjourned.
Dated effective as of the 22nd day of December, 2010.
/s/ Richard Seltzer
RICHARD SELTZER
Meeting Secretary and Director
ATTEST:
Directors in attendance
/s/ Chris Hymel
CHRIS HYMEL
/s/ Malcolm Skolnick
MALCOLM SKOLNICK
EXHIBIT 23.1 - Consent of Independent Registered Accountant
BOBBY J. HUTTON
Certified Public Accountant
4824 Courtside Drive
Fort Worth, Texas 76113
817 263 8666
August 2, 2012
CONSENT OF INDEPENDENT REGISTERED ACCOUNTANT
We hereby consent to the use in this Registration Statement on Form 10 of
our report(s) dated December 27, 2011 and February 28, 2012 relating to the
financial statements of Signal Advance, Inc. for years ending December 31,
2010 and December 31, 2101, respectively, which appear in such Registration
Statement.
We also consent to the references to us under the headings "Experts" in such
Registration Statement.
/s/ Bobby J. Hutton
Bobby J. Hutton,
Certified Public Accountant
Fort Worth, Texas
August 2, 2012
EXHIBIT 23.2 - Consent of Independent Consultant
CONSENT OF INDEPENDENT CONSULTANT
We hereby consent to the inclusion of our report dated 12/17/07 on the
Market valuation of the Company's intellectual property described in a
patent application entitled: "Utility and Method for the Application of
Negative Group Delay (NGD)...", in its Registration Statement on Form 10,
which appears in such Registration Statement.
We also consent to the reference to us under the heading "Experts" in such
Registration statement.
/s/ S P Weeks 12/20/07
Stephen P. Weeks, Ph.D., President
First Principals, Inc.
1768 East 25th Street
Cleveland, OH 44114
EXHIBIT 23.3 - Consent of Independent Consultant
On letterhead of: Harold, L. Russell, PhD, NeuroMedics technology, Inc.
July 30, 2012
Dr. Chris M Hymel
Signal Advance, Inc.
2520 County Road 81
Rosharon, Texas 77583
I hereby consent to the use in this Registration Statemsnt of my opnion
letter dated April 4, 2012 discussing Signal Advance technology to which
Registrant refers in such Registration Statement.
I also consent to the reference to us under the heading "Experts" in such
Registration statement.
/s/ Harold L. Russell PhD
Harold L. Russell PhD
EXHIBIT 23.4 - Consent of Patent Atty
Not yet Available
EXHIBIT 23.5 - Consent of Legal Counsel
August 28, 2012
Signal Advance, Inc.
2520 County Road 81
Rosharon, Texas 77583
Re: Signal Advance, Inc. Registration Statement:
1,585,544 Shares of Common Stock, No Par Value
To Whom It May Concern,
I have acted as legal counsel to Signal Advance, Inc., a Texas corporation (the
"Company"), in connection with the proposed sale of up to 1,585,544 shares of
common stock, no par value per share (the "Shares"), by certain selling stock-
holders named in the "Selling Stockholders" table included in the Registration
Statement. The Shares are issued and outstanding as of the date hereof. The
Shares are included in a Registration Statement on Form S-1 under the Securi-
ties Act of 1933, as amended (the "Act"), to be filed with the Securities and
Exchange Commission (the "Commission") within the next thirty (30) days. This
opinion is being furnished in connection with the requirements of Item 601
(b)(5) of Regulation S-K under the Act, and no opinion is expressed herein as
to any matter pertaining to the contents of the Registration Statement or
related Prospectus, other than as expressly stated herein with respect to the
issue of the Shares.
As such counsel, I have examined such matters of fact and questions of law as I
have considered appropriate for purposes of this letter. With your consent, I
have relied upon certificates and other assurances of officers of the Company
and others as to factual matters without having independently verified such
factual matters. I am opining herein as to the general corporate laws of the
State of Texas, and I am expressing no opinion with respect to any other laws.
Subject to the foregoing and the other matters set forth herein, it is my
opinion that, as of the date hereof, the Shares have been duly authorized by
all necessary corporate actions of the Company, have been validly issued and
are fully paid and non-assessable.
This opinion is for your benefit in connection with the Registration Statement
and may be relied upon by you and by persons entitled to rely upon it pursuant
to the applicable provisions of the Act.
