Ryan's Restaurant Group, Inc.
UNITED STATES
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
Washington, D.C. 20549
SCHEDULE 14A
Proxy Statement Pursuant to Section 14(a) of
the Securities
Exchange Act of 1934
Filed by the Registrant
x
Filed by a Party other than the Registrant
o
Check the appropriate box:
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o Preliminary
Proxy Statement |
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o Confidential,
for Use of the Commission Only (as permitted by Rule 14a-6(e)(2)) |
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x Definitive
Proxy Statement
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o Definitive
Additional Materials
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o Soliciting
Material Pursuant to §240.14a-12
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Ryans Restaurant Group, Inc.
(Name of Registrant as Specified In Its Charter)
(Name of Person(s) Filing Proxy Statement, if
other than the Registrant)
Payment of Filing Fee (Check the appropriate box):
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No fee required.
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Fee computed on table below per Exchange Act
Rules 14a-6(i)(4) and 0-11.
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(1) |
Title of each class of securities to which
transaction applies:
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(2) |
Aggregate number of securities to which
transaction applies:
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(3) |
Per unit price or other underlying value of
transaction computed pursuant to Exchange Act Rule 0-11
(set forth the amount on which the filing fee is calculated and
state how it was determined):
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(4) |
Proposed maximum aggregate value of
transaction:
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Fee paid previously with preliminary materials.
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Check box if any part of the fee is offset as
provided by Exchange Act Rule 0-11(a)(2) and identify the
filing for which the offsetting fee was paid previously.
Identify the previous filing by registration statement number,
or the Form or Schedule and the date of its filing.
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(1) |
Amount Previously Paid:
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(2) |
Form, Schedule or Registration Statement No.:
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RYANS
RESTAURANT GROUP, INC.
405 Lancaster Avenue (29650)
Post Office Box 100 (29652)
Greer, South Carolina
September 5, 2006
To Our Shareholders:
We invite you to attend a special meeting of the shareholders of
Ryans Restaurant Group, Inc., a South Carolina corporation
to be held on October 5, 2006 at 10:00 a.m. local
time. The meeting will be held at Ryans corporate
headquarters, 405 Lancaster Avenue, Greer, South Carolina.
At the special meeting, you will be asked to adopt the agreement
and plan of merger, dated July 24, 2006, by and among
Ryans, Buffets, Inc. and Buffets Southeast, Inc., a
wholly-owned subsidiary of Buffets, and to approve the merger of
Buffets Southeast, Inc. with and into Ryans. If the
merger is completed, each holder of shares of our common stock
will be entitled to receive $16.25 in cash in exchange for each
share of our common stock held, as more fully described in the
enclosed proxy statement, and Ryans will become a
wholly-owned subsidiary of Buffets.
After careful consideration, our board of directors approved the
merger agreement and the merger and has declared the merger
agreement and the merger advisable and in the best interests of
Ryans and our shareholders. Our board of directors
recommends that you vote FOR the adoption of the merger
agreement and the approval of the merger.
The merger agreement must be adopted and the merger approved by
the affirmative vote of holders of at least two-thirds of our
outstanding shares of common stock that are entitled to vote at
the special meeting. If the merger agreement is adopted and the
merger is approved, the merger agreement provides that the
closing of the merger will occur no later than the third
business day after the other conditions to the closing of the
merger are satisfied or waived.
The accompanying notice of special meeting of shareholders
provides specific information concerning the special meeting.
The enclosed proxy statement provides you with a summary of the
merger and the merger agreement and additional information about
the parties involved. We urge you to read carefully the enclosed
proxy statement and the merger agreement, a copy of which is
included in the proxy statement as Exhibit A, and the
fairness opinion of Brookwood Associates, LLC, a copy of which
is included in the proxy statement as Exhibit B.
Your vote is very important. Whether you plan to attend the
special meeting or not, please either complete the enclosed
proxy card and return it as promptly as possible or submit your
proxy or voting instructions by telephone or Internet. The
enclosed proxy card contains instructions regarding voting. If
you attend the special meeting, you may continue to have your
shares voted as instructed in the proxy or you may withdraw your
proxy at the special meeting and vote your shares in person.
If you fail to vote by proxy or in person, or fail to
instruct your broker on how to vote, it will have the same
effect as a vote against adoption of the merger proposal.
Sincerely,
Charles D. Way
Chairman and Chief Executive Officer
This Proxy Statement is dated September 5, 2006 and is
first being mailed, along with the attached proxy card, to our
shareholders on or about September 6, 2006.
RYANS
RESTAURANT GROUP, INC.
405 Lancaster Avenue (29650)
Post Office Box 100 (29652)
Greer, South Carolina
NOTICE OF SPECIAL MEETING OF
SHAREHOLDERS
TO BE HELD OCTOBER 5, 2006
To Our Shareholders:
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that Ryans Restaurant Group, Inc.
will hold a Special Meeting of Shareholders at Ryans
corporate headquarters at 405 Lancaster Avenue, Greer, South
Carolina, on October 5, 2006, at 10:00 a.m. local time
for the following purposes:
(1) to consider and vote upon a proposal to adopt the
agreement and plan of merger, dated July 24, 2006, by and
among Ryans Restaurant Group, Inc.
(Ryans), Buffets, Inc., a Minnesota
corporation (Buffets), and Buffets Southeast, Inc.,
a South Carolina corporation (Merger Sub), a
wholly-owned subsidiary of Buffets, which we refer to as the
merger agreement, including approval of the merger of Buffets
Southeast with and into Ryans (the merger),
pursuant to which each holder of shares of our common stock,
will be entitled to receive $16.25 in cash, without interest, in
exchange for each share held;
(2) to consider and vote upon a proposal to grant
discretionary authority to the proxy holders to vote for the
adjournment or postponement of the special meeting if there are
insufficient votes at the time of the meeting to approve the
merger proposal; and
(3) to consider and act upon any other business properly
presented at the special meeting or any adjournment or
postponement thereof.
All holders of record of shares of our common stock as of the
close of business on August 28, 2006 are entitled to notice
of and to vote at the special meeting or any postponements or
adjournments of the special meeting. Regardless of the number
of shares you own, your vote is important. If you
do not plan to attend the meeting and vote your shares of common
stock in person, please cast your vote by either marking,
signing, dating and promptly returning the enclosed proxy card
in the postage-paid envelope or by submitting your proxy or
voting instructions by telephone or Internet.
Any proxy may be revoked at any time prior to its exercise by
delivery of a later-dated proxy card or by voting in person at
the special meeting.
After careful consideration, our board of directors approved
the merger agreement and the merger and has declared the merger
agreement and the merger advisable and in the best interests of
Ryans and our shareholders. Our board of directors
recommends that you vote FOR the adoption of the merger
agreement and the approval of the merger, FOR the proposal to
grant discretionary authority to the proxy holders to vote for
adjournment of the special meeting for the purpose of soliciting
additional proxies if there are insufficient votes at the
special meeting to approve the merger proposal and FOR the
authorization of the proxies to vote on such other matters as
may properly come before the special meeting or any adjournment
or postponement thereof.
We encourage you to read this proxy statement carefully. If you
have any questions or need assistance, please call our proxy
solicitor, W. F. Doring & Company at (201)-823-4300.
These documents may also be obtained for free from Ryans
by directing a request to Ryans Restaurant Group, Inc.,
Investor Relations, Ryans Restaurant Group, Inc., Post
Office Box 100, Greer, South Carolina 29652 or at our
Investor Relations page on our corporate website at
www.ryans.com.
By Order of the Board of Directors,
Janet J. Gleitz
Secretary
September 5, 2006
Greer, South Carolina
IMPORTANT:
Whether or not you plan to attend the special meeting, please
promptly either complete, sign, date and mail the enclosed form
of proxy or submit your proxy or voting instructions by
telephone or Internet. A self-addressed envelope is enclosed for
your convenience. Details are outlined in the enclosed proxy
card. If you hold your shares through a broker, dealer, trustee,
bank or other nominee, you may be also able to submit your proxy
or voting instructions by telephone or by Internet in accordance
with the instructions your broker, dealer, trustee, bank or
other nominee provides. Returning a signed proxy will not
prevent you from attending the meeting and voting in person, if
you wish to do so. Please note that if you execute multiple
proxies for the same shares, the last proxy you execute revokes
all previous proxies.
TABLE OF
CONTENTS
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1
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6
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EXHIBITS
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Exhibit A Agreement
and Plan of Merger
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Exhibit B Opinion of
Brookwood Associates, LLC
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i
SUMMARY
This summary highlights material information in this proxy
statement relating to the merger contemplated by the merger
agreement, which we refer to in this proxy statement as the
merger, and may not contain all of the information
that is important to you. To understand the merger and the
related transactions fully and for a more complete description
of the legal terms of the transactions contemplated by the
Agreement and Plan of Merger, which we refer to in this proxy
statement as the merger agreement, dated
July 24, 2006, by and among Buffets, Inc., which we refer
to in this proxy statement as Buffets, Buffets
Southeast, Inc., a wholly-owned subsidiary of Buffets, which we
refer to in this proxy statement as Merger Sub and
Ryans Restaurant Group, Inc., which we refer to in this
proxy statement as we, us,
our or Ryans, you should carefully
read this entire document as well as the additional documents to
which it refers, including the merger agreement, which is
attached to this proxy statement as Exhibit A and
incorporated herein by reference. For instructions on obtaining
more information, see Where You Can Find Additional
Information on page 43. This proxy statement is first
being mailed on or about September 6, 2006.
The
Parties (Page 12)
Ryans Restaurant Group, Inc.
405 Lancaster Avenue (29650)
Post Office Box 100 (29652)
Greer, South Carolina
(864) 879-1000
Ryans Restaurant Group, Inc., is a South Carolina
corporation that owns and operates a chain of restaurants
located principally in the southern and midwestern United
States. As of September 1, 2006, Ryans operated 261
Ryans®
brand restaurants and 72 Fire
Mountain®
brand restaurants.
Buffets, Inc.
1460 Buffet Way
Eagan, Minnesota 55121
(651) 994-8608
Buffets, Inc., is a Minnesota corporation that currently
operates 337 restaurants in 33 states comprised of 328
buffet restaurants and nine Tahoe Joes Famous
Steakhouse®
restaurants. The buffet restaurants are principally operated
under the Old Country
Buffet®
or HomeTown
Buffet®
brands. Buffets also franchises 18 buffet restaurants in
seven states.
Buffets Southeast, Inc
1460 Buffet Way
Eagan, Minnesota 55121
(651) 994-8608
Buffets Southeast, Inc., is a South Carolina corporation and was
organized solely for the purpose of acquiring Ryans
pursuant to the merger agreement. Merger Sub has not conducted
any activities to date other than activities incidental to its
formation and in connection with the proposed merger. Merger Sub
is wholly-owned by Buffets.
The
Merger (Page 12).
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If the merger is completed, Merger Sub will be merged with and
into Ryans with the result that Ryans will become a
wholly-owned subsidiary of Buffets. We sometimes use the term
surviving corporation in this proxy statement to
describe Ryans as the surviving entity following the
merger.
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The merger will become effective when we file articles of merger
with the Secretary of State of the State of South Carolina, or
at such later time that we and Buffets specify in the articles
of merger. We sometimes use the term effective time
in this proxy statement to describe the time the merger becomes
effective under South Carolina law.
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1
Merger
Consideration (Page 32).
If the merger is completed, each share of our common stock that
is issued and outstanding immediately prior to the effective
time of the merger (other than shares of our common stock owned
by Ryans, Buffets or Merger Sub or any of their respective
subsidiaries), together with any associated rights under
Ryans rights agreement, will be cancelled and
automatically converted into the right to receive an amount in
cash equal to $16.25, without interest, less any required
withholding taxes.
The
Special Meeting (Page 9)
Place,
Date and Time of the Special Meeting (Page 9)
The special meeting will be held at Ryans corporate
headquarters at 405 Lancaster Avenue, Greer, South Carolina, on
Thursday, October 5, 2006, at 10:00 a.m. local time.
Purpose
(Page 9)
The purpose of the special meeting is for you to consider and
vote upon a proposal to adopt the merger agreement and to
approve the merger and to vote upon a proposal to grant
discretionary authority to the proxy holders to vote for
adjournment of the special meeting for the purpose of soliciting
additional proxies if there are not sufficient votes at the
special meeting to approve the merger proposal.
Record
Date and Quorum (Page 9)
The holders of record of Ryans common stock as of the
close of business on the record date which was August 28,
2006 are entitled to receive notice of, and to vote at, the
special meeting. On the record date, there were 42,377,109
shares of Ryans common stock outstanding. The holders of a
majority of the outstanding shares of Ryans common stock
on the record date, represented in person or by proxy, will
constitute a quorum for purposes of the special meeting. For
purposes of determining whether a quorum exists, broker
non-votes and abstentions will be counted. Each holder will have
one vote at the special meeting for each share of Ryans
common stock held on the record date.
Required
Vote; Abstentions and Broker Non-Votes
(Page 9)
Completion of the merger requires approval of the merger by the
affirmative vote of the holders of two-thirds of the outstanding
shares of Ryans common stock entitled to vote at the
special meeting. Because the required vote is based on the
number of shares of Ryans common stock outstanding rather
than on the number of votes cast, failure to vote your shares
(including as a result of broker non-votes) and abstentions will
have the same effect as voting against approval of the merger
contemplated by the merger agreement.
Share
Ownership of Directors and Executive Officers
(Page 42)
As of the record date, our executive officers and directors
beneficially owned an aggregate of approximately 1,348,248
shares of Ryans common stock (in the form of 154,287
shares and stock options with respect to an additional 1,193,961
shares), representing 3.1% of the total beneficial ownership of
Ryans common stock and entitling them to exercise
approximately 0.4% of the voting power of Ryans common
stock entitled to vote at the special meeting. The executive
officers and directors of Ryans have advised us that they
intend to vote their shares of Ryans common stock in favor
of approval of the merger.
Interests
of Ryans Directors and Executive Officers in the Merger
(Page 27)
When you consider the recommendation of Ryans board of
directors that you vote for the adoption of the merger agreement
and approval of the merger, you should be aware that certain of
our directors and
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executive officers may have interests in the merger that are
different from, or in addition to, yours, including the
following:
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certain Ryans executive officers who are not directors
hold unvested stock options of Ryans common stock (with
respect to 1,500 shares in the aggregate), and these
options will become fully vested immediately prior to the
effective time of the merger and will be cancelled at the
effective time of the merger in exchange for the payment of
$8,685 in the aggregate under the merger agreement;
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Ryans executive officers generally are party to employment
agreements that provide, among other things, for severance
payments in certain circumstances following changes of control
such as the proposed merger; and
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the merger agreement provides for indemnification and insurance
arrangements for our current and former directors and officers
that will continue for six years following the effective time of
the merger.
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Opinion
of Ryans Fairness Advisor (Page 21)
In connection with the merger, Brookwood Associates, LLC
delivered its written opinion to our board of directors that,
based upon and subject to the various qualifications and
assumptions described therein, the consideration of
$16.25 per share to be received by Ryans shareholders
in the merger is fair from a financial point of view to
Ryans shareholders. The full text of the Brookwood opinion
is attached as Exhibit B to this proxy statement. We
encourage you to read the Brookwood opinion carefully in its
entirety for a description of the procedures followed,
assumptions made, matters considered and limitations on the
review undertaken by Brookwood. The opinion of Brookwood is
directed to our board of directors and does not constitute a
recommendation to any shareholder of Ryans as to how to
vote in connection with the merger.
Buffets
Financing (Page 36)
Buffets and Merger Sub have obtained a debt commitment letter
from Drawbridge Special Opportunity Fund, LLC and a debt
commitment letter from Credit Suisse Securities (USA) LLC, UBS
Securities LLC, Goldman Sachs Credit Partners L.P. and
Piper Jaffray & Co. providing for debt financing in an
aggregate principal amount of up to $1.5 billion for the
completion of the merger and other costs such as transaction
costs relating to the merger. In the event the committed amounts
become unavailable for any reason, Buffets and Merger Sub will
use their respective commercially reasonable efforts to arrange
alternative financing on terms and conditions that are not less
favorable in substance to Buffets and Merger Sub to those
contained in the commitment letters mentioned above.
Limitation
on Considering other Takeover Proposals (Page 36)
The merger agreement contains restrictions on our ability to
solicit or engage in discussions or negotiations with a third
party regarding specified transactions involving Ryans or
our subsidiaries. Notwithstanding these restrictions, under
certain circumstances, our board of directors may respond to an
unsolicited written bona fide proposal for an alternative
acquisition or terminate the merger agreement and enter into an
acquisition agreement with respect to a superior proposal.
Conditions
to Merger (Page 38)
Completion of the merger is subject to the satisfaction or
waiver of a number of conditions, such as:
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the affirmative vote of the holders of at least two-thirds of
the outstanding shares of Ryans common stock entitled to
vote at the special meeting to adopt the merger agreement and
approve the merger;
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there must be no order, decree, ruling, judgment or injunction
by any governmental authority of competent jurisdiction making
illegal or preventing the merger substantially on the terms
contemplated in the merger agreement;
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the waiting period under the
Hart-Scott-Rodino
Antitrust Improvements Act of 1976 (referred to in this proxy
statement as the HSR Act) must have expired or been
terminated;
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the representations and warranties of Ryans set forth in
the merger agreement, regardless of any materiality or material
adverse effect qualification, must be true and correct in all
respects as of the date the merger closes (except for any
representations or warranties made as of a specified date, which
must only be true as of such specified date), except for any
failures of such representations and warranties to be true and
correct as would not individually or in the aggregate reasonably
be expected to have a material adverse effect on Ryans;
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Ryans must have performed or complied with, in all
material respects, all obligations under the merger agreement at
or prior to the effective time of the merger; and
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Ryans, Buffets or Merger Sub, as applicable, must have
received the proceeds of the financing contemplated by the
financing commitment letters described under Buffets
Financing or alternative financing, in each case, no less
favorable in substance to Buffets, Merger Sub or the surviving
corporation, as applicable.
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Termination
of the Merger Agreement (Page 39)
We and Buffets may agree in writing to terminate the merger
agreement at any time without completing the merger whether
before or after the adoption of the merger agreement and
approval of the merger by Ryans shareholders.
Under certain circumstances, prior to the closing of the merger,
either we or Buffets may terminate the merger agreement without
the consent of the other party.
Termination
Fees (Page 40)
Upon termination of the merger agreement following the
occurrence of certain events, we may be required to pay Buffets
a termination fee and to reimburse Buffets for its documented
out-of-pocket
expenses in connection with the merger in an aggregate amount
equal to $25,000,000. Upon termination of the merger agreement
following the occurrence of certain events, Buffets may be
required to pay us a termination fee of $7,500,000.
Certain
Material United States Federal Income Tax Consequences
(Page 30)
If you are a U.S. holder of our common stock, receipt of
the merger consideration will be a taxable transaction to you
for federal income tax purposes. Although your tax consequences
will depend on your particular situation, you will generally
recognize gain or loss measured by the difference, if any,
between the cash you receive in the merger and your adjusted tax
basis in your shares of Ryans common stock. If you are a
non-U.S. holder
of our common stock, the merger will generally not be a taxable
transaction to you under federal income tax laws unless you have
certain connections to the United States. You should consult
your own tax advisor for a full understanding of the tax
consequences of the merger to you.
Regulatory
Approvals (Page 29)
Other than approval pursuant to the HSR Act, no other material
federal or state regulatory approvals are required to be
obtained by us, Buffets or Merger Sub in connection with the
merger. On August 7, 2006, Ryans and Buffets each
filed a Notification and Report Form with the Antitrust Division
of the Department of Justice and the Federal Trade Commission.
Under the HSR Act and related rules, the merger may not be
completed until the expiration or termination of the statutory
waiting period. The waiting period is scheduled to expire at
11:50 p.m. (EDT) on September 6, 2006, unless early
termination is granted or unless extended by a request for
additional information.
Litigation
Challenging the Merger (Page 29)
On July 28, 2006, a putative shareholder class action,
Marjorie Fretwell v. Ryans Restaurant Group, Inc.
et. al. Case
No. 06-CP-23-4828,
was filed against Ryans and its directors in the
Greenville County, South Carolina Circuit Court.
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The complaint alleges that each of the directors of Ryans
individually breached the fiduciary duties owing to the
Ryans shareholders by voting to approve the merger
agreement and alleges that Ryans aided and abetted such
alleged breach of fiduciary duties. The complaint seeks, among
other relief, the courts designation of class action
status, a declaration that entry into the merger agreement was
in breach of the defendants fiduciary duties and therefore
was unlawful and unenforceable, and entry of an order enjoining
the defendants from taking further action to consummate the
proposed merger. Ryans and its board of directors believe
that the action is without merit and will vigorously defend it.
Market
Price of Ryans Common Stock (Page 41)
Our common stock is listed on the NASDAQ National Market
(NASDAQ) under the trading symbol RYAN.
On July 24, 2006, which was the last trading day before we
made a public announcement about the merger, the closing price
of Ryans common stock was $11.22 per share. On
September 1, 2006, which was the last trading day before
this proxy statement was finalized, the closing price of
Ryans common stock was $15.78 per share.
Appraisal
Rights (Page 29)
Under applicable provisions of South Carolina law, no
dissenters or appraisal rights are available with respect
to the merger because our common stock is designated as a
national market system security on an interdealer quotation
system by the National Association of Securities Dealers.
5
QUESTIONS
AND ANSWERS ABOUT THE SPECIAL MEETING AND THE MERGER
The following questions and answers address briefly some
questions you may have regarding the special meeting and the
proposed merger. These questions and answers may not address all
questions that may be important to you as a shareholder of
Ryans. Please refer to the more detailed information
contained elsewhere in this proxy statement, as well as the
additional documents to which it refers or which it incorporates
by reference, including the merger agreement, a copy of which is
attached to this proxy statement as Exhibit A.
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Why am I receiving this proxy statement? |
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You are receiving this proxy statement because you are being
asked to vote to adopt the merger agreement and approve the
merger and to consider the grant of discretionary authority to
the proxy holders to vote for adjournment of the special meeting
for the purpose of soliciting additional proxies if they are
insufficient votes at the time of the meeting to approve the
merger proposal. |
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What is the proposed transaction? |
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The proposed transaction is the acquisition of Ryans by
Buffets under an agreement and plan of merger, dated
July 24, 2006, by and among Buffets, Inc., Buffets
Southeast, Inc., a wholly-owned subsidiary of Buffets and
Ryans. Once the merger has been approved by Ryans
shareholders and the other closing conditions under the merger
agreement have been satisfied or waived, Merger Sub will merge
with and into Ryans. Ryans will be the surviving
corporation in the merger, but the shares of its common stock
will not be publicly traded after the merger. |
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What will I receive in the merger? |
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You will be entitled to receive $16.25 in cash, without
interest, less any required withholding taxes, for each
outstanding share of Ryans common stock that you own as of
the effective time of the merger. |
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When do you expect to complete the merger? |
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We are working toward completing the merger as promptly as
practicable. If our shareholders vote to adopt the merger
agreement and approve the merger, and the other conditions to
the merger are satisfied or waived, then we intend to complete
the merger as soon as possible after the special meeting. The
merger agreement provides that the closing will occur no later
than the third business day after the other conditions to the
closing of the merger are satisfied or waived. We expect to
complete the merger in the fourth quarter of 2006. |
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Will I have appraisal rights in connection with the
merger? |
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No. Under applicable provisions of South Carolina law, no
dissenters or appraisal rights are available in connection
with the merger because our common stock is designated as a
national market system security on an interdealer quotation
system by the National Association of Securities Dealers. |
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What vote of our shareholders is required to adopt the merger
agreement? |
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Approval of the merger requires the affirmative vote of at least
two-thirds of the shares of Ryans common stock that are
outstanding and entitled to vote at the special meeting.
Because the required vote is based on the number of shares of
Ryans common stock outstanding and not the number of votes
cast, failure to vote your shares (including as a result of
broker non-votes) and abstentions will have the same effect as
voting against approval of the merger. We urge
you to either complete, sign and return the enclosed proxy card
or submit your proxy or voting instructions by telephone or
Internet to assure the representation of your shares of
Ryans common stock at the special meeting. |
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How does Ryans board of directors recommend that I
vote? |
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Our board of directors unanimously recommends that our
shareholders vote FOR the adoption of the
merger agreement and approval of the merger and
FOR the granting of discretionary authority
to the proxy holders to vote for adjournment of the special
meeting for the purpose of soliciting additional proxies if
there are insufficient votes to approve the merger proposal at
the time of the special meeting. For a description of the
factors considered by our board of directors, please see
Reasons for the Merger and Recommendation of Our Board of
Directors beginning on page 19. |
6
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This proxy statement contains important information regarding
the special meeting, the merger agreement and the merger, as
well as information about Ryans, Buffets and Merger Sub.
It also contains important information about some of the factors
our board of directors considered in approving the merger
agreement and the merger. We urge you to carefully read this
proxy statement, including its exhibits, and to consider how the
merger affects you. You may also want to review the documents
referenced in the section captioned Where You Can Find
More Information beginning on page 43. |
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If my Ryans shares are held in street name
by my broker, will my broker vote my shares for me if I do not
give instructions? |
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If you hold your shares in street name through a
broker or other nominee, your broker or nominee will not vote
your shares unless you provide instructions on how to vote. You
should instruct your broker or nominee how to vote your shares
by following the directions your broker or nominee will provide
to you. If you do not provide instructions to your broker or
nominee with respect to the merger proposal, your shares will
not be voted and this will have the same effect as a vote
against the proposal to adopt the merger agreement and approve
the merger. If a quorum is present, but you did not provide
instructions to your broker or nominee with respect to the
granting of discretionary authority with respect to adjournment,
your shares will not be voted and this will have no effect on
the outcome of the adjournment proposal. |
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Can I change my vote? |
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Yes. You may change your vote at any time before the shares
reflected on your proxy are voted at the special meeting. If you
own your shares in your name, you can do this in one of three
ways. First, you can send a written notice of revocation to our
secretary at our principal executive offices. Second, you can
either mark, sign, date and return a new proxy card or submit
your proxy or voting instructions by telephone or Internet at a
later date than your previously submitted proxy. Third, you can
attend the meeting and vote in person. Your attendance alone
will not revoke your proxy. If you have instructed a broker,
dealer, trustee, bank or other nominee to vote your shares, you
must follow the directions received from the broker, dealer,
trustee, bank or other nominee to change your instructions. |
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Should I send in my Ryans stock certificates now? |
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No. You should not send in your Ryans stock
certificates now. After we complete the merger, the paying
agent, American Stock Transfer & Trust Company, will
send you a letter of transmittal describing how you may exchange
your Ryans stock certificates for the merger
consideration. At that time, you must send in your share
certificates or execute an appropriate instrument of transfer of
your shares of Ryans common stock, as applicable, with
your completed letter of transmittal to the paying agent to
receive the merger consideration. If you do not hold any
physical share certificates, you must execute a properly
completed letter of transmittal and arrange to electronically
transfer your shares of Ryans common stock. |
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Have any shareholders already agreed to approve the
merger? |
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No. There are no agreements between the Merger Sub or
Buffets and any Ryans shareholder in which that
shareholder has agreed to vote in favor of adopting the merger
agreement and approving the merger. |
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What are the financial interests of Ryans directors,
officers and employees in the merger? |
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Our directors and executive officers also hold shares of
Ryans common stock and options to purchase shares of
Ryans common stock which will be converted in the same
manner as other shareholders and option holders of Ryans.
For more information on the holdings of stock and options by
directors and executive officers, see Security Ownership
of Management and Certain Beneficial Owners, beginning on
page 42. In addition, the merger agreement provides for
certain indemnification arrangements for our current and former
directors and officers, and our executive officers could be
entitled to severance payments under certain circumstances if
their employment with Ryans or the surviving corporation
ends at or following the merger. See Interests of Certain
Persons in the Merger, beginning on page 27. |
7
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Will I owe taxes as a result of the merger? |
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The receipt of cash in exchange for shares of Ryans common
stock or options to purchase Ryans common stock pursuant
to the merger will generally be a taxable transaction for
U.S. federal income tax purposes. In general, you will
recognize a capital gain or loss equal to the difference between
the amount of merger consideration you receive for your shares
and the adjusted tax basis of your shares. See Material
U.S. Federal Income Tax Consequences, beginning on
page 30. You should consult your tax advisor for a complete
understanding of the specific tax consequences of the merger to
you. |
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What if I have additional questions? |
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If you have questions about the merger agreement, the special
meeting or where to send your proxy, or if you would like
additional copies of this proxy statement, you should contact
the following: Secretary, Janet Gleitz, at
(864) 879-1000. |
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Where can I find more information about Ryans? |
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We file certain information with the SEC under the Exchange Act.
You may read and copy this information at the SECs public
reference facilities. You may call the SEC at
1-800-SEC-0330
for information about these facilities. This information is also
available at the Internet site the SEC maintains at www.sec.gov
and at our Investor Relations page on our corporate website at
www.ryans.com. Information contained on our website is
not part of, or incorporated in, this proxy statement. You can
also request copies of these documents from us. See Where
You Can Find More Information beginning on page 43. |
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Who will solicit and pay the cost of soliciting proxies? |
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Ryans board of directors is soliciting your proxy.
Ryans will bear the cost of soliciting proxies. In
addition to solicitation by mail and, without additional
compensation for these services, proxies may be solicited by
telephone and facsimile, by mail, on the Internet or in person.
We will pay approximately $7,500 to our proxy solicitor. We will
also request that banking institutions, brokerage firms,
custodians, directors, nominees, fiduciaries and other like
parties forward the solicitation materials to the beneficial
owners of shares of common stock held of record by such person,
and we will, upon request of such record holders, reimburse
reasonable forwarding charges and
out-of-pocket
expenses. |
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If you have further questions, you may contact W. F.
Doring & Company by phone at
(291) 823-4300
or by mail at 866-868 Broadway, Bayonne, New Jersey, 07002. |
8
THE
SPECIAL MEETING OF RYANS SHAREHOLDERS
The
Proposal
This proxy statement is being furnished to our shareholders in
connection with the solicitation of proxies by the Ryans
board of directors for use at a special meeting to be held at
Ryans executive offices, 405 Lancaster Avenue, Greer,
South Carolina on October 5, 2006, at 10:00 a.m. local
time. The purpose of the special meeting is for you to consider
and vote upon a proposal to adopt the merger agreement, which
provides for the merger of Merger Sub with and into Ryans
with the result that Ryans will become a wholly-owned
subsidiary of Buffets, to consider and vote upon a proposal to
grant discretionary authority to the proxy holders to adjourn
the special meeting for the purpose of soliciting additional
proxies and to transact any other business that may properly
come before the special meeting or any adjournment or
postponement thereof. A copy of the merger agreement is attached
as Exhibit A to this proxy statement.
Record
Date; Stock Entitled to Vote; Quorum
The holders of record of our common stock as of the close of
business on August 28, 2006, which is the record date for
the special meeting, are entitled to receive notice of, and to
vote at, the special meeting.
On the record date, there were 42,377,109 shares of our common
stock outstanding held by approximately 2,988 shareholders of
record. The presence in person or by proxy of the holders
entitled to cast a majority of the total votes of our common
stock as of the record date will constitute a quorum for
purposes of the special meeting. Each holder of our common stock
is entitled to one vote per share of our common stock held. Both
abstentions and broker non-votes will be counted as
present for purposes of determining the existence of a quorum.
In the event that a quorum is not present at the special
meeting, we currently expect that we will adjourn or postpone
the meeting to solicit additional proxies. Broker
non-votes result when the beneficial owners of shares of
common stock do not provide specific voting instructions to
their brokers. Under the rules of The Nasdaq Stock Market,
brokers are precluded from exercising their voting discretion
with respect to the approval of non-routine matters.
Vote
Required
Completion of the merger requires the approval of the merger by
the affirmative vote of the holders of two-thirds of Ryans
common stock entitled to vote at the special meeting. Approval
of the grant of discretionary authority to the proxy holders to
vote for adjournment of the special meeting for the purpose of
soliciting additional proxies will require the affirmative vote
of holders of a majority of the shares voting on the issue at
the special meeting.
Our board of directors recommends that you vote FOR the
adoption of the merger agreement and the approval of the merger,
FOR the proposal to grant discretionary authority to the proxy
holders to vote for adjournment of the special meeting for the
purpose of soliciting additional proxies if there are
insufficient votes at the special meeting to approve the merger
proposal and FOR the authorization of the proxies to vote on
such other matters as may properly come before the special
meeting or any adjournment or postponement thereof.
Each holder of shares of Ryans common stock that was
outstanding on the record date is entitled to one vote at the
special meeting for each share held. Because the required
vote with respect to the merger is based on the number of shares
of Ryans common stock outstanding rather than on the
number of votes cast, failure to vote your shares (including as
a result of broker non-votes) and abstentions with respect to
the merger proposal will have the same effect as voting
against approval of the merger. Accordingly, in order
for your shares of common stock to be included in the vote, if
you are a shareholder of record, you must either have your
shares voted by returning the enclosed proxy card or by
following voting instructions by telephone or Internet, or you
must vote in person at the special meeting.
9
Proxies
Record holders may cause their shares of Ryans common
stock to be voted using one of the following methods:
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mark, sign, date and return the enclosed proxy card by mail;
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submit your proxy or voting instructions by telephone or
Internet by following the instructions included with your proxy
card; or
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appear and vote in person by ballot at the special meeting.
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Regardless of whether you plan to attend the special meeting, we
request that you complete and return a proxy for your shares of
Ryans common stock as described above as promptly as
possible.
If you hold your shares of Ryans common stock through a
bank, brokerage firm or nominee (i.e., in street
name), you must provide voting instructions in accordance
with the instructions on the voting instruction card that your
bank, brokerage firm or nominee provides to you. You should
instruct your bank, brokerage firm or nominee as to how to vote
your shares, following the directions contained in such voting
instruction card. If you have not received such voting
instructions or require further information regarding such
voting instructions, contact your broker, who can give you
directions on how to vote your shares of Ryans common
stock.
As of the record date, our executive officers and directors
beneficially owned an aggregate of approximately 1,348,248
shares of Ryans common stock (in the form of 154,287
shares and stock options with respect to an additional 1,193,961
shares), representing 3.1% of the total beneficial ownership of
Ryans common stock and entitling them to exercise
approximately 0.4% of the voting power of Ryans common
stock entitled to vote at the special meeting.
Shareholders who have questions or requests for assistance in
completing and submitting proxy cards should contact our
Secretary, Janet Gleitz, at
(864) 879-1000.
Revocation
If you submit a proxy, your shares will be voted at the special
meeting as you indicate on your proxy. If no instructions are
indicated on your signed proxy card, your shares of Ryans
common stock will be voted FOR the approval
of the merger, FOR the proposal to grant
discretionary authority to the proxy holders to vote for
adjournment of the special meeting for the purpose of soliciting
additional proxies if there are insufficient votes at the
special meeting to approve the merger proposal and
FOR the authorization of the proxies to vote
on such other matters as may properly come before the special
meeting or any adjournment or postponement thereof.
You may revoke your proxy at any time, but only before the proxy
is voted at the special meeting, in any of three ways:
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by delivering a written revocation dated after the date of the
proxy that the proxy is being revoked to the Secretary of
Ryans at 405 Lancaster Avenue, Post Office Box 100,
Greer, South Carolina, 29652;
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by delivering to the Secretary of Ryans a later-dated,
duly executed proxy or by submitting your proxy or voting
instructions by telephone or Internet at a date after the date
of the previously submitted proxy relating to the same
shares; or
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by attending the special meeting and voting in person by ballot.
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Attendance at the special meeting will not, in itself,
constitute revocation of a previously granted proxy. If you hold
your shares of Ryans common stock in street name, you may
revoke or change a previously given proxy by following the
instructions provided by the bank, brokerage firm, nominee or
other party that is the registered owner of the shares.
10
Solicitation
of Proxies
Ryans will pay the costs of soliciting proxies for the
special meeting. In addition, our officers and directors and
employees may solicit proxies by telephone,
e-mail,
telegram or personal interview for no additional compensation.
We will also request that individuals and entities holding
shares in their names, or in the names of their nominees, that
are beneficially owned by others, send proxy materials to and
obtain proxies from those beneficial owners, and will reimburse
those holders for their reasonable expenses in performing those
services. We have engaged W. F. Doring & Company to
solicit proxies and distribute materials to brokerage houses,
banks, custodians, nominees and fiduciaries for a fee of
approximately $7,500. We will reimburse brokerage houses and
other custodians, nominees and fiduciaries for their reasonable
out-of-pocket
expenses for forwarding solicitation materials to shareholders.
Adjournments
and Postponements
Although we do not expect to do so, if we have not received
sufficient proxies to constitute a quorum or sufficient votes
for approval of the merger at the special meeting of
shareholders, the special meeting may be adjourned for the
purpose of soliciting additional proxies. Any signed proxies
received by us will be voted in favor of an adjournment in these
circumstances. Any adjournment or postponement of the special
meeting for the purpose of soliciting additional proxies will
allow shareholders who have already sent in their proxies to
revoke them at any time prior to their use.
Other
Business
As of the date of this proxy statement, we are not aware of any
business other than the proposed merger that may be presented
for consideration at the special meeting. If any other business
properly comes before the meeting, the shares represented by
proxies will be voted in the discretion of, and according to the
best judgment of, the proxy holders.
HOUSEHOLDING
OF PROXY MATERIALS
Some banks, brokerages and other nominee record holders may be
participating in the practice of householding proxy
statements. This means that only one copy of this proxy
statement may have been sent to multiple shareholders in your
household. Ryans will promptly deliver a separate copy of
this proxy statement to you if you call or write Ryans at
the following address or telephone number: Ryans
Restaurant Group, Inc., 405 Lancaster Avenue, Post Office
Box 100, Greer, South Carolina, 29652, telephone
864-879-1000,
Attention: Janet J. Gleitz. If you want to receive separate
copies of Ryans proxy statement in the future, or if you
are receiving multiple copies and would like to receive only one
copy for your household, you should contact your bank, broker or
other nominee record holder, or you may contact Ryans at
the above address and telephone number.
FORWARD-LOOKING
STATEMENTS
This document contains statements, which to the extent they are
not statements of historical or present fact, constitute forward
looking statements. These forward-looking statements are
identified by their use of terms and phrases such as
anticipate, believe, could,
estimate, expect, intend,
may, plan, predict,
project, will and similar terms and
phrases, and may also include references to assumptions. We or
our representatives may also make similar forward-looking
statements from time to time orally or in writing. Such
statements are based upon our current beliefs and expectations
and are subject to significant risks and uncertainties. There
are a number of important factors that could cause actual
results or events to differ materially from those indicated by
such forward-looking statements, including:
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we may be unable to obtain Ryans shareholder approval
required to consummate the merger;
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conditions to the closing may not be satisfied or the merger
agreement may be terminated prior to closing;
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11
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failure to obtain regulatory approvals of the merger or
otherwise to complete the merger, or any potential adverse
conditions to receiving regulatory approvals;
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changes in the restaurant operation business;
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changes in government regulation, including, but not limited to,
environmental, tax laws, and economic policy;
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legal actions; and
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acts of war or terrorism.
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Additional factors that may affect future results are contained
in Ryans filings with the SEC, including Ryans
Annual Report on
Form 10-K
for the year ended December 28, 2005, which are available
at the SECs Web site www.sec.gov. The information
set forth herein speaks only as of the date hereof, and any
intention or obligation to update any forward-looking statements
as a result of developments occurring after the date hereof is
hereby disclaimed except to the extent required by law.
THE
PARTIES TO THE MERGER
Ryans
Restaurant Group, Inc.
Ryans is a South Carolina corporation that owns and
operates a chain of restaurants located principally in the
southern and midwestern United States. As of September 1,
2006, Ryans operated 261
Ryans®
brand restaurants and 72 Fire
Mountain®
brand restaurants.
Buffets,
Inc.
Buffets is a Minnesota corporation that currently operates 337
restaurants in 33 states comprised of 328 buffet
restaurants and nine Tahoe Joes Famous
Steakhouse®
restaurants. The buffet restaurants are principally operated
under the Old Country
Buffet®
or HomeTown
Buffet®
brands. Buffets also franchises 18 buffet restaurants in
seven states.
