La Jolla Pharmaceuticals Company
UNITED STATES SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
Washington, D.C. 20549
SCHEDULE 14A
(RULE 14a-101)
INFORMATION REQUIRED IN PROXY STATEMENT
SCHEDULE 14A INFORMATION
PROXY STATEMENT PURSUANT TO SECTION 14(a) OF THE SECURITIES
EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934 (AMENDMENT NO. )
Filed by the Registrant þ
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Preliminary Proxy Statement |
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Confidential, for Use of the Commission Only (as permitted by Rule 14a-6(e)(2)) |
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Definitive Proxy Statement |
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Soliciting Material Pursuant to § 240.14a-12 |
LA JOLLA PHARMACEUTICAL
COMPANY
(Name of Registrant as Specified In Its Charter)
N/A
(Name of Person(s) Filing Proxy Statement, if Other Than the Registrant)
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Form, Schedule or Registration Statement No.: |
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LA JOLLA PHARMACEUTICAL COMPANY
6455 Nancy Ridge Drive
San Diego, California 92121
NOTICE OF ANNUAL MEETING OF STOCKHOLDERS
To Be Held on Thursday, May 19, 2005
The annual meeting of stockholders of La Jolla
Pharmaceutical Company, a Delaware corporation, will be held at
our offices at 6455 Nancy Ridge Drive, San Diego,
California 92121 on Thursday, May 19, 2005, at
10:00 a.m. (local time) for the following purposes:
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1. To elect one Class III director to serve until the
2008 annual meeting of stockholders and to elect one
Class II director to serve until the 2007 annual meeting of
stockholders. |
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2. To vote on a proposal to amend our certificate of
incorporation to increase the authorized number of shares of
common stock by 75,000,000. |
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3. To vote on a proposal to amend the La Jolla
Pharmaceutical Company 2004 Equity Incentive Plan to increase
the number of shares of our common stock that may be issued
under the plan by 2,800,000. |
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4. To vote on a proposal to amend the La Jolla
Pharmaceutical Company 1995 Employee Stock Purchase Plan to
increase the number of shares of our common stock that may be
issued under the plan by 700,000. |
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5. To ratify the selection of Ernst & Young LLP as
our independent registered public accounting firm for the fiscal
year ending December 31, 2005. |
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6. To transact such other business that may properly come
before the meeting or any adjournment thereof. |
Our board of directors unanimously recommends that you
vote FOR the two nominees named in the accompanying proxy
statement and FOR the other four proposals.
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By order of the board of directors, |
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Steven B. Engle
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Chairman and Chief Executive Officer |
San Diego, California
March 30, 2005
YOUR VOTE IS IMPORTANT
Our board of directors has fixed the close of business on
March 24, 2005 as the record date for determining the
stockholders entitled to notice of, and to vote at, the annual
meeting. All stockholders are invited to attend the annual
meeting. You are urged to sign, date and complete the enclosed
proxy card and return it as soon as possible, even if you plan
to attend the meeting in person. If you attend the meeting and
wish to vote your shares in person, you may do so even if you
have signed and returned your proxy card. Please note, however,
that if your shares are held of record by a broker, bank or
other nominee and you wish to vote at the meeting, you must
obtain from the record holder a proxy issued in your name.
LA JOLLA PHARMACEUTICAL COMPANY
6455 Nancy Ridge Drive
San Diego, California 92121
NOTICE OF ANNUAL MEETING OF STOCKHOLDERS
To Be Held on Thursday, May 19, 2005
INFORMATION CONCERNING THE SOLICITATION
This proxy statement is furnished in connection with the
solicitation of proxies by the board of directors of
La Jolla Pharmaceutical Company, a Delaware corporation, to
be used at our 2005 annual meeting of stockholders to be held on
Thursday, May 19, 2005 at 10:00 a.m. (local time) and
at any and all postponements and adjournments of the meeting.
The meeting will be held at our offices at 6455 Nancy Ridge
Drive, San Diego, California 92121. This proxy statement
and the accompanying proxy card will be first mailed to
stockholders on or about April 11, 2005.
We will pay for the cost of preparing, assembling and mailing
the proxy materials and the cost of soliciting proxies. We will
pay brokers and other persons holding stock in their names or
the names of their nominees for the reasonable expenses of
forwarding soliciting material to their principals. We and our
employees may solicit proxies in person or by telephone,
facsimile or other electronic means. Our employees will not
receive any additional compensation for such solicitation. In
addition, we have engaged MacKenzie Partners, Inc. to assist us
in soliciting proxies. We will pay the proxy solicitor a fee of
approximately $25,000 for such solicitation and will reimburse
it for reasonable out-of-pocket expenses.
VOTING
Our board of directors has fixed March 24, 2005 as the
record date for determining the stockholders entitled to notice
of, and to vote at, the annual meeting. As of March 24,
2005, we had 73,758,850 shares of common stock outstanding
held by 353 record holders in addition to approximately 9,500
stockholders who do not hold shares in their own name. Each
share is entitled to one vote on any matter that may be
presented for consideration and action by the stockholders at
the meeting. The holders of a majority of the outstanding shares
of our common stock on the record date and entitled to be voted
at the meeting, present in person or represented by proxy, will
constitute a quorum for the transaction of business at the
meeting and any adjournments and postponements thereof. Shares
abstained or subject to a broker non-vote are counted as present
for the purpose of determining the presence or absence of a
quorum for the transaction of business.
With regard to the election of directors, votes may be cast in
favor of a director nominee or withheld. Because directors are
elected by plurality, abstentions from voting and broker
non-votes will be entirely excluded from the vote and will have
no effect on its outcome. If a quorum is present at the meeting,
the nominees receiving the greatest number of votes, up to two
directors, will be elected.
With regard to Proposal 2, the affirmative vote of a
majority of the shares outstanding is required for approval.
With regard to this proposal, abstentions and broker non-votes
will be counted in tabulations of the votes cast on a proposal
and both will have the same effect as a vote against the
proposal.
With regard to Proposals 3, 4, and 5, the affirmative
vote of a majority of the shares present in person or
represented by proxy and entitled to vote at the meeting is
required for approval. With regard to these proposals,
abstentions will be counted in tabulations of the votes cast on
a proposal and will have the same effect as a vote against the
proposal, whereas broker non-votes will be entirely excluded
from the vote and will have no effect on its outcome.
Each proxy submitted by a stockholder will, unless otherwise
directed by such stockholder, be voted FOR:
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Proposal 1 |
The election of the two director nominees named in this proxy
statement. |
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Proposal 2 |
The proposal to amend our certificate of incorporation to
increase the authorized number of shares of common stock by
75,000,000. |
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Proposal 3 |
The proposal to amend the La Jolla Pharmaceutical Company
2004 Equity Incentive Plan to increase the number of shares of
our common stock that may be issued under the plan by 2,800,000. |
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Proposal 4 |
The proposal to amend the La Jolla Pharmaceutical Company
1995 Employee Stock Purchase Plan to increase the number of
shares of our common stock that may be issued under the plan by
700,000. |
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Proposal 5 |
The ratification of the selection of Ernst & Young LLP
as our independent registered public accounting firm for our
fiscal year ending December 31, 2005. |
In addition, the persons acting as proxies will cast their votes
in their discretion for any additional matters that are properly
raised for consideration at the meeting. If you submit a proxy,
your shares will be voted according to your direction. You have
the power to revoke your proxy at any time before it is voted at
the annual meeting by submitting a written notice of revocation
to our corporate secretary or by timely providing us with a
valid proxy bearing a later date. Your proxy will not be voted
if you attend the annual meeting and elect to vote your shares
in person. Our board of directors reserves the right to withhold
any proposal described in this proxy statement from a vote at
the annual meeting if it deems that a vote on such proposal to
be contrary to our and our stockholders best interests. In
that event, the proposal withheld will be neither adopted nor
defeated.
PROPOSAL 1
ELECTION OF DIRECTORS
Our Board of Directors
Our certificate of incorporation provides for a board of
directors that is divided into three classes. The terms for each
class are three years, staggered over time. This year, the term
of the directors in Class III, Mr. Engbers and
Dr. Fildes, expire. Mr. Engbers has notified the
Company that, after many years of service, he will not be
standing for re-election to our board of directors.
Mr. Engbers has agreed to complete his term as a
Class III director and will continue to serve in his
capacity as our Lead Independent Director, chairman of the audit
committee, and the audit committee financial expert
until the annual meeting of stockholders. In addition,
Dr. Smith joined the board of directors in 2004 as a
Class II director and will stand for election for a two
year term that expires when the term of the other Class II
director expires. Accordingly, two directors will be elected at
the annual meeting.
Our board of directors is currently composed of six members. If
all of the nominees are elected at the annual meeting of
stockholders, the composition of our board of directors will be
as follows: Class I Dr. Adams and
Mr. Engle; Class II Dr. Smith and
Mr. Martin; and Class III Dr. Fildes.
Therefore, in compliance with our certificate of incorporation,
our board of directors has by resolution decreased the total
number of directors to five members, effective as of the 2005
annual meeting of stockholders.
All of the nominees for election as directors at the meeting set
forth below are incumbent directors. These nominees have
consented to serve as a director if elected and management has
no reason to believe that any nominee will be unable to serve.
Unless authority to vote for any of the nominees is withheld in
a proxy, shares represented by proxies will be voted FOR all
such nominees. In the event that any of the nominees for
director becomes unavailable for re-election as a result of an
unexpected occurrence, such shares will be voted for the
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election of such substitute nominee, if any, as the board of
directors may propose. Proxies cannot be voted for more than two
directors, the number of nominees identified herein.
Nominees for Director
The person listed below is nominated for election to
Class III of the board of directors, to serve a three year
term ending at the 2008 annual meeting and until his successor
is elected and qualified. Our board of directors recommends
that you vote for the following nominee.
Robert A. Fildes, Ph.D., 66, has been a director
since 1991. Since January 1998, Dr. Fildes has served as
President of SB2, Inc., a privately held company that licenses
antibody technology. From June to December 1998, Dr. Fildes
served as Chief Executive Officer of Atlantic Pharmaceuticals, a
publicly held company in the field of biotechnology. From 1993
to 1997, Dr. Fildes was the Chairman and Chief Executive
Officer of Scotgen Biopharmaceuticals, Inc., a privately held
company in the field of human monoclonal antibody technology.
From 1990 to 1993, Dr. Fildes was an independent consultant
in the biopharmaceutical industry. He was the President and
Chief Executive Officer of Cetus Corporation, a publicly held
biotechnology company, from 1982 to 1990. From 1980 to 1982,
Dr. Fildes was the President of Biogen, Inc., a publicly
held biopharmaceutical company, and from 1975 to 1980, he was
the Vice President of Operations for the Industrial Division of
Bristol-Myers Squibb Company. From April 2002 to April 2003,
Dr. Fildes was a director of Polymerat Pty. Ltd. (now
Bio-Layer Pty. Ltd.), a privately held company that develops
surfaces for carrying out biological reactions. Dr. Fildes
is currently a director of Inimex Pharmaceuticals, Inc., a
privately held Canadian biotechnology company and Twinstrand
Therapeutics, a privately held Canadian biopharmaceutical
company focused on discovering and developing targeted produgs.
Dr. Fildes holds a D.C.C. degree in Microbial Biochemistry
and a Ph.D. in Biochemical Genetics from the University of
London.
The person listed below is nominated for election to
Class II of the board of directors, to serve a two year
term ending at the 2007 annual meeting and until his successor
is elected and qualified. Our board of directors recommends
that you vote for the following nominee.
Craig R. Smith, M.D., 59, joined our board of
directors in 2004. From 1993 to 2004, Dr. Smith served as
the Chairman, President and Chief Executive Officer of Guilford
Pharmaceuticals, Inc., a publicly held pharmaceutical company.
He joined Guilford at its inception in 1993 and led its growth
into a fully integrated pharmaceutical company with two marketed
products and two products in Phase 3 clinical trials. From
1988 to 1993, Dr. Smith was Senior Vice President of
Business and Market Development at Centocor, Inc., a publicly
held biotechnology company. From 1975 to 1988, he served on the
faculty of the Department of Medicine at Johns Hopkins Medical
School. He also serves on the boards of the Maryland Chapter of
the Cystic Fibrosis Foundation, the Greater Baltimore Committee
and the Greater Baltimore High Tech Council. Dr. Smith is
the Chair of the Advisory Council for the Institute of Basic
Biomedical Sciences at Johns Hopkins University and a member of
the board of directors of Guilford Pharmaceuticals, Inc.,
Depomed, Inc., a publicly held specialty pharmaceutical company,
and Excigen, Inc., a privately held company that focuses on gene
therapy treatments. Dr. Smith holds an M.D. from the State
University of New York at Buffalo and trained in Internal
Medicine at Johns Hopkins Hospital from 1972 to 1975.
Continuing Directors
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Class I: Currently Serving Until the 2006 Annual
Meeting |
Thomas H. Adams, Ph.D., 62, has been a director
since 1991. Dr. Adams is the founder and Chairman Emeritus
of Genta, Inc., a publicly held biotechnology company in the
field of antisense technology, and, since September 1998, has
been chairman of the board of directors and Chief Executive
Officer of Leucadia Technologies, a privately held company in
the field of medical devices. From 1989 to 1997, Dr. Adams
served as Chief Executive Officer of Genta, Inc. In 1984,
Dr. Adams founded Gen-Probe, Inc., a publicly held
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company that develops and manufactures diagnostic products, and
served as its Chief Executive Officer and Chairman until its
acquisition by Chugai Biopharmaceuticals, Inc. in 1989. From
1980 to 1984, Dr. Adams was Senior Vice President of
Research and Development at Hybritech, which was later acquired
by Eli Lilly and Company in 1986. Dr. Adams has also held
management positions at Technicon Instruments and the Hyland
Division of Baxter Travenol, and served as a director of Biosite
Diagnostics, Inc., a publicly held medical research firm, from
1989 to 1998. In addition, Dr. Adams served as a director
of XiFin, Inc., a privately held application service provider
focusing on the financial management needs of laboratories, and
Bio-Mems, a privately held company. Dr. Adams currently
serves as a director of Xenomics, Inc., a publicly held
development stage molecular diagnostics company. Dr. Adams
holds a Ph.D. in Biochemistry from the University of California
at Riverside.
Steven B. Engle, 50, has been a director since 1994 and
currently serves as Chairman of the board of directors and Chief
Executive Officer. He joined us in 1993 as Executive Vice
President and Chief Operating Officer, assumed the offices of
President and Secretary in 1994, became Chief Executive Officer
in 1995, and Chairman of the board of directors in 1997. From
1991 to 1993, Mr. Engle served as Vice President of
Marketing at Cygnus Inc., a publicly held company that develops
drug-delivery systems for therapeutic drugs, including
Nicotrol®, a smoking cessation transdermal patch. From 1987
to 1991, he was Chief Executive Officer of Quantum Management
Company, a privately held management consulting firm serving
pharmaceutical and other industries. From 1984 to 1987, he was
Vice President of Marketing and Divisional General Manager for
Micro Power Systems, Inc., a privately held company that
manufactures high technology products, including medical
devices. From 1979 to 1984, he was a management consultant at
Strategic Decisions Group and SRI International, where he
advised pharmaceutical, high technology and other companies.
Mr. Engle is a former Chairman of BIOCOM, a regional trade
association for the biotechnology and medical device industries.
Mr. Engle holds an M.S.E.E. and a B.S.E.E. with a focus in
biomedical engineering from the University of Texas.
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Class II: Currently Serving Until the 2007 Annual
Meeting |
Stephen M. Martin, 58, has been a director since 2000. In
June 2001, Mr. Martin retired from CIBA Vision Corporation,
a Novartis Company engaged in the research, manufacture and sale
of contact lenses, lens care products and ophthalmic
pharmaceuticals. Mr. Martin founded CIBA Vision in 1980.
Mr. Martin was President of CIBA Vision Corporation, USA
from 1995 to 1998 and President of CIBA Vision Ophthalmics, USA,
the companys ophthalmic pharmaceutical division, which he
founded, from 1990 until 1998. He served as CIBA Visions
Vice President of Venture Opportunities from 1998 until his
retirement in 2001. Mr. Martin is currently CEO Partner of
Hi Tech Partners, LLC, a privately held consulting firm for
executive management of early stage technology businesses, and
is Managing Partner of Merritt Capital Services, a privately
held firm that assists entrepreneurs in finding venture capital.
Mr. Martin currently serves as a director and a member of
the audit and compensation committees of Alimera Sciences, Inc.,
a privately held ophthalmic pharmaceutical company. From 1997 to
2000, Mr. Martin served as a director of CareLinc
Corporation, a privately held developer of clinical information
management systems. Mr. Martin is the inventor on six
issued U.S. patents and a number of European patents.
Mr. Martin holds a B.A. degree from Wake Forest University
and attended the Woodrow Wilson College of Law.
PROPOSAL 2
PROPOSAL TO INCREASE THE NUMBER OF
AUTHORIZED SHARES OF OUR COMMON STOCK
Our certificate of incorporation currently provides that we are
authorized to issue two classes of stock, consisting of
100,000,000 shares of common stock and
8,000,000 shares of preferred stock. Our board of directors
is authorized to establish and designate the rights, terms, and
preferences of any series of preferred stock. On March 24,
2005, our board of directors approved and adopted an amendment
to the certificate of incorporation, subject to stockholder
approval, to increase the authorized number of shares of common
stock to 175,000,000 shares. The proposed amendment to our
certificate of incorporation does not change the
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authorized number of shares of our preferred stock. The text of
the proposed amendment to our certificate of incorporation is
attached to this proxy statement as Appendix A and is
incorporated herein by reference. Our board of directors
recommends that stockholders approve the proposed amendment to
our certificate of incorporation.
Purpose and Effect of Amendment
As of March 24, 2005:
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there were 73,758,850 shares of common stock issued and
outstanding; |
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there were 8,854,866 options to purchase shares of common stock
outstanding, and the same number of shares of common stock
reserved for issuance upon exercise of such options; |
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there were 686,982 shares of common stock reserved for
issuance upon the exercise of awards not yet granted under the
La Jolla Pharmaceutical Company 2004 Equity Incentive
Plan; and |
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there were 209,591 shares of common stock reserved for
issuance under the La Jolla Pharmaceutical Company 1995
Employee Stock Purchase Plan. |
Accordingly, as of March 24, 2005, there were an aggregate
of 83,510,289 shares outstanding or reserved for issuance.
In addition, pursuant to Proposals 3 and 4, we are
seeking to increase the number of shares available for issuance
under the La Jolla Pharmaceutical Company 2004 Equity
Incentive Plan and the La Jolla Pharmaceutical Company 1995
Employee Stock Purchase Plan by an aggregate of
3,500,000 shares. If both proposals pass, there will be
approximately 87,010,289 shares of common stock
outstanding, or reserved for future issuance. Accordingly, if
both Proposals 3 and 4 are approved, as of March 24,
2005, there will only be 12,989,711 shares of authorized
common stock that are not outstanding or subject to an equity
award or plan. The principal purpose of the proposed charter
amendment is, therefore, to authorize additional shares of
common stock in order to ensure that there is a sufficient
number of shares of authorized common stock available to us in
the future in the event the board of directors determines that
it is necessary or appropriate to raise additional capital
through the sale of securities, to establish strategic
relationships with corporate partners, to provide equity
incentives to employees, officers or directors, or to pursue
other matters.
As of the date of this proxy statement, other than upon the
exercise of outstanding options or issuances under our equity
incentive and stock purchase plans, our board of directors has
no agreement, arrangement or intention to issue any of the
shares for which approval is sought. If the proposed amendment
to the certificate of incorporation is approved by the
stockholders, our board of directors does not intend to solicit
further stockholder approval prior to the issuance of any
additional shares of common stock, except as may be required by
applicable law, rules of The Nasdaq Stock Market, Inc. or other
applicable stock exchange requirements.
Potential Effect of the Proposed Amendment on the Holders of
Common Stock
Although the increase in the authorized number of shares of
common stock will not, in and of itself, have any immediate
effect on the rights of our stockholders, any future issuance of
additional shares of common stock could affect our stockholders
in a number of respects, including by diluting the voting power
of the current holders of our common stock at such time and
diluting the earnings per share and book value per share of
outstanding shares of our common stock at such time.
In addition, the proposed amendment could, under certain
circumstances, have an anti-takeover effect, although this is
not the intention of this proposal. In December 1998, we
distributed rights to the holders of our outstanding shares of
common stock pursuant to an arrangement designed to protect
stockholders from proposed takeovers which the board of
directors believes are not in the best interests of the
stockholders, by providing stockholders with certain rights to
acquire our capital stock upon the occurrence of certain events.
Although the rights provide for the issuance of our
Series A Junior Participating Preferred Stock in the event
rights become exercisable, we may, under certain circumstances,
be required to issue a substantial number of shares of common
stock with respect to the rights. An increase in the number of
authorized shares of common
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stock could, therefore, make a change in control more difficult
by facilitating the issuance of additional shares of common
stock pursuant to the rights. We may also issue shares of
preferred stock without further stockholder approval and upon
terms that our board of directors may determine in the future.
The issuance of preferred stock that is convertible into a
significant number of shares of common stock could have the
effect of making it more difficult for a third party to acquire
a majority of our outstanding stock.
Accordingly, the proposed amendment may have the effect of
permitting our current management, including our current board
of directors, to retain its position, and place it in a better
position to resist changes that stockholders may wish to make if
they are dissatisfied with the conduct of our business. However,
the board of directors is not aware of any attempt to take
control of us, and the board of directors has not presented this
proposal with the intent that it be utilized as a type of
anti-takeover device.
Implementing Proposed Amendment
If approved by the stockholders at the annual meeting, the
proposed amendment to our certificate of incorporation will
become effective upon the filing of a certificate of amendment
with the Secretary of State of the State of Delaware. Although
our board of directors intends to file the certificate of
amendment as soon as practicable after the annual meeting, if,
in the judgment of our board of directors, any circumstances
exist that would make consummation of the proposed amendment
inadvisable, then, in accordance with Delaware law, and
notwithstanding approval of the proposed amendment to the
certificate of incorporation by the stockholders, our board of
directors may abandon the proposed amendment, either before or
after approval and authorization thereof by the stockholders, at
any time prior to the effectiveness of the filing of the
certificate of amendment.
Vote Required and Recommendation of the Board of Directors
The affirmative vote of stockholders having a majority of the
voting power of all outstanding shares of our capital stock
entitled to vote at the meeting is required to approve the
amendment to the certificate of incorporation to increase our
authorized shares of common stock. Proxies solicited by the
board of directors will be voted for Proposal 2, unless you
specify otherwise in your proxy. Our board of directors
recommends that you vote for Proposal 2.
PROPOSAL 3
AMENDMENT TO THE 2004 EQUITY INCENTIVE PLAN
General
The maximum number of shares of our common stock that may be
issued pursuant to awards under the La Jolla Pharmaceutical
Company 2004 Equity Incentive Plan (the 2004 Plan)
is currently 2,000,000. As of March 24, 2005, options
covering a total of 1,313,018 shares are outstanding under
the 2004 Plan and no shares have been previously issued upon the
exercise of options. Accordingly, only 686,982 shares
remain available for new grants. We rely heavily on the 2004
Plan to recruit, retain and reward qualified employees and
directors. On March 24, 2005, our board of directors
unanimously approved, subject to approval by our stockholders,
an amendment of the 2004 Plan to make available an additional
2,800,000 shares of our common stock for awards under the
2004 Plan. Our board of directors recommends that you vote for
Proposal 3.
The following is a summary of the principal features of the 2004
Plan. The summary below is qualified in its entirety by the
terms of the 2004 Plan, a copy of which, as it is proposed to be
amended, is attached hereto as Appendix B and is
incorporated by reference herein.
Summary of the 2004 Plan
Purpose. The purpose of the 2004 Plan is to advance our
and our stockholders interests by providing eligible
persons with financial incentives to promote the success of our
business objectives, by increasing
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eligible persons proprietary interest in us and by giving
us a means to attract and retain employees and directors of
appropriate experience and stature.