I consent to your filing this opinion as an exhibit to the Registration
Statement and to the reference to my firm in the Prospectus under the heading
"Experts." In giving such consent, I do not thereby admit that I am in the
category of persons whose consent is required under Section 7 of the Act or
the rules and regulations of the Commission thereunder.
Yours truly,
/s/ Richard Seltzer
Richard Seltzer
:rcs
cc: Dr. Chris M. Hymel, President
Signal Advance, Inc.
EXHIBIT 99.1 - Patent Valuation Summary, Steve Weeks, PhD,
First Principals, Inc.
Excerpted from a Patent Valuation Report by Steve Weeks, Ph.D., First
Principals, Inc., 1768 East 25th Street, Cleveland, OH 44114.
EXECUTIVE SUMMARY
Signal Advance (SIGNAL ADVANCE) has developed and filed patents for a
system for advancing the detection of electrical signals from medical
devices to accelerate the timing of their response to medical events. First
Principals, Inc. (FPI) has been engaged to provide an approximate valuation
for the subject Intellectual Property.
In this document, FPI will establish the estimated current value of:
US Patent Application "Utility and Method for the Application of
Negative Group Delay (NGD) Bandpass Amplification to Analog Wave-
Form Signal Detection, Acquisition and Processing for the Purpose
Of Control, Reinforcement, Intervention, Amelioration, Enhancement
Suppression of Processes Underlying the Detected Signal".
Technology: The technology represents a significant advance in the ability
to react quickly to biomedical electrical signals, enabling more rapid
intervention than is currently possible. There appear to be no competing
technologies at this time.
Intellectual Property: SIGNAL ADVANCE's patent application represents a
new and unique application of the concept of "signal advance" to medical
applications. The patent is seminal in concept. No other patents were
discovered that prevent SIGNAL ADVANCE from practicing its technology, or
that offer superior solutions to the issues addressed by SIGNAL ADVANCE.
Market: The addressable market for SIGNAL ADVANCE totals approximately $3
billion in 20 years time, to be penetrated to levels of ~4% with slow
initial impact. SIGNAL ADVANCE will compete based on superior technology
and performance, across a range of products.
VALUE: Including the projected, risk-adjusted licensing royalties, we
project A NET PRESENT VALUE OF UP TO ~$10.4 MILLION. This valuation will
increase rapidly as the technology is proven and then successfully applied to
products in this very large market.
Markets projected in the above scenarios are highly speculative. These
markets are unproven, as the technology is only recently being introduced.
Valuations are intended for planning purposes only.
N.B. THE ABOVE VALUATION IS ONLY AN ESTIMATE WITH NO GUARANTEES OF FUTURE
OUTCOME. IT IS, HOWEVER, DELIBERATELY CONSERVATIVE. WE HAVE INCLUDED ONLY
THOSE MARKET SECTORS FOR WHICH RELIABLE DATA CAN BE CITED. WE HAVE USED
CONSERVATIVE ESTIMATES OF MARKET SHARE AND OF MARKET GROWTH RATES. THERE
MAY BE A NUMBER OF OTHER MARKET SEGMENTS ACCESSIBLE BY THE SUBJECT PATENTS,
AS NOTED IN THE TEXT. THEIR ADDITION WOULD ADD TO THE STATED VALUE. THUS, WE
REGARD THE ABOVE VALUE AS A CONSERVATIVE VALUE FOR THE PATENT(S).
The significant element of this concept is the ability to temporally
advance electrophysiological waveforms potentially resulting in earlier
or more rapid detection of anomalous activity which may facilitate more
effective and potentially proactive ameliorative intervention.
Key SIGNAL ADVANCE Technology Features
--------------------------------------
The SIGNAL ADVANCE system offers the unique feature or:
* The ability to advance the detection of electrical signals in real time
Key SIGNAL ADVANCE Technology Benefits
SIGNAL ADVANCE technology provides a significantly superior Tee Box
experience:
* The ability to detect the onset of anomalous ECG and other medically
important waveforms at an earlier time than currently possible
* The ability to use this information for earlier intervention in
medically harmful situations.
The system can be deployed in
* Cardiology (pacemakers, defibrillators, etc.)
* Neurology (epilepsy, pain management, etc.)
State of Development of the Technology
--------------------------------------
The technology covered by the subject patents is in the development
process. SIGNAL ADVANCE has developed several product concepts based on the
technology as described above.
Competing Technologies
----------------------
Current competition arises from standard methods of detecting and
processing medically significant electrical signals in cardiology and
neurology. It is accepted in medical practice that rapid response is
valuable, but current devices rely on delayed signal detection
characteristic of current technology.
