SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
                              Washington, D.C.  20549


                 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 [ ]
Check the appropriate box:
[  ]     Preliminary Proxy Statement
[  ]     Confidential, for Use of the Commission Only (as permitted by 
         Rule 14a-6(e)(2))
[X ]     Definitive Proxy Statement
[  ]     Definitive Additional Materials
[  ]     Soliciting Material Pursuant toss.240.14a-12

                         CBL & ASSOCIATES PROPERTIES, 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):
[X]      No fee required.
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         and 0-11.
 1)      Title of each class of securities to which transaction applies:

 2)      Aggregate number of securities to which transaction applies:

 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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[  ]     Fee paid previously with preliminary materials.
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         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.
 1) Amounts Previously Paid:

 2) Form, Schedule or Registration Statement No.:

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 4) Date Filed:


                 [CBL & ASSOCIATES PROPERTIES, INC LETTERHEAD]



                              April 1, 2005



Dear Stockholder:

     You are  cordially  invited to attend the  annual  meeting of  stockholders
which will be held at The  Chattanoogan,  1201 South Broad Street,  Chattanooga,
Tennessee, on Monday, May 9, 2005 at 4:00 p.m. (EDT).

     The Notice and Proxy  Statement  on the  following  pages  contain  details
concerning  the business to come before the meeting.  Management  will report on
current  operations and there will be an opportunity  for discussion  concerning
the  Company and its  activities.  Please sign and return your proxy card in the
enclosed  envelope to ensure that your shares will be  represented  and voted at
the  meeting  even if you  cannot  attend.  You are urged to sign and return the
enclosed proxy card even if you plan to attend the meeting.

     I look  forward to  personally  meeting  all  stockholders  who are able to
attend.

                            Sincerely,

                            /s/ Charles B. Lebovitz

                            Chairman of the Board and
                            Chief Executive Officer






                        CBL & ASSOCIATES PROPERTIES, INC.

                    NOTICE OF ANNUAL MEETING OF STOCKHOLDERS
                                   May 9, 2005



NOTICE  IS  HEREBY  GIVEN  that the  Annual  Meeting  of  Stockholders  of CBL &
Associates  Properties,  Inc., a Delaware  corporation (the "Company"),  will be
held at The Chattanoogan,  1201 South Broad Street,  Chattanooga,  Tennessee, on
Monday, May 9, 2005 at 4:00 p.m. (EDT) for the following purposes:

1.   To  re-elect  four  directors  to serve for a term of three years and until
     their respective successors are elected and qualified;

2.   To act upon a proposal to approve an amendment to the Company's Amended and
     Restated  Certificate of Incorporation to increase the number of authorized
     shares of the Company's Common Stock (the "Common  Stock"),  par value $.01
     per share, from 95,000,000 to 180,000,000 shares;

3.   To act upon a proposal to ratify the  selection of Deloitte & Touche LLP as
     the independent registered public accountants for the Company's fiscal year
     ending December 31, 2005; and

4.   To consider and act upon any other  matters  which may properly come before
     the meeting or any adjournment thereof.

     In accordance  with the  provisions of the Company's  Bylaws,  the Board of
Directors  has fixed the close of business on March 14, 2005, as the record date
for the determination of the stockholders entitled to notice of, and to vote at,
the Annual Meeting.

     Your attention is directed to the accompanying Proxy Statement.

     Whether or not you plan to attend the  meeting,  we urge you to sign,  date
and promptly return the enclosed Proxy in order to ensure representation of your
shares. An addressed  envelope for which no postage is required if mailed in the
United  States is  enclosed  for that  purpose.  Returning  your  Proxy will not
prevent  you from  voting  your shares at the meeting if you desire to do so, as
your Proxy is revocable at your option.

                                   By Order of the Board of Directors

                                   /s/ Stephen D. Lebovitz

                                   President and Secretary

Chattanooga, Tennessee
April 1, 2005



                                 PROXY STATEMENT

                        CBL & ASSOCIATES PROPERTIES, INC.
                            2030 Hamilton Place Blvd.
                                    Suite 500
                                   CBL Center
                          Chattanooga, Tennessee 37421

                         ANNUAL MEETING OF STOCKHOLDERS
                                   May 9, 2005


                                     PROXIES

     The enclosed  proxy is solicited by and on behalf of the Board of Directors
of CBL & Associates  Properties,  Inc., a Delaware  corporation (the "Company"),
for use at the annual  meeting of  stockholders  (the  "Annual  Meeting") of the
Company to be held at The  Chattanoogan,  1201 South Broad Street,  Chattanooga,
Tennessee,  on  Monday,  May 9,  2005,  at 4:00  p.m.  (EDT)  and at any and all
postponements  or  adjournments  thereof.  Any proxy given may be revoked at any
time before it is voted by filing with the  Secretary  of the Company  either an
instrument  revoking  it or a duly  executed  proxy  bearing a later  date.  All
expenses of the  solicitation of proxies for the Annual  Meeting,  including the
cost of mailing,  will be borne by the Company.  In addition to  solicitation by
mail,  officers and regular  employees  of the Company may solicit  proxies from
stockholders by telephone,  telegram or personal  interview but will not receive
additional  compensation for such services.  The Company also intends to request
persons holding stock in their name or custody,  or in the name of nominees,  to
send proxy materials to their principals and request authority for the execution
of the proxies.  The Company  will  reimburse  such  persons for the  associated
expense. Although the Company presently does not intend to retain a solicitor to
assist in the  solicitation of proxies,  the Company may retain a paid solicitor
if it becomes  necessary to obtain the required  vote. If the Company  elects to
retain  such a paid  solicitor,  the Company  anticipates  that the cost of such
services shall be approximately $25,000.

     The Company  anticipates  mailing proxy materials and the Annual Report for
the Company's fiscal year ended December 31, 2004, on or about April 1, 2005, to
stockholders of record as of March 14, 2005.


                                VOTING SECURITIES

Record Date and Shares Entitled to Vote

     Only  stockholders of record at the close of business on March 14, 2005 are
entitled  to vote on the  matters to be  presented  at the Annual  Meeting.  The
number  of shares of the  Company's  Common  Stock,  par value  $.01 per  share,
outstanding on such date and entitled to vote was 31,399,138 shares.

Quorum Requirements

     The  presence  in person or by proxy of holders of record of a majority  of
the  outstanding  shares of Common  Stock is  required  for a quorum to transact
business at the Annual Meeting with respect to those matters requiring  approval
by the  holders of Common  Stock,  but if a quorum  should not be  present,  the
Annual Meeting may be adjourned from time to time until a quorum is obtained.


                                       1


Votes Necessary to Approve the Proposals

     The  affirmative  vote of the holders of a  plurality  of the shares of the
Common Stock present or  represented  at the Annual  Meeting is required for the
election of directors.  The approval of the proposed  amendment to the Company's
Certificate of Incorporation will require the affirmative vote of the holders of
a majority  of the  Company's  issued and  outstanding  shares of Common  Stock,
voting as a class.  The  affirmative  vote of the  holders of a majority  of the
shares of Common Stock present or  represented at the Annual Meeting is required
for the  ratification  of the selection of the independent  public  accountants.
Each share of Common Stock is entitled to one vote with respect to those matters
upon which such share is to be voted, no cumulative voting rights are authorized
and dissenters' rights are not applicable to these matters.

Voting Procedures

     A proxy  card is being  mailed to each  holder  of shares of the  Company's
Common  Stock for voting  with  respect to each  stockholder's  shares of Common
Stock.  Stockholders  holding shares of Common Stock should  complete,  sign and
return to the Company the proxy card.

     Abstentions and broker non-votes  (shares held by a broker or nominee which
are represented at the Annual Meeting,  but with respect to which such broker or
nominee does not have discretionary  authority to vote on a particular proposal)
will be counted as present at the Annual  Meeting for the purpose of determining
whether or not a quorum exists.  Abstentions and broker non-votes will generally
not be  counted  for any other  purpose,  except  that  abstentions  and  broker
non-votes,  other than with respect to the election of directors, will generally
have the same effect as negative votes.

     Unless contrary  instructions are indicated on the accompanying  proxy, the
shares represented  thereby will be voted in accordance with the recommendations
of the Board of Directors.

ELECTION OF DIRECTORS

     The Board of  Directors  currently  consists of nine  members  divided into
three  classes  (having  two,  three  and four  members,  respectively)  serving
staggered three-year terms. Under the Company's Amended and Restated Certificate
of Incorporation (the "Certificate of  Incorporation")  and Amended and Restated
Bylaws  (the  "Bylaws"),  a  majority  of the  directors  must  be  unaffiliated
("Independent  Directors")  with the Company and its predecessor  entity,  CBL &
Associates, Inc. and its affiliates ("CBL's Predecessor"). Each year the term of
office of one class of directors expires.

     Upon the  recommendation of the Company's  Nominating/Corporate  Governance
Committee,  the Board of  Directors  intends to present for action at the Annual
Meeting the  re-election  of Charles B.  Lebovitz,  Claude M.  Ballard,  Gary L.
Bryenton and Leo Fields, whose present terms expire in 2005, to serve for a term
of three years and until their  successors  are duly elected and shall  qualify.
Mr.  Lebovitz  is  Chairman  of the  Board and Chief  Executive  Officer  of the
Company. Mr. Ballard, Mr. Bryenton and Mr. Fields are three of the Company's six
Independent  Directors.  Mr.  Ballard  currently  serves as the  Chairman of the
Company's  Compensation  Committee  and as a member of the  Company's  Audit and
Nominating/Corporate Governance Committees, Mr. Bryenton currently serves as the
Chairman of the  Company's  Nominating/Corporate  Governance  Committee and as a
member of the Company's  Audit  Committee,  and Mr. Fields serves as a member of
the Company's Executive Committee.

     Unless authority to vote for such directors is withheld, the enclosed proxy
will be voted for such  persons,  except that the persons  designated as proxies
reserve  discretion to cast their votes for other  persons in the  unanticipated
event that any of such nominees is unable or declines to serve.