Administration, Amendment and Termination. The 2004 Plan
is administered by the compensation committee of our board of
directors. The compensation committee has the authority: to
interpret the 2004 Plan and any agreements defining the rights
and obligations of recipients of awards granted under the 2004
Plan; to determine the terms and conditions of awards; to
prescribe, amend and rescind the rules and regulations under the
2004 Plan; and to make all other determinations necessary or
advisable for the administration of the 2004 Plan.
The compensation committee, in its discretion, selects from the
class of eligible persons those individuals to whom awards will
be granted and determines the nature, dates, amounts, exercise
prices, vesting periods and other relevant terms of such awards.
The compensation committee may, with the consent of the
recipient of an award, modify the terms and conditions of such
award. However, outstanding options may not be repriced without
stockholder approval. In addition, the compensation committee
has no authority or discretion with respect to the recipients,
timing, vesting, underlying shares or exercise price of
Nonemployee Directors Options (as defined below) because
these matters are specifically governed by the provisions of the
2004 Plan. Awards may be granted under the 2004 Plan until the
earlier of the tenth anniversary of the adoption of the 2004
Plan or its termination.
Eligibility. Our directors, employees and consultants,
and the directors, employees and consultants of any affiliated
company, if any, are eligible to receive grants of stock
options, restricted stock, stock appreciation rights, stock
payments, performance awards of cash and/or stock and dividend
equivalents under the 2004 Plan (Incentive Awards).
As of March 24, 2005, 153 people were eligible for
selection to receive awards under the 2004 Plan, consisting of
138 employees other than executive officers, 10 executive
officers (one of whom is also a director), and five non-employee
directors. In addition to being eligible to receive Incentive
Awards, each of our non-employee directors is entitled to
receive an automatic, one-time grant of an option upon becoming
a director and an annual grant of an additional option upon each
re-election as a director or upon continuing as a director after
the annual meeting without being re-elected as a result of the
classification of the board of directors (all of such option are
referred to as Nonemployee Directors Options).
Securities Subject to the 2004 Plan. Currently, no more
than 2,000,000 shares of our common stock may be issued and
outstanding or subject to outstanding awards granted under the
2004 Plan. If Proposal 3 is approved, the number of shares
of our common stock that may be issued and outstanding or
subject to outstanding awards granted under the 2004 Plan will
increase by 2,800,000 shares to 4,800,000. Shares of common
stock subject to unexercised portions of any award that expire,
terminate or are canceled, and shares of common stock issued
pursuant to an award that we reacquire pursuant to the terms of
the award under which the shares were issued, will again become
eligible for the grant of further awards under the 2004 Plan.
The shares to be issued under the 2004 Plan are made available
either from authorized but unissued shares of our common stock
or from previously issued shares of our common stock that we
reacquire, including shares purchased on the open market.
Adjustments. The number and kind of shares of common
stock or other securities available under the 2004 Plan in
general, as well as the number and kind of shares of common
stock or other securities subject to outstanding awards and the
price per share of such awards, may be proportionately adjusted
to reflect stock splits, stock dividends and other capital stock
transactions. If we are the surviving corporation in any merger
or consolidation, each outstanding and vested option will
entitle the optionee to receive the same consideration received
by holders of the same number of shares of our common stock in
such merger or consolidation.
Section 162(m) of the Internal Revenue Code
Limitations. In general, Section 162(m) of Internal
Revenue Code of 1986, as amended (the Internal Revenue
Code), imposes a $1 million limit on the amount of
compensation that we may deduct in any tax year with respect to
our Chief Executive Officer and each of our other four most
highly compensated officers, including any compensation relating
to an award granted under the 2004 Plan. The 2004 Plan is
designed to allow us to grant awards that are not subject to the
$1 million limit imposed by Section 162(m). No single
employee may be granted any awards with respect to
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more than 1,000,000 shares of common stock or, in the case
of a performance award, in excess of $1 million in any one
calendar year; provided, however, that this limitation does not
apply if it is not required in order for the compensation
attributable to such awards to qualify as performance-based
compensation as described in Section 162(m) and the
regulations issued thereunder. Furthermore, if
Section 162(m) would otherwise apply and if the amount of
compensation a person would receive under an award is not based
solely upon an increase in the value of the underlying shares of
our common stock after the date of grant or award, the
compensation committee is authorized to condition the grant,
vesting, or exercisability of such an award on the attainment of
a pre-established objective performance goal. The 2004 Plan
defines a pre-established objective performance goal to include
one or more of the following performance criteria: cash flow;
earnings per share (including earnings before interest, taxes
and amortization); return on equity; total stockholder return;
return on capital; return on assets or net assets; income or net
income; operating margin; return on operating revenue;
attainment of stated goals related to our research and
development or clinical trial programs; attainment of stated
goals related to our capitalization, costs, financial condition
or results of operations; and any other similar performance
criteria.
Change in Control. Unless the compensation committee
provides otherwise in a written agreement, in the event of a
change in control (as defined in the 2004 Plan), the
compensation committee will provide that all options (other than
Nonemployee Directors Options) either: vest in full
immediately preceding the change in control and terminate upon
the change in control; be assumed or continued in effect in
connection with the change in control transaction; be cashed out
for an amount equal to the consideration per share offered in
connection with the change in control transaction less the
exercise price; or be substituted for similar awards of the
surviving corporation. The compensation committee will determine
the effect that a change in control has on an award (other than
an option) outstanding at the time such a change in control
occurs. Immediately prior to a change in control, all
outstanding Nonemployee Directors Options will vest in
full.
Non-Assignability of Awards. Awards are generally not
transferable by a recipient during the life of the recipient.
Awards are generally exercisable during the life of a recipient
only by the recipient.
Stockholder Rights. No recipient or permitted transferee
of an award under the 2004 Plan has any rights as a stockholder
with respect to any shares issuable or issued in connection with
the award until we receive all amounts payable in connection
with exercise of the award and performance by the recipient of
all obligations under such award.
Award Types
Stock Options. Stock options granted under the 2004 Plan
may be incentive stock options (Incentive Stock
Options), which are intended to qualify under the
provisions of Section 422 of the Internal Revenue Code, or
nonqualified stock options (Nonqualified Stock
Options), which do not so qualify.
The exercise price for each option (other than Nonemployee
Directors Options) is determined by the compensation
committee at the date of grant and may not be set below the fair
market value of the underlying common stock on the date of
grant, subject to permissible discounts of up to 15% from fair
market value on the date of grant for Nonqualified Stock Options
in lieu of salary or bonus. Notwithstanding the foregoing, in no
event may the exercise price be less than the par value of the
shares of common stock subject to the option, and the exercise
price of an Incentive Stock Option may not be less than 100% of
the fair market value on the date of grant. Fair market value is
equal to the closing price of our common stock on the date of
grant. On March 24, 2005, the fair market value of our
common stock was $0.61 per share.
The exercise price of any option may be paid in cash or by other
consideration deemed by the compensation committee to be
acceptable, including delivery of our capital stock (surrendered
by or on behalf of the optionee) or surrender of other awards
previously granted to the recipient exercising the option. The
compensation committee may allow exercise in a broker-assisted
transaction in which the exercise price will not be received
until after exercise if the exercise of the option is followed
by an immediate sale of all or a portion of the underlying
shares and a portion of the sales proceeds is dedicated to full
payment of the exercise price.
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Options (other than Nonemployee Directors Options) granted
under the 2004 Plan vest, become exercisable and terminate as
determined by the compensation committee. All options granted
under the 2004 Plan may be exercised at any time after they vest
and before their expiration date or earlier termination;
provided, however, that no option may be exercised more than
10 years after the date of its grant; and provided,
further, that the exercise period may be less than 10 years
if required by the Internal Revenue Code. In the absence of a
specific written agreement to the contrary, and in each case
subject to earlier termination on the options original
expiration date, options will generally terminate: immediately
upon termination of the recipients employment with us for
just cause; 12 months after death or permanent disability;
24 months after normal retirement; and, with respect to
termination of employment for any reason other than just cause,
disability or retirement, three months in the case of Incentive
Stock Options and six months in the case of Nonqualified Stock
Options. Notwithstanding the foregoing, the compensation
committee may designate shorter or longer periods after
termination of employment to exercise any option (other than a
Nonemployee Directors Option) if provided for in the
instrument evidencing the grant of the options or if agreed upon
in writing by the recipient. Options cease to vest upon
termination of employment, but the compensation committee may
accelerate the vesting of any or all options that had not become
exercisable on or prior to the date of such termination. In the
event that a nonemployee director ceases to be a director, an
option granted to such director (other than a Nonemployee
Directors Option) is exercisable, to the extent
exercisable at that date, for a period of five years after that
date or longer if permitted by the compensation committee.
Other Awards. In addition to options, the compensation
committee may also grant performance awards, restricted stock,
stock appreciation rights (SARs), stock payments and
dividend equivalents. Performance awards entitle the recipient
to a payment in cash or shares of our common stock upon the
satisfaction of certain performance criteria. Shares of
restricted stock may be granted by the compensation committee to
recipients who may not transfer the restricted shares until the
restrictions are removed or expire. These restrictions will be
for a period of at least one year for performance-based grants
and three years for non-performance-based grants. SARs, either
related or unrelated to options, entitle the recipient to
payment (in the form of cash, stock or a combination thereof) of
the difference between the fair market value of a share of
common stock as of a specified date and the exercise price of
the related option or initial base amount, multiplied by the
number of shares as to which such SAR is exercised. The
compensation committee may also approve stock payments of our
common stock to any eligible person and may also grant dividend
equivalents payable in cash, common stock or other awards to
recipients of options, SARs or other awards denominated in
shares of common stock. For all such awards, the compensation
committee will generally determine the relevant criteria, terms
and restrictions.
Nonemployee Directors Options. Under the 2004 Plan,
each of our nonemployee directors automatically receives, upon
becoming a nonemployee director, a one-time grant of a
Nonqualified Stock Option to purchase up to 40,000 shares
of our common stock at an exercise price equal to the fair
market value of a share of the common stock on the date of
grant. These Nonemployee Directors Options have a term of
10 years and vest with respect to 25% of the underlying
shares on the grant date and with respect to an additional 25%
of the underlying shares on the date of each of the first three
anniversaries of such grant, but only if the director has
remained a director for the entire period from the date of grant
to such date.
In addition, each nonemployee director, upon re-election to our
board of directors or upon continuing as a director after an
annual meeting without being re-elected due to the
classification of the board of directors, automatically receives
a grant of an additional Nonqualified Stock Option to purchase
up to 10,000 shares of our common stock. These additional
Nonemployee Directors Options have a term of 10 years
and vest and become exercisable upon the earlier to occur of the
first anniversary of the grant date or immediately prior to the
annual meeting of stockholders next following the grant date,
provided that the director has remained a director for the
entire period from the grant date to such earlier date. The
exercise price for these additional Nonemployee Directors
Options is the fair market value of our common stock on the date
of their grant. Finally, all outstanding Nonemployee
Directors Options vest in full immediately prior to any
change in control.
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Federal Income Tax Consequences
The following summary of certain federal income tax consequences
of the receipt and exercise of awards granted by us is based
upon the laws and regulations in effect as of the date of this
proxy statement and does not purport to be a complete statement
of the law in this area. Furthermore, the discussion below does
not address the tax consequences of the receipt and exercise of
awards under foreign, state and local tax laws, and such tax
laws may not correspond to the federal income tax treatment
described herein. The exact federal income tax treatment of
transactions under the 2004 Plan will vary depending upon the
specific facts and circumstances involved and participants are
advised to consult their personal tax advisors with regard to
all consequences arising from the grant or exercise of awards
and the disposition of any acquired shares.
Incentive Stock Options. Except as discussed below, a
recipient of an Incentive Stock Option generally will not owe
tax on the grant or the exercise of the option if the recipient
exercises the option while the recipient is our employee (or an
employee of any parent or subsidiary corporation) or within
three months following termination of the recipients
employment (or within one year, if termination was due to a
permanent and total disability).
If the recipient of the Incentive Stock Option sells the shares
acquired upon the exercise of the option at any time within one
year after the date we issue such shares to the recipient or
within two years after the date we grant the Incentive Stock
Option to the recipient, then:
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if the recipients sales price exceeds the purchase price
paid for the shares upon exercise of the Incentive Stock Option,
the recipient will recognize capital gain equal to the excess,
if any, of the sales price over the fair market value of the
shares on the date of exercise, and will recognize ordinary
income equal to the excess, if any, of the lesser of the sales
price or the fair market value of the shares on the date of
exercise over the purchase price paid for the shares upon
exercise of the Incentive Stock Option; or |
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if the recipients sales price is less than the purchase
price paid for the shares upon exercise of the Incentive Stock
Option, the recipient will recognize a capital loss equal to the
excess of the purchase price paid for the shares upon exercise
of the Incentive Stock Option over the sales price of the shares. |
If the recipient sells shares acquired upon exercise of an
Incentive Stock Option at any time after the recipient has held
the shares for at least one year after the date we issue such
shares to the recipient pursuant to the recipients
exercise of the Incentive Stock Option and at least two years
after the date we grant the recipient the Incentive Stock
Option, then the recipient will recognize capital gain or loss
equal to the difference between the sales price and the purchase
price paid for the shares upon exercise of the Incentive Stock
Option.
The amount by which the fair market value of shares the
recipient acquires upon exercise of an Incentive Stock Option
(determined as of the date of exercise) exceeds the purchase
price paid for the shares upon exercise of the Incentive Stock
Option will be included as a positive adjustment in the
calculation of the recipients alternative minimum
taxable income in the year of exercise.
In the case of an early disposition of shares by a recipient
that results in the recognition of ordinary income, we will be
entitled to a deduction equal to the amount of such ordinary
income. If the recipient holds the shares for the requisite
period described above, and therefore solely recognizes capital
gain upon the sale of such shares, we will not be entitled to
any deduction.
Nonqualified Stock Options. The grant of a Nonqualified
Stock Option to a recipient is generally not a taxable event for
the recipient. Upon the exercise of a Nonqualified Stock Option,
the recipient will generally recognize ordinary income equal to
the excess of the fair market value of the shares the recipient
acquires upon exercise (determined as of the date of exercise)
over the purchase price paid for the shares upon exercise of the
Nonqualified Stock Option. Under recently enacted tax laws, the
time for recognizing ordinary income may occur prior to exercise
if the options exercise price is less than the underlying
stock on the date the Nonqualified Stock Option is granted or
the Nonqualified Stock Option is granted in tandem with a Stock
Appreciation Right. We generally will be entitled to deduct as a
compensation expense the amount of such
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ordinary income. Provided the shares are held as a capital
asset, the recipients subsequent sale of the shares
generally will give rise to capital gain or loss equal to the
difference between the sale price and the sum of the purchase
price paid for the shares plus the ordinary income recognized
with respect to the shares, and such capital gain or loss will
be taxable as long term or short term capital gain or loss
depending upon the recipients holding period after
exercise.
Stock Appreciation Rights (SARs). Generally, the holder
of a SAR will recognize ordinary income equal to the value we
pay (whether in cash, stock or a combination thereof) pursuant
to the SAR on the date the holder receives payment. If we place
a limit on the amount that will be payable under a SAR, the
holder may recognize ordinary income equal to the value of the
holders right under the SAR at the time the value of such
right equals such limit and the SAR is exercisable. In addition,
under recently enacted tax laws, the holder of a SAR with
certain features may be required to recognize ordinary income on
the date the SAR becomes exercisable. We will generally be
entitled to a deduction in an amount equal to the ordinary
income recognized by the holder.
Stock Purchase Rights Restricted Stock. Under
the 2004 Plan, we are authorized to grant rights to purchase
shares of restricted common stock subject to a right to
repurchase such stock at the price paid by the participant if
the participants employment relationship with us
terminates prior to the lapse of such repurchase right. In
general, there will be no tax consequences to a participant upon
the grant of a right to purchase such restricted stock or upon
purchase of such restricted stock. Instead, the participant will
be taxed at ordinary income rates at the time our repurchase
rights expire or are removed on an amount equal to the excess of
the fair market value of the stock at that time over the amount
the participant paid to acquire such stock. A participant who
acquires restricted stock, however, may make an election under
Section 83(b) of the Internal Revenue Code with respect to
such stock. If such an election is made within 30 calendar days
after the participants acquisition of the stock, the
participant is taxed at ordinary income rates in the year in
which the participant acquires the restricted stock. The
ordinary income the participant must recognize is equal to the
excess of the fair market value of the stock at the time of the
participants acquisition of the stock (determined without
regard to the restrictions) over the amount that the participant
paid to acquire such stock. If a participant makes a timely
election under Section 83(b) of the Internal Revenue Code
with respect to restricted stock, the participant generally will
not be required to report any additional income with respect to
such restricted stock until he or she disposes of such stock, at
which time he or she will generally recognize capital gain or
loss (provided the shares are held as a capital asset) equal to
the difference between the sales price and the fair market value
of the stock at the time of the participants acquisition
of the stock (determined without regard to the restrictions). In
the event that a participant forfeits (as a result of a
repurchase) restricted stock with respect to which an election
under Section 83(b) of the Internal Revenue Code has been
made, the participant ordinarily will not be entitled to
recognize any loss for federal income tax purposes (except to
the extent the amount realized by the participant at the time of
such forfeiture is less than the participants purchase
price for such stock). We generally will be entitled to a
deduction equal to the amount of ordinary income, if any,
recognized by a participant.
Other Awards. In addition to the awards described above,
the 2004 Plan authorizes certain other types of awards that may
include payments in cash, our common stock or a combination of
cash and our common stock. The tax consequences of such awards
will depend upon the specific terms of such awards. Generally,
however, a participant who receives an award payable in cash
will recognize ordinary income, and we will be entitled to a
deduction, with respect to such award at the earliest time at
which the participant has an unrestricted right to receive the
amount of the cash payment. In general, the sale or grant of
stock to a participant under the 2004 Plan will be a taxable
event at the time of the sale or grant if such stock at that
time is not subject to a substantial risk of forfeiture or is
transferable within the meaning of Section 83 of the
Internal Revenue Code in the hands of the participant. For such
purposes, stock is ordinarily considered to be transferable if
it can be transferred to another person who takes the stock free
of any substantial risk of forfeiture. In such case, the
participant will recognize ordinary income, and we will be
entitled to a deduction, equal to the excess of the fair market
value of such stock on the date of the sale or grant over the
amount, if any, that the participant paid for such stock. Stock
that, at the time of receipt by a participant, is subject to
restrictions that constitute a substantial risk of forfeiture
and that is not transferable within the meaning of
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Section 83 of the Internal Revenue Code generally will be
taxed under the rules applicable to restricted stock as
described above.
Withholding. In the event that an optionee or other
recipient of an award under the 2004 Plan is our employee, we
generally will be required to withhold applicable federal income
taxes with respect to any ordinary income recognized by such
optionee or other award recipient in connection with stock
options or other awards under the 2004 Plan.
Certain Additional Rules Applicable to Awards. The
terms of awards granted under the 2004 Plan may provide for
accelerated vesting in connection with a change in control. In
that event, and depending upon the individual circumstances of
the recipient, certain amounts with respect to such awards may
constitute excess parachute payments under the
golden parachute provisions of the Internal Revenue
Code. Under these provisions, a participant will be subject to a
20% excise tax on any excess parachute payments and
we will be denied any deduction with respect to such parachute
payment.
We generally are entitled to a deduction equal to the ordinary
income recognized by a recipient in connection with an award.
However, our deduction (including the deduction related to
ordinary income recognized by a recipient) for compensation paid
to our Chief Executive Officer and each our other four most
highly compensated officers may be limited to $1 million
per person annually. Depending on the nature of the award, all
or a portion of the ordinary income attributable to certain
awards granted under the 2004 Plan may be included in the
compensation subject to such deduction limitation.
Interest of Certain Persons in Matters to Be Acted Upon
Each of our current directors, executive officers and employees
is eligible to receive Incentive Awards under the 2004 Plan.
Other than automatic option awards to nonemployee directors, the
compensation committee has the discretion to determine which
eligible persons will receive Incentive Awards under the 2004
Plan. As a result, future participation in the 2004 Plan by
executive officers, directors and other employees is not
determinable. On May 19, 2005, each of Dr. Fildes and
Dr. Smith, if re-elected as a director at the annual
meeting, along with each continuing nonemployee director, will
each automatically receive a Nonemployee Directors Option
to purchase up to 10,000 shares of our common stock. On the
dates of future annual meetings, each continuing and re-elected
nonemployee director will automatically receive an additional
Nonemployee Directors Option to purchase up to
10,000 shares of our common stock.
Vote Required and Recommendation of the Board of Directors
The affirmative vote of a majority of the shares present in
person or represented by proxy and entitled to vote at the
annual meeting, at which a quorum is present, is required to
approve Proposal 3. Proxies solicited by the board of
directors will be voted for Proposal 3, unless you specify
otherwise in your proxy. Our board of directors recommends
that you vote for Proposal 3.
PROPOSAL 4
AMENDMENT TO THE 1995 EMPLOYEE STOCK PURCHASE PLAN
General
The maximum number of shares of our common stock that may be
issued under the La Jolla Pharmaceutical Company 1995
Employee Stock Purchase Plan (the Purchase Plan) is
currently 1,500,000 shares. As of March 24, 2005,
1,290,409 shares have been issued under the Purchase Plan
and 209,591 shares remain available for future issuance.
The Purchase Plan permits qualifying employees to purchase
shares of our common stock every three months at a price that is
85% of the fair market value of the common stock at specified
dates. We use the Purchase Plan as an incentive to employees and
to encourage employee ownership of our common stock. By
increasing employee stock ownership, we hope to align the
interests of our employees with the interests of our
stockholders. Our board of directors has unanimously approved,
subject to stockholder approval, an amendment to the Purchase
Plan to make available an
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additional 700,000 shares of our common stock for issuance
to qualifying employees. Our board of directors recommends that
you vote for Proposal 4.
Summary of the 1995 Employee Stock Purchase Plan
The following is a summary of the principal features of the
Purchase Plan. The summary below is qualified in its entirety by
the terms of the Purchase Plan, a copy of which, as it is
proposed to be amended, is attached hereto as Appendix C
and is incorporated by reference herein.
Purpose and Eligibility. The purpose of the Purchase Plan
is to maintain competitive equity compensation programs and to
provide our employees with an opportunity and incentive to
acquire a proprietary interest in us through the purchase of
common stock, thereby more closely aligning the interests of our
employees and stockholders. The Purchase Plan, including the
right of participants to make purchases of our common stock
thereunder, is intended to qualify under the provisions of
Section 423 of the Internal Revenue Code. Subject to
certain limitations imposed by Section 423 of the Internal
Revenue Code, any employee or, in the discretion of the Purchase
Plans administrator, any employee of a subsidiary, whose
customary employment is for more than five months per calendar
year and for more than 20 hours per week, is eligible to
participate in the Purchase Plan (each, an Eligible
Employee).
As of March 24, 2005, there were 156 employees eligible to
participate in the Purchase Plan, including 10 executive
officers (one of whom is also a director). Participation in the
Purchase Plan is voluntary and depends upon each Eligible
Employees election to participate and his or her
determination as to the level of payroll deductions to be
allocated to the purchase of common stock under the Purchase
Plan. Accordingly, future purchases by executive officers and
other employees under the Purchase Plan are not determinable.
Offering Dates and Grants of Options. The Purchase Plan
is implemented by a series of consecutive and overlapping
Offering Periods commencing on each January 1,
April 1, July 1 and October 1 during the term of
the Purchase Plan. Offering Periods generally last for
24 months each, provided that the administrator of the
Purchase Plan may alter the duration of the Offering Periods
without stockholder approval if the change is announced at least
15 days before the commencement of the first Offering
Period to be affected. The first day of each Offering Period is
referred to as an Enrollment Date. Each Offering
Period is generally composed of eight three-month Purchase
Periods. The last day of each Purchase Period,
i.e., each March 31, June 30, September 30
and December 31, is referred to as an Exercise
Date under the Purchase Plan.
