In this scenario it's equivalent to all of the founders quitting, shutting the company down, and going to work for Google, right? Ie. Google didn't buy / shouldn't own any of the company's assets?
No. It is equivalent to buying the preferred shares at $X/share, which obtains voting control of the board, cutting the founders a check (not for shares), and zeroing out the common.
This is always possible with a company with a significant interest controlled by the preferred (which is another way of saying: a company funded by VCs.)
Why would it be sleazy? What if the investors got their money back and nothing more? Even if they got more based on preference, I don't see the problem.
That TechCrunch article doesn't really present the event as a great exit, but more that the founders were hired to move on from a startup that wasn't really going anywhere. (the post specifically says that Google didn't technically acquire the company)
You don't see anything sleezy about an employee who put in both sweat equity and money getting nothing for his stock, while other shareholders are reimbursed for theirs?
Seems both sleezy and a cautionary tale for those thinking of working at a startup from where I'm sitting...
The general definition of preferred shares is that they are treated preferentially to common shares. In the most typical case, they get their money back before the remaining funds, if any, are disbursed.
So no. There's nothing sleazy about a preferred shareholder being treated preferentially, necessarily.
Usually things like preferred stock and senior bonds are used to protect shareholders from bankruptcy, rather than acquisition.
When you issue stock to someone, you accept a fiduciary responsibility for increasing the value of those shares to the best of your ability. That fiduciary responsibility includes siding with their interests if and when a conflict of interest arises.
If the founders really did receive a large pay day while taking the value of their non-preferred stock to zero, then it sounds like that fiduciary responsibility was ignored.
This is always possible with a company with a significant interest controlled by the preferred (which is another way of saying: a company funded by VCs.)