                                       2

                                    Nominees

     Set forth below is information with respect to the nominees for election:




Name                          Age      Current Position*                       
------------------------- ------------ ----------------------------------------
                                 
Charles B. Lebovitz            68      Chairman of the Board of Directors and
                                       Chief Executive Officer

------------------------- ------------ ----------------------------------------
Claude M. Ballard              75      Director

------------------------- ------------ ----------------------------------------
Leo Fields                     76      Director

------------------------- ------------ ----------------------------------------
Gary L. Bryenton               65      Director
------------------------- ------------ ----------------------------------------


*    The position shown  represents the  individual's  position with the Company
     and with CBL & Associates  Management,  Inc., a Delaware  corporation  (the
     "Management Company"),  through which the Company's property management and
     development activities are conducted.



     CHARLES B. LEBOVITZ has served as Chairman of the Board and Chief Executive
Officer of the Company since the  completion of its initial  public  offering in
November  1993  and is  Chairman  of the  Executive  Committee  of the  Board of
Directors.  Mr.  Lebovitz also served as President of the Company until February
1999.  Prior to the Company's  formation,  he served in a similar  capacity with
CBL's Predecessor. Mr. Lebovitz has been involved in shopping center development
since 1961 when he joined his family's development  business. In 1970, he became
affiliated  with Arlen Realty & Development  Corp.  ("Arlen") where he served as
President of Arlen's  shopping center  division,  and, in 1978, he founded CBL's
Predecessor  together with his associates (the "Associates"),  including John N.
Foy and Ben S. Landress. Mr. Lebovitz is an Advisory Director of First Tennessee
Bank,  N.A.,  Chattanooga,  Tennessee and a National Vice Chairman of the United
Jewish Appeal.  Mr. Lebovitz has previously served as a Trustee,  Vice President
(Southern  Division)  and  Chairman of the ICSC.  He is the father of Stephen D.
Lebovitz and Michael I. Lebovitz, executive officers of the Company, and Alan L.
Lebovitz, one of the Company's vice-presidents.

     CLAUDE M.  BALLARD,  CRE,  M.A.I.  has served as a Director  of the Company
since the  completion  of its initial  public  offering in November  1993 and is
Chairman  of  the  Compensation   Committee  and  a  member  of  the  Audit  and
Nominating/Corporate  Governance  Committees  of the  Board  of  Directors.  Mr.
Ballard has served as a general partner,  limited partner and senior  consultant
of  Goldman  Sachs & Co.  and as a Senior  Vice  President  in the  real  estate
division  of the  Prudential  Insurance  Company of America.  He is  currently a
Director of Quapaw  Council,  Boy Scouts of  America,  Horizon  Hotel Corp.  and
Research  Solutions,  Inc. Mr.  Ballard is a member of the Board of Directors of
St. Vincent's Infirmary,  Little Rock, Arkansas.  In 1999, the United States Tax
Court determined that Mr. Ballard had underpaid  federal taxes and underreported
income  over a period of years  ending in 1989 as  result  of  participation  in
transactions  found  by  the  Tax  Court  to  have  involved  serious  financial
improprieties.  (Investment Research Associates, Ltd. and Subsidiaries, et al v.
Commissioner of Internal  Revenue Service,  T.C. Memo 1999-407).  Because of the
nature of the  transactions,  the Tax Court upheld the  imposition  of penalties
under Internal Revenue Code Section 6663 and its  predecessors,  and Mr. Ballard
has paid the taxes,  penalties and interest at issue.  The Tax Court's  decision
was upheld by the United  States  Court of Appeals for the  Eleventh  Circuit on
February 13, 2003.  Upon further appeal of the case to the United States Supreme
Court (the  "Court"),  the Court,  by opinion dated March 7, 2005,  reversed the
decision of the  Eleventh  Circuit  Court of Appeals and  remanded  the case for
further proceedings consistent with the Court's decision. As of the date of this
proxy  statement,  the Company  has no  information  as to whether the  Internal
Revenue Service will pursue a retrial of the case.

                                       3



     LEO FIELDS has served as a Director of the Company since the  completion of
its initial  public  offering in November  1993 and is a member of the Executive
Committee of the Board of  Directors.  Mr. Fields is  Co-Chairman  of Weisberg &
Fields,  Inc., an investment advisory firm he started in 1991. From 1984 through
1991, Mr. Fields directed Leo Fields  Interests,  a private  investment firm. He
was  affiliated  with Zale  Corporation  from 1947 until his retirement in 1984,
serving,  from 1981 to 1984, as Vice  Chairman and a member of Zale's  Executive
Committee.  He is a Trustee of the Dallas  Home for the  Jewish  Aged  Endowment
Foundation and serves on the Executive  Committee of Legacy Senior  Communities,
Inc. Mr. Fields is also a Director of the M. B. and Edna Zale Foundation.

     GARY L.  BRYENTON  joined the Company as a Director on January 31, 2001, in
accordance  with the  terms  of the  Company's  acquisition  of a  portfolio  of
properties from Jacobs Realty Investors Limited Partnership,  a Delaware limited
partnership  ("JRI") and certain of its  affiliates  and partners  (collectively
referred  to herein as the  "Jacobs  Group" and the  acquisition  is referred to
herein as the "Jacobs  Acquisition").  Mr. Bryenton is Chairman of the Companys'
Nominating/Corporate Governance Committee and a member of the Audit Committee of
the Board of  Directors.  Mr.  Bryenton  is a Senior  Partner of the law firm of
Baker & Hostetler LLP and has formerly  served as the firm's  Executive  Partner
and Chief  Operating  Officer.  He currently  serves as Chairman of the Board of
Trustees of Heidelberg  College and is a member of the Boards of Trustees of the
Cleveland  Orchestra,  the  Rock  and  Roll  Hall of  Fame  and  Museum  and the
Rutherford B. Hayes Presidential Center.



                        THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS RECOMMENDS
                        A VOTE "FOR" THE ELECTION OF THE
                           FOUR DIRECTORS NAMED ABOVE


                                       4


Directors and Executive Officers

     Set forth below is information  with respect to the directors and executive
officers of the Company (other than Charles B. Lebovitz, Claude M. Ballard, Gary
L. Bryenton and Leo Fields):





                                  Term
Name                           Expires (1)       Age      Current Position(2)
----------------------------- -------------- ------------ ---------------------------------------------------

                                                 
Stephen D. Lebovitz               2007           44       Director, President and Secretary
----------------------------- -------------- ------------ ---------------------------------------------------

John N. Foy                       2006           61       Vice Chairman of the Board of Directors, Chief
                                                          Financial Officer and Treasurer
----------------------------- -------------- ------------ ---------------------------------------------------

Martin J. Cleary                  2006           69       Director
----------------------------- -------------- ------------ ---------------------------------------------------

Winston W. Walker                 2007           61       Director
----------------------------- -------------- ------------ ---------------------------------------------------

Matthew S. Dominski               2006           50       Director
----------------------------- -------------- ------------ ---------------------------------------------------

Ben S. Landress                    --            77       Executive Vice President - Management
----------------------------- -------------- ------------ ---------------------------------------------------

Ronald L. Fullam                   --            62       Senior Vice President - Development
----------------------------- -------------- ------------ ---------------------------------------------------

Ronald S. Gimple                   --            65       Senior Vice President and General Counsel
----------------------------- -------------- ------------ ---------------------------------------------------

Michael I. Lebovitz                --            41       Senior Vice President - Mall Projects
----------------------------- -------------- ------------ ---------------------------------------------------

Charles H. May, II                 --            61       Senior Vice President - Development
----------------------------- -------------- ------------ ---------------------------------------------------

Farzana K. Mitchell                --            53       Senior Vice President - Finance
----------------------------- -------------- ------------ ---------------------------------------------------

Jerry L. Sink                      --            54       Senior Vice President - Mall Management
----------------------------- -------------- ------------ ---------------------------------------------------

Eric P. Snyder                     --            55       Senior Vice President and Director of Corporate
                                                          Leasing
----------------------------- -------------- ------------ ---------------------------------------------------

Augustus N. Stephas                --            62       Senior Vice President - Accounting and Controller
----------------------------- -------------- ------------ ---------------------------------------------------

R. Stephen Tingle                  --            59       Senior Vice President - Community Center
                                                          Development
----------------------------- -------------- ------------ ---------------------------------------------------

Charles W.A. Willett, Jr.          --            55       Senior Vice President - Real Estate Finance
----------------------------- -------------- ------------ ---------------------------------------------------


(1)  Indicates expiration of term as a director.

(2)  The position shown  represents the  individual's  position with the Company
     and with the Management Company.





                                       5


     STEPHEN D.  LEBOVITZ has served as President  and  Secretary of the Company
since February 1999 and as a Director of the Company since the completion of its
initial  public  offering in November 1993.  Since joining CBL's  Predecessor in
1988,   Mr.   Lebovitz   has  also  served  as   Executive   Vice   President  -
Development/Acquisitions,  Executive Vice  President - Development,  Senior Vice
President - New England Office and as Senior Vice  President - Community  Center
Development and Treasurer of the Company. Before joining CBL's Predecessor,  Mr.
Lebovitz was affiliated with Goldman,  Sachs & Co. from 1984 to 1986. He is past
president of the Boston Jewish Family and  Children's  Service,  a member of the
Board of Directors of the Combined Jewish Philanthropic,  Boston,  Massachusetts
and a member of the Board of Directors of the Children's Hospital Trust, Boston,
Massachusetts.   He  is  a  Trustee  and   Divisional   Vice  President  of  the
International Council of Shopping Centers ("ICSC"). Stephen D. Lebovitz is a son
of  Charles  B.  Lebovitz  and a brother  of  Michael  I.  Lebovitz  and Alan L.
Lebovitz.