Eligible Employees desiring to participate in the Purchase Plan
may enroll in an Offering Period by submitting a subscription
agreement to us at least five business days prior to the
Enrollment Date for that Offering Period. The subscription
agreement specifies a whole number percentage from 1% to 10% of
the Eligible Employees base salary or hourly compensation
and any cash bonus to be deducted from the Eligible
Employees paychecks during the Offering Period and applied
to the purchase of common stock under the Purchase Plan. The
Eligible Employee then receives an Option to
purchase on each Exercise Date during the Offering Period up to
that number of shares of common stock determined by dividing
$6,250 by the fair market value of a share of common stock on
the Enrollment Date (the Periodic Exercise Limit).
Notwithstanding the foregoing, no participant may receive an
Option (a) if immediately after such grant, the participant
would own stock and/or outstanding options to purchase stock
amounting to five percent or more of the total combined voting
power of all classes of our stock or of any subsidiary or
(b) which permits the participants rights to purchase
stock under all of our employee stock purchase plans and any of
our subsidiaries to accrue at a rate in excess of $25,000 worth
of stock (determined at the fair market value of the stock at
the time such Option is granted) in any calendar year. Eligible
Employees may participate in only one Offering Period at a time.
A participants subscription agreement remains in effect
for successive Offering Periods unless the participant withdraws
as described below.
Payroll Deductions, Exercise and Purchase Price. During
the Offering Period, we deduct from a participants
paychecks the amount specified in the participants
subscription agreement, and such deducted amounts are credited
to a Plan Account that we maintain for the
participant. A participant may increase or decrease (subject to
such limits as the administrator may impose) the rate of his or
her payroll deductions
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during any Purchase Period by providing us with a new
subscription agreement authorizing such a change in the payroll
deduction rate. A participant may not make additional payments
into his or her Plan Account. No interest accrues on payroll
deductions under the Purchase Plan, and we may use all payroll
deductions for any corporate purpose with no obligation to
segregate such amounts.
Unless a participant withdraws from the Offering Period as
described below, such participants Option will be
exercised automatically on each Exercise Date of the Offering
Period to purchase the maximum number of shares of common stock
that can be purchased at the applicable Purchase Price with the
payroll deductions accumulated in the participants Plan
Account and not yet applied to the purchase of shares under the
Purchase Plan, subject to the Periodic Exercise Limit. If, due
to the Periodic Exercise Limit, there remains in a
participants Plan Account immediately following exercise
of such participants Option on an Exercise Date any cash
accumulated during the Purchase Period immediately preceding
such Exercise Date and not applied to the purchase of shares
under the Purchase Plan, such cash will be promptly returned to
the participant.
The Purchase Price of the Option on each Exercise
Date is an amount equal to 85% of the fair market value of a
share of our common stock as of the close of business on the
Exercise Date or as of the open of business on the Enrollment
Date for the Offering Period in which such Exercise Date occurs,
whichever is lower. If the fair market value of the common stock
as of the close of business on any Exercise Date is lower than
the fair market value of the common stock as of the open of
business on the Enrollment Date for the Offering Period in which
such Exercise Date occurs, then all participants in such
Offering Period will be automatically withdrawn from such
Offering Period immediately after the exercise of their Options
on such Exercise Date and automatically re-enrolled in the
immediately following Offering Period as of the first day
thereof.
Withdrawal; Termination of Employment. A participant may
withdraw from an Offering Period by giving written notice to us
at least five business days before the next Exercise Date. On or
promptly following the effective date of any withdrawal, all
(but not less than all) of the withdrawing participants
payroll deductions credited to his or her Plan Account and not
yet applied to the purchase of shares under the Purchase Plan
will be paid to such participant. On the effective date of such
withdrawal, the participants Option for the Offering
Period will be automatically terminated and no further payroll
deductions for the purchase of shares will be made unless the
participant delivers to us a new subscription agreement with
respect to a subsequent Offering Period.
Promptly after a participant ceases to be an Eligible Employee
for any reason, the payroll deductions credited to the
participants Plan Account and not yet applied to the
purchase of shares under the Purchase Plan will be returned to
the participant or, in the case of his or her death, to the
participants designated beneficiary.
Administration, Amendment and Termination of Plan. The
Purchase Plan will be administered by the compensation committee
of the board of directors, which has the authority to interpret
the Purchase Plan, prescribe rules and regulations and make all
other determinations necessary or advisable for the
administration of the Purchase Plan. The compensation committee
is entitled to amend the Purchase Plan to the extent necessary
to comply with and qualify under Rule 16b-3 under the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended (the Exchange
Act), and Section 423 of the Internal Revenue Code,
change the Purchase Periods and Offering Periods, limit the
frequency and number of changes in payroll deductions during
Purchase Periods and Offering Periods, and establish such other
limitations or procedures as the compensation committee
determines in its sole discretion to be advisable and which are
consistent with the Purchase Plan.
The compensation committee may, at any time and for any reason,
terminate or amend the Purchase Plan. To the extent necessary to
comply with or qualify under Rule 16b-3 under the Exchange
Act or Section 423 of the Internal Revenue Code, such
amendments will be subject to stockholder approval. The Purchase
Plan will remain in effect until the earlier of the 20th
anniversary of the adoption of the Purchase Plan or its
termination in accordance with the terms of the Purchase Plan.
14
The compensation committee will consist of three or more members
of our board of directors, each of whom shall be disinterested
within the meaning of Rule 16b-3; provided, however, that
the number of members of the compensation committee may be
reduced or increased from time to time by our board of directors
to the number required or allowed by Rule 16b-3. Our board
of directors may from time to time in its discretion exercise
any responsibilities or authority allocated to the compensation
committee under the Purchase Plan.
Capital Changes. Subject to any required action by our
stockholders, the number of shares subject to outstanding
Options and the number of shares remaining available under the
Purchase Plan, as well as the Purchase Price, Periodic Exercise
Limit and other characteristics of the Options, will be
appropriately and proportionately adjusted for any increase or
decrease or exchange in the issued shares of common stock
resulting from a stock split, reverse stock split, stock
dividend, combination or reclassification of the common stock,
exchange or any other increase or decrease in the number of
shares of common stock effected without receipt of consideration
by us. The compensation committee may, if it so determines in
the exercise of its sole discretion, adjust the number of shares
subject to outstanding Options and the number of shares
remaining available under the Purchase Plan, as well as the
Purchase Price, Periodic Exercise Limit and other
characteristics of the Options, in the event we effect one or
more reorganizations, recapitalizations, rights offerings or
other increases or reductions of shares of our outstanding
common stock.
In the event we propose to dissolve or liquidate, unless
otherwise provided by the administrator, all pending Offering
Periods will terminate immediately prior to the consummation of
such proposed action, and all Plan Account balances will be paid
to participants as appropriate and consistent with applicable
law.
In the event we propose to sell all or substantially all of our
assets, or merge or enter into another business with or into
another entity, each Option will be assumed or an equivalent
option will be substituted by such successor entity or a parent
or subsidiary of such successor entity, unless the administrator
determines, in the exercise of its sole discretion and in lieu
of such assumption or substitution, to shorten the Offering
Periods then in progress by setting a new Exercise Date, in
which case each participants Option will be exercised
automatically on the new Exercise Date unless, at least five
business days prior to such date, the participant has withdrawn
from the Offering Period. An Option will be deemed to be assumed
if the Option confers the right to purchase, for each share of
stock subject to the Option, the consideration received by
holders of common stock for each share of common stock held on
the effective date of the transaction.
Nontransferability, Compliance With Law, Withholding.
Neither payroll deductions credited to a participants Plan
Account nor any rights with regard to the exercise of an Option
or to receive shares under the Purchase Plan nor any Option
itself may be assigned or otherwise transferred or disposed by
the participant in any way other than by will or the laws of
descent and distribution. The compensation committee may treat
any prohibited assignment or transfer as an election to withdraw
from an Offering Period. Options may be exercised during a
participants lifetime only by the participant.
Shares of our common stock will not be issued with respect to an
Option unless the exercise of such Option and the issuance and
delivery of such shares pursuant thereto comply with all
applicable provisions of law, including securities laws and the
requirements of any stock exchange upon which the shares may
then be listed. As a condition to the exercise of an Option, we
may require the participant to represent that the shares are
being purchased only for investment and without any present
intention to sell or distribute such shares, and shares issued
under the Purchase Plan may be subject to such transfer
restrictions and stop-transfer instructions as the compensation
committee deems appropriate. At the time of each exercise of an
Option, and at the time any common stock issued under the
Purchase Plan to a participant is disposed of, the participant
must adequately provide for our federal, state or other tax
withholding obligations, if any, that arise upon the exercise of
the Option or the disposition of the common stock.
Securities Subject to the Purchase Plan. If
Proposal 4 is approved, the aggregate number of shares of
our common stock that may be issued upon exercise of Options
granted under the Purchase Plan will be 2,200,000. Shares of
common stock subject to unexercised Options that expire,
terminate or are cancelled will again become available for the
grant of further Options under the Purchase Plan. As of
March 24, 2005,
15
1,290,409 shares have been issued under the Purchase Plan
and the market value of our common stock was $0.61 per
share.
Federal Income Tax Consequences
The following summary of certain federal income tax consequences
to the participant and us with respect to the grant and exercise
of rights to purchase shares of our common stock under the
Purchase Plan does not purport to be a complete statement of the
law in this area and reference should be made to the applicable
provisions of the Internal Revenue Code. This summary does not
address the tax consequences under foreign, state and local,
estate and gift tax laws, and such tax laws may not correspond
to the federal income tax treatment described herein. The exact
income tax treatment of transactions under the Purchase Plan
will depend upon the specific circumstances of the participant,
and participants are advised to consult their personal tax
advisors with regard to all consequences arising from the grant
or exercise of Options and the disposition of any acquired
shares.
The Purchase Plan is intended to qualify as an employee stock
purchase plan under Section 423 of the Internal Revenue
Code. If certain employment requirements are satisfied, an
employee who is granted a right, or option, to
purchase stock under a plan meeting the requirements of Internal
Revenue Code Section 423 will not be subject to federal
income tax, and we will not be entitled to any deduction, on
either the grant or the exercise of such right.
If the employee makes no disposition of the stock acquired
pursuant to the exercise of such right within two years after
the date of the grant of such stock purchase right (generally,
the first day of each Offering Period, i.e., the Enrollment
Date) or within one year after the transfer of the stock to the
employee pursuant to the exercise of such right, any gain or
loss on the subsequent disposition of the stock generally will
be treated as capital gain or loss, except to the extent that
the employees purchase price was less than 100% of the
fair market value of the stock on the Enrollment Date, and no
deduction will be available to us at the time of such
disposition. If the employees purchase price for the stock
was less than 100% of the fair market value of the stock on the
Enrollment Date, the employee will be required to include in his
or her gross income as ordinary income for the year of the
disposition (or, if earlier, at the time of his or her death) an
amount equal to the lesser of (i) the excess of the fair
market value of the stock on the Enrollment Date over the
purchase price that the employee would have been required to pay
if the employee had exercised such right as of the Enrollment
Date or (ii) the excess of the fair market value of the
stock at the time of the disposition or death over the amount
paid for the stock. No deduction will be available to us with
respect to any such ordinary income recognized by the employee.
Any sale or disposition of the stock acquired under a right
granted under the Purchase Plan at any time within (i) two
years after the Enrollment Date or (ii) one year after the
transfer of the shares to the employee pursuant to the exercise
of such right generally will be treated as a disqualifying
disposition. Upon a disqualifying disposition, the
employee generally will recognize ordinary compensation income
in an amount equal to the difference between the purchase price
and the fair market value of the stock on the date the option
was exercised. Any gain in excess of such ordinary income amount
generally will be capital gain. We generally will be entitled to
a deduction in an amount equal to the amount of ordinary income
recognized by the employee by reason of a disqualifying
disposition.
Interest of Certain Persons in Matters to be Acted Upon
Each of our executive officers identified in this proxy
statement qualifies for participation under the Purchase Plan
and thus is eligible to annually purchase up to $25,000 worth of
our common stock each calendar year under the Purchase Plan at a
discount to the applicable market price. If Proposal 4 is
approved, 700,000 additional shares of our common stock will be
available for sale under the Purchase Plan. The maximum possible
annual benefit for each of these executives is disclosed in the
table below. However, participation in the Purchase Plan is
voluntary and depends upon each Eligible Employees
election to participate and his or her determination as to the
level of payroll deductions. Accordingly, future purchases by
executive officers and other Eligible Employees under the
Purchase Plan are not determinable. No purchase
16
rights have been granted with respect to the shares of common
stock that are the subject of this Proposal 4 and no such
shares have been issued.
Plan Benefits
The following table sets forth the number of shares of common
stock purchased under the Purchase Plan during the fiscal year
ended December 31, 2004 and the estimated maximum dollar
amount of shares of common stock that may be purchased under the
Purchase Plan during the fiscal year ending December 31,
2005 by each of: (i) the named executive officers;
(ii) all of our current executive officers as a group;
(iii) all of our employees, including all officers who are
not current executive officers, as a group; and (iv) all
nonemployee directors, including each of the nominees for
election as director.
La Jolla Pharmaceutical Company 1995 Employee Stock
Purchase Plan
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Maximum | |
|
|
Number of Shares | |
|
Dollar Amount | |
Name |
|
Purchased in 2004 | |
|
Purchasable in 2005(1) | |
|
|
| |
|
| |
Steven B. Engle
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
25,000 |
|
|
Chief Executive Officer and
Chairman of the Board |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Matthew D. Linnik, Ph.D.
|
|
|
2,574 |
|
|
|
25,000 |
|
|
Chief Scientific Officer and
Executive Vice President of Research |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Bruce K. Bennett, Jr.
|
|
|
1,721 |
|
|
|
20,160 |
|
|
Vice President of Manufacturing |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Kenneth R. Heilbrunn, M.D.
|
|
|
2,480 |
|
|
|
25,000 |
|
|
Vice President of Clinical Development |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
William J. Welch
|
|
|
1,493 |
|
|
|
23,440 |
|
|
Vice President of Sales and Marketing |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
All current executive officers as a group (10 people)
|
|
|
19,069 |
|
|
|
208,940 |
|
All employees, including current officers who are not executive
officers, as a group (146 people)
|
|
|
360,382 |
|
|
|
1,047,140 |
|
Nonemployee
directors(2)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(1) |
This figure is the estimated maximum dollar amount that the
Purchase Plan would permit the employee to purchase in 2004.
Under the Purchase Plan, each participating Eligible Employee
specifies a whole number percentage from 1% to 10% of the
Eligible Employees base salary or hourly compensation and
any cash bonus to be deducted from the Eligible Employees
paychecks during the Offering Period and applied to the purchase
of common stock under the Purchase Plan. The estimate above is
based upon the maximum percentage (10%) of each persons
2004 base salary that may be applied toward stock purchases,
subject to the maximum limits in the Purchase Plan as described
in this Proposal 4. The estimate excludes the amount of
cash bonuses that would otherwise be included in the calculation
because the amount of such bonuses for 2005, if any, are not
determinable at this time. This estimate may change depending
upon future changes (i) in Eligible Employees compensation
and (ii) to the Internal Revenue Code and resulting changes
to the Purchase Plan. |
|
(2) |
Nonemployee directors are not eligible to participate in the
Purchase Plan. |
Vote Required and Recommendation of the Board of Directors
The affirmative vote of a majority of the shares present in
person or represented by proxy and entitled to vote at the
annual meeting, at which a quorum is present, is required to
approve Proposal 4. Proxies solicited by the board of
directors will be voted for Proposal 4, unless you specify
otherwise in your proxy. Our board of directors recommends
that you vote for Proposal 4.
17
EQUITY COMPENSATION PLAN INFORMATION
The following table provides information as of December 31,
2004 with respect to shares of our common stock that may be
issued under our equity compensation plans.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(a) | |
|
(b) | |
|
(c) | |
|
|
| |
|
| |
|
| |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Number of | |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Securities | |
|
|
Number of | |
|
Weighted- | |
|
Remaining Available | |
|
|
Securities to Be | |
|
Average Exercise | |
|
for Future Issuance | |
|
|
Issued upon | |
|
Price of | |
|
Under Equity | |
|
|
Exercise of | |
|
Outstanding | |
|
Compensation Plans | |
|
|
Outstanding | |
|
Options, | |
|
(Excluding | |
|
|
Options, Warrants | |
|
Warrants and | |
|
Securities Reflected | |
Plan Category |
|
and Rights | |
|
Rights | |
|
in Column (a)) | |
|
|
| |
|
| |
|
| |
Equity compensation plans approved by security holders
|
|
|
8,978,464 |
(1) |
|
$ |
4.44 |
|
|
|
864,958 |
(2)(3) |
Equity compensation plans not approved by security holders
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(1) |
Outstanding options to purchase shares of our common stock under
the La Jolla Pharmaceutical Company 1994 Stock Incentive
Plan and the La Jolla Pharmaceutical Company 2004 Equity
Incentive Plan. |
|
(2) |
Includes 655,367 shares subject to the La Jolla
Pharmaceutical Company 2004 Equity Incentive Plan and
209,591 shares subject to the La Jolla Pharmaceutical
Company 1995 Employee Stock Purchase Plan (each stated as of
December 31, 2004). |
|
(3) |
If our stockholders approve Proposal 3, the number of
shares available under the La Jolla Pharmaceutical Company
2004 Equity Incentive Plan will be increased by 2,800,000. If
our stockholders approve Proposal 4, the number of shares
available under the La Jolla Pharmaceutical Company 1995
Employee Stock Purchase Plan will be increased by 700,000. |
PROPOSAL 5
RATIFICATION OF SELECTION OF
INDEPENDENT REGISTERED PUBLIC ACCOUNTING FIRM
The audit committee of our board of directors has selected
Ernst & Young LLP to serve as our independent
registered public accounting firm for the fiscal year ending
December 31, 2005. Ernst & Young LLP has served as
our independent registered public accounting firm since our
incorporation in 1989. Representatives of Ernst & Young
LLP are expected to be at the annual meeting, will have an
opportunity to make a statement if they so desire, and will be
available to respond to appropriate questions.
Reasons for the Proposal
The selection of our independent registered public accounting
firm is not required to be submitted for stockholder approval.
Nonetheless, the audit committee is seeking ratification of its
selection of Ernst & Young LLP as a matter of further
involving our stockholders in our corporate affairs. If the
stockholders do not ratify this selection, the audit committee
will reconsider its selection of Ernst & Young LLP and
will either continue to retain the firm or appoint a new
independent registered public accounting firm. Even if the
selection is ratified, the audit committee may, in its sole
discretion, determine to appoint a different independent
registered public accounting firm at any time during the year if
it determines that such a change would be in our and our
stockholders best interests.
Vote Required and Recommendation of the Board of Directors
The affirmative vote of a majority of the shares present in
person or represented by proxy and entitled to vote at the
annual meeting, at which a quorum is present, is required to
approve Proposal 5. Proxies solicited
18
by the board of directors will be voted for Proposal 5,
unless you specify otherwise in your proxy. Our board of
directors recommends that you vote for Proposal 5.
AUDIT FEES
Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm and Fees
The following table presents the aggregate fees agreed to by the
Company for the annual and statutory audits for the fiscal years
ended December 31, 2003 and 2004, and all other fees paid
by the Company during 2003 and 2004 to Ernst & Young
LLP:
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
2003 | |
|
2004 | |
|
|
| |
|
| |
Audit Fees
|
|
$ |
124,000 |
|
|
$ |
265,000 |
|
Audit Related Fees
|
|
|
20,000 |
|
|
|
|
|
Tax Fees
|
|
|
11,000 |
|
|
|
12,000 |
|
All Other Fees
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Total
|
|
$ |
155,000 |
|
|
$ |
277,000 |
|
Audit Fees. The fees identified under this caption were
for professional services rendered by Ernst & Young LLP
for the audit of our annual financial statements and internal
controls over financial reporting and for the review of the
financial statements included in our quarterly reports on
Form 10-Q. The amounts also include fees for services that
are normally provided by the auditor in connection with
statutory and regulatory filings and engagements for the years
identified. Audit fees in 2003 and 2004 include an aggregate of
$34,000 and $47,000, respectively, in fees paid in connection
with our filing of registration statements on Form S-8 and
Form S-3.
Audit-Related Fees. The fees identified under this
caption were for assurance and related services that were
related to the performance of the audit or review of our
financial statements and were not reported under the caption
Audit Fees. Audit-related fees consisted of fees
paid for an audit of our employee benefits plan.
Tax Fees. Tax fees consist principally of assistance
related to tax compliance and reporting.
Approval Policy. Our audit committee approves in advance
all services provided by our independent registered public
accounting firm. All engagements of our independent registered
public accounting firm in 2003 and 2004 were pre-approved by the
audit committee.
BOARD COMMITTEES, MEETINGS AND RELATED MATTERS
During our fiscal year ended December 31, 2004, our board
of directors met 10 times, six of which meetings were
telephonic. All directors attended at least 75% of the aggregate
number of the board meetings and meetings of the committees on
which they served.
Director Independence
Our board of directors has determined that Dr. Adams,
Mr. Engbers, Dr. Fildes, Mr. Martin, and
Dr. Smith are independent within the meaning of
Nasdaq Marketplace Rule 4200(a)(15) as adopted by the
Nasdaq Stock Market, Inc. (Nasdaq). Mr. Engle
was not deemed to be independent because he is our
Chief Executive Officer.
Committees of the Board of Directors
Our board of directors has three standing committees: an audit
committee; a compensation committee; and a corporate governance
and nominating committee. As discussed above, all committee
members have been determined by our board of directors to be
independent. The committees operate under written
19
charters that are available for viewing on our website at
www.ljpc.com, then Investor Relations, then
Corporate Governance.
Audit Committee. It is the responsibility of the audit
committee to oversee our accounting and financial reporting
processes and the audits of our financial statements. In
addition, the audit committee assists the board of directors in
its oversight of our compliance with legal and regulatory
requirements. The specific duties of the audit committee
include: monitoring the integrity of our financial process and
systems of internal controls regarding finance, accounting and
legal compliance; selecting our independent auditor; monitoring
the independence and performance of our independent auditor; and
providing an avenue of communication among the independent
auditor, our management and our board of directors. The audit
committee has the authority to conduct any investigation
appropriate to fulfill its responsibilities, and it has direct
access to all of our employees and to the independent auditor.
The audit committee also has the ability to retain, at our
expense and without further approval of the board of directors,
special legal, accounting or other consultants or experts that
it deems necessary in the performance of its duties.
The audit committee met seven times during 2004, and otherwise
accomplished its business without formal meetings. The members
of the audit committee are Dr. Adams, Mr. Engbers and
Mr. Martin. Mr. Engbers currently serves as the
chairman of the audit committee. Mr. Engbers will continue
to serve as the chairman of the audit committee until the annual
meeting of stockholders, at which time our board of directors
will appoint a new chairman of the audit committee. Our board of
directors has determined that each of Dr. Adams,
Mr. Engbers and Mr. Martin is independent
within the meaning of the enhanced independence standards
contained in Nasdaq Marketplace Rule 4350(d) that relate
specifically to members of audit committees. Our board of
directors has also determined that Mr. Engbers qualifies as
our audit committee financial expert, as that term
is used in Section 401(h)(2) of Regulation S-K.
Mr. Engbers will continue to serve as the audit
committee financial expert until the annual meeting of
stockholders, at which time our board of directors will
designate a new audit committee financial expert.
The Report of the Audit Committee is included in
this proxy statement on page 23.
Compensation Committee. It is the responsibility of the
compensation committee to assist the board of directors in
discharging the board of directors responsibilities
regarding the compensation of our employees and directors. The
specific duties of the compensation committee include: making
recommendations to the board of directors regarding the
corporate goals and objectives relevant to executive
compensation; evaluating our executive officers
performance in light of such goals and objectives; recommending
compensation levels to the board of directors based upon such
evaluations; administering our incentive compensation plans,
including our equity-based incentive plans; and making
recommendations to the board of directors regarding our overall
compensation structure, policies and programs.
The compensation committee met seven times during 2004, and
otherwise accomplished its business without formal meetings. The
members of the compensation committee are Dr. Adams,
Dr. Fildes, Mr. Martin, and Dr. Smith.
