Lynn Tilton loses dispute over her removal from board seats

Judge rules the Patriarch CEO improperly granted herself permanent control of three firms within Zohar funds managed
DEC 01, 2017
By  Bloomberg

Patriarch Partners Chief Executive Officer Lynn Tilton lost a challenge to her removal by Zohar investment funds from the boards of some portfolio companies she claimed to control. Tilton improperly granted herself permanent control over board seats at three companies within the Zohar funds she once managed and the funds are the firms' proper owners., a Delaware judge ruled Thursday. Patriarch's Tilton stepped down as manager of Zohar's distressed-debt funds last year after coming under fire from investors and the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission about her handling of the entities. She then permanently appointed herself to the boards of three of the companies Zohar managed. That move caused an improper transfer of "the voting rights attached to the portfolio companies' shares in violation'' of agreements covering the firms, Delaware Chancery Court Judge Joseph Slights ruled. "We strongly disagree with this ruling and will immediately appeal to the Delaware Supreme Court,'' Richard White, a Patriarch spokesman, said in an emailed statement.

Fund Holdings

The Zohar funds' managers challenged Tilton's refusal to step down from the boards of distressed companies such as FSAR Holdings Inc., Universal Ltd., and UI Acquisition Holding Co. They also accused her of overcharging the companies for management fees. Patriarch stepped down as manager for the Zohar funds in the wake of disputes with MBIA Inc. and minority investors about the performance of the entities. Investors questioned whether Tilton was unfairly enriching herself at the expense of the companies she was supposed to be trying to turn around. More than $800 million of debt insured by MBIA is at stake in one of the funds. Patriarch had sought to push one Zohar entity into bankruptcy and impose a reorganization plan that it said would pay MBIA in full. During a trial in Wilmington, Delaware, Tilton disputed that she charged excessive management fees to the Zohar portfolio companies and countered that the monies were used to help operate the businesses. The fund manager also argued she'd invested her own money into the companies and she controlled the firms rather than the Zohar funds. In his 96-page ruling, Slights noted Tilton, a sophisticated investor, acknowledged Zohar's ownership of the companies "in several documents she herself executed.'' Since the Zohar funds were the proper owners of the portfolio companies' shares, fund managers "had the authority" to oust Tilton as a director, the judge added. Earlier this year, Tilton convinced an SEC administrative law judge to reject regulators' allegations that Patriarch Partners bilked investors out of more than $200 million. The case is Zohar II 2005-1 Ltd. v. FSAR Holdings Inc., 12946, Delaware Court of Chancery (Wilmington).

Latest News

NY Republican Stefanik presses SEC to probe Harvard bond sale
NY Republican Stefanik presses SEC to probe Harvard bond sale

Open letter to SEC Chair Paul Atkins questions whether the Ivy League university withheld material information prior to its $750 million taxable bond offering.

Ex-LPL leader re-emerges at The Wealth Consulting Group
Ex-LPL leader re-emerges at The Wealth Consulting Group

The Las Vegas-based hybrid RIA overseeing $8.8 billion in assets has named Andy Kalbaugh president to help scale its advisor platform.

Envestnet extends investment offerings with new alts model portfolios
Envestnet extends investment offerings with new alts model portfolios

The wealth tech giant – in collaboration with Fidelity, BlackRock, State Street, and Franklin Templeton – is offering its advisor and wealth firm users more ways to diversify.

Just as wealth industry M&A was picking up, economic uncertainty could kill it again
Just as wealth industry M&A was picking up, economic uncertainty could kill it again

Deal volume increased post-election but now caution has taken over.

Want to get the most out of alts? You’ll have to do your homework
Want to get the most out of alts? You’ll have to do your homework

Advisors who expect an edge from alternatives' illiquidity premium – without understanding the underlying terms and explaining them to clients – have a world of learning to do.

SPONSORED RILAs bring stability, growth during volatile markets

Barely a decade old, registered index-linked annuities have quickly surged in popularity, thanks to their unique blend of protection and growth potential—an appealing option for investors looking to chart a steadier course through today's choppy market waters, says Myles Lambert, Brighthouse Financial.

SPONSORED Beyond the dashboard: Making wealth tech human

How intelliflo aims to solve advisors' top tech headaches—without sacrificing the personal touch clients crave