     JOHN N. FOY has  served  as Vice  Chairman  of the Board of  Directors  and
Treasurer  of the  Company  since  February  1999 and as a  Director  and  Chief
Financial  Officer of the Company  since the  completion  of its initial  public
offering in November  1993.  Until  February  1999, he served as Executive  Vice
President - Finance and  Secretary  of the  Company.  Mr. Foy is a member of the
Executive Committee of the Board of Directors. Prior to the Company's formation,
he served in similar executive  capacities with CBL's  Predecessor.  Mr. Foy has
been  involved in the  shopping  center  industry  since 1968 when he joined the
Lebovitz  family's  shopping  center  development  business.  In 1970, he became
affiliated  with the shopping  center  division of Arlen,  and, in 1978,  joined
Charles B. Lebovitz as an Associate in establishing CBL's  Predecessor.  Mr. Foy
served as Chairman of the Board of First  Fidelity  Savings Bank in  Crossville,
Tennessee  from  December 1985 until April 1994.  Mr. Foy currently  serves as a
member of the Advisory Board of AmSouth Bank of Chattanooga,  Tennessee and as a
Director and Vice Chairman of the Board of Chattanooga  Neighborhood Enterprise,
a non-profit organization based in Chattanooga,  Tennessee.  Mr. Foy is a former
member of the Board of  Governors  of the  National  Association  of Real Estate
Investment Trusts ("NAREIT").

     MARTIN J. CLEARY  joined the Company as  Director on January 31,  2001,  in
accordance with the terms of the Jacobs  Acquisition.  Mr. Cleary is a member of
the Company's  Compensation  Committee.  Mr. Cleary is the former  President and
Chief Operating  Officer of The Richard E. Jacobs Group,  Inc. He is currently a
Director and member of the Human Resources  Committee of Guardian Life Insurance
Company  and a  Director  and  member of the  Audit  Committee  of the  Lamson &
Sessions Company.  Mr. Cleary is also an ex-officio  Trustee and former Chairman
of the ICSC.

     MATTHEW S.  DOMINSKI  joined the Company as a Director on February 2, 2005,
when he was appointed to the Board of Directors to fill the  un-expired  term of
William J.  Poorvu,  who  retired  from the  Company's  Board in July 2004.  Mr.
Dominski is joint-owner of Polaris Capital, LLC, a Chicago,  Illinois based real
estate  investment  firm.  From 1993 through 2000, Mr.  Dominski served as Chief
Executive Officer of Urban Shopping Centers ("Urban"). Urban was formerly one of
the largest regional mall property companies in United States and was a publicly
traded  real  estate  investment  trust  listed on the New York  Stock  Exchange
("NYSE") and the Chicago  Exchange.  Following  the purchase of Urban by Rodamco
North America in 2000, Mr. Dominski  served as Urban's  President until 2002. In
2003,  Mr.  Dominski  formed  Polaris  Capital,  LLC. From 1998 until 2004,  Mr.
Dominski served as a member of the Board of Trustees of the ICSC.

     WINSTON  W.  WALKER  has  served as a  Director  of the  Company  since the
completion of its initial  public  offering in November  1993. He is a member of
the Compensation and Nominating/Corporate  Governance Committees of the Board of
Directors and is Chairman of the Company's Audit Committee. Mr. Walker served as
President and Chief Executive  Officer of Provident Life and Accident  Insurance
Company of America  ("Provident") from 1987 until October 1, 1993, and served in
various  other  capacities  with  Provident  from 1974 to 1987.  Mr. Walker is a
Director,  a member of the Audit  Committee  and  Chairman  of the  Compensation
Committee of American Campus Communities,  Inc. of Austin,  Texas, a real estate
investment trust listed on the NYSE.

                                       6


     BEN S.  LANDRESS  serves as Executive  Vice  President - Management  of the
Company.  He has held that position since January 1997.  Prior to that time, Mr.
Landress  served as Senior Vice  President - Management  and prior  thereto,  he
served in a similar  capacity with CBL's  Predecessor.  Mr. Landress directs the
day-to-day management of the Company's properties and is responsible for general
corporate administration.  Mr. Landress has been involved in the shopping center
business since 1961 when he joined the Lebovitz family's  development  business.
In 1970, he became  affiliated with Arlen's  shopping center  division,  and, in
1978, joined Mr. Lebovitz as an Associate in establishing CBL's Predecessor.

     RONALD L. FULLAM  serves as Senior  Vice  President  -  Development  of the
Company.  He has held that position since January 1997.  Prior to that time, Mr.
Fullam served as Vice President - Development of the Company.  Mr. Fullam joined
Arlen's shopping center development division as a project manager in August 1977
and CBL's Predecessor as a Vice President upon its formation in 1978.

     RONALD S. GIMPLE serves as Senior Vice President and General Counsel of the
Company.  He has held these  positions since January 1997. Mr. Gimple joined the
Company in 1994 as Vice President -  Development.  Prior to joining the Company,
Mr. Gimple served as a Vice  President of The Edward J.  DeBartolo  Corporation,
from 1987 to 1994,  and,  prior to 1987, he served as General  Counsel of Petrie
Store Corporation,  Vice President and Real Estate Counsel of BATUS Retail Group
and Vice President and General Counsel of General Growth Company.

     MICHAEL I. LEBOVITZ  serves as Senior Vice President - Mall Projects of the
Company.  He has held that position since January 1997.  Prior to that time, Mr.
Lebovitz served as Vice President - Development and as a project manager for the
Company.  Mr. Lebovitz joined CBL's Predecessor in 1988 as a project manager for
CoolSprings Galleria in Nashville, Tennessee, and was promoted to Vice President
in 1993.  Prior to joining CBL's  Predecessor,  he was affiliated  with Goldman,
Sachs & Co. from 1986 to 1988. He is the immediate  past President of the Jewish
Community Federation of Greater Chattanooga,  serves as a Board Member of United
Jewish  Communities and is a Board Member of the Chattanooga United Way. Michael
I. Lebovitz is a son of Charles B. Lebovitz and a brother of Stephen D. Lebovitz
and Alan L. Lebovitz.

     CHARLES H. MAY, II serves as a Senior Vice  President - Development  of the
Company.  Mr. May joined the Company in June 2003. Prior to joining the Company,
he served as Vice  President - Real Estate  (2002 - 2003) and Senior  Director -
Real Estate (1994 - 2002), for Sears Roebuck & Co. Prior to 1994, Mr. May served
in various capacities,  including Vice President,  Secretary and General Counsel
and Senior Vice President - Development,  with Homart  Development and served as
Vice President of Coldwell  Banker  Commercial  Real Estate Group.  Mr. May is a
member of the ICSC and the Urban Land Institute.

     FARZANA  K.  MITCHELL  serves as Senior  Vice  President  - Finance  of the
Company.  She has held that position since September 2000.  Prior to joining the
Company,  Ms.  Mitchell was an officer of Lend Lease Real Estate  Investments in
Atlanta,  Georgia (the successor of Equitable Real Estate Investment Management,
Inc.  ("Equitable")).  During  her  service  with  Equitable,  she held  various
positions from 1982 to 2000 and she served as Deputy  Portfolio  Manager for the
Equitable's  portfolio of real estate  mortgages from 1995 to 2000. From 1976 to
1982, Ms. Mitchell served as Assistant Treasurer of IRT Property Company, a real
estate investment trust. Ms. Mitchell is a certified public accountant, licensed
in the state of Georgia.

     JERRY L. SINK serves as Senior Vice  President  - Mall  Management  for the
Company.  He has held that position since February 1998. Prior to that time, Mr.
Sink had served as Vice President - Mall Management since joining the Company in
July 1993. Mr. Sink has served as Vice President of Retail Asset  Management for
Equitable Real Estate,  Chicago,  Illinois,  from January 1988 to June 1993 and,
prior to January 1988, he was affiliated with General Growth Companies,  Inc. as
Vice President of Management. Mr. Sink holds the designation of Senior Certified
Shopping Center Manager ("SCSM") as recognized by the ICSC.


                                       7

     ERIC P. SNYDER  serves as Senior Vice  President  and Director of Corporate
Leasing for the Company.  He has held these  positions  since January 1997.  Mr.
Snyder joined CBL's Predecessor as a project manager in 1978 and was promoted to
Vice President in 1984 and to Vice  President and Director of Corporate  Leasing
in 1992.  From 1974 to 1978, Mr. Snyder was a leasing agent and project  manager
for Arlen's shopping centers.

     AUGUSTUS N.  STEPHAS  serves as Senior  Vice  President  -  Accounting  and
Controller for the Company.  He has held these positions since January 1997. Mr.
Stephas joined CBL's  Predecessor in July 1978 as Controller and was promoted to
Vice President in 1984.  From 1970 to 1978, Mr. Stephas was affiliated  with the
shopping  center  division of Arlen,  first as accountant and later as assistant
controller.

     R.  STEPHEN  TINGLE  serves as Senior Vice  President  -  Community  Center
Development for the Company. He has held that position since January 2000. Prior
to that time,  Mr.  Tingle  served as Vice  President  and Director of Community
Center Development - Chattanooga  Office. Mr. Tingle joined CBL's Predecessor in
1986 as a project manager for community and  neighborhood  shopping  centers and
was promoted to Vice President of  Development  in 1988.  From 1978 to 1986, Mr.
Tingle engaged in the practice of law.

     CHARLES W.A.  WILLETT,  JR.  serves as Senior Vice  President - Real Estate
Finance for the Company.  He has held that  position  since  January  2002.  Mr.
Willett was  promoted to Vice  President - Real Estate  Finance in 1996 and held
that  position  until his  promotion to Senior Vice  President as stated  above.
Prior to 1996, Mr. Willett  participated in the Company's finance department and
he  served in a similar  capacity  with  CBL's  Predecessor  prior to 1993.  Mr.
Willett joined CBL's  Predecessor  in 1978 and prior thereto,  he was affiliated
with Arlen in its finance and accounting departments.

Operation of the Company's Business

     The  Company  operates  through  its  two  wholly-owned  subsidiaries,  CBL
Holdings I, Inc., a Delaware  corporation  ("CBL  Holdings I"), and CBL Holdings
II, Inc., a Delaware  corporation  ("CBL Holdings  II").  Through the referenced
subsidiaries,  the Company  currently holds a 1.6% sole general partner interest
and a 53.4% limited partner interest in CBL & Associates Limited Partnership,  a
Delaware  limited  partnership  (the  "Operating  Partnership").   See  "Certain
Relationships and Related Transactions - Operating  Partnership  Agreement;  CBL
Rights".  The Company  conducts  substantially  all of its business  through the
Operating Partnership.