Dr. Fildes currently serves as the chairman of the
compensation committee. The Report of the Compensation
Committee on Executive Compensation is included in this
proxy statement beginning at page 24.
Corporate Governance and Nominating Committee. It is the
responsibility of the corporate governance and nominating
committee to assist the board of directors: to identify
qualified individuals to become board members; to determine the
composition of the board of directors and its committees; and to
monitor and assess the effectiveness of the board of directors
and its committees. The specific duties of the corporate
governance and nominating committee include: identifying,
screening and recommending to the board of directors candidates
for election to the board; reviewing director candidates
recommended by our stockholders; assisting in attracting
qualified director candidates to serve on the board; monitoring
the independence of current directors and nominees; and
monitoring and assessing the relationship between the board of
directors and our management with respect to the boards
ability to function independently of management.
The corporate governance and nominating committee met five times
during the course of board meetings in 2004, and otherwise
accomplished its business without formal meetings. The members
of the corporate
20
governance and nominating committee are Dr. Fildes,
Mr. Martin, and Dr. Smith. Mr. Martin currently
serves as the chairman of the corporate governance and
nominating committee.
Meetings of Non-Management Directors. The non-management
members of the board of directors regularly meet without any
members of management present during regularly scheduled
executive sessions of meetings of the board of directors.
Corporate Governance Guidelines
We have adopted a set of Corporate Governance Guidelines that
describe a number of our corporate governance practices. The
Corporate Governance Guidelines are available on our website at
www.ljpc.com, then Investor Relations, then
Corporate Governance, then Corporate
Governance Guidelines.
Lead Independent Director
Our Corporate Governance Guidelines provide for the designation
of a Lead Independent Director. The Lead Independent
Director is elected annually by the independent directors and is
responsible for setting the agenda for and presiding over the
executive sessions of the independent directors, consulting with
the Chairman regarding board meeting agendas, schedules and
information flow and any other functions that may be specified
to the position. Our Lead Independent Director is currently
Mr. Engbers. Mr. Engbers will continue to serve as our
Lead Independent Director until the annual meeting, at which
time our board of directors will designate a new Lead
Independent Director.
Code of Conduct
We have adopted a code of conduct that describes the ethical and
legal responsibilities of all of our employees and, to the
extent applicable, members of our board of directors. This code
includes (but is not limited to) the requirements of the
Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002 pertaining to codes of ethics for
chief executives and senior financial and accounting officers.
Our board of directors has reviewed and approved this code. Our
employees agree in writing to comply with the code at
commencement of employment and periodically thereafter. Our
employees are encouraged to report suspected violations of the
code through various means, including, when appropriate, through
the use of an anonymous toll-free hotline and/or a website. Our
code of conduct is available for viewing on our website at
www.ljpc.com, then Investor Relations, then
Corporate Governance, then Code of
Conduct. If we make substantive amendments to the code or
grant any waiver, including any implicit waiver, to our
principal executive, financial or accounting officer, or persons
performing similar functions, we will disclose the nature of
such amendment or waiver on our website and/or in a report on
Form 8-K in accordance with applicable rules and
regulations.
Communications With the Board of Directors
Our stockholders may communicate with our board of directors, a
committee of our board of directors or a director by sending a
letter addressed to the board, a committee or a director
c/o Corporate Secretary, La Jolla Pharmaceutical
Company, 6455 Nancy Ridge Drive, San Diego, California
92121. All communications will be compiled by our corporate
Secretary and forwarded to the board, the committee or the
director accordingly.
Director Nominations
The corporate governance and nominating committee regularly
assesses the appropriate size of the board of directors and
whether any vacancies on the board of directors are expected due
to retirement or otherwise. In the event that vacancies are
anticipated or otherwise arise, the committee utilizes a variety
of methods for identifying and evaluating director candidates.
Candidates may come to the attention of the committee through
current directors, professional search firms, stockholders or
other persons. Once the committee has identified a prospective
nominee, the committee will evaluate the prospective nominee in
the context of the then current constitution of the board of
directors and will consider a variety of other factors,
including the prospective nominees business, technology,
finance and financial reporting experience, and attributes that
21
would be expected to contribute to an effective board of
directors. The committee seeks to identify nominees who possess
a wide range of experience, skills, areas of expertise,
knowledge and business judgment. Successful nominees must have a
history of superior performance or accomplishments in their
professional undertakings and should have the highest personal
and professional ethics and values. The committee does not
evaluate stockholder nominees differently than any other nominee.
Pursuant to procedures set forth in our bylaws, our corporate
governance and nominating committee will consider stockholder
nominations for directors if we receive timely written notice,
in proper form, of the intent to make a nomination at a meeting
of stockholders. To be timely, the notice must be received
within the time frame discussed below beginning on page 32
under the heading Stockholder Proposals. To be in
proper form, the notice must, among other matters, include each
nominees written consent to serve as a director if
elected, a description of all arrangements or understandings
between the nominating stockholder and each nominee and
information about the nominating stockholder and each nominee.
These requirements are further described below under the heading
Stockholder Proposals beginning on page 32 and
are detailed in our bylaws, which were attached as an exhibit to
our Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q for the fiscal quarter
ended September 30, 2000. A copy of our bylaws will be
provided upon written request to our corporate Secretary.
Director Attendance at Annual Meetings
Our board of directors has adopted a policy that encourages our
directors to attend our annual stockholder meetings. The 2004
annual meeting of stockholders was attended by all five of our
then incumbent directors.
Director Compensation
Retainers and Fees. Directors who are also our employees
receive no extra compensation for their service on the board of
directors. Nonemployee directors receive $1,500 per board
meeting attended in person and $500 per board meeting
attended telephonically. Nonemployee directors also receive
$750 per committee meeting attended in person and
$500 per committee meeting attended telephonically.
Directors are reimbursed for reasonable costs associated with
attendance at meetings of the board of directors and its
committees. Effective as of September 2004, nonemployee
directors receive an annual retainer of $20,000, which is paid
quarterly. The previous annual retainer was $10,000 per
year. The chairman of the audit committee receives an annual fee
of $5,000. The chairman of each of the compensation and the
corporate governance and nominating committees receives an
annual fee of $3,000. All chairman fees are paid quarterly.
Finally, in September 2004, the board of directors approved the
payment of an annual fee of $10,000 to the Lead Independent
Director. This fee is paid quarterly.
Option Grants Under the 2004 Plan. Under the
La Jolla Pharmaceutical Company 2004 Equity Incentive Plan,
each of our nonemployee directors automatically receives, upon
becoming a nonemployee director, a one-time grant of a
non-qualified stock option to purchase up to 40,000 shares
of our common stock at an exercise price equal to the fair
market value of a share of the common stock on the date of
grant. These nonemployee director options have a term of
10 years and vest with respect to 25% of the underlying
shares on the grant date and with respect to an additional 25%
of the underlying shares on the date of each of the first three
anniversaries of such grant, but only if the director has
remained a nonemployee director for the entire period from the
date of grant to such date. In addition, each nonemployee
director will, upon re-election to our board of directors or
upon continuing as a director after an annual meeting without
being re-elected due to the classification of the board of
directors, automatically receive a grant of an additional
non-qualified stock option to purchase up to 10,000 shares
of our common stock. These additional nonemployee director
options have a term of 10 years and vest and become
exercisable upon the earlier to occur of the first anniversary
of the grant date or immediately prior to the annual meeting of
stockholders next following the grant date; provided that the
director has remained a director for the entire period from the
grant date to such earlier date. The exercise price for these
additional nonemployee director options is the fair market value
of our common stock on the date of their grant. All outstanding
nonemployee director options vest in full immediately prior to
any change in control. Each nonemployee director is also
eligible to receive additional options under the 2004 Plan in
the discretion of the compensation committee of the board of
directors. These options vest and become
22
exercisable pursuant to the 2004 Plan and the terms of the
option grant. During the fiscal year ended December 31,
2004, Dr. Smith received a stock option to
purchase 40,000 shares of our common stock upon
joining the board of directors and each of the directors who
were elected at or continued to serve after the 2004 annual
meeting each received an option to
purchase 10,000 shares of our common stock.
Accordingly, we issued a total of 90,000 options to our
nonemployee in the year ended December 31, 2004.
Report of the Audit Committee
The audit committee oversees our financial reporting process on
behalf of the board of directors. Management has the primary
responsibility for the financial statements and the reporting
process, including our systems of internal controls. In
fulfilling its oversight responsibilities, the audit committee
reviewed and discussed the audited financial statements in our
Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended
December 31, 2004 with management, including a discussion
of the quality, not merely the acceptability, of the accounting
principles, the reasonableness of significant judgments and the
clarity of disclosures in the financial statements.
The audit committee reviewed with the independent auditor, which
is responsible for expressing an opinion on the conformity of
those audited financial statements with accounting principles
generally accepted in the United States, its judgments as to the
quality, not merely the acceptability, of our accounting
principles and such other matters as are required to be
discussed under auditing standards generally accepted in the
United States. In addition, the audit committee has discussed
with the independent auditor the auditors independence,
including SAS 61, from us and our management, including the
matters in the written disclosures received by us required by
the Independence Standards Board Standard No. 1. The audit
committee has also considered the compatibility of the
independent auditors provision of non-audit services to us
with the auditors independence.
During 2004, management completed the documentation, testing and
evaluation of our system of internal control over financial
reporting in accordance with the requirements set forth in
Section 404 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002 and the rules
and regulations promulgated thereunder. The audit committee was
periodically informed of the progress of the evaluation and
provided oversight and advice to management during the process.
In connection with this oversight, the audit committee received
periodic updates from management and Ernst & Young LLP
at each regularly scheduled audit committee meeting. The audit
committee also held a number of special meetings to discuss
issues as they arose. At the conclusion of the process,
management met with the audit committee and reviewed the
effectiveness of the Companys internal control over
financial reporting. The audit committee also reviewed the
report of management contained in the Annual Report on
Form 10-K of La Jolla Pharmaceutical Company for the
year ended December 31, 2004 and the Report Of Independent
Registered Public Accounting Firm of Ernst & Young LLP
included in the Annual Report on Form 10-K related to
Ernst & Young LLPs audit of (i) the
consolidated financial statements, (ii) managements
assessment of the effectiveness of internal control over
financial reporting, and (iii) the effectiveness of
internal control over financial reporting. The audit committee
continues to oversee La Jolla Pharmaceutical Companys
efforts related to its internal control over financial reporting
and managements evaluation of the same.
The audit committee discussed with our independent auditor the
overall scope and plan for its audit. The audit committee met
with the independent auditor, with and without management
present, to discuss the results of its examinations, its
evaluations of our internal controls and the overall quality of
our financial reporting. The audit committee held seven meetings
during fiscal year 2004.
Based upon the reviews and discussions referred to above, the
audit committee recommended to the board of directors that our
audited financial statements be included in our Annual Report on
Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2004 for
filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission.
|
|
|
Audit Committee |
|
William E. Engbers, Chairman |
|
Thomas H. Adams, Ph.D. |
|
Stephen M. Martin |
23
Report of the Compensation Committee on Executive
Compensation
Executive Officer Compensation. Our executive
compensation program is designed to provide competitive levels
of base compensation in order to attract, retain and motivate
high-quality employees, to tie individual compensation to
individual performance and our progress, and to align the
interests of our executive officers with those of our
stockholders. In 2004, our executive compensation program
consisted of base salary, cash bonuses and stock option grants.
The compensation committee believes that our ability to execute
our drug development programs and successfully bring products to
market depends heavily upon the quality of our top scientific
and management personnel. Accordingly, the compensation
committee attempts to set base salary for our executive officers
at levels that are competitive with compensation paid to top
executives of similarly situated biotechnology companies, and
not significantly below cash compensation levels available to
our key executives through alternative employment. However,
because of our current and historical need to conserve our cash
resources, rewards for individual performance and our progress
have generally taken the form of stock-based awards, and,
beginning in 1999, limited cash bonuses.
The compensation committee currently administers the
La Jolla Pharmaceutical Company 2004 Equity Incentive Plan
pursuant to which we may grant various stock-based awards
intended to compensate our personnel and align the interests of
the recipients with those of our stockholders. To date, only
stock options have been granted under the 2004 Plan, although
the compensation committee may, in the future, utilize other
types of incentive awards available under the 2004 Plan. The
compensation committee also administers the La Jolla
Pharmaceutical Company 1995 Employee Stock Purchase Plan.
Because of our need to conserve cash, the compensation committee
has used stock options to reward executives for individual
performance and our progress and to provide incentives for
vigorous pursuit of our goals. In general, executive officers
receive a substantial grant of stock options upon first becoming
employed by us. The compensation committee believes that an
initial grant serves two purposes. First, an initial grant makes
up, in part, for any discrepancy between the cash compensation
we pay and salaries and bonuses available from more established
employers which could compete for the services of our
executives. Second, an initial option grant provides a recipient
a meaningful stake in our long-term performance, with any
ultimate realization of significant value from those options
being dependent upon returns to stockholders on investments in
our stock.
In addition to initial grants, executive officers are eligible
to receive periodic option grants based upon our progress and
individual contributions. Such grants, if any, are determined by
the compensation committee with the input and recommendation of
our Chief Executive Officer, except in the case of option grants
to the Chief Executive Officer, which are determined solely by
the compensation committee. In determining award levels, the
compensation committee focuses on our performance and the
contributions made by individual executives to that performance.
The compensation committee believes that such a retrospective
analysis is most appropriate and practicable for a
development-stage biopharmaceutical enterprise like ours, which
operates in an uncertain environment and without the same types
of standard measures of performance as are available to more
seasoned companies.
The compensation committee periodically reviews the
effectiveness and competitiveness of our executive compensation
structure with the assistance of an independent consultant. The
consultant is engaged by, and reports directly to, the committee.
Chief Executive Officer Compensation. We face significant
challenges in the coming years and will rely heavily upon our
Chief Executive Officer for leadership, strategic direction and
operational effectiveness. Our goals include establishing one or
more collaborative agreements to assist us in the development of
Riquent®, raising additional financing, obtaining FDA
clearance to market Riquent, and preparing and filing a
Marketing Authorization Application with the European Medicines
Evaluation Agency. Our Chief Executive Officer will have
ultimate responsibility for these goals as part of maximizing
stockholders returns on their investments in us and the
compensation committee believes stockholders are best served if
our Chief Executive Officer has significant incentives to meet
these expectations. In January 2004, our Chief Executive Officer
received a cash
24
bonus of $144,474 primarily in recognition of completing and
filing a New Drug Application for Riquent. In May 2004, our
Chief Executive Officer received options to purchase an
aggregate of 300,000 shares of our common stock primarily
in recognition of his leadership of our regulatory, product
development, scientific and business teams in completing and
filing a New Drug Application for Riquent, raising additional
capital and continuing to build a strong organization. The
compensation committee determines our Chief Executive
Officers bonus and option grants on the basis of its
qualitative evaluation of the Chief Executive Officers
contributions. The compensation committee did not attempt to
apply any specific quantitative measures to the Chief Executive
Officers compensation, or to provide any specific dollar
value of option-based compensation to the Chief Executive
Officer, due to the difficulty of determining the long-term
value of an investment in our stock.
|
|
|
Compensation Committee |
|
Robert A. Fildes, Ph.D., Chairman |
|
Thomas H. Adams, Ph.D. |
|
Stephen M. Martin |
|
Craig R. Smith, M.D. |
Compensation Committee Interlocks and Insider
Participation
There are no compensation committee interlocks between us and
other entities involving our executive officers and directors
who serve as executive officers or directors of such other
entities. During the last completed fiscal year, no member of
the compensation committee was a current or former officer or
employee.
25
EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION AND OTHER INFORMATION
Summary Compensation Table
The following table sets forth the compensation paid for the
last three fiscal years to our Chief Executive Officer and our
four most highly compensated executive officers other than the
Chief Executive Officer who were serving as executive officers
at the end of our fiscal year ended December 31, 2004 and
whose total annual salary and bonus for that fiscal year
exceeded $100,000 (collectively, the named executive
officers).
|
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|
|
|
|
|
|
|
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|
|
|
|
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|
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|
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|
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|
|
Long-Term | |
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|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Compensation | |
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|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Awards | |
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|
|
|
|
|
Annual Compensation | |
|
Securities | |
|
|
|
|
|
|
| |
|
Underlying | |
|
All Other | |
Name and Principal Position |
|
Year | |
|
Salary ($) | |
|
Bonus ($) | |
|
Options (#) | |
|
Compensation ($) | |
|
|
| |
|
| |
|
| |
|
| |
|
| |
Steven B. Engle
|
|
|
2004 |
|
|
$ |
418,855 |
|
|
$ |
144,474 |
|
|
|
300,000 |
|
|
$ |
|
|
|
Chief Executive Officer and |
|
|
2003 |
|
|
|
392,798 |
|
|
|
140,664 |
|
|
|
300,000 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Chairman of the Board |
|
|
2002 |
|
|
|
374,946 |
|
|
|
77,406 |
|
|
|
515,000 |
|
|
|
|
|
Matthew D. Linnik, Ph.D.
|
|
|
2004 |
|
|
|
290,577 |
|
|
|
87,998 |
|
|
|
122,000 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Chief Scientific Officer and |
|
|
2003 |
|
|
|
275,445 |
|
|
|
77,035 |
|
|
|
150,000 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Executive Vice President of |
|
|
2002 |
|
|
|
251,158 |
|
|
|
40,661 |
|
|
|
150,000 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Research |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Bruce K.
Bennett, Jr.(1)
|
|
|
2004 |
|
|
|
201,065 |
|
|
|
52,302 |
|
|
|
70,000 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Vice President of Manufacturing |
|
|
2003 |
|
|
|
188,269 |
|
|
|
52,567 |
|
|
|
90,000 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
2002 |
|
|
|
170,731 |
|
|
|
458 |
|
|
|
130,000 |
|
|
|
|
|
Kenneth R.
Heilbrunn, M.D.(2)
|
|
|
2004 |
|
|
|
289,401 |
|
|
|
75,190 |
|
|
|
80,000 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Vice President of |
|
|
2003 |
|
|
|
275,050 |
|
|
|
54,195 |
|
|
|
90,000 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Clinical Development |
|
|
2002 |
|
|
|
158,823 |
|
|
|
458 |
|
|
|
145,000 |
|
|
|
25,000 |
(3) |
William J. Welch
|
|
|
2004 |
|
|
|
233,184 |
|
|
|
60,743 |
|
|
|
90,000 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Vice President of Sales and |
|
|
2003 |
|
|
|
212,827 |
|
|
|
57,189 |
|
|
|
82,500 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Marketing |
|
|
2002 |
|
|
|
193,091 |
|
|
|
31,181 |
|
|
|
75,000 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(1) |
Mr. Bennett joined us in January 2002. As a result, the
amounts paid to him in 2002 reflect only a partial years
compensation. |
|
(2) |
Dr. Heilbrunn joined us in June 2002. As a result, the
amounts paid to him in 2002 reflect only a partial years
compensation. |
|
(3) |
The amount consisted of relocation expense reimbursement. |
Option Grants in Last Fiscal Year
The following table sets forth information regarding stock
options granted to the named executive officers during the
fiscal year ended December 31, 2004.
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|
|
|
Individual Grants | |
|
Potential Realizable | |
|
|
| |
|
Value at Assumed Annual | |
|
|
Number of | |
|
Percent of | |
|
|
|
Rates of Stock Price | |
|
|
Securities | |
|
Total Options | |
|
|
|
Appreciation for | |
|
|
Underlying | |
|
Granted to | |
|
Exercise | |
|
|
|
Option Term(4) | |
|
|
Options | |
|
Employees in | |
|
Price | |
|
Expiration | |
|
| |
Name |
|
Granted (#)(1) | |
|
Fiscal Year (%) | |
|
($/share)(2) | |
|
Date(3) | |
|
5% ($) | |
|
10% ($) | |
|
|
| |
|
| |
|
| |
|
| |
|
| |
|
| |
Steven B. Engle
|
|
|
300,000 |
|
|
|
17.04 |
|
|
$ |
2.96 |
|
|
|
5/21/14 |
|
|
$ |
558,458 |
|
|
$ |
1,415,243 |
|
Matthew D. Linnik
|
|
|
122,000 |
|
|
|
6.93 |
|
|
|
2.96 |
|
|
|
5/21/14 |
|
|
|
227,106 |
|
|
|
575,532 |
|
Bruce K. Bennett, Jr.
|
|
|
70,000 |
|
|
|
3.98 |
|
|
|
2.96 |
|
|
|
5/21/14 |
|
|
|
130,307 |
|
|
|
330,223 |
|
Kenneth R. Heilbrunn
|
|
|
80,000 |
|
|
|
4.54 |
|
|
|
2.96 |
|
|
|
5/21/14 |
|
|
|
148,922 |
|
|
|
377,398 |
|
William J. Welch
|
|
|
90,000 |
|
|
|
5.11 |
|
|
|
2.96 |
|
|
|
5/21/14 |
|
|
|
167,538 |
|
|
|
424,573 |
|
|
|
(1) |
A portion of the options were granted under the La Jolla
Pharmaceutical Company 1994 Stock Incentive Plan (the 1994
Plan) and a portion of the options were granted under the
2004 Plan. The 1994 and |
26
|
|
|
2004 Plans are administered by the compensation committee of the
board of directors which has broad discretion and authority to
construe and interpret the 1994 and 2004 Plans and to modify
outstanding options. All granted options vest and become
exercisable pursuant to the 1994 and 2004 Plans between the date
of the grant and May 21, 2007. |
|
|
(2) |
The exercise price and tax withholding obligations related to
the exercise may be paid by delivery of cash or already owned
shares or offset by the underlying shares, subject to certain
conditions. The exercise price for each grant is the market
price of our common stock on the date of grant. |
|
(3) |
All of the options are exercisable for a term of 10 years,
subject to earlier termination upon certain events related to
termination of employment or if we experience a change in
control. |
|
(4) |
The potential realizable values listed are based upon an
assumption that the market price of our common stock appreciates
at the stated rate, compounded annually, from the date of grant
to the expiration date. The 5% and 10% assumed rates of
appreciation are determined by the rules of the Securities and
Exchange Commission and do not represent our estimate of the
future market value of the common stock. Actual gains, if any,
are dependent upon the future market price of our common stock. |
Aggregated Option Exercises in Last Fiscal Year and Fiscal
Year-End Option Values
The following table sets forth the number of shares acquired on
exercise of stock options and the aggregate gains realized on
exercise during the fiscal year ended December 31, 2004 by
the named executive officers. The table also sets forth the
number of shares covered by exercisable and unexercisable
options held by such executives on December 31, 2004, and
the aggregate gains that would have been realized had these
options been exercised on that date, even though the exercisable
options were not exercised and the unexercisable options could
not have been exercised.