Buffets
Southeast, Inc.
Merger Sub is a South Carolina corporation and was organized
solely for the purpose of effecting the proposed transaction.
Merger Sub has not conducted any activities to date other than
activities incidental to its formation and in connection with
the proposed transaction. Merger Sub is wholly-owned by Buffets.
If the transaction is consummated, Merger Sub would cease to
exist after it merges with Ryans.
THE
MERGER
This discussion of the merger is qualified by reference to
the merger agreement, which is attached to this proxy statement
as Exhibit A. You should read the entire merger agreement
carefully as it is the legal document that governs the
merger.
Background
of the Merger
On December 8, 2005, a representative of an entity with
which Ryans had no prior relationship contacted
Ryans Chief Executive Officer, Charles D. Way, to discuss
the interest it and another entity (collectively, Company
A) had in Ryans. On December 12, 2005, Company
A sent a letter to Mr. Way suggesting a meeting between
representatives of Company A and members of Ryans
executive management team.
On December 21, 2005, members of Ryans executive
management met with representatives of Company A and discussed
Company As interest in Ryans.
12
On December 27, 2005, Ryans received an unsolicited
letter from Company A expressing an interest in a possible
acquisition of all of the outstanding shares of Ryans
common stock for a proposed purchase price between $14.50 and
$15.00 per share. A copy of this letter was sent to all
Ryans board members and a special board meeting was called
for January 4, 2006.
On January 4, 2006, Ryans board of directors held a
special meeting to discuss Company As letter and whether
the sale of Ryans should be pursued. Ryans board of
directors also discussed the process by which it should evaluate
Company As letter or otherwise pursue the sale of
Ryans, if Ryans board of directors determined to do
so. In order to avoid any potential conflicts of interest which
might arise, Ryans board of directors appointed a special
committee of the board consisting of independent directors Barry
L. Edwards, Harold K. Roberts, Jr., and Brian S. MacKenzie,
with Mr. Edwards serving as chairman. Ryans board of
directors authorized the special committee to (i) consider
Company As letter and any other proposals or alternatives
that may be received or sought by the special committee from any
other party; (ii) conduct or supervise the conduct of any
negotiations with respect to Company As letter and any
such proposals; (iii) review, evaluate and make a
determination with respect to Company As letter or any
other proposal; and (iv) make a recommendation to
Ryans board of directors with respect to Company As
letter or any proposed transaction or alternative considered by
the special committee. Ryans board of directors also
authorized the special committee to engage advisers, including
legal counsel and financial advisers, to assist the special
committee in fulfilling its duties.
The special committee retained Rogers & Hardin LLP
(Rogers & Hardin) as legal counsel to the
special committee.
On January 9, 2006, the special committee held a telephonic
meeting in which Rogers & Hardin participated. The
special committee summarized for Rogers & Hardin the
events to date with regard to Company As letter.
Rogers & Hardin discussed with the special committee
the fiduciary duties of directors with respect to a transaction
of the type contemplated by Company As letter and the role
of the special committee. The special committee also discussed
engaging Brookwood Associates, LLC (Brookwood) as
the financial advisor to the special committee.
On January 11, 2006, Company A delivered to
Mr. Edwards a request for due diligence and requested that
Company A and Ryans enter into a confidentiality
agreement. On January 18, 2006, the special committee,
through its representatives provided a form confidentiality
agreement to Company A.
On January 13, 2006, the special committee met
telephonically with Rogers & Hardin and Brookwood
present. Brookwood discussed with the special committee the due
diligence process generally, including the due diligence review
Brookwood would need to conduct in order to provide an
independent valuation of Ryans. The special committee
agreed to make available information which Brookwood requested
in order to prepare a preliminary assessment of Ryans
value. Brookwood and Rogers & Hardin further discussed
the negotiation and sale process, including the possibility of
having Brookwood contact other potential interested parties.
Immediately following this meeting, the special committee and
Rogers & Hardin met telephonically to discuss the terms
of Brookwoods proposed engagement.
From January 13, 2006 through January 24, 2006, the
special committee, with the assistance of Rogers &
Hardin, negotiated and finalized the terms of Brookwoods
engagement as the financial advisor to the special committee,
and the special committee and Brookwood executed an engagement
agreement dated January 27, 2006.
On January 30, 2006, Ryans board of directors held a
regularly scheduled board meeting at which the special committee
reported to Ryans full board of directors with respect to
the special committees progress. Rogers & Hardin
and Brookwood joined this portion of the meeting telephonically.
From January 24, 2006 through February 9, 2006,
Brookwood conducted a due diligence investigation of
Ryans, including in-person due diligence meetings at
Ryans corporate headquarters between representatives of
Brookwood and Ryans executive management team.
13
On February 1, 2006, following the negotiation of the
terms, a confidentiality agreement was executed by Ryans
and Company A.
On February 10, 2006, the special committee held a
telephonic meeting at which Brookwood reviewed with the special
committee Brookwoods preliminary financial analysis of
Ryans equity value based upon various methodologies,
including comparable selected public companies, selected merger
and acquisitions, discounted cash flows and premiums paid in
selected transactions. The special committee determined that the
purchase price proposed by Company A was not adequate and
instructed Brookwood to inform Company A of such determination.
Brookwood informed the special committee that it had considered
various parties that had sufficient resources and relevant
transaction experience to enter into a transaction with
Ryans and that it had identified seven parties, other than
Company A, that Brookwood believed would be most likely to have
an interest in acquiring Ryans, taking into account the
nature and value of Ryans assets and business and the
parties experience in the restaurant industry. The special
committee agreed to have Brookwood solicit indications of
interest from these potentially interested parties on a
confidential basis.
On February 13, 2006, Brookwood informed Company A that the
special committee had determined that Company As proposed
purchase price was too low.
During the end of February 2006, materials to be distributed to
the previously identified parties were prepared, including a
form confidentiality agreement, summary information regarding
Ryans and a letter inviting the submission of non-binding
indications of interest.
In early March, Brookwood contacted the previously identified
parties on a confidential basis to determine if they were
interested in receiving information. By March 17, 2006, six
of the parties which had been contacted by Brookwood had entered
into confidentiality agreements with Ryans and had
received summary information and a letter inviting such buyers
to submit non-binding indications of interest. Thereafter,
during the remainder of March and early April, four of the six
parties which had executed confidentiality agreements had
various discussions with Brookwood and members of Ryans
management concerning due diligence and other related matters to
permit such parties to determine a price range in which they
would have an interest in acquiring Ryans. The other two
parties determined, after review of the summary information,
that they were not interested in continuing the process.
On March 9, 2006, the special committee received a letter
from Company A which reaffirmed Company As proposal to
purchase Ryans common stock for a purchase price of
$14.50 per share, subject to Company As satisfactory
completion of due diligence. Company A requested that
Ryans execute an exclusivity agreement providing for a
45-day
exclusivity period, the payment by Ryans of a $250,000 fee
and Ryans agreement to reimburse Company A for its due
diligence expenses up to an additional $750,000.
During March 2006, Mr. Edwards and Brookwood had several
discussions with Company A regarding its
March 9th letter, including reasons why Company
As proposed purchase price should be increased.
On March 14, 2006, the special committee held a telephonic
meeting at which Brookwood and Rogers & Hardin were
present. Mr. Edwards updated the special committee with
respect to his conversations with Company A, and the special
committee discussed Company As March 9th letter
and strategies for negotiating a higher purchase price from
Company A. The special committee also discussed Company As
request for exclusivity and for fees and expense reimbursement
and agreed that Ryans should not enter into an exclusivity
agreement at that time. Brookwood updated the special committee
regarding Brookwoods progress with respect to contacting
the previously identified parties. The special committee
instructed Brookwood to attempt to obtain indications of
interest with price ranges from such parties.
Following the special committee meeting on March 14, 2006,
Mr. Edwards had a further conversation with Company A and
was informed that, while Company A might increase the range of
its proposed purchase price, Company A ultimately would not
likely be willing to pay more than $15.00 per share.
At a telephonic meeting of the special committee held on
March 16, 2006, at which Brookwood and Rogers &
Hardin were present, Mr. Edwards updated the special
committee regarding his conversations with
14
Company A. Brookwood also updated the special committee
regarding the status of Brookwoods efforts to obtain
indications of interest from the other previously identified
parties, and the special committee instructed Brookwood to
continue those efforts.
On March 21, 2006, Caxton-Iseman Capital, Inc., a New
York-based private equity firm, began its initial due diligence
related to Ryans business. Buffets is owned by an
investment partnership organized by Caxton-Iseman Capital, Inc.
and the senior management of Buffets. We refer to Caxton-Iseman
Capital, Inc. and Buffets collectively in this proxy statement,
as Caxton-Iseman.
In response to the invitation letter, on April 4, 2006, an
entity which had no prior relationship to Ryans, referred
herein as Company B, submitted to the special
committee an initial indication of interest to acquire all of
the outstanding shares of Ryans common stock for a
proposed purchase price between $13.00 and $15.50 per
share. Brookwood advised Company B that its proposed price range
was too wide.
On April 3, 2006 and April 4, 2006, Mr. Edwards
and Brookwood continued discussions with Company A and its
representatives regarding its proposal, including advising
Company A that the special committee believed its proposed
purchase price to be too low, and informed Company A that the
special committee was having discussions with other interested
buyers.
The special committee held a telephonic meeting on April 5,
2006, at which Brookwood and Rogers & Hardin were
present. At the meeting, Brookwood reported that of the six
parties who had executed confidentiality agreements (other than
Company A), two were not interested in pursuing a transaction;
two expressed a general interest in a transaction, but did not
submit indications of interest because they did not believe that
the value of Ryans supported a price that would represent
a material premium to market; the fifth, Company B, provided an
indication of interest between $13.00 and $15.50; and Brookwood
expected to receive shortly a written indication of interest
from the sixth, Caxton-Iseman. The special committee discussed
the proposal from Company B and the continuing discussions with
Company A, including the risks that Company B may not be willing
to pay at least $15.00 per share and that Company A might
decrease its proposed purchase price after completing due
diligence.
In response to the invitation letter, on April 7, 2006,
Caxton-Iseman submitted to the special committee an initial
indication of interest to acquire all of the outstanding shares
of Ryans common stock for a proposed purchase price
between $15.25 to $16.00 per share.
At a meeting of Ryans board of directors held on
April 10, 2006 at which Brookwood was present by telephone,
Brookwood updated Ryans board of directors regarding the
results of Brookwoods solicitation of indications of
interest from the previously identified parties. Brookwood
reported that, based on the indications of interest received by
the special committee, Brookwood, under the direction of the
special committee, was continuing the process with Company A and
the two other parties which submitted indications of interest.
Brookwood suggested that each of the three parties be invited to
Ryans corporate offices for further discussion.
Between April 24, 2006 and May 10, 2006, Company A,
Company B and Caxton-Iseman participated in meetings with
Ryans executive management, conducted site visits of
Ryans restaurants and corporate offices, and were given
access to additional due diligence materials. In addition,
during April and May 2006, Brookwood and Ryans had
numerous conversations with representatives of Company A,
Company B and Caxton-Iseman with respect to such parties
due diligence review of Ryans.
Brookwood, at the request of the special committee, instructed
Company A, Company B and Caxton-Iseman to submit to the special
committee their highest and final indication of interest no
later than May 26, 2006.
On May 5, 2006, the last remaining party originally
contacted by Brookwood executed a confidentiality agreement, was
provided with the summary information, was asked to provide an
indication of interest with a price range and was advised of the
May 26 deadline. This company did not provide Brookwood with a
price range or indication of interest.
15
On May 17, 2006, Company A sent a letter to the special
committee increasing Company As proposed purchase price to
$15.10 per share.
Between May 17, 2006 and May 30, 2006,
Mr. Edwards and Brookwood had several conversations with
Company A and its financial adviser indicating that
$15.10 per share was too low and that the fees and
reimbursement of expenses requested by Company A were too high.
On May 30, 2006, Company A sent another letter to the
special committee increasing Company As proposed purchase
price to $15.25 per share, conditioned upon Ryans
agreeing to a
45-day
exclusivity period during which Company A would conduct
confirmatory due diligence and negotiate the terms of an
acquisition agreement and upon Ryans agreeing to reimburse
Company A for one-half of its costs and expenses up to $500,000
if no acquisition agreement was entered into.
On the morning of June 1, 2006, the special committee had a
telephonic meeting with Brookwood and Rogers & Hardin
to discuss the proposals from Company A, Company B and
Caxton-Iseman. Brookwood informed the special committee that,
based on recent discussions with Company B and Caxton-Iseman,
Brookwood expected that Company B would be increasing its
proposed purchase price to $15.25 per share and that
Caxton-Iseman had orally proposed a purchase price of
$15.25 per share (both of which would be subject to
completion of confirmatory due diligence, negotiation of a
definitive acquisition agreement and entering into an
exclusivity period). The special committee discussed the
advantages and disadvantages of each proposal, including the due
diligence conducted by each party, the risks that any particular
bidder would reduce its proposed purchase price, the risks
associated with the financing needs of each bidder to consummate
the proposed transaction and the impact of the respective
proposals on Ryans employees and operations and the
related risks to Ryans if the transaction failed to close
(including the potential loss of employees).
On the afternoon of June 1, 2006, Company B submitted to
the special committee a draft letter of intent in which Company
B increased its proposed purchase price to $15.25 per
share. The draft letter of intent included a
45-day
exclusivity period for Company B to complete confirmatory due
diligence and negotiate the terms of an acquisition agreement.
Mr. Edwards, Brookwood and representatives of Company B had
discussions regarding Company Bs proposal. Company B also
had discussions with Mr. Way with regard to Company
Bs proposal.
On June 2, 2006, Ryans board of directors held a
telephonic meeting with Brookwood present. Mr. Edwards
updated Ryans full board of directors with respect to the
status of the negotiations and, based upon the advantages and
disadvantages of each proposal as previously discussed by the
special committee on June 1, 2006, the special committee
determined that Company As proposal was the most
favorable and unanimously recommended that Ryans enter
into an exclusivity agreement with Company A.
Following this meeting, Brookwood informed Company B and
Caxton-Iseman that the special committee had determined to enter
into exclusive discussions with another party regarding the
acquisition of Ryans. Later on June 2, 2006,
Brookwood had further discussions with Caxton-Iseman in which
Caxton-Iseman indicated that it might be willing to increase its
purchase price.
On the evening of June 2, 2006, Caxton-Iseman contacted
Brookwood and increased its proposed purchase price from $15.25
to $16.75 per share. Caxton-Iseman also sent a letter to
the special committee reflecting the $16.75 per share
purchase price, subject to confirmatory due diligence, and
indicating that Caxton-Iseman would provide to Ryans upon
request financing commitments from Caxton-Isemans lenders.
Caxton-Iseman indicated that it was only prepared to move
forward on this basis if Ryans and Caxton-Iseman entered
into an exclusivity agreement.
Later that evening, the special committee had a telephonic
meeting with Brookwood and Rogers & Hardin present and
discussed the increased proposal by Caxton-Iseman and the terms
of their exclusivity agreement. The special committee determined
that Caxton-Isemans revised proposal was more favorable
than the other proposals and further determined to enter into a
45-day
exclusivity period with Caxton-Iseman, subject to
Caxton-Isemans agreement to provide financing commitments
from Caxton-Isemans lenders by June 13, 2006.
16
On June 3, 2006, Rogers & Hardin negotiated and
finalized with Caxton-Isemans legal counsel, Paul, Weiss,
Rifkind, Wharton & Garrison LLP (Paul
Weiss) the terms of an exclusivity agreement, which was
executed by Ryans and Caxton-Iseman on such date. The
exclusivity agreement provided, among other things, for a
45-day
exclusivity period which would terminate if Caxton-Iseman did
not deliver to Ryans by June 13, 2006 a financing
commitment from Credit Suisse or another financial institution
reasonably acceptable to Ryans on terms customary for
transactions similar to the proposed merger.
On June 5, 2006, Caxton-Iseman commenced its confirmatory
due diligence related to Ryans business.
On June 7, 2006, Company B sent an unsigned letter to
Brookwood indicating that it was having discussions on a no-name
basis with a competitor of Ryans and that it believed that
it could increase its purchase price range to between $16 and
$17, assuming that it reached an agreement with the competitor.
After discussing the letter with Mr. Edwards, Brookwood
advised Company B that its unsigned letter was too
contingent and uncertain and that Ryans had entered into
an exclusivity agreement with another party.
On June 13, 2006, Caxton-Iseman provided Brookwood with
draft financing commitment letters from Credit Suisse and
Drawbridge Special Opportunities Fund LP.
On July 7, 2006, Paul Weiss circulated to the special
committee an initial draft of the merger agreement. The initial
draft did not permit Ryans to terminate the merger
agreement upon expiration or termination of Caxton-Isemans
financing commitments and, upon termination of the merger
agreement following certain events, required Ryans to pay
Buffets a termination fee of $25,000,000 and to reimburse
Buffets for all documented
out-of-pocket
expenses incurred by Buffets in connection with the transactions
contemplated by the merger agreement, provided the aggregate fee
and expenses payable by Ryans would not exceed
$30,000,000. Further, the initial draft did not require Buffets
to pay a termination fee to Ryans in any circumstance.
The special committee met telephonically on July 13, 2006
with Brookwood and Rogers & Hardin present to discuss
the principal terms of the merger agreement and to identify the
issues raised by the merger agreement. At the meeting, the
special committee also discussed the anticipated timeline for
the execution of the merger agreement and the pending expiration
of the exclusivity agreement and considered the possibility that
Caxton-Iseman might request to extend the exclusivity period.
Based on these discussions and instructions provided by the
special committee, Rogers & Hardin sent a revised
merger agreement reflecting the comments of the special
committee and Ryans to Paul Weiss. The revised merger
agreement, among other things, proposed to reduce the
termination fee payable by Ryans, reduce the aggregate fee
and expenses to be paid by Ryans and provide Ryans
with the right to terminate the merger agreement if
Caxton-Isemans financing commitments expire or terminate.
In addition, the revised merger agreement proposed a termination
fee payable by Buffets to Ryans upon termination of the
merger agreement by Ryans following the occurrence of
certain events and reduced the number of conditions to
Buffets obligation to close the transaction.
From July 14, 2006 through July 24, 2006,
Rogers & Hardin and Paul Weiss engaged in negotiations
regarding the merger agreement, including negotiations
concerning the termination fees payable by Ryans and
Buffets, expenses payable by Ryans and closing and
termination provisions. During the same time period,
Rogers & Hardin conferred with Mr. Edwards
regarding each revised draft of the merger agreement circulated
by Paul Weiss and discussed with Mr. Edwards the issues
raised by such drafts.
On or about July 17, 2006, Caxton-Iseman, through legal
counsel, requested that the exclusivity period be extended in
order to provide sufficient time to complete due diligence
related to Ryans business, negotiate the remaining terms
and conditions of the merger agreement and obtain final
financing commitment letters from Caxton-Isemans lenders.
On July 18, 2006, Caxton-Isemans financial advisers
discussed with Brookwood Caxton-Isemans concerns regarding
Ryans declining store sales, anticipated expenses and
defense or settlement costs with respect to certain wage and
hour lawsuits filed against Ryans, increased financing
costs to Caxton-Iseman in connection with the proposed merger
and the impact that general economic conditions may have on
Ryans business.
17
On July 18, 2006, Brookwood and Rogers & Hardin
discussed with Mr. Edwards the unresolved issues in the
merger agreement, Caxton-Isemans concerns regarding
Ryans performance and the increased financing costs and
Caxton-Isemans request to extend the exclusivity period.
After conferring with the other members of the special
committee, Mr. Edwards informed Brookwood and
Rogers & Hardin that the special committee had agreed
to extend the exclusivity period through July 24, 2006.
On July 18, 2006, Ryans and Caxton-Iseman amended the
exclusivity agreement to extend the exclusivity period through
and including July 24, 2006.
On July 20, 2006, Brookwood and Rogers & Hardin
discussed with Mr. Edwards the remaining unresolved issues
in the merger agreement, the status of the negotiations and the
possibility that Caxton-Iseman might reduce its proposed
purchase price in response to the concerns previously expressed
by Caxton-Iseman.
On July 21, 2006, Caxton-Iseman notified Brookwood that, as
a result of concerns previously raised with Brookwood on
July 18, 2006, Caxton-Iseman was reducing its proposed
purchase price from $16.75 to $16.25 per share.
On July 23, 2006, Mr. Edwards discussed with Brookwood
and Rogers & Hardin the recent revisions to the merger
agreement, including how certain issues in the merger agreement
had been addressed, and the reduction in Caxton-Isemans
proposed purchase price.
On July 24, 2006, the special committee held a telephonic
meeting at which Brookwood and Rogers & Hardin were
present. Prior to the meeting, each member of the special
committee had received a draft of the most recent version of the
proposed merger agreement, a copy of discussion materials
prepared by Brookwood and other related materials.
Rogers & Hardin reviewed with the special committee the
material legal points in the proposed merger agreement,
including how certain issues in the merger agreement had been
addressed. Rogers & Hardin also reviewed with the
special committee the directors fiduciary duties in
connection with the proposed transaction. Brookwood then
reviewed with the special committee Brookwoods financial
analysis of the merger consideration and rendered to the special
committee an oral opinion, which was confirmed by delivery of a
written opinion later that day, to the effect that, as of the
date of its opinion and based on and subject to the matters
described in the opinion, the $16.25 per share merger
consideration to be paid to Ryans shareholders was fair,
from a financial point of view, to the Ryans shareholders.
After an extensive discussion in which the special committee,
together with Brookwood and Rogers & Hardin, discussed,
among other things, the potential risks and benefits of the
merger transaction, the reduction in the maximum aggregate
amount of the termination fee and expenses payable by
Ryans from $30,000,000 to $25,000,000, the size of the
proposed termination fee as compared to similar transactions,
the requirement that Buffets pay a termination fee of $7,500,000
to Ryans in certain circumstances, the possibility of
Ryans terminating the merger agreement for a superior
proposal subject to the termination fee, the possibility of
Ryans terminating the merger agreement if Buffets
financing commitments expire or terminate and replacement
financing reasonably acceptable to Ryans is not obtained
within 30 days, and the closing conditions to the merger, the
special committee unanimously approved a motion recommending
that Ryans full board of directors approve and adopt the
merger agreement and approve the merger.
Following the meeting of the special committee, Ryans full
board of directors also met telephonically to review the
recommendation of the special committee and the proposed sale of
Ryans to Caxton-Iseman. Brookwood reviewed with
Ryans board of directors its financial analysis of the
merger consideration as presented to the special committee
earlier in the day. Ryans board of directors was also
informed by Mr. Edwards of the special committees
recommendation and that Brookwood had rendered an oral opinion
to the special committee, which would be confirmed by the
delivery of a written opinion later that day, that based upon
and subject to the various qualifications and assumptions
described therein, the consideration of $16.25 per share to
be received by Ryans shareholders in the merger is fair
from a financial point of view to Ryans shareholders.
Ryans board of directors then discussed the proposed
transaction, the opinion of Brookwood and the recommendation of
the special committee. Ryans board of directors
unanimously determined that the merger
18
and the merger agreement are advisable, fair to and in the best
interest of the Ryans shareholders, approved the merger
and the merger agreement, and resolved to recommend that
Ryans shareholders adopt the merger agreement and approve
the merger.
Later on the night of July 24, 2006, the merger agreement
was executed by Ryans, Buffets and Merger Sub.
On July 25, 2006, prior to the opening of the trading
markets, Ryans issued a press release announcing the
execution of the merger agreement with Buffets. Later that day,
Ryans filed a Current Report on
Form 8-K
with the SEC reporting the execution of the merger agreement and
related matters. The press release, the Merger Agreement and the
amendment to Ryans Shareholder Rights Agreement were filed
as exhibits to the Current Report on
Form 8-K.
Reasons
for the Merger and Recommendation of Our Board of
Directors
The special committee unanimously recommended that Ryans
full board of directors approve and adopt the merger agreement
and approve the merger.
Based, in part, on the unanimous recommendation of the special
committee, the board of directors of Ryans determined that
the merger and the merger agreement are advisable and are fair
to, and in the best interest of, Ryans and its
shareholders and that the consideration to be paid for each
share of Ryans common stock in connection with the merger
is fair to Ryans shareholders. Ryans board of
directors recommends that Ryans shareholders vote to
approve and adopt the merger agreement and the transactions
contemplated thereby.
In making these determinations, the special committee and the
board of directors consulted with legal and financial advisors
and with management and considered a number of factors and
potential benefits of the merger, including those discussed
below:
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the value of the consideration to be received by Ryans
shareholders pursuant to the merger agreement, as well as the
fact that Ryans shareholders will receive the
consideration in cash, which provides liquidity and certainty of
value to Ryans shareholders;
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the risks and uncertainties associated with continuing to
operate on a stand-alone basis, including the uncertainty
regarding future operating results and value after considering
Ryans current and historical financial performance and
condition, operations, management and competitive position, and
current industry, economic and market conditions;
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the current and historical market prices of Ryans common
stock, including the fact that the merger consideration of
$16.25 per share represents a 45% premium over the closing
stock price of $11.22 on the last trading day prior to
Ryans public announcement on July 25, 2006 that it
had executed a merger agreement with Buffets;
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the fact that, of the potentially interested parties identified
by the special committee and its financial advisor prior to
entering into the merger agreement who conducted due diligence
and made proposals, Buffets proposed purchase price was
the highest, as described under Background of the
Merger;
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the fact that $16.25 per share represented an increase from
Buffets original proposed price of $15.25 per share and is
greater than the proposed purchase price of Company A and
Company B, as described under Background of the
Merger;
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the level of certainty that Buffets would have sufficient cash
to complete the merger based on the financing commitment letters
provided by Drawbridge Special Opportunity Fund, LLC and Credit
Suisse Securities (USA) LLC and UBS Securities, LLC with respect
to the financing of the merger;
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the fact that, under certain circumstances described under
The Merger Agreement Termination Fees,
Buffets may be required to pay a termination fee of
$7.5 million if Buffets exercises its right not to complete
the merger based on the failure to complete its financings on
terms no less favorable to Buffets than those terms set forth in
the commitment letters;
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the presentation of Brookwood (including the assumptions and
methodologies underlying the analyses in connection therewith)
and the opinion, dated July 24, 2006, of Brookwood as to
the fairness, from a financial point of view and as of the date
of the opinion, of the merger consideration to be paid to the
holders of Ryans common stock, as more fully described
below under Opinion of the Special Committees
Financial Advisor;
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the ability of Ryans, under the terms of the merger
agreement, to terminate the merger agreement if Ryans
board of directors determines in good faith that any unsolicited
proposal constitutes a superior proposal, and authorizes
Ryans to enter into a definitive agreement with respect to
such superior proposal, subject to payment to Buffets of a
termination fee and expenses not to exceed $25 million in
the aggregate, in accordance with the terms of the merger
agreement;
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the belief of the special committee, after consultation with its
legal and financial advisors, that the termination fee was
within the range of termination fees observed in similar
transactions; and
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the other terms and conditions of the merger agreement and the
fact that the merger agreement was the product of
arms-length negotiations between representatives of
Buffets and representatives of the special committee.
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The special committee and Ryans board of directors also
considered and balanced against the foregoing factors a number
of risks and other countervailing factors concerning the merger,
including those described below:
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the risk that the merger might not be completed in a timely
manner or at all as a result of the failure of any of the
closing conditions to be satisfied or waived, including as a
result of the failure of Buffets to complete its financings as
described below;
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the fact that completion of the financings contemplated by the
commitment letters issued to Buffets, or alternate financing on
terms and conditions no less favorable to Buffets, is a
condition to Buffets obligation to complete the merger;
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the risks to Ryans if the merger does not close as a
result of the diversion of management, employees and resources
from other opportunities and from operational matters, the
potential loss of employees and the effect on business and
employee relationships;
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the fact that following the merger, Ryans shareholders
will not participate in any future earnings or growth of the
business; and
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the restrictions in the merger agreement on Ryans ability
to solicit or engage in negotiations with other third parties
regarding other proposals with regard to specified transactions
and the requirement that Ryans pay Buffets a
$25 million termination fee if Ryans board of
directors terminates the merger agreement as the result of a
superior proposal.
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After considering these factors, the special committee and
Ryans board of directors determined that the positive
factors relating to the merger outweighed the risks and
countervailing factors.
The foregoing discussion of the factors considered by the
special committee and the board of directors is not intended to
be exhaustive, but rather includes the material factors
considered by the special committee and the board of directors.
The special committee and the board of directors did not assign
relative weights to the above factors or the other factors
considered by them. In addition, the special committee and the
board of directors did not reach any specific conclusion on each
factor considered, but, with the assistance of their advisors,
conducted an overall analysis of these factors. Individual
members of the special committee and the board of directors may
have given different weights to different factors.
Ryans board of directors has unanimously determined
that the merger is fair to and in the best interests of
Ryans shareholders and has approved the merger.
Ryans board of directors unanimously recommends that
Ryans shareholders vote FOR the approval of
the merger agreement and the merger.
20
Fairness
Opinion of Brookwood Associates
The special committee retained Brookwood to act as its financial
advisor and, if requested, to render to the special committee an
opinion as to the fairness, from a financial point of view, of
the merger consideration to be received by Ryans
shareholders pursuant to the merger agreement, other than
Buffets, Merger Sub and their respective subsidiaries.
On July 24, 2006, the special committee met to review the
proposed merger. During this meeting, Brookwood reviewed with
the special committee certain financial analyses, which are
summarized below. Also at this meeting, Brookwood delivered its
oral opinion, which was subsequently confirmed in writing, to
the effect that, as of July 24, 2006, and based upon and
subject to the factors, assumptions and limitations set forth in
its opinion, the $16.25 per share cash merger consideration
proposed to be paid by affiliates of Buffets pursuant to the
merger agreement was fair, from a financial point of view, to
Ryans shareholders, other than Buffets, Merger Sub and
their respective subsidiaries.
The full text of the opinion, dated July 24, 2006, which
sets forth, among other things, the assumptions made, procedures
followed, matters considered and limitations on the scope of the
review undertaken by Brookwood, is attached to this proxy
statement as Exhibit B and is incorporated in its
entirety herein by reference. You are urged to carefully read
the opinion in its entirety. The opinion addresses only the
fairness, from a financial point of view as of the date of the
opinion, of the merger consideration to Ryans
shareholders, other than Buffets, Merger Sub and their
respective subsidiaries. It does not address any other terms or
agreements related to the merger. The opinion does not address,
the basic business decision to proceed with or effect the
merger, or the merits of the merger relative to any alternative
transaction or business strategy that may be available to
Ryans. The opinion was addressed to the special committee
and was not intended to be, and does not constitute, a
recommendation as to how any shareholder should vote or act on
any matter relating to the proposed merger. The summary of
Brookwoods opinion in this proxy statement is qualified in
its entirety by reference to the full text of the opinion.
In arriving at its opinion, Brookwood, among other things,
reviewed:
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the financial terms of the July 24, 2006 draft of the
merger agreement;
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certain publicly available financial, business and operating
information related to Ryans;
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certain internal financial, operating and other data with
respect to Ryans prepared and furnished to Brookwood by
the management of Ryans;
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certain internal financial projections for Ryans that were
prepared for financial planning purposes and furnished to
Brookwood by the management of Ryans;
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certain publicly available market and securities data of
Ryans;
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certain financial data and the imputed prices and trading
activity of certain other publicly-traded companies that
Brookwood deemed relevant for purposes of its opinion;
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the financial terms, to the extent publicly available, of
certain merger transactions that Brookwood deemed relevant for
purposes of its opinion; and
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other information, financial studies, analyses and
investigations and other factors that Brookwood deemed relevant
for purposes of its opinion.
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In addition, Brookwood performed a discounted cash flow analysis
for Ryans on a stand-alone basis. Brookwood also conducted
discussions with members of the senior management of Ryans
concerning the financial condition, historical and current
operating results, business and prospects for Ryans. The
analyses performed by Brookwood in connection with this opinion
were going-concern analyses.
Brookwood relied upon and assumed the accuracy, completeness and
fair presentation of the financial, accounting and other
information provided to it by Ryans or otherwise made
available to it, and did not independently verify this
information. Brookwood also assumed, in reliance upon the
assurances of
21
management, that the information provided by Ryans was
prepared on a reasonable basis in accordance with industry
practice and, with respect to financial forecasts, projections
and other estimates and other business outlook information,
reflected the best currently available estimates and judgments
of management, was based on reasonable assumptions, and that
there was not, and the management of Ryans was not aware
of, any information or facts that would make the information
provided to Brookwood incomplete or misleading. The forecasts
and estimates of Ryans future performance provided by
Ryans management in or underlying Brookwoods
analyses are not necessarily indicative of future results or
values, which may be significantly more or less favorable than
those estimates. Brookwood expressed no opinion as to such
financial forecasts, projections and other estimates and
business outlook information or the assumptions on which they
are based. Furthermore, in arriving at its opinion, Brookwood
was not requested to make, and did not make, any physical
inspection of the properties or facilities of Ryans.
Brookwood did not perform any appraisals or valuations of any
specific assets or liabilities (fixed, contingent or other) of
Ryans, and has not been furnished with any such appraisals
or valuations. Brookwood did not undertake any independent
analysis of any outstanding, pending or threatened litigation,
regulatory action, possible unasserted claims or other
contingent liabilities to which Ryans, or any of its
respective affiliates is a party or may be subject. With the
consent of the special committee, Brookwood relied upon and
assumed the accuracy of information provided by senior
management as to Walker v. Ryans Family Steak
Houses, Inc., No. 3 D2 1078 (M.D. Tenn. Apr. 19,
2006), but Brookwoods opinion made no assumption
concerning, and therefore did not consider, the possible
assertion of claims, outcomes or damages arising out of any
other pending or threatened litigation, regulatory action,
unasserted claims or other contingent liabilities, or the
outcomes or damages arising out of any such matters.
Brookwood assumed that the final form of the merger agreement
would be substantially similar to the last draft it had
reviewed. Brookwood also assumed that all necessary regulatory
approvals and consents required for the merger would be obtained
in a manner that would not result in the disposition of any
material portion of the assets of Ryans, or otherwise
adversely affect Ryans, and that would not alter the terms
of the merger agreement.
Brookwoods opinion was necessarily based on economic,
monetary, market and other conditions as in effect on, and the
information made available to Ryans as of, the date of its
opinion. In performing its analyses, Brookwood considered
industry performance, general business and economic conditions
and other matters, many of which are beyond Ryans control.
Estimates of the financial value of companies do not purport to
be appraisals or reflect the prices at which companies may
actually be sold.
The following is a summary of the material financial analyses
performed by Brookwood in connection with the preparation of its
fairness opinion. The preparation of analyses and a fairness
opinion is a complex analytic process involving various
determinations as to the most appropriate and relevant methods
of financial analysis and the application of those methods to
the particular circumstances and, therefore, this summary does
not purport to be a complete description of the analyses
performed by Brookwood or of its presentation to the special
committee on July 24, 2006.
Accordingly, Brookwood believes that its analyses and the
summary below must be considered as a whole and that selecting
portions of its analyses and factors, without considering all
analyses and factors, could create a misleading or incomplete
view of the processes underlying Brookwoods analyses and
opinion. Brookwood did not form an opinion as to whether any
individual analysis or factor, whether positive or negative,
considered in isolation, supported or failed to support
Brookwoods opinion. Rather, Brookwood arrived at its
ultimate opinion based on the results of all analyses undertaken
by it and assessed as a whole, and believes that the totality of
the factors considered and analyses it performed in connection
with its opinion operated collectively to support its
determination as to the fairness of the merger consideration
from a financial point of view as of the date of
Brookwoods opinion. The fact that any specific analysis
has been referred to in the summary below is not meant to
indicate that this analysis was given greater weight than any
other analysis.
This summary includes information presented in tabular format,
which tables must be read together with the corresponding text,
and considered as a whole, in order to fully understand the
financial analyses presented
22
by Brookwood. The tables alone do not constitute a complete
summary of the financial analyses. Considering the data below
without considering the full narrative description of the
financial analyses, including the methodologies and assumptions
underlying the analyses, could create a misleading or incomplete
view of Brookwoods financial analyses. The order in which
these analyses are presented below, and the results of those
analyses, should not be taken as any indication of the relative
importance or weight given to these analyses by Brookwood or
Ryans board of directors. Except as otherwise noted, the
following quantitative information, to the extent that it is
based on market data, is based on market data as it existed on
or before July 21, 2006, and is not necessarily indicative
of current market conditions.
Summary
of Implied Share Values
Brookwood assessed the fairness of the per share merger
consideration to the holders of shares of Ryans common
stock, other than Buffets, Merger Sub and their respective
subsidiaries, by assessing the value of Ryans using
several methodologies, including a comparable public companies
analysis, a precedent transactions analysis, a discounted cash
flow analysis and a premiums paid analysis, each of which is
described in more detail in the summaries set forth below. Each
of these methodologies was used to generate implied valuation
ranges that were compared to the per share merger consideration
of $16.25.
The following table shows the ranges of implied valuation per
common share of Ryans derived under each of these
methodologies. The table should be read together with the more
detailed summary of each of these valuation analyses as set
forth below.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Implied Valuation per Common Share
|
|
Valuation Methodology
|
|
Minimum
|
|
|
Maximum
|
|
|
Comparable Public Company Analysis
|
|
$
|
10.32
|
|
|
$
|
14.18
|
|
Precedent Transactions Analysis
|
|
$
|
13.34
|
|
|
$
|
15.34
|
|
Discounted Cash Flow Analysis
|
|
$
|
11.38
|
|
|
$
|
15.06
|
|
Premiums Paid Analysis
One Day Prior
|
|
$
|
12.10
|
|
|
$
|
12.81
|
|
Premiums Paid Analysis
30 Days Prior
|
|
$
|
13.56
|
|
|
$
|
14.06
|
|
Historical
Stock Price Analysis
Brookwood compared the historical stock prices for Ryans
common stock against the merger consideration, as shown in the
table below.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Closing
|
|
|
Implied
|
|
|
|
Stock Price
|
|
|
Premium
|
|
|
Merger Consideration
|
|
$
|
16.25
|
|
|
|
|
|
Closing Stock Price as of
July 21, 2006
|
|
$
|
10.80
|
|
|
|
50.5
|
%
|
One Month Prior
|
|
$
|
11.30
|
|
|
|
43.8
|
%
|
Three Months Prior
|
|
$
|
12.99
|
|
|
|
25.1
|
%
|
Six Months Prior
|
|
$
|
12.01
|
|
|
|
35.3
|
%
|
One Month Average
|
|
$
|
11.29
|
|
|
|
43.9
|
%
|
Three Month Average
|
|
$
|
12.17
|
|
|
|
33.5
|
%
|
Six Month Average
|
|
$
|
12.76
|
|
|
|
27.3
|
%
|
52-Week High
|
|
$
|
14.68
|
|
|
|
10.7
|
%
|
52-Week Low
|
|
$
|
10.04
|
|
|
|
61.9
|
%
|
During the fifty-two weeks ended July 21, 2006, Ryans
low and high share prices were $10.04 and $14.68, respectively,
compared to the $16.25 per share merger consideration.
Brookwood also noted that the price of Ryans common stock
as of the close of business the day prior to the date of
announcement was $11.22.
23
Comparable
Public Companies Analysis
Brookwood reviewed selected financial data of publicly traded
companies in the restaurant industry. Brookwood identified and
analyzed ten comparable public companies:
|
|
|
|
|
Bob Evans Farms, Inc.
|
|
|
|
CBRL Group, Inc.
|
|
|
|
Dennys Corporation
|
|
|
|
Friendly Ice Cream Corporation
|
|
|
|
Frischs Restaurants, Inc.
|
|
|
|
Landrys Restaurants, Inc.
|
|
|
|
Lone Star Steakhouse & Saloon, Inc.
|
|
|
|
Lubys, Inc.
|
|
|
|
OCharleys Inc.
|
|
|
|
RARE Hospitality International, Inc.
|
No company used in the comparable public companies analysis
possessed characteristics identical to those of Ryans.