Certain Terms of Jacobs Acquisition

     In connection with the Jacobs Acquisition, the Company agreed to expand its
Board of Directors  from seven to nine members and to nominate two  designees of
JRI as  members  of the  Board.  Martin  J.  Cleary  and Gary L.  Bryenton  were
appointed  to the Board as these  initial  designees.  JRI will  continue  to be
entitled to nominate  two Board  members  until JRI,  together  with  Richard E.
Jacobs and certain  members of his family and certain  trusts for the benefit of
the families of Richard E. Jacobs and David H. Jacobs (collectively, the "Jacobs
Persons"),  as a group,  beneficially own fewer than 6.78 million special common
units  in the  Operating  Partnership  ("SCUs")  and  shares  of  Common  Stock,
following which JRI will be entitled to nominate only one Board member. JRI will
no longer be entitled to nominate any Board members if the Jacobs Persons,  as a
group, beneficially own fewer than 3.34 million SCUs and shares of Common Stock.
CBL's Predecessor and certain of the Company's executive officers have agreed to
vote their shares in favor of JRI's designees  until the twelfth  anniversary of
the Jacobs Acquisition. The Jacobs Persons, together with Martin J. Cleary, have
agreed to a 12-year standstill period during which they will not seek to acquire
control  of the  Company  and will not  participate  in a group  which  seeks to
acquire such control.  The Jacobs Persons,  together with Martin J. Cleary, also
agreed until the twelfth  anniversary  of the Jacobs  Acquisition  to vote their
shares  in  favor  of the  election  of the  Board's  nominees  to the  Board of
Directors who are running unopposed and uncontested.

                                       8


Corporate Governance Matters

     Overview.  The Board of  Directors  has  adopted  guidelines  on  corporate
governance (including director independence criteria), committee charters, and a
code of  business  conduct  and ethics  setting  forth the  Company's  corporate
governance  principles  and  practices.  These  documents can be accessed in the
"Investor Relations - Corporate  Governance" section of the Company's website at
cblproperties.com or by directing a written request for copies to the Company at
CBL & Associates  Properties,  Inc., CBL Center,  Suite 500, 2030 Hamilton Place
Boulevard,  Chattanooga,  Tennessee 37421-6000,  Attention: Director of Investor
Relations.

     Director Independence. The Board has adopted a set of director independence
standards ("Director Independence Standards") for evaluating the independence of
each of the Directors in accordance with the  requirements of the Securities and
Exchange Commission ("SEC") and of the NYSE corporate governance  standards.  In
March 2005,  the Board  undertook  its annual  review of  Director  independence
pursuant  to  NYSE  Rule  303A.02(a)  and  pursuant  to the  Company's  Director
Independence  Standards.  During this process,  the Board  reviewed  whether any
Director has any relationship with the Company's  independent  registered public
accountants  that would preclude  independence  under SEC and NYSE rules, or any
material relationship with the Company (either directly or as a partner, member,
shareholder  or  officer of an  organization  that has a  relationship  with the
Company) which could (directly or indirectly)  materially  impact the ability of
such  director or nominee to exert his  independent  judgment  and analysis as a
member  of the  Board.  As a result  of this  review,  the  Board  affirmatively
determined that six of the Company's nine Directors were  independent  under the
standards  of the  SEC and  NYSE  and as set  forth  in the  Company's  Director
Independence  Standards.  Messrs. Charles B. Lebovitz,  Stephen D. Lebovitz, and
John N. Foy,  who are  executive  officers of the Company and  employees  of the
Management  Company,  were not deemed  independent.  In making the  independence
determinations with respect to the other six directors, the Board considered the
following   matters  and  determined  that  they  did  not  interfere  with  the
independence  of the  directors in question:  (i) with respect to Mr. Cleary and
Mr. Bryenton, the Company's contractual commitments in connection with the terms
of the  Jacobs  Acquisition  as  described  above and (ii) with  respect  to Mr.
Fields,  the  fact  that he is  Co-Chairman  of  Weisberg  &  Fields,  Inc.,  an
investment  advisory firm that provides certain advisory services,  from time to
time,  to Charles B.  Lebovitz  and members of his family.  The full text of the
Director Independence Standards is as follows:

         A. GENERAL INDEPENDENCE REQUIREMENTS

                  In determining whether or not any director or nominee for
         director may be considered "independent", the Board shall apply the
         following criteria:

                  (1) No director or nominee shall be deemed "independent"
         unless the Board affirmatively determines that the director or nominee
         satisfies the requirements stated herein and has no material
         relationship with the Company (either directly or as a partner, member,
         shareholder or officer of an organization that has a relationship with
         the Company). For purposes of this test, a relationship with the
         Company shall be deemed to be a "material" relationship which precludes
         a determination that a director or nominee is independent if, in the
         opinion of the Board and in light of all the relevant facts and
         circumstances, such relationship (directly or indirectly) could
         materially impact the ability of such director or nominee to exert his
         or her independent judgment and analysis as a member of the Board. For
         purposes hereof, ownership of the Company's stock (even in a
         significant amount) or ownership of securities convertible to the
         Company's stock shall not be viewed, in and of themselves, as a bar to
         a finding of independence. To assist in this determination, the Company
         shall periodically (at least annually and prior to any nominee becoming
         a director for his or her initial term as a director) deliver to the
         directors and/or nominees for directorships a Directors and Officers
         Questionnaire designed to elicit information from such director or
         nominee as to material relationships and other information relative to
         these Independence Standards; and


                                       9



                  (2) In addition, to be considered "independent," a director or
         nominee must satisfy all other independence criteria for directors of a
         publicly traded company which are now, or may be hereafter, set forth
         in applicable federal statutes and rules promulgated by the SEC, and in
         the related listing standards promulgated by the NYSE and any other
         exchange upon which the Company's stock may be listed, as such statutes
         and/or rules and listing standards may be revised or amended from time
         to time.


         B. ADDITIONAL AUDIT COMMITTEE INDEPENDENCE REQUIREMENTS

                  In determining whether or not any director or nominee
         satisfies the "independence" requirement for Audit Committee
         membership, in addition to satisfying all of the requirements set forth
         in Paragraph A hereof, such director also must satisfy the following:

         Such director or nominee must satisfy all additional requirements for
         the independence of audit committee members of publicly traded
         companies which are now, or may be hereafter, set forth in applicable
         federal statutes and rules promulgated by the SEC, and in the related
         listing standards promulgated by the NYSE and any other exchange upon
         which the Company's stock may be listed, as such statutes and/or rules
         and listing standards may be revised or amended from time to time.


     The Director Independence  Standards also are included as an exhibit to the
Company's  guidelines  on  corporate  governance,  which  can  be  found  in the
"Investor Relations - Corporate  Governance" section of the Company's website at
cblproperties.com.  A copy may also be obtained  upon request from the Company's
Director of Investor Relations at the address provided above.

     Executive Sessions for Independent  Directors.  In accordance with the NYSE
Rule 303A.03,  the  Independent  Directors of the Company will meet from time to
time in scheduled executive sessions without management participation. The Board
of Directors  has  designated  Winston W. Walker as lead  Independent  Director,
solely for the purpose of chairing these  executive  sessions.  The  Independent
Directors met in four executive sessions during 2004.

     Communicating  with the Board of Directors.  The Company provides a process
for  stockholders to send  communications  to the Board or any of the Directors.
Stockholders may send written communication to the Board or any of the Directors
c/o the Corporate Secretary,  CBL & Associates  Properties,  Inc., 2030 Hamilton
Place Blvd.,  Suite 500, CBL Center,  Chattanooga,  Tennessee,  37421-6000.  All
communications  will  be  compiled  by the  Company's  Corporate  Secretary  and
submitted to the Board or the individual Directors(s) to whom such communication
is addressed.  It is the Company's  policy that all Directors  attend the Annual
Meeting unless they are prevented from attending due to scheduling  conflicts or
important personal or business reasons;  provided,  however, it is the Company's
policy that a majority of the  Directors  (including a majority of the Company's
Independent  Directors)  attend  each  Annual  Meeting.  All  of  the  Company's
then-incumbent Directors attended the 2004 Annual Meeting of Stockholders.

     Code of Business  Conduct and Ethics.  The Board has adopted an Amended and
Restated  Code of Business  Conduct and Ethics (the "Code of Business  Conduct")
that applies to all Directors,  officers and employees,  including the Company's
principal   executive  officer,   principal   financial  officer  and  principal
accounting  officer.  The Code of Business Conduct is available in the "Investor
Relations  -  Corporate   Governance"   section  of  the  Company's  website  at
cblproperties.com,  or at no charge by written request to the Company's Director
of Investor  Relations at the address provided above. The purpose of the Code of
Business  Conduct is to provide a  codification  of standards that is reasonably
designed to deter wrongdoing and to promote  accountability for and adherence to
the standards of the Code,  including  honest and ethical  conduct;  the ethical
handling  of actual or  apparent  conflicts  of interest  between  personal  and
professional  relationships;  full, fair,  accurate,  timely and  understandable
disclosure  in  the  Company's   filings  with  the  SEC  and  in  other  public
communications  by the Company;  and compliance  with all  applicable  rules and
regulations  that  apply  to the  Company  and to its  Directors,  officers  and
employees.


                                       10


Board of Directors' Meetings and Committees

     The  Board  of  Directors  has  established   standing  Executive,   Audit,
Compensation  and  Nominating/  Corporate  Governance  Committees.  The Board of
Directors met thirteen times and took action by unanimous  written consent three
times during 2004. Each director  attended more than 75% of the aggregate of (i)
the total number of Board  meetings  and (ii)  meetings of Board  committees  on
which the director served at the time during 2004.