These opportunities are further described in the "Product and Market
Opportunities" section and APPENDIX D of this report.
SUMMARY:
-------
The technology represents a significant advance in the ability to react
quickly to biomedical electrical signals, enabling more rapid intervention
than is currently possible. There appear to be no competing technologies at
this time.
INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY OVERVIEW
The technologies on which the SIGNAL ADVANCE products are based are subject
to the following US Patents:
* US Patent Application "Utility and Method for the Application
of Negative Group Delay (NGD) Bandpass Amplification to Analog
Waveform Signal Detection, Acquisition and Processing for the
Purpose of Control, Reinforcement, Intervention, Amelioration,
Enhancement, Suppression of Processes Underlying the Detected
Signal"
Details of these patents are described in APPENDIX A, Core Intellectual
Property.
The patent application represents a new technique whereby a signal from a
medical device (e.g. a pacemaker or defibrillator) could be detected at an
earlier stage, enabling intervention more quickly. The patent is invented by
Chris Hymel.
Key Features of the SIGNAL ADVANCE IP
-------------------------------------
The innovation represents
* The ability to detect the onset of anomalous ECG and other
medically important waveforms at an earlier time than currently
possible
* The ability to use this information for earlier intervention in
medically harmful situations.
Patent Trends
-------------
The table below summarizes some of the types of searches performed for
subjects that are similar to the SIGNAL ADVANCE technology. Results shown
are illustrative of the nature of patent activity in cardio treatment and
related technology.
The numbers show that the number of patents in the field of
Publication Pat Class Negative Group Tachycardia Anti- Coverage
"Cardi$" Delay Tachycardia (*)
Granted 2,146 39 390 49 1976 -
4-Dec 07
Pub. Apps. 1,557 25 164 41 2001-
6 Dec 07
(*) US PTO updates its issued patent database on Tuesdays, therefore
December 4 is the latest update searched for issued patents. Similarly,
published applications are uploaded on Thursdays; therefore December 6 is
the latest date searched for published applications.
In addition, there were 68 issued patents and 164 published patent
applications containing the word "neurostimulation" or "neurostimulator" in
the abstract. The larger number of patent applications indicates that the
field is growing rapidly.
Competing Patents
-----------------
First of all, there were NO PATENTS FOUND THAT LINKED THE CONCEPT OF
"SIGNAL ADVANCE" TO APPLICATIONS IN CARDIOVASCULAR OR NEUROSTIMULATION
APPLICATIONS. Most of the patents in the search reflect various aspects of
the intersection of electronics and medical devices. They included various
concepts in prevention of tachycardia in particular. The patents of high
relevance are described further in APPENDIX B.
Other searches performed included combinations of classification and term
searches, for instance. These and other techniques retrieved lists of
literally hundreds of patents in the general area of cardiology.
When the specifically-claimed aspect of the present innovation was
searched, the following patents were identified:
* US Patent 7,277,750 "Method and apparatus for anti-tachycardia
pacing and defibrillation" describes in particular the need for more
rapid signal detection and response in treating tachycardia.
* US Patent 7,171,268 "Implantable cardiac stimulation device
providing accelerated defibrillation delivery and method" describes a
method of accelerating delivery of defibrillation signals from an
implanted medical advice to the heart.
Other patents were identified which deal with other aspects of implantable
medical devices, but none cite the use of "signal advance" techniques to
achieve their goals.
Summary
-------
SIGNAL ADVANCE's patent application represents a new and unique application
of the concept of "signal advance" to medical applications. The patent is
seminal in concept. No other patents were discovered that prevent SIGNAL
ADVANCE from practicing its technology, or that offer superior solutions to
the issues addressed by SIGNAL ADVANCE.