Accordingly, an analysis of the results of the comparable public
companies necessarily involves complex considerations and
judgments concerning differences in financial and operating
characteristics of the selected companies, as well as other
factors that could affect the public trading value of the
selected companies and Ryans.
Brookwood calculated certain financial ratios for Ryans
using the per share merger consideration and for the comparable
companies using the stock prices as reported at the close of
trading on July 21, 2006 and other recent publicly
available information, available as of the date of the opinion:
|
|
|
|
|
Enterprise Value to last twelve months (LTM)
Revenues;
|
|
|
|
Enterprise Value to LTM EBITDA;
|
|
|
|
Enterprise Value to LTM EBIT.
|
The enterprise value is the sum of the fully diluted
market value of any common equity plus short-term debt and
long-term debt minus cash and equivalents. For Ryans, in
calculating the enterprise value, Brookwood took into account
the unpaid portion of the settlement of the Tennessee wage and
hour class action lawsuit and the estimated after-tax proceeds
from assets held for sale.
This analysis indicated the following low, mean, median and high
enterprise value multiples for Ryans and the comparable
public companies:
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Merger
|
|
|
Comparable Company Values
|
|
|
|
Consideration
|
|
|
Low
|
|
|
Mean
|
|
|
Median
|
|
|
High
|
|
|
Enterprise Value to LTM Revenues
|
|
|
1.0x
|
|
|
|
0.5x
|
|
|
|
0.7x
|
|
|
|
0.7x
|
|
|
|
0.9x
|
|
Enterprise Value to LTM EBITDA
|
|
|
8.6x
|
|
|
|
5.8x
|
|
|
|
7.0x
|
|
|
|
6.8x
|
|
|
|
9.2x
|
|
Enterprise Value to LTM EBIT
|
|
|
14.0x
|
|
|
|
8.9x
|
|
|
|
13.2x
|
|
|
|
12.0x
|
|
|
|
19.7x
|
|
Mathematical analysis, such as determining the average or
median, is not in itself a meaningful method of using comparable
company data. Brookwood performed this analysis to understand
the multiples of revenues and earnings before interest, taxes,
depreciation and amortization, commonly referred to as EBITDA,
of these comparable public companies based upon market prices.
Based on the estimates and assumptions used in the comparable
public companies analysis, the multiples implied by the merger
consideration were above or within the range of the trading
multiples of the comparable public companies. Based on the
various judgments concerning relative comparability of each of
the selected companies to Ryans, Brookwood did not rely
solely on the quantitative results of the comparable public
companies analysis in developing a reference range or otherwise
applying its analysis. The implied valuation range for
Ryans based on the comparable public companies analysis
was $10.32 to $14.18 per share.
24
Precedent
Transactions Analysis
Brookwood performed a precedent transactions analysis, which
compares the per share merger consideration to be received by
Ryans shareholders to an implied range of per share values
derived from an analysis of selected transactions deemed
reasonably comparable. The selected transactions involved
mergers
and/or
acquisitions of companies in the restaurant industry between
January 1, 2004 and the date of the Brookwood opinion. The
selected transactions included all of the transactions falling
within these criteria in the time frame used that were
identified by Brookwood and for which Brookwood was able, based
on publicly available information, to identify reliable
valuation statistics.
|
|
|
Acquiror
|
|
Target Company
|
|
Briad Main Street
|
|
Main Street Restaurant Group
|
Wellspring Capital Management
|
|
Checkers Drive-In Restaurants
|
Circle Peak Capital
|
|
Sharis Management Corp.
|
Newcastle Partners
|
|
Fox and Hound Restaurant Group
|
Wellspring Capital Management
|
|
Dave and Busters
|
Steakhouse Partners
|
|
Roadhouse Grill
|
CBC Restaurant
Corp.(1)
|
|
Corner Bakery
|
Sun Capital Partners
|
|
Garden Fresh
|
Trimarin Capital
|
|
El Pollo Loco
|
Leonard Green and Partners
|
|
Claim Jumper
|
Castle Harlan, Inc.
|
|
Perkins Family Restaurants
|
Roark Capital
|
|
McAlisters Deli
|
Palladium Equity Partners
|
|
Taco Bueno (TB Corporation)
|
Artisan Acquisition
Corp(2)
|
|
Au Bon Pain
|
Pacific Equity Partners
|
|
Worldwide Restaurant
Concepts(3)
|
Trimarin Capital
|
|
Charlie Brown Steakhouse
|
Charlesbank Capital
Partners(4)
|
|
Captain Ds
|
Crescent Capital
|
|
Churchs Chicken
|
Bob Evans
|
|
Mimis Café Inc.
|
The Yucaipa
Companies(5)
|
|
Picadilly Cafeterias
|
|
|
|
(1) |
|
II Fornaio and Bruckmann, Rosser, Sherrill & Co |
|
(2) |
|
Au Bon Pain Mgt and PNC Equity Management |
|
(3) |
|
Parent of Sizzler and Oscars |
|
(4) |
|
Charlesbank Capital Partners and Grotech Capital Group |
|
(5) |
|
The Yucaipa Companies and Diversified Investment Management Group |
In performing its analysis, Brookwood calculated LTM net sales
and EBITDA transaction value multiples for the selected
transactions by dividing the publicly announced transaction
value of each selected transaction by the publicly available LTM
net sales and EBITDA, respectively, of the target company. The
selected transactions may differ significantly from the proposed
merger based on, among other things, the structure of the
transactions, the financial and other characteristics of the
parties to the transactions, and the dates that the transactions
were announced or consummated. The following table sets forth
the results of the analysis:
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Merger
|
|
Comparable Transaction Values
|
|
|
Consideration
|
|
Low
|
|
Mean
|
|
Median
|
|
High
|
|
Enterprise Value to LTM Sales
|
|
|
1.0x
|
|
|
|
0.3x
|
|
|
|
0.8x
|
|
|
|
0.7x
|
|
|
|
1.9x
|
|
Enterprise Value to LTM EBITDA
|
|
|
8.6x
|
|
|
|
6.0x
|
|
|
|
7.6x
|
|
|
|
7.8x
|
|
|
|
10.2x
|
|
25
This precedent transactions analysis indicated that the multiple
to be received by Ryans shareholders was within the range
of the multiples of the precedent transactions. Based on the
various judgments concerning relative comparability of each of
the selected transactions to the proposed merger, Brookwood did
not rely solely on the quantitative results of the precedent
transactions analysis in developing a reference range or
otherwise applying its analysis. The implied valuation range for
Ryans based on the precedent transactions analysis was
$13.34 to $15.34 per share.
Discounted
Cash Flow Analysis
Using a discounted cash flow analysis, Brookwood calculated a
range of theoretical enterprise values for Ryans based on
(1) the net present value of implied annual cash flows of
Ryans for the seven-month period from June through
December 2006 and fiscal years 2007 through 2010 and
(2) the net present value of a terminal value, which is an
estimate of the future value of Ryans at the end of fiscal
year 2010 based upon a multiple of EBITDA. Brookwood relied on
monthly forecasts for fiscal years 2006 through 2008, furnished
by management, and yearly forecasts for fiscal years 2009
through 2010, extrapolated by Brookwood and approved by
management. Brookwood calculated the range of net present values
based on an assumed tax rate of 33.4% in fiscal 2006 and 2007
and 33.0% between fiscal years 2008 and 2010, a range of
discount rates of 10% to 14% and a range of EBITDA multiples for
a terminal value of 8.0x to 9.0x applied to the projected fiscal
year 2010 EBITDA. This analysis resulted in an implied per share
value of Ryans ranging from a low of $11.38 to a high of
$15.06.
Premiums
Paid Analysis
Brookwood compared the premium proposed to be paid in the merger
with the premiums paid for all public target transactions in the
United States announced since January 1, 2003 with an
enterprise value between $500 million and
$1.0 billion. Brookwood calculated the premiums paid
relative to the targets share price one day and
30 days prior to the date on which the merger agreement was
executed and on which the presentation to the special committee
was made. The table below compares the premiums paid in these
transactions to the premium that would be paid to Ryans
shareholders based on the per share merger consideration.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Per Share
|
|
|
All Selected
|
|
|
Cash Only
|
|
|
|
Merger
|
|
|
Transactions
|
|
|
Transactions
|
|
Premium Paid
|
|
Consideration
|
|
|
Mean
|
|
|
Median
|
|
|
Mean
|
|
|
Median
|
|
|
One Day Prior
|
|
|
50.5
|
%(1)
|
|
|
18.6
|
%
|
|
|
13.0
|
%
|
|
|
16.0
|
%
|
|
|
12.0
|
%
|
30 Days Prior
|
|
|
43.8
|
%(2)
|
|
|
24.4
|
%
|
|
|
20.5
|
%
|
|
|
23.0
|
%
|
|
|
20.0
|
%
|
|
|
|
(1) |
|
Ryans premium based on the closing stock price of $10.80
on July 21, 2006. |
|
(2) |
|
Ryans premium based on the closing stock price of $11.30
on June 22, 2006. |
Based on the mean and median premiums paid in the selected
transactions at one day prior and 30 days prior to
announcement, the implied valuation range for Ryans was
$12.10 to $14.06 per share.
Miscellaneous
Brookwood is an investment banking firm and is regularly engaged
as a financial advisor in connection with mergers and
acquisitions. The special committee selected Brookwood to render
its fairness opinion in connection with the proposed merger on
the basis of Brookwoods experience and reputation in
acting as a financial advisor in connection with mergers and
acquisitions and particularly because of its familiarity with
acquisitions in the restaurant industry.
Brookwood acted as financial advisor to Ryans in
connection with the merger and will receive a fee from
Ryans for its services upon consummation of the merger. A
substantial portion of Brookwoods fee is contingent upon
the consummation of the merger. Brookwood also received a fee of
$400,000 from Ryans for providing its opinion, which will
be credited against the fee for financial advisory services.
This opinion fee is not contingent upon the consummation of the
merger. Ryans has also agreed to indemnify Brookwood
against
26
certain liabilities in connection with its services and to
reimburse it for certain expenses in connection with its
services. In the past, Brookwood has provided financial advisory
services to Ryans and has received fees for the rendering
of those services.
Delisting
and Deregistration of Ryans Common Stock
If the merger is completed, our common stock will be delisted
from The Nasdaq National Market and deregistered under the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934, and we will no longer file
periodic reports with the SEC.
INTERESTS
OF CERTAIN PERSONS IN THE MERGER
Ryans
Stock Options
As of the record date, there were 1,193,961 shares of our
common stock subject to stock options granted to our directors
and executive officers under each of Ryans stock option
plans, which we refer to in this proxy statement as the
option plans.
All unvested outstanding options to acquire shares of
Ryans common stock were granted under Ryans 2002
Stock Option Plan, which provides for automatic vesting in the
event of certain change of control transactions, including the
merger with Merger Sub. Accordingly, all unvested outstanding
options to acquire shares of Ryans stock will become fully
vested immediately prior to the effective time of the merger
and, pursuant to the merger agreement, will be cancelled at the
effective time of the merger. Each option holder will have the
right to receive, within five business days of the effective
time of the merger, a cash payment, without interest (less any
required withholding taxes) equal to the product of (1) the
excess, if any, of $16.25 over the applicable exercise price per
share of the option and (2) the number of shares of common
stock of Ryans issuable upon exercise of the option
(whether or not the option is vested or exercisable).
The following table summarizes the vested and unvested options
held by each of our directors and executive officers as of
August 28, 2006, and the consideration (calculated prior to
any reduction for any required withholding taxes) that each of
them will receive pursuant to the merger agreement in connection
with the cancellation of his or her options:
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Weighted
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Average
|
|
|
Approximate
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Exercise
|
|
|
Aggregate
|
|
Name of Director, Officer or Beneficial Owner
|
|
Stock Options
|
|
|
Price ($)
|
|
|
Value ($)
|
|
|
Charles D. Way
|
|
|
220,000
|
|
|
|
11.88
|
|
|
|
961,400
|
|
G. Edwin McCranie
|
|
|
222,500
|
|
|
|
10.29
|
|
|
|
1,327,150
|
|
Fred T. Grant, Jr.
|
|
|
138,600
|
|
|
|
10.48
|
|
|
|
800,162
|
|
Michael R. Kirk
|
|
|
71,150
|
|
|
|
11.14
|
|
|
|
363,295
|
|
James R. Hart
|
|
|
136,800
|
|
|
|
9.85
|
|
|
|
875,931
|
|
Ilene T. Turbow
|
|
|
93,875
|
|
|
|
9.08
|
|
|
|
673,449
|
|
Janet J. Gleitz
|
|
|
66,600
|
|
|
|
9.54
|
|
|
|
447,074
|
|
Richard D. Sieradzki
|
|
|
20,375
|
|
|
|
11.61
|
|
|
|
94,534
|
|
Edward R. Tallon, Sr.
|
|
|
19,061
|
|
|
|
11.72
|
|
|
|
86,441
|
|
James M. Shoemaker, Jr.
|
|
|
50,000
|
|
|
|
10.25
|
|
|
|
300,050
|
|
Barry L. Edwards
|
|
|
57,500
|
|
|
|
9.63
|
|
|
|
380,375
|
|
Harold K. Roberts, Jr.
|
|
|
22,500
|
|
|
|
13.38
|
|
|
|
64,525
|
|
Brian S. MacKenzie
|
|
|
65,000
|
|
|
|
9.12
|
|
|
|
463,325
|
|
Vivian A. Wong
|
|
|
10,000
|
|
|
|
12.33
|
|
|
|
39,250
|
|
27
Indemnification
of Officers and Directors
The merger agreement provides for indemnification and insurance
arrangements for Ryans current and former directors and
officers that will continue for six years following the
effective time of the merger. The merger agreement provides that
from and after the effective time of the merger, Buffets will,
and will cause Ryans as the surviving corporation in the
merger to, fulfill and honor in all respects, the obligations of
Ryans pursuant to any indemnification, exculpation or
advancement of expenses provisions in favor of the current or
former directors, officers, employees or agents of Ryans
or any of its subsidiaries, or certain other parties, under the
constitutional documents of Ryans or its subsidiaries or
any agreement between these indemnified persons and Ryans
or its subsidiaries in effect as of the date of the merger
agreement. The merger agreement also provides that for a period
of six years following the effective time of the merger the
articles of incorporation and bylaws of Ryans as the
surviving corporation will contain provisions with respect to
indemnification, exculpation and advancement of expenses that
are at least as favorable to the beneficiaries of these
provisions as those contained in Ryans articles of
incorporation and bylaws in effect on the date of the merger
agreement.
The merger agreement also provides that for a period of six
years after the effective time of the merger Buffets will cause
to be maintained directors and officers liability insurance and
fiduciary liability insurance arrangements substantially
equivalent in scope and amount of coverage (and on terms and
conditions no less advantageous to the insureds) to the policies
maintained by Ryans as of the date of the merger agreement
with respect to claims arising from or relating to actions or
omissions, or alleged actions or omissions, occurring on or
prior to the effective time of the merger. The merger agreement
provides that Buffets will not be required to make total annual
premium payments with respect to these insurance arrangements to
the extent the premiums exceed 225% of the last annual premium
paid by Ryans prior to the date of the merger agreement.
If the annual premium costs necessary to maintain this insurance
coverage exceed 225% of the last annual premium paid by
Ryans, Buffets will maintain as much comparable directors
and officers liability insurance and fiduciary liability
insurance as is reasonably obtainable for an annual premium not
exceeding 225% of the last annual premium paid by Ryans.
Potential
Severance Payments to Executive Officers
Nine of Ryans executive officers (Charles D. Way, G. Edwin
McCranie, Fred T. Grant, Jr., Michael Rick Kirk, J.
Randolph Hart, Ilene Turbow, Janet J. Gleitz, Richard Sieradzki
and Edward Tallon, each of whom we refer to in this proxy
statement as an executive for purposes of this
discussion) are parties to an Employment, Noncompetition and
Severance Agreement with Ryans. Under these agreements,
the executive is eligible for severance payments resulting from
certain termination circumstances. Severance payments, when
applicable, will be based on the sum of executives most
recent annual salary and the average of the most recent three
years of bonus payments (this sum is referred to as Annual
Compensation). If an executive is terminated by
Ryans (including the surviving corporation) without cause
after a change of control, as defined in the agreement (which
includes circumstances like the proposed merger), the severance
payment will be equal to two times Annual Compensation or, for
termination for cause after a change of control, one times
Annual Compensation. Also, following a change of control, an
Involuntary Termination by the executive results in
a severance payment equal to two times Annual Compensation,
while a voluntary termination by the executive after a change of
control results in a severance payment equal to one times Annual
Compensation. Involuntary Termination is defined as
a termination by the executive following a change of control due
to a change in the executives position, authority, status
or duties, change in the agreements terms (including the
rolling two-year termination date), reduction in compensation or
benefits, forced relocation outside the Greenville, South
Carolina metropolitan area or significant increase in travel
requirements. In addition, termination by the executive due to a
material breach of the agreement by Ryans (after notice
and a cure period) results in a severance payment equal to two
times Annual Compensation.
Consequently, the merger, combined with other circumstances,
could result in one or more executives becoming entitled to
receive severance payments under their employment agreements.
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LITIGATION
CHALLENGING THE MERGER
On July 28, 2006, a putative shareholder class action,
Marjorie Fretwell v. Ryans Restaurant Group, Inc.
et. al. Case
No. 06-CP-23-4828,
was filed against Ryans and its directors in the
Greenville County, South Carolina Circuit Court.
The complaint alleges that each of the directors of Ryans
individually breached the fiduciary duties owing to the
Ryans shareholders by voting to approve the merger
agreement and alleges that Ryans aided and abetted such
alleged breach of fiduciary duties. The complaint seeks, among
other relief, the courts designation of class action
status, a declaration that entry into the merger agreement was
in breach of the defendants fiduciary duties and therefore
was unlawful and unenforceable, and entry of an order enjoining
the defendants from taking further action to consummate the
proposed merger. Ryans and its board of directors believe
that the action is without merit and will vigorously defend it.
REGULATORY
APPROVALS
Federal
or State Regulatory Filings Required in Connection with the
Merger
Other than the notification required to be filed pursuant to the
HSR Act, no other material federal or state regulatory approvals
are required to be obtained by us, Buffets or Merger Sub in
connection with the merger. On August 7, 2006,
Ryans and Buffets each filed a Notification and Report
Form with the Antitrust Division of the Department of Justice
and the Federal Trade Commission. Under the HSR Act and related
rules, the merger may not be completed until the expiration or
termination of the statutory waiting period. The waiting period
is scheduled to expire at 11:59 p.m. (EDT) on
September 6, 2006, unless early termination is granted or
unless extended by a request for additional information.
Amendment
to Ryans Rights Agreement
In connection with the signing of the merger agreement,
Ryans amended its rights agreement with American Stock
Transfer & Trust Company to provide that the preferred
stock purchase rights issued under the rights agreement will not
become exercisable nor will any holder of any preferred stock
purchase right be entitled to exercise any other rights
described in the agreement because of:
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the approval, execution or delivery of the merger agreement or
any amendments of the merger agreement; or
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the consummation of the merger.
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Among other things, the amendment also provides that the
preferred stock purchase rights will expire immediately prior to
the effective time of the merger.
Anti-Takeover
Considerations
The 1976 Code of Laws of South Carolina contains anti-takeover
provisions that prevent a person from engaging in specified
transactions with us or from taking specific actions after that
person has acquired a significant portion of our shares. These
protections fall into two categories: the business combination
statute, which regulates specified types of transactions with
interested shareholders; and the control share statute, which
regulates the voting power of shares held by specified large
shareholders. Because Buffets does not own any of shares of our
common stock, these business combination statutes do not apply
to the merger.
APPRAISAL
RIGHTS
Under applicable provisions of South Carolina law, no
dissenters or appraisal rights are available to holders of
shares of stock which is designated as a national market system
security on an interdealer quotation system by the National
Association of Securities Dealers. Our shareholders are not
entitled, under applicable
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provisions of South Carolina law, to dissenters or
appraisal rights in connection with the merger because our
common stock is so designated on The Nasdaq National Market.
MATERIAL
U.S. FEDERAL INCOME TAX CONSEQUENCES
The following describes generally the material United States
federal income tax consequences of the receipt of cash to
U.S. holders (i.e., an individual citizen or resident of
the United States or a domestic corporation) of our common stock
pursuant to the merger. The summary is based on the Internal
Revenue Code of 1986, as amended, which we refer to in this
proxy statement as the Code, applicable
current and proposed United States Treasury Regulations,
judicial authority, and administrative rulings and practice, all
of which are subject to change, possibly with retroactive
effect, and to differing interpretation. This discussion assumes
that U.S. holders hold the shares of our common stock as a
capital asset within the meaning of Section 1221 of the
Code. This discussion does not address all aspects of United
States federal income taxation that may be relevant to holders
in light of their particular circumstances, or that may apply to
holders that are subject to special treatment under the United
States federal income tax laws (including, for example, persons
who are not U.S. holders, insurance companies, dealers in
securities or foreign currencies, tax-exempt organizations,
financial institutions, mutual funds, partnerships or other
pass-through entities and persons holding our common stock
through a partnership or other pass-through entity, United
States expatriates, U.S. holders who hold shares of our
stock as part of a hedge, straddle, constructive sale or
conversion transaction, who are subject to the alternative
minimum tax or who acquired our common stock through the
exercise of employee stock options or other compensation
arrangements). In addition, the discussion does not address any
tax considerations under state, local or foreign laws or federal
laws other than United States federal income tax laws that may
be applicable to one of our shareholders.
If a partnership holds our common stock, the tax treatment of a
partner will generally depend on the status of the partners and
the activities of the partnership. If you are a U.S. holder
that is a partner in a partnership holding our common stock, you
should consult your tax advisor.
We urge you to consult your own tax advisor to determine the
particular tax consequences of the merger to you (including the
application and effect of any state, local or foreign income and
other tax laws), especially with respect to alternative minimum
tax.
The receipt of cash in the merger by U.S. holders of our
common stock will be a taxable transaction for United States
federal income tax purposes (and may also be a taxable
transaction under applicable state, local, foreign and other tax
laws). In general, for United States federal income tax
purposes, a U.S. holder of shares of our common stock will
recognize capital gain or loss equal to the difference, if any,
between (i) the amount of cash received in exchange for
such shares and (ii) the holders adjusted tax basis
in such shares. Such gain or loss will be long-term capital gain
or loss if the U.S. holders holding period of the
shares of our common stock is more than one year at the time the
merger is completed. Long-term gains recognized by
U.S. holders that are not corporations generally will be
subject to a maximum U.S. federal income tax rate of 15%
(subject to application of the alternative minimum tax). The
deductibility of a capital loss recognized on the exchange is
subject to limitations. If a U.S. holder acquired different
blocks of our stock at different times or different prices, such
holder must determine its tax basis and holding period
separately with respect to each block of our stock.
Backup
Withholding
Under the Codes backup withholding rules, unless an
exemption applies, the surviving corporation generally is
required to and will withhold 28% of all payments to which a
shareholder or other payee is entitled in the merger, unless the
shareholder or other payee (i) is a corporation or comes
within other exempt categories and demonstrates this fact or
(ii) provides its correct tax identification number (social
security number, in the case of an individual, or employer
identification number in the case of other shareholders),
certifies under penalties of perjury that the number is correct
(or properly certifies that it is awaiting a taxpayer
identification number), certifies as to no loss of exemption
from backup withholding and otherwise complies with the
applicable requirements of the backup withholding rules. Each
shareholder of ours and, if
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applicable, each other payee, should complete, sign and return
to the paying agent for the merger the substitute
Form W-9
that each shareholder of ours will receive with the letter of
transmittal following completion of the merger in order to
provide the information and certification necessary to avoid
backup withholding, unless an applicable exception exists and is
proved in a manner satisfactory to the paying agent. The
exceptions provide that certain shareholders of ours (including,
among others, all corporations and certain foreign individuals)
are not subject to these backup withholding and reporting
requirements. In order for a foreign individual to qualify as an
exempt recipient, however, he or she must submit a signed
Form W-8BEN, Certificate of Foreign Status of
Beneficial Owner for United States Tax Withholding. Backup
withholding is not an additional tax. Generally, any amounts
withheld under the backup withholding rules described above can
be refunded or credited against a holders United States
federal income tax liability, if any, provided that the required
information is furnished to the United States Internal Revenue
Service in a timely manner.
The foregoing discussion of certain material United States
income tax consequences is included for general information
purposes only and is not intended to be, and should not be
construed as, legal or tax advice to any holder of shares of our
common stock. We urge you to consult your own tax advisor to
determine the particular tax consequences of the merger to you
(including the application and effect of any state, local or
foreign income and other tax laws).
THE
AGREEMENT AND PLAN OF MERGER
The following is a summary of the material terms of the
merger agreement. However, because the merger agreement is the
primary legal document that governs the merger, you should
carefully read the complete text of the merger agreement for its
precise legal terms and other information that may be important
to you. The merger agreement is attached as Exhibit A
to this proxy statement to provide investors with
information concerning the terms of the merger agreement.
Information on our company is available in our Annual Reports on
Form 10-K,
our quarterly reports on
Form 10-Q
and other documents filed with the Securities and Exchange
Commission.
The merger agreement has been included to provide you with
information regarding its terms, and we recommend that you read
carefully the merger agreement in its entirety. Except for its
status as a contractual document that establishes and governs
the legal relations among the parties thereto with respect to
the merger, we do not intend for its text to be a source of
factual, business or operational information about Ryans.
The merger agreement contains representations, warranties and
covenants that are qualified by information in the disclosure
letter referenced in the merger agreement that Ryans
delivered to Buffets in connection with the execution of the
merger agreement. Representations and warranties may be used as
a tool to allocate risks between the respective parties to the
merger agreement, including where the parties do not have
complete knowledge of all facts, instead of establishing such
matters as facts. Furthermore, the representations and
warranties may be subject to different standards of materiality
applicable to the contracting parties, which may differ from
what may be viewed as material to shareholders. While we do not
believe that the disclosure letter contains non-public
information that applicable securities laws require us to
publicly disclose (other than information that has already been
disclosed or is disclosed in this proxy statement), the
disclosure letter does contain information that modifies,
qualifies and creates exceptions to the merger agreement,
including to the representations and warranties of Ryans.
Accordingly, you should not rely on the representations and
warranties as characterizations of the actual state of facts,
because (i) they were only made as of the date of the
merger agreement or a prior, specified date, (ii) in some
cases they are subject to materiality, material adverse effect
or knowledge qualifiers, and (iii) they are modified in
important part by the confidential disclosure letter. The
confidential disclosure letter contains information that has
been included in Ryans prior public disclosures, as well
as non-public information. Moreover, information concerning the
subject matter of the representations and warranties may have
changed since the date of the merger agreement, which subsequent
information may or may not be fully reflected in Ryans
public disclosures. Information about Ryans can be found
elsewhere in this proxy statement and in such other public
filings we make with the Securities and Exchange Commission,
which are available without charge at www.sec.gov.
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Form of
the Merger
The merger agreement provides that at the effective time of the
merger, Merger Sub will be merged with and into Ryans. As
a result of the merger, the separate corporate existence of
Merger Sub will cease and Ryans will continue as the
surviving corporation following the merger as a wholly-owned
indirect subsidiary of Buffets. Ryans, as the surviving
corporation, will succeed to all the properties, rights,
privileges, powers, franchises and assets, and all debts,
liabilities and duties of Ryans and Merger Sub.
Effective
Time of the Merger
The merger agreement provides that the merger will become
effective when we file articles of merger with the Secretary of
State of the State of South Carolina, or at such later time that
we and Buffets specify in the articles of merger. We will file
the articles of merger at the closing of the merger, which will
take place no later than the third business day following the
satisfaction or the waiver of the conditions set forth in the
merger agreement or at such other time as we and Buffets agree
in writing.
Directors
and Officers
The directors and officers of Merger Sub at the effective time
of the merger will be the initial directors and officers of the
surviving corporation. The directors and officers will serve in
accordance with the articles of incorporation and bylaws of the
surviving corporation.
Merger
Consideration
The merger agreement provides that each share of common stock of
Ryans (other than shares owned by Ryans, Buffets or
Merger Sub, or any of their respective subsidiaries) issued and
outstanding immediately prior to the effective time will be
cancelled and automatically converted into the right to receive
an amount in cash equal to $16.25, without interest, less any
required withholding taxes. Each share of common stock of
Ryans that is owned by Ryans, Buffets or Merger Sub,
or any of their respective subsidiaries, will be cancelled and
extinguished at the effective time of the merger and no
consideration will be delivered in exchange for those shares.
Payment
Procedures
Prior to the effective time, Buffets will appoint a paying agent
approved by us. Immediately prior to the effective time, Buffets
will deposit with the paying agent an amount in cash sufficient
to provide for the payment of the aggregate merger
consideration. No later than three business days following the
effective time, Buffets will instruct the paying agent to mail
to each shareholder a letter of transmittal and instructions
explaining how to surrender stock certificates or execute an
appropriate instrument of transfer of your shares of Ryans
common stock in exchange for the merger consideration. Upon
surrender of a certificate or appropriate instrument of transfer
representing shares of Ryans common stock to the paying
agent, together with a duly executed and completed letter of
transmittal and all other documents required by the paying
agent, each former shareholder of Ryans will be entitled
to receive $16.25 in cash, without interest, for each share of
Ryans common stock so surrendered.
Effect on
Stock Options, Stock-Based Awards and Employee Stock Purchase
Plan
All unvested outstanding options to acquire shares of
Ryans common stock were granted under the Ryans
Family Steak Houses, Inc. 2002 Stock Option Plan, which provides
for automatic vesting in the event of certain change of control
transactions, including the merger with Merger Sub. Accordingly,
all unvested outstanding options to acquire shares of
Ryans stock will become fully vested immediately prior to
the effective time of the merger and, pursuant to the merger
agreement, will be cancelled at the effective time of the
merger. The merger agreement provides that each outstanding
option to acquire shares of Ryans common stock granted
under the Ryans 1987 Stock Option Plan, the Ryans
Family Steak Houses, Inc. 1991 Stock Option Plan, the
Ryans Family Steak Houses, Inc. 1998 Stock Option Plan and
the Ryans Family Steak Houses, Inc. 2002 Stock Option Plan
will be cancelled at the effective time of the merger. Each
option holder
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will have the right to receive, within five business days of the
effective time of the merger, a cash payment, without interest
(less any required withholding taxes) equal to the product of
(1) the excess, if any, of $16.25 over the applicable
exercise price per share of the option and (2) the number
of shares of common stock of Ryans issuable upon exercise
of the option.
The merger agreement provides that our Employee Stock Purchase
Plan is to be terminated immediately following the purchases of
Ryans common stock on the day prior to the day on which
the effective time of the merger occurs and no new offering
period (as defined under the plan) will commence following the
date of the merger agreement. Under the merger agreement,
participants in the plan may not increase their payroll
deductions or purchase elections from those in effect as of the
date of the merger agreement, and each participants
outstanding right to purchase shares of Ryans common stock
under the plan terminated on the day after the date of the
merger agreement, except that all amounts allocated to each
participants account under the plan on that date will be
used to purchase whole shares of Ryans common stock at the
applicable price determined under the plan for the then
outstanding offering periods using that date as the final
purchase date for each offering period.
Representations
and Warranties
The merger agreement contains representations and warranties
made by Ryans, including, but not limited to,
representations and warranties relating to:
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corporate organization, authority to conduct business and
standing;
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capitalization;
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corporate power and authority to enter into and perform our
obligations under, and enforceability of, the merger agreement;
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voting standard required for shareholder approval of the merger;
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conflicts or violations under charter documents, contracts,
instruments or laws, required consents or approvals and creation
or imposition of any liens;
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reports, proxy statements and financial statements filed with
the Securities and Exchange Commission, the accuracy of the
information in those documents, internal control over financial
reporting, disclosure controls and procedures and required
certifications with respect thereto;
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absence of undisclosed liabilities;
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absence of certain events and changes;
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litigation matters and compliance with laws;
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material contracts and performance thereunder;
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tax matters;
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employee benefit matters;
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environmental matters;
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owned and leased real property;
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intellectual property matters;
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labor matters;
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amendment of our rights agreement;
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applicability of certain takeover laws and our satisfaction of
the requirements under those laws;
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insurance;
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brokers and finders fees; and
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receipt of an opinion from our financial advisor.
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Many of the above representations and warranties are qualified
by a material adverse effect standard. A material adverse effect
for purposes of our representations and warranties means any
event, circumstance, condition, change, development or effect
that, individually or in the aggregate, would have a material
adverse effect on the business, financial condition, assets,
liabilities, operations or results of operations of us and our
subsidiaries taken as a whole, or on our ability to consummate
the merger and perform our obligations under the merger
agreement.
In determining whether a material adverse effect has occurred,
none of the following are taken into account:
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conditions relating to financial, credit or securities markets
or economic conditions in general;
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conditions relating to changes to laws or applicable accounting
regulations or principles, or relating to the restaurant
industry generally, to the extent that these conditions do not
materially, disproportionately impact Ryans and its
subsidiaries taken as a whole relative to other companies in the
restaurant industry;
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changes in Ryans stock price or trading volume or any
failure by Ryans to meet revenue or earnings projections,
in each case, in and of itself (although the facts or
occurrences giving rise to or contributing to a change in
Ryans stock price or trading volume or a failure to meet
projections may be taken into account to determine whether there
has been a material adverse effect); or
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the announcement, pendency or consummation of the merger.
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The merger agreement contains representations and warranties
made by Buffets and Merger Sub including, but not limited to,
representations and warranties relating to:
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corporate organization, authority to conduct business and
standing;
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corporate power and authority to enter into and perform their
respective obligations under, and enforceability of, the merger
agreement;
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conflicts or violations under charter documents or laws, and
required consents or approvals;
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financing capability, including the debt financing to enable
Buffets to perform its obligations under the merger agreement,
including payment of the merger consideration and amounts
payable in respect of stock options and other awards;
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information in this proxy statement supplied by Buffets or
Merger Sub expressly for inclusion herein;
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litigation matters; and
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absence of brokers and finders fees.
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The representations and warranties of the parties will expire at
the effective time of the merger.
Conduct
of Business Pending the Merger
From the date of the merger agreement until the effective time
or the termination of the merger agreement, unless Buffets
otherwise agrees in writing, Ryans and its subsidiaries
will:
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conduct their operations in accordance with their ordinary
course of business consistent with past practice; and
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use reasonable efforts to preserve intact their business
organization, keep available the services of their current
officers and employees, preserve the goodwill of those having
business relationships with them, preserve their relationships
with customers, creditors and suppliers, maintain their books,
accounts and records and comply in all material respects with
applicable laws.
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Ryans also agreed that, until the effective time of the
merger, Ryans will not, and will cause its subsidiaries
not to, take any of the following actions without the prior
written consent of Buffets:
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amend or propose to amend its articles of incorporation or
bylaws or file any certificate of designation or similar
instrument with respect to any authorized but unissued capital
stock;
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split, combine or reclassify any shares of its capital stock,
amend the terms of any outstanding securities or repurchase,
redeem or acquire any shares of capital stock;
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declare, pay or set aside any dividend or distribution other
than dividends payable by a wholly-owned subsidiary of
Ryans to Ryans or another wholly-owned subsidiary;
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authorize for issuance, issue, sell or grant any capital stock
or any options or other securities or rights to acquire capital
stock or which are exchangeable for or convertible into capital
stock other than in connection with the exercise of options
outstanding on the date of the merger agreement or in connection
with any offering period under the employee stock purchase plan
that has commenced prior to the date of the merger agreement, or
repurchase, redeem or otherwise acquire any shares of capital
stock or any other securities exercisable or exchangeable for or
convertible into capital stock;
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merge or consolidate, liquidate, dissolve, recapitalize or
reorganize, or create any new subsidiary;
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sell, lease, license, pledge, encumber or otherwise dispose of
any material assets or interests, except in the ordinary course
of business, consistent with past practice;
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acquire any assets other than in the ordinary course of
business, consistent with past practice;
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acquire any equity interest in any entity or any business, or
enter into any joint venture, strategic alliance or other
similar arrangement with another entity, other than teaming or
other similar agreements entered into in the ordinary course of
business, consistent with past practice;
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incur, assume or guarantee any indebtedness (including the
issuance of debt securities) other than under Ryans
existing credit lines, intercompany indebtedness or in the
ordinary course of business, consistent with past practice;
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except as required by changes in law or GAAP, change any of
Ryans accounting principles or practices used as of
December 28, 2005 that would reasonably be expected to
materially affect the assets, liabilities, or results of
operation of Ryans or its subsidiaries;
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except in the ordinary course of business, consistent with past
practice, make or change any material tax election, settle or
compromise any tax liability involving a payment of more than
$1 million, change in any material respect any accounting
method in respect of taxes, file any amendment to a material tax
return, settle any claim or assessment in respect of taxes
involving a payment of more than $1 million, or consent to
any extension or waiver of the limitation period applicable to
any claim or assessment in respect of taxes;
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except as required under any existing agreement and other than
increases in cash compensation to employees who are not
directors or officers that are made in the ordinary course of
business consistent with past practice, grant any increase in
compensation, bonus, severance, pension or other benefit plan;
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except as required by the terms of any employment-related
agreement grant any severance or termination pay except to
employees who are not officers or directors in amounts
consistent with Ryans policies and past practices;
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make any individual capital expenditure, addition or improvement
in excess of $100,000 or $1,000,000 in the aggregate;
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enter into or terminate, renew or amend in any material respect
any contract that is or would be expected to be material to
Ryans and its subsidiaries taken as a whole or that could
require payments of more than $1 million in the aggregate
over its term, except for entering into certain types of
purchaser contracts for food or beverage supplies;
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waive, release or assign any material rights, claims or benefits
under any material agreement;
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engage in any reportable transaction, including any
listed transaction within the meaning of
Section 6011 of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986 or any
other applicable law;
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waive or release any of the material rights of Ryans or
its subsidiaries, taken as a whole, or pay, discharge or satisfy
any material claims, liabilities or obligations before due
except for the payment, discharge and satisfaction in the
ordinary course of business of liabilities reflected on or
reserved for in Ryans financial statements that are
included in its SEC filings or otherwise incurred in the
ordinary course of business, consistent with past practice;
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settle or compromise any pending or threatened suit, action or
proceeding involving a settlement payment by Ryans or any
of its subsidiaries in excess of $250,000 or requiring the
surviving corporation to take or refrain from taking any
material action after the effective time of the merger;
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take certain actions relating to rights to any material
intellectual property owned or licensed by Ryans outside
the ordinary course of business consistent with past
practice; or
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agree, resolve or commit to take any action described above.
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Buffets
Financing
In the merger agreement, Buffets and Merger Sub commit to use
their commercially reasonable efforts to maintain their
financing commitment letters from Drawbridge Special Opportunity
Fund, LLC and from Credit Suisse Securities (USA) LLC, UBS
Securities LLC, Goldman Sachs Credit Partners L.P. and
Piper Jaffray & Co. providing for debt financing in an
aggregate principal amount of up to $1.5 billion for the
completion of the merger and other costs such as transaction
costs relating to the merger (the commitment
letters) and to enter into definitive financing agreements
with respect to the financing contemplated by the commitment
letters. In the event the committed amounts become unavailable
for any reason, Buffets and Merger Sub will use their respective
commercially reasonable efforts to arrange alternative financing
on terms and conditions that are not less favorable in substance
to Buffets and Merger Sub to those contained in the commitment
letters.
Other
Proposals
In the merger agreement, we have agreed to certain limitations
on our ability to take action with respect to other acquisition
proposals prior to the effective time of the merger.