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|
|
|
Number of Securities | |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Underlying Unexercised | |
|
Value of Unexercised | |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Options at | |
|
In-the-Money Options at | |
|
|
Shares | |
|
Value | |
|
Fiscal Year End (#) | |
|
Fiscal Year End ($)(2) | |
|
|
Acquired on | |
|
Realized | |
|
| |
|
| |
Name |
|
Exercise (#) | |
|
($)(1) | |
|
Exercisable | |
|
Unexercisable | |
|
Exercisable | |
|
Unexercisable | |
|
|
| |
|
| |
|
| |
|
| |
|
| |
|
| |
Steven B. Engle
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
250,000 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
$ |
305,786 |
|
|
|
|
|
Matthew D. Linnik
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
82,792 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
98,605 |
|
|
|
|
|
Bruce K. Bennett, Jr.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Kenneth R. Heilbrunn
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
William J. Welch
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(1) |
This amount represents the difference between the exercise price
of the options and the market price of our common stock on the
date of exercise. |
|
(2) |
These amounts represent the difference between the exercise
price of the in-the-money options and the market price of our
common stock on December 31, 2004, the last trading day of
2004. The closing price of our common stock on that day on the
Nasdaq National Market was $1.67. Options are in-the-money if
the market value of the shares covered thereby is greater than
the option exercise price. |
Employment Agreements
Steven B. Engle. Mr. Engles employment
agreement provides for a minimum annual salary of $273,000 and
entitles him to receive a severance payment in the event of his
involuntary termination without cause or if his employment is
terminated in connection with a change in control. The severance
amount is equal to 24 months of pay at his then current
base salary and up to 24 months of medical, dental and life
insurance coverage for Mr. Engle and his family. His
employment will be deemed to be terminated in connection with a
change in control if his employment is terminated or if he
resigns following: (i) any change in his title to any
position other than President and Chief Executive Officer of the
surviving company; (ii) any change in his reporting
responsibility such that he does not report directly to the
board of directors of the surviving company on all matters;
(iii) any material reduction by us or any successor in his
responsibilities; (iv) any requirement
27
that his place of employment be in other than the San Diego
area; or (v) any material breach by us or any successor of
his employment agreement. Also, all employee stock options and
other performance awards granted to Mr. Engle before the
termination of his employment without cause or in connection
with a change in control will automatically vest and become
fully exercisable as of his termination date and will remain
exercisable for a period equal to the remaining term of the
employee stock option or other performance award as provided by
the applicable plan or grant pursuant to which the options or
awards were granted. If, within one year from the termination of
Mr. Engles employment, employee stock options granted
to any of our executive officers or non-employee directors or
those of any successor are repriced, we are required to provide
similar repricing for all outstanding employee stock options
granted to Mr. Engle before his termination date. If
Mr. Engles employment is terminated by Mr. Engle
for any reason other than under circumstances where we would be
entitled to terminate him for cause, then all employee stock
options granted to him before the termination of his employment
will remain exercisable for a period of one year from his
termination date or such longer period as provided by the
applicable plan or grant pursuant to which the options were
granted. Finally, if we experience an acquisition, merger,
reorganization or similar transaction within 30 days of
Mr. Engles termination of employment, Mr. Engle
may be eligible to receive a cash bonus of $100,000.
Mr. Engles current annual base salary is $420,000.
Matthew D. Linnik. Dr. Linniks employment
agreement entitles him to receive a severance payment in the
event of his involuntary termination without cause or if his
employment is terminated in connection with a change in control.
The severance amount is equal to nine months of pay at his then
current base salary and up to nine months of medical and dental
coverage for Dr. Linnik and/or his dependants. His
employment will be deemed to be terminated in connection with a
change in control if, within 180 days of the date of the
change in control: (i) his employment is terminated;
(ii) his position is eliminated as a result of a reduction
in force made to reduce over-capacity or unnecessary duplication
of personnel and he is not offered a replacement position with
us or our successor as a vice president with compensation and
functional duties substantially similar to the compensation and
duties in effect immediately before the change in control; or
(iii) he resigns because he is required to be employed more
than 50 miles from our current headquarters. Also, all
employee stock options granted to Dr. Linnik as of the date
of the employment agreement will automatically vest and become
fully exercisable as of his termination date if his termination
of employment is without cause or is in connection with a change
in control, and will remain exercisable for a period of one year
from his termination date or such longer period as provided by
the applicable plan or grant pursuant to which the options were
granted. Dr. Linniks current annual base salary is
$291,769.
Bruce K. Bennett, Jr. Mr. Bennetts
employment agreement entitles him to receive a severance payment
in the event of his involuntary termination without cause or if
his employment is terminated in connection with a change in
control. The severance amount is equal to up to nine months of
pay at his then current base salary and up to nine months of
medical and dental coverage for Mr. Bennett and/or his
dependents. His employment will be deemed to be terminated in
connection with a change in control if, within 180 days of
the date of the change in control: (i) his employment is
terminated; (ii) his position is eliminated as a result of
a reduction in force made to reduce over-capacity or unnecessary
duplication of personnel and he is not offered a replacement
position with the Company or its successor as a vice president
with compensation and functional duties substantially similar to
the compensation and duties in effect immediately before the
change in control; or (iii) he resigns because he is
required to be employed more than 50 miles from our current
headquarters. Also, all employee stock options granted to
Mr. Bennett as of the date of the employment agreement will
automatically vest and become fully exercisable as of his
termination date if his termination of employment is without
cause or is in connection with a change in control, and will
remain exercisable for a period of one year from his termination
date or such longer period as provided by the applicable plan or
grant pursuant to which the options were granted.
Mr. Bennetts current annual base salary is $201,582.
28
Kenneth R. Heilbrunn. Dr. Heilbrunns
employment agreement entitles him to receive a severance payment
in the event of his involuntary termination without cause or if
his employment is terminated in connection with a change in
control. The severance amount is equal to up to nine months of
pay at his then current base salary and up to nine months of
medical and dental coverage for Dr. Heilbrunn and/or his
dependants. His employment will be deemed to be terminated in
connection with a change in control if, within 180 days of
the date of the change in control: (i) his employment is
terminated; (ii) his position is eliminated as a result of
a reduction in force made to reduce over-capacity or unnecessary
duplication of personnel and he is not offered a replacement
position with the Company or its successor as a vice president
with compensation and functional duties substantially similar to
the compensation and duties in effect immediately before the
change in control; or (iii) he resigns because he is
required to be employed more than 50 miles from our current
headquarters. Also, all employee stock options granted to
Dr. Heilbrunn as of the date of the employment agreement
will automatically vest and become fully exercisable as of his
termination date if his termination of employment is without
cause or is in connection with a change in control, and will
remain exercisable for a period of one year from his termination
date or such longer period as provided by the applicable plan or
grant pursuant to which the options were granted.
Dr. Heilbrunns current annual base salary is $290,588.
William J. Welch. Mr. Welchs employment
agreement entitles him to receive a severance payment in the
event of his involuntary termination without cause or if his
employment is terminated in connection with a change in control.
The severance amount is equal to nine months of pay at his then
current base salary. His employment will be deemed to be
terminated in connection with a change in control if, within
180 days of the date of the change in control: (i) his
employment is terminated; (ii) his position is eliminated
as a result of a reduction in force made to reduce over-capacity
or unnecessary duplication of personnel and he is not offered a
replacement position with us or our successor as a vice
president with compensation and functional duties substantially
similar to the compensation and duties in effect immediately
before the change in control; or (iii) he resigns because
he is required to be employed more than 50 miles from our
current headquarters. Also, all employee stock options granted
to Mr. Welch as of the date of the employment agreement
will automatically vest and become fully exercisable as of his
termination date if his termination of employment is without
cause or is in connection with a change in control, and will
remain exercisable for a period of one year from his termination
date or such longer period as provided by the applicable plan or
grant pursuant to which the options were granted.
Mr. Welchs current annual base salary is $234,407.
29
STOCK PERFORMANCE GRAPH
The following graph compares the cumulative total stockholder
return on our common stock for the five years ended
December 31, 2004 with the Center for Research in
Securities Prices (CRSP) Total Return Index for the
Nasdaq Stock Market (U.S. Companies) and the CRSP Total
Return Index for Nasdaq Pharmaceutical Stocks (comprising all
companies listed in the Nasdaq Stock Market under SIC 283). The
graph assumes that $100 was invested on December 31, 1999
in our common stock and each index and that all dividends were
reinvested. No cash dividends have been declared on our common
stock. The comparisons in the graph are required by the
Securities and Exchange Commission and are not intended to
forecast or be indicative of possible future performance of our
common stock.
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1999 |
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2000 |
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2001 |
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2002 |
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2003 |
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2004 |
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La Jolla Pharmaceutical Company
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100 |
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186.45 |
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353.22 |
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256.82 |
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168.31 |
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65.98 |
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Nasdaq - US
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100 |
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60.31 |
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47.84 |
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33.07 |
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49.45 |
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53.81 |
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Nasdaq - Pharmaceuticals
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100 |
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124.73 |
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106.31 |
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68.69 |
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100.69 |
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107.22 |
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30
SECURITY OWNERSHIP OF CERTAIN BENEFICIAL OWNERS AND
MANAGEMENT
The following table sets forth information regarding the
beneficial ownership of our common stock as of March 24,
2005, by:
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each person who is known by us to be the beneficial owner of
more than 5% of our common stock; |
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each of our current directors and nominees; |
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each of our executive officers listed in the summary
compensation table; and |
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all of our directors and executive officers as a group. |
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Amount and Nature of | |
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Percent of | |
Name and Address of Beneficial Owner(1) |
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Beneficial Ownership(2) | |
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Class (%)(3) | |
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Federated Investors, Inc.
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7,558,600 |
(4) |
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10.2 |
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Federated Investors Tower
Pittsburgh, PA 15222 |
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Alejandro Gonzalez
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5,859,720 |
(5) |
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7.9 |
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Ruben Dario #223 5-A
Chapultepec Morales
Mexico, D.F. 05 11570 |
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Mazama Capital Management, Inc.
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4,531,420 |
(6) |
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6.1 |
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One S.W. Columbia, Suite 1500
Portland, Oregon 97258 |
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Thomas H. Adams, Ph.D.
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158,906 |
(7) |
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* |
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William E. Engbers
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144,906 |
(8) |
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* |
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Steven B. Engle
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2,241,484 |
(9) |
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3.0 |
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Robert A. Fildes, Ph.D.
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189,907 |
(10) |
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* |
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Stephen M. Martin
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86,311 |
(11) |
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* |
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Craig R. Smith, M.D.
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10,000 |
(8) |
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* |
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Bruce K. Bennett, Jr.
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214,650 |
(12) |
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* |
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Kenneth R. Heilbrunn, M.D.
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201,861 |
(13) |
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* |
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Matthew D. Linnik, Ph.D.
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595,533 |
(14) |
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* |
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William J. Welch
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243,575 |
(15) |
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* |
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All directors and executive officers as a group (15 persons)
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5,101,138 |
(16) |
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6.9 |
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(1) |
Unless otherwise indicated, the address for each beneficial
owner is care of La Jolla Pharmaceutical Company, 6455
Nancy Ridge Drive, San Diego, California 92121. |
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(2) |
The table below includes the number of shares underlying options
that are exercisable within 60 days from March 24,
2005. All information with respect to beneficial ownership is
based upon filings made by the respective beneficial owners with
the Securities and Exchange Commission or information provided
to the Company by such beneficial owners. The persons named in
the table have sole voting and investment power with respect to
all shares of common stock shown as beneficially owned by them,
subject to community property laws. |
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(3) |
On March 24, 2005, there were 73,758,850 shares of
common stock outstanding. Shares not outstanding that are
subject to options exercisable by the holder thereof within
60 days of March 24, 2005 are deemed outstanding for
the purposes of calculating the number and percentage owned by
such stockholder, but not deemed outstanding for the purpose of
calculating the percentage owned by each other stockholder
listed. |
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(4) |
Based upon Form 13G filed by, among others, Federated
Investors, Inc. on February 17, 2005. |
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(5) |
Based upon Form 4/ A filed by the reporting person on
February 15, 2005. |
31
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(6) |
Based upon Form 13G filed by, among others, Mazama Capital
Management, Inc. on February 14, 2005. |
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(7) |
Includes 151,906 shares subject to options that are
exercisable within 60 days. |
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(8) |
All shares are subject to options that are exercisable within
60 days. |
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(9) |
Includes 2,240,000 shares subject to options that are
exercisable within 60 days. |
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(10) |
Includes 106,843 shares subject to options that are
exercisable within 60 days. |
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(11) |
Includes 86,111 shares subject to options that are
exercisable within 60 days. |
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(12) |
Includes 175,000 shares subject to options that are
exercisable within 60 days. |
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(13) |
Includes 190,833 shares subject to options that are
exercisable within 60 days. |
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(14) |
Includes 590,169 shares subject to options that are
exercisable within 60 days. |
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(15) |
Includes 241,666 shares subject to options that are
exercisable within 60 days. |
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(16) |
Includes 4,887,451 shares subject to options that are
exercisable within 60 days. |
SECTION 16(a) BENEFICIAL OWNERSHIP REPORTING
COMPLIANCE
Under the securities laws of the United States, our directors,
officers and persons who own more than 10% of our equity
securities are required to report their initial ownership of our
equity securities and any subsequent changes in that ownership
to the Securities and Exchange Commission and the Nasdaq Stock
Market. Specific due dates for these reports have been
established, and we are required to disclose in this proxy
statement any late filings during the fiscal year ended
December 31, 2004. To our knowledge, based solely upon our
review of the copies of such reports required to be furnished to
us during the fiscal year ended December 31, 2004, all of
these reports were timely filed.
OTHER INFORMATION
Other Matters of Business
Our board of directors currently is not aware of any other
matters that are to be presented for action at the annual
meeting. If any other matters properly come before the annual
meeting or any adjournments or postponements thereof, the
persons named in the enclosed proxy will have the discretionary
authority to vote all proxies received with respect to such
matters in accordance with their judgment.
Stockholder Proposals
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2005 Annual Meeting Proposals |
Our amended and restated bylaws require that a stockholder give
our corporate Secretary timely written notice of any proposal or
nomination of a director. To be timely, such written notice must
be received by our corporate Secretary not less than
90 days nor more than 120 days prior to a scheduled
annual meeting of stockholders, or if less than
95 days notice or prior public disclosure of the date
of the scheduled annual meeting of stockholders is given or
made, such written notice must be received by our corporate
Secretary not later than the close of business on the seventh
day following the earlier of the date of the first public
announcement of the date of such meeting or the date on which
such notice of the scheduled meeting was mailed.
Any notice to our corporate Secretary regarding a stockholder
proposal must include, as to each matter the stockholder
proposes to bring before the meeting: a brief description of the
business desired to be brought before the meeting and the
reasons for conducting such business at the meeting; the name
and address, as they appear on our books, of the stockholder
proposing such business and any stockholders known by such
stockholder to be supporting such proposal; the class and number
of shares of our stock that are beneficially owned by the
stockholder and by any other stockholder known by such
stockholder to be supporting such matter on the date of such
stockholder notice; and any material interest of the stockholder
in such business.
32
Any notice to our corporate Secretary regarding a nomination for
the election of a director must include: the name and address of
the stockholder who intends to make the nomination; the name and
address of the person or persons to be nominated; the class and
number of shares of our stock that are beneficially owned by the
stockholder; a representation that such stockholder intends to
appear in person or by proxy at the annual meeting and nominate
the person or persons specified in the notice; a description of
all arrangements or understandings between the stockholder and
each nominee and any other person or persons (naming such
persons) pursuant to which the nomination or nominations are to
be made by the stockholder; such other information regarding
each nominee as would be required to be included in a proxy
statement filed pursuant to the proxy rules of the Securities
and Exchange Commission had the nominee been nominated, or
intended to be nominated, by the board of directors; and the
consent of each nominee to serve as a director if so elected.
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2006 Annual Meeting Proposals |
Stockholders who wish to have proposals considered for inclusion
in the proxy statement and form of proxy for our 2006 annual
meeting of stockholders, including nominees for directors, must
cause their proposals to be received in writing by our corporate
Secretary at the address set forth on the first page of this
proxy statement no later than December 12, 2005. Any
proposal should be addressed to our corporate Secretary and may
be included in next years proxy materials only if such
proposal complies with our bylaws, as discussed above, and the
rules and regulations promulgated by the Securities and Exchange
Commission. Nothing in this section shall be deemed to require
us to include in our proxy statement or our proxy relating to
any annual meeting any stockholder proposal or nomination that
does not meet all of the requirements for inclusion established
by the Securities and Exchange Commission.
Incorporation by Reference
The report of the audit committee, which appears on
page 23, the report of the compensation committee, which
begins on page 24, and the stock performance graph, which
appears on page 30, shall not be deemed to be soliciting
material or to be filed with the Securities and Exchange
Commission under the Securities Act of 1933 or the Securities
Exchange Act of 1934 or incorporated by reference in any
document so filed.
Delivery of Documents to Stockholders Sharing the Same
Address
With regard to the delivery of annual reports and proxy
statements, under certain circumstances, the Securities and
Exchange Commission permits a single set of documents to be sent
to any household at which two or more stockholders reside if
they appear to be members of the same family. This procedure,
known as householding, reduces the amount of
duplicate information received at a household and reduces
mailing and printing costs. Even if householding is implemented,
each stockholder will continue to receive a separate proxy card
or, in the case of shares of stock held in a street name
account, a separate voting instruction form.
We have not implemented householding rules with respect to our
record holders. However, banks, brokers, and other firms may
have instituted householding and this may impact stockholders
whose shares are registered in the name of the bank, broker, or
other firm. If a stockholder received a householding
notification from its broker, only one annual report and one
proxy statement will be mailed to an address at which two or
more stockholders reside unless the stockholder gave
instructions to the contrary. If any stockholder residing at
such an address wishes to receive a separate annual report or
proxy statement, the stockholder should contact his, her, or its
broker directly. A stockholder may also receive additional
copies of our annual report and proxy statement by calling the
number listed below under the heading Availability of
Additional Information.
33
Availability of Additional Information
Along with this proxy statement, we have provided each
stockholder entitled to vote a copy of our 2004 Annual Report
(which includes our Annual Report on Form 10-K for our year
ended December 31, 2004). We will provide, without charge,
a copy of our 2004 Annual Report and/or our Annual Report on
Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2004 upon
the written or oral request of any stockholder or beneficial
owner of our common stock. Written requests should be directed
to the following address: Investor Relations, La Jolla
Pharmaceutical Company, 6455 Nancy Ridge Drive, San Diego,
California 92121. Telephonic requests should be directed to
(858) 646-6649.
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By order of the board of directors, |
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Steven B. Engle
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Chairman of the Board and Chief Executive Officer |
34
APPENDIX A
FORM OF AMENDMENT TO CERTIFICATE OF INCORPORATION
CERTIFICATE OF AMENDMENT TO
CERTIFICATE OF INCORPORATION
OF
LA JOLLA PHARMACEUTICAL COMPANY
La Jolla Pharmaceutical Company (the
Corporation), a corporation organized and existing
under and by virtue of the General Corporation Law of the State
of Delaware, does hereby certify:
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1. The name of the Corporation is: La Jolla
Pharmaceutical Company. |
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2. The Certificate of Incorporation of the Corporation is
hereby amended by striking out Article IV thereof and by
substituting in lieu of said Article the following new Article: |
ARTICLE IV
Authorized Capital Stock
The Corporation is authorized to issue two classes of stock
designated Common Stock and Preferred
Stock. The number of shares of Common Stock that the
Corporation is authorized to issue is 175,000,000; the number of
shares of Preferred Stock that the Corporation is authorized to
issue is 8,000,000. The Board is hereby authorized to issue the
shares of Preferred Stock in one or more series, to fix the
number of shares of any such series of Preferred Stock, to
determine the designation of any such series, and to fix the
rights, preferences, and privileges and the qualifications,
limitations or restrictions of the series of Preferred Stock to
the full extent permitted under the Delaware General Corporation
Law. The authority of the Board with respect to any series of
Preferred Stock shall include, without limitation, the power to
fix or alter the dividend rights, dividend rate, conversion
rights, voting rights, rights and terms of redemption (including
sinking fund provisions, if any), the redemption price or
prices, and the liquidation preferences and the number of shares
constituting any such additional series and the designation
thereof, or any of them; and to increase or decrease the number
of authorized shares of any series subsequent to the issue of
that series, but not below the number of shares of such series
then outstanding. In case the authorized number of shares of any
series shall be so decreased, the shares constituting such
decrease shall resume the status which they had prior to the
adoption of the resolution originally fixing the number of
shares of such series. All shares of the Common Stock and the
Preferred Stock shall have a par value of $0.01 per share.
3. The amendment of the Certificate of Incorporation herein
certified has been duly adopted in accordance with the
provisions of Section 242 of the General Corporation Law of
the State of Delaware.
Executed on this
day of
,
2005.
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Gail A. Sloan
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Vice President of Finance and Secretary |
A-1
APPENDIX B
LA JOLLA PHARMACEUTICAL COMPANY
2004 EQUITY INCENTIVE PLAN
(as proposed to be amended)
ARTICLE I
General Provisions
Terms used herein and not otherwise defined shall have the
meanings set forth below:
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(a) Administrator means the Board or a
Committee that has been delegated the authority to administer
the Plan. |
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(b) Award means an Incentive Award or a
Nonemployee Directors Option. |
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(c) Award Document means an award
agreement duly executed on behalf of the Company and by the
Recipient or, in the Administrators discretion, a
confirming memorandum issued by the Company to the Recipient. |
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(d) Board means the Board of Directors
of the Company. |
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(e) Change in Control means the
following and shall be deemed to occur if any of the following
events occur: |
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(i) Except as provided by
subsection (iii) hereof, the acquisition (other than
from the Company) by any person, entity or group,
within the meaning of Section 13(d)(3) or 14(d)(2) of the
Exchange Act (excluding, for this purpose, the Company or its
subsidiaries, or any employee benefit plan of the Company or its
subsidiaries which acquires beneficial ownership of voting
securities of the Company), of beneficial ownership (within the
meaning of Rule 13d-3 promulgated under the Exchange Act)
of forty percent (40%) or more of either the then outstanding
shares of Common Stock or the combined voting power of the
Companys then outstanding voting securities entitled to
vote generally in the election of directors; or |
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(ii) Individuals who, as of the effective date of the Plan,
constitute the Board (the Incumbent Board) cease for
any reason to constitute at least a majority of the Board,
provided that any person becoming a director subsequent to the
date hereof whose election, or nomination for election by the
Companys stockholders, is or was approved by a vote of at
least a majority of the directors then comprising the Incumbent
Board (other than an election or nomination of an individual
whose initial assumption of office is in connection with an
actual or threatened election contest relating to the election
of the directors of the Company, as such terms are used in
Rule 14a-11 of Regulation 14A promulgated under the
Exchange Act) shall be, for purposes of the Plan, considered as
though such person were a member of the Incumbent Board; or |
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(iii) Approval by the stockholders of the Company of a
reorganization, merger or consolidation with any other person,
entity or corporation, other than: |
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(A) a merger or consolidation which would result in the
persons holding the voting securities of the Company outstanding
immediately prior thereto continuing to hold more than fifty
percent (50%) of the combined voting power of the voting
securities of the Company or its successor which are outstanding
immediately after such merger or consolidation, or |
B-1
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(B) a merger or consolidation effected to implement a
recapitalization of the Company (or similar transaction) in
which no person acquires forty percent (40%) or more of the
combined voting power of the Companys then outstanding
voting securities; or |
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(iv) Approval by the stockholders of the Company of a plan
of complete liquidation of the Company or an agreement for the
sale or other disposition by the Company of all or substantially
all of the Companys assets. |
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Notwithstanding the foregoing, a Change in Control shall not be
deemed to have occurred (1) if the person is an
underwriter or underwriting syndicate that has acquired the
ownership of 50% or more of the combined voting power of the
Companys then outstanding voting securities solely in
connection with a public offering of the Companys
securities, or (2) if the person is an employee
stock ownership plan or other employee benefit plan maintained
by the Company that is qualified under the provisions of the
Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974, as amended. |
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(f) Code means the Internal Revenue Code
of 1986, as amended. Where the context so requires, a reference
to a particular Code section shall also refer to any successor
provision of the Code to such section. |
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(g) Committee means the committee
appointed by the Board to administer the Plan. |
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(h) Common Stock means the common stock
of the Company, $0.01 par value. |
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(i) Company means La Jolla
Pharmaceutical Company. |
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(j) Dividend Equivalent means a right
granted by the Company under Section 2.07 to a holder of an
Option, Stock Appreciation Right, or other Incentive Award
denominated in shares of Common Stock to receive from the
Company during the Applicable Dividend Period (as defined in
Section 2.07) payments equivalent to the amount of
dividends payable to holders of the number of shares of Common
Stock underlying such Option, Stock Appreciation Right, or other
Incentive Award. |
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(k) Eligible Person means any director,
Employee or consultant of the Company or any Related Corporation. |
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(l) Employee means an individual who is
in the employ of the Company (or any Parent or Subsidiary)
subject to the control and direction of the employer entity as
to both the work to be performed and the manner and method of
performance. |
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(m) Exchange Act means the Securities
Exchange Act of 1934, as amended. Where the context so requires,
a reference to a particular section of the Exchange Act or rule
thereunder shall also refer to any successor provision to such
section or rule. |
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(n) Exercise Price means the price at
which the Holder may purchase shares of Common Stock underlying
an Option. |
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(o) Fair Market Value of capital stock
of the Company shall be determined with reference to the closing
price of such stock on the day in question (or, if such day is
not a trading day in the U.S. securities markets, on the
nearest preceding trading day), as reported with respect to the
principal market or trading system on which such stock is then
traded; or, if no such closing prices are reported, the mean
between the high bid and low ask prices that day on the
principal market or national quotation system on which such
shares are then quoted; provided, however, that when
appropriate, the Administrator in determining Fair Market Value
of capital stock of the Company may take into account such other
factors as may be deemed appropriate under the circumstances.