     Executive  Committee.  The  Executive  Committee is comprised of Charles B.
Lebovitz  (Chairman),  John N. Foy and Leo Fields.  The Executive  Committee may
exercise  all the powers and  authority of the Board of Directors of the Company
in the  management  of the  business  and affairs of the Company as permitted by
law;  provided,   however,  unless  specifically  authorized  by  the  Board  of
Directors,  the Executive  Committee may not exercise the power and authority of
the Board of Directors with respect to (i) the  declaration  of dividends,  (ii)
issuance of stock, (iii) amendment to the Company's Certificate of Incorporation
or Bylaws,  (iv) filling  vacancies on the Board of  Directors,  (v) approval of
borrowings  in excess  of $40  million  per  transaction  or  series of  related
transactions,  (vi) hiring executive officers, (vii) approval of acquisitions or
dispositions  of property or assets in excess of $40 million per transaction and
(viii) certain  transactions  between the Company and its directors and officers
and  certain  sales  of  real  estate  and   reductions  of  debt  that  produce
disproportionate  tax allocations to CBL's Predecessor pursuant to the Company's
Bylaws. The Executive Committee met four times during 2004.

     Audit  Committee.  The Audit  Committee  is  comprised of Winston W. Walker
(Chairman),  Claude M.  Ballard and Gary L.  Bryenton,  all of whom the Board of
Directors has determined are Independent  Directors pursuant to the independence
requirements of Sections 303A.02 and 303A.07(b) of the listing  standards of the
NYSE as currently applicable. The Audit Committee operates pursuant to a written
amended and  restated  charter  adopted by the Board of Directors on February 3,
2004.  A copy of the  amended  and  restated  charter  is  available  and can be
accessed  in the  "Investor  Relations -  Corporate  Governance"  section of the
Company's website at  cblproperties.com.  The Audit Committee is responsible for
the engagement of independent  public  accountants  and the plans and results of
the audit engagement.  The Audit Committee approves audit and non-audit services
provided  by the  independent  public  accountants  and the fees  therefore  and
reviews the adequacy of the Company's  internal  accounting  controls as well as
the Company's accounting policies and results. The Audit Committee met six times
during 2004.

     Compensation  Committee.  The Compensation Committee is comprised of Claude
M. Ballard  (Chairman),  Winston W. Walker and Martin J. Cleary, all of whom the
Board of Directors has determined are Independent  Directors.  The  Compensation
Committee  operates  pursuant  to a  written  charter  adopted  by the  Board of
Directors  on February 3, 2004.  A copy of the charter is  available  and can be
accessed  in the  "Investor  Relations -  Corporate  Governance"  section of the
Company's website at cblproperties.com.  The Compensation  Committee reviews and
approves compensation programs generally and, specifically,  salaries,  bonuses,
stock awards and stock  options for officers of the Company of the level of vice
president or higher.  The  Compensation  Committee  administers  the Amended and
Restated CBL & Associates  Properties,  Inc.  Stock  Incentive  Plan (the "Stock
Incentive  Plan").  The Compensation  Committee met two times and took action by
unanimous written consent once during 2004.

     Nominating/Corporate   Governance   Committee.   The   Nominating/Corporate
Governance  Committee  is comprised of Gary L.  Bryenton  (Chairman),  Claude M.
Ballard and Winston W. Walker, all of whom the Board of Directors has determined
are  Independent  Directors.  The   Nominating/Corporate   Governance  Committee
operates  pursuant to a written  charter  adopted by the Board of  Directors  on
February 3, 2004. A copy of the charter is available  and can be accessed in the
"Investor Relations - Corporate  Governance" section of the Company's website at
cblproperties.com.  The  Nominating/Corporate  Governance  Committee reviews and
makes recommendations to the Board of Directors regarding various aspects of the
Board of Directors' and the Company's governance  processes and procedures.  The
Nominating/Corporate   Governance  Committee  also  recommends   candidates  for
election  to  fill  vacancies  on  the  Board,  including  consideration  of the
renominations of members whose terms are due to expire. The Nominating/Corporate
Governance  Committee  requires  a majority  of the  Company's  directors  to be
"independent,"  in  accordance  with  applicable  requirements  of the Company's
Certificate  of  Incorporation  and  Bylaws as well as rules of the SEC and NYSE


                                       11


(including  certain  additional  independence  requirements  for Audit Committee
members). A set of uniform Independence Standards,  which was used in making all
such Independent Director determinations, is included in the Company's Corporate
Governance Guildelines, a copy of which is available on the Company's website at
cblproperties.com.  In addition, the  Nominating/Corporate  Governance Committee
considers  the breadth of a  candidate's  business and  professional  skills and
experiences,  diversity of background,  reputation for personal  integrity,  and
ability to devote  sufficient  time to Board  service,  as well as the Company's
needs for particular  skills,  insight and/or talents on the Board of Directors.
For  incumbent   directors  whose  terms  of  office  are  set  to  expire,  the
Nominating/Corporate   Governance  Committee  reviews  such  directors'  overall
service during their term,  including the number of meetings attended,  level of
participation  and  quality of  performance.  With  respect  to the Board  seats
presently  held  by  Mr.  Cleary  and  Mr.  Bryenton,  the  Nominating/Corporate
Governance  Committee  also considers the Company's  contractual  commitments in
connection with the terms of the Jacobs Acquisition, as discussed above.

     The Nominating/Corporate  Governance Committee will consider candidates for
Board of Directors' seats proposed by stockholders. Any such proposals should be
made in writing to CBL & Associates Properties, Inc., 2030 Hamilton Place Blvd.,
Suite 500, CBL Center, Chattanooga,  Tennessee, 37421-6000, Attention: Corporate
Secretary,  and must be received no later than  December 2, 2005, in order to be
considered for the Company's 2006 Annual  Meeting.  In order to be considered by
the  Nominating/Corporate   Governance  Committee,  any  candidate  proposed  by
stockholders  will be  required  to submit  appropriate  biographical  and other
information  equivalent to that required of all other director  candidates.  The
Nominating/Corporate Governance Committee does not intend to alter the manner in
which it evaluates  candidates  on the criteria set forth above based on whether
or not the candidate was recommended by a stockholder.  The Nominating/Corporate
Governance Committee met two times in 2004.

Compensation of Directors

     During 2004,  each  Director  not employed by the Company (a  "Non-Employee
Director")  received  from the Company an annual fee of $25,000.  In addition to
the annual fee, each Non-Employee  Director received a meeting fee of $1,500 for
each Board, Compensation Committee and Nominating/Corporate Governance Committee
meeting  attended  and $500 for  each  telephonic  Board  meeting  attended  and
reimbursement of expenses incurred in attending meetings. In addition,  but with
the  exception  of the  Non-Employee  Director  who was  Chairman  of the  Audit
Committee,  each Non-Employee Director received from the Company a fee of $1,500
for each Audit Committee meeting attended. Each Non-Employee Director serving as
a member of the Executive  Committee and the  Non-Employee  Director  serving as
Chairman of the Audit Committee  received from the Company a monthly fee of $750
in lieu of  meeting  fees for their  participation  on the  Executive  and Audit
Committees in 2004.

     Effective  as of January  1,  2005,  fees to  Non-Employee  Directors  were
increased such that each Non-Employee Director shall receive from the Company an
annual  fee of  $27,500  and a fee of $1,500 for each  Board,  Compensation  and
Nominating/Corporate  Governance  Committee meeting attended.  In addition,  but
with the  exception  of the  Non-Employee  Director who is Chairman of the Audit
Committee,  each  Non-Employee  Director shall receive from the Company a fee of
$1,500 for each Audit Committee  meeting attended.  Each  Non-Employee  Director
shall  receive a fee of $750 for each  telephonic  Board  meeting.  Non-Employee
Directors  also  receive  reimbursement  of any  expenses  incurred in attending
meetings or  participating  in telephonic  meetings.  Effective as of January 1,
2005, each Non-Employee  Director serving as a member of the Executive Committee
shall  receive  from the  Company a monthly  fee of $750,  and the  Non-Employee
Director  serving as Chairman of the Audit Committee shall receive a monthly fee
of $2,000, in lieu of meeting fees for their  participation on the Executive and
Audit Committees.

     Each fiscal year of the Company,  Non-Employee  Directors receive either an
annual  grant of  options  to  purchase  500  shares of Common  Stock  having an
exercise  price equal to 100% of the fair  market  value of the shares of Common
Stock on  December  31 of such  fiscal  year or up to 500  shares of  restricted
Common Stock of the Company.  For 2004, each Non-Employee  Director received 250
shares of  restricted  Common  Stock of the Company with a value (on the date of
grant,  January 3, 2005) of $75.44  per share,  the  average of the high and low


                                       12


trading prices of the Company's  Common Stock as reported on the NYSE on January
3, 2005. The restrictions on shares of Common Stock received by the Non-Employee
Directors are set forth in the Stock Incentive Plan and provide that such shares
may not be transferred during the Non-Employee  Director's term and for one year
thereafter.  Each holder of a Non-Employee  Director option granted  pursuant to
the above-stated  arrangement has the same rights as other holders of options in
the event of a change in control.  Options granted to the Non-Employee Directors
(i) shall have a term of 10 years from date of grant,  (ii) are 100% vested upon
grant, (iii) are non-forfeitable prior to the expiration of the term except upon
the Non-Employee  Director's  conviction for any criminal activity involving the
Company  or,  if   non-exercised,   within  one  year  following  the  date  the
Non-Employee  Director  ceases to be a  director  of the  Company,  and (iv) are
non-transferable.

     In addition, any person who becomes a Non-Employee Director will receive an
initial grant of 500 shares of restricted Common Stock upon joining the Board of
Directors.

                                       13



                    SECURITY OWNERSHIP OF CERTAIN BENEFICIAL
                              OWNERS AND MANAGEMENT

     The following table sets forth  information  available to the Company as of
March 14, 2005, with respect to the ownership of Common Stock by (i) each person
known  to  the  Company  to be the  beneficial  owner  of  more  than  5% of the
outstanding  Common Stock,  (ii) each director of the Company,  (iii) each named
executive  officer of the Company,  as defined below, and (iv) all directors and
executive officers as a group. Except as otherwise indicated,  each person named
below has sole investment and voting power with respect to the securities shown.
Except as  otherwise  indicated,  the  address of each  person is the  Company's
address.



