Quarterly report pursuant to Section 13 or 15(d)

Commitments and Contingencies

v3.23.3
Commitments and Contingencies
9 Months Ended
Sep. 30, 2023
Commitments and Contingencies  
Commitments and Contingencies

14. Commitments and Contingencies

During three and nine months ended September 30, 2023 and 2022, the Company recorded the following as lease expense to current period operations:

    

Three Months Ended September 30, 

    

Nine Months Ended September 30, 

    

($ in thousands)

2023

2022

2023

2022

Operating lease cost

$

687

$

940

$

2,656

$

2,589

Shared lease costs

 

(526)

(542)

 

(1,560)

(1,592)

Variable lease cost

 

220

198

 

620

459

Total lease expense

$

381

$

596

$

1,716

$

1,456

The following tables summarize quantitative information about the Company’s operating leases, under the adoption of ASC Topic 842, Leases:

    

Nine Months Ended September 30, 

 

    

($ in thousands)

2023

2022

 

Operating cash flows from operating leases

$

(2,652)

$

(2,615)

Right-of-use assets exchanged for new operating lease liabilities

$

(923)

$

2,176

Weighted-average remaining lease term – operating leases (years)

 

4.2

 

4.9

Weighted-average discount rate – operating leases

 

6.28

%  

 

6.5

%

    

Future Lease

($ in thousands)

Liability

Three months ended December 31, 2023

$

900

Year Ended December 31, 2024

 

3,796

Year Ended December 31, 2025

 

3,799

Year Ended December 31, 2026

3,535

Year Ended December 31, 2027

3,191

Other

 

11,669

Total operating lease liabilities

 

26,890

Less: present value discount

 

(5,533)

Net operating lease liabilities, short-term and long-term

$

21,357

Indemnification

In accordance with its certificate of incorporation, bylaws and indemnification agreements, the Company has indemnification obligations to its officers and directors for certain events or occurrences, subject to certain limits, while they are serving at the Company’s request in such capacity. There have been no claims to date, and the Company has director and officer insurance to address such claims. The Company and its subsidiaries and partner companies also provide indemnification of contractual counterparties (sometimes without monetary caps) to clinical sites, service providers and licensors.

University of Tennessee Research Foundation v. Caelum Biosciences, Inc.

Caelum Biosciences, Inc. (“Caelum”), a former subsidiary of Fortress that was sold to AstraZeneca’s Alexion (“Alexion”) in October 2021, is the defendant in a lawsuit brought by The University of Tennessee Research Foundation (“UTRF”) captioned as University of Tennessee Research Foundation v. Caelum Biosciences, Inc., No. 19-cv-00508, which is pending in the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Tennessee (the “UTRF Litigation”).  UTRF brought claims against Caelum, for, inter alia, tortious interference and trade secret misappropriation.  UTRF primarily alleges that Caelum unauthorizedly used non-patent trade secrets owned by UTRF in the development of Caelum’s 11-1F4 monoclonal antibody, known as CAEL-101.  Under the agreement pursuant to which Alexion acquired Caelum (as amended, the “DOSPA”), Fortress has indemnification obligations of Caelum under certain circumstances, including for certain of Caelum’s legal expenses and potential damages arising out of the UTRF Litigation (with such indemnification capped in the aggregate as to Fortress at the amount of Caelum acquisition proceeds received by Fortress and which, at Caelum’s election, may be satisfiable in the form of offsets against future amounts that Caelum may owe Fortress under the DOSPA).  Caelum is defending the UTRF Litigation, with Fortress participating in such defense and maintaining a consent right over any potential settlements.  Caelum’s legal fees and costs in defending the UTRF Litigation are being reimbursed by Fortress by distribution from a $15 million escrow account established concurrently with the acquisition of Caelum; Fortress considers the amount remaining in escrow to be in excess of the amount of its anticipated out-of-pocket indemnifiable costs and damages in the UTRF Litigation and therefore has not accrued any liability pertaining to this indemnity.  Caelum and Fortress both believe the UTRF Litigation is without merit and intend to continue defending it vigorously (including exhausting all appeals if applicable).  Caelum’s motion for summary judgment is currently pending, and a trial is scheduled for March 2024 with respect to any of UTRF’s claims that may survive summary judgment.