PRODUCT AND MARKET OPPORTUNITIES
Implantable Medical Devices Market
----------------------------------
The SIGNAL ADVANCE system can be applied to
* Implantable cardiovascular devices
- Pacemakers
- Defibulators
- Anti-tachyarrhythmia devices
* Implantable neurostimulator devices
- Pain control
- Epileptic therapy
The Implantable Medical Devices (IMD) Market:
In 2004, there were approximately 2.4 million patients with pacemakers and
460 thousand with ICD's, these numbers are expected to increase at annual
rate of 5% and 14-22%, respectively. The earliest pacemakers stimulated at a
constant rate, so did not adjust for varying physiological demands or normal,
organic activation, potentially stimulating during a naturally occurring T-
wave thus potentially causing tachycardia or fibrillation. The use of
integrated circuits to sense atrial/ventricular signals and programmable
functionality in "demand" type pacemakers and later improvements including
the use of microprocessors, allowed for dual-lead placement, sensing and
stimulation. More recent advances resulted in the development of cardiac
resynchronization therapy (CRT), implantable cardioverter defibrillators
(ICD), improved rate-response (adaptive) pacing algorithms, as well as, a
number of other improvements which have enhanced electro-physiologically-
relevant pacing. Recent investigations have focused on the application of
cardiac pacing technology the management of atrial fibrillation. While the
pacing technology has improved significantly, the current sensing technology
must still detect at least two consecutive heartbeats to determine the
current heart rate (more to be more accurate) and then execute a necessarily
delayed response. However, atrial anti-tachycardia therapies are most
effective the earlier the delivery following onset.
With the application of "Signal Advance" amplification may be possible to
"pre-" detect a heart beat determine its rate relative to the previous
detection and deliver an appropriate stimulation response during that same
beat. Further, this response could potentially suppress an anomalous
electro-cardiac signal and by exploiting constructive interference.
According to industry resurces, the US medical implant industry currently
generates some $23 billion annually. This includes microelectronics,
specialty metals, polymers, elastomers, biologicals and pharmaceuticals,
ceramics) and type (e.g., cardiac, orthopedic, breast, ophthalmic,
neurological, drug, urological, cochlear, dermal/tissue).
Analysts estimate the worldwide CRM (Cardiac Rhythm Management) market,
comprised of pacemakers and implantable defibrillators, exceeded $8 billion
in 2005 and is estimated to be ~$11 billion in 2007.
Medtronic, Johnson & Johnson, Guidant, Boston Scientific, Stryker, Zimmer,
St. Jude Medical, Biomet, Smith & Nephew, and WL Gore are some of the more
significant players.
Additional Market Opportunities
-------------------------------
In addition to applications in Cardiac care, the "signal advance"
technology with have impact on neurology through neurostimulator devices.
However, these applications are sufficiently far in the future, and will
require such significant development, that their contribution will be
small. In the valuation calculation of APPENDIX E, the distant future
timeframe multiplied by very high risk factor reductions, render the value of
future revenues discounted to present value to be very small.
Competition
-----------
Further challenging SIGNAL ADVANCE's overall sales will be competition from
current technology and the step-wise advances it will achieve in the next
decade or so. SIGNAL ADVANCE's impact will be as an add-on to these
existing technologies in enhancing their future value.
Industry Participants
---------------------
The world's largest ...
APPENDIX D is a list of companies with vested interest in the IMD industry.
These companies would have particular interest in SIGNAL ADVANCE's technology
and assets.
Market Available to SIGNAL ADVANCE:
-----------------------------------
SIGNAL ADVANCE's technology will likely be suitable for only a fraction of
the products sold into the above applications. We see the immediate benefit
of SIGNAL ADVANCE in Anti-tachycardia applications, and eventually in
treating epilepsy. In other applications, the impact is likely to be smaller.
Cardio: if ~20% of cardio IMDs are used for the treatment of anti-
tachycardia, and if the contribution of SIGNAL ADVANCE to the success of
products in this segment is ~10%, then SIGNAL ADVANCE could expect to earn
some 2% = 20% X 10% of that $11 billion market.
Neuro: The worldwide market for implantable neurostimulation devices holds
much promise for patients, physicians, device OEMs and investors. While still
considered to be in an infant stage the commonly held opinion of venture
capitalists, equity analysts and most device companies is that the
neurostimulation device market could eventually exceed the market for
implantable cardiac rhythm management devices, currently a darling of the
medtech sector at $11 billion in revenue. If we estimate that this market
will reach such a stage in 15 years or so, we can project some contribution
from neurostimulation in to the calculation of present value. Again, SIGNAL
ADVANCE would participate in the revenue generated at a level of ~2% or less.
We estimate the current growth rate of Cardio applications to be ~18%,
tapering slowly to ~5% in 15 years. We estimate the growth rate of Neuro
applications to explode in 5 years to 25%, tapering to ~15% in 15 years.
SIGNAL ADVANCE' penetration into these applications would be 100%, as SA
has no current competition.
