Monday, December 08, 2003 |
Lawsuit aimed at Farmer
Bros.
By Muhammed El-Hasan
DAILY BREEZE
A finance professor filed a class-action lawsuit against Torrance coffee
roaster and distributor Farmer Bros. Co. to prevent the firm’s management
from having most voting shares.
The lawsuit comes as dissident investors search for ways to defeat a
management-sponsored proposal to reincorporate in Delaware, a move that
would further strengthen management’s control.
Filed late Thursday in U.S. District Court in Los Angeles, the suit seeks
to prevent management from voting the shares contained in the employee stock
ownership plan — about 8 percent of all company shares.
Leonard Rosenthal, a finance professor at Bentley College in Waltham,
Mass., purchased eight shares of Farmer Bros. stock in July.
“It was bought with the idea of making money on this,” Rosenthal said in
a telephone interview. “It was after I bought the stock that I realized
there were problems with corporate governance.”
Farmer Bros. has made about $35 million in loans to the ESOP, which
rewards employees with a stake in the company, but also concentrates a large
block of voting shares in management.
The lawsuit also seeks to have the company directors personally repay the
minority shareholders the amount spent on the ESOP.
“The illegal loans to the ESOP have illegitimately created enough
management-controlled votes to lock the minority shareholders into permanent
minority status,” the lawsuit states.
Farmer Bros. treasurer John Simmons said in a statement: “The company
hasn’t yet had a chance to thoroughly review and respond to the complaint
filed yesterday in the district court. On its face, however, there appears
to be no basis for this action.”
In October, management submitted a proposal for the Jan. 5 shareholder
meeting to reincorporate in Delaware. If approved, the proposal would
require an 80 percent super majority to pass any investor-sponsored
proposal.
The coffee roaster, whose products are used in restaurants, hotels and
other commercial outlets, has been fending off dissident investor
accusations that management is too secretive about financial information
including plans for its cash stockpile of $300 million.
Chairman Roy F. Farmer and the rest of the management control 54 percent
of stock. If the class-action lawsuit succeeds, company management would no
longer control most shares.Last month, Farmer’s sister, Catherine Crowe,and
her two children filed a lawsuit to remove him as head of a family trust
containing shares owned by the Crowes. If successful, that lawsuit would
deny Farmer another 12.5 percent of voting shares for the shareholder
meeting.
If both lawsuits succeed, management’s voting block would decline to
about 33.5 percent of shares.
“If you knock off either the 12.5 percent from the Crowe trusts or the 8
percent from the ESOP, management wouldn’t have the votes for the
reincorporation,” said Gary Lutin, who runs a Farmer Bros. discussion group
funded by one of the dissident investors. “If they win the reincorporation
vote, there will be virtually no shareholder rights left. So it’s a survival
issue for shareholders.
The Farmer Bros. share price rose 5 percent Friday on Nasdaq to close at
$315.25.
Publish Date:December
8, 2003
© Copyright 2003 Copley
Press, Inc.
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