                                                                     Number of         Rule 13d-3      Fully-Diluted
                                                                     Shares(1)       Percentage(1)     Percentage(2)
                                                                    ------------     -------------     -------------
                                                                                                     
FMR Corporation (3) ..........................................        4,401,812          14.02%             7.72%
82 Devonshire St.
Boston, Massachusetts  02109

Cohen & Steers Capital Management, Inc.(4)....................        1,727,348           5.50%             3.03%
757 Third Avenue
New York, New York 10017-2013

Jacobs Realty Investors Limited Partnership, and affiliates(5)       11,922,626          27.52%             7.72%
25425 Center Ridge Road
Cleveland, OH 44145-4122

CBL & Associates, Inc.("CBL's Predecessor")(6)................        8,828,028          22.85%            13.74%

Charles B. Lebovitz(7)........................................        9,800,631          24.80%            15.04%

John N. Foy(8)................................................          546,855           1.72%              *

Stephen D. Lebovitz(9)........................................          528,948           1.66%              *

Eric P. Snyder(10)............................................          178,680            *                 *

Augustus N. Stephas(11).......................................           74,084            *                 *

Martin J. Cleary (12).........................................          222,426            *                 *
619 Ocean Avenue
Sea Girt, New Jersey 08750

Leo Fields(13)................................................           65,650            *                 *
c/o Weisberg & Fields, Inc.
8750 North Central Expressway
Suite 1010
Dallas, Texas 75231-6409

Claude M. Ballard(14).........................................           56,450            *                 *
1421 N. University
Little Rock, Arkansas 72207

Winston W. Walker(15).........................................           38,950            *                 *
13450 N. Kachina Drive
Tucson, Arizona 85737

Matthew S. Dominski(16).......................................              500            *                 *
c/o Polaris Capital LLC
1033 Skokie Boulevard
Suite 660
Northbrook,  Illinois 60062

Gary L. Bryenton(17)..........................................            2,450            *                 *
Baker & Hostetler LLP
3200 National City Center
1900 East 9th Street
Cleveland, Ohio 44114-3485

All executive officers and directors as a group (20 persons)..       11,933,872          29.44%           18.07%

* Less than 1%

                                       14


     (1)  The  Company  conducts  all of its  business  activities  through  the
          Operating  Partnership.  Pursuant to the second  amended and  restated
          partnership  agreement of the Operating Partnership and all subsequent
          amendments   thereto   (collectively,   the   "Operating   Partnership
          Agreement"), each of the partners of the Operating Partnership,  which
          include,  among others,  CBL's  Predecessor,  certain of the executive
          officers  named in this Proxy  Statement and the holders of SCUs,  and
          subject to the terms of SCUs as  outlined  below,  has the right ("CBL
          Rights") to exchange all or a portion of its common  partnership units
          in the Operating  Partnership for shares of Common Stock or their cash
          equivalent,  at  the  Company's  election.   Pursuant  to  the  Jacobs
          Acquisition,  on January 31, 2001 and in March,  2002,  the  Operating
          Partnership  issued to the  Jacobs  Group and  certain  third  parties
          12,358,187  SCUs and  499,730  SCUs,  respectively,  of the  Operating
          Partnership.  SCUs may,  at any time after the  earlier of (i) January
          31, 2004, or (ii) the death of the  beneficial  owner of the SCUs (the
          "Exchange  Date"),  be  exchanged  for cash,  shares of the  Company's
          Common Stock (on a one-for-one  basis) or any  combination  of cash or
          shares of Common Stock, at the Company's election.  Under the terms of
          Rule 13d-3 promulgated  under the Securities  Exchange Act of 1934, as
          amended  (the  "Exchange  Act"),  shares of Common  Stock  that may be
          acquired  within  60 days  are  deemed  outstanding  for  purposes  of
          computing  the  percentage  of Common  Stock  owned by a  stockholder.
          Therefore,  for purposes of Rule 13d-3 of the Exchange Act, percentage
          ownership  of the  Common  Stock is  computed  based on the sum of (i)
          31,399,138 shares of Common Stock actually outstanding as of March 14,
          2005, (ii) as described in the accompanying  notes,  each individual's
          share of  25,630,481  shares of Common Stock that may be acquired upon
          exercise of CBL Rights by the individual or entity whose percentage of
          share  ownership  is being  computed  (but not  taking  account of the
          exercise  of CBL Rights by any other  person or  entity)  and (iii) as
          described  in the  accompanying  notes,  each  individual's  share  of
          1,233,932  shares of Common Stock that may be acquired  within 60 days
          of March 14,  2005 upon the  exercise  of  outstanding  options by the
          individual  or entity  whose  percentage  of share  ownership is being
          computed (but not taking into account the exercise of such outstanding
          options by any other person).  Amounts shown were  determined  without
          regard to applicable Ownership Limits.

     (2)  The  Fully-Diluted  Percentage  calculation is based on (i) 31,399,138
          shares of Common Stock  outstanding and (ii) assumes the full exercise
          of all CBL Rights for shares of Common  Stock by all holders of common
          units of the Operating Partnership as well as the exchange of all SCUs
          for shares of Common Stock (in each case, without regard to applicable
          Ownership  Limits),  for an aggregate of  57,029,619  shares of Common
          Stock.  The  Fully-Diluted  Percentage  calculation  does not  include
          1,233,932 shares of Common Stock subject to outstanding  stock options
          other than, with respect to each person whose fully-diluted percentage
          is being  computed,  shares  which may be  acquired  within 60 days of
          March 14, 2005 upon the exercise of outstanding options.

     (3)  In a Schedule  13G/A  filed on February  14,  2005 by FMR  Corporation
          ("FMR"),  FMR reported that as of December 31, 2004,  it  beneficially
          owned 4,401,812  shares of Common Stock, or 14.02% of the total shares
          outstanding  as of March 14, 2005. FMR reported that it possesses sole
          voting power with  respect to 542,993  shares of Common Stock and sole
          dispositive power with respect to 4,401,812 shares of Common Stock.

     (4)  In a  Schedule  13G/A  filed on  February  14,  2005 by Cohen & Steers
          Capital Management,  Inc. ("Cohen & Steers"),  Cohen & Steers reported
          that as of December 31, 2004, it beneficially  owned 1,727,348  shares
          of Common Stock,  or 5.5% of the total shares  outstanding as of March
          14, 2005.  Cohen & Steers reported that it possesses sole voting power
          with respect to 1,416,448  shares of Common Stock and sole dispositive
          power with respect to 16,285 shares of Common Stock.

     (5)  Includes 11,922,626 shares of Common Stock that may be acquired by the
          Jacobs  Group on exercise of CBL Rights with  respect to SCUs owned by
          the Jacobs Group. The Jacobs Group received the above-referenced  SCUs
          as part of the  Jacobs  Acquisition.  See  "Election  of  Directors  -
          Certain Terms of Jacobs Acquisition" and see Footnote 1 above.

                                       15



     (6)  Includes (i)  1,492,839  shares of Common Stock owned  directly,  (ii)
          7,237,823  shares  of  Common  Stock  that  may be  acquired  upon the
          exercise of CBL Rights and (iii)  97,366  shares of Common  Stock that
          may be acquired by four entities  controlled by CBL's Predecessor (CBL
          Employees Partnership/Conway, Foothills Plaza Partnership, Girvin Road
          Partnership  and  Warehouse  Partnership)  upon  the  exercise  of CBL
          Rights.

     (7)  Includes  (i)  138,759  shares  of  unrestricted  Common  Stock  owned
          directly,  (ii)  24,424  shares of  restricted  Common  Stock that Mr.
          Lebovitz  received  under the Stock  Incentive Plan (640 of which will
          vest within sixty days of March 14, 2005), (iii) 3,970 shares owned by
          Mr.  Lebovitz'  wife,  14,154 shares held in trusts for the benefit of
          his  grandchildren  (of  which  Mr.  Lebovitz   disclaims   beneficial
          ownership) and 50,800 shares that may be acquired upon the exercise of
          CBL  Rights  by  interests  held in a trust  for  the  benefit  of Mr.
          Lebovitz,  (iv) 352,903 shares of Common Stock that may be acquired by
          Mr.  Lebovitz upon the exercise of CBL Rights,  (v) 159,400  shares of
          Common Stock subject to options granted under the Stock Incentive Plan
          that are currently exercisable or that become exercisable with respect
          to such shares  within  sixty days of March 14, 2005,  (vi)  8,828,028
          shares of Common Stock beneficially owned by CBL's Predecessor,  which
          Mr.  Lebovitz  may be  deemed  to  beneficially  own by  virtue of his
          control of CBL's Predecessor, and (vii) 228,194 shares of Common Stock
          that  may  be  acquired  by  College  Station  Associates,  an  entity
          controlled by Mr. Lebovitz, upon the exercise of CBL Rights.

     (8)  Includes  (i)  219,334  shares  of  unrestricted  Common  Stock  owned
          directly,  (ii) 2,880 shares of  restricted  Common Stock that Mr. Foy
          received under the Stock Incentive Plan (640 of which will vest within
          sixty days of March 14, 2005),  (iii)  189,241  shares of Common Stock
          that may be  acquired  by Mr. Foy upon the  exercise of CBL Rights and
          (iv) 135,400  shares of Common Stock subject to options  granted under
          the Stock Incentive Plan that are currently exercisable or that become
          exercisable with respect to such shares within sixty days of March 14,
          2005.  Totals do not include 13,320 shares of Common Stock  previously
          transferred  by Mr. Foy to a  partnership  consisting of Mr. Foy's two
          sisters,  with  respect  to which Mr.  Foy  disclaims  any  beneficial
          ownership in such shares and in such partnership.

     (9)  Includes  (i)  95,646  shares  of  unrestricted   Common  Stock  owned
          directly,  (ii)  34,066  shares of  restricted  Common  Stock that Mr.
          Lebovitz  received  under the Stock  Incentive Plan (640 of which will
          vest within sixty days of March 14,  2005),  (iii)  238,936  shares of
          Common Stock that may be acquired by Mr. Lebovitz upon the exercise of
          CBL Rights and (iv) 159,400  shares of Common Stock subject to options
          granted under the Stock Incentive Plan which are currently exercisable
          or that become  exercisable  with respect to such shares  within sixty
          days of March 14, 2005.