Projecting forward on this basis, we arrive at the following rough figures:
YEAR 3 8 13 18 23
---- ------ ------ ------ ------ ------
Cardio ($millions) 11,000 25,165 36,976 47,192 60,230
Potential Revenue $220 503 740 944 1,205
Neuro ($millions) 0 5,000 15,259 46,566 93,661
Potential Revenue 0 100 305 931 $1,873
------ ------ ------ ------ ------
TOTAL ($millions) $220 $603 $1,045 $1,875 $3,078
These figures are reflected in the Table below and in the Valuation
calculation in APPENDIX E.
Summary
-------
The addressable market for SIGNAL ADVANCE totals approximately $3 billion
in 20 years time, to be penetrated to levels of ~4% with slow initial
impact.
SIGNAL ADVANCE will compete based on superior technology and performance,
across a range of products
VALUE ESTIMATION
The following discussion relates the methodology and assumptions used in
developing a valuation for SIGNAL ADVANCE US Patent Application in the
field of implantable medical electronic devices. The valuation calculation
is shown in APPENDIX E.
Methodology
-----------
FPI's value estimation approach will make use of a composite of market
data, in combination with sector utilization and penetration estimates, to
determine a basis upon which royalty calculations are determined. The
process, following procedures accepted by the US intellectual property
management community, provides a risk-adjusted, discounted cash flow, net
present value, based on the market projections and stage of development
risk factors.
For the purposes of this report, value for SIGNAL ADVANCE's device is
assumed to be realized through royalty income derived from non-exclusive
licenses to US patent application (see APPENDIX A). This is known as the
"Relief from Royalty Approach".
This concept is based on the premise that the value of particular
intellectual property can be measured by what the exclusive licensee of the
property would pay in royalties if it did not own the property and was
required to license it from a third party.
Market Projections - For purposes of valuation, FPI uses the market
projection figures from the Products and Market Opportunities section,
projected out to 2025, the projected life of the patent portfolio
(particularly the new patents).
We have charted the market figures from the table in the Market section
onto the projections shown in APPENDIX E, the Valuation Schedule, for each of
the market segments discussed. We use the year 2008 as the basis year for
Cardio applications and 2013 as the basis year for Neuro applications.
For years 2009-2025, we have projected revenues forward at their average
growth rates consistent with projections outlined in the Market section.
Risk - A discount rate is applied to reflect the risk on investment that is
appropriate for this type of asset. For instance, "very low risk" would be
characteristic of a product made with well-understood technology and sold in
response to existing demand.
For the SIGNAL ADVANCE system, we assign a range of risk factors depending on
the scenario. We view the SIGNAL ADVANCE Business plan projection as Very
High risk, such as making a product not presently sold or even known to exist
using unproven technologies. (50-70%).
Ramp-Up Factor - in developing an estimate of the Net Present Value of the
technology, we must take into account the time required for the technology to
come into use, saturate the available market, and realize revenue. For
purposes of this calculation, we have assumed that the technology will take
SEVEN years to fully penetrate. The applications in Neurostimulation will not
even begin until ~2013 This is reflected in the schedule in APPENDIX E.
Utility Lifetime - it is further assumed that the term for which subject
technology will dominate its market segments is limited by two factors.
First, the patents have are valid for a period of 20 years from disclosure
(filing). The earliest priority date is 2005. We run our calculation through
the year 2025 on that basis. Secondly, it is expected that the technology
will eventually be displaced by newer, better technology. However, in this
case, this seems unlikely, so we continue at 100% penetration throughout the
life of the patent.
Royalty Rate - The rule-of-thumb for determining royalty rates is that the
owner of the intellectual property is entitled to 25% of the profit earned
from its application.
For the SIGNAL ADVANCE system, we assign a conservative royalty rate of 7%
for the products and services sold in their business plan. This royalty rate
is higher than average (~5%) due to the integration of technology and product
design, which makes it unique.
VALUE - Taken in aggregate, the above factors lead to an estimate of the
licensing royalty value of the subject entities in this scenario of up to
~$10.4 Million. This figure could be somewhat higher or lower depending
upon segment utilization, segment penetration, and royalty rates. Details
of this calculation are presented in APPENDIX E, the Valuation Schedule.
As individual values have been calculated for the various applications or
market segments, it is interesting to note that the more valuable
applications are in Cardio. In comparison, the Neuro applications
are of relatively low current value, although their value will grow in time
as the technology matures.