Notwithstanding the foregoing, the Fair Market Value of capital
stock for purposes of grants of Incentive Stock Options shall be
determined in compliance with applicable provisions of the Code.
The Fair Market Value of rights or property other than capital
stock of the Company means the fair market value thereof as
determined by the Administrator on the basis of such factors as
it may deem appropriate. |
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(p) Holder means the Recipient of an
Award or any permitted assignee holding the Award. |
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(q) Incentive Award means any Option
(other than a Nonemployee Directors Option), Restricted
Stock, Stock Appreciation Right, Stock Payment, Performance
Award or Dividend Equivalent granted or sold to an Eligible
Person under this Plan. |
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(r) Incentive Stock Option means an
Option that qualifies as an incentive stock option under
Section 422 (or any successor section) of the Code and the
regulations thereunder. |
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(s) Just Cause Dismissal shall mean a
termination of a Recipients Service for any of the
following reasons: (i) the Recipient violates any
reasonable rule or regulation of the Company or the
Recipients superiors or the Chief Executive Officer or
President of the Company that (A) results in damage to the
Company or (B) after written notice to do so, the Recipient
fails to correct within a reasonable time; (ii) any willful
misconduct or gross negligence by the Recipient in the
responsibilities assigned to him or her; (iii) any willful
failure to perform his or her job; (iv) any wrongful
conduct of a Recipient which has an adverse impact on the
Company or which constitutes fraud, embezzlement or dishonesty;
(v) the Recipients performing services for any other
person or entity which competes with the Company while he or she
is providing Service, without the written approval of the Chief
Executive Officer or President of the Company; or (vi) any
other conduct that the Administrator determines constitutes Just
Cause for Dismissal; provided, however, that if the term of
concept has been defined in an employment agreement between the
Company and the Recipient, then Just Cause Dismissal shall have
the definition set forth in such employment agreement. The
foregoing definition shall not in any way preclude or restrict
the right of the Company or any Related Corporation to discharge
or dismiss any Recipient or other person in the Service of the
Company or any Related Corporation for any other acts or
omissions but such other acts or omission shall not be deemed,
for purposes of the Plan, to constitute grounds for Just Cause
Dismissal. |
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(t) Nonemployee Director means a
director of the Company who is not an Employee of the Company or
any of its Related Corporations. |
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(u) Nonemployee Directors Option
means a Nonqualified Stock Option granted to a Nonemployee
Director pursuant to Article III of the Plan. |
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(v) Nonqualified Stock Option means an
Option that does not qualify as an Incentive Stock Option. |
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(w) Option means a right to purchase
stock of the Company granted under this Plan, and can be an
Incentive Stock Option or a Nonqualified Stock Option. |
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(x) Parent means any corporation (other
than the Company) in an unbroken chain of corporations ending
with the Company, provided each corporation in the unbroken
chain (other than the Company) owns, at the time of the
determination, stock possessing 50% or more of the total
combined voting power of all classes of stock in one of the
other corporations in such chain. |
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(y) Performance Award means an award,
payable in cash, Common Stock or a combination thereof, which
vests and becomes payable over a period of time upon attainment
of performance criteria established in connection with the grant
of the award. |
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(z) Performance-Based Compensation means
performance-based compensation as described in
Section 162(m) of the Code and the regulations thereunder.
If the amount of compensation an Eligible Person will receive
under any Incentive Award is not based solely on an increase in
the value of Common Stock after the date of grant or award, the
Administrator, in order to qualify an Incentive Award as
performance-based compensation under Section 162(m) of the
Code and the regulations thereunder, can condition the grant,
award, vesting, or exercisability of such an award on the
attainment of a preestablished, objective performance goal. For
this purpose, a preestablished, objective performance goal may
include one or more of the following performance criteria:
(i) cash flow, (ii) earnings per share (including
earnings before interest, taxes, and amortization),
(iii) return on equity, (iv) total stockholder return,
(v) return on capital, (vi) return on assets or net
assets, (vii) income or net income, (viii) operating
margin, (ix) return on operating revenue,
(x) attainment of stated goals related to the |
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Companys research and development or clinical trials
programs, (xi) attainment of stated goals related to the
Companys capitalization, costs, financial condition, or
results of operations, and (xii) any other similar
performance criteria. |
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(aa) Permanent Disability shall mean the
inability of the Recipient to engage in any substantial gainful
activity by reason of any medically determinable physical or
mental impairment which can be expected to result in death or
has lasted or can be expected to last for a continuous period of
twelve months or more. |
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(bb) Plan means the La Jolla
Pharmaceutical Company 2004 Equity Incentive Plan as set forth
in this document. |
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(cc) Purchase Price means the purchase
price (if any) to be paid by a Recipient for Restricted Stock as
determined by the Administrator (which price shall be at least
equal to the minimum price required under applicable laws and
regulations for the issuance of Common Stock). |
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(dd) Recipient means an Eligible Person
who has received an Award hereunder. |
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(ee) Related Corporation means either a
Parent or Subsidiary. |
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(ff) Restricted Stock means Common Stock
that is the subject of an award made under Section 2.04 and
which is nontransferable and subject to a substantial risk of
forfeiture until specific conditions are met as set forth in
this Plan and in any Award Document. |
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(gg) Securities Act means the Securities
Act of 1933, as amended. |
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(hh) Service means the performance of
services for the Company or its Related Corporations by a person
in the capacity of an Employee, a director or a consultant,
except to the extent otherwise specifically provided in the
Award Document. |
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(ii) Stock Appreciation Right means a
right granted under Section 2.05 to receive a payment that
is measured with reference to the amount by which the Fair
Market Value of a specified number of shares of Common Stock
appreciates from a specified date, such as the date of grant of
the Stock Appreciation Right, to the date of exercise. |
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(jj) Stock Payment means a payment in
shares of Common Stock to replace all or any portion of the
compensation (other than base salary) that would otherwise
become payable to a Recipient. |
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(kk) Subsidiary means any corporation
(other than the Company) in an unbroken chain of corporations
beginning with the Company, provided each corporation in the
unbroken chain (other than the last corporation) owns, at the
time of the determination, stock possessing 50% or more of the
total combined voting power of all classes of stock in one of
the other corporations in such chain. |
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1.02 |
Purpose of the Plan. |
The Board has adopted this Plan to advance the interests of the
Company and its stockholders by (a) providing Eligible
Persons with financial incentives to promote the success of the
Companys business objectives, and to increase their
proprietary interest in the success of the Company, and
(b) giving the Company a means to attract and retain
Eligible Persons.
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1.03 |
Common Stock Subject to the Plan. |
(a) Number of Shares. Subject to
Section 1.05(b), the maximum number of shares of Common
Stock that may be issued and outstanding or subject to
outstanding Awards under the Plan shall not exceed 4,800,000.
(b) Source of Shares. The Common Stock to be issued
under this Plan will be made available, at the discretion of the
Administrator, either from authorized but unissued shares of
Common Stock or from previously issued shares of Common Stock
reacquired by the Company, including shares purchased on the
open market.
B-4
(c) Availability of Unused Shares. Shares of Common
Stock subject to unexercised portions of any Award granted under
this Plan that expire, terminate or are cancelled, and shares of
Common Stock issued pursuant to an Award under this Plan that
are reacquired by the Company pursuant to the terms of the Award
under which such shares were issued, will again become available
for the grant of further Awards under this Plan.
(d) Grant Limits. Notwithstanding any other
provision of this Plan, no Eligible Person shall be granted
Awards with respect to more than 1,000,000 shares of Common
Stock in the aggregate in any one calendar year; provided,
however, that this limitation shall not apply if it is not
required in order for the compensation attributable to Awards
hereunder to qualify as Performance-Based Compensation.
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1.04 |
Administration of the Plan. |
(a) The Administrator. The Plan will be administered
by a Committee, which will consist of two or more members of the
Board each of whom must be an independent director
as defined by applicable listing standards. Notwithstanding the
foregoing or any provision of the Plan to the contrary, the
Board may, in lieu of the Committee, exercise any authority
granted to the Committee pursuant to the provisions of the Plan.
To obtain the benefits of Rule 16b-3, Incentive Awards must
be granted by the entire Board or a Committee comprised entirely
of non-employee directors as such term is defined in
Rule 16b-3. In addition, if Incentive Awards are to be made
to persons subject to Section 162(m) of the Code and such
Awards are intended to constitute Performance-Based
Compensation, then such Incentive Awards must be granted by a
Committee comprised entirely of outside directors as
such term is defined in the regulations under
Section 162(m) of the Code.
(b) Authority of the Administrator. The
Administrator has authority in its discretion to select the
Eligible Persons to whom, and the time or times at which,
Incentive Awards shall be granted or sold, the nature of each
Incentive Award, the number of shares of Common Stock or the
number of rights that make up or underlie each Incentive Award,
the period for the exercise of each Incentive Award, the
performance criteria (which need not be identical) utilized to
measure the value of Performance Awards, and such other terms
and conditions applicable to each individual Incentive Award as
the Administrator shall determine. In addition, the
Administrator shall have all other powers granted to it in the
Plan.
(c) Interpretation. Subject to the express
provisions of the Plan, the Administrator has the authority to
interpret the Plan and any Award Documents, to determine the
terms and conditions of Incentive Awards and to make all other
determinations necessary or advisable for the administration of
the Plan. All interpretations, determinations and actions by the
Administrator shall be final, conclusive and binding upon all
parties. The Administrator has authority to prescribe, amend and
rescind rules and regulations relating to the Plan.
(d) Special Rules Regarding Nonemployee Director
Options. Notwithstanding anything herein to the contrary,
the Administrator shall have no authority or discretion as to
the selection of persons eligible to receive Nonemployee
Directors Options granted under the Plan, the number of
shares covered by Nonemployee Directors Options granted
under the Plan, the timing of such grants, or the Exercise Price
of Nonemployee Directors Options granted under the Plan,
which matters are specifically governed by the provisions of the
Plan.
(e) No Liability. The Administrator and its
delegates shall be indemnified by the Company to the fullest
extent provided for in the Companys certificate of
incorporation and bylaws.
(a) Documentation. Each Award granted under the Plan
shall be evidenced by an Award Document which shall set forth
the terms and conditions applicable to the Award as the
Administrator may in its discretion determine consistent with
the Plan, provided that the Administrator shall exercise no
discretion with respect to Nonemployee Directors Options,
which shall reflect only the terms of the Award as set forth in
Article III and certain administrative matters dictated by
the Plan. Award Documents shall comply with and be subject to
the terms and conditions of the Plan. In case of any conflict
between the Plan and any Award
B-5
Document, the Plan shall control. Various Award Documents
covering the same types of Awards may but need not be identical.
(b) Adjustment Provisions. Should any change be made
to the outstanding shares of Common Stock by reason of a merger,
consolidation, reorganization, recapitalization,
reclassification, combination of shares, stock dividend, stock
split, reverse stock split, exchange of shares or other change
affecting the outstanding Common Stock without the
Companys receipt of consideration, an appropriate and
proportionate adjustment may be made in (i) the maximum
number and kind of shares subject to the Plan as provided in
Section 1.03, (ii) the number and kind of shares or
other securities subject to then outstanding Awards,
(iii) the price for each share or other unit of any other
securities subject to then outstanding Awards and (iv) the
number and kind of shares or other securities subject to the
Nonemployee Director Options described in Section 3.01 and
3.02. In addition, the per person limitation set forth in
Section 1.03(d) shall also be subject to adjustment as
provided in this Section 1.05(b), but only to the extent
such adjustment would not affect the status of compensation
attributable to Awards hereunder as Performance-Based
Compensation. Such adjustments are to be effected in a manner
that shall preclude the enlargement or dilution of rights and
benefits under the Awards. In no event shall any adjustments be
made in connection with the conversion of preferred stock or
warrants into shares of Common Stock. No fractional interests
will be issued under the Plan resulting from any such
adjustments.
(c) Continuation of Service. Nothing contained in
this Plan (or in Award Documents or in any other documents
related to this Plan or to Awards granted hereunder) shall
confer upon any Eligible Person or Recipient any right to
continue in the Service of the Company or its Related
Corporations or constitute any contract or agreement of
employment or engagement, or interfere in any way with the right
of the Company or its Related Corporations to reduce such
persons compensation or other benefits or to terminate the
Service of such Eligible Person or Recipient, with or without
cause. Except as expressly provided in the Plan or in any Award
Document, the Company shall have the right to deal with each
Recipient in the same manner as if the Plan and any Award
Document did not exist, including, without limitation, with
respect to all matters related to the hiring, discharge,
compensation and conditions of the employment or engagement of
the Recipient.
(d) Restrictions. All Awards granted under the Plan
shall be subject to the requirement that, if at any time the
Company shall determine, in its discretion, that the listing,
registration or qualification of the shares subject to Awards
granted under the Plan upon any securities exchange or under any
state or federal law, or the consent or approval of any
government regulatory body, is necessary or desirable as a
condition of, or in connection with, the granting of such an
Award or the issuance, if any, or purchase of shares in
connection therewith, such Award may not be exercised in whole
or in part unless such listing, registration, qualification,
consent or approval shall have been effected or obtained free of
any conditions not acceptable to the Company.
(e) Additional Conditions. Any Incentive Award may
also be subject to such other provisions (whether or not
applicable to any other Award or Recipient) as the Administrator
determines appropriate.
(f) Tax Withholding. The Companys obligation
to deliver shares of Common Stock under the Plan shall be
subject to the satisfaction of all applicable income and
employment tax withholding requirements.
(g) Privileges of Stock Ownership. Except as
otherwise set forth herein, a Holder shall have no rights as a
stockholder of the Company with respect to any shares issuable
or issued in connection with the Award until the date of the
receipt by the Company of all amounts payable in connection with
exercise of the Award, performance by the Holder of all
obligations thereunder, and the Company issues a stock
certificate representing the appropriate number of shares.
Status as an Eligible Person shall not be construed as a
commitment that any Incentive Award will be granted under this
Plan to an Eligible Person or to Eligible Persons generally. No
person shall have any right, title or interest in any fund or in
any specific asset (including shares of capital stock) of the
Company by reason of any Award granted hereunder. Neither this
Plan (or any documents related hereto) nor any action taken
pursuant hereto shall be construed to create a trust of any kind
or a fiduciary relationship between the Company and any person.
To the extent that any person acquires a right to receive an
Award hereunder, such right shall be no greater than the right
of any unsecured general creditor of the Company.
B-6
(h) Effective Date and Duration of Plan; Amendment and
Termination of Plan. The Plan shall become effective upon
its approval by the Companys stockholders. Unless
terminated by the Board prior to such time, the Plan shall
continue in effect until the 10th anniversary of the date the
Plan was adopted, whereupon the Plan shall terminate
automatically. The Board may, insofar as permitted by law, from
time to time suspend or terminate the Plan. No Awards may be
granted during any suspension of this Plan or after its
termination. Any Award outstanding after the termination of the
Plan shall remain in effect until such Award has been exercised
or expires in accordance with its terms and the terms of the
Plan. The Board may, insofar as permitted by law, from time to
time revise or amend the Plan in any respect except that no such
amendment shall adversely affect any rights or obligations of
the Holder under any outstanding Award previously granted under
the Plan without the consent of the Holder. Amendments shall be
subject to stockholder approval to the extent such approval is
required to comply with the listing requirements imposed by any
exchange or trading system upon which the Companys
securities trade or applicable law.
(i) Amendment of Awards. The Administrator may make
any modifications in the terms and conditions of an outstanding
Incentive Award, provided that (i) the resultant provisions
are permissible under the Plan and (ii) the consent of the
Holder shall be obtained if the amendment will adversely affect
his or her rights under the Award. However, the outstanding
Options may not be repriced without stockholder approval.
(j) Nonassignability. No Incentive Stock Option
granted under the Plan shall be assignable or transferable
except by will or by the laws of descent and distribution. No
other Awards granted under the Plan shall be assignable or
transferable except (i) by will or by the laws of descent
and distribution, (ii) to one or more of the
Recipients family members (as such term is defined in the
instructions to Form S-8) or (iii) upon dissolution of
marriage pursuant to a qualified domestic relations order.
During the lifetime of a Recipient, an Award granted to him or
her shall be exercisable only by the Holder or his or her
guardian or legal representative.
(k) Other Compensation Plans. The adoption of the
Plan shall not affect any other stock option, incentive or other
compensation plans in effect for the Company, and the existence
of the Plan shall not preclude the Company from establishing any
other forms of incentive or other compensation for Eligible
Persons.
(l) Plan Binding on Successors. The Plan shall be
binding upon the successors and assigns of the Company.
(m) Participation by Foreign Employees.
Notwithstanding anything to the contrary herein, the
Administrator may, in order to fulfill the purposes of the Plan,
structure grants of Incentive Awards to Recipients who are
foreign nationals or employed outside of the United States to
recognize differences in applicable law, tax policy or local
custom.
ARTICLE II
Incentive Awards
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2.01 |
Grants of Incentive Awards. |
Subject to the express provisions of this Plan, the
Administrator may from time to time in its discretion select
from the class of Eligible Persons those individuals to whom
Incentive Awards may be granted pursuant to its authority as set
forth in Section 1.04(b). Each Incentive Award shall be
subject to the terms and conditions of the Plan and such other
terms and conditions established by the Administrator as are not
inconsistent with the provisions of the Plan.
(a) Nature of Options. The Administrator may grant
Incentive Stock Options and Nonqualified Stock Options under the
Plan. However, Incentive Stock Options may only be granted to
Employees of the Company or its Related Corporations.
B-7
(b) Option Price. The Exercise Price per share for
each Option (other than a Nonemployee Directors Option)
shall be determined by the Administrator at the date such Option
is granted and shall not be less than the Fair Market Value of a
share of Common Stock (or other securities, as applicable) on
the date of grant, except that the Exercise Price for a
Nonqualified Stock Option may reflect a discount of up to 15% of
the Fair Market Value at the time of grant if the amount of such
discount is expressly in lieu of a reasonable amount of salary
or cash bonus. Notwithstanding the foregoing, however, in no
event shall the Exercise Price be less than the par value of the
shares of Common Stock.
(c) Option Period and Vesting. Options (other than
Nonemployee Directors Options) hereunder shall vest and
may be exercised as determined by the Administrator, except that
exercise of such Options after termination of the
Recipients Service shall be subject to
Section 2.02(g). Each Option granted hereunder (other than
a Nonemployee Directors Option) and all rights or obligations
thereunder shall expire on such date as shall be determined by
the Administrator, but not later than ten years after the date
the Option is granted and shall be subject to earlier
termination as herein provided.
(d) Exercise of Options. Except as otherwise
provided herein, an Option may become exercisable, in whole or
in part, on the date or dates specified by the Administrator
(or, in the case of Nonemployee Directors Options, the
Plan) at the time the Option is granted and thereafter shall
remain exercisable until the expiration or earlier termination
of the Option. No Option shall be exercisable except in respect
of whole shares, and fractional share interests shall be
disregarded. An Option shall be deemed to be exercised when the
Secretary of the Company receives written notice of such
exercise from the Holder, together with payment of the Exercise
Price made in accordance with Section 2.02(e). Upon proper
exercise, the Company shall deliver to the person entitled to
exercise the Option or his or her designee a certificate or
certificates for the shares of stock for which the Option is
exercised.
(e) Form of Exercise Price. The aggregate Exercise
Price shall be immediately due and payable upon the exercise of
an Option and shall, subject to the provisions of the Award
Document, be payable in one or more of the following:
(i) by delivery of legal tender of the United States,
(ii) by delivery of shares of Common Stock held for the
requisite period, if any, necessary to avoid a charge to the
Companys earnings for financial reporting purposes, and/or
(iii) through a sale and remittance procedure pursuant to
which the Holder shall concurrently provide irrevocable
instructions to (A) a brokerage firm to effect the
immediate sale of the purchased shares and remit to the Company,
out of the sale proceeds available on the settlement date,
sufficient funds to cover the aggregate Exercise Price payable
for the purchased shares plus all applicable income and
employment taxes required to be withheld by the Company by
reason of such exercise and (B) the Company to deliver the
certificates for the purchased shares directly to such brokerage
firm in order to complete the sale. Any shares of Company stock
or other non-cash consideration assigned and delivered to the
Company in payment or partial payment of the Exercise Price will
be valued at Fair Market Value on the exercise date.
(f) Limitation on Exercise of Incentive Stock
Options. The aggregate Fair Market Value (determined as of
the respective date or dates of grant) of the Common Stock for
which one or more Options granted to any Recipient under the
Plan (or any other option plan of the Company or any of its
subsidiaries or affiliates) may for the first time become
exercisable as Incentive Stock Options under the Code during any
one calendar year shall not exceed $100,000. Any Options granted
as Incentive Stock Options pursuant to the Plan in excess of
such limitation shall be treated as Nonqualified Stock Options.
Options are to be taken into account in the order in which they
were awarded.
(g) Termination of Service.
(i) Termination for Cause. Except as otherwise
provided by the Administrator, in the event of a Just Cause
Dismissal of a Recipient, all of the outstanding Options granted
to such Recipient shall expire and become unexercisable as of
the date of such Just Cause Dismissal.
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(ii) Termination Other Than for Cause. Subject to
subsection (i) above and except as otherwise provided by
the Administrator, in the event of a Recipients
termination of Service from the Company or its Related
Corporations due to:
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(A) any reason other than Just Cause Dismissal, death, or
Permanent Disability, or normal retirement, the outstanding
Options granted to such Recipient, whether or not vested, shall
expire and become unexercisable as of the earlier of
(1) the date such Options would expire in accordance with
their terms if the Recipient had remained in Service or
(2) three calendar months after the date the
Recipients Service terminated in the case of Incentive
Stock Options, or six months after the Recipients Service
terminated, in the case of Nonqualified Stock Options. |
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(B) death or Permanent Disability, the outstanding Options
granted to such Recipient, whether or not vested, shall expire
and become unexercisable as of the earlier of (1) the date
such Options would expire in accordance with their terms if the
Recipient had remained in Service or (2) twelve months
after the date of termination. |
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(C) normal retirement, the outstanding Options granted to
such Recipient, whether or not vested, shall expire and become
unexercisable as of the earlier of (A) the date such
Options expire in accordance with their terms or
(B) twenty-four months after the date of retirement. |
(iii) Termination of Director Service. In the event
that a Director shall cease to be a Nonemployee Director, all
outstanding Options (other than a Nonemployee Directors
Option) granted to such Recipient shall be exercisable, to the
extent already vested and exercisable on the date such Recipient
ceases to be a Nonemployee Director and regardless of the reason
the Recipient ceases to be a Nonemployee Director until the
fifth anniversary of the date such Director ceases to be a
Nonemployee Director; provided that the Administrator may extend
such post-termination period to up to the expiration date of the
Option.
(a) Grant of Performance Award. The Administrator
may grant Performance Awards under the Plan and shall determine
the performance criteria (which need not be identical and may be
established on an individual or group basis) governing
Performance Awards, the terms thereof, and the form and timing
of payment of Performance Awards.
(b) Payment of Award; Limitation. Upon satisfaction
of the conditions applicable to a Performance Award, payment
will be made to the Holder in cash or in shares of Common Stock
valued at Fair Market Value or a combination of Common Stock and
cash, as the Administrator in its discretion may determine.
Notwithstanding any other provision of this Plan, no Eligible
Person shall be paid Performance Awards with a value in excess
of $1,000,000 in any one calendar year; provided, however, that
this limitation shall not apply if it is not required in order
for the compensation attributable to the Performance Award
hereunder to qualify as Performance-Based Compensation.