     (10) Includes  (i)  115,834  shares  of  unrestricted  Common  Stock  owned
          directly, (ii) 1,620 shares of restricted Common Stock that Mr. Snyder
          received under the Stock Incentive Plan (360 of which will vest within
          sixty days of March 14,  2005),  (iii)  6,283  shares of Common  Stock
          owned by Mr.  Snyder's  wife and 1,104 shares of Common Stock owned by
          Mr. Snyder's children,  (iv) 48,439 shares of Common Stock that may be
          acquired by Mr.  Snyder upon the  exercise of CBL Rights and (v) 5,400
          shares of Common  Stock  subject  to options  granted  under the Stock
          Incentive   Plan  that  are  currently   exercisable  or  that  become
          exercisable with respect to such shares within sixty days of March 14,
          2005.  Does not include  83,223 shares of Common Stock that Mr. Snyder
          is entitled to receive upon the termination of his employment with the
          Company  under  certain  circumstances  pursuant  to  a  non-qualified
          deferred compensation arrangement between Mr. Snyder and the Company.

     (11) Includes (i) 5,194 shares of unrestricted Common Stock owned directly,
          (ii) 1,620 shares of restricted Common Stock that Mr. Stephas received
          under the Stock  Incentive  Plan (360 of which will vest within  sixty
          days of March 14, 2005),  (iii) 27,670 shares of Common Stock that may
          be acquired by Mr.  Stephas  upon the  exercise of CBL Rights and (iv)
          39,600  shares of Common Stock  subject to options  granted  under the
          Stock  Incentive  Plan that are currently  exercisable  or that become
          exercisable with respect to such shares within sixty days of March 14,
          2005.


                                       16


     (12) Includes  (i) 220,576  shares of Common  Stock that may be acquired by
          Mr.  Cleary  upon the  exercise  of CBL  Rights  with  respect to SCUs
          indirectly  owned by Mr.  Cleary and which are  included in the amount
          shown for the Jacobs Group, see Footnote 5 above, (ii) 1,000 shares of
          Common Stock subject to immediately  exercisable stock options granted
          to Mr. Cleary under the Stock  Incentive  Plan and (iii) 850 shares of
          restricted  Common  Stock  granted  to  Mr.  Cleary  under  the  Stock
          Incentive Plan.

     (13) Includes (i) 24,000  shares of Common Stock owned by a family  limited
          partnership created by Mr. Fields and his wife and in which Mr. Fields
          serves as a general  partner,  (ii) 40,300 shares of Common Stock held
          by members of Mr.  Fields'  family,  with respect to which Mr.  Fields
          acts  as  investment   adviser  and  of  which  Mr.  Fields  disclaims
          beneficial ownership,  (iii) 1,000 shares of Common Stock owned by Mr.
          Fields'   individual   retirement  account  and  (iv)  350  shares  of
          restricted  Common  Stock  granted  to  Mr.  Fields  under  the  Stock
          Incentive Plan.

     (14) Includes (i) 28,500 shares of Common Stock owned directly, (ii) 11,500
          shares of Common Stock owned by a family limited  partnership  created
          by Mr.  Ballard  and his wife and in which  Mr.  Ballard  serves  as a
          general  partner,  (iii)  12,100  shares of Common  Stock owned by the
          Ballard Family  Foundation of which Mr. Ballard  disclaims  beneficial
          ownership,  (iv) 3,500 shares of Common Stock  subject to  immediately
          exercisable  stock  options  granted  to Mr.  Ballard  under the Stock
          Incentive  Plan and (v) 850 shares of restricted  Common Stock granted
          to Mr. Ballard under the Stock Incentive Plan.

     (15) Includes  (i) 37,500  shares of Common Stock owned by a trust of which
          Mr.  Walker is a  co-trustee  and  co-beneficiary,  (ii) 600 shares of
          Common  Stock  owned by Mr.  Walker's  wife and  (iii)  850  shares of
          restricted  Common  Stock  granted  to  Mr.  Walker  under  the  Stock
          Incentive Plan.

     (16) Includes 500 shares of restricted Common Stock granted to Mr. Dominski
          in February,  2005 on his entry to the Company's Board under the Stock
          Incentive Plan.

     (17) Includes  (i) 600 shares of Common  Stock owned  directly,  (ii) 1,000
          shares  of Common  Stock  subject  to  immediately  exercisable  stock
          options  granted to Mr.  Bryenton  under the Stock  Incentive Plan and
          (iii) 850 shares of restricted  Common Stock  granted to Mr.  Bryenton
          under the Stock Incentive Plan.




Section 16(a) Beneficial Ownership Reporting Compliance

     Section  16(a)  of the  Exchange  Act  requires  the  Company's  directors,
executive  officers  and persons  who own more than ten percent of a  registered
class of the Company's equity securities to file with the SEC initial reports of
ownership  and reports of changes in  beneficial  ownership  of Common Stock and
other equity securities of the Company. Officers, directors and greater than ten
percent  stockholders are required by SEC regulation to furnish the Company with
copies of all Section 16(a) reports they file.

     Based solely upon the Company's review of copies of such reports  furnished
to it through the date hereof, or written  representations that no other reports
were  required  to be filed,  the Company  believes  that during the fiscal year
ended  December 31, 2004 all officers,  directors  and ten percent  stockholders
complied  with  the  filing  requirements  applicable  to them,  except  for the
following late filings for the following executive  officers:  William J. Poorvu
(a retired  director of the  Company),  Charles H. May, II (3 reports),  Charles
W.A.  Willett,  Jr. (2 reports),  Charles B. Lebovitz,  John N. Foy,  Stephen D.
Lebovitz,  Ben S. Landress,  Ronald L. Fullam,  R. Stephen Tingle and Farzana K.
Mitchell.  These filings were subsequently  made.  Additionally,  one report was
filed late for each of Messrs. Leo Fields,  Winston W. Walker, Gary L. Bryenton,
Martin  J.  Cleary  and  Claude  M.  Ballard  upon  their  receipt  of grants of
restricted  Common  Stock in 2004 due to an  error  in the  Company's  reporting
procedures.  The error in procedures  has been  corrected and these filings have
been made. The Company is not aware of any failure to file a required  report by
any of its Section 10(a) reporting persons.

                                       17



                             EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION

     The following table sets forth  information  regarding the  compensation of
the Company's Chief Executive Officer and its next four most highly  compensated
executive  officers (these four and Charles B. Lebovitz being herein referred to
as the "named executive  officers") for the Company's fiscal year ended December
31, 2004, and for the Company's fiscal years ending December 31, 2003, and 2002:

                                       Summary Compensation Table(1)



=============================================================================================================

                                                                    Long Term Compensation
                                        Annual Compensation                 Awards
                                      -------------------------- ----------------------------- 
                                                                                                    All
                                                                  Restricted     Securities        Other
                                                                     Stock       Underlying    Compensation
Name and Principal                                                 Award(s)        Options          ($)
Position(2)                 Year      Salary($)      Bonus($)         ($)(3)           (#)          (4)
--------------------------- -------- ------------- ------------- -------------- -------------- --------------

                                                                                       
Charles B. Lebovitz,        2004          526,724    500,000            75,424       --               13,849
Chairman of the Board and
Chief Executive Officer
                            2003          511,383    500,000            69,200       --               13,724

                            2002          496,488      --              375,000         16,000         12,506
--------------------------- -------- ------------- ------------- -------------- -------------- --------------

John N. Foy,                2004          446,320    500,000            75,424       --               13,849
Vice Chairman of the
Board,  Chief               2003          426,320    550,000            69,200       --               13,724
Financial Officer
and Treasurer               2002          406,320      --              400,000         16,000         12,298
--------------------------- -------- ------------- ------------- -------------- -------------- --------------

Stephen D. Lebovitz         2004          425,000    500,000            75,424       --               13,849
Director, President and
Secretary                   2003          400,000    500,000            69,200       --               13,724

                            2002          375,000      --              400,000         16,000         11,506
--------------------------- -------- ------------- ------------- -------------- -------------- --------------

Eric P. Snyder              2004          391,823    275,000(5)         42,426       --                5,827
Senior Vice President
and Director of             2003          371,833    250,000(5)         38,925       --                5,702
Corporate Leasing
                            2002          351,833    225,000(5)       --                9,000          5,702
--------------------------- -------- ------------- ------------- -------------- -------------- --------------

Augustus N. Stephas         2004          414,107    200,000            42,426       --                5,827
Senior Vice
President --                2003          394,107    175,000            38,925       --                5,702
Accounting and Controller
                            2002          374,107    150,000          --                9,000          5,702
=============================================================================================================
-----------------------


     (1)  All amounts shown represent  compensation  paid to the named executive
          officers by the Management Company.

     (2)  The position  shown  represents  the  individual's  position  with the
          Company and the Management Company.

     (3)  Amounts  shown are based upon the closing price of the Common Stock on
          the NYSE as of the date of grant of the restricted stock awards. As of
          December 31, 2004, an aggregate of 64,610  shares of restricted  stock
          with a value of $4,932,974 had been awarded and were  outstanding with
          respect to the named executive officers. Dividends, to the extent paid
          on the Company's Common Stock, will be paid on all outstanding  shares
          of restricted stock.

                                       18



     (4)  For fiscal years 2004,  2003 and 2002,  amount shown  represents  term
          life insurance  premiums paid by the  Management  Company and matching
          contributions  by the  Management  Company  under the CBL & Associates
          Management,  Inc.  401(k)  Profit  Sharing Plan and Trust (the "401(k)
          Plan").  For fiscal year 2004,  such amounts for each named  executive
          officer  were as follows:  Charles B.  Lebovitz - $8,724 in  insurance
          premiums,  $5,125  in  401(k)  matching  contributions;  John N. Foy -
          $8,724 in insurance premiums, $5,125 in 401(k) matching contributions;
          Stephen D. Lebovitz - $8,724 in insurance  premiums,  $5,125 in 401(k)
          matching  contributions;  Eric P. Snyder - $702 in insurance premiums,
          $5,125 in 401(k)  matching  contributions;  and  Augustus N. Stephas -
          $702 in insurance premiums, $5,125 in 401(k) matching contributions.