Notwithstanding these limitations, we may respond to certain
proposals prior to the adoption of the merger agreement and
approval of the merger by our shareholders. The merger agreement
provides that:
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the term acquisition proposal means any inquiry,
proposal, indication of interest or offer from any person or
other entity other than Buffets or its affiliates relating to an
acquisition or sale of 20% or more of Ryans consolidated
assets or 20% or more of Ryans or its subsidiaries
equity securities, a tender or exchange offer that would result
in any one person or entity beneficially owning 20% or more of
Ryans or any of its subsidiaries equity securities,
or a merger, consolidation, business combination,
reorganization, recapitalization, liquidation, dissolution or
other similar transaction other than the merger of Ryans
and Merger Sub contemplated by the merger agreement;
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the term superior proposal means an unsolicited,
bona fide, written acquisition proposal not received in
violation of the following paragraph for at least a majority of
Ryans outstanding common stock or all or substantially all
or a majority of its consolidated assets which is fully financed
or for which financing is reasonably likely to be available (but
excluding a sale-leaseback or similar transaction) and on terms
that Ryans board of directors determines in good faith
would result in a transaction that is more favorable to
Ryans shareholders from a financial point of view than the
merger with Merger Sub and is reasonably capable of being
completed according to its terms; and
|
36
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prior to the effective time, Ryans and its representatives
may not:
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|
solicit, initiate, facilitate or knowingly encourage the making
or submission of any acquisition proposal;
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|
enter into any letter of intent, agreement, arrangement or
understanding with respect to any acquisition proposal, or agree
to approve or endorse any acquisition proposal or enter into any
agreement, arrangement or understanding that would require
Ryans to abandon, terminate or fail to consummate the
merger;
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initiate or participate in any discussions or negotiations or
furnish or disclose information in furtherance of a proposal
that constitutes or could lead to an acquisition
proposal; or
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facilitate any inquiries or the making or the submission of a
proposal that constitutes or could reasonably be expected to
lead to an acquisition proposal.
|
Prior to the adoption of the merger agreement and approval of
the merger by our shareholders, Ryans is permitted to
engage in discussions and negotiations with respect to an
unsolicited, bona fide acquisition proposal and furnish
information about itself and its subsidiaries to the party
making such a proposal pursuant to a customary confidentiality
agreement that is at least as restrictive on the other party as
the confidentiality agreement between Ryans and Buffets if:
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Ryans has not violated its obligations as described in the
preceding paragraph; and
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Ryans board of directors determines in good faith, after
consulting with its financial advisor and outside legal counsel,
that the acquisition proposal is, or is reasonably likely to
result in, a superior proposal and that failure to provide such
information, or engage in such discussions or negotiations
regarding the acquisition proposal would be inconsistent with
the fiduciary duties of Ryans board of directors to
Ryans shareholders under applicable law.
|
In addition, the merger agreement provides that Ryans will:
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|
notify Buffets of any acquisition proposal or any request for
information or inquiry that could reasonably be expected to lead
to an acquisition proposal within 48 hours of receiving
such proposal or inquiry, which notification will include a copy
or summary of the acquisition proposal or inquiry, including the
identity of the third party making such acquisition proposal or
inquiry;
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keep Buffets advised on a reasonably current basis as to the
status and content of any discussions or negotiations involving
any acquisition proposal or inquiry and promptly make available
to Buffets any non-public information furnished in connection
with such acquisition proposal or inquiry that has not been
previously provided to Buffets; and
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notify Buffets in writing promptly after any determination by
Ryans board of directors that an acquisition proposal is,
or would reasonably be likely to result in or lead to a superior
proposal.
|
Neither Ryans board of directors nor any committee thereof
may withdraw, modify or change, or propose publicly to withdraw,
modify or change, its recommendation regarding the merger in a
manner adverse to Buffets, Merger Sub or the transactions
contemplated by the merger agreement unless, prior to obtaining
shareholder approval, Ryans board of directors determines
in good faith, after consultation with its outside legal
counsel, that failing to do so would be inconsistent with the
fiduciary duties of Ryans board of directors to
Ryans shareholders. If Ryans board of directors
withdraws, modifies or changes, or proposes publicly to
withdraw, modify or change, its recommendation in response to a
superior proposal, Ryans has agreed to give Buffets three
business days written notice of the material terms and
provisions of the superior proposal and to negotiate in good
faith with Buffets during that period to amend the merger
agreement so that the acquisition proposal is no longer a
superior proposal. If at the end of such three business day
period, Ryans board of directors continues to believe in
good faith, after receiving the advice of its outside legal
counsel and financial advisors, that the acquisition proposal
continues to be a superior proposal, and Ryans satisfies
its obligations to pay any termination fee and make any expense
reimbursement, then it may withdraw, modify or change its
37
recommendation by written notice to Buffets and terminate the
merger agreement, subject to payment of a termination fee
described in Termination Fees beginning on
page 40.
Employee
Benefits
The merger agreement provides that Buffets will, for a period
beginning on the date the merger is completed and ending on
December 31, 2006, provide Ryans employees with
compensation and other benefits that are no less favorable than
the compensation and benefits provided to them immediately prior
to the closing of the merger or, at Buffets election,
substantially comparable to the employee benefits provided to
similarly situated employees of Buffets.
Other
Covenants
The merger agreement contains a number of mutual covenants of
Ryans and Buffets, including covenants relating to:
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actions relating to anti-takeover statutes;
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obtaining all necessary governmental approvals and consents;
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preparing and filing this proxy statement, the inclusion in the
proxy statement of the recommendation of Ryans board of
directors that Ryans shareholders vote in favor of
adoption of the merger agreement and approval of the merger and
the accuracy of the information furnished to each other for
inclusion in the proxy statement;
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making public announcements in connection with the merger;
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notifying the other party of certain events and supplementing
information in the confidential disclosure letter delivered in
connection with the merger agreement;
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indemnification, exculpation, advancement of expenses and
director and officer liability insurance; and
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maintaining the confidentiality of the non-public documents
furnished to each other.
|
Conditions
to the Merger
The respective obligations of each party to complete the merger
are subject to the satisfaction or written waiver of the
following conditions:
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Ryans shareholders must adopt the merger agreement and
approve the merger;
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there must be no order, decree, ruling, judgment or injunction
by any governmental authority of competent jurisdiction making
illegal or preventing the merger substantially on the terms
contemplated in the merger agreement; and
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the waiting period under the HSR Act must have expired or been
terminated.
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Ryans obligations to complete the merger are also subject
to satisfaction or written waiver of the following conditions:
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the representations and warranties of Buffets and Merger Sub in
the merger agreement, regardless of any materiality or material
adverse effect qualification, must be true and correct in all
respects as of the date the merger closes (except for any
representations and warranties made as of a specified date,
which must only continue to be true as of such specified date),
except for any failures of such representations and warranties
to be true and correct as would not, individually or in the
aggregate, reasonably be expected to have a material adverse
effect on Buffets;
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Buffets and Merger Sub must have performed in all material
respects all of their respective obligations and have complied
in all material respects with all of their respective covenants
required to be performed or complied with by it under the merger
agreement at or prior to the effective time of the
merger; and
|
38
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Buffets must have delivered to Ryans a certificate, dated
the date of closing and signed by an executive officer,
certifying the satisfaction of the conditions set forth above.
|
Buffets and Merger Subs obligations to complete the
merger are also subject to satisfaction or written waiver of the
following conditions:
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the representations and warranties of Ryans set forth in
the merger agreement, regardless of any materiality or material
adverse effect qualification, must be true and correct in all
respects as of the date the merger closes (except for any
representations and warranties made as of a specified date,
which must only continue to be true as of such specified date),
except for any failures of such representations and warranties
to be true and correct as would not individually or in the
aggregate reasonably be expected to have a material adverse
effect on Ryans;
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Ryans must have performed or complied with in all material
respects all obligations required to be performed or complied
with by it under the merger agreement at or prior to the
effective time of the merger;
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there must have been no material adverse effect with respect to
Ryans since the date of the merger agreement;
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|
Ryans must have delivered to Buffets a certificate, dated
the date of closing and signed by an executive officer,
certifying the satisfaction of the conditions set forth above;
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Ryans or its subsidiaries must have received the proceeds
of the sale-leaseback transaction with Drawbridge immediately
prior to the merger effective time, and the Buffets and Merger
Sub must have received the other proceeds of the financing
contemplated by the commitment letters, in each case on terms
that are no less favorable in substance to Buffets, Merger Sub
or the surviving corporation than those set forth in the
commitment letters or definitive financing agreements, as the
case may be; and
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Ryans shall have delivered an affidavit meeting the
requirements of Section 1445(b)(3) of the Code.
|
Termination
of the Merger Agreement
The merger agreement may be terminated at any time prior to the
effective time, whether before or, under certain circumstances,
after the adoption of the merger agreement and the approval of
the merger by the shareholders by:
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mutual written consent of Buffets and Ryans;
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either Buffets or Ryans if the merger has not been
completed by January 15, 2007, unless the failure to
complete the merger by that date is due to the terminating
partys material breach of the merger agreement;
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either Buffets or Ryans if there are any laws that
prohibit the merger, or if a final and non-appealable order,
decree, ruling, judgment or injunction has been entered by a
governmental authority permanently restraining or otherwise
prohibiting the merger and the terminating party has made
reasonable efforts to resist, resolve or remove such law, order,
decree, ruling, judgment or injunction;
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either Buffets or Ryans if shareholder approval for the
merger proposal is not obtained unless that failure was caused
by a material breach of the merger agreement by the terminating
party;
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|
either Buffets or Ryans if any one of the following has
occurred: (i) the waiting period applicable to the
consummation of the merger under the HSR Act has not expired or
been terminated by January 15, 2007; (ii) any
governmental authority files a complaint or otherwise commences
a proceeding seeking an injunction or order enjoining the
consummation of the merger or restraining or prohibiting the
operation of the business of Buffets or any of its subsidiaries
after the effective time; or (iii) Buffets receives notice
that either the United States Federal Trade Commission or the
United States Department of Justice has authorized its staff to
file a complaint or seek a preliminary injunction enjoining
|
39
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|
consummation of the merger; provided that in each case the
terminating party has used its reasonable efforts to resist,
resolve or remove the impediments to the closing of the merger;
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either Buffets or Ryans if the non-terminating party fails
to satisfy its obligations relating to representations and
warranties described in the Conditions to the Merger
section beginning on page 38 or if the non-terminating
party materially breaches or fails to perform any of its
covenants or obligations under the merger agreement and in
either case does not cure such breach, default or failure in all
material respects within 30 days after receiving written
notice;
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Ryans if prior to obtaining shareholder approval of the
merger, the Ryans board of directors authorizes
Ryans to enter into a definitive agreement for a superior
proposal and Ryans enters into a definitive agreement
immediately following the termination of the merger agreement,
provided that concurrent with and as a condition to termination
of the merger agreement Ryans pays the required
termination fee and expense reimbursement to Buffets;
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Ryans if either of the commitment letters expires or
terminates prior to January 15, 2007 (or is amended, such
that the total amount of the financing is not sufficient to
consummate the merger), and Buffets has not secured a
replacement commitment letter (on terms that are no less
favorable, in substance, to Buffets and Merger Sub than the
expired or terminated commitment letter or letters) within
30 days after the date of such expiration, termination or
amendment;
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Buffets if Ryans board of directors withdraws or adversely
modifies its recommendation to approve the merger or if the
board of directors fails to reconfirm its recommendation to
approve the merger within 10 business days of a request to do so
following notice of a public announcement of Ryans receipt
of an acquisition proposal or any material change thereto or a
public announcement of any transaction to acquire a material
portion of Ryans common stock by a person or entity other
than a party to the merger agreement; or
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Buffets if Ryans enters into a definitive agreement with
respect to any acquisition proposal or approves or recommends
any acquisition proposal.
|
Termination
Fees
Ryans must reimburse Buffets for
out-of-pocket
expenses up to $10,000,000 and pay to Buffets a termination fee
of $25,000,000 (less the amount of any expenses Ryans has
reimbursed to Buffets) upon certain events, including if:
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Ryans terminates the merger agreement to accept a superior
proposal;
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Buffets terminates the merger agreement after:
(i) Ryans board of directors withdraws or adversely
modifies its recommendation in favor of the merger agreement,
(ii) Ryans board of directors fails to reconfirm its
recommendation to approve the merger within 10 business days
after a request from Buffets to do so under circumstances giving
Buffets a right to terminate the merger agreement as described
above, or (iii) Ryans board of directors approves or
recommends an acquisition proposal or enters into a definitive
agreement with respect to an acquisition proposal; or
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both the merger agreement is terminated because
(i) the closing does not occur on or prior to
January 15, 2007, (ii) Ryans shareholders do not
adopt the merger agreement, (iii) Ryans cannot
satisfy its obligations relating to representations and
warranties described in the Conditions to the Merger
section beginning on page 38 or (iv) Ryans
breaches any of its covenants which default or breach is not
cured within 30 days after notice thereof from Buffets
and, prior to the time of termination, there
exists an acquisition proposal, and Ryans accepts a
written offer for, or otherwise enters into an agreement to
consummate, or consummates, an acquisition proposal (for these
purposes, acquisition proposal has a 50% threshold instead of a
20% threshold) within one year of termination of the merger
agreement. No fee will be payable by Ryans in these
circumstances if a termination fee is payable by Buffets as
described below.
|
40
Buffets will pay to Ryans a termination fee of $7,500,000
if:
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Ryans terminates the merger agreement after the expiration
or termination of Buffets commitment letters without
securing a replacement; or
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all conditions to the closing of the merger are satisfied (other
than Buffets financing-relating condition described on
page 39 and conditions that, by their nature, are to be and
are capable of being satisfied at the merger closing), and the
merger agreement is terminated by either party because the
merger has not been completed by January 15, 2007.
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No termination fee will be payable by Buffets if Ryans has
breached in any material respect any of its representations,
warranties or covenants and does not cure such breach, default
or failure in all material respects within 30 days after
receiving written notice or if there has been a material adverse
effect with respect to Ryans.
Other
Fees and Expenses
Except as described above, all fees and expenses incurred in
connection with the transactions contemplated by the merger
agreement will be paid by the party incurring such fees or
expenses, whether or not the merger is consummated.
Amendment
The merger agreement may not be amended except by action taken
or authorized by the board of directors of each of Ryans,
Buffets and Merger Sub in writing, provided that after adoption
of the merger agreement by our shareholders, no amendment may be
made without the further approval of our shareholders if and to
the extent such approval is required under applicable law or in
accordance with the rules of The Nasdaq National Market.
MARKET
PRICE AND DIVIDEND DATA
Ryans common stock is listed on The Nasdaq Stock Market
under the symbol RYAN. The following tables sets
forth the high and low bid prices of our common stock for the
indicated part of our current fiscal year and for our 2005 and
2004 fiscal years, as reported on The Nasdaq National Market.
These quotations represent prices between dealers and do not
include retail mark-ups, mark-downs or other fees or commissions
and may not represent actual transactions.
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First
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Second
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Third
|
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Fourth
|
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|
Quarter
|
|
|
Quarter
|
|
|
Quarter
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|
|
Quarter
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|
|
2006
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
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|
|
High
|
|
|
13.88
|
|
|
|
14.50
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Low
|
|
|
11.46
|
|
|
|
10.95
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
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|
2005
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
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|
|
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High
|
|
|
15.48
|
|
|
|
14.76
|
|
|
|
14.58
|
|
|
|
12.41
|
|
Low
|
|
|
13.05
|
|
|
|
12.18
|
|
|
|
11.66
|
|
|
|
10.04
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|
2004
|
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|
|
|
|
|
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|
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High
|
|
|
17.60
|
|
|
|
18.82
|
|
|
|
16.69
|
|
|
|
15.76
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|
Low
|
|
|
14.96
|
|
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|
15.44
|
|
|
|
13.55
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|
13.39
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On July 24, 2006, which was the last trading day before we
made a public announcement about the merger, the closing price
of Ryans common stock on The National Stock Market was
$11.22 per share. On September 1, 2006, the latest
practicable date before the date of this proxy statement, the
closing price of our common stock was $15.78.
If the merger is consummated, our common stock will be delisted
from The Nasdaq National Market, there will be no further public
market for shares of our common stock, and each share of our
common stock will be cancelled and converted into the right to
receive $16.25 in cash, without interest. We have never paid
cash dividends on our common stock.
41
SECURITY
OWNERSHIP OF MANAGEMENT AND CERTAIN BENEFICIAL OWNERS
The following table sets forth certain information with respect
to the beneficial ownership of shares of our common stock
(including shares underlying options) as of August 28,
2006, by each of our directors, executive officers, all
executive officers and directors as a group and the beneficial
owner of 5% or more of our outstanding common stock. Unless
otherwise specified, the address for each holder is 405
Lancaster Avenue, Greer, South Carolina 29650.
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Amount of
|
|
Percent of
|
Name and Address of Beneficial Owner
|
|
Beneficial Ownership
|
|
Class
|
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Charles D. Way
|
|
|
261,076
|
|
|
|
0.6
|
%
|
G. Edwin McCranie
|
|
|
240,651
|
|
|
|
0.6
|
%
|
Fred T. Grant, Jr.
|
|
|
152,497
|
|
|
|
0.4
|
%
|
Janet J. Gleitz
|
|
|
72,400
|
|
|
|
0.2
|
%
|
James R. Hart
|
|
|
147,575
|
|
|
|
0.3
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%
|
Michael R. Kirk
|
|
|
72,500
|
|
|
|
0.2
|
%
|
Richard D. Sieradzki
|
|
|
21,065
|
|
|
|
*
|
%
|
Edward R. Tallon, Sr.
|
|
|
19,661
|
|
|
|
*
|
%
|
Ilene T. Turbow
|
|
|
101,883
|
|
|
|
0.2
|
%
|
Barry L. Edwards
|
|
|
66,096
|
|
|
|
0.2
|
%
|
Brian S. MacKenzie
|
|
|
81,500
|
|
|
|
0.2
|
%
|
Harold K. Roberts, Jr.
|
|
|
26,500
|
|
|
|
0.1
|
%
|
James M. Shoemaker, Jr.
|
|
|
71,844
|
|
|
|
0.2
|
%
|
Vivian A. Wong
|
|
|
13,000
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|
|
|
*
|
%
|
All executive officers and
directors as a group (14 persons)
|
|
|
1,348,248
|
|
|
|
3.1
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%
|
FMR
Corp.(1)
|
|
|
4,056,700
|
|
|
|
9.6
|
%
|
Edward C. Johnson
3d(1)
82 Devonshire Street
Boston, MA 02109
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Private Capital Management,
Inc.(2)
|
|
|
3,401,815
|
|
|
|
8.0
|
%
|
Bruce S.
Sherman(2)
Gregg J.
Powers(2)
8889 Pelican Bay Boulevard
Naples, FL 34108
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Barclays Global Investors,
NA(3)
|
|
|
3,210,196
|
|
|
|
7.6
|
%
|
Barclays Global Fund
Advisors(3)
45 Fremont Street
San Francisco, CA 94105
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Dimensional Fund Advisors,
Inc.(4)
|
|
|
2,599,374
|
|
|
|
6.1
|
%
|
1299 Ocean Avenue,
11th Floor
Santa Monica, CA 90401
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Millenco,
L.P.(5)
|
|
|
2,437,511
|
|
|
|
5.8
|
%
|
Millennium Management,
L.L.C.(5)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Israel A.
Englander(5)
666 Fifth Avenue
New York, NY 10103
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
* Less than 0.1%
|
|
|
(1) |
|
FMR Corp. (FMR), together with Edward C. Johnson 3d,
Chairman of FMR, and Abigail P. Johnson, a director of FMR,
reported February 14, 2006 that FMRs wholly-owned
subsidiary, Fidelity Management & Research Company
(Fidelity) is the beneficial owner of
4,056,700 shares of common stock as a result of acting as
investment adviser to various investment companies. Fidelity
Management Trust Company, a |
42
|
|
|
|
|
wholly-owned subsidiary of FMR, is the beneficial owner of
133,800 shares of common stock as a result of its serving
as investment manager of the institutional account, and each of
Mr. Johnson and FMR, through its control of Fidelity
Management Trust Company, has sole dispositive power and sole
voting power over these shares. Fidelity Low Priced Stock Fund,
one of the investment companies for which Fidelity serves as
investment adviser, owns 3,922,900 shares of Ryans
common stock (the FLPSF Shares). None of FMR,
Mr. Johnson, nor Fidelity has sole voting power as to any
of the FLPSF Shares, which power resides with the Funds
Board of Trustees. Each of FMR, Mr. Johnson and the funds
has sole power to dispose of the FLPSF Shares. Members of the
Johnson family are the predominant owners of Class B shares
of common stock of FMR (representing approximately 49% of the
voting power of FMR Corp.) and may be deemed to form a control
group with respect to FMR. |
|
(2) |
|
Private Capital Management, L.P. (PCM) reported on
June 12, 2006 that it has shared voting and dispositive
power as to 3,401,815 shares of common stock. Bruce S.
Sherman, Chief Executive Officer of PCM, and Gregg J. Powers,
President of PCM, each has shared voting and dispositive power
as to these shares of Ryans common stock owned by
PCMs clients and managed by PCM, but disclaims beneficial
ownership of these shares and disclaim the existence of a group. |
|
(3) |
|
Barclays Global Investors, NA (Barclays Investors),
together with Barclays Global Fund Advisors and a number of
other Barclays entities reported on February 10, 2006 that
they have an aggregate beneficial ownership of
3,210,196 shares of common stock. Of these, Barclays
Investors has sole voting power with respect to
1,795,008 shares and sole dispositive power with respect to
2,166,383 shares, and Barclays Global Fund Advisors
has sole voting and dispositive power with respect to
1,043,813 shares. All shares reported are held by the
company in trust accounts for the economic benefit of the
beneficiaries of those accounts. |
|
(4) |
|
Dimensional Fund Advisors, Inc reported on February 1,
2006 that it beneficially owns 2,599,374 shares of common
stock, with sole voting and dispositive power as to all of those
shares. |
|
|
|
(5) |
|
In a Schedule 13D dated August 22, 2006 and filed on
August 31, 2006, Millenco, L.P., together with Millennium
Management, L.L.C. (Millencos general partner) and Israel
A. Englander (Millennium Managements managing member),
reported that it has sole voting and dispositive power with
respect to 2,437,511 shares of common stock. As general partner
of Millenco, Millennium Management may also be deemed to
beneficially own these shares, and as managing member of
Millennium Management, Mr. Englander may also be deemed to
beneficially own these shares. In the Schedule 13D, these
reporting persons indicated that they are engaged in the
investment business and that in pursuing this business, they
from time to time may hold discussions with third parties or
management that may include making suggestions or taking
positions with respect to potential changes in the operations,
management or capital structure of companies in which they
invest, and that Millenco is continuing to evaluate its options
with respect to the merger. |
FUTURE
SHAREHOLDER PROPOSALS
We intend to hold an annual meeting in 2007 only if the merger
is not consummated. Any shareholder who wishes to present a
proposal at the 2007 Special Meeting of Shareholders, if such a
meeting is held, and have his or her proposal included in the
proxy statement and proxy card relating to that meeting must
deliver such proposal to Ryans no later than
October 30, 2006. The proposal must comply with the rules
of the SEC relating to shareholder proposals. With respect to a
shareholder proposal for the 2007 Special Meeting of
Shareholders that is not intended to be included in the proxy
materials relating to the meeting, the proposal must be received
by Ryans at least 45 days prior to the shareholders
meeting at which the proposal is to be presented. After that
date, the proposal will not be considered timely. Shareholders
may send their proposals to Ryans, Attention: Janet J.
Gleitz, Post Office Box 100, Greer, South Carolina 29652.
WHERE YOU
CAN FIND MORE INFORMATION
Ryans files annual, quarterly and current reports, proxy
statements and other information with the SEC under the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended. You may read and
copy this information at, or obtain copies of this information
by mail from, the SECs Public Reference Room, 100 F Street
N.E., Room 1024,
43
Washington, D.C. 20549, at prescribed rates. Please call
the SEC at
1-800-SEC-0330
for further information about the public reference room.
The filings of Ryans with the SEC are also available to
the public from commercial document retrieval services and at
the web site maintained by the SEC at www.sec.gov. These
documents may also be obtained for free from Ryans by
directing a request to Ryans Restaurant Group, Inc.,
Investor Relations, Ryans Restaurant Group, Inc., Post
Office Box 100, Greer, South Carolina 29652 or at our
Investor Relations page on our corporate website at
www.ryans.com.
Incorporation
of Information by Reference
We are incorporating by reference information into
this proxy statement, meaning that we are disclosing important
information to you by referring you to another document filed
separately with the SEC. The information incorporated by
reference is considered to be part of this proxy statement,
except to the extent that the information is superseded by
information in this proxy statement.
This proxy statement incorporates by reference the information
contained in our Annual Report on
Form 10-K
for the year ended December 28, 2005. We also incorporate
by reference any documents filed by us pursuant to
Section 13(a), 13(c), 14 or 15(d) of the Securities
Exchange Act of 1934 after the date of this proxy statement and
prior to the date of the special meeting. The information
contained in any of these documents will be considered part of
this proxy statement from the date these documents are filed.
No persons have been authorized to give any information or to
make any representations other than those contained in this
proxy statement and, if given or made, such information or
representations must not be relied upon as having been
authorized by us or any other person. This proxy statement is
dated September 5, 2006. You should not assume that the
information contained in this proxy statement is accurate as of
any date other than that date, and the mailing of this proxy
statement to shareholders shall not create any implication to
the contrary.
If you have any questions about is proxy statement, the Special
Meeting or the merger or need assistance with the voting
procedures, you should contact our Secretary, Janet Gleitz, at
(864) 879-1000.
By Order of the Board of Directors,
Janet J. Gleitz
Secretary
Greer, South Carolina
September 5, 2006
44
Exhibit A
AGREEMENT
AND PLAN OF MERGER
dated
July 24, 2006
by and among
RYANS RESTAURANT GROUP, INC.,
BUFFETS, INC.
and
BUFFETS SOUTHEAST, INC.
TABLE OF
CONTENTS
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ARTICLE I THE MERGER
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A-1
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Section 1.1
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The Merger
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A-1
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Section 1.2
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The Closing
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A-1
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Section 1.3
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Effective Time
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A-1
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Section 1.4
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Effects of the Merger
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A-1
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Section 1.5
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Organizational Documents
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A-1
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Section 1.6
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Directors and Officers
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A-2
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Section 1.7
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Conversion of Shares
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A-2
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Section 1.8
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Company Options and Equity-Based
Awards
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A-2
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Section 1.9
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Employee Stock Purchase Plan
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A-3
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Section 1.10
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Adjustments
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A-4
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ARTICLE II PAYMENT
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A-4
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Section 2.1
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Surrender of Certificates
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A-4
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Section 2.2
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Paying Agent; Certificate
Surrender Procedures
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A-4
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Section 2.3
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Transfer Books
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A-5
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Section 2.4
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Termination of Payment Fund
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A-5
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Section 2.5
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Lost Certificates
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A-5
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Section 2.6
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No Rights as Stockholder
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A-5
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Section 2.7
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Withholding
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A-5
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Section 2.8
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Escheat
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A-5
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ARTICLE III REPRESENTATIONS
AND WARRANTIES OF THE COMPANY
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A-6
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Section 3.1
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Corporate Existence and Power
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A-6
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Section 3.2
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Capitalization
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A-7
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Section 3.3
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Authorization of Transaction
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A-8
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Section 3.4
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Vote Required
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A-8
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Section 3.5
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Noncontravention; Approvals
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A-8
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Section 3.6
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Company Filings; Information in
the Proxy Statement
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A-9
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Section 3.7
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No Undisclosed Liabilities
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A-10
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Section 3.8
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Absence of Company Material
Adverse Effect
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A-10
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Section 3.9
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Litigation and Legal Compliance
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A-10
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Section 3.10
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Contract Matters
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A-11
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Section 3.11
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Tax Matters
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A-12
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Section 3.12
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Employee Benefit Matters
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A-13
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Section 3.13
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Environmental Matters
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A-15
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Section 3.14
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Real Estate
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A-16
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Section 3.15
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Intellectual Property Matters
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A-17
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Section 3.16
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Labor Matters
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A-18
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Section 3.17
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Amendment to the Rights Agreement
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A-19
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Section 3.18
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Takeover Laws
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A-19
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Section 3.19
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Insurance
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A-19
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Section 3.20
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Brokers Fees
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A-20
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Section 3.21
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Opinion of Financial Advisor
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A-20
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A-i
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ARTICLE IV REPRESENTATIONS
AND WARRANTIES OF THE PARENT AND THE MERGER SUBSIDIARY
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A-20
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Section 4.1
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Corporate Existence and Power
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A-20
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Section 4.2
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Authorization of Transaction;
Non-Contravention; Approvals
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A-20
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Section 4.3
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Financing Capability
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A-21
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Section 4.4
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Information in the Proxy Statement
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A-21
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Section 4.5
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Litigation
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A-21
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Section 4.6
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Brokers and Finders
Fees
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A-22
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ARTICLE V COVENANTS
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A-22
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Section 5.1
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General
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A-22
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Section 5.2
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Further Assurances
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A-22
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Section 5.3
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Interim Conduct of the Company
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A-22
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Section 5.4
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Control of Operations
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A-25
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Section 5.5
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Proxy Statement; Company
Stockholders Meeting
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A-25
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Section 5.6
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Financing
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A-26
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Section 5.7
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Additional Reports
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A-27
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Section 5.8
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Acquisition Proposals
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A-27
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Section 5.9
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Indemnification
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A-29
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Section 5.10
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Public Announcements
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A-30
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Section 5.11
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Full Access
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A-30
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Section 5.12
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Actions Regarding Anti-takeover
Statutes
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A-31
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Section 5.13
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Continued Benefit Plans
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A-31
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Section 5.14
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Standstill Provisions
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A-31
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Section 5.15
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Notification of Certain Matters;
Supplemental Disclosure
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A-31
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Section 5.16
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Nonqualified Excess Plans
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A-31
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Section 5.17
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Title Insurance
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A-32
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Section 5.18
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Surveys
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A-32
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ARTICLE VI CONDITIONS TO THE
CONSUMMATION OF THE MERGER
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A-32
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Section 6.1
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Conditions to the Obligations of
Each Party
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A-32
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Section 6.2
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Conditions to the Obligation of
the Company
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A-32
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Section 6.3
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Conditions to the Obligation of
the Parent and the Merger Subsidiary
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A-33
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Section 6.4
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Frustration of Closing Conditions
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A-33
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ARTICLE VII TERMINATION
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A-33
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Section 7.1
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Termination
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A-33
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Section 7.2
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Effect of Termination
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A-35
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Section 7.3
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Fees and Expenses
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A-35
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Section 7.4
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Other Company Termination Fee and
Expense Reimbursement Matters
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A-36
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Section 7.5
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Parent Termination Fee
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A-36
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ARTICLE VIII MISCELLANEOUS
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A-37
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Section 8.1
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Nonsurvival of Representations
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A-37
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Section 8.2
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Specific Performance
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A-37
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Section 8.3
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Successors and Assigns
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A-37
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A-ii
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Section 8.4
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Amendment
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A-37
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Section 8.5
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Severability
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A-37
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Section 8.6
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Extension of Time; Waiver
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A-37
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Section 8.7
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Counterparts
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A-38
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Section 8.8
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Descriptive Headings
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A-38
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Section 8.9
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Notices
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A-38
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Section 8.10
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No ThirdParty Beneficiaries
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A-39
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Section 8.11
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Entire Agreement
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A-39
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Section 8.12
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Construction
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A-39
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Section 8.13
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Governing Law
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A-39
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EXHIBITS
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Exhibit A
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Form of Surviving Corporation
Articles of Incorporation
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Exhibit B
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Form of Surviving Corporation
Bylaws
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A-iii
TABLE OF
DEFINED TERMS
|
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Defined Term
|
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Section
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Acquisition Proposal
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Section 5.8(g)
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Affiliate
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Section 5.2
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Agreement
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Preamble
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Agreement Date
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Preamble
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Antitrust Laws
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Section 3.5
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Articles of Merger
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Section 1.3
|
Brookwood Engagement Letter
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Section 3.20
|
Certificate
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Section 2.1
|
Closing
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Section 1.2
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Closing Date
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Section 1.2
|
Code
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Section 2.7
|
Commitment Letters
|
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Section 4.3(a)
|
Company
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Preamble
|
Company Common Stock
|
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Recitals
|
Company Intellectual Property
|
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Section 3.15(a)
|
Company Material Adverse Effect
|
|
Section 3.1(b)
|
Company Material Agreements
|
|
Section 3.10(a)
|
Company Options
|
|
Section 1.8(a)
|
Company Plans
|
|
Section 3.12(a)
|
Company Recommendation
|
|
Section 5.5(a)
|
Company Representatives
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|
Section 5.6(c)
|
Company SEC Documents
|
|
Section 3.6(a)
|
Company Stock Plans
|
|
Section 1.8(a)
|
Company Stockholders
|
|
Section 3.21
|
Company Stockholders Approval
|
|
Section 3.4
|
Company Stockholders Meeting
|
|
Section 5.5(a)
|
Confidentiality Agreement
|
|
Section 5.8(b)
|
Construction Projects
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|
Section 3.14(i)
|
Continuing Employees
|
|
Section 5.13
|
Drawbridge
|
|
Section 4.3(a)
|
Effective Time
|
|
Section 1.3
|
Employee Pension Benefit Plan
|
|
Section 3.12(a)
|
Employee Welfare Benefit Plan
|
|
Section 3.12(a)
|
Environmental Laws
|
|
Section 3.13(b)
|
ERISA
|
|
Section 3.12(a)
|
ERISA Affiliate
|
|
Section 3.12(c)
|
ESPP
|
|
Section 1.9
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Exchange Act
|
|
Section 1.8(a)
|
Expense Reimbursement
|
|
Section 7.3(b)
|
Financial Statements
|
|
Section 3.6(b)
|
Financing
|
|
Section 4.3(a)
|
Financing Agreements
|
|
Section 5.6(a)
|
GAAP
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|
Section 3.6(b)
|
Governmental Authority
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|
Section 3.5
|
A-iv
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Defined Term
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|
Section
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Hazardous Substance
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|
Section 3.13(c)
|
HSR Act
|
|
Section 3.5
|
Indemnified Parties
|
|
Section 5.9(a)
|
Intellectual Property
|
|
Section 3.15(a)
|
IP Licenses
|
|
Section 3.15(a)
|
Laws
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|
Section 3.9(b)
|
Leased Real Property
|
|
Section 3.14(b)
|
Lien
|
|
Section 3.2(e)
|
Material Adverse Effect
|
|
Section 3.1(b)
|
Merger
|
|
Section 1.1
|
Merger Consideration
|
|
Section 1.7(a)
|
Merger Subsidiary
|
|
Preamble
|
Nonqualified Excess Plan
|
|
Section 5.16
|
Option Consideration
|
|
Section 1.8(b)
|
Owned Real Property
|
|
Section 3.14(a)
|
Parent
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Preamble
|
Parent Material Adverse Effect
|
|
Section 4.1
|
Paying Agent
|
|
Section 2.2(a)
|
Payment Fund
|
|
Section 2.2(b)
|
Permitted Leased Real Property
Exceptions
|
|
Section 3.14(b)
|
Permitted Lien
|
|
Section 3.14(a)
|
Person
|
|
Section 3.1(b)
|
Proxy Statement
|
|
Section 3.6(f)
|
Real Property
|
|
Section 3.14(c)
|
Real Property Leases
|
|
Section 3.14(b)
|
Rights Agreement
|
|
Section 3.17
|
SCBA
|
|
Section 1.1
|
SC Code
|
|
Section 3.3(c)
|
SEC
|
|
Section 5.6(e)
|
Securities Act
|
|
Section 3.6(a)
|
Share
|
|
Section 1.7(a)
|
Shares
|
|
Section 1.7(a)
|
Software
|
|
Section 3.15(a)
|
SOXA
|
|
Section 3.6(a)
|
Space Leases
|
|
Section 3.14(d)
|
Structures
|
|
Section 3.14(f)
|
Subsidiary
|
|
Section 1.7(b)
|
Superior Proposal
|
|
Section 5.8(h)
|
Surviving Corporation
|
|
Section 1.1
|
Tax
|
|
Section 3.11(c)
|
Taxes
|
|
Section 3.11(c)
|
Tax Returns
|
|
Section 3.11(a)
|
Trade Secrets
|
|
Section 3.15(a)
|
Vested Options
|
|
Section 1.8(a)
|
WARN
|
|
Section 3.16
|
A-v
AGREEMENT
AND PLAN OF MERGER
AGREEMENT AND PLAN OF MERGER (this
Agreement), dated July 24, 2006 (the
Agreement Date), by and among RYANS
RESTAURANT GROUP, INC., a South Carolina corporation (the
Company), BUFFETS, INC., a Minnesota
corporation (the Parent), and BUFFETS
SOUTHEAST, INC., a South Carolina corporation and a wholly-owned
subsidiary of the Parent (the Merger
Subsidiary).
BACKGROUND
WHEREAS, the Board of Directors of each of the Parent, the
Merger Subsidiary and the Company deem it advisable and in the
best interests of their respective companies and stockholders to
consummate the merger of the Merger Subsidiary with and into the
Company, upon the terms and subject to the conditions set forth
herein, and have unanimously adopted resolutions adopting,
approving and declaring the advisability of this Agreement, the
Merger and the other transactions contemplated herein.
WHEREAS, pursuant to the Merger, shares of the Companys
common stock, par value $1.00 per share (the
Company Common Stock), shall be, except as
otherwise provided herein, converted into the right to receive
the Merger Consideration in the manner set forth herein, and the
Company shall become a wholly-owned subsidiary of the Parent.
NOW, THEREFORE, in consideration of the mutual agreements
contained in this Agreement, and for other good and valuable
consideration, the value, receipt and sufficiency of which are
acknowledged, the parties agree as follows:
ARTICLE I
THE MERGER
Section 1.1 The
Merger. Subject to the terms and conditions of
this Agreement, at the Effective Time the Merger Subsidiary
shall be merged with and into the Company (the
Merger) in accordance with the provisions of
the South Carolina Business Corporation Act of 1988, as amended
(the SCBA). Following the Merger, the
Company shall continue as the surviving corporation (the
Surviving Corporation) and the separate
corporate existence of the Merger Subsidiary shall cease. As a
result of the Merger, the Surviving Corporation shall become a
wholly-owned subsidiary of the Parent.
Section 1.2 The
Closing. Unless this Agreement has been
terminated pursuant to Section 7.1, the closing of
the Merger (the Closing) shall take
place on a date no later than the third business day following
satisfaction or waiver of the conditions set forth in
Article VI (the Closing Date), at
the New York offices of Paul, Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton &
Garrison, LLP, unless another date or place is agreed to in
writing by the parties.
Section 1.3 Effective
Time. Upon the terms and subject to the
satisfaction or waiver of the conditions of this Agreement, at
the Closing (or at such other time as the parties may agree) the
Company and the Merger Subsidiary shall (a) execute and
file with the South Carolina Secretary of State appropriate
articles of merger (the Articles of Merger)
in accordance with
Section 33-11-105
of the SCBA and (b) make all other filings or recordings
required by the SCBA in connection with the Merger. The Merger
shall be consummated upon the filing of the Articles of Merger
with the South Carolina Secretary of State or such later time as
is agreed upon by the parties and specified in the Articles of
Merger. The time the Merger becomes effective in accordance with
the SCBA is referred to in this Agreement as the
Effective Time.
Section 1.4 Effects
of the Merger. The Merger shall have the effects
set forth in this Agreement and the relevant provisions of the
SCBA.
Section 1.5 Organizational
Documents. At the Effective Time, and without any
further action on the part of any Person, the articles of
incorporation and bylaws of the Company shall be amended in
their entirety to read as set forth on Exhibits A
and B, respectively, and thereby shall become the
articles of incorporation
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and bylaws of the Surviving Corporation until thereafter amended
in accordance with their respective terms and the SCBA.
Section 1.6 Directors
and Officers. The directors and the officers of
the Merger Subsidiary immediately before the Effective Time
shall at the Effective Time become the directors and officers of
the Surviving Corporation and shall hold office from the
Effective Time in accordance with the articles of incorporation
and bylaws of the Surviving Corporation until their respective
successors are duly elected or appointed and qualified or until
their earlier death, resignation or removal.
