Farmer Brothers Wins Round in Ongoing
Battle With Investors
WALL STREET WEST
A battle over a proposal related to control of employee
stock ownership plan assets ended in defeat last week for a group of
Farmer Bros. Co. shareholders.
The Securities and Exchange Commission said in an Oct. 4 letter to Farmer
Bros. attorneys Skadden Arps Slate Meagher & Flom LLP that Farmer Bros.
does not have to include in its proxy materials a proposal from hedge fund
Lime Capital Management LLC.
The proposal would have amended the company’s bylaws to provide control of
the ESOP to an independent trustee and a governing committee selected by
ESOP employee participants.
The proposal, submitted to the Torrance-based coffee company on Aug. 12 in
preparation for the annual stockholders meeting on Nov. 29, stated the
change was “so employees will know that their retirement rights cannot be
withdrawn or changed without their consent.”
Farmer Bros. attorneys claimed in an Aug. 25 letter to the SEC that
operating an employee benefit plan relates to employee compensation, which
is “within the scope of the ordinary business operations of the company,”
and may therefore be omitted from proxy materials. The SEC agreed.
“If the SEC isn’t going to allow the company’s employees to take
responsibility for the protection of their rights, I assume this means the
SEC will,” said New York investment banker Gary Lutin, who runs an
investor forum for Farmer Bros. shareholders and wrote several letters to
the SEC in support of the shareholder proposal.
“We’ve asked them to investigate and take appropriate action,” Lutin said.
“Management has basically stated in their argument that they intend to
continue to control assets they claim they turned over to employees.”
Lutin says that Farmer Bros. management used the ESOP, which was
established in 2000, to pass entrenchment measures.
“The Farmer Brothers ESOP already has pass-through voting, which means
that the employees vote all of the ESOP’s 300,000 shares,” said Jim Lucas,
a spokesman for Farmer Bros.
Shareholders have long been outspoken about their dissatisfaction with the
management of the 92-year-old company, which has posted 11 straight
quarters of year-over-year earnings declines.
Roy E. Farmer took over as chief executive in March 2003 from his father,
Roy F. Farmer, who died a year later.
In January, Lutin sent a letter to the SEC asking that it investigate
possible violations of securities laws. He and others maintain that Farmer
Bros.’ extensive investment portfolio makes it an investment company that
must comply with the Investment Act of 1940, and asked the SEC to probe
other issues.
Farmer Bros. management has since made some shareholder-friendly moves,
including disclosures related to a loan to the ESOP and modifications of
ESOP governance provisions. It also implemented a 10-1 stock split in
March.
Despite concessions, many shareholders want the company sold, Lutin said.
“There are increasing questions about management’s ability to either run
the coffee business or manage the investment portfolio,” he said. “There
are only two ways to solve the problem. One is for the board to replace
management, and they don’t seem inclined to do that. The other alternative
is to transfer ownership of the company to somebody that can provide the
management that’s needed to grow the company.”
– Rebecca Flass