Farmer's shareholder
meeting is put on hold
TORRANCE: Coffee
roaster delays annual session as some dissident investors ask the SEC to
intervene in the company's voting-shares dispute.
By Muhammed El-Hasan, Daily Breeze
Torrance-based coffee roaster Farmer Bros. Co. on Thursday pushed back
its annual shareholders meeting until an unspecified day in February.
The company, which distributes its coffee beans to restaurants, hotels
and other commercial enterprises, previously had set the meeting for
Wednesday.
The date change comes as several outside investors have formally asked
the SEC to intervene in a dispute over voting shares.
The coffee roaster has proposed a reincorporation in Delaware, whose laws
empower public company directors more than in many other states. Some of the
management's proposals would limit outside shareholders' powers.
Prominent outside shareholders accuse management of using reincorporation
to silence dissent, a charge the company denies.
Some dissident investors are asking the SEC to prevent shares in Farmer
Bros.' employee stock ownership plan from being voted at the upcoming
shareholder meeting. The stocks, which represent 18.7 percent of outstanding
shares, constitute a swing vote that could determine whether the company's
proposals win approval. The dissident investors say those shares were
allocated illegally.
"In the case of Farmer Bros. unless you act to disallow the voting of
improperly acquired shares, the non-management shareholders will continue to
have their rights trampled on," according to a letter dated Tuesday and sent
to the SEC by Leonard Rosenthal, a Farmer Bros. shareholder and finance
professor at Bentley College in Waltham, Mass.
Last month, Rosenthal lost a class-action lawsuit in U.S. District Court
in Los Angeles to request a preliminary injunction to prevent the voting of
the employee stock ownership plan shares.
The judge ruled that an investor cannot sue the company under the
Investment Company Act, which Rosenthal claims the firm violated. It's the
SEC's responsibility to investigate possible violations of the act, the
judge said in her ruling.
It's unclear whether SEC intervention represents outside investors' last
chance to prevent reincorporation. The shares in the employee stock
ownership plan would be voted by the employees holding that stock.
But dissident investors have voiced concern that those employees could
side with their employer, Farmer Bros., possibly due to pressure from
supervisors.
The company denies the employees will be under pressure to vote in favor
of management proposals.
The company's preliminary proxy statement filed Thursday differs from a
previous statement mainly in that shareholders would vote for five
management-sponsored anti-takeover measures separately instead of as part of
a proposal to reincorporate in another state.
Farmer Bros. shares closed at $305 Thursday on the Nasdaq, up $3.
Publish Date:January
16, 2004
© Copyright 2004 Copley
Press, Inc.
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