Section 1.7 Conversion
of Shares. As of the Effective Time, by virtue of
the Merger and without any action on the part of the Company,
the Parent or the Merger Subsidiary or their respective
stockholders:
(a) each share of Company Common Stock (a
Share and collectively, the
Shares), other than Shares to be canceled in
accordance with subsection (b) below, issued and
outstanding immediately prior to the Effective Time shall be
converted into the right to receive $16.25 in cash, without
interest (the Merger Consideration), payable
to the holder thereof upon surrender of the Certificate formerly
representing such Share in the manner provided in
Section 2.2. All such Shares, when so converted,
shall no longer be outstanding and shall automatically be
canceled and shall cease to exist, and each holder of a
Certificate shall cease to have any rights with respect to such
Shares, except the right to receive the Merger Consideration,
without interest, upon the surrender of such Certificate in
accordance with Section 2.2;
(b) each Share owned immediately prior to the Effective
Time by the Company, the Parent, the Merger Subsidiary or any of
their respective Subsidiaries, shall be canceled and
extinguished and no consideration shall be delivered in exchange
therefor. For purposes of this Section 1.7(b),
Company Common Stock owned beneficially or held of record by any
plan, program or arrangement sponsored or maintained for the
benefit of any current or former employee of the Company, the
Parent, the Merger Subsidiary or any of their respective
Subsidiaries, shall not be deemed to be held by the Company, the
Parent, the Merger Subsidiary or any such Subsidiary, regardless
of whether the Company, the Parent, the Merger Subsidiary or any
such Subsidiary has the power, directly or indirectly, to vote
or control the disposition of such shares. For purposes of this
Agreement, the term Subsidiary means,
with respect to any Person, any other Person fifty percent (50%)
or more of the outstanding voting ownership securities of which
(or if there are no such voting interests, fifty percent (50%)
or more of the equity interests of which) are owned, directly or
indirectly, by such first Person; and
(c) Section 1.7 of the Company Disclosure
Letter sets forth by employee each Share that is pledged (or
held in escrow) and any outstanding loan or indebtedness
(including the principal balance and interest) whether to the
Company or third party lender in connection with the
Companys Operating Partner and District Partner programs,
as of the Agreement Date, which list shall be updated 2 business
days prior to the Effective Time. Notwithstanding the foregoing,
in the case of any employee who has pledged Shares purchased by
such employee in connection with the Companys Operating
Partner or District Partner programs as collateral for any
outstanding loan or indebtedness (whether to the Company or
otherwise), the aggregate Merger Consideration, after applicable
withholding Taxes (as set forth in Section 2.7), shall be
applied by the Surviving Corporation to the repayment of such
loan or indebtedness, and the employee shall be entitled to
receive any remaining Merger Consideration following such
repayment; and
(d) each share of common stock, par value $0.01 per
share, of the Merger Subsidiary issued and outstanding
immediately prior to the Effective Time will, by virtue of the
Merger and without any action on the part of the holder thereof,
be converted into one share of common stock, par value
$0.01 per share, of the Surviving Corporation and shall
constitute the only outstanding shares of capital stock of the
Surviving Corporation.
Section 1.8 Company
Options and Equity-Based Awards.
(a) As soon as practicable following the Agreement Date,
the Company shall take such actions as shall be required:
(i) to effectuate the cancellation of any outstanding but
unvested options (Unvested Options) and
vested options (Vested Options, which term
shall include any option that would vest under its applicable
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Company Stock Plan (defined below) as a consequence of the
transaction contemplated by this Agreement) to purchase shares
of Company Common Stock (collectively, the Company
Options) granted pursuant to the Ryans Family
Steak Houses, Inc. 1987 Stock Option Plan, the Ryans
Family Steak Houses, Inc. 1991 Stock Option Plan, the
Ryans Family Steak Houses, Inc. 1998 Stock Option Plan and
the Ryans Family Steak Houses, Inc. 2002 Stock Option Plan
(or any other stock option plan, program, agreement or
arrangement of the Company and its Subsidiaries (collectively,
the Company Stock Plans)), as of the
Effective Time and to cause all Company Options to no longer
represent the right to purchase Company Common Stock or any
other equity security of the Company, the Parent, the Surviving
Corporation or any other Person; (ii) to cause, pursuant to
the Company Stock Plans, each outstanding Vested Option to
represent as of the Effective Time solely the right to receive,
in accordance with this Section 1.8, a lump sum cash
payment in the amount of the Option Consideration, if any, with
respect to such Vested Option, and each Unvested Option shall be
canceled and forfeited without the receipt of any consideration;
and (iv) to cause the transactions contemplated by this
section to be exempt from the provisions of Section 16(b)
of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended (together
with the rules and regulations promulgated thereunder, the
Exchange Act).
(b) Parent shall cause the Surviving Corporation to pay to
each holder of a Vested Option, in respect and in consideration
of each Vested Option so cancelled, as soon as practicable
following the Effective Time (but in any event not later than
five (5) business days after the Effective Time), an amount
equal to the product of (i) the excess, if any, of
(A) the Merger Consideration over (B) the exercise
price per share of Company Common Stock subject to such Vested
Option, multiplied by (ii) the total number
of shares of Company Common Stock issuable upon exercise of such
Vested Option (whether or not then vested or exercisable),
without any interest thereon (the Option
Consideration).
(c) As soon as practicable following the execution of this
Agreement, the Company shall mail to each person who is a holder
of Company Options a letter describing the treatment of and
payment (if such option is a Vested Option) for such Company
Options pursuant to this Section 1.8 and providing
instructions for obtaining payment for such Vested Options. The
Parent shall at all times from and after the Effective Time
cause the Surviving Corporation to maintain sufficient liquid
funds to satisfy its obligations to holders of Vested Options
pursuant to this Section 1.8.
(d) As of the Effective Time, the Company Stock Plans shall
terminate and all rights under any provision of any other plan,
program or arrangement providing for the issuance or grant of
any other interest in respect of the capital stock of the
Company shall be canceled. At and after the Effective Time, no
Person shall have any right under the Company Options, the
Company Stock Plans or any other plan, program or arrangement
with respect to equity securities of the Surviving Corporation
or any Subsidiary thereof, except the right to receive the
amount payable under this Section 1.8.
(e) No additional Company Options or other equity-based
awards or other rights to acquire Company Common Stock shall be
granted pursuant to the Company Stock Plans or otherwise after
the Agreement Date.
(f) The Board of Directors of the Company shall adopt such
resolutions or take such other actions as may be required or
appropriate such that, upon the Effective Time, each Company
Option and Company Stock Plan is treated in accordance with this
Section 1.8.
Section 1.9 Employee
Stock Purchase Plan. As soon as practicable
following the Agreement Date, the Board of Directors of the
Company (or if appropriate, any committee of the Board of
Directors of the Company administering the Employee Stock
Purchase Plan (the ESPP)) shall adopt such
resolutions or take such other actions as may be required to
provide that (i) participants may not increase their
payroll deductions or purchase elections from those in effect as
of the Agreement Date, (ii) no offering period shall
commence after the Agreement Date, (iii) each
participants outstanding right to purchase shares of
Company Common Stock under the ESPP shall terminate on the day
immediately following the Agreement Date, provided
that all amounts allocated to each participants
account under the ESPP as of such date shall thereupon be used
to purchase whole shares of Company Common Stock at the
applicable price determined under the ESPP for then outstanding
offering periods using such date as the final purchase date for
each offering period and (iv) the ESPP shall terminate
immediately following the purchases of Company Common Stock on
the day prior to the day on which the Effective Time occurs.
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Section 1.10 Adjustments. In
the event of any stock split, reverse stock split, stock
dividend (including any dividend or distribution of securities
convertible into capital stock), reorganization,
reclassification, combination, recapitalization, exchange,
readjustment or other like change with respect to the Company
Common Stock occurring after the Agreement Date and prior to the
Effective Time, all references in this Agreement to specified
numbers of shares of any class or series affected thereby, and
all calculations provided for that are based upon numbers of
shares of any class or series affected thereby, shall be
adjusted to the extent necessary to provide the parties the same
economic effect as contemplated by this Agreement prior to such
stock split, reverse stock split, stock dividend,
reorganization, reclassification, combination, recapitalization,
exchange, readjustment or other like change.
ARTICLE II
PAYMENT
Section 2.1 Surrender
of Certificates. From and after the Effective
Time, each holder of a certificate that immediately prior to the
Effective Time represented an outstanding Share (a
Certificate) shall be entitled to receive in
exchange therefor, upon surrender thereof to the Paying Agent,
the Merger Consideration into which the Shares formerly
evidenced by such Certificate were converted into the right to
receive pursuant to the Merger. No interest shall be payable on
the Merger Consideration to be paid to any holder of a
Certificate irrespective of the time at which such Certificate
is surrendered for exchange.
Section 2.2 Paying
Agent; Certificate Surrender Procedures.
(a) Prior to the Effective Time, the Parent (with the
approval of the Company, not to be unreasonably conditioned,
withheld or delayed) shall designate, or shall cause to be
designated, a bank or trust company based in the United States,
to act as agent for the payment of the Merger Consideration upon
surrender of Certificates (the Paying Agent).
(b) Immediately prior to the Effective Time, the Parent
shall deposit, or cause to be deposited, with the Paying Agent,
an amount in cash sufficient to provide all funds necessary for
the Paying Agent to make payment of the aggregate Merger
Consideration payable pursuant to Section 1.7 (the
Payment Fund). For purposes of
determining the amount of Merger Consideration to be so
deposited, the Parent and the Merger Subsidiary shall assume
that no holder of Company Common Stock shall perfect any right
to dissent from the Merger and obtain payment for his, her or
its Company Common Stock pursuant to Chapter 13 of the
SCBA. Pending payment of such funds to the holders of
Certificates, the Payment Fund shall be held and may be invested
by the Paying Agent pursuant to the terms of the agreement
entered into between the Parent and the Paying Agent. The Parent
shall replenish the Payment Fund to the extent of any investment
losses any monies lost through any investment made pursuant to
this subsection (b).
(c) As soon as reasonably practicable, and in any event not
later than three (3) business days after the Effective
Time, the Parent shall instruct the Paying Agent to mail to each
record holder of a Certificate (i) a letter of transmittal
(which shall specify that delivery shall be effected, and risk
of loss and title to such Certificates shall pass, only upon
delivery of the Certificates to the Paying Agent and shall be in
customary form) and (ii) instructions for use in effecting
the surrender of Certificates for the Merger Consideration. Upon
the surrender to the Paying Agent of a Certificate together with
a duly executed and completed letter of transmittal and all
other documents and other materials required by the Paying Agent
to be delivered in connection therewith, the holder shall be
entitled to receive promptly in exchange therefor the Merger
Consideration into which the Shares formerly represented by such
Certificates so surrendered have been converted into the right
to receive in accordance with the provisions of this Agreement
and the Certificates so surrendered shall forthwith be canceled.
If payment of the Merger Consideration is to be made to a Person
other than the Person in whose name the surrendered Certificate
is registered, it shall be a condition precedent of payment that
(i) the Certificate so surrendered shall be properly
endorsed or shall be otherwise in proper form for transfer and
(ii) the Person requesting such payment shall have paid any
transfer and other Taxes required by reason of the payment of
the Merger Consideration to a Person other than the registered
holder of the Certificate surrendered or shall have established
to the satisfaction of the Surviving Corporation that such
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Tax either has been paid or is not required to be paid. Until so
surrendered, each outstanding Certificate shall be deemed from
and after the Effective Time, for all corporate purposes, to
evidence the right to receive the Merger Consideration without
interest thereon, into which the Shares represented by such
Certificate have been converted into the right to receive in
accordance with the provisions of this Agreement.
Section 2.3 Transfer
Books. The stock transfer books of the Company
shall be closed at the Effective Time, and no transfer of any
shares of Company Common Stock shall thereafter be recorded on
any of the stock transfer books. In the event of a transfer of
ownership of any shares of Company Common Stock prior to the
Effective Time that is not registered in the stock transfer
records of the Company at the Effective Time, the Merger
Consideration into which such Company Common Stock has been
converted into the right to receive in the Merger shall be paid
to the transferee in accordance with the provisions of
Section 2.2 only if the Certificate is surrendered
as provided in Section 2.2 and accompanied by all
documents required to evidence and effect such transfer
(including evidence of payment of any applicable stock transfer
taxes).
Section 2.4 Termination
of Payment Fund. Any portion of the Payment Fund
(including any interest received with respect thereto) that
remains undistributed one hundred eighty (180) days after
the Effective Time shall be delivered to the Parent upon demand,
and each holder of Company Common Stock as of the Effective Time
who has not previously surrendered Certificates in accordance
with the provisions of this Article II shall
thereafter look only to the Parent (subject to abandoned
property, escheat or similar laws) as general creditors thereof
with respect to the Merger Consideration payable upon due
surrender of their Certificates or affidavits of loss in lieu
thereof, without any interest thereon.
Section 2.5 Lost
Certificates. If any Certificate shall have been
lost, stolen or destroyed, upon the making of an affidavit (in
form and substance reasonably acceptable to the Parent) of that
fact by the Person making such a claim, and, if required by the
Parent, the posting by such Person of a bond in such reasonable
amount as the Parent may direct as indemnity against any claim
that may be made against or with respect to such Certificate,
the Paying Agent shall pay the Merger Consideration in respect
of each Share represented by such lost, stolen or destroyed
Certificate.
Section 2.6 No
Rights as Stockholder. From and after the
Effective Time, the holders of Certificates shall cease to have
any rights as a stockholder of the Surviving Corporation except
as otherwise expressly provided in this Agreement or by
applicable Laws, and the Parent shall be entitled to treat each
Certificate that has not yet been surrendered for exchange
solely as evidence of the right to receive the Merger
Consideration into which the Company Common Stock evidenced by
such Certificate has been converted pursuant to the Merger.
Section 2.7 Withholding. Each
of the Parent, the Merger Subsidiary, the Surviving Corporation
and the Paying Agent shall be entitled to deduct and withhold
from the Merger Consideration
and/or
Option Consideration payable to any former holder of Company
Common Stock and Company Options, or pursuant to
Sections 1.8 and 1.9, all amounts required to
be deducted or withheld therefrom by the Internal Revenue Code
of 1986, as amended (the Code), or
other applicable state, local or foreign tax Laws. To the extent
that amounts are so deducted and withheld and paid to the
appropriate Governmental Authority, such amounts shall be
treated for all purposes of this Agreement as having been paid
to the holder thereof in respect of which such deduction and
withholding was made by the Parent or the Surviving Corporation.
All payments to any Governmental Authority required to be made
in connection with the withholding Taxes as described in this
Section 2.7 shall be paid to the relevant
Governmental Authority through the withholding tax payment
systems of the Surviving Corporation.
Section 2.8 Escheat. Neither
the Parent, the Merger Subsidiary nor the Company shall be
liable to any former holder of Company Common Stock for any
portion of the Merger Consideration delivered to any public
official pursuant to any applicable abandoned property, escheat
or similar Law. In the event any Certificate has not been
surrendered for the Merger Consideration prior to the sixth
anniversary of the Closing Date, or prior to such earlier date
as of which such Certificate or the Merger Consideration payable
upon the surrender thereof would otherwise escheat to or become
the property of any Governmental Authority, then the Merger
Consideration otherwise payable upon the surrender of such
Certificate will, to the extent permitted by
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applicable Laws, become the property of the Surviving
Corporation, free and clear of all rights, interests and adverse
claims of any person.
ARTICLE III
REPRESENTATIONS
AND WARRANTIES OF THE COMPANY
Except (i) with respect to Sections 3.7 through 3.16
and Section 3.19, as disclosed in any report, schedule,
form, statement or other document filed with, or furnished to,
the Securities and Exchange Commission (the
SEC) by the Company and publicly available at
least two (2) business days prior to the date of this
Agreement and, for the avoidance of doubt, without giving effect
to any change of fact or circumstance subsequent to the date
such document was filed or furnished, or (ii) as set forth
in the letter dated the Agreement Date from the Company to the
Parent (the Company Disclosure Letter) (it being
understood that any information set forth in one section or
subsection of the Company Disclosure Letter shall be deemed to
apply to and qualify the section or subsection of this Agreement
to which it corresponds in number and each other section or
subsection of this Agreement to the extent that it is reasonably
apparent on its face that such information is relevant to such
other section or subsection), the Company represents and
warrants to the Parent and Merger Subsidiary that:
Section 3.1 Corporate
Existence and Power.
(a) Each of the Company and its Subsidiaries is a
corporation or limited liability company duly organized, validly
existing and in good standing under the laws of the jurisdiction
of its incorporation or organization, and has all requisite
corporate or limited liability company power and authority to
own, lease and operate its properties and assets and to carry on
its business as presently being conducted, except when the
failure to be in good standing or have such power and authority,
individually or in the aggregate, would not reasonably be
expected to have a Company Material Adverse Effect. Each of the
Company and its Subsidiaries is duly qualified or licensed to
conduct business and is in good standing in each jurisdiction in
which the properties owned, leased or operated by it or the
nature of the business conducted by it makes such qualification
or license necessary, except where the failure to be so
qualified or licensed and in good standing individually or in
the aggregate, would not reasonably be expected to have a
Company Material Adverse Effect. The Company has made available
to the Parent or its counsel, true, correct and complete copies
of the charter and bylaws or other equivalent organizational
documents, as applicable of each of the Company and its
Subsidiaries, in each case as amended and in effect on the
Agreement Date. Neither the Company nor any of its Subsidiaries
is in violation of any of the provisions of its charter or
bylaws or equivalent organizational documents.
(b) For the purposes of this Agreement, Company
Material Adverse Effect means a Material Adverse
Effect with respect to the Company and Material
Adverse Effect means any event, circumstance,
condition, change, development or effect that, individually or
in the aggregate with all other events, circumstances,
conditions, changes, developments or effects, would have a
material adverse effect on the business, financial condition,
assets, liabilities, operations or results of operations of a
Person and its Subsidiaries taken as a whole, or the ability of
a Person to consummate the Merger and to perform its obligations
under this Agreement. For purposes of this Agreement,
Person means an individual, a corporation, a
limited liability company, a partnership, a joint venture, an
association, a trust, an unincorporated organization or any
other entity or organization, including any Governmental
Authority. Notwithstanding the foregoing, a Company Material
Adverse Effect shall not include any event, circumstance,
condition, change, development or effect (i) relating to
financial, credit or securities markets or economic conditions
in general; (ii) relating to changes in Law or applicable
accounting regulations or principles or interpretations thereof,
to the extent such event, circumstances, condition, change,
development or effect described in this clause (ii) does
not materially, disproportionately impact the Company and its
Subsidiaries taken as a whole relative to other companies
operating in the restaurant industry; (iii) relating to the
restaurant industry generally, to the extent such event,
circumstance, condition, change, development or effect described
in this clause (iii) does not materially,
disproportionately impact the Company and its Subsidiaries taken
as a whole relative to other companies operating in such
industry; (iv) consisting of any change in the Company
Common Stock price or trading
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volume, in and of itself, or any failure, in and of itself, by
the Company to meet revenue or earnings projections (it being
understood that the facts or occurrences giving rise to or
contributing to such change in the Company Common Stock price,
trading volume or failure to meet revenue or earnings
projections may be taken into account in determining whether
there has been a Company Material Adverse Effect);
(v) relating to the announcement of this Agreement
(including any termination of, reduction in or similar negative
impact on relationships with any suppliers, distributors or
employees of the Company and its Subsidiaries, to the extent
such change or effect was due to the identity of Parent or its
Affiliates) and the transactions contemplated hereby and
performance of and compliance with the terms of this Agreement.
Notwithstanding the foregoing, any occurrence of any food borne
illness at any restaurant owned or operated by the Company that
results in death or serious bodily injury which would reasonably
be expected to cause the consolidated earnings before income
taxes of the Company to decline by more than 10% over a period
of at least one year shall be deemed to have had a Company
Material Adverse Effect.
Section 3.2 Capitalization.
(a) The authorized capital stock of the Company consists of
One Hundred Million (100,000,000) shares of Company Common
Stock. As of the close of business on July 21, 2006,
42,325,415.38 shares of Company Common Stock were issued
and outstanding and 2,896,347 shares were reserved for
issuance pursuant to the Company Stock Plans. All of the issued
and outstanding shares of the capital stock of the Company are,
and all shares which may be issued pursuant to the exercise of
the Company Options or pursuant to the Company Stock Plans shall
be, when issued in accordance with the respective terms thereof,
duly authorized, validly issued, fully paid and non-assessable
and not subject to or issued in violation of any purchase
option, call option, right of first refusal, preemptive right,
subscription right or any similar right under any provision of
the SCBA, the Companys articles of incorporation or bylaws
or any contract or commitment to which the Company is a party or
otherwise bound and (ii) issued in compliance with all
applicable Laws, including federal and state securities Laws and
all requirements set forth in applicable contracts governing the
issuance of such Company Options. The Company has granted no
Company Options outside of the Company Stock Plans.
(b) There are no outstanding or authorized options, calls,
warrants, subscription rights, convertible securities,
conversion rights, exchange rights or other contracts,
agreements or commitments that could require the Company or any
of its Subsidiaries to issue, transfer, sell or otherwise cause
to become outstanding any of its capital stock or other
securities. There are no outstanding stock appreciation, phantom
stock, profit participation or similar rights with respect to
the Company or any of its Subsidiaries or other equity interest
in the Company or any of its Subsidiaries, or securities
convertible into or exchangeable for such shares or equity
interests. The Company Disclosure Letter sets forth a list of
all outstanding Company Options and any other awards, the plan
under which the options or other awards were granted, as well as
the respective exercise prices, dates of grant and vesting
schedules thereof. Except as set forth in Article I,
the Company is not party to or bound by any obligation to
accelerate the vesting of any Company Options.
(c) Neither the Company nor any of its Subsidiaries is a
party to, bound by, or has knowledge of, any voting trust, proxy
or other agreement or understanding with respect to the voting
of any capital stock of the Company or any of its Subsidiaries.
(d) The Board of Directors of the Company has not declared
any dividend or distribution with respect to the Company Common
Stock the record or payment date for which is on or after the
Agreement Date.
(e) Other than with respect to the Subsidiaries listed on
Section 3.2(e) of the Company Disclosure Letter, the
Company does not directly or indirectly own any securities or
beneficial ownership interests in any other Person (including
through joint ventures or partnership arrangements) or have any
investment in any other Person. All of the outstanding shares of
capital stock of the Companys Subsidiaries that are owned
by the Company are duly authorized, validly issued, fully paid
and non-assessable and not subject to or issued in violation of
any purchase option, call option, right of first refusal,
preemptive right, subscription right or any similar right under
any provision of the Laws applicable to such Subsidiary in such
Subsidiarys state of incorporation, such Subsidiarys
articles of incorporation or bylaws (or the equivalent thereof)
or any contract or commitment to which such Subsidiary is a
party or otherwise bound, and (ii) issued in compliance
with all
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applicable Laws, including federal and state securities laws,
and are owned by the Company or one of its Subsidiaries, free
and clear of any and all Liens. For purposes of this Agreement,
Lien means any lien, pledge, mortgage, deed
of trust, security interest, claim, community property interest,
equitable interest, lease, license, charge, option, right of
first refusal, easement, servitude, restrictive covenant, right
of way, encroachment or other survey defect, title defect,
encumbrance, including any restriction on use, voting, transfer,
receipt of income or exercise of any other attribution of
ownership or other restriction or limitation whatsoever.
(f) As of the Agreement Date, (i) no bonds,
debentures, notes or other indebtedness of the Company having
the right to vote are issued or outstanding, and (ii) there
are no outstanding contractual obligations of the Company or any
of its Subsidiaries to repurchase, redeem or otherwise acquire
any shares of capital stock of the Company or any of its
Subsidiaries.
(g) The Company Common Stock is listed for quotation on the
NASDAQ National Market. No other securities of the Company or
any of its Subsidiaries are listed or quoted for trading on any
United States domestic or foreign securities exchange.
(h) Holders of Company Common Stock are not entitled to
dissenters rights under Chapter 13 of the SCBA.
Section 3.3 Authorization
of Transaction.
(a) The Company has full corporate power and authority and
has taken all requisite corporate action to enable it to execute
and deliver this Agreement, and, subject to obtaining the
Company Stockholders Approval, to enter into this Agreement and
to consummate the transactions contemplated hereby and to
perform its obligations hereunder. This Agreement has been duly
authorized, executed and delivered by the Company and, assuming
the due authorization, execution and delivery thereof by the
Parent and the Merger Subsidiary, constitutes a valid and
legally binding agreement of the Company enforceable against the
Company in accordance with its terms, except that (i) such
enforcement may be limited by applicable bankruptcy, insolvency,
reorganization, moratorium, fraudulent transfer or similar Laws
of general applicability relating to or affecting enforcement of
creditors rights generally and (ii) the remedy of
specific performance and injunctive and other forms of equitable
relief may be subject to equitable defenses and to the
discretion of the court before which any proceeding therefor may
be brought.
(b) In connection with its adoption of the resolutions of
the Board of Directors of the Company described in the Preamble
to this Agreement, the Board of Directors of the Company
received the opinion of Brookwood referenced in
Section 3.21.
(c) The Company has taken all action required to be taken
by it in order to exempt this Agreement and the transactions
contemplated hereby from, and this Agreement, and the
transactions contemplated hereby are exempt from, the
requirements of any moratorium, control
share, fair price, affiliate
transaction, business combination or other
anti takeover Laws of the State of South Carolina, including
Chapter 2 of Title 35 of the 1976 Code of Laws of
South Carolina, as amended (the SC Code). The
Company has taken all action required to be taken by it in order
to make this Agreement and the transactions contemplated hereby
comply with, and this Agreement, and the transactions
contemplated hereby do comply with, the requirements of any
articles, sections or provisions of its articles of
incorporation and bylaws concerning business
combination, fair price, voting
requirement, constituency requirement or other
related provisions.
Section 3.4 Vote
Required. The affirmative vote of the holders of
two-thirds of the outstanding shares of Company Common Stock
(the Company Stockholders Approval) is the
only vote of the holders of any class or series of the
Companys capital stock necessary to adopt this Agreement
and approve the Merger and the consummation of the transactions
contemplated hereby.
Section 3.5 Noncontravention;
Approvals. Except for (a) filings and
approvals necessary to comply with the applicable requirements
of the Exchange Act, (b) filings pursuant to the
Hart-Scott-Rodino
Antitrust Improvements Act of 1976, as amended (the
HSR Act), and any other applicable
competition, merger control, antitrust or similar laws or
regulations (collectively with the HSR Act, the
Antitrust Laws), (c) the Company
Stockholders Approval and the filing of the Articles of Merger
pursuant to the SCBA, and
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any similar certificates or filings to be made pursuant to the
corporation laws of other jurisdictions in which the Company or
any of its Subsidiaries is qualified to do business, and
(d) any filings required under the rules and regulations of
the NASDAQ National Market, neither the execution and delivery
of this Agreement by the Company, nor the consummation by the
Company of the transactions contemplated hereby, shall
(i) violate or conflict with any provision of the articles
of incorporation or bylaws of the Company or the equivalent
organizational documents of any of its Subsidiaries,
(ii) result in a violation or breach of, be in conflict
with, or constitute or create (with or without due notice or
lapse of time or both) a default (or give rise to any right of
termination, cancellation or acceleration) under any of the
terms, conditions or provisions of any Company Material
Agreement, (iii) violate any Laws applicable to the
Company, any of its Subsidiaries or any of their properties or
assets, (iv) require any filing or registration with,
notification to, or authorization, consent or approval of, any
government or any agency, bureau, board, commission, court,
department, official, political subdivision, tribunal or other
instrumentality of any government with appropriate jurisdiction
over the Company, any of its Subsidiaries or their respective
properties or assets, whether federal, state or local, domestic
or foreign (each a Governmental Authority) or
(v) result in the creation or imposition of any Lien on any
of the property or assets of the Company or any of its
Subsidiaries; except in the case of clauses (ii), (iii), (iv),
and (v) for such violations, breaches, defaults or Liens
that, or filings, registrations, notifications, authorizations,
consents or approvals the failure of which to obtain,
individually or in the aggregate, would not reasonably be
expected to have a Company Material Adverse Effect (excluding
for this purpose only clause (vi) of the penultimate
sentence of Section 3.1(b)).
Section 3.6 Company
Filings; Information in the Proxy Statement.
(a) The Company has filed on a timely basis all proxy
statements, reports, schedules, forms, statements and other
documents (including exhibits thereto), and all amendments
thereto, required to be filed by it with the SEC since
January 1, 2005 (collectively, together with the
information incorporated by reference therein, the
Company SEC Documents). Each of the Company
SEC Documents, as of its filing date (or if amended or
superseded by a filing prior to the Agreement Date, then as of
the date of such filing) complied in all material respects with
the applicable requirements of the Securities Act of 1933, as
amended (together with the rules and regulations thereunder, the
Securities Act), the Exchange Act or the
Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002 (SOXA) (as the
case may be) and the applicable rules and regulations of the SEC
thereunder, and did not contain any untrue statement of a
material fact or omit to state a material fact required to be
stated therein or necessary in order to make the statements
therein, in light of the circumstances under which they were
made, not misleading. No Subsidiary of the Company is required
to file any statements, reports, schedules, forms or other
documents with the SEC.
(b) Each of the consolidated financial statements
(including, in each case, any related notes thereto) contained
in the Company SEC Documents (the Financial
Statements), (i) complied as to form in all
material respects with the published rules and regulations of
the SEC with respect thereto, (ii) was prepared in
accordance with accounting principles generally accepted in the
United States (GAAP) applied on a consistent
basis throughout the periods involved (except in the case of
unaudited interim statements, to the extent they may exclude
footnotes or may be condensed or summary statements as may be
permitted by the SEC on
Form 10-Q,
8-K or any
successor form under the Exchange Act), and (iii) fairly
presented in all material respects the consolidated financial
position of the Company and its Subsidiaries as of the
respective dates thereof and the consolidated results of the
Companys and its Subsidiaries operations and cash
flows for the periods indicated, subject, in the case of the
unaudited interim financial statements, to normal and recurring
year-end audit adjustments. Except as reflected in the Financial
Statements, neither the Company nor any of its Subsidiaries is a
party to any material off-balance sheet arrangements (as defined
in Item 303 of
Regulation S-K
promulgated under the Exchange Act). As of the Agreement Date,
the Company has not had any material dispute with KPMG, LLP
regarding accounting matters or policies during any of its past
two full fiscal years or during the current fiscal year that is
currently outstanding or that has resulted in (x) a passed
adjustment or (y) any restatement of the Financial
Statements.
(c) Without limiting the generality of the foregoing, KPMG,
LLP has not resigned nor been dismissed as independent public
accountant of the Company as a result of or in connection with
any disagreement with the Company on a matter of accounting
practices which materially impacts or would require the
restatement of
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any previously issued financial statements, covering one or more
years or interim periods for which the Company is required to
provide financial statements, such that they should no longer be
relied on.
(d) As of the Agreement Date, to the knowledge of the
Company, no investigation by the SEC with respect to the Company
or any of its Subsidiaries is pending or threatened.
(e) As required by
Rule 13a-15
of the Exchange Act, the Company has established and maintains
(i) internal control over financial reporting (as defined
in
Rule 13a-15(f)
of the Exchange Act), which is designed to provide reasonable
assurance regarding the reliability of the Companys
financial reporting and its preparation of financial statements
for external purposes in accordance with GAAP and
(ii) disclosure controls and procedures (as defined in
Rule 13a-15(e)
of the Exchange Act), which are designed to ensure that all
material information required to be disclosed by the Company in
the Company SEC Documents is accumulated and communicated to the
Companys and its Subsidiaries management, as
appropriate to allow timely decisions regarding required
disclosure. Each Company SEC Document that was required to be
accompanied by the certifications required of the Companys
principal executive officer and principal financial officer
pursuant to Sections 302 and 906 of SOXA and the rules and
regulations promulgated thereunder was accompanied by such
certification and, at the time of filing or submission of each
such certification, to the knowledge of the Companys
principal executive officer and principal financial officer,
such certification was true and accurate and complied with SOXA
and the rules and regulations promulgated thereunder as of the
date filed.
(f) The proxy statement to be provided to the
Companys stockholders in connection with the Company
Stockholders Meeting (such proxy statement and any amendment
thereof or supplement thereto, the Proxy
Statement) on the date mailed to the Companys
stockholders and at the time of the Company Stockholders
Meeting, shall not contain any untrue statement of a material
fact or omit to state any material fact required to be stated
therein or necessary in order to make the statements therein, in
the light of the circumstances under which they were made, not
misleading. The Proxy Statement will comply in all material
respects with the provisions of the Exchange Act and the rules
and regulations thereunder.
Section 3.7 No
Undisclosed Liabilities. Neither the Company nor
any of its Subsidiaries has any liabilities or obligations of
any nature (whether accrued or unaccrued, absolute or
contingent, liquidated or unliquidated, or due or to become due)
required by GAAP to be set forth on a consolidated balance sheet
of the Company and its Subsidiaries or in the notes thereto,
except for (a) liabilities and obligations accrued or
reserved in the Financial Statements as of December 28,
2005 or otherwise disclosed in the Company SEC Documents,
(b) liabilities and obligations incurred in the ordinary
course of business, consistent with past practice, since
December 28, 2005, (c) other liabilities and
obligations that, individually or in the aggregate, would not
reasonably be expected to have a Company Material Adverse Effect
and (d) liabilities and obligations which have been
discharged or paid prior to the Agreement Date.
Section 3.8 Absence
of Company Material Adverse Effect. Since
December 28, 2005, (i) to the Agreement Date, there
has not been a Company Material Adverse Effect, nor does there
exist or has there occurred any event, change, circumstance,
condition, development or effect that, individually or in the
aggregate, would reasonably be expected to have a Company
Material Adverse Effect, and (ii) neither the Company nor
any of its Subsidiaries has taken or authorized the taking of
any action prohibited by, or that would be, if taken after the
Agreement Date, in violation of, Section 5.3.
Section 3.9 Litigation
and Legal Compliance.
(a) Except as would not, individually or in the aggregate,
reasonably be expected to have a Company Material Adverse Effect
(i) there are no claims, actions, suits or proceedings
pending, or to the Companys knowledge, threatened by or
against the Company or any of its Subsidiaries, (ii) to the
Companys knowledge there is no investigation pending or
threatened by or against the Company or any of its Subsidiaries
and (iii) neither the Company nor any of its Subsidiaries
is subject to any outstanding judgment, injunction, order or
decree of any Governmental Authority. There are no judicial or
administrative actions or proceedings pending, or to the
Companys knowledge, threatened, and to the Companys
knowledge there are no
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investigations pending or threatened by or against the Company,
that question the validity of this Agreement or any action taken
or to be taken by the Company in connection with this Agreement.
(b) Except for instances of noncompliance that,
individually or in the aggregate, would not reasonably be
expected to have a Company Material Adverse Effect, the Company
and its Subsidiaries are in compliance with each applicable
federal, state, local and foreign law, statute, rule,
regulation, ordinance, code, license, permit, order, legal
doctrine, writ, injunction, judgment, decree, requirement or
agreement with any Governmental Authority (including common law
or the interpretation thereof) (collectively, the
Laws) to which the Company, any of its
Subsidiaries, or any of their respective assets or properties
may be subject. The Company and its Subsidiaries have all
permits, licenses, approvals, authorizations of and
registrations with and under all Laws, and from all Governmental
Authorities, required by the Company and its Subsidiaries to
carry on their respective businesses as currently conducted,
except where the failure to have such permits, licenses,
approvals, authorizations and registrations would not,
individually or in the aggregate, reasonably be expected to have
a Company Material Adverse Effect.
Section 3.10 Contract
Matters.
(a) Section 3.10 of the Company Disclosure
Letter lists each of the Company Material Agreements that as of
the Agreement Date are in effect or otherwise binding on the
Company or any of its Subsidiaries or their respective
properties or assets, other than those contracts or agreements
that have been filed as exhibits to the Company SEC Documents.
Section 3.10 of the Company Disclosure Letter shall
be deemed to be amended to include any contract or agreement
that would qualify as a Company Material Agreement which is
entered into by the Company during the period between the date
of this Agreement and the Effective Time; provided
that the Company shall have delivered written notice to
the Parent of its entry into any such contract or agreement
promptly, and in any event within two business days of its
execution thereof. Company Material
Agreements means (i) any credit agreement, note,
bond, guarantee, mortgage, indenture, lease (excluding leases
covered by Section 3.14(b) or not required to be
scheduled pursuant to that section), or other instrument or
obligation pursuant to which any indebtedness of the
Company or any of its Subsidiaries of more than $250,000 is
outstanding or may be incurred; (ii) any contract or
agreement under which the Company or any Subsidiary has,
directly or indirectly, made any advance, loan, extension of
credit or capital contribution to any person in excess of
$250,000 (other than to the Company or any Subsidiary and other
than extensions of trade credit in the ordinary course of
business, consistent with past practice); (iii) any
agreement, contract or binding commitment which was, or which
was required to be, filed as an exhibit to the Company SEC
Documents; and (iv) any (A) collective bargaining
agreement; (B) employment agreement contract or binding
commitment providing for annual compensation or payments in
excess of $250,000 in the current or any future year;
(C) agreement, contract or commitment of indemnification or
guaranty not entered into in the ordinary course of business
consistent with past practice which would reasonably be expected
to exceed $250,000, as well as any agreement, contract or
commitment of indemnification or guaranty between the Company or
any of its Subsidiaries and any of their respective officers or
directors, irrespective of the amount; (D) agreement,
contract or binding commitment containing any covenant directly
or indirectly limiting the freedom of the Company or any of its
Subsidiaries to engage in any line of business, compete with any
Person, or sell any product or service; (E) agreement,
contract or binding commitment that shall result in the payment
by, or the creation of any commitment or obligation (absolute or
contingent) to pay on behalf of the Company or any of its
Subsidiaries any severance, termination, change of control,
golden parachute, or other similar payments to any
current or former employee, officer, director or consultant
following termination of employment or otherwise as a result of
the consummation of the transactions contemplated by this
Agreement; (F) agreement, contract or binding commitment by
the Company or any of its Subsidiaries entered into since
January 1, 2005 or that has material obligations that are
to be performed subsequent to the Agreement Date, relating to
the disposition or acquisition of material assets not in the
ordinary course of business or any ownership interest in any
Subsidiary or other Person; (G) material agreements,
contracts or binding commitments regarding the development,
ownership or use of Intellectual Property (including material
licenses to or from third parties but other than commercial
off-the-shelf
software, as that term is commonly understood);
(H) material partnership, joint venture or similar
agreement or arrangement; (I) any contract or agreement
involving a standstill or similar obligation of the Company or
any of its Subsidiaries to a third party; (J) any franchise
agreement;
A-11
(K) each contract or agreement the terms of which the
Company or any Subsidiary is or will be bound to share its
profits or pay any royalties; (L) each supplier agreement
requiring payments in excess of $250,000; (M) each power of
attorney granted in favor of any Person; or (N) other
agreement, contract or binding commitment which is material to
the operation of the Companys and its Subsidiaries
businesses. For purposes of this section,
indebtedness shall mean, with respect to any Person,
without duplication, (1) all obligations of such Person for
borrowed money, (2) all obligations of others secured by
any Lien on property or assets owned or acquired by such Person,
whether or not the obligations secured thereby have been
assumed, (3) all letters of credit issued for the account
of such Person (excluding letters of credit issued for the
benefit of suppliers to support accounts payable to suppliers
incurred in the ordinary course of business or to support
workers compensation insurance obligations or perf ormance
obligations under contracts entered into in the ordinary course)
and (4) all obligations, the principal component of which
are obligations under leases that are, or should be pursuant to
GAAP, classified as capital leases; provided that,
any obligations between or among the Company and its
wholly-owned Subsidiaries shall not be considered to be
indebtedness hereunder.