Summary
-------
Including the projected, risk-adjusted licensing royalties, we project A
NET PRESENT VALUE OF UP TO ~$10.4 MILLION. This valuation will increase
rapidly as the technology is proven and then successfully applied to
products in this very large market. Markets projected in the above scenarios
are highly speculative. These markets are unproven, as the
technology is only recently being introduced. Valuations are intended for
planning purposes only.
N.B. THE ABOVE VALUATION IS ONLY AN ESTIMATE WITH NO GUARANTEES OF FUTURE
OUTCOME. IT IS, HOWEVER, DELIBERATELY CONSERVATIVE. WE HAVE INCLUDED ONLY
THOSE MARKET SECTORS FOR WHICH RELIABLE DATA CAN BE CITED. WE HAVE USED
CONSERVATIVE ESTIMATES OF MARKET SHARE AND OF MARKET GROWTH RATES. THERE
MAY BE A NUMBER OF OTHER MARKET SEGMENTS ACCESSIBLE BY THE SUBJECT PATENTS,
AS NOTED IN THE TEXT. THEIR ADDITION WOULD ADD TO THE STATED VALUE. THUS, WE
REGARD THE ABOVE VALUE AS A CONSERVATIVE VALUE FOR THE PATENT(S).
EXHIBIT 99.2 - Expert opinion Letter, David G. Henry, Registered Patent
Attorney
On the Letterhead of David G. Henry
DAVID G. HENRY
Registered Patent Attorney
14 May 2007
To Whom It May Concern:
I have been practicing patent law for over twenty years, and have been
teaching the patent law courses at Baylor Law School for fourteen years.
Despite dealing with hundreds of patent matters (as someone in my position
inevitably does), one rarely comes across truly "pioneering" or "landmark"
inventions. Chris Hymel's systems and methods pertaining to, and made
possible by the unprecedented, early detection of precursors to physio-
logical, electrochemical phenomena in humans appear to be just such an
invention (or family of inventions).
Based on currently available information and understanding, it is my opinion
that Mr. Hymel's inventions will first constitute the foundation of a wholly
new branch of diagnostics and medical treatment. Also, preliminary efforts
are underway to identify and to start to reduce to practice applications of
Mr. Hymel's methodologies in a variety of other fields. In that regard, and
with appropriate capitalization, I expect to see Mr. Hymel's methods and
related systems come to underlie ground-breaking advances in fields which
range from psychiatry to law enforcement to combat training and weaponry to
biomechanical prosthetics.
I and my firm, as well as other outside patent and technical consultants,
are currently working on patent protection, both for protecting Mr. Hymel's
basic methodologies (which are common to all presently anticipated
applications), as well as for a variety of specific applications which are
under active consideration or development, as previously mentioned.
"Excited" is not too strong a description of my reaction to this technology
and its future potential not a term I often use in this context.
Cordially,
/s/ David G. Henry
David G. Henry
EXHIBIT 99.3 - Expert Opinion Letter - Harold L Russell, PhD
On letterhead of: Harold, L. Russell, PhD, NeuroMedics technology, Inc.
April 14, 2012
Dr. Chris M Hymel, President
Signal Advance, Inc.
2520 County Road 81
Rosharon, Texas 77583
Dear Chris:
I am looking forward with much anticipation to collaborating with you to
demonstrate the degree to which Signal Advance technology will improve the
performance of my own technology - repetitive EEG-Driven Light and Sound
Stimulation (rEDLSS) neuro-therapy systems). I expect the reduced response
delay will markedly increase treatment efficacy, thereby decreasing the amount
of time required to produce significant and long lasting increases in children
memory and cognitive abilities as indicated by IQ test scores. Increased scores
on IQ tests are usually thought to be indicative of an increased ability to
learn and perform well in school.
Increased effectiveness resulting from the incorporation of Signal Advance
technology could significantly improve the precision of the stimulation,
improving treatment efficiency and thus, significantly decrease treatment time.
The direct cost of EDLSS treatment could then become even more affordable to
most schools and parents.
It is my belief that Signal Advance technology will likely be seen as a
disruptive technology that forces rapid change in the field of biomedical
instrumentation with early adopters of this technology gaining a significant
commercial advantage over later adopters in the same field.
I am pleased to be able to be a part of and support the development and
implementation of Signal Advance technology.
/s/ Harold L. Russell PhD
Harold L. Russell PhD