(c) Expiration of Performance Award. If any
Recipients Service is terminated for any reason other than
normal retirement, death or Permanent Disability prior to the
time a Performance Award or any portion thereof becomes payable,
all of the Holders rights under the unpaid portion of the
Performance Award shall expire unless otherwise determined by
the Administrator. In the event of termination of Service by
reason of death, Permanent Disability or normal retirement, the
Administrator, in its discretion, may determine what portions,
if any, of the Performance Award should be paid to the Holder.
(a) Award of Restricted Stock. The Administrator may
issue Restricted Stock under the Plan. The Administrator shall
determine the Purchase Price (if any), the forms of payment of
the Purchase Price (which shall be either cash or past
services), the restrictions upon the Restricted Stock, and when
such restrictions shall lapse (provided that the restriction
period shall be at least one year for performance-based grants
and three years for non-performance-based grants).
B-9
(b) Requirements of Restricted Stock. All shares of
Restricted Stock granted or sold pursuant to the Plan will be
subject to the following conditions:
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(i) No Transfer. The shares of Restricted Stock may
not be sold, assigned, transferred, pledged, hypothecated or
otherwise disposed of, alienated or encumbered until the
restrictions are removed or expire; |
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(ii) Certificates. The Administrator may require
that the certificates representing shares of Restricted Stock
granted or sold to a Holder pursuant to the Plan remain in the
physical custody of an escrow holder or the Company until all
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(iii) Restrictive Legends. Each certificate
representing shares of Restricted Stock granted or sold to a
Holder pursuant to the Plan will bear such legend or legends
making reference to the restrictions imposed upon such
Restricted Stock as the Administrator in its discretion deems
necessary or appropriate to enforce such restrictions; and |
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(iv) Other Restrictions. The Administrator may
impose such other conditions on Restricted Stock as the
Administrator may deem advisable including, without limitation,
restrictions under the Securities Act, under the Exchange Act,
under the requirements of any stock exchange or upon which such
Restricted Stock or shares of the same class are then listed and
under any blue sky or other securities laws applicable to such
shares. |
(c) Rights of Holder. Subject to the provisions of
Section 2.04(b) and any additional restrictions imposed by
the Administrator, the Holder will have all rights of a
stockholder with respect to the Restricted Stock, including the
right to vote the shares and receive all dividends and other
distributions paid or made with respect thereto.
(d) Termination of Service. Unless the Administrator
in its discretion determines otherwise, upon a Recipients
termination of Service for any reason, all of the Restricted
Stock issued to the Recipient that remains subject to
restrictions imposed pursuant to the Plan on the date of such
termination of Service may be repurchased by the Company at the
Purchase Price (if any).
(e) Adjustments. Any new, substituted or additional
securities or other property which Holder may have the right to
receive with respect to the Holders shares of Restricted
Stock by reason of a merger, consolidation, reorganization,
recapitalization, reclassification, combination of shares, stock
dividend, stock split, reverse stock split, exchange of shares
or other change affecting the outstanding Common Stock without
the Companys receipt of consideration shall be issued
subject to the same vesting requirements applicable to the
Holders shares of Restricted Stock and shall be treated as
if they had been acquired on the same date as such shares.
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2.05 |
Stock Appreciation Rights. |
(a) Granting of Stock Appreciation Rights. The
Administrator may grant Stock Appreciation Rights, either
related or unrelated to Options, under the Plan.
(b) Stock Appreciation Rights Related to Options.
(i) A Stock Appreciation Right granted in connection with
an Option granted under this Plan will entitle the holder of the
related Option, upon exercise of the Stock Appreciation Right,
to surrender such Option, or any portion thereof to the extent
unexercised, with respect to the number of shares as to which
such Stock Appreciation Right is exercised, and to receive
payment of an amount computed pursuant to
Section 2.05(b)(iii). Such Option will, to the extent
surrendered, then cease to be exercisable.
(ii) A Stock Appreciation Right granted in connection with
an Option hereunder will be exercisable at such time or times,
and only to the extent that, the related Option is exercisable,
and will not be transferable except to the extent that such
related Option may be transferable.
(iii) Upon the exercise of a Stock Appreciation Right
related to an Option, the Holder will be entitled to receive
payment of an amount determined by multiplying: (i) the
difference obtained by subtracting the
B-10
Exercise Price of a share of Common Stock specified in the
related Option from the Fair Market Value of a share of Common
Stock on the date of exercise of such Stock Appreciation Right
(or as of such other date or as of the occurrence of such event
as may have been specified in the instrument evidencing the
grant of the Stock Appreciation Right), by (ii) the number
of shares as to which such Stock Appreciation Right is exercised.
(c) Stock Appreciation Rights Unrelated to Options.
The Administrator may grant Stock Appreciation Rights unrelated
to Options to Eligible Persons. Section 2.05(b)(iii) shall
be used to determine the amount payable at exercise under such
Stock Appreciation Right, except that in lieu of the Exercise
Price specified in the related Option the initial base amount
specified in the Incentive Award shall be used.
(d) Limits. Notwithstanding the foregoing, the
Administrator, in its discretion, may place a dollar limitation
on the maximum amount that will be payable upon the exercise of
a Stock Appreciation Right under the Plan.
(e) Payments. Payment of the amount determined under
the foregoing provisions may be made solely in whole shares of
Common Stock valued at their Fair Market Value on the date of
exercise of the Stock Appreciation Right, in cash or in a
combination of cash and shares of Common Stock as the
Administrator deems advisable. If permitted by the
Administrator, the Holder may elect to receive cash in full or
partial settlement of a Stock Appreciation Right. If the
Administrator decides to make full payment in shares of Common
Stock, and the amount payable results in a fractional share,
payment for the fractional share will be made in cash.
(f) Termination of Service. Section 2.02(g)
will govern the treatment of Stock Appreciation Rights upon the
termination of a Recipients Service.
The Administrator may issue Stock Payments under the Plan for
all or any portion of the compensation (other than base salary)
or other payment that would otherwise become payable by the
Company to the Eligible Person in cash.
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2.07 |
Dividend Equivalents. |
The Administrator may grant Dividend Equivalents to any
Recipient who has received an Option, Stock Appreciation Right,
or other Incentive Award denominated in shares of Common Stock.
Such Dividend Equivalents shall be effective and shall entitle
the Recipients thereof to payments during the Applicable
Dividend Period, which shall be (a) the period
between the date the Dividend Equivalent is granted and the date
the related Option, Stock Appreciation Right, or other Incentive
Award is exercised, terminates, or is converted to Common Stock,
or (b) such other time as the Administrator may specify in
the Award Document. Dividend Equivalents may be paid in cash,
Common Stock, or other Incentive Awards; the amount of Dividend
Equivalents paid other than in cash shall be determined by the
Administrator by application of such formula as the
Administrator may deem appropriate to translate the cash value
of dividends paid to the alternative form of payment of the
Dividend Equivalent. Dividend Equivalents shall be computed as
of each dividend record date and shall be payable to Recipients
thereof at such time as the Administrator may determine.
Notwithstanding the foregoing, if it is intended that an
Incentive Award qualify as Performance-Based Compensation and
the amount of the compensation the Eligible Person could receive
under the award is based solely on an increase in value of the
underlying stock after the date of grant or award (i.e., the
grant, vesting, or exercisability of the award is not
conditioned upon the attainment of a preestablished, objective
performance goal described in Section 1.01(x)), then the
payment of any Dividend Equivalents related to the Award shall
not be made contingent on the exercise of the Award.
B-11
ARTICLE III
Nonemployee
Directors Options
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3.01 |
Grants of Initial Options. |
Each Nonemployee Director shall, upon first becoming a
Nonemployee Director, receive a one-time grant of a Nonqualified
Stock Option to purchase up to 40,000 shares of Common
Stock at an Exercise Price per share equal to the Fair Market
Value of the Common Stock on the date of grant. Options granted
under this Section 3.01 vest in accordance with
Section 3.04(a) hereof and are Initial Options
for purposes hereof.
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3.02 |
Grants of Additional Options. |
On the date of the annual meeting of stockholders of the Company
next following a Nonemployee Director becoming such, and on the
date of each subsequent annual meeting of stockholders of the
Company, in each case if the Nonemployee Director has served as
a director since his or her election or appointment and has been
re-elected as a director at such annual meeting or is continuing
as a director without being re-elected due to the classification
of the Board, such Nonemployee Director shall automatically
receive a Nonqualified Stock Option to purchase up to
10,000 shares of Common Stock at an Exercise Price per
share equal to the Fair Market Value of Common Stock on the date
of grant. Options granted under this Section 3.02 vest in
accordance with Section 3.04(b) hereof and are
Additional Options for purposes hereof.
Notwithstanding the foregoing to the contrary, the first grant
of Additional Options shall be made to eligible Nonemployee
Directors on the date of the 2005 annual meeting of stockholders.
The Exercise Price for Nonemployee Directors Options shall
be payable as set forth in Section 2.02(e).
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3.04 |
Vesting and Exercise. |
(a) Initial Options shall vest and become exercisable with
respect to 25% of the underlying shares on the grant date and
with respect to an additional 25% of the underlying shares on
the dates of each of the first three anniversaries of the date
of grant provided the Recipient has remained a Nonemployee
Director for the entire period from the date of grant to such
date.
(b) Additional Options shall vest and become exercisable
upon the earlier of (i) the first anniversary of the grant
date or (ii) immediately prior to the annual meeting of
stockholders of the Company next following the grant date,
provided the Recipient has remained a Nonemployee Director for
the entire period from the date of grant to such earlier date.
(c) Notwithstanding the foregoing, however, Initial Options
and Additional Options that have not vested and become
exercisable at the time the Recipient ceases to be a Nonemployee
Director shall expire.
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3.05 |
Term of Options and Effect of Termination. |
No Nonemployee Directors Option shall be exercisable after
the expiration of ten years from the date of its grant. In the
event that the Recipient of a Nonemployee Directors Option
shall cease to be a Nonemployee Director, all outstanding
Nonemployee Directors Options granted to such Recipient
shall be exercisable, to the extent already vested and
exercisable on the date such Recipient ceases to be a
Nonemployee Director and regardless of the reason the Recipient
ceases to be a Nonemployee Director until the fifth anniversary
of the date such Director ceases to be a Nonemployee Director;
provided that the Administrator may extend such post-termination
period to the expiration date of the Option.
B-12
ARTICLE IV
Recapitalizations and
Reorganizations
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4.01 |
Corporate Transactions. |
(a) Options. Unless the Administrator provides
otherwise in the Award Document or another written agreement, in
the event of a Change in Control, the Administrator shall
provide that all Options (other than Non-employee Director
Options) either (i) vest in full immediately preceding the
Change in Control and terminate upon the Change in Control,
(ii) are assumed or continued in effect in connection with
the Change in Control transaction, (iii) are cashed out for
an amount equal to the deal consideration per share less the
Exercise Price or (iv) are substituted for similar awards
of the surviving corporation. Each Option that is assumed or
otherwise continued in effect in connection with a Change in
Control shall be appropriately adjusted, immediately after such
Change in Control, to apply to the number and class of
securities which would have been issuable to Recipient in
consummation of such Change in Control had the Recipient been
exercised immediately prior to such Change in Control.
Appropriate adjustments to reflect such Change in Control shall
also be made to (A) the Exercise Price payable per share
under each outstanding Option, provided the aggregate Exercise
Price payable for such securities shall remain the same,
(B) the maximum number and/or class of securities available
for issuance over the remaining term of the Plan, (C) the
maximum number and/or class of securities for which any one
person may be granted options and direct stock issuances
pursuant to the Plan per calendar year and (D) the number
and/or class of securities subject to Nonemployee
Directors Options. To the extent the holders of Common
Stock receive cash consideration in whole or part for their
Common Stock in consummation of the Change in Control, the
successor corporation may, in connection with the assumption of
the outstanding Options, substitute one or more shares of its
own common stock with a fair market value equivalent to the cash
consideration paid per share of Common Stock in such Change in
Control transaction.
(b) Nonemployee Directors Options. Immediately
prior to a Change of Control, all outstanding Nonemployee
Directors Options shall vest in full.
(c) Other Incentive Awards. The Administrator may
specify the effect that a Change in Control has on an Incentive
Award (other than an Option) outstanding at the time such a
Change in Control occurs either in the applicable Award Document
or by subsequent modification of the Award.
The grant of an Option pursuant to the Plan shall not affect in
any way the right or power of the Company to make adjustments,
reclassifications, reorganizations or changes of its capital or
business structure or to merge or to consolidate or to dissolve,
liquidate or sell, or transfer all of any part of its business
or assets.
B-13
Form of Option
Grant
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Notice of Grant of Stock Options
and Option Agreement |
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La Jolla Pharmaceutical Co.
ID: 33-0361285
6455 Nancy Ridge Drive
San Diego, CA 92121
(858) 452-6600 |
Name:
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Option Number: |
Address:
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Plan: 2004 |
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ID: |
Effective ,
you have been granted a(n) Incentive Stock Option to
buy shares
of La Jolla Pharmaceutical Co. (the Company) stock at
$ per
share.
The total option price of the shares granted is
$ .
Shares in each period will become fully vested on the date shown.
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Vest Type |
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Full Vest |
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Expiration |
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By your signature and the Companys signature below, you
and the Company agree that these options are granted under and
governed by the terms and conditions of the Companys Stock
Option Plan as amended and the Option Agreement, all of which
are attached and made a part of this document.
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La Jolla Pharmaceutical Company
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Date |
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Name
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B-14
APPENDIX C
LA JOLLA PHARMACEUTICAL COMPANY
1995 EMPLOYEE STOCK PURCHASE PLAN
(as proposed to be amended)
The following constitutes the provisions of the La Jolla
Pharmaceutical Company 1995 Employee Stock Purchase Plan (the
Plan).
The purpose of the Plan is to maintain competitive equity
compensation programs and to provide employees of La Jolla
Pharmaceutical Company (the Company) with an
opportunity and incentive to acquire a proprietary interest in
the Company through the purchase of the Companys Common
Stock, thereby more closely aligning the interests of the
Companys employees and stockholders. It is the intention
of the Company to have the Plan qualify as an Employee
Stock Purchase Plan under Section 423 of the Internal
Revenue Code of 1986, as amended (Section 423).
Accordingly, the provisions of the Plan shall be construed to
extend and limit participation consistent with the requirements
of Section 423.
Capitalized terms used in this Plan and not otherwise defined
have the meanings set forth below.
Administrator means the Committee, or the
Board if the Board asserts administrative authority over the
Plan pursuant to Section 13.
Board means the Board of Directors of the
Company.
Code means the Internal Revenue Code of 1986,
as amended.
Committee means a committee of members of the
Board meeting the qualifications described in Section 13
and appointed by the Board to administer the Plan.
Common Stock shall mean the Common Stock of
the Company.
Compensation means base salary or hourly
compensation and any cash bonus paid to a participant.
Eligible Employee means any employee of the
Company whose customary employment is for more than five months
per calendar year and for more than 20 hours per week. For
purposes of the Plan, the employment relationship shall be
treated as continuing while the individual is on sick leave or
other leave of absence approved by the Company, except that when
the period of leave exceeds 90 days and the
individuals right to reemployment is not guaranteed either
by statute or by contract, the employment relationship will be
deemed to have terminated on the 91st day of such leave.
Enrollment Date means the first day of each
Offering Period.
Exchange Act means the Securities Exchange
Act of 1934, as amended.
Exercise Date means the last day of each
Purchase Period.
Fair Market Value of the Common Stock as of
the time of any determination thereof means the value of Common
Stock determined as follows:
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(1) If the Common Stock is listed on any established stock
exchange or trades on the Nasdaq National Market, its Fair
Market Value shall be the most recent closing sales price for
such stock (or the closing bid, if no sales were reported), as
quoted on such exchange or system (or the exchange or system
with the greatest volume of trading in the Common Stock) as of
the time of such determination as reported in the Wall Street
Journal or such other source as the Administrator deems
reliable; or |
C-1
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(2) If the Common Stock is not listed on any established
stock exchange or traded on the Nasdaq National Market its Fair
Market Value shall be the mean between the most recent closing
high and low asked prices for the Common Stock as of the time of
such determination, as reported in the Wall Street Journal or
such other source as the Administrator deems reliable; or |
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(3) In the absence of an established market for the Common
Stock, the Fair Market Value of the Common Stock shall be
determined in good faith by the Administrator. |
Offering Period means (i) the period of
twenty-three (23) months commencing on August 1, 1996
and terminating on June 30, twenty-three (23) months
later; (ii) each period of twenty-four (24) months
commencing on January 1, 1997 and each January 1 thereafter
for the duration of the Plan and terminating on the
December 31 twenty-four (24) months later;
(iii) each period of twenty-four (24) months
commencing on July 1, 1997 and each July 1 thereafter
for the duration of the Plan and terminating on the June 30
twenty-four (24) months later; (iv) each period of
twenty-four (24) months commencing on October 1, 2000
and each October 1 thereafter for the duration of the Plan
and terminating on the September 30 twenty-four
(24) months later; and (v) each period of twenty-four
(24) months commencing on April 1, 2001 and each
April 1 thereafter for the duration of the Plan and
terminating on the March 31 twenty-four (24) months
later. The Administrator shall have the power to change the
duration of Offering Periods without stockholder approval as set
forth in Section 12 or if such change is announced at least
fifteen (15) days prior to the scheduled beginning of the
first Offering Period to be affected.
Option means the option granted to each
participant pursuant to Section 4 upon enrollment in an
Offering Period.
Periodic Exercise Limit has the meaning set
forth in Section 4(a).
Plan Account means an account maintained by
the Company for each participant in the Plan, to which are
credited the payroll deductions made for such participant
pursuant to Section 5 and from which are debited amounts
paid for the purchase of shares upon exercise of such
participants Option pursuant to Section 6.
Purchase Price as of any Exercise Date means
an amount equal to 85% of the Fair Market Value of a share of
Common Stock as of the close of business on the Exercise Date or
the opening of business on the Enrollment Date for the Offering
Period in which such Exercise Date occurs, whichever is lower.
Purchase Period means (i) the period of
five (5) months commencing on August 1, 1996 and
ending on December 31, 1996; (ii) with respect to the
Offering Periods beginning on January and July 1, 1997,
January and July 1, 1998, and January 1, 1999, each
period of six (6) months within any such Offering Period,
commencing January 1, 1997 and each July 1 and January
1 thereafter, and ending on the December 31 or June 30
following such commencement date; (iii) with respect to the
Offering Period beginning on July 1, 1999, the period of
six (6) months commencing July 1, 1999 and ending on
December 31, 1999, the period of six (6) months
commencing on January 1, 2000 and ending on June 30,
2000, the period of six (6) months commencing on
July 1, 2000 and ending on December 31, 2000, the
period of three (3) months commencing on January 1,
2001 and ending on March 31, 2001, and the period of three
(3) months commencing on April 1, 2001 and ending on
June 30, 2001; (iv) with respect to the Offering
Period beginning on January 1, 2000, the period of six
(6) months commencing on January 1, 2000 and ending on
June 30, 2000, the period of six (6) months commencing
on July 1, 2000 and ending on December 31, 2000, and
each period of three (3) months commencing on
January 1, 2001 and each April 1, July 1, and
October 1 thereafter, and ending on the March 31,
June 30, September 30 and December 31 following
such commencement date; (v) with respect to the Offering
Period beginning on July 1, 2000, the period of six
(6) months commencing on July 1, 2000 and ending on
December 31, 2000, and each period of three (3) months
commencing on January 1, 2001 and each April 1,
July 1, and October 1 thereafter, and ending on the
March 31, June 30, September 30 and
December 31 following such commencement date; and
(vi) for any Offering Period commencing on or after
October 1, 2000, each period of three (3) months
within the Offering Period commencing on October 1, 2000
and each January 1, April 1, July 1, and
October 1 thereafter, and ending on the December 31,
March 31, June 30, and September 30 following
such commencement date.
C-2
Reserves means the number of shares of Common
Stock covered by each Option that has not yet been exercised and
the number of shares of Common Stock that have been authorized
for issuance under the Plan, but not yet placed under any Option.
Rule 16b-3 means Rule 16b-3 under
the Exchange Act and any successor provision.
Subsidiary has the meaning as set forth under
§ 424(f) of the Code.
Trading Day means a day on which national
stock exchanges and the National Association of Securities
Dealers Automated Quotation System are open for trading.
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3. |
Offering Periods and Participation. |
The Plan shall be implemented through a series of consecutive
and overlapping Offering Periods. An Eligible Employee may
enroll in an Offering Period by delivering a subscription
agreement in the form of Exhibit A hereto to the
Companys payroll office at least five (5) business
days prior to the Enrollment Date for that Offering Period.
Eligible Employees shall participate in only one Offering Period
at a time, and a subscription agreement in effect for a Plan
participant for a particular Offering Period shall continue in
effect for subsequent Offering Periods if the participant
remains an Eligible Employee and has not withdrawn pursuant to
Section 8.
(a) Grants. On the Enrollment Date for each Offering
Period, each Eligible Employee participating in such Offering
Period shall be granted an Option to purchase (i) on each
Exercise Date for any six-month Purchase Period in such Offering
Period (at the applicable Purchase Price) up to that number of
shares of Common Stock determined by dividing $12,500 by the
Fair Market Value of a share of Common Stock as of the opening
of business on the Enrollment Date, and (ii) on each
Exercise Date for any three-month Purchase Period in such
Offering Period (at the applicable Purchase Price) up to that
number of shares of Common Stock determined by dividing $6,250
by the Fair Market Value of a share of Common Stock as of the
opening of business on the Enrollment Date (such number of
shares being the Periodic Exercise Limit). The
Option shall expire immediately after the last Exercise Date of
the Offering Period.
(b) Grant Limitations. Any provisions of the Plan to
the contrary notwithstanding, no participant shall be granted an
Option under the Plan:
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(i) if, immediately after the grant, such participant (or
any other person whose stock would be attributed to such
participant pursuant to Section 424(d) of the Code) would
own stock and/or hold outstanding options to purchase stock
possessing five percent (5%) or more of the total combined
voting power or value of all classes of stock of the Company or
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(ii) which permits such participants rights to
purchase stock under all employee stock purchase plans of the
Company and its Subsidiaries to accrue at a rate that exceeds
Twenty-Five Thousand Dollars ($25,000) worth of stock
(determined at the Fair Market Value of the shares at the time
such Option is granted) in any calendar year. |
(c) No Rights in Respect of Underlying Stock. The
participant will have no interest or voting right in shares
covered by an Option until such Option has been exercised.
(a) Participant Designations. The subscription
agreement applicable to an Offering Period shall designate
payroll deductions to be made on each payday during the Offering
Period as a whole number percentage not exceeding ten percent
(10%) of such Eligible Employees Compensation for the pay
period preceding such payday, provided that the aggregate of
such payroll deductions during the Offering Period shall not
exceed ten percent (10%) of the participants Compensation
during said Offering Period.
C-3
(b) Plan Account Balances. The Company shall
make payroll deductions as specified in each participants
subscription agreement on each payday during the Offering Period
and credit such payroll deductions to such participants
Plan Account. A participant may not make any additional payments
into such Plan Account. No interest will accrue on any payroll
deductions. All payroll deductions received or held by the
Company under the Plan may be used by the Company for any
corporate purpose, and the Company shall not be obligated to
segregate such payroll deductions.
(c) Participant Changes. A participant may
discontinue his or her participation in the Plan as provided in
Section 8, or may increase or decrease (subject to such
limits as the Administrator may impose) the rate of his or her
payroll deductions during any Purchase Period by filing with the
Company a new subscription agreement authorizing such a change
in the payroll deduction rate. The change in rate shall be
effective with the first full payroll period following five
(5) business days after the Companys receipt of the
new subscription agreement, unless the Company elects to process
a given change in participation more quickly.