(b) Each Company Material Agreement is valid, binding and
enforceable upon the Company or the Subsidiary that is a party
thereto, and to the Companys knowledge each other party
thereto, and is, and following consummation of the transactions
contemplated by this Agreement shall remain, in full force and
effect (except that (i) such enforcement may be subject to
applicable bankruptcy, insolvency, reorganization, moratorium,
fraudulent transfer and similar Laws of general applicability
relating to or affecting the enforcement of creditors
rights, and (ii) the remedy of specific performance and
injunctive and other forms of equitable relief may be subject to
equitable defenses and to the discretion of the court before
which any proceeding therefor may be brought). There are no
defaults or breaches under any Company Material Agreement by the
Company or any of its Subsidiaries, or to its knowledge any
other party thereto.
Section 3.11 Tax
Matters.
(a) The Company and each of its Subsidiaries have
(i) timely filed with the appropriate Governmental
Authorities every material return, report or other document or
information (including any election, declaration, disclosure,
schedule, estimate or information return) required to be
supplied to a taxing authority or agent thereof in connection
with Taxes (Tax Returns) required to be filed
for all periods ending on or prior to the Effective Time, and
for which a tax return is required by applicable Law to be filed
on or prior to such Effective Time (including pursuant to
extensions properly obtained), and such filed Tax Returns are
correct and complete in all material respects, (ii) timely
paid in full or made adequate provision for the payment of all
Taxes and (iii) timely withheld and paid all Taxes required
by applicable Laws to have been withheld and paid as of the
Effective Time in connection with amounts paid or owing to any
employee, independent contractor, creditor, or other third
party. The liabilities and reserves for Taxes reflected in the
balance sheet included in the Company Reports as of and for the
period ended December 28, 2005 are adequate to cover all
Taxes of the Company and its Subsidiaries for all periods ending
at and prior to the date of such balance sheet and there are no
material Liens for Taxes upon any property or asset of the
Company or any of its Subsidiaries, except for Liens for Taxes
not yet due. The Company has delivered to the Parent correct and
complete copies of all federal income Tax Returns filed for
2002, 2003 and 2004 and any amended federal income Tax Returns
filed within the three-year period ending on the Agreement Date,
and all state, local and foreign income Tax Returns filed for
2004. The Company and its Subsidiaries have each disclosed on
their respective Tax Returns all positions taken therein that
could give rise to a substantial understatement of Tax within
the meaning of Code Section 6662 or any similar provision
of applicable Law, and is in possession of supporting
documentation as may be required under any such provision.
(b) Neither the Company nor any of its Subsidiaries:
(i) has waived any statute of limitations in respect of
Taxes or agreed to any extension of time with respect to a Tax
assessment or deficiency other than waivers and extensions which
are no longer in effect; (ii) has received any written
notice indicating an intent to open an audit or other review, a
request for information related to Tax matters, or notice of
deficiency or proposed adjustment for any amount of Tax
proposed, asserted or assessed (and no audit or administrative
or judicial Tax proceeding is pending or being conducted with
respect to the Company or any of its Subsidiaries);
(iii) has been subject to a written claim by a Governmental
Authority in a jurisdiction where the Company or any of its
A-12
Subsidiaries does not file Tax Returns that it is or may be
subject to taxation by that jurisdiction; (iv) is a party
to any agreement providing for the allocation or sharing of
Taxes with any person that is not, directly or indirectly, a
wholly owned Subsidiary of the Company; (v) for taxable
years after 2001, has participated (within the
meaning of Treasury
Regulation Section 1.6011-4(c)(3)(i)(A))
in any listed transaction within the meaning of Code
Section 6011 or any similar provision of state, local or
foreign Law; (vi) is presently required, or shall be
required, to include any taxable income for any period ending
after the Closing Date as a result of (A) a change in
method of accounting under Code Section 481 made prior to
the Closing Date, (B) any intercompany transaction,
(C) an installment sale or open transaction disposition
made on or prior to the Closing Date, or (D) a prepaid
amount received on or prior to the Closing Date (or under any
provision of Law of any jurisdiction with similar consequences
as any of (vi)(A) through (vi)(D) above); or (vii) is a
party to any material agreement, contract, arrangement or plan
(A) pursuant to which any one of them is required to make a
compensatory payment to any individual more than two and
one-half
(21/2)
months after the calendar year in which services were performed
as an employee in such calendar year commencing in 2005,
(B) that has resulted or would result, separately or in the
aggregate, in the payment of any excess parachute
payment within the meaning of Code Section 280G, or
any amount that would not be fully deductible as a result of
Code Section 162(m), or (C) pursuant to which it is
bound to compensate any Person for excise or other additional
Taxes paid pursuant to Code Sections 409A or 4999 or any
similar provision of state, local or foreign Law. There are no
unresolved issues of law or fact which, to the knowledge of the
Company, arise out of a notice of deficiency, proposed
deficiency or assessment from the Internal Revenue Service or
any other Governmental Authority with respect to Taxes of the
Company or any of its Subsidiaries.
(c) For purposes of this Agreement, Tax
or Taxes shall mean (i) any and all
taxes, fees, levies, duties, tariffs, imposts, and other like
charges imposed by the United States or any other Governmental
Authority (together with any and all interest, penalties, loss,
damage, liability, expense, additions to tax and additional
amounts or costs incurred or imposed with respect thereto),
whether disputed or not, including (A) taxes or other
charges on or with respect to income, estimated income,
franchise, escheat, windfall or other profits, gross receipts,
real or personal property, sales, use, capital gains, capital
stock or shares, premium, payroll, employment, social security
(or similar), workers compensation, occupation,
unemployment compensation, disability, environmental (including
taxes under Code Section 59A), alternative or add-on
minimum, estimated or net worth; (B) taxes or other charges
in the nature of excise, withholding, ad valorem, license,
registration, stamp, transfer, value added, or gains taxes; and
(C) customs duties, tariffs, import and export taxes and
similar charges; (ii) any liability for payment of amounts
described in clause (i) whether as a result of transferee
liability, of being a member of an affiliated, consolidated,
combined or unitary group for any period, or otherwise through
operation of law; and (iii) any liability for payment of
amounts described in clauses (i) and (ii) as a result
of any tax sharing, tax indemnity or tax allocation agreement or
any other express or implied agreement to indemnify any Person.
Section 3.12 Employee
Benefit Matters.
(a) Each plan, program, agreement or arrangement of the
Company or any of its Subsidiaries constituting (i) an
employee welfare benefit plan as defined in Section 3(1) of
the Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974 (as amended,
ERISA) is referred to herein as an
Employee Welfare Benefit Plan and
(ii) an employee pension benefit plan as defined in
Section 3(2) of ERISA is referred to herein as an
Employee Pension Benefit Plan. The Employee
Welfare Benefit Plans, Employee Pension Benefit Plans and each
other employee benefit plan, agreement, program or arrangement
or employment practice maintained by the Company or any of its
Subsidiaries with respect to any of its current or former
employees, officers, directors or consultants or to which the
Company or any of its Subsidiaries contributes or is required to
contribute with respect to any of its current or former
employees, officers, directors or consultants are collectively
referred to herein as the Company Plans. With
respect to each Company Plan:
(i) such Company Plan (and each related trust, insurance
contract or fund, if applicable) has been administered in a
manner consistent in all material respects with its written
terms and complies in all material respects in form and
operation with the applicable requirements of ERISA and the Code
and other applicable Laws;
A-13
(ii) all required reports, returns, similar documents and
descriptions (including Form 5500 Annual Reports, Summary
Annual Reports and Summary Plan Descriptions) have been filed or
distributed appropriately with respect to such Company Plan and
there are no investigations by any Governmental Authority with
respect to termination proceedings or other claims (except
claims for benefits payable in the normal operation of the
Company Plans), suits or proceedings against or involving any
company Plan or asserting any rights or claims to benefits under
any company Plan that would give rise to any material liability,
and to the knowledge of the Company, there are no facts that
could give rise to any material liability in the event of any
such investigation, claim, suit or proceeding;
(iii) The requirements of Part 6 of Subtitle B of
Title I of ERISA and Code Section 4980B have been met
in all material respects with respect to each such Company Plan
which is an Employee Welfare Benefit Plan;
(iv) all material contributions, premiums or other payments
(including all employer contributions and employee salary
reduction contributions) that are required to be made under the
terms of any Company Plan have been timely made and properly
provided for in the Financial Statements contained in the most
recent Company SEC Documents;
(v) each such Company Plan which is an Employee Pension
Benefit Plan intended to be a qualified plan under
Code Section 401(a) has received a favorable determination
letter from the Internal Revenue Service stating that such plan
is a qualified plan and exempt from income tax under
Sections 401(a) and 501(a) of the Code, and no event has
occurred which would reasonably be expected to cause the loss,
revocation or denial of any such favorable determination letter;
(vi) to the extent applicable, the Company has previously
delivered to the Parent, upon its request, correct and complete
copies of the plan documents (or in the case of any unwritten
Company Plan, a description thereof) and most recent summary
plan descriptions, the most recent determination letter received
from the Internal Revenue Service, the three (3) most
recent Form 5500 Annual Report, has previously delivered
the most recent actuarial report, the most recent audited
financial statements, and all related trust agreements,
insurance contracts and other funding agreements that implement
such Company Plan; and
(vii) all Company Plans are by their terms able to be
amended or terminated by the Company without advance notice and
without incurring additional liabilities.
(b) With respect to each Employee Welfare Benefit Plan or
Employee Pension Benefit Plan that the Company or any of its
Subsidiaries maintains or ever has maintained, or to which any
of them contributes, ever has contributed or ever has been
required to contribute, there have been no non-exempt prohibited
transactions (as defined in Section 406 of ERISA and Code
Section 4975) with respect to such plan, no fiduciary
has any liability for breach of fiduciary duty or any other
failure to act or comply in connection with the administration
or investment of the assets of such plan, and no action, suit,
proceeding, hearing or, to the Companys knowledge,
investigation with respect to the administration or the
investment of the assets of such plan (other than routine claims
for benefits) is pending or, to the Companys knowledge,
threatened.
(c) Neither the Company nor any of its Subsidiaries, nor
any other entity which, together with the Company or any of its
Subsidiaries, would be treated as a single employer under
Section 4001 of ERISA or Section 414 of the Code (an
ERISA Affiliate) contributes to or has in the
past six years sponsored, maintained, contributed to or had any
liability in respect of any defined benefit pension plan (as
defined in Section 3(35) of ERISA) or plan subject to
Section 412 of the Code or Section 302 of ERISA.
(d) No Company Plan is a Multiemployer Plan and neither the
Company, its Subsidiaries nor any of their respective ERISA
Affiliates has at any time sponsored or contributed to, or had
any liability or obligation in respect of, any Multiemployer
Plan.
(e) Neither the Company nor any of its Subsidiaries has any
obligation to provide medical, health, life insurance or other
welfare benefits for currently retired or future retired or
terminated employees, their spouses
A-14
or their dependents (other than in accordance with Code
Section 4980B), including any such obligations resulting
from transactions contemplated by this Agreement.
(f) Neither the execution and delivery of this Agreement
nor the consummation of the transactions contemplated hereby
will (either alone or in combination with another event)
(i) result in any payment becoming due, or increase the
amount of any compensation due, to any current or former
employee, officer, director or consultant of the Company;
(ii) increase any benefits otherwise payable under any
Company Plan; (iii) result in the acceleration of the time
of payment or vesting of any such compensation or benefits;
(iv) result in the payment of any amount that could,
individually or in combination with any other such payment,
constitute an excess parachute payment, as defined
in Section 280G(b)(1) of the Code; or (v) result in
the triggering or imposition of any restrictions or limitations
on the rights of the Company to amend or terminate any Company
Plan.
(g) Prior to the execution of this Agreement, for each
Company Stock Option Plan, the Board of Directors or other body
authorized to administer and interpret such Company Stock Option
Plan has made the determination and directed, in each case in
accordance with the terms of such Company Stock Option Plan,
that the Company Stock Options shall be treated as set forth in
Section 1.8 of this Agreement.
Section 3.13 Environmental
Matters.
(a) (i) The Company and its Subsidiaries are and have
been in compliance with all applicable Environmental Laws and
have all permits, licenses and authorizations required by such
Environmental Laws necessary for the operation of their
businesses as presently conducted; (ii) there is no order,
claim, action, proceeding or demand for information pending or,
to the knowledge of the Company, threatened in writing against
the Company or any of its Subsidiaries pursuant to Environmental
Laws; (iii) the Company is not otherwise subject to any
liability under Environmental Laws including any liability
arising out of the release or disposal of hazardous, toxic,
dangerous or regulated substances into the environment; and
(iv) the Company and its Subsidiaries have not received any
notice, demand letter or request for information from any
Governmental Authority or third party, which has not heretofore
been resolved with such Governmental Authority or third party,
indicating that the Company or any of its Subsidiaries may be in
violation of, or liable under, any Environmental Laws;
provided, however, that no representation or
warranty is made in the foregoing clauses (i), (ii),
(iii) and (iv) with respect to matters that,
individually or in the aggregate, would not reasonably be
expected to have a Company Material Adverse Effect.
(b) For purposes of this Agreement, Environmental
Laws means any Federal, state, local or foreign Laws
relating to (i) the protection, preservation or restoration
of the environment (including air, water vapor, surface water,
groundwater, drinking water supply, surface land, subsurface
land, plant and animal life or any other natural resource) or
(ii) the exposure to, or the use, storage, recycling,
treatment, generation, transportation, processing, handling,
labeling production, release or disposal of, Hazardous
Substances, in each case as amended. The term
Environmental Laws includes the Comprehensive
Environmental Response, Compensation and Liability Act of 1980,
42 U.S.C. § 9601 et seq., as amended by the
Superfund Amendment and Reauthorization Act of 1986 and as
further amended, the Federal Water Pollution Control Act,
33 U.S.C. § 1251 et seq., as amended, the Solid
Waste Disposal Act of 1976, 42 U.S.C. § 6901 et
seq., as amended, the Clean Air Act, 42 U.S.C.
§ 7401 et seq., as amended, the Toxic Substances
Control Act, 15 U.S.C. § 2601 et seq., as
amended, the Hazardous Material Transportation Act, 49 Ap.
U.S.C.A. § 1801 et seq., as amended, the Federal
Insecticide, Fungicide and Rodenticide Act, 7 U.S.C.
§ 136 et seq., as amended, and comparable state and
local Laws.
(c) For purposes of this Agreement, Hazardous
Substance means any substance presently or hereafter
listed, defined, designated or classified as hazardous, toxic,
radioactive, or dangerous, or otherwise regulated, under any
Environmental Laws. Hazardous Substance includes any substance
to which exposure is regulated by any Governmental Authority or
any Environmental Laws including any toxic waste, pollutant,
contaminant, hazardous substance, toxic substance, hazardous
waste, special waste, industrial substance or petroleum or any
derivative or by-product thereof, radon, radioactive material,
asbestos, or asbestos containing material, urea formaldehyde
foam insulation, lead or polychlorinated biphenyls.
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Section 3.14 Real
Estate.
(a) The Company or one of its Subsidiaries is the owner of
good, marketable and insurable fee title to the land described
in Section 3.14(a) of the Company Disclosure Letter and to
all of the buildings, structures and other improvements located
thereon (collectively, the Owned Real
Property), free and clear of all Liens except for
Permitted Liens. For purposes of this Agreement,
Permitted Lien means (i) Liens for Taxes
not delinquent or the validity of which are being contested in
good faith by appropriate proceedings and as to which adequate
reserves have been established on the Companys financial
statements in accordance with GAAP consistently applied;
(ii) statutory landlords, mechanics,
carriers, workmens, repairmens or other
similar Liens arising or incurred in the ordinary course of
business and securing amounts that are not past due and as to
which adequate reserves have been established on the
Companys financial statements in accordance with GAAP
consistently applied; and (iii) other Liens arising in the
ordinary course of business, other than liens for indebtedness
or other monetary obligation, which do not
(x) interfere in any material respect with the use or
occupancy of the affected property as currently used or operated
or (y) materially reduce the market value of the Real
Property below the fair market value the Real Property would
have had but for such encumbrance.
(b) Section 3.14(b)(1) of the Company
Disclosure Letter contains a true, correct and complete schedule
of all leases, subleases, licenses and other agreements
(including all modifications, amendments and supplements
thereto) (collectively, the Real Property
Leases) under which the Company or any of its
Subsidiaries uses or occupies or has the right to use or occupy,
now or in the future, any real property (the land, buildings and
other real property improvements covered by the Real Property
Leases being herein called the Leased Real
Property), which schedule sets forth the date of and
parties to each Real Property Lease, the date of and parties to
each amendment, modification and supplement thereto, the term
and renewal terms (whether or not exercised) thereof and a brief
description of the Leased Real Property covered thereby. The
Company has heretofore delivered to the Parent true, correct and
complete copies of all Real Property Leases. Each Real Property
Lease is valid, binding and in full force and effect. Except for
the matters listed in Section 3.14(b)(2) of the
Company Disclosure Letter (collectively, the Permitted
Leased Real Property Exceptions), the Company or its
Subsidiary, as applicable, holds the leasehold estate under and
interest in each Real Property Lease free and clear of all
Liens. There are no material disputes with respect to each Real
Property Lease and except as disclosed in
Section 3.14(b)(3) of the Company Disclosure Letter,
neither the Company, nor, to the knowledge of the Company, any
other party to each Real Property Lease, is in breach or default
under such Real Property Lease, and no event has occurred or
failed to occur or circumstance exists which, with the delivery
of notice, the passage of time or both, would constitute such a
breach or default, or permit the termination, modification or
acceleration of rent under such Real Property Lease. Except as
set forth in Section 3.14(b)(4) of the Company
Disclosure Letter, no consent by the landlord or other third
party under any of the Real Property Leases is required in
connection with the consummation of the transactions
contemplated herein and each of the Real Property Leases will
continue to be in full force and effect on identical terms
following the Closing. Except as disclosed in
Section 3.14(b)(5) of the Company Disclosure Letter,
the Company or its Subsidiary has non-disturbance agreements
with the landlords lender with respect to each Real
Property Lease.
(c) All of the land, buildings, structures and other
improvements and all appurtenances thereto used by each of the
Company and its Subsidiaries in the conduct of its business are
included in the Owned Real Property and the Leased Real
Property. The Leased Real Property and the Owned Real Property
are hereinafter collectively referred to as the Real
Property.
(d) Section 3.14(d) of the Company Disclosure Letter
contains a true, correct and complete schedule of all material
leases, subleases, licenses and other agreements (including all
modifications, amendments and supplements thereto)
(collectively, the Space Leases) granting to
any person other than the Company or any of its Subsidiaries any
right to the possession, use, occupancy or enjoyment of the Real
Property or any portion thereof. The Company has heretofore
delivered to the Parent true, correct and complete copies of all
Space Leases.
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(e) Neither the Company nor any of its Subsidiaries owns or
holds, or is obligated under or a party to, any option, right of
first refusal, right of first offer or other contractual right
to purchase, acquire, sell or dispose of the Real Property or
any portion thereof or interest therein.
(f) All buildings, structures, fixtures, building systems
and equipment included in the Real Property (the
Structures) are in reasonably good condition
and repair in all material respects and sufficient for the
operation of the business of the Company, subject to reasonable
wear and tear and subject to replacements and upgrades of fixed
assets consistent with the Companys capital expenditures
budget and in the ordinary course of business. There are no
facts or conditions affecting any of the Structures which would
interfere in any material respect with the use or occupancy of
the Structures or any portion thereof in the operation of the
business of the Company.
(g) Neither the Company nor any of its Subsidiaries has
received notice or has knowledge of any pending, threatened or
contemplated condemnation proceeding affecting the Real Property
or any part thereof or of any sale or other disposition of the
Real Property or any part thereof in lieu of condemnation.
(h) The present use of the land and Structures on the Real
Property are in conformity in all material respects with all
applicable laws, rules, regulations and ordinances, including
all applicable zoning laws, land use laws and restrictions,
building codes, setback requirements, ordinances and regulations
and with all registered deeds, restrictions of record,
reciprocal easement agreements or other agreements affecting
such Real Property, and neither the Company nor any of its
Subsidiaries has knowledge of any proposed change therein that
would so affect any of the Real Property or its use and neither
the Company nor any of its Subsidiaries has knowledge of any
violation thereof. To the Companys or any applicable
Subsidiarys knowledge, there exists no conflict or dispute
with any regulatory authority or other Person relating to any
Real Property or the activities thereon which would be
reasonably likely to result in a Material Adverse Effect. No
damage or destruction has occurred with respect to any of the
Real Property that would reasonably be expected to result in a
Material Adverse Effect.
(i) Section 3.14(i) of the Company Disclosure Letter
sets forth a list of all construction and material alteration
projects currently ongoing with respect to any Real Property
(the Construction Projects). The Construction
Projects are proceeding in a workmanlike fashion in compliance
in all material respects with all applicable laws, rules,
regulations and ordinances, and, to the Companys
knowledge, there are no facts or conditions affecting any of the
Construction Projects which would interfere in any significant
respect with the completion of the Construction Projects, or the
use, occupancy or operation thereof, which interference would
reasonably be expected to result in a Material Adverse Effect.
No Construction Project or portion thereof is dependent for its
access, operation or utility on any land, building or other
improvement not included in the Real Property.
Section 3.15 Intellectual
Property Matters.
(a) Either the Company or one of its Subsidiaries owns, or
otherwise has the right pursuant to a valid written license,
sublicense or other agreement to use, all Intellectual Property
used in connection with the business of the Company or any of
its Subsidiaries as presently conducted or contemplated (the
Company Intellectual Property), free and
clear of all Liens. Intellectual Property
shall mean all intellectual property or other proprietary rights
of any kind, as they exist anywhere in the world, including
(i) all copyrights, all renewals and extensions thereof,
and all registrations and applications thereof, (ii) domain
names, Internet addresses, and other computer identifiers, web
sites, and web pages, and similar rights and items,
(iii) patents, patent applications, inventions (whether or
not patentable) and other patent rights, (iv) computer
software programs, including all source code, object code,
specifications, databases, designs and related documentation
(collectively, Software),
(v) trademarks, service marks, trade dress, trade names,
brand names, designs, logos, or corporate names, all
registrations and applications for registration thereof, and all
goodwill associated therewith, (vi) trade secrets,
know-how, inventions, processes, procedures, customer
information, confidential business information, and technical
information (collectively, Trade Secrets),
and (vii) licenses, sublicenses, distribution agreements,
covenants not to sue and other agreements and permissions
relating to items (i)-(vi) (collectively, IP
Licenses).
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(b) Section 3.15(b)(i) of the Company Disclosure
Letter sets forth a true and complete list of all registrations,
issuances, filings and applications for any Intellectual
Property owned or filed by the Company or any of its
Subsidiaries as well as all material unregistered Company
Intellectual Property. All such items of Intellectual Property
are valid, subsisting, enforceable and in full force and effect.
(c) Each of the Company and its Subsidiaries has taken all
necessary and desirable actions to maintain and protect each
item of Company Intellectual Property owned or purported to be
owned by the Company or any of its Subsidiaries, including
taking all reasonable or necessary actions and precautions to
protect the secrecy, confidentiality, and value of its Trade
Secrets and the proprietary nature and value of its Intellectual
Property.
(d) To the Companys knowledge, (i) none of the
Company Intellectual Property, business operations, products or
services owned, used, developed, provided, sold, licensed,
imported or otherwise exploited by the Company or any of its
Subsidiaries, or made for, used or sold by or licensed to the
Company or any of its Subsidiaries by any person nor the conduct
of the Company or its subsidiaries business infringes
upon, misappropriates or otherwise violates any Intellectual
Property rights of others, and (ii) no person is infringing
upon or otherwise violating the Intellectual Property rights of
the Company or any of its Subsidiaries. There are no claims
pending or, to the Companys knowledge, threatened, and
there is no fact, event, condition or circumstance that,
directly or indirectly, may give rise to or serve as a basis for
the commencement of any claim, (x) contesting the right of
the Company or any of its Subsidiaries to use any of the
Companys or such Subsidiarys products or services
currently or previously used by the Company or such Subsidiary
or (y) opposing or attempting to cancel any rights of the
Company or such Subsidiary in or to any Company Intellectual
Property.
(e) Section 3.15(e) of the Company Disclosure
Letter sets forth a true and complete list and description of
all Software used by the Company or any of its Subsidiaries
(except for
off-the-shelf
software, as such term is commonly understood, that is
commercially available on a retail basis under
non-discriminatory pricing terms and used solely on the desktop
personal computers of the Company). All Software used by the
Company or any of its Subsidiaries performs in conformance with
its documentation, is free from any material software defect and
does not contain any malicious code. The Company and each of its
Subsidiaries has made back-ups of all such Software
(specifically including all databases) and has maintained such
backups at a secure off-site location. The Company and each of
its Subsidiaries is in compliance with each IP License relating
to Software to which it is a party, and each such IP License
shall remain in full force and effect following the consummation
of the transactions contemplated herein.
(f) After the consummation of the transactions contemplated
herein, the Company will own all right, title, and interest in
and to or have a valid written license to use all Company
Intellectual Property on identical terms and conditions as each
of the Company or its subsidiaries enjoyed immediately prior to
such transactions.
(g) Each of the Company and its Subsidiaries has security
measures and safeguards in place that are adequate and
appropriate in all material respects to protect information it
collects from customers and other parties from illegal or
unauthorized access or use by its personnel or third parties or
access or use by its personnel or third parties in a manner that
could reasonably be expected to lead to a violation of the
privacy rights of third parties. Neither the Company nor any of
its Subsidiaries has collected, received or used such
information in an unlawful manner or in violation of the privacy
rights of third parties, and to the Companys knowledge, no
Person has gained unauthorized access to or made any
unauthorized use of such information in any manner that has led
or could reasonably be expected to lead to a material legal
liability of the Company or its Subsidiaries.
Section 3.16 Labor
Matters. Neither the Company nor any of its
Subsidiaries is a party to any collective bargaining agreements,
memoranda of understanding, settlements or other labor
agreements with any union or labor organization. There are no
material disputes or controversies pending or, to the
Companys knowledge, threatened between the Company or any
of its Subsidiaries and any of their current or former employees
or any labor or other collective bargaining unit representing
any such employee that, individually or in the aggregate, would
reasonably be expected to have a Company Material Adverse
Effect. To the
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Companys knowledge, as of the Agreement Date, there is no
organizational effort presently being made or threatened by or
on behalf of any labor union with respect to employees of the
Company or any of its Subsidiaries. To the Companys
knowledge, as of the Agreement Date, there are no current
Department of Labor, Office of Federal Contract Compliance
Programs or Equal Employment Opportunity Commission audits
pending with respect to the Company or any of its Subsidiaries
except for audits arising in the ordinary course of business or
that would not, individually or in the aggregate, reasonably be
expected to have a Company Material Adverse Effect. To the
Companys knowledge, it is in material compliance with all
local, state and federal wage and hours laws (including the
Federal Fair Labor Standards Act) and all federal immigration
laws. There are no material liabilities or obligations relating
to any individuals current or former employment with the
Company or its Subsidiaries or related entities arising in
connection with any violation of any Laws. No individual who has
performed services for the Company or any of its Subsidiaries
has been improperly excluded from participation in any Company
Plan, and neither the Company nor any of its Subsidiaries has
any direct or indirect liability, whether actual or contingent,
with respect to any misclassification of any person as an
independent contractor rather than as an employee, or with
respect to any employee leased from another employer. Neither
the Company nor any of its Subsidiaries has incurred any
liability or obligation and none of the employees of the Company
or any of its Subsidiaries have experienced or will experience
an employment loss (as defined by the federal Worker Adjustment
and Retraining Notification Act of 1988, including the
regulations promulgated thereto (WARN) or any
similar state or local statute) during the 90 day period
immediately prior to the Closing, or that if such employment
losses do occur, with prior written notice to the Parent, that
the Company will timely give all notices required to be issued
under, and otherwise comply with, WARN and any similar state or
local statues and regulations of any applicable jurisdiction
related to plant closings, mass layoffs
(or similar triggering event) caused by the Company. To the
extent that, after the Closing, the Parent operates the business
of the Company and its Subsidiaries in the same manner operated
by the Company and its Subsidiaries during the six-month period
prior to the Closing, the Parent will not incur any liability
under WARN or any similar state or local statute.
Section 3.17 Amendment
to the Rights Agreement. The Company has taken
and will maintain in effect all necessary action to prevent the
Shareholder Rights Agreement, dated as of February 18,
2005, by and between the Company and American Stock
Transfer & Trust Company, as Rights Agent, as amended
(the Rights Agreement), from being applicable
to this Agreement and the transactions contemplated hereby,
including preventing any right issued or issuable under the
Rights Agreement from becoming exercisable by virtue of this
Agreement, the Merger or any other transaction contemplated by
this Agreement and ensuring that (a) neither the Parent nor
the Merger Subsidiary nor any of their Affiliates
(as defined in the Rights Agreement) or Associates
(as defined in the Rights Agreement) is considered to be an
Acquiring Person (as defined in the Rights
Agreement) by virtue of this Agreement, the Merger or any other
transaction contemplated by this Agreement, (b) the
provisions of the Rights Agreement, including the occurrence of
a Share Acquisition Date (as defined in the Rights Agreement) or
Distribution Date (as defined in the Rights Agreement), are not
and shall not be triggered by reason of the execution,
announcement or consummation of this Agreement, the Merger any
other transaction contemplated by this Agreement and
(c) each right issued and outstanding immediately prior to
the Effective Time shall expire without additional payment at
the Effective Time. The Company has delivered to the Parent a
true and correct copy of the Rights Agreement as amended and
supplemented to the date of this Agreement.
Section 3.18 Takeover
Laws. The restrictions contained in
Chapter 2 of Title 35 of the SC Code do not apply to
the Company, this Agreement, the Merger or the other
transactions contemplated herein. The Company has taken all
necessary action to render any other potentially applicable
anti-takeover or similar statute or regulation or provision of
the articles of incorporation or by-laws, or other
organizational or constitutive document or governing instruments
of the Company or any of its Subsidiaries, inapplicable to this
Agreement and the transactions contemplated by this Agreement.
Section 3.19 Insurance. Section 3.19
of the Company Disclosure Letter sets forth a list of all
material insurance policies that the Company and each of its
respective Subsidiaries maintain. Such policies or binders of
insurance cover risks in amounts adequate for the Company and
its Subsidiaries respective businesses and operations and
are customary in the industry in which the Company and its
Subsidiaries operate. All material
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insurance policies maintained by the Company and its
Subsidiaries are in full force and effect, all premiums due and
payable thereon have been paid (and no further premiums or
payments are due after the Effective Time with respect to any
coverage prior to the Effective Time), and the Company and its
Subsidiaries are otherwise in compliance in all material
respects with the terms and conditions of such policies. No
limit imposed on any such insurance policy has been exhausted or
significantly diminished and each provider of the insurance
policies listed in Section 3.19 of the Company Disclosure
Letter is solvent as of the Agreement Date. The Company has made
available to the Parent true and correct copies of all loss run
reports for the past five years which have been provided to the
Company, its Subsidiaries or any of their insurance agents.
Section 3.20 Brokers
Fees. Except for the fees and expenses payable by
the Company to Brookwood Associates, LLC (Brookwood)
pursuant to a letter agreement dated January 27, 2006 (the
Brookwood Engagement Letter), a complete copy
of which has been previously delivered to the Parent, neither
the Company nor any of its Subsidiaries has any liability or
obligation to pay any fees or commissions to any financial
advisor, broker, finder or agent with respect to the
transactions contemplated by this Agreement.
Section 3.21 Opinion
of Financial Advisor. The Company has received
the opinion of Brookwood, dated the Agreement Date, to the
effect that, as of the date the opinion was delivered, the
consideration to be received by the holders of Company Common
Stock (the Company Stockholders) pursuant to
this Agreement is fair to the Company Stockholders, other than
the Parent, the Merger Subsidiary and their respective
Subsidiaries, from a financial point of view. Upon the
Companys receipt of the written version of such opinion,
the Company will promptly provide the Parent with a copy of such
opinion. The Company has received the consent of Brookwood to
include its final written opinion in the Proxy Statement subject
to the terms and provisions of the Brookwood Engagement Letter.
ARTICLE IV
REPRESENTATIONS
AND WARRANTIES OF THE PARENT AND THE MERGER SUBSIDIARY
The Parent and the Merger Subsidiary, jointly and severally,
represent and warrant to the Company that:
Section 4.1 Corporate
Existence and Power. Each of the Parent and the
Merger Subsidiary is a corporation duly organized, validly
existing and in good standing under the Laws of the jurisdiction
of its incorporation and has all requisite corporate power and
authority to own, lease and operate its properties and assets
and to carry on its business as presently being conducted,
except when the failure to be in good standing or have such
power and authority, individually or in the aggregate, would not
reasonably be expected to have a material adverse effect on the
ability of the Parent or the Merger Subsidiary to consummate the
Merger (a Parent Material Adverse Effect).
Each of the Parent and the Merger Subsidiary is duly qualified
or licensed to conduct business and is in good standing in each
jurisdiction in which the properties owned, leased or operated
by it or the nature of the business conducted by it makes such
qualification or license necessary, except where the failure to
be so qualified or licensed and in good standing, individually
or in the aggregate, would not reasonably be expected to have a
Parent Material Adverse Effect. Since the date of its
incorporation, the Merger Subsidiary has not engaged in any
activities other than in connection with, or as contemplated by,
this Agreement.
Section 4.2 Authorization
of Transaction; Non-Contravention; Approvals.
(a) The Parent and the Merger Subsidiary have full
corporate power and authority and have taken all requisite
corporate action to enter into this Agreement and, subject to
the adoption of this Agreement by the Parent as the sole
stockholder of the Merger Subsidiary (which shall occur promptly
after the execution and delivery hereof), to consummate the
transactions contemplated hereby and to perform its obligations
hereunder. This Agreement has been duly authorized, executed and
delivered by the Parent and the Merger Subsidiary and, assuming
the due authorization, execution and delivery thereof by the
Company, constitutes a valid and legally binding agreement of
the Parent and the Merger Subsidiary enforceable against each of
them in accordance with its terms, except that (i) such
enforcement may be limited by applicable bankruptcy, insolvency,
reorganization, moratorium, fraudulent transfer or similar Laws
of general applicability relating to or affecting enforcement of
creditors rights generally and (ii) the remedy of
specific performance and
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injunctive and other forms of equitable relief may be subject to
equitable defenses and to the discretion of the court before
which any proceeding therefor may be brought.
(b) Except for (a) filings and approvals necessary to
comply with the applicable requirements of the Exchange Act,
(b) filings pursuant to the HSR Act and any other
applicable Antitrust Laws, (c) the filing of the Articles
of Merger pursuant to the SCBA and (d) any filings required
under the rules and regulations of the NASDAQ National Market,
neither the execution and delivery of this Agreement by the
Parent and the Merger Subsidiary, nor the consummation by the
Parent and the Merger Subsidiary of the transactions
contemplated hereby, shall (i) violate or conflict with any
provision of the articles of incorporation or bylaws of the
Parent or the Merger Subsidiary, (ii) violate any Laws
applicable to the Parent or the Merger Subsidiary or any of
their respective properties or assets, or (iii) require any
filing or registration with, notification to, or authorization,
consent or approval of, any Governmental Authority; except in
the case of clauses (ii) and (iii) for such
violations, breaches or defaults that, or filings,
registrations, notifications, authorizations, consents or
approvals that the failure to obtain, individually or in the
aggregate, would not reasonably be expected to have a Parent
Material Adverse Effect.
Section 4.3 Financing
Capability
(a) The Parent has entered into a sale-leaseback facility
commitment letter with Drawbridge Special Opportunity Fund, LLC
dated July 23, 2006 (Drawbridge) and the
Parent and the Merger Subsidiary have entered into a debt
financing commitment letter from Credit Suisse Securities (USA)
LLC and UBS Securities LLC (together with Drawbridge, the
Lenders) dated July 24, 2006 (the
Commitment Letters) pursuant to which the
sale-leaseback facility and debt financing sources identified
therein have committed to provide to the Parent up to
$1.5 billion in the aggregate (the
Financing), subject to the terms and
conditions therein and assuming that the conditions set forth in
Sections 6.1 and 6.2 are satisfied as of the Closing. The
Parent has delivered correct and complete copies of the
Commitment Letters to the Company. As of the date hereof, the
Commitment Letters (i) are in full force and effect,
(ii) are binding and enforceable against the Parent and, to
the knowledge of Parent, each of the other parties thereto in
accordance with their respective terms, except that
(A) such enforcement may be limited by applicable
bankruptcy, insolvency, reorganization, moratorium, fraudulent
transfer or similar Laws of general applicability relating to or
affecting enforcement of creditors rights generally and
(B) the remedy of specific performance and injunctive and
other forms of equitable relief may be subject to equitable
defenses and to the discretion of the court before which any
proceeding therefor may be brought, and (iii) have not been
amended or terminated in any manner adverse to the Company. As
of the date of this Agreement, the Parent does not believe that
the Commitment Letters will be terminated or amended in any
material respect in a manner adverse to the Company. As of the
date of this Agreement, the Lenders have not advised Parent,
Merger Subsidiary or any of their respective Affiliates of any
facts which cause them to believe the financings contemplated by
the Commitment Letters will not be consummated substantially in
accordance with the terms thereof. All commitment fees and other
fees required to be paid pursuant to the Commitment Letters on
or prior to the date hereof have been paid.
(b) To the knowledge of the Parent, as of the date hereof,
there are no conditions precedent related to the funding of the
Financing other than as set forth in the Commitment Letters.
Section 4.4 Information
in the Proxy Statement. The information supplied
by the Parent or the Merger Subsidiary expressly for inclusion
or incorporation by reference in the Proxy Statement shall not
contain any untrue statement of a material fact or omit to state
any material fact required to be stated therein or necessary in
order to make the statements made therein, in the light of the
circumstances under which they were made, not misleading.
Section 4.5 Litigation. As
of the Agreement Date, there are no claims, actions or
proceedings pending or, to the knowledge of the Parent,
threatened against the Parent or any of its Subsidiaries before
any Governmental Authority that seek to restrain or enjoin the
consummation of the Merger or that, if adversely determined,
would adversely affect in any material respect Parent or any of
its Subsidiaries ability (financial or otherwise) to
consummate the Merger. As of the Agreement Date, neither the
Parent nor any of its Subsidiaries is subject to any to any
outstanding judgment, injunction, order or decree of any
Governmental Authority which prohibits or restricts the
consummation of the transactions contemplated by this Agreement.
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Section 4.6 Brokers
and Finders Fees. Except for the fees and
expenses payable by the Parent to Berenson & Company,
LLC pursuant to a letter agreement dated May 31, 2006, the
Parent has not incurred any liability for brokerage or
finders fees or agents commissions or any similar
charges in connection with this Agreement or any transaction
contemplated hereby.
ARTICLE V
COVENANTS
Section 5.1 General. Subject
to the terms and conditions of this Agreement, each of the
parties shall take all actions and do all things necessary,
proper or advisable to perform its obligations under this
Agreement which are required to be performed on or prior to the
Closing, and use its reasonable efforts to consummate and make
effective the transactions contemplated by this Agreement as
promptly as reasonably practical.
Section 5.2 Further
Assurances. Prior to the Closing Date, each of
the parties shall give all required notices to third parties and
Governmental Authorities and shall use its reasonable efforts to
obtain all material third party and governmental consents and
approvals that it is required to obtain in connection with this
Agreement, the Merger and the other transactions contemplated
hereby. No later than ten (10) business days after the date
of the execution of this Agreement, each of the parties shall
file a Notification and Report Form and related material with
the Federal Trade Commission and the Antitrust Division of the
United States Department of Justice under the HSR Act and any
other applicable Antitrust Laws, shall use its respective
reasonable efforts to obtain termination of the applicable
waiting period under all Antitrust Laws and shall take all
further actions and make all further filings pursuant to the
Antitrust Laws that may be necessary, proper or advisable.
Notwithstanding anything to the contrary contained herein,
nothing contained in this Agreement shall be deemed to require
the Parent or any of its Subsidiaries or the Company or any of
its Subsidiaries to enter into any agreement, consent decree or
other commitment requiring the Parent or any of its Subsidiaries
or the Company or any of its Subsidiaries to divest any assets
or properties or to agree to any restriction on the operations
of the Parent, the Surviving Corporation, the Company or any of
their respective Subsidiaries after the Effective Time or to
litigate, pursue or defend any action or proceeding by any
Governmental Authority challenging any of the transactions
contemplated hereby as violative of any Antitrust Laws. In
connection with the foregoing, each party (i) shall
promptly notify the other party in writing of any communication
received by that party or its Affiliates from any Governmental
Authority, and subject to applicable Laws, provide the other
party with a copy of any such written communication (or written
summary of any oral communication), and (ii) not
participate in any substantive meeting or discussion with any
Governmental Authority in respect of any filing, investigation
or inquiry concerning the transactions contemplated by this
Agreement unless it consults with the other party in advance,
and to the extent permitted by such Governmental Authority, give
the other party the opportunity to attend and participate
thereat. For purposes of this Agreement,
Affiliate will mean, with respect to any
Person, any other Person that (i) owns 10% or more of the
voting securities of the first Person or any of its
Subsidiaries, (ii) is a director, executive or officer of
the first Person or any of its Subsidiaries, or
(iii) directly or indirectly controls, is controlled by or
is under common control with the first Person or any of its
Subsidiaries.
Section 5.3 Interim
Conduct of the Company.
(a) Except as expressly permitted by this Agreement, set
forth in Section 5.3 of the Company Disclosure Letter, or
pursuant to the Parents prior written consent, which
consent shall not be unreasonably withheld, conditioned or
delayed (it being understood that reasonableness for this
purpose will be assessed both from the Parents perspective
assuming the Closing will take place in accordance with this
Agreement and from the Companys perspective in connection
with its operational needs), from and after the Agreement Date
through the Effective Time, the Company shall, and shall cause
each of its Subsidiaries, (i) to conduct its operations in
accordance with its ordinary course of business in all material
respects, consistent with past practice, and (ii) use its
reasonable efforts to preserve intact its business organization,
keep available the services of its current officers and
employees, preserve the goodwill of those having business
relationships with the Company
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and its Subsidiaries, preserve its relationships with customers,
creditors and suppliers, maintain its books, accounts and
records and comply in all material respects with applicable Laws.
(b) Without limiting the generality of the foregoing,
except as provided in this Agreement, or in Section 5.3 of
the Company Disclosure Letter, from and after the Agreement Date
through the Effective Time, the Company shall not, and shall not
cause or permit any of its Subsidiaries to, take any of the
following actions without the prior written consent of the
Parent:
(i) amend or propose to amend its certificate (or articles)
of incorporation or bylaws or file any certificate of
designation or similar instrument with respect to any shares of
its authorized but unissued capital stock;
(ii) authorize or effect any stock split, combination or
reclassification of shares of its capital stock or amend any
term of any outstanding security of the Company or repurchase,
redeem or otherwise acquire any shares of its capital stock;
(iii) declare, pay or set aside any dividend or
distribution with respect to the Company Common Stock or any
other of its capital stock (other than dividends payable by a
wholly-owned Subsidiary of the Company to the Company or another
wholly-owned Subsidiary), authorize for issuance or issue, sell,
grant any shares of its capital stock (other than in connection
with the exercise of Company Options outstanding on the
Agreement Date and listed in the Company Disclosure Letter or in
connection with any offering period under the ESPP that has
commenced prior to the Agreement Date; provided,
however, that participants may not increase their payroll
deductions or purchase selections from those in effect as of the
Agreement Date.), options, warrants, stock appreciation rights,
phantom equity, commitments, subscriptions, other rights of any
kind (including Company Stock Based Awards) to acquire any
shares of capital stock, or any other securities exercisable or
exchangeable for or convertible into shares of its capital
stock, or repurchase, redeem or otherwise acquire any shares of
its capital stock or any other securities exercisable or
exchangeable for or convertible into shares of its capital stock;
(iv) merge or consolidate with any entity or liquidate,
dissolve or effect any recapitalization or reorganization in any
form or create any new Subsidiary;
(v) sell, lease, license, pledge, encumber or otherwise
dispose of any (A) Owned Real Property (other than in
connection with any definitive agreement to sell, lease, pledge,
encumber or otherwise dispose of any such Owned Real Property
entered into prior to the date hereof) or (B) any other
assets or any interests (including any shares of the capital
stock of any of the Subsidiaries) that are material to the
Company and its Subsidiaries, taken as a whole, other than
assets used, consumed, replaced or sold in the ordinary course
of business, consistent with past practice;
(vi) acquire (whether by purchase of assets, purchase of
stock, merger or otherwise) (A) any assets (including any
equity interests) other than in the ordinary course of business
or (B) any equity interest of any Person or any business or
division of any business, or enter into any joint venture,
partnership agreement, joint development agreement, strategic
alliance agreement or other similar agreement (other than
teaming or other similar agreements entered into by the Company
and/or its
Subsidiaries in the ordinary course of business, consistent with
past practice);
(vii) create, incur, assume or otherwise become liable for
any indebtedness for borrowed money, or guarantee any such
indebtedness; issue or sell any debt securities or warrants or
rights to acquire any debt securities of the Company or its
Subsidiaries; guarantee any debt securities of others; enter
into any keep well or other contract to maintain any
financial statement condition of any Person other than a
wholly-owned Subsidiary or enter into any arrangement having the
economic effect of the foregoing, other than indebtedness
existing as of the Agreement Date or incurred to refinance
existing indebtedness on monetary terms, including with respect
to prepayment, no less favorable to the Company or its
Subsidiaries than the indebtedness being refinanced, borrowings
under existing credit lines or any of the foregoing created,
incurred or assumed in the ordinary course of business,
consistent with past practice and intercompany indebtedness
among the Company and its wholly-owned Subsidiaries;
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(viii) except as required as a result of changes in Law,
GAAP or
Regulation S-X
of the Exchange Act, change any of the accounting principles or
practices used by it as of December 28, 2005 that would
reasonably be expected to materially affect the assets,
liabilities or results of operation of the Company or any of its
Subsidiaries;
(ix) make or change any Tax election, settle or compromise
any Tax liability involving a payment of more than $1,000,000,
change in any material respect any accounting method in respect
of Taxes, file any amendment to a material Tax Return, enter
into any closing agreement, settle any material claim or
material assessment in respect of Taxes involving a payment of
more than $1,000,000, or consent to any extension or waiver of
the limitation period applicable to any claim or assessment in
respect of Taxes, except, in each case, in the ordinary course
of business consistent with past practice, or make any Tax
payment outside the ordinary course of business consistent with
past practice;
(x) other than (A) as set forth in
Section 5.3(x) of the Company Disclosure Letter or
(B) as required to comply with applicable Laws or the terms
of any employment-related agreement in effect on the Agreement
Date, increase the compensation payable or to become payable to
any director or officer (other than increases in cash
compensation to employees who are not directors or officers,
made in the ordinary course of business, consistent with past
practice) or adopt, enter into, or increase any bonus,
insurance, severance, pension or other benefit plan, payment or
arrangement made to, for or with any such directors, officers or
other employees, or grant any severance or termination pay to
any officer or director or to any other employee except payments
made in connection with the termination of employees who are not
officers or directors in amounts consistent with its policies
(existing immediately prior to the Agreement Date) and past
practice;
(xi) enter into, adopt, amend or terminate any Company Plan
or collective bargaining agreement;
(xii) make any capital expenditure, capital addition or
capital improvement in an amount exceeding $100,000 or
$1,000,000 in the aggregate;
(xiii) (A) enter into any contract, agreement or
commitment (excluding purchase contracts for food or beverage
supplies that (x) either do not require any volume
commitments or (y) to the extent they do require volume
commitments (I) could not require payments of $1,000,000 in
the aggregate over the term of any such contract and
(II) do not expire on or after December 31,
2006) of a character that is, or would reasonably be
expected to be, material to the Company and its Subsidiaries
taken as a whole, or could require payments of more than
$1,000,000 in the aggregate over the term of any such contract,
agreement or commitment or (B) terminate, renew or amend in
any material respect any contract, agreement or commitment that
is, or would reasonably be expected to be, material to the
Company and its Subsidiaries taken as a whole, or could require
payments of more than $1,000,000 in the aggregate over the term
of any such contract, agreement or commitment;
(xiv) waive, release or assign any material rights, claims
or benefits of the Company or any Subsidiary under any Company
Material Agreement;
(xv) engage in any reportable transaction,
including any listed transaction, each within the
meaning of Code Section 6011 or any other applicable
federal Law, including any Internal Revenue Service ruling,
procedure, notice or other pronouncement;
(xvi) waive or release any rights that are material to the
Company and its Subsidiaries, taken as a whole, or pay,
discharge or satisfy any claims, liabilities or obligations that
are, or would reasonably be expected to be, material to the
Company and its Subsidiaries, taken as a whole, before the same
come due in accordance with their terms, except in either case
other than the payment, discharge and satisfaction in the
ordinary course of business of liabilities reflected on or
reserved for in the Financial Statements of the Company included
in the Company SEC Documents or otherwise incurred in the
ordinary course of business, consistent with past practice;
A-24
(xvii) settle or compromise any pending or threatened suit,
action or proceeding involving a settlement payment by the
Company or any of its Subsidiaries in excess of $250,000 or
requiring the Surviving Corporation to take or refrain from
taking any material action after the Effective Time;
(xviii) acquire, sell, lease, license, transfer, pledge,
encumber, grant or dispose of (whether by merger, consolidation,
purchase, sale or otherwise) any material Company Intellectual
Property, or enter into any material commitment or transaction
or take any material action, with respect to any Intellectual
Property outside the ordinary course of business consistent with
past practice, or do any act or knowingly omit to do any act
whereby any Company Intellectual Property material to the
business of the Company or any of its Subsidiaries may become
invalidated, abandoned, unmaintained, unenforceable or dedicated
to the public domain; or
(xix) agree, resolve or commit to do any of the foregoing.
Section 5.4 Control
of Operations. Nothing contained in this
Agreement shall give to the Parent, directly or indirectly,
rights to control or direct the operations of the Company prior
to the Effective Time. Prior to the Effective Time, the Company
shall exercise, consistent with the terms and conditions of this
Agreement, complete control and supervision of its and its
Subsidiaries operations.
Section 5.5 Proxy
Statement; Company Stockholders Meeting.
(a) As promptly as practicable after the Agreement Date,
the Company shall commence preparation of a Proxy Statement
relating to a special meeting of the Companys stockholders
meeting (the Company Stockholders Meeting)
for the purpose of obtaining the Company Stockholders Approval,
and file a preliminary Proxy Statement with the SEC or its
staff. The Company shall use its reasonable efforts to respond
to any comments by the SEC or its staff to such preliminary
Proxy Statement and to cause a definitive Proxy Statement to be
mailed to the Company Stockholders as soon as possible following
the Agreement Date. The Company shall notify the Parent promptly
of the receipt of and shall respond promptly to any
(i) comments from the SEC or its staff and
(ii) request by the SEC or its staff for amendments or
supplements to the Proxy Statement or for additional information
and shall supply the Parent with copies of all correspondence
between the Company or any of its representatives, on the one
hand, and the SEC or its staff, on the other hand, with respect
to the Proxy Statement or the Merger. The Parent and its counsel
shall be given a reasonable opportunity to review and comment
upon the Proxy Statement and any amendment or supplement thereto
and any such correspondence prior to its filing with the SEC or
dissemination to the Company Stockholders. If necessary, after
the Proxy Statement has been so mailed, the Company shall
promptly circulate amended, supplemental or supplemented proxy
materials, and if required in connection therewith, resolicit
proxies. Subject to Section 5.8(d), the Company
shall include in the definitive Proxy Statement the unanimous
recommendation of the Companys Board of Directors that the
Company Stockholders vote in favor of approval of the Merger and
the adoption of this Agreement (the Company
Recommendation).
(b) The Parent shall provide the Company with information
concerning or relating to the Parent or the Merger Subsidiary
that may be required in connection with the preparation and
filing of the Proxy Statement pursuant to this
Section 5.5. The information supplied by the Parent
and the Company for inclusion in the Proxy Statement shall not
at the time (i) the Proxy Statement is filed with the SEC,
(ii) the Proxy Statement is first mailed to the Company
Stockholders, or (iii) of the Company Stockholders Meeting,
contain any untrue statement of a material fact or omit to state
any material fact required to be stated therein or necessary in
order to make the statements therein, in light of the
circumstances under which they were made, not misleading. For
purposes of the foregoing, it is understood and agreed that
information concerning or relating to the Parent or the Merger
Subsidiary will be deemed to have been supplied by the Parent,
and all other information will be deemed to have been supplied
by the Company. The Company shall cause all documents filed with
the SEC in connection with the Merger to comply as to form and
substance in all material respects with the applicable
requirements of the Exchange Act.
(c) The Company, acting through the Companys Board of
Directors, shall in accordance with applicable Law and as soon
as possible following the Agreement Date, establish a record
date for, duly call, give notice of, convene and hold the
Company Stockholders Meeting for the purpose of voting upon this
Agreement and
A-25
the Merger, and the Company shall submit this Agreement at such
meeting. The Company shall use its reasonable efforts (it being
understood that such reasonable efforts shall not prevent the
Company from withdrawing, modifying or changing its
recommendation pursuant to Section 5.8(d)) to
solicit from the Company Stockholders proxies in favor of the
adoption of this Agreement and take all actions reasonably
necessary or, in the reasonable opinion of the Parent, advisable
to secure the Company Stockholders Approval. Without limiting
the generality of the foregoing, the Companys obligation
pursuant to the preceding two sentences will not be affected by
the commencement, public proposal, public disclosure or
communication to the Company of any Acquisition Proposal or
Superior Proposal or any withdrawal of the Company
Recommendation. Subject to the Company withdrawing, modifying or
changing its recommendation pursuant to
Section 5.8(d), the Company, acting through the
Companys Board of Directors, shall make the Company
Recommendation at the Company Stockholders Meeting.
Section 5.6 Financing.
(a) The Parent and the Merger Subsidiary shall use
commercially reasonable efforts to take, or cause to be taken,
all actions and to do, or cause to be done, all things
necessary, proper or advisable to (i) maintain in effect
the Commitment Letters and to satisfy the conditions (to the
extent such conditions are under the reasonable control of the
Parent) to obtaining the Financing set forth therein,
(ii) enter into definitive financing agreements (the
Financing Agreements) with respect to
the Financing so that the Financing Agreements are in effect as
promptly as practicable (but no later than the third business
day) following satisfaction of the conditions to this Agreement
and (iii) consummate the Financing as soon as practicable
following satisfaction of the conditions to this Agreement. The
Parent shall keep the Company reasonably informed of the status
of the financing process and shall advise the Company if, at any
time after the date hereof, any of the representations and
warranties set forth in Section 4.3 are no longer
true and correct in any material respect.
(b) If the Commitment Letters or the Financing Agreements
expire or are terminated, amended, modified or supplemented for
any reason, the Parent shall (i) promptly notify the
Company of such expiration, termination, amendment, modification
or supplement and the reasons therefor and (ii) in the case
of the termination or expiration of either of the Commitment
Letters, use commercially reasonable efforts to obtain
alternative financing to consummate the transactions
contemplated by this Agreement; it being understood, however,
that such commercially reasonable efforts would not require the
Parent to obtain financing that is on terms less favorable, in
substance, to the Parent and the Merger Subsidiary thereunder
than those set forth in the Commitment Letters or the Financing
Agreements, as the case may be.
(c) The Company shall, and shall cause its Subsidiaries, to
reasonably cooperate with the Parent in connection with the
fulfillment of the obligations of the Parent under
Sections 5.6(a) and 5.6(b) of the Agreement
and the fulfillment of the condition set forth in
Section 6.3(d) of the Agreement, including causing
the Company and any of its Subsidiaries and each of their
respective directors, officers, employees, agents, attorneys,
accountants, investment bankers and other representatives
(collectively, the Company
Representatives) to (i) provide, as promptly as
reasonably practicable after the execution of this Agreement,
the Parent with all audited financial statements and interim
financial statements of the Company that would be required to be
included in a registration statement of the Parent filed under
the Securities Act of 1933, as amended, pursuant to
Rule 3-05
of
Regulation S-X,
(ii) provide, as promptly as reasonably practicable after
the execution of this Agreement, all financial information
required by the Parent to produce pro forma financial statements
for the Parent in accordance with Article 11 of
Regulation S-X,
(iii) assist with the preparation of such offering
memoranda and documentation as is required under the Commitment
Letters, (iv) meet with potential lenders and financing
sources, (v) remove all Liens (other than Liens arising
after the date of this Agreement in the ordinary course of
business in favor of mechanics, contractors or repairmen for
amounts which are not material to the business of the Company
and its Subsidiaries, which are being contested in good faith by
appropriate proceedings diligently prosecuted, which proceedings
have the effect of preventing the forfeiture or sale of the
property subject thereto, and in each case for which adequate
reserves in accordance with GAAP are being maintained) that are
not Permitted Liens from the Leased Real Property and the Owned
Real Property, (vi) obtain consents, estoppel certificates,
memorandums of leases, and subordination, non-disturbance and
attornments agreements from the lessors of the Leased Real
Property, (vii) permit Phase II environmental
investigations on up to 12 of the Owned Real Properties and
Leased Real Properties and
A-26
(viii) timely notify all third parties holding rights of
first refusal, rights of first offers and purchase options
against the Owned Real Property of the Financing and seek to
obtain waivers of those rights.
(d) The Company shall, and shall cause its Subsidiaries, to
provide the Parent with financial statements and related
information sufficient to permit the Parent to fulfill its
obligations to provide financial disclosure relating to the
Company, on a timely basis in any report under the Exchange Act.
(e) Upon the request of the Parent, the Company shall
(i) use its commercially reasonable efforts to cause its
independent auditors to deliver to the SEC any auditors
consent that is required to be included in any filing with the
SEC that includes or incorporates by reference the financial
statements and related information of the Company and
(ii) to the extent the Parent or any of its Subsidiaries
conducts or intends to conduct an offering of securities (and if
the registration statement, prospectus or offering memorandum
for such offering includes or incorporates by reference the
financial statements relating to the Company), use its
commercially reasonable efforts to cause its independent
auditors to deliver a letter containing statements and
information of the type ordinarily included in accountants
cold comfort letters with respect to the financial
statements and financial information relating to the Company
contained or incorporated by reference in any such document
relating to any such offering, in the case of each of
(i) and (ii) above, within the time period reasonably
requested by the Parent or any of its Subsidiaries. In addition,
in connection with any SEC filing required to be made by the
Parent or any of its Subsidiaries (or any SEC review of such
filing), the Company shall permit the Parent and its authorized
representatives to have reasonable access, during normal
business hours and upon reasonable advance notice, to the
properties, books and records of the Company and its
Subsidiaries relating to the Company solely for the purpose of
preparing any such SEC filing or responding to SEC questions,
comments or requests on such SEC filing.
Section 5.7 Additional
Reports. The Company will furnish to the Parent
drafts of any Company SEC Documents within a reasonable time
prior to filing with the SEC, and copies of any Company SEC
Documents that it files with the SEC on or after the date
hereof, and the Company represents and warrants that as of the
respective dates thereof, such filed reports will
(i) comply as to form in all material respects with the
published rules and regulations of the SEC with respect thereto,
(ii) contain financial statements prepared in accordance
with GAAP applied on a consistent basis throughout the periods
involved (except as may be indicated in the notes thereto or, in
the case of unaudited interim financial statements, as may be
permitted by the SEC on
Form 10-Q,
8-K or any
successor form under the Exchange Act), and (iii) contain
financial statements that fairly present in all material
respects the consolidated financial position of the Company and
its Subsidiaries as of the respective dates thereof and the
consolidated results of the Companys and its
Subsidiaries operations and cash flows for the periods
indicated, except that the unaudited interim financial
statements may not contain footnotes and may be subject to
normal and recurring year-end adjustments.
Section 5.8
Acquisition Proposals.
(a) From the Agreement Date until the Effective Time, the
Company shall, and shall cause its Subsidiaries and each of the
Company Representatives, to immediately cease all existing
discussions, negotiations or other action with any other Person
conducted heretofore with respect to any Acquisition Proposal.
From the Agreement Date until the Effective Time, the Company
shall not, and shall cause its Subsidiaries and each of the
Company Representatives not to, (i) solicit, initiate,
knowingly facilitate or knowingly encourage, directly or
indirectly, the making or submission of any Acquisition
Proposal, (ii) enter into any letter of intent, agreement,
arrangement or understanding with respect to any Acquisition
Proposal, or agree to approve or endorse any Acquisition
Proposal or enter into any agreement, arrangement or
understanding that would require the Company to abandon,
terminate or fail to consummate the Merger or any other
transaction contemplated by this Agreement, (iii) initiate
or participate in any way in any discussions or negotiations
with, or furnish or disclose any information to, any Person
(other than the Parent or the Merger Subsidiary) in furtherance
of any proposal that constitutes, or could reasonably be
expected to lead to, any Acquisition Proposal, or
(iv) facilitate or further in any other manner any
inquiries or the making or submission of any proposal that
constitutes, or could reasonably be expected to lead to, any
Acquisition Proposal. Without limiting the foregoing, it is
agreed that any violation of the foregoing restrictions by any
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Company Representative, whether or not such Person is purporting
to act on behalf of the Company or any of its Subsidiaries, or
otherwise, will be deemed to be a breach of this
Section 5.8(a) by the Company.
(b) Notwithstanding the restrictions set forth in
Section 5.8(a), if at any time prior to obtaining
the Company Stockholders Approval, the Companys Board of
Directors receives a bona fide, unsolicited Acquisition Proposal
(under circumstances in which there has not been a violation of
Section 5.8(a)) and the Companys Board of
Directors determines in good faith (after consulting with its
financial advisor and outside legal counsel) that such
Acquisition Proposal is, or is reasonably likely to result in a
Superior Proposal (as such term is defined in
subsection (h) below) and that failure to take the
action permitted under this paragraph would be inconsistent with
its fiduciary duties to the Company Stockholders under
applicable Laws, the Company may (or permit the Company
Representatives), subject to providing the Parent with the
information required pursuant to subsection (c) below,
(A) furnish information with respect to the Company and its
Subsidiaries to the Person making such Acquisition Proposal
pursuant to a customary confidentiality agreement not less
restrictive (including with respect to standstill provisions) on
the other party than the confidentiality agreement dated
March 20, 2006 (the Confidentiality
Agreement), and (B) participate in discussions or
negotiations with the Person making such Acquisition Proposal.
(c) The Company shall as promptly as practical, and in any
event within forty-eight (48) hours, notify the Parent of
any Acquisition Proposal or of any request for information or
inquiry that could reasonably be expected to lead to an
Acquisition Proposal, which notification shall include a copy of
the applicable Acquisition Proposal or a reasonably detailed
written summary thereof, request or inquiry (or, if oral, a
written statement setting forth in reasonable detail the
material terms and conditions of such Acquisition Proposal,
request or inquiry), including the identity of the third party
making such Acquisition Proposal, request or inquiry. The
Company shall keep the Parent advised on a reasonably current
basis of the status and content of any discussions or
negotiations involving any Acquisition Proposal, request or
inquiry and shall promptly make available to the Parent any
non-public information furnished to any third party in
connection therewith that has not been previously provided to
the Parent. The Company will notify the Parent in writing
promptly after any determination by the Board of Directors of
the Company that an Acquisition Proposal is, or would reasonably
be likely to result in or lead to, a Superior Proposal.
(d) Neither the Companys Board of Directors nor any
committee thereof will withdraw, modify or change, or propose
publicly to withdraw, modify or change, in a manner adverse to
the Parent, the Merger Subsidiary or the transactions
contemplated by this Agreement, the Company Recommendation,
unless prior to obtaining the Company Stockholders Approval,
(A) the Companys Board of Directors determines in
good faith (after consultation with outside legal counsel) that
the failure to take such action would be inconsistent with its
fiduciary duties to the Company Stockholders under applicable
Laws, and (B) if such withdrawal, modification or public
proposal is taken in response to a Superior Proposal, then
unless the Company also first gives the Parent three
(3) business days written notice of the material terms and
provisions of such Superior Proposal, during which three
(3) business day period the Company will and will cause the
Company Representatives to negotiate in good faith with the
Parent, so that the Parent may propose an amendment to this
Agreement for the purpose of causing the Acquisition Proposal to
no longer constitute a Superior Proposal. In the case of
(i) subclause (A) of the immediately preceding
sentence, the Company may withdraw, modify or change its
recommendation and shall give the Parent prompt notification
thereof; and (ii) subclause (B) of the
immediately preceding sentence, if at the end of such three
(3) business day period, the Companys Board of
Directors continues to believe in good faith, after receiving
the advice of its financial advisors and outside legal counsel,
that the Acquisition Proposal continues to be a Superior
Proposal, and the Company has concurrently satisfied its
obligations pursuant to Sections 7.3 and 7.4,
then the Company may withdraw, modify or change the Company
Recommendation by written notice to the Parent and terminate
this Agreement pursuant to Section 7.1(c)(ii).
(e) Unless the Companys Board of Directors has
previously withdrawn or modified, or is concurrently withdrawing
or modifying, the Company Recommendation in accordance with this
section, the Companys Board of Directors shall not
recommend any Acquisition Proposal to the Company Stockholders.
Notwithstanding the foregoing, nothing contained in this
Agreement shall prevent the Companys Board of Directors
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from complying with
Rule 14e-2(a)
and
Rule 14d-9
promulgated under the Exchange Act with respect to any
Acquisition Proposal or making any disclosure required by
applicable Laws.
(f) The Company shall not release nor permit the release of
any Person from, or waive or permit the waiver of any provision
of, and the Company shall use its reasonable efforts to enforce
or cause to be enforced, any confidentiality,
standstill or similar agreement to which any of the
Company or any of its Subsidiaries is a party, unless the
Companys Board of Directors determines in good faith
(after consultation with outside legal counsel) that the failure
to take such action would be inconsistent with its fiduciary
duties to the Company Stockholders under applicable Laws;
provided, however, that the Company shall not
release or permit the release from, or waive or permit the
waiver of, any provision of any standstill or similar agreement
the effect of which would be to permit such Person to effect a
transaction without the approval of the Companys Board of
Directors.
(g) The term Acquisition Proposal means
an inquiry, proposal, indication of interest or offer from any
Person other than Parent or any of its Affiliates relating to
any (i) acquisition or sale of (1) 20% or more of the
consolidated assets of the Company and its Subsidiaries, or
(2) 20% or more (in number or voting power) of the equity
securities of the Company (or any of its Subsidiaries, as
applicable), (ii) tender offer or exchange offer, as
defined pursuant to the Exchange Act, that, if consummated,
would result in any Person beneficially owning 20% or more (in
number or voting power) of the equity securities of the Company
(or a Company Subsidiary as applicable), or (iii) merger,
consolidation, business combination, reorganization,
recapitalization, liquidation, dissolution or other similar
transaction involving the Company or any of its Subsidiaries,
other than the transactions contemplated by this Agreement or a
merger involving only the Company and one or more of its
wholly-owned Subsidiaries.
(h) The term Superior Proposal means a
bona fide, written Acquisition Proposal that is (i) not
received in violation of Section 5.8(a);
(ii) for at least a majority of the outstanding Company
Common Stock or all or substantially all or a majority of the
assets of the Company on a consolidated basis, provided
that, a sale-leaseback or similar transaction shall not
be deemed a Superior Proposal; (iii) fully financed or for
which financing, to the extent required, is reasonably likely to
be available; and (iv) on terms that the Companys
Board of Directors determines in good faith (A) would
result in a transaction that is more favorable to the Company
Stockholders, from a financial point of view, than the
transaction contemplated hereby, and (B) is reasonably
capable of being completed according to its terms.
Section 5.9 Indemnification.
(a) From and after the Effective Time, the Surviving
Corporation shall fulfill and honor in all respects the
obligations of the Company pursuant to any indemnification,
exculpation and advancement of expenses provisions in favor of
the current or former directors, officers, employees or agents
of the Company or any of its Subsidiaries or any other person
who, at the request of the Company or any of its Subsidiaries,
served as a director, officer, member, trustee or fiduciary of
another corporation, partnership, joint venture, trust, employee
benefit plan or other enterprise (the Indemnified
Parties) under the constitutional documents of the
Company and its Subsidiaries or any agreement between an
Indemnified Party and the Company or any of its Subsidiaries in
effect as of the Agreement Date. The articles of incorporation
and bylaws of the Surviving Corporation shall contain provisions
with respect to indemnification, exculpation and advancement of
expenses that are at least as favorable to the Indemnified
Parties as those contained in the articles of incorporation and
bylaws of the Company in effect on the Agreement Date, and such
provisions shall not be amended, repealed or otherwise modified
for a period of six (6) years from the Effective Time in
any manner that would adversely affect the rights of any of the
Indemnified Parties thereunder.
(b) The Surviving Corporation shall obtain, at the
Effective Time, prepaid (or tail) directors
and officers liability insurance policies in respect of
acts or omissions occurring at or prior to the Effective Time
for six (6) years from the Effective Time, covering each
Indemnified Party on terms with respect to such coverage and
amounts no less favorable than those of such policies in effect
on the date of this Agreement. In the event the Surviving
Corporation is unable to obtain such tail insurance
policies, then, for a period of six (6) years from the
Effective Time, the Surviving Corporation shall maintain in
effect the Companys current directors and
officers liability insurance policies in respect of acts
or omissions occurring at or prior
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to the Effective Time, covering each Indemnified Party on terms
with respect to such coverage and amounts (including with
respect to the payment of attorneys fees) no less
favorable than those of such policies in effect on the date of
this Agreement. Notwithstanding the provisions of this section,
the Surviving Corporation shall not be obligated to make total
annual premium payments with respect to such policies of
insurance to the extent such premiums exceed two hundred and
twenty-five percent (225%) of the last annual premium paid by
the Company prior to the Agreement Date. If the annual premium
costs necessary to maintain such insurance coverage exceed the
foregoing amount, the Surviving Corporation shall maintain as
much comparable directors and officers liability insurance and
fiduciary liability insurance reasonably obtainable for an
annual premium not exceeding the foregoing amount. The Company
represents that the amount of the last annual premium paid by
the Company prior to the Agreement Date was the amount set forth
on Section 5.9(b) of the Company Disclosure Letter.
(c) The Parent shall cause the Surviving Corporation to
honor the provisions of this Section 5.9 and all
indemnification agreements entered into by the Company and its
Subsidiaries listed in Section 5.9 of the Company
Disclosure Letter.
(d) The rights of each Indemnified Party hereunder shall be
in addition to any other rights such Indemnified Party may have
under the SCBA or otherwise. Notwithstanding anything to the
contrary contained in this Agreement or otherwise, the
provisions of this Section 5.9 shall survive the
consummation of the Merger, and each Indemnified Party will, for
all purposes, be a third party beneficiary of the covenants and
agreements contained in this Section 5.9 and,
accordingly, shall be treated as a party to this Agreement for
purposes of the rights and remedies relating to enforcement of
such covenants and agreements and shall be entitled to enforce
any such rights and exercise any such remedies directly against
the Parent and the Surviving Corporation.
(e) If the Surviving Corporation or any of its successors
or assigns (i) consolidates with or merges into any other
Person and is not the continuing or surviving corporation or
entity of such consolidation or merger or (ii) transfers or
conveys all or substantially all of its properties and assets to
any Person, then, and in each such case, to the extent
necessary, proper provision will be made so that the successors
and assigns of the Surviving Corporation will assume the
obligations set forth in this Section 5.9.
Section 5.10 Public
Announcements. The initial press releases issued
by each party announcing the Merger and the transactions
contemplated by this Agreement shall be in a form that is
mutually acceptable to the Parent and the Company. Thereafter,
the Parent and the Company shall consult with one another before
issuing any press releases or otherwise making any public
announcements with respect to the transactions contemplated by
this Agreement, and except as may be required by applicable Laws
or by the rules and regulations of the NASDAQ National Market
shall not issue any such press release or make any such
announcement prior to such consultation, except that
(a) the Parent and the Company shall agree on the content
of the first announcement made to the Companys employees
regarding the execution of this Agreement and the transactions
contemplated hereby and (b) the Company may otherwise
communicate with the Companys employees as it deems
appropriate, provided that, in any formal
communications with such employees (other than as contemplated
by Section 1.8), the Company shall not make any
commitments to the employees that might reasonably be expected
to be binding upon the Parent or the Surviving Corporation after
the Closing.
Section 5.11 Full
Access.
(a) Between the Agreement Date and the Effective Time, the
Company shall, and shall cause its Subsidiaries to, afford the
Parent and its Representatives reasonable access during normal
business hours and upon reasonable notice, to the officers,
employees, agents, properties, books and records of the Company
and its Subsidiaries.
(b) The Parent shall hold, and shall cause its directors,
officers, employees, agents and representatives to hold, all
information provided to them pursuant to this
Section 5.11 in confidence in accordance with the
terms of the Confidentiality Agreement and, in the event of the
termination of this Agreement for any reason,
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the Parent promptly shall return or destroy all such information
in accordance with the terms of the Confidentiality Agreement.
Section 5.12 Actions
Regarding Anti-takeover Statutes. If (a) the
provisions of Chapter 2 of Title 35 of the SC Code or
(b) any other potentially applicable anti-takeover or
similar statute or regulation is or becomes applicable to the
transactions contemplated by this Agreement, the Board of
Directors of the Company shall grant such approvals and take
such other actions as may be required so that the transactions
contemplated hereby may be consummated as promptly as
practicable on the terms and conditions set forth in this
Agreement.
Section 5.13 Continued
Benefit Plans. From the date on which the
Effective Time occurs through December 31, 2006, the
employees of the Company who remain in the employment of the
Surviving Corporation and its Subsidiaries (the
Continuing Employees) shall receive employee
benefits that in the aggregate are either (i) substantially
comparable to the employee benefits provided under the
Companys employee benefit plans to such employees
immediately prior to the Effective Time or (ii) at the
Parents election, substantially comparable to the employee
benefits provided to similarly situated employees of the Parent;
provided that neither the Parent nor the Surviving
Corporation nor any of their Subsidiaries shall have any
obligation to issue, or adopt any plans or arrangements
providing for the issuance of, capital stock, warrants, options,
stock appreciation rights or other rights in respect of any
shares of capital stock of any entity or any securities
convertible or exchangeable into such shares pursuant to any
such plans or arrangements. Nothing contained herein shall be
construed as requiring, and the Company shall take no action
that would have the effect of requiring, the Parent or the
Surviving Corporation to adopt or continue any specific plans or
to continue the employment of any specific person.
Section 5.14 Standstill
Provisions. The restrictions on the Parent and
the Merger Subsidiary contained in Section 10 of the
Confidentiality Agreement are hereby waived by the Company but
only to the extent reasonably necessary to permit the Parent and
the Merger Subsidiary to consummate the transactions
contemplated by this Agreement
and/or to
comply with their obligations or exercise their legal remedies
under this Agreement.
Section 5.15 Notification
of Certain Matters; Supplemental Disclosure. Each
party shall give the other reasonably prompt notice upon
learning of any event that is reasonably likely to cause any of
the conditions set forth in Article VI not to be
satisfied. The Company shall give prompt written notice to the
Parent of the occurrence of any event that, individually or in
the aggregate, would reasonably be expected to result in a
Company Material Adverse Effect. Each of the Company, the Parent
and the Merger Subsidiary agrees to use their respective
reasonable efforts to prevent or promptly remedy, (i) the
occurrence or failure to occur or the impending or threatened
occurrence or failure to occur, of any event which occurrence or
failure to occur would be likely to cause any of its
representations or warranties in this Agreement to be untrue or
inaccurate in any material respect at any time from the
Agreement Date to the Effective Time and (ii) any material
failure on its part to comply with or satisfy any covenant,
condition or agreement to be complied with or satisfied by it
hereunder. Each party shall give prompt written notice to the
other of any material development which would give rise to a
failure of a condition set forth in Article VI. The
delivery of any notice pursuant to this Section 5.15
shall not limit or otherwise affect the remedies available
hereunder to the party receiving such notice nor be deemed to
have amended any of the disclosures set forth in the Company
Disclosure Letter, to have qualified the representations and
warranties contained herein or to have cured any
misrepresentation or breach of a representation or warranty that
otherwise might have existed hereunder by reason of such
material development. No disclosure after the Agreement Date of
the untruth of any representation and warranty made in this
Agreement will operate as a cure of any breach of the failure to
disclose the information, or of any untrue representation or
warranty made herein.
Section 5.16 Nonqualified
Excess Plans. As soon as practicable following
the Agreement Date, the Board of Directors of the Company (or if
appropriate, any committee of the Board of Directors of the
Company administering the Company Nonqualified Excess Plan and
the Company Executive Nonqualified Excess Plan (collectively,
the Nonqualified Excess Plans)) shall adopt
such resolutions or take such other actions as may be required
(in form and substance satisfactory to Parent) to provide that
the Nonqualified
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Excess Plans shall terminate immediately prior to the Effective
Time, provided further that the distribution or payout of
account balances with respect to the Nonqualified Excess Plans
shall not be made until the last day of the month following the
six month anniversary of the termination of such plans. The
Parent shall cause the Surviving Corporation to maintain
sufficient funds to meet the Companys obligation to pay
out such account balances which amounts as of the date of this
Agreement are set forth in Section 5.16 of the
Company Disclosure Letter.
Section 5.17 Title Insurance. The
Company shall use reasonable efforts to assist the Parent in
obtaining, at Closing, from First American Title Insurance
Company and Commonwealth Land Title Company (collectively,
the Title Company) title insurance
policies, in such amounts as the Parent reasonably determines to
be the value of the Owned Real Property or Leased Real Property
insured thereunder (the Title Policies).
It is anticipated that each of the Title Policies shall
provide extended coverage over the general or standard
exceptions and have those endorsements attached thereto which
are customary and reasonable for a transaction involving real
property of this value and type. The Company shall provide the
Title Company with such affidavits, undertaking or other
assurances as may reasonably be requested by the
Title Company to issue the Title Policies. The Parent
shall pay all fees, costs and expenses with respect to the
Title Commitments and Title Policies.
Section 5.18 Surveys. The
Company shall use reasonable best efforts to assist the Parent
in obtaining, before Closing, a survey for each Owned Real
Property and Leased Real Property, dated no earlier than the
date of this Agreement, prepared by a licensed surveyor
satisfactory to the Parent, conforming to 2005
ALTA/ACSM
Minimum Detail Requirements for Urban Land Title Surveys,
and in a form reasonably satisfactory to the Parent (the
Surveys). The Parent shall pay all fees,
costs and expenses with respect to the Surveys.
ARTICLE VI
CONDITIONS TO THE CONSUMMATION OF THE MERGER
Section 6.1 Conditions
to the Obligations of Each Party. The respective
obligation of each party to consummate the Merger and the other
transactions contemplated hereby is subject to the satisfaction
at or prior to the Closing Date of each of the following
conditions, any of which may be waived by the written agreement
of the parties:
(a) the Company shall have obtained the Company
Stockholders Approval;
(b) no order, decree, ruling, judgment or injunction will
have been enacted, entered, promulgated or enforced by any
Governmental Authority of competent jurisdiction making illegal
or otherwise prohibiting the Merger and the consummation of the
transactions contemplated by this Agreement substantially on the
terms contemplated hereby, and continue to be in effect; and
(c) all applicable waiting periods under the HSR Act will
have expired or been terminated.
Section 6.2 Conditions
to the Obligation of the Company. The obligations
of the Company to consummate the Merger and the other
transactions contemplated hereby, are subject to the
satisfaction at or prior to the Closing Date of each of the
following conditions, any of which may be waived, in writing,
exclusively by the Company:
(a) the representations and warranties of the Parent and
the Merger Subsidiary contained herein (which for purposes of
this subparagraph shall be read as though none of them contained
any Parent Material Adverse Effect or materiality qualification)
shall be true and correct in all respects as of the Closing Date
with the same effect as though made as of the Closing Date
(provided that, any representations and warranties
made as of a specified date shall be required only to continue
on the Closing Date to be true and correct as of such specified
date), except for any failure of such representations and
warranties to be true and correct that, individually or in the
aggregate, would not reasonably be expected to have a Parent
Material Adverse Effect;
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(b) each of the Parent and the Merger Subsidiary shall have
performed or complied with in all material respects all
covenants and obligations required to be performed or complied
with by it under this Agreement at or prior to the Effective
Time; and
(c) the Parent shall have delivered to the Company a
certificate, dated the Closing Date and signed by an executive
officer of the Parent, certifying the satisfaction of the
conditions set forth in subsections (a) and (b) above.