     (5)  Represents  amount  deferred at Mr.  Snyder's  election  pursuant to a
          non-qualified deferred compensation arrangement between Mr. Snyder and
          the Company  payable in Common Stock.  See below "Equity  Compensation
          Plan  Information  as of December 31, 2004" for a description  of this
          deferred compensation arrangement.




      Aggregated Option Exercises in 2004 and Fiscal Year-End Option Values
      ---------------------------------------------------------------------

     The following table provides information  regarding the number and value of
options held by each of the named  executive  officers at December 31, 2004. Mr.
Foy did not exercise any options during the Company's 2004 fiscal year.



----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                          Number of Securities          
                                                     Underlying Unexercised Options        Value of Unexercised
                            Shares                                 at                     In-the-Money Options at
                           Acquired                         December 31, 2004            December 31, 2004($) (1)
                              on          Value      -------------------------------- --------------------------------
          Name            Exercise(#)  Realized($)    Exercisable     Unexercisable     Exercisable    Unexercisable
------------------------- ------------ ------------- --------------- ---------------- ---------------- ---------------
                                                                                             
Charles B. Lebovitz         120,000      5,692,050        149,800        19,200           7,941,963        862,163

------------------------- ------------ ------------- --------------- ---------------- ---------------- ---------------

John N. Foy                   -0-          -0-            145,800        19,200           7,703,408        862,163

------------------------- ------------ ------------- --------------- ---------------- ---------------- ---------------

Stephen D. Lebovitz         64,000       2,330,962        149,800        19,200           7,830,556        862,163

------------------------- ------------ ------------- --------------- ---------------- ---------------- ---------------

Eric P. Snyder              99,000       3,531,893          7,200        10,800             347,348        484,967

------------------------- ------------ ------------- --------------- ---------------- ---------------- ---------------

Augustus N. Stephas         18,000         672,120         43,200        10,800           2,196,601        484,967

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

     (1)  Amounts  listed are based upon the $76.35 closing price for the Common
          Stock on the NYSE on December 31, 2004 (last trading day in 2004).



Equity Compensation Plan Information as of December 31, 2004

     The  following  table sets forth  information  as to the  Company's  equity
compensation plans as of the end of the Company's 2004 fiscal year:


----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
        Plan Category                       (a)                          (b)                          (c)
                                                                                             Number of securities
                                                                                            remaining available for
                                Number of securities to be    Weighted-average exercise      future issuance under
                                  issued upon exercise of       price of outstanding       equity compensation plans
                                 the outstanding options,       options, warrants and        (excluding securities
                                    warrants and rights                rights              reflected in column (a))
------------------------------- ---------------------------- ---------------------------- ----------------------------
                                                                                               
Equity compensation plans                1,516,771                    $26.78(1)                     976,634
approved by security holders
------------------------------- ---------------------------- ---------------------------- ----------------------------

Equity compensation plans not              None                          N/A                          N/A
approved by security holders
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

                                       19



     (1)  The  weighted  average  calculation  does not reflect  107,098  shares
          reserved for issuance under deferred  compensation  arrangements as of
          December 31, 2004.  The  Company's  Stock  Incentive  Plan permits the
          Compensation   Committee   to   enter   into   deferred   compensation
          arrangements  designed  to  provide a deferral  of  taxable  income to
          participants,  which may be funded or  unfunded  and may  provide  for
          future  payments to  participants in the form of Common Stock or cash.
          As used by the  Compensation  Committee,  these deferred  compensation
          arrangements  typically allow the executive/employee to elect to defer
          a portion of  his/her  salary or bonuses  into the  arrangement  on an
          unfunded and unsecured basis. For deferred  compensation  arrangements
          payable in Common  Stock,  the amount of salary or bonus  deferred  is
          then deemed to be  converted to shares of the  Company's  Common Stock
          based  on the  closing  price of the  Common  Stock on the date of the
          deferral.  Those deemed shares are then further  deemed to increase as
          dividends  are paid on the Common Stock as if such  dividends had been
          utilized  via the  Company's  Dividend  Reinvestment  Plan to acquired
          additional  shares of Common Stock at the price  provided  through the
          Company's  Dividend  Reinvestment  Plan.  The  arrangements  generally
          provide  that on the earlier of (i) a date  certain  specified in each
          deferred  compensation  arrangement  or (ii) the death,  disability or
          termination  of  employment  of the  executive/employee  or (iii)  the
          merger,  consolidation or sale of the Company, the  executive/employee
          will then be  entitled  to receive  the stated  amount of cash or, for
          deferred  compensation  arrangements  payable  in Common  Stock,  that
          number of shares of Common  Stock  deemed set aside on the date of the
          deferral  together  with  additional  shares  of Common  Stock  deemed
          acquired through the Company's Dividend  Reinvestment Plan through the
          date of the payout.



Non-Competition Arrangements

     Each of Charles B. Lebovitz, John N. Foy and Stephen D. Lebovitz has agreed
to refrain  from  competing  with the  Company  until two years from the date of
termination of his employment. Prohibited competition includes any participation
in the development,  improvement or construction of any shopping center project,
acquiring any interest in a shopping center project or acquiring vacant land for
development as a shopping center project.  Charles B. Lebovitz,  John N. Foy and
Stephen D. Lebovitz are,  however,  permitted to hold certain  investments which
they owned prior to  completion  of the  Company's  initial  public  offering in
November 1993.

Compensation Committee Interlocks and Insider Participation

     The Compensation  Committee of the Board of Directors consists of Claude M.
Ballard,  Martin J. Cleary and Winston W. Walker,  with Mr.  Ballard  serving as
Chairman.  None of the members of the  Compensation  Committee  are or have been
officers or employees of the Company or any of its  subsidiaries and each member
of the Compensation Committee is an Independent Director.

     No  executive  officer of the Company  served on any board of  directors or
compensation   committee   of  any  entity   (other  than  the  Company  or  its
subsidiaries) with which any member of the Compensation  Committee, or any other
director of the Company, is affiliated.

Report of the Compensation Committee of the Board of Directors

     The  information  contained  in  this  report  shall  not be  deemed  to be
"soliciting  material" or to be "filed" with the SEC, nor shall such information
or report be deemed  incorporated  by  reference  into any future  filing by the
Company  under the  Securities  Act of 1933,  as amended,  or the Exchange  Act,
except to the extent that the Company specifically  incorporates it by reference
in such filing.

     General. The Company is a self-managed, self-administered, fully-integrated
real estate  company which is engaged in the ownership,  marketing,  management,
leasing,  expansion,  development,  redevelopment,  acquisition and financing of
regional malls and community and neighborhood centers.

     The   Compensation   Committee   determines  all  matters  related  to  the
compensation  of all  officers of the Company of the level of vice  president or
higher and  administers the Stock  Incentive  Plan. The  Compensation  Committee
operates under a written  charter  adopted by the Board of Directors on February
3, 2004. A copy of the charter is available and can be accessed in the "Investor
Relations  -  Corporate   Governance"   section  of  the  Company's  website  at
cblproperties.com.

                                       20


     Philosophy.  It is the  philosophy of the Company to ensure that  executive
compensation  be  directly  linked  to  financial  objectives  that the  Company
believes  are  primary   determinates  of  stockholder   value  over  time.  The
Compensation  Committee's  objectives in administering  the Company's  executive
compensation  are to ensure that pay levels and incentive  compensation  are (i)
competitive in attracting and retaining the best personnel, (ii) properly linked
to the  Company's  performance,  and (iii)  simple in design.  To fulfill  these
objectives,  the  compensation  approach for  executives  includes  base salary,
performance based discretionary  bonuses and periodic grants of stock awards and
stock options pursuant to the Stock Incentive Plan.  Non-executive  employees of
the Company are also eligible to participate in the Stock Incentive Plan.

     The Company  believes that the ability to use the Stock  Incentive  Plan to
attract and retain key personnel has substantial  value and will be essential to
the  growth  of the  Company.  The stock  option  and stock  award  elements  of
compensation are designed to encourage and create ownership and retention of the
Company's  stock by key employees in order to align their  long-range  interests
with those of  stockholders  and to allow the  opportunity  for key employees to
build,  through the achievement of corporate goals, a meaningful ownership stake
in the Company.

     Financial Criteria.  The Compensation  Committee,  based on recommendations
made  by the  Company,  utilized  an  executive  compensation  approach  in 1994
pursuant to which  officers of the level of vice  president and higher  received
during  fiscal year 2004, in addition to a base salary,  incentive  compensation
consisting of cash and stock awards  determined by the  Compensation  Committee.
The amount of this  additional  compensation  was  determined for each executive
officer  based  upon  his or her  contribution  to the  overall  success  of the
Company.  Utilizing the Company's basic theory for incentive compensation,  cash
and stock awards were granted during fiscal year 2004 to other  employees of the
Company as performance-based incentive compensation.

     Compensation  of the Chief  Executive  Officer.  During  fiscal  year 2004,
Charles B.  Lebovitz  was paid (i) a base salary of $526,724  which sum included
4,611 shares of Common Stock paid to Mr. Lebovitz as part of his salary pursuant
to a quarterly  deferral  arrangement  under the Stock Incentive Plan and (ii) a
cash  bonus of  $500,000.  Mr.  Lebovitz  receives  annual  reviews  for  salary
increases and discretionary bonuses.  Additionally, Mr. Lebovitz participates in
the Company's incentive plans, including the Stock Incentive Plan. During fiscal
year 2004 and  pursuant  to the Stock  Incentive  Plan,  Mr.  Lebovitz  received
restricted  stock  awards of an aggregate of 1,600 shares of Common Stock with a
value of $47.42 per share, based on the closing price of the Common Stock on the
NYSE as of the date of grant (May 10, 2004). The awards were determined upon the
same criteria as applied to the other executive officers of the Company.

     Policy Regarding  Qualifying