(d) Decreases. Notwithstanding the foregoing, to the
extent necessary to comply with Section 423(b)(8) of the
Code and Section 4(b) herein, a participants payroll
deductions may be decreased to 0% at such time during any
Purchase Period that is scheduled to end during a calendar year
(the Current Purchase Period) when the aggregate of
all payroll deductions previously used to purchase stock under
the Plan in a prior Purchase Period which ended during that
calendar year plus all payroll deductions accumulated with
respect to the Current Purchase Period equal $21,250. Payroll
deductions shall recommence at the rate provided in such
participants subscription agreement at the beginning of
the first Purchase Period that is scheduled to end in the
following calendar year, unless terminated by the participant as
provided in Section 8.
(e) Tax Obligations. At the time of each exercise of
a participants Option, and at the time any Common Stock
issued under the Plan to a participant is disposed of, the
participant must adequately provide for the Companys
federal, state, or other tax withholding obligations, if any,
that arise upon the exercise of the Option or the disposition of
the Common Stock. At any time, the Company may, but will not be
obligated to, withhold from the participants compensation
the amount necessary for the Company to meet applicable
withholding obligations, including any withholding required to
make available to the Company any tax deductions or benefit
attributable to sale or early disposition of Common Stock by the
participant.
(f) Statements of Account. The Company shall
maintain each participants Plan Account and shall give
each Plan participant a statement of account at least annually.
Such statements will set forth the amounts of payroll
deductions, the Purchase Price, the number of shares purchased
and the remaining cash balance, if any, for the period covered.
(a) Automatic Exercise on Exercise Dates. Unless a
participant withdraws as provided in Section 8, his or her
Option for the purchase of shares will be exercised
automatically on each Exercise Date within the Offering Period
in which such participant is enrolled for the maximum number of
shares of Common Stock, including fractional shares, as can then
be purchased at the applicable Purchase Price with the payroll
deductions accumulated in such participants Plan Account
and not yet applied to the purchase of shares under the Plan,
subject to the Periodic Exercise Limit. During a
participants lifetime, a participants Options to
purchase shares hereunder are exercisable only by the
participant.
(b) Delivery of Shares. As promptly as practicable
after each Exercise Date on which a purchase of shares occurs,
the Company shall arrange the delivery to each participant, as
appropriate, of a certificate or book entry transfer
representing the shares purchased upon exercise of his or her
Option, provided that the Company may in its discretion hold
fractional shares for the accounts of the participants pending
aggregation to whole shares.
(c) Compliance with Law. Shares shall not be issued
with respect to an Option unless the exercise of such Option and
the issuance and delivery of such shares pursuant thereto comply
with all applicable provisions of law, domestic or foreign,
including, without limitation, the Securities Act of 1933, as
amended, the Exchange Act, the rules and regulations promulgated
thereunder, and the requirements of any stock
C-4
exchange upon which the shares may then be listed, and shall be
further subject to the approval of counsel for the Company with
respect to such compliance. As a condition to the exercise of an
Option, the Company may require the participant for whom an
Option is exercised to represent and warrant at the time of any
such exercise that the shares are being purchased only for
investment and without any present intention to sell or
distribute such shares if, in the opinion of counsel for the
Company, such a representation is required by any of the
aforementioned applicable provisions of law. Shares issued upon
purchase under the Plan may be subject to such transfer
restrictions and stop-transfer instructions as the Administrator
deems appropriate.
(d) Excess Plan Account Balances. If, due to
application of the Periodic Exercise Limit, there remains in a
participants Plan Account immediately following exercise
of such participants Option on an Exercise Date any cash
accumulated during the Purchase Period immediately preceding
such Exercise Date and not applied to the purchase of shares
under the Plan, such cash shall promptly be returned to the
participant.
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7. |
Automatic Transfer to Low Price Offering Period. |
If the Fair Market Value of the Common Stock as of the close of
business on any Exercise Date is lower than the Fair Market
Value of the Common Stock as of the opening of business on the
Enrollment Date for the Offering Period in which such Exercise
Date occurs, then all participants in such Offering Period shall
be automatically withdrawn from such Offering Period immediately
after the exercise of their Options on such Exercise Date and
automatically re-enrolled in the immediately following Offering
Period as of the first day thereof.
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8. |
Withdrawal; Termination of Employment. |
(a) Voluntary Withdrawal. A participant may withdraw
from an Offering Period by giving written notice to the
Companys payroll office at least five (5) business
days prior to the next Exercise Date. Such withdrawal shall be
effective beginning five business days after receipt by the
Companys payroll office of notice thereof. On or promptly
following the effective date of any withdrawal, all (but not
less than all) of the withdrawing participants payroll
deductions credited to his or her Plan Account and not yet
applied to the purchase of shares under the Plan will be paid to
such participant, and on the effective date of such withdrawal
such participants Option for the Offering Period will be
automatically terminated, and no further payroll deductions for
the purchase of shares will be made during the Offering Period.
If a participant withdraws from an Offering Period, payroll
deductions will not resume at the beginning of any succeeding
Offering Period unless the participant delivers to the Company a
new subscription agreement with respect thereto.
(b) Termination of Employment. Promptly after a
participants ceasing to be an Eligible Employee for any
reason the payroll deductions credited to such
participants Plan Account and not yet applied to the
purchase of shares under the Plan will be returned to such
participant or, in the case of his or her death, to the person
or persons entitled thereto under Section 10, and such
participants Option will be automatically terminated,
provided that, if the Company does not learn of such death more
than five (5) business days prior to an Exercise Date,
payroll deductions credited to such participants Plan
account may be applied to the purchase of shares under the Plan
on such Exercise Date.
Neither payroll deductions credited to a participants Plan
Account nor any rights with regard to the exercise of an Option
or to receive shares under the Plan nor any Option itself may be
assigned, transferred, pledged or otherwise disposed of by the
participant in any way other than by will, the laws of descent
and distribution or as provided in Section 10 hereof. Any
such attempt at assignment, transfer, pledge or other
disposition shall be without effect, except that the
Administrator may treat such act as an election to withdraw from
an Offering Period in accordance with Section 8.
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10. |
Designation of Beneficiary. |
A participant may file a written designation of a beneficiary
who is to receive any cash from the participants Plan
Account in the event of such participants death and any
shares purchased for the
C-5
participant upon exercise of his or her Option but not yet
issued. If a participant is married and the designated
beneficiary is not the spouse, spousal consent may be required
for such designation to be effective. A designation of
beneficiary may be changed by a participant at any time by
written notice. In the event of the death of a participant and
in the absence of a beneficiary validly designated under the
Plan who is living at the time of such participants death,
the Company shall deliver such shares and/or cash to the
executor or administrator of the estate of the participant, or
if no such executor or administrator has been appointed (to the
knowledge of the Company), the Company, in its discretion, may
deliver such shares and/or cash to the spouse or to any one or
more dependents or relatives of the participant, or if no
spouse, dependent or relative is known to the Company, then to
such other person as the Company may designate.
The maximum number of shares of the Companys Common Stock
that shall be made available for sale under the Plan shall be
2,200,000 shares, subject to adjustment upon changes in
capitalization of the Company as provided in Section 12. If
on a given Enrollment Date or Exercise Date the number of shares
with respect to which Options are to be granted or exercised
exceeds the number of shares then available under the Plan, the
Administrator shall make a pro rata allocation of the shares
remaining available for purchase in as uniform a manner as shall
be practicable and as it shall determine to be equitable. Shares
of Common Stock subject to unexercised Options that expire,
terminate or are cancelled will again become available for the
grant of further Options under the Plan.
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12. |
Adjustments Upon Changes in Capitalization, Dissolution,
Merger or Asset Sale. |
(a) Changes in Capitalization. Subject to any
required action by the stockholders of the Company, the Reserves
as well as the Purchase Price, Periodic Exercise Limit, and
other characteristics of the Options, shall be appropriately and
proportionately adjusted for any increase or decrease or
exchange in the issued shares of Common Stock resulting from a
stock split, reverse stock split, stock dividend, combination or
reclassification of the Common Stock, exchange or any other
increase or decrease in the number of shares of Common Stock
effected without receipt of consideration by the Company;
provided, however, that conversion of any convertible securities
of the Company shall not be deemed to have been effected
without receipt of consideration. Such adjustment shall be
made by the Administrator, whose determination in that respect
shall be final, binding and conclusive. Except as expressly
provided herein, no issuance by the Company of shares of stock
of any class, or securities convertible into shares of stock of
any class, shall affect, and no adjustment by reason thereof
shall be made with respect to, the number or price of shares of
Common Stock subject to an Option. The Administrator may, if it
so determines in the exercise of its sole discretion, provide
for adjusting the Reserves, as well as the Purchase Price,
Periodic Exercise Limit, and other characteristics of the
Options, in the event the Company effects one or more
reorganizations, recapitalizations, rights offerings or other
increases or reductions of shares of its outstanding Common
Stock.
(b) Dissolution or Liquidation. In the event of the
proposed dissolution or liquidation of the Company, all pending
Offering Periods will terminate immediately prior to the
consummation of such proposed action, unless otherwise provided
by the Administrator, and all Plan Account balances will be paid
to participants as appropriate consistent with applicable law.
(c) Merger or Asset Sale. In the event of a proposed
sale of all or substantially all of the assets of the Company,
or the merger or other combination (the Transaction)
of the Company with or into another entity, each Option under
the Plan shall be assumed or an equivalent option shall be
substituted by such successor entity or a parent or subsidiary
of such successor entity, unless the Administrator determines,
in the exercise of its sole discretion and in lieu of such
assumption or substitution, to shorten the Offering Periods then
in progress by setting a new Exercise Date (the New
Exercise Date). If the Administrator shortens the Offering
Periods then in progress in lieu of assumption or substitution,
the Administrator shall notify each participant in writing, at
least ten (10) days prior to the New Exercise Date, that
the Exercise Date for such participants Option has been
changed to the New Exercise Date and that such
participants Option will be exercised automatically on the
New Exercise Date, unless prior to such date the participant has
withdrawn from the Offering Period as provided in Section 8
(provided that, in such case, the participants withdrawal
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shall be effective if notice thereof is delivered to the
Companys payroll office at least two (2) business
days prior to the New Exercise Date). For purposes of this
Section, an Option granted under the Plan shall be deemed to be
assumed if, following the Transaction the Option confers the
right to purchase at the Purchase Price (provided that for such
purposes the Fair Market Value of the Common Stock on the New
Exercise Date shall be the value per share of the consideration
paid in the Transaction), for each share of stock subject to the
Option immediately prior to the Transaction, the consideration
(whether stock, cash or other securities or property) received
in the Transaction by holders of Common Stock for each share of
Common Stock held on the effective date of the transaction (and
if such holders were offered a choice of consideration, the type
of consideration chosen by the holders of a majority of the
outstanding shares of Common Stock); provided, however, that if
such consideration received in the Transaction was not solely
common equity of the successor entity or its parent (as defined
in Section 424(e) of the Code), the Administrator may, with
the consent of the successor entity and the participant, provide
for the consideration to be received upon exercise of the Option
to be solely common equity of the successor entity or its parent
equal in fair market value to the per share consideration
received by holders of Common Stock in the Transaction.
The Plan shall be administered by the Committee, which shall
have the authority to construe, interpret and apply the terms of
the Plan and any agreements defining the rights and obligations
of the Company and participants under the Plan, to prescribe,
amend, and rescind rules and regulations relating to the Plan,
to determine eligibility and to adjudicate all disputed claims
filed under the Plan, and to make all other determinations
necessary or advisable for the administration of the Plan. The
Administrator may, in its discretion, delegate ministerial
responsibilities under the Plan to the Company. Every finding,
decision and determination made by the Committee shall, to the
full extent permitted by law, be final and binding upon all
parties. Any action of the Committee shall be taken pursuant to
a majority vote or by the unanimous written consent of its
members. The Committee shall consist of three or more members of
the Board, each of whom shall be disinterested within the
meaning of Rule 16b-3, provided, however, that the number
of members of the Committee may be reduced or increased from
time to time by the Board to the number required or allowed by
Rule 16b-3. The Board may from time to time in its
discretion exercise any responsibilities or authority allocated
to the Committee under the Plan. No member of the Committee or
any designee thereof will be liable for any action or
determination made in good faith with respect to the Plan or any
transaction arising under the Plan.
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14. |
Amendment or Termination. |
(a) Administrators Discretion. The
Administrator may, at any time and for any reason, terminate or
amend the Plan. Except as provided in Section 12, no such
termination can affect Options previously granted, provided that
an Offering Period may be terminated by the Administrator on any
Exercise Date if the Administrator determines that such
termination is in the best interests of the Company and its
stockholders. Except as provided herein, no amendment may make
any change in any Option theretofore granted that adversely
affects the rights of any participant. To the extent necessary
to comply with and qualify under Rule 16b-3 or under
Section 423 (or any successor rule or provision or any
other applicable law or regulation), the Administrator shall
obtain stockholder approval of amendments to the Plan in such a
manner and to such a degree as required.
(b) Administrative Modifications. Without
stockholder consent (except as specifically required by
applicable law or regulation) and without regard to whether any
participant rights may be considered to have been
adversely affected, the Administrator shall be
entitled to amend the Plan to the extent necessary to comply
with and qualify under Rule 16b-3 and Section 423,
change the Purchase Periods and/or Offering Periods, limit the
frequency and/or number of changes in payroll deductions during
Purchase Periods and/or Offering Periods, establish the exchange
ratio applicable to amounts withheld in a currency other than
U.S. dollars, permit payroll withholding in excess of the
amount designated by a participant to adjust for delays or
mistakes in the Companys processing of properly completed
withholding elections, establish reasonable waiting and
adjustment periods and/or accounting and crediting procedures to
ensure that amounts
C-7
applied toward the purchase of Common Stock for each participant
properly correspond with amounts withheld from the
participants Compensation, and establish such other
limitations or procedures as the Administrator determines in its
sole discretion to be advisable and which are consistent with
the Plan.
The Plan shall become effective upon the first Enrollment Date
after its approval by the stockholders of the Company and shall
continue in effect for a term of twenty (20) years unless
sooner terminated pursuant to Section 14.
(a) Notices. All notices or other communications by
a participant to the Company under or in connection with the
Plan shall be deemed to have been duly given when received in
the form specified by the Company at the location, or by the
person, designated by the Company for the receipt thereof.
(b) Subsidiaries. The Administrator may from time to
time in its discretion permit persons who are employees of any
Subsidiary whose customary employment is for more than five
months per calendar year and for more than 20 hours per
week to participate in the Plan on the same terms as Eligible
Employees hereunder.
(c) Stockholder Approval. The Plan shall be subject
to approval by the stockholders of the Company within twelve
months before or after the date the Board adopts the Plan. If
such stockholder approval is not obtained, the Plan and all
rights to the Common Stock purchased under the Plan shall be
null and void and shall have no effect.
(d) Additional Restrictions of Rule 16b-3. The
terms and conditions of Options granted hereunder to, and the
purchase of shares by, persons subject to Section 16 of the
Exchange Act shall comply with the applicable provisions of
Rule 16b-3. This Plan shall be deemed to contain, and such
Options shall contain, and the shares issued upon exercise
thereof shall be subject to, such additional conditions and
restrictions as may be required by Rule 16b-3 to qualify
for the maximum exemption from Section 16 of the Exchange
Act with respect to Plan transactions.
(e) No Employment Rights. The Plan does not,
directly or indirectly, create any right for the benefit of an
employee or class of employees to purchase any shares under the
Plan, or create in any employee or class of employees any right
with respect to continuation of employment by the Company, and
it shall not be deemed to interfere in any way with the
Companys right to terminate, or otherwise modify, an
employees employment at any time.
(f) Applicable Law. The laws of the State of
California shall govern all matters relating to the Plan, except
to the extent (if any) superseded by the laws of the United
States.
(g) Headings. Headings used herein are for
convenience of reference only and do not affect the meaning or
interpretation of the Plan.
C-8
EXHIBIT A
LA JOLLA PHARMACEUTICAL COMPANY
1995 EMPLOYEE STOCK PURCHASE PLAN
SUBSCRIPTION AGREEMENT
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Original Application |
Enrollment Date: |
Change in Payroll Deduction Rate
Change of Beneficiary(ies)
1. I, ,
hereby elect to participate in the La Jolla Pharmaceutical
Company 1995 Employee Stock Purchase Plan (the Plan)
and subscribe to purchase shares of the Companys Common
Stock in accordance with this Subscription Agreement and the
Plan.
2. I hereby authorize payroll deductions from each paycheck
in the amount of % (not to exceed
10%) of my Compensation (as defined in the Plan) on each payday
during the Offering Period in accordance with the Plan. (Please
note that no fractional percentages are permitted.)
3. I understand that said payroll deductions shall be
accumulated for the purchase of shares of Common Stock at the
applicable Purchase Price determined in accordance with the
Plan. I understand that if I do not withdraw from an Offering
Period, any accumulated payroll deductions will be used to
automatically exercise my Option on each Exercise Date within
the Offering Period.
4. I have received a copy of the complete Plan. I
understand that my participation in the Plan is in all respects
subject to the terms of the Plan, that capitalized terms used
herein have the same meanings as ascribed thereto in the Plan,
and that in case of any inconsistency between this Subscription
Agreement and the Plan, the Plan shall govern. I understand that
the grant of the Option by the Company under this Subscription
Agreement is subject to stockholder approval of the Plan.
5. Shares purchased for me under the Plan should be issued
in the name(s) of (employee and/or spouse
only): .
6. I understand that if I dispose of any shares received by
me pursuant to the Plan within two years after the Enrollment
Date (the first day of the Offering Period during which I
purchased such shares) or within one year after the Exercise
Date (the date I purchased such shares), I will be treated for
federal income tax purposes as having received ordinary income
at the time of such disposition in an amount equal to the excess
of the fair market value of the shares at the time such shares
were delivered to me over the price which I paid for the shares,
regardless of whether I disposed of the shares at a price less
than their fair market value at the Exercise Date. The remainder
of the gain or loss, if any, recognized on such disposition will
be treated as capital gain or loss. I hereby agree to notify the
Company in writing within 30 days after the date of any
disposition of my shares, and I will make adequate provision for
Federal, State or other tax withholding obligations, if any,
which arise upon the disposition of the Common Stock. The
Company may, but will not be obligated to, withhold from my
Compensation or other amounts payable to me the amount necessary
to meet any applicable withholding obligation including any
withholding necessary to make available to the Company any tax
deductions or benefits attributable to sale or early disposition
of Common Stock by me. If I dispose of such shares at any time
after the expiration of the one-year and two-year holding
periods described above, I understand that I will be treated for
federal income tax purposes as having received income only at
the time of such disposition, and that such income will be taxed
as ordinary income only to the extent of an amount equal to the
lesser of (a) the excess of the fair market value of the
shares at the time of such disposition over the purchase price
which I paid for the shares, or (b) 15% of the fair market
value of the shares on the first day of the Offering Period. The
remainder of the gain or loss, if any, recognized on such
disposition will be taxed as capital gain or loss. I understand
that this tax summary is only a summary for general information
purposes and is subject to change and I agree to consult with my
own tax advisors for definitive advice regarding the tax
consequences to me of participation in the Plan and sale of
shares purchased thereunder.
C-9
7. I agree to be bound by the terms of the Plan. The
effectiveness of this Subscription Agreement is dependent upon
my eligibility to participate in the Plan.
8. In the event of my death, I hereby designate the
following as my beneficiary(ies) to receive (in proportion to
the percentages listed below) all payments and shares due me
under the Plan (use additional sheets to add beneficiaries):
NAME: (Please print)
Relationship
NAME: (Please print)
Relationship
Employees Social Security Number:
Employees Address:
I UNDERSTAND THAT THIS SUBSCRIPTION AGREEMENT SHALL REMAIN IN
EFFECT THROUGHOUT SUCCESSIVE OFFERING PERIODS UNLESS TERMINATED
BY ME.
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Signature of Employee |
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Spouses Signature (If beneficiary other than spouse) |
C-10
LA JOLLA PHARMACEUTICAL COMPANY
PROXY CARD
THIS PROXY IS
SOLICITED ON BEHALF OF THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS
The undersigned hereby appoints Steven B. Engle and Gail A. Sloan, and each of them, as
proxies, each with the power to appoint such proxys substitute and hereby authorizes them to
represent and vote all of the shares of common stock of La Jolla Pharmaceutical Company held by the
undersigned on March 24, 2005 at the annual meeting of stockholders to be held on Thursday, May 19,
2005 and at any adjournment or postponement thereof, with like effect as if the undersigned were
personally present and voting upon the following matters.
THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS RECOMMENDS A VOTE FOR THE ELECTION OF DIRECTORS AND FOR PROPOSALS
2 THROUGH 5. PLEASE SIGN, DATE AND RETURN PROMPTLY IN THE ENCLOSED ENVELOPE. PLEASE MARK YOUR VOTE
IN BLUE OR BLACK INK AS SHOWN HERE þ.
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Election
of one Class II
director to serve
until the 2007
annual meeting of
stockholders and
of one Class III
director to serve
until the 2008
annual meeting of
stockholders, and
each to serve
until his
successor has been
duly elected and
qualified.
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o
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FOR ALL NOMINEES
listed below for
whom stockholder is
entitled
to vote |
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WITHHOLD AUTHORITY
FOR ALL NOMINEES
listed
below for whom
stockholder is entitled
to vote
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EXCEPTIONS
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NOMINEES: |
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○
CRAIG R. SMITH |
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Class II Nominee |
○
ROBERT A. FILDES |
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Class III Nominee |
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INSTRUCTIONS. To withhold authority to vote for any individual nominee, mark the
EXCEPTIONS box above and write that nominees name in the space provided below. |
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*Exceptions:
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2. |
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Amendment of the La Jolla Pharmaceutical Company Certificate of Incorporation to increase
the number of shares of common stock authorized for issuance by 75,000,000. |
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FOR
o
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AGAINST o
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ABSTAIN o |
3. |
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Amendment of the La Jolla Pharmaceutical Company 2004 Equity Incentive Plan to increase the
number of shares of common stock available for issuance thereunder by 2,800,000. |
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FOR
o
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AGAINST o
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ABSTAIN o |
4. |
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Amendment of the La Jolla Pharmaceutical Company 1995 Employee Stock Purchase Plan to
increase the number of shares of common stock available for issuance thereunder by 700,000. |
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FOR o
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AGAINST o
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ABSTAIN o |
5. |
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Ratification of the selection of Ernst & Young LLP as the independent registered public
accounting firm of La Jolla Pharmaceutical Company for the fiscal year ending December 31,
2005. |
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FOR o
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AGAINST o
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ABSTAIN o |
6. |
In their discretion, the proxies are authorized to consider and vote upon such other
business as may properly come before the annual meeting or any adjournment or postponement
thereof. |
This proxy when properly executed will be voted in the manner directed herein by the
undersigned stockholder. If no direction is made, this proxy will be voted FOR the election of the
above-named nominees and FOR proposals 2 through 5. This proxy confers discretionary authority
with respect to matters not known or determined at the time of mailing the notice of annual meeting
and the enclosed proxy statement.
The undersigned hereby acknowledges receipt of the Notice of Annual Meeting of Stockholders
and Proxy Statement furnished herewith and directs that his or her votes be cast by the above named
proxies in the manner directed herein. All other proxies heretofore given by the undersigned to
vote shares of common stock of La Jolla Pharmaceutical Company are expressly revoked.
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Signatures(s) of Stockholder:
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Dated:
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, 2005 |
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Please sign exactly as your name or names appear on this Proxy. When shares are held jointly,
each holder should sign, When signing as executor, adminstrator, attorney, trustee or guardian,
please give full title as such. If the signer is a corporation, please sign full corporate name by
duly authorized officer, giving full title as such. If signer is a partnership, please sign in
partnership name by authorized person.
Please sign and return this proxy in the enclosed envelope. The giving of this proxy will not
affect your right to vote in person if you attend the annual meeting. Please note, however, that
if your shares are held of record by a broker, bank or other nominee and you wish to vote at the
meeting, you must obtain from the record holder a proxy issued in your name. You may also submit
to the Secretary of La Jolla Pharmaceutical Company a later dated revocation or amendment to this
proxy on any of the matters set forth above.