Section 6.3 Conditions
to the Obligation of the Parent and the Merger
Subsidiary. The obligations of the Parent and the
Merger Subsidiary to consummate the Merger and the other
transactions contemplated hereby, are subject to the
satisfaction at or prior to the Closing Date of each of the
following conditions, any of which may be waived, in writing,
exclusively by the Parent:
(a) the representations and warranties of the Company
contained herein (which for purposes of this subparagraph shall
be read as though none of them contained any Company Material
Adverse Effect or materiality qualification) shall be true and
correct in all respects as of the Closing Date with the same
effect as though made as of the Closing Date (provided
that, any representations and warranties made as of a
specified date shall be required only to continue on the Closing
Date to be true and correct as of such specified date), except
for any failure of such representations and warranties to be
true and correct that, individually or in the aggregate, would
not reasonably be expected to have a Company Material Adverse
Effect;
(b) the Company shall have performed or complied with in
all material respects all obligations required to be performed
or complied with by it under this Agreement at or prior to the
Effective Time;
(c) since the Agreement Date, there shall have been no
Company Material Adverse Effect;
(d) the Company shall have delivered to the Parent a
certificate, dated the Closing Date and signed by an executive
officer of the Company, certifying the satisfaction of the
conditions set forth in subsections (a) through
(c) above;
(e) the Company or its Subsidiaries shall have received the
proceeds of the sale leaseback transaction with Drawbridge
immediately prior to the Effective Time, and the Parent and the
Merger Subsidiary shall have received the other proceeds of the
Financing, in each case on terms that are no less favorable in
substance to the Parent, the Merger Subsidiary or the Surviving
Corporation thereunder than those set forth in the Commitment
Letters or the Financing Agreements, as the case may be; and
(f) the Company shall have delivered an affidavit meeting
the requirements of Code Section 1445(b)(3) and the
regulations promulgated thereunder, certifying that either:
(i) the Company is not and has not been a United States
real property holding corporation (within the meaning of Code
Section 897(c)(2)) during the period described in Code
Section 897(c)(1)(A)(ii); or (ii) as of the Effective
Time, interests in the Company are not United States real
property interests by reason of Code Section 897(c)(1)(B).
Section 6.4 Frustration
of Closing Conditions. None of the Company, the
Parent or the Merger Subsidiary may rely on the failure of any
condition set forth in Sections 6.1, 6.2 or
6.3, as the case may be, to be satisfied if such
partys material breach of this Agreement has been a
principal cause of the failure of such condition to be satisfied.
ARTICLE VII
TERMINATION
Section 7.1 Termination. This
Agreement may be terminated at any time prior to the Effective
Time, whether before or, subject to the terms hereof, after the
Company Stockholders Approval has been obtained:
(a) by mutual written agreement of the Parent and the
Company;
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(b) by either the Parent or the Company, if:
(i) the Closing has not occurred by January 15, 2007
(the Outside Date); provided, that the
party seeking to terminate this Agreement pursuant to this
subsection (b)(i) has not breached in any material respect
its obligations under this Agreement in any manner that has been
the principal cause of, or resulted in, the failure of the
Closing to occur on or before such date;
(ii) (A) there are any Laws that prohibit or make the
Merger illegal, or if an order, decree, ruling, judgment or
injunction has been entered by a Governmental Authority of
competent jurisdiction permanently restraining, enjoining or
otherwise prohibiting the Merger and such order, decree, ruling,
judgment or injunction has become final and non-appealable, and
(B) the party seeking to terminate this Agreement pursuant
to this subsection (b)(ii) has used its reasonable efforts
to resist, resolve or remove such Laws, order, decree, ruling,
judgment or injunction;
(iii) at the Company Stockholder Meeting (including any
adjournment or postponement thereof), the Company Stockholders
Approval has not been obtained, unless such failure to obtain
the Company Stockholders Approval is the result of a material
breach of this Agreement by the party seeking to terminate this
Agreement; or
(iv) any one of the following shall have occurred;
provided, however, that the party seeking to terminate this
Agreement pursuant to this subsection (b)(iv) has used
reasonable efforts to resist, resolve or remove the impediments
to the Closing set forth in subparagraphs (A), (B), and
(C) of this subsection (b)(iv):
(A) the waiting period applicable to the consummation of
the Merger under the HSR Act shall not have expired or been
terminated by the Outside Date;
(B) any Governmental Authority files a complaint or
otherwise commences a proceeding seeking a judgment, injunction,
order or decree enjoining the consummation of the Merger or
restraining or prohibiting the operation of the business of the
Parent or any of its Subsidiaries or the Company or any of its
Subsidiaries after the Effective Time; or
(C) the Parent receives notice that the United States
Federal Trade Commission has authorized its staff to file a
complaint, or that the Assistant Attorney General or other
appropriate official at the United States Department of Justice
has authorized the staff of the Antitrust Division to seek a
preliminary injunction, as the case may be, enjoining
consummation of the Merger;
(c) by the Company:
(i) if (A) the representations and warranties of the
Parent
and/or the
Merger Subsidiary contained in Article IV of this
Agreement fail to be true and correct in any respect that causes
a failure of the condition set forth in
Section 6.2(a) or (B) the Parent or the Merger
Subsidiary materially breaches or materially fails to perform
its covenants and other agreements contained herein;
provided that, in each of the foregoing
clauses (A) and (B), such breach or failure cannot be
or has not been cured in all material respects within thirty
(30) days after the Companys written notice thereof
to the Parent or the Merger Subsidiary; or
(ii) prior to obtaining the Company Stockholders Approval,
if (A) the Board of Directors of the Company approves and
authorizes the Company to enter into a definitive agreement
providing for the implementation of a Superior Proposal, and
(B) immediately following termination of this Agreement the
Company enters into such definitive agreement; provided
that, concurrent with the termination of this Agreement
pursuant to this subsection and as a condition precedent
thereof, the Company pays to the Parent the Company Termination
Fee and Expense Reimbursement in accordance with
Sections 7.3 and 7.4; or
(iii) if (a) either of the Commitment Letters expires
or terminates prior to the Outside Date (or is amended, such
that the total amount of the Financing is not sufficient to
consummate the
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transactions contemplated hereby), and Parent has not secured a
replacement Commitment Letter (on terms that are no less
favorable, in substance, to Parent and the Merger Subsidiary
than the expired or terminated Commitment Letter or Letters)
within thirty (30) days after the date of such expiration,
termination or amendment.
(d) by the Parent if:
(i) (A) the representations and warranties of the
Company contained in Article III of this Agreement
fail to be true and correct in any respect that causes a failure
of the conditions set forth in Section 6.3(a) of
this Agreement or (B) the Company materially breaches or
materially fails to perform its covenants and other agreements
contained herein; provided that, in each of the
foregoing clauses (A) and (B), such breach or failure
cannot be or has not been cured in all material respects within
thirty (30) days after the Parents written notice
thereof to the Company;
(ii) (A) the Companys Board of Directors (or any
committee thereof) withdraws or modifies in a manner adverse to
the Parent or Merger Subsidiary the Company Recommendation or
exempts any Person other than the Parent or Merger Subsidiary
from the provisions of Chapter 2 of Title 35 of the SC
Code or the Rights Agreement; (B) the Companys Board
of Directors fails to reconfirm the Company Recommendation
within ten (10) business days after receipt of a request by
the Parent, provided that, any such request may be
made only after notice of any of the following events (as any of
the following events may occur from time to time): (1) the
public announcement of the receipt by the Company of an
Acquisition Proposal or any material change thereto; or
(2) a public announcement of any transaction to acquire a
material portion of the Company Common Stock by a Person other
than the Merger Subsidiary, the Parent or any of their
Affiliates; or
(iii) the Company enters into a definitive agreement with
respect to an Acquisition Proposal, or approves or recommends
any Acquisition Proposal.
Section 7.2 Effect
of Termination. If any party terminates this
Agreement pursuant to Section 7.1 above, all rights
and obligations of the parties hereunder shall terminate without
any liability of any party to any other party, other than the
provisions of this Section 7.2,
Sections 7.3, 7.4 and 7.5 and
Article VIII of this Agreement which shall remain in
full force and effect and survive any termination of this
Agreement; provided, however, that, subject to such provisions,
any such termination shall not relieve any party hereto from
liability for any willful breach of this Agreement; it being
understood that payment of the amounts described in
Sections 7.3 and 7.4 and 7.5 will not
be in lieu of damages incurred in the event of any such willful
breach. No termination of this Agreement shall affect the
obligations of the parties contained in the Confidentiality
Agreement, all of which obligations shall survive termination of
this Agreement in accordance with its terms.
Section 7.3 Fees
and Expenses.
(a) Except as set forth in this Section 7.3 and
in Section 7.4, all fees and expenses incurred in
connection with the transactions contemplated hereby shall be
paid by the party incurring such expenses, whether or not the
Merger is consummated.
(b) If this Agreement is validly terminated pursuant to
Section 7.1(c)(ii), then the Company shall
(i) pay to the Parent a fee of $25,000,000 less the amount
set forth in clause (ii) of this Section 7.3(b) (the
Company Termination Fee) and
(ii) reimburse for the Parents documented
out-of-pocket
expenses in connection with the transactions contemplated by
this Agreement up to $10,000,000 (the Expense
Reimbursement) at the time set forth in
Section 7.4.
(c) If this Agreement is validly terminated pursuant to
Section 7.1(d)(ii) or
Section 7.1(d)(iii), then the Company will pay to
the Parent the Company Termination Fee and the Expense
Reimbursement at the time set forth in Section 7.4.
(d) If this Agreement is validly terminated pursuant to
Section 7.1(b)(i), Section 7.1(b)(iii),
or Section 7.1(d)(i), then if (A) prior to such
termination there exists an Acquisition Proposal (whether or not
such offer or proposal has been rejected or has been withdrawn
prior to the time of such termination) and
A-35
(B) within twelve (12) months of such termination, the
Company or any of its Subsidiaries accepts a written offer for,
or otherwise enters into a definitive agreement to consummate or
consummates, an Acquisition Proposal, then the Company shall pay
to the Parent the Company Termination Fee and the Expense
Reimbursement at the time set forth in Section 7.4;
provided, however, no payment shall be due to the
Parent pursuant to this Section 7.3(d) if this
Agreement is terminated by the Parent pursuant to
Section 7.1(b)(i) under circumstances in which the
Parent Termination Fee set forth in Section 7.5(a)
is payable. For purposes of the foregoing clause (d) only,
references in the definition of the term Acquisition
Proposal to the figure 20% shall be deemed to
be replaced by the figure 50%.
(e) Notwithstanding anything to the contrary contained
herein, if the Company pays the Parent both the Company
Termination Fee and the Expense Reimbursement, the Company
Termination Fee shall be reduced so that the total amount paid
by the Company to the Parent shall be no more than $25,000,000.
Section 7.4 Other
Company Termination Fee and Expense Reimbursement Matters.
(a) The parties shall make all payments required by
Section 7.3 by wire transfer of immediately
available funds to an account designated by the receiving party
in writing.
(b) The Company Termination Fee and the Expense
Reimbursement shall be paid as follows:
(i) if payments are due pursuant to
Section 7.3(b), then the Expense Reimbursement and
the Company Termination Fee shall be paid to the Parent by the
Company concurrently with, and as a condition precedent to, such
termination of this Agreement by the Company pursuant to
Section 7.1(c)(ii);
(ii) if payments are due pursuant to
Section 7.3(c), then the Expense Reimbursement and
the Company Termination Fee, as applicable, shall be paid to the
Parent by the Company within two (2) business days
following such termination of this Agreement by the
Parent; and
(iii) if payments are to be made pursuant to
Section 7.3(d), then the Expense Reimbursement and
the Company Termination Fee shall be paid to the Parent by the
Company on the earlier of the date of the Companys entry
into a definitive agreement providing for, or consummating, an
Acquisition Proposal.
(c) The parties agree that (i) the provisions of
Sections 7.3 and 7.4 are an integral part of
the transactions contemplated by this Agreement and
(ii) the amount of, and basis for payment of, the Company
Termination Fee and Expense Reimbursement are reasonable and
appropriate in all respects. Accordingly, if the Company fails
to pay in a timely manner a Company Termination Fee
and/or
Expense Reimbursement, and in order to obtain such payment, the
Parent makes a claim that results in a judgment for the amounts
set forth in Section 7.3, the Company shall pay to
the Parent its reasonable costs and expenses (including
reasonable attorneys fees and expenses) in connection with
such suit, together with interest on the amount set forth in
Section 7.3 at the rate announced by Credit Suisse
as its prime rate in effect on the date such payment was
required to be made hereunder.
Section 7.5 Parent
Termination Fee.
(a) If this Agreement is terminated by the Company pursuant
to Section 7.1(c)(iii) or if all conditions to
Closing set forth in Article VI are satisfied (other than
the condition in Section 6.3(e) and conditions that, by
their nature, are to be and are capable of being satisfied at
Closing), and this Agreement is terminated pursuant to
Section 7.1(b)(i) (a Parent Payment
Event), then Parent shall pay to Company an amount
(the Parent Termination Fee) equal to
$7,500,000; provided that, no Parent Payment Event
shall be deemed to have occurred and no Parent Termination Fee
shall be payable if the Company shall have breached in any
material respect any of its representations, warranties or
covenants, provided that, such breach cannot be or
has not been cured in all material respects within thirty
(30) days after the Parents written notice thereof to
the Company, or if there shall have been a failure of the
conditions set forth in Section 6.3(c). Such payment shall
be made as promptly as reasonably practicable (and, in any
event, within two (2) business days following the date such
payment becomes due and payable) by wire transfer of immediately
available funds.
A-36
(b) The parties agree that (i) the provisions of this
Section 7.5 are an integral part of the transactions
contemplated by this Agreement and (ii) the amount of, and
basis for payment of, the Parent Termination Fee are reasonable
and appropriate in all respects. Accordingly, if the Parent
fails to pay in a timely manner the Parent Termination Fee, and
in order to obtain such payment, the Company makes a claim that
results in a judgment for the amounts set forth in
Section 7.5(a), the Parent shall pay to the Company
its reasonable costs and expenses (including reasonable
attorneys fees and expenses) in connection with such suit,
together with interest on the amount set forth in
Section 7.5(a) at the rate announced by Credit
Suisse as its prime rate in effect on the date such payment was
required to be made hereunder.
ARTICLE VIII
MISCELLANEOUS
Section 8.1 Nonsurvival
of Representations. None of the representations
and warranties contained in this Agreement or in any schedule,
certificate, instrument or other writing delivered pursuant to
this Agreement shall survive the Merger or the termination of
this Agreement. This Section 8.1 shall not limit any
covenant or agreement of the parties hereto which by its terms
contemplates performance after the Effective Time and this
Article VIII shall survive the Effective Time.
Section 8.2 Specific
Performance. The parties agree that irreparable
damage would occur and the non-breaching party could not be made
whole by monetary damages in the event any of the provisions of
this Agreement were not performed in accordance with their
specific terms, and it is accordingly agreed that the parties
shall be entitled to specific performance of the terms of this
Agreement, without posting a bond or other security, this being
in addition to any other remedy to which they are entitled
hereunder, at law or in equity.
Section 8.3 Successors
and Assigns. Neither this Agreement nor any of
the rights, interests or obligations provided by this Agreement
shall be assigned by any of the parties (whether by operation of
law or otherwise) without the prior written consent of the other
parties. Subject to the preceding sentence, this Agreement shall
be binding upon and inure to the benefit of the parties hereto
and their respective successors and permitted assigns.
Section 8.4 Amendment. This
Agreement may be amended in accordance with its terms by the
execution and delivery of a written instrument by or on behalf
of the Parent, the Merger Subsidiary and the Company at any time
before or after the Company Stockholders Approval;
provided that, after obtaining the Company
Stockholders Approval, no amendment to this Agreement shall be
made without the approval of the stockholders of the Company if
and to the extent such approval is required under applicable Law
or in accordance with the rules of any relevant stock exchange.
Section 8.5 Severability. Whenever
possible, each provision of this Agreement shall be interpreted
in such manner as to be effective and valid under applicable
Laws, but if any provision of this Agreement is held to be
prohibited by or invalid under applicable Laws, such provision
shall be ineffective only to the extent of such prohibition or
invalidity, without invalidating the remainder of this
Agreement. The parties hereto agree to replace any such void or
unenforceable provision of this Agreement with a valid and
enforceable provision that shall achieve, to the greatest extent
possible, the economic, business and other purposes of such void
or unenforceable provision.
Section 8.6 Extension
of Time; Waiver. Except as set forth elsewhere in
this Agreement, at any time prior to the Effective Time, the
parties may extend the time for performance of or waive
compliance with any of the covenants, agreements or conditions
of the other parties to this Agreement, and may waive any breach
of the representations or warranties of such other parties. No
agreement extending or waiving any provision of this Agreement
shall be valid or binding unless it is in writing and is
executed and delivered by or on behalf of the party against
which it is sought to be enforced. Delay in exercising any right
under this Agreement shall not constitute a waiver of such right.
A-37
Section 8.7 Counterparts. This
Agreement may be executed in two or more counterparts (whether
by facsimile or otherwise), each of which shall be deemed an
original, but all such counterparts taken together shall
constitute one and the same Agreement.
Section 8.8 Descriptive
Headings. The descriptive headings of this
Agreement are inserted for convenience only and shall not
constitute a part of this Agreement.
Section 8.9 Notices. Any
notice, request, instruction or other document to be given
hereunder shall be sent in writing and delivered personally,
sent by reputable, overnight courier service (charges prepaid),
sent by registered or certified mail, postage prepaid, or by
facsimile, according to the instructions set forth below. Such
notices shall be deemed given: at the time delivered by hand, if
personally delivered; one business day after being sent, if sent
by reputable, overnight courier service; at the time received,
if sent by registered or certified mail; and at the time when
confirmation of successful transmission is received by the
sending facsimile machine, if sent by facsimile.
If to the Parent or the Merger Subsidiary, to:
Buffets, Inc.
1460 Buffet Way
Eagan, Minnesota
55121-1133
Telephone: (651) 365-263
Facsimile:
(651) 365-2224
Attention: H. Thomas Mitchell, Executive Vice President
with a copy (which shall not constitute notice) to:
Paul, Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton & Garrison LLP
1285 Avenue of the Americas
New York, New York
10019-6064
Telephone:
(212) 373-3000
Facsimile:
(212) 757-3990
Attention: Carl L. Reisner, Esq.
If to the Company, to:
Ryans Restaurant Group, Inc.
405 Lancaster Avenue
P.O. Box 100
Greer, SC 29652
Telephone:
(864) 989-2291
Facsimile:
(864) 877-0979
Attention: Fred T. Grant, Jr., Senior
Vice President Finance
with copies (which shall not constitute notice) to:
Wyche, Burgess, Freeman & Parham, P.A.
P.O. Box 728
44 East Camperdown Way (29601)
Greenville, South Carolina 29602
Telephone:
(864) 242-8203
Facsimile:
(864) 235-8900
Attention: Lawson Vicario, Esq.
A-38
and
Rogers & Hardin LLP
2700 International Tower
229 Peachtree Street, N.E.
Atlanta, Georgia
30303-1601
Telephone:
(404) 522-4700
Facsimile:
(404) 525-2224
Attention: Steven E. Fox, Esq.
or to such other address or to the attention of such other party
that the recipient party has specified by prior written notice
to the sending party in accordance with the preceding.
Section 8.10 No
Third-Party Beneficiaries. Except as provided
pursuant to Section 5.9, the terms and provisions of
this Agreement will not confer third-party beneficiary rights or
remedies upon any person or entity other than the parties hereto
and their respective successors and permitted assigns. The
provisions of Section 5.9 are intended to be for the
benefit of, and shall be enforceable by, the Indemnified Parties
and shall be binding on the Parent and the Surviving Corporation
and their successors and assigns. In the event the Parent or the
Surviving Corporation or one of their successors or assigns
(i) consolidates with or merges into any other Person and
shall not be the continuing or surviving corporation or entity
in such consolidation or merger or (ii) transfers all or
substantially all of its properties and assets to any Person,
then, and in each case, proper provision shall be made so that
the successors or assigns of the Parent or the Surviving
Corporation, as the case may be, honor the obligations set forth
in Section 5.9.
Section 8.11 Entire
Agreement. This Agreement, the Confidentiality
Agreement, the Company Disclosure Letter and the other documents
referred to herein collectively constitute the entire agreement
among the parties and supersede any prior and contemporaneous
understandings, agreements or representations by or among the
parties, written or oral, that may have related in any way to
the subject matter hereof.
Section 8.12 Construction. For
purposes of this Agreement:
(a) References to applicable Law or Laws with
respect to a particular Person, thing or matter shall include
only such Law or Laws as to which the Governmental Authority
that enacted or promulgated such Law or Laws has jurisdiction
over such Person, thing or matter as determined under such Laws.
(b) Whenever the context requires, the singular number
shall include the plural, and vice versa, the masculine gender
shall include the feminine and neuter genders, the feminine
gender shall include the masculine and neuter genders, and the
neuter gender shall include masculine and feminine genders.
(c) The words include and
including, and variations thereof, shall not be
deemed to be terms of limitation, but rather shall be deemed to
be followed by the words without limitation.
(d) Except as otherwise indicated, all references in this
Agreement to Sections and Exhibits are
intended to refer to Sections and Exhibits to this Agreement.
(e) The terms hereof, hereunder,
herein and words of similar import shall refer to
this Agreement as a whole and not to any particular provision of
this Agreement.
(f) As it relates to the Company, knowledge
means the actual knowledge of the persons set forth in
Section 8.12 of the Company Disclosure Letter with no
further duty of inquiry.
(g) Each party hereto has participated in the drafting of
this Agreement, which each party acknowledges is the result of
extensive negotiations between the parties, and consequently,
this Agreement shall be interpreted without reference to any
rule or precept of Law to the effect that any ambiguity in a
document be construed against the drafter.
Section 8.13 Governing
Law. THIS AGREEMENT AND THE COMPANY DISCLOSURE
LETTER WILL BE GOVERNED BY AND CONSTRUED IN ACCORDANCE WITH THE
LAWS OF THE STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA, WITHOUT GIVING EFFECT TO
ANY LAW OR RULE THAT WOULD CAUSE THE LAWS OF ANY
JURISDICTION OTHER THAN THE STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA TO BE
APPLIED.
* * * * *
A-39
IN WITNESS WHEREOF, the parties hereto have caused this
Agreement to be duly executed by their respective authorized
officers as of the day and year first above written.
BUFFETS, INC.
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By:
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/s/ R.
Michael Andrews, Jr.
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Name: R. Michael Andrews, Jr.
Title: Chief Executive Officer
BUFFETS SOUTHEAST, INC.
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By:
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/s/ R.
Michael Andrews, Jr.
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Name: R. Michael Andrews, Jr.
Title: Chief Executive Officer
RYANS RESTAURANT GROUP, INC.
Name: Charles D. Way
Title: Chairman and Chief Executive Officer
Signature Page to Agreement and Plan of Merger
A-40
EXHIBIT B
July 24, 2006
Personal and Confidential
Special Committee of the Board of Directors
Ryans Restaurant Group, Inc.
405 Lancaster Avenue
Greer, South Carolina 29650
Members of the Special Committee of the Board of Directors:
You have requested our opinion as to the fairness, from a
financial point of view, as of the date hereof, to the holders
of common stock, par value $1.00 per share (the Common
Stock), of Ryans Restaurant Group Inc., a South
Carolina corporation (the Company), other than
Buffets, Inc., a Minnesota corporation (Parent),
Buffets Southeast, Inc., a South Carolina corporation and a
wholly-owned subsidiary of the Parent (the Merger
Subsidiary), and their respective subsidiaries, of the
consideration to be received by them pursuant to the Agreement
and Plan of Merger (the Agreement) to be entered
into among the Company, Parent and Merger Subsidiary. The
Agreement provides for the merger (the Merger) of
Merger Subsidiary with and into the Company, as a result of
which the Company will become a wholly-owned subsidiary of
Parent. As set forth more fully in the Agreement, in connection
with the Merger, each outstanding share of Common Stock of the
Company (other than shares, if any, held by the Company, Parent
or Merger Subsidiary or any of their respective subsidiaries,
which are not covered by this opinion) will be converted into
the right to receive $16.25 per share in cash, without
interest (the Merger Consideration). The terms and
conditions of the Merger are more fully set forth in the
Agreement.
We have acted as financial advisor to the Company in connection
with the Merger and will receive a fee from the Company, a
substantial portion of which is contingent upon the consummation
of the Merger. We will also receive a fee from the Company for
providing this opinion, which will be credited against the fee
for financial advisory services. This opinion fee is not
contingent upon the consummation of the Merger. The Company has
also agreed to indemnify us against certain liabilities in
connection with our services and to reimburse us for certain
expenses in connection with our services. In the past, we have
provided financial advisory services to the Company and have
received fees for the rendering of those services.
In arriving at our opinion, we have undertaken such review,
analyses and inquiries as we have deemed necessary and
appropriate under the circumstances. We have reviewed:
(i) the financial terms of the July 24, 2006 draft of
the Agreement; (ii) certain publicly available financial,
business and operating information related to the Company;
(iii) certain internal financial, operating and other data
with respect to the Company prepared and furnished to us by the
management of the Company; (iv) certain internal financial
projections for the Company that were prepared for financial
planning purposes and furnished to us by the management of the
Company; (v) certain publicly available market and
securities data of the Company; (vi) certain financial data
and the imputed prices and trading activity of certain other
publicly-traded companies that we deemed relevant for purposes
of our opinion; (vii) the financial terms, to the extent
publicly available, of certain merger transactions that we
deemed relevant for purposes of our opinion; and
(viii) other information, financial studies, analyses and
investigations and other factors that we deemed relevant for
purposes of our opinion. In addition, we have performed a
discounted cash flow analysis for the Company. We have also
conducted discussions with members of the senior management of
the Company concerning the financial condition, historical and
current operating results, business and prospects for the
Company.
In connection with our review, with your consent, we have relied
upon and assumed the accuracy, completeness and fair
presentation of the financial, accounting and other information
furnished or otherwise
B-1
made available to us by the Company and Parent, discussed with
or otherwise reviewed by us, or publicly available, and have not
assumed responsibility independently to verify such information
or any liability therefore. We also have relied upon and assumed
that there is not (and that management of the Company is not
aware of) any information or facts that would make the
information provided or otherwise made available to us
incomplete or misleading. The Company has advised us that they
do not publicly disclose internal financial information of the
type provided to us and that such information was prepared for
financial planning purposes and not with the expectation of
public disclosure. We have further relied upon the assurances of
the management of the Company that the financial forecasts,
projections and other estimates and business outlook information
have been prepared on a reasonable basis in accordance with
industry practice, reflecting the best currently available
estimates and judgments of the management of the Company. We
express no opinion as to such financial forecasts, projections
and other estimates and business outlook information or the
assumptions on which they are based. We have relied, with your
consent, on advice of the outside counsel and the independent
accountants to the Company, and on the assumptions of the
management of the Company, as to all accounting, legal, tax and
financial reporting matters with respect to the Company and the
Agreement. Without limiting the generality of the foregoing, for
the purpose of this opinion, we have assumed that neither the
Company nor Parent is party to any material pending transaction,
including any external financing, recapitalization, acquisition
or merger, divestiture or spin off other than the Merger and
other financing transactions described in the Agreement.
Furthermore, in arriving at our opinion, we have not been
requested to make, and have not made, any physical inspection of
the properties or facilities of the Company.
We have assumed that the final form of the Agreement will be in
all material respects identical to the last draft reviewed by
us, without modification of material terms or conditions by the
Company, Parent or any other party thereto. We have not been
asked to, nor do we, take any responsibility as to the terms and
conditions of the Agreement or the form of the transaction. We
have assumed the Merger will be consummated pursuant to the
terms of the Agreement without amendments thereto and with full
satisfaction of all covenants and conditions without any waiver
thereof. In arriving at our opinion, we have assumed that all
necessary regulatory approvals and consents required for the
Merger will be obtained in a manner that will not result in the
disposition of any material portion of the assets of the Company
or Parent, or otherwise adversely affect the Company or Parent,
and that will not alter the terms of the Merger. We express no
opinion regarding whether the necessary approvals or other
conditions to the consummation of the Merger will be obtained or
satisfied.
In arriving at our opinion, we have not performed any appraisals
or valuations of any specific assets or liabilities (fixed,
contingent or other) of the Company, and have not been furnished
with any such appraisals or valuations. The analyses performed
by Brookwood in connection with this opinion were going-concern
analyses. We express no opinion regarding the liquidation value
or solvency of any entity. Without limiting the generality of
the foregoing, we have undertaken no independent analysis of any
pending or threatened litigation, regulatory action, possible
unasserted claims or other contingent liabilities, to which the
Company or any of its affiliates is a party or may be subject.
With your consent, we have relied upon and assumed the accuracy
of information provided by senior management as to
Walker v. Ryans Family Steak Houses, Inc.,
No. 3 D2 1078 (M.D. Tenn. Apr. 19, 2006), but our
opinion makes no assumption concerning, and therefore does not
consider, the possible assertion of claims, outcomes or damages
arising out of any other pending or threatened litigation,
regulatory action, unasserted claims or other contingent
liabilities.
3525
Piedmont Road NE 5 Piedmont
Center Suite 415 Atlanta,
GA
30305 Phone 404.874.7433 Fax
404.564.5101
121 West Trade
St. Suite 3000 Charlotte,
NC 28202 Phone
704.372.1399 Fax 704.372.2528
www.brookwoodassociates.com
B-2
This opinion is necessarily based upon market, real estate,
economic or other facts, circumstances and conditions as they
exist and can be evaluated on, and on the information available
to us on, the date hereof; events occurring after the date
hereof could materially affect the assumptions used in preparing
this opinion. We are not expressing any opinion herein as to the
prices at which shares of Common Stock may trade following
announcement of the Merger or at any future time, and we express
no opinion as to the underlying valuation, future performance or
long-term viability of the Company. We have not agreed or
undertaken to reaffirm or revise this opinion or otherwise
comment upon any events occurring after the date hereof and do
not have any obligation to update, revise or reaffirm this
opinion.
This opinion is solely for the benefit and use of the Board of
Directors of the Company in connection with its consideration of
the Merger and may not be relied upon by any other person. This
opinion is not intended to be and does not constitute a
recommendation to any stockholder of the Company as to how such
stockholder should vote or otherwise act with respect to the
Merger, and should not be relied upon by any stockholder as
such. This opinion is not intended to confer rights and remedies
upon Parent, any stockholders of the Company or Parent or any
other person (including holders of options to purchase shares of
Common Stock). Except as contemplated in the January 24,
2006 engagement letter between us, this opinion shall not be
published or otherwise used, nor shall any public references to
us be made, without our prior written approval.
This opinion addresses solely the fairness, from a financial
point of view, to holders of Common Stock of the Company of the
proposed Merger Consideration set forth in the Agreement and
does not address any other terms or agreements relating to the
Merger. We were not requested to opine as to, and this opinion
does not address, the basic business decision to proceed with or
effect the Merger, or the merits of the Merger relative to any
alternative transaction or business strategy that may be
available to the Company. During the course of our engagement,
at the request of the Special Committee of the Board of
Directors of the Company, we contacted certain parties to
solicit indications of interest regarding a transaction
involving the Company. This process resulted in certain bids
which culminated in the Companys decision to enter into
the Agreement. We have considered the results of such
solicitation in rendering our opinion.
Based upon and subject to the foregoing and based upon such
other factors as we consider relevant, it is our opinion that
the Merger Consideration to be received by the holders of Common
Stock of the Company pursuant to the Agreement is fair, from a
financial point of view, as of the date hereof, to the holders
of Common Stock of the Company, other than Parent, Merger
Subsidiary and their respective subsidiaries.
Sincerely,
BROOKWOOD ASSOCIATES
3525
Piedmont Road NE 5 Piedmont
Center Suite 415 Atlanta,
GA
30305 Phone 404.874.7433 Fax
404.564.5101
121 West Trade
St. Suite 3000 Charlotte,
NC 28202 Phone
704.372.1399 Fax 704.372.2528
www.brookwoodassociates.com
B-3
SPECIAL MEETING OF SHAREHOLDERS OF
RYANS RESTAURANT GROUP, INC.
October 5, 2006
Please date, sign and mail
your proxy card in the
envelope provided as soon
as possible.
â Please detach along perforated line and mail in the envelope provided. â
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THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS RECOMMENDS A VOTE FOR THE
BELOW-LISTED PROPOSALS.
PLEASE SIGN, DATE AND RETURN PROMPTLY IN THE ENCLOSED ENVELOPE.
PLEASE MARK YOUR VOTE IN BLUE OR BLACK INK AS SHOWN HERE
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FOR
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AGAINST
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Approve the Agreement and Plan of Merger, dated July 24, 2006, by and among Ryans, Buffets, Inc., and Buffets Southeast, Inc. (Merger Sub), including the approval of the merger of Merger Sub with and into Ryans, with Ryans as the surviving company.
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Grant discretionary authority to the proxies named herein to vote for the adjournment or postponement of the special meeting for the purpose of soliciting additional proxies if there are not sufficient votes at the time of the special meeting to approve Proposal No. 1.
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THIS PROXY CARD, WHEN PROPERLY EXECUTED, WILL BE VOTED IN THE
MANNER DIRECTED HEREIN. IF NO DIRECTION IS MADE, THIS PROXY WILL
BE VOTED FOR THE PROPOSALS.
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In his discretion, each person appointed proxy is authorized to vote upon such other
business as properly may come before the Special Meeting and any and all
adjournments thereof and on matters incident to the conduct of the meeting.
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If any other business is presented at the Special Meeting, this proxy card will be voted
by the person(s) appointed proxy in his or their best judgment. At the present time,
the Board of Directors knows of no other business to be presented at the Special
Meeting.
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TO INCLUDE ANY COMMENTS, USE THE COMMENTS BOX ON THE REVERSE
SIDE OF THIS CARD. |
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MARK X HERE IF YOU PLAN TO ATTEND THE MEETING.o |
To change the address on your account, please check the box
at right and indicate your new address in the address space
above. Please note that changes to the registered name(s)
on the account may not be submitted
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Signature
of Stockholder
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Date:
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Signature
of Stockholder
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Date:
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Please sign exactly as your name or names appear on this Proxy.
When shares are held jointly, each holder should sign. When signing
as executor, administrator, attorney, trustee or guardian, please give full
title as such. If the signer is a corporation, please sign full corporate name
by duly authorized officer, giving full title as such. If signer is a partnership,
please sign in partnership name by authorized person. |
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RYANS RESTAURANT GROUP, INC.
405 Lancaster Avenue (29650)
Post Office Box 100 (29652)
Greer, South Carolina
Dear Shareholder:
Your vote is important, and you are strongly encouraged to exercise your right to vote your
shares. On behalf of the Board of Directors, we urge you to sign, date and return the proxy
card in the enclosed postage-paid envelope as soon as possible.
Thank you in advance for your prompt consideration.
Sincerely,
Ryans Restaurant Group, Inc.
1 n
RYANS RESTAURANT GROUP, INC.
405 LANCASTER AVENUE (29650)
POST OFFICE BOX 100 (29652)
GREER, SOUTH CAROLINA
THIS PROXY IS SOLICITED BY THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS
FOR A SPECIAL MEETING OF SHAREHOLDERS
The undersigned shareholder of Ryans Restaurant Group, Inc. (Ryans), hereby revoking all
previous proxies,
hereby appoints Charles D. Way and G. Edwin McCranie and either of them, the attorney or attorneys
or proxy
or proxies, with full power of substitution, to act for and in the name of the undersigned to vote
all shares of
Ryans common stock that the undersigned shall be entitled to vote, at a Special Meeting of
Shareholders of
Ryans, to be held at Ryans corporate offices at 405 Lancaster Avenue, Greer, South Carolina,
on Thursday, October 5, 2006 at 10:00 a.m. local time, and at any and all adjournments thereof, as set forth
on the
reverse side.
The undersigned may elect to withdraw this proxy card at any time prior to its use by (i)
submitting a written
notice of revocation (dated later than this proxy card) to the Secretary of Ryans at or before the
Special Meeting,
(ii) submitting another proxy that is properly signed and dated later than this proxy card, or
(iii) voting in person
at the meeting (although attendance at the Special Meeting will not in and of itself revoke a
proxy).
Receipt of the Notice of the Meeting and the accompanying Proxy Statement is hereby
acknowledged.
(Continued and to be signed on the reverse side)
SPECIAL MEETING OF SHAREHOLDERS OF
RYANS RESTAURANT GROUP, INC.
October 5, 2006
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PROXY VOTING INSTRUCTIONS
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MAIL Date, sign and mail your proxy card in the
envelope provided as soon as possible.
- or -
TELEPHONE Call toll-free 1-800-PROXIES
(1-800-776-9437) from any touch-tone telephone
and follow the instructions. Have your proxy card
available when you call.
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INTERNET
Access www.voteproxy.com and
follow the on-screen instructions. Have your proxy
card available when you access the web page.
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COMPANY NUMBER
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ACCOUNT NUMBER
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You may enter your voting instructions at 1-800-PROXIES or www.voteproxy.com up until 11:59 PM
Eastern Time the day before the cut-off or meeting date.
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â Please
detach along perforated line and mail in the envelope provided
IF you are not voting via telephone or the internet. â
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THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS RECOMMENDS A VOTE FOR THE
ELECTION OF DIRECTORS AND FOR PROPOSALS.
PLEASE SIGN, DATE AND RETURN PROMPTLY IN THE ENCLOSED ENVELOPE.
PLEASE MARK YOUR VOTE IN BLUE OR BLACK INK AS SHOWN HERE
þ
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FOR
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AGAINST
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ABSTAIN |
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1) |
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Approve
the Agreement and Plan of Merger, dated July 24, 2006, by and among Ryans, Buffets, Inc., and Buffets Southeast, Inc. (Merger Sub), including the approval of the merger of Merger Sub with and into Ryans, with Ryans as the surviving company.
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Grant discretionary authority to the proxies named herein to vote for the adjournment or postponement of the special meeting for the purpose of soliciting additional proxies if there are not sufficient votes at the time of the special meeting to approve Proposal No. 1.
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THIS PROXY CARD, WHEN PROPERLY EXECUTED, WILL BE VOTED IN THE
MANNER DIRECTED HEREIN. IF NO DIRECTION IS MADE, THIS PROXY WILL
BE VOTED FOR THE PROPOSALS.
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In his discretion, each person appointed proxy is authorized to vote upon such other
business as properly may come before the Special Meeting and any and all
adjournments thereof and on matters incident to the conduct of the meeting.
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If any other business is presented at the Special Meeting, this proxy card will be voted
by the person(s) appointed proxy in his or their best judgment. At the present time,
the Board of Directors knows of no other business to be presented at the Special
Meeting.
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TO INCLUDE ANY COMMENTS, USE THE COMMENTS BOX ON THE REVERSE
SIDE OF THIS CARD |
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MARK X HERE IF YOU PLAN TO ATTEND THE MEETING.o |
To change the address on your account, please check the box
at right and indicate your new address in the address space
above. Please note that changes to the registered name(s)
on the account may not be submitted
via this method. |
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Signature
of Stockholder
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Date:
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Signature
of Stockholder
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Date:
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Note: |
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Please sign exactly as your name or names appear on this Proxy.
When shares are held jointly, each holder should sign. When signing
as executor, administrator, attorney, trustee or guardian, please give full
title as such. If the signer is a corporation, please sign full corporate name
by duly authorized officer, giving full title as such. If signer is a partnership,
please sign in partnership name by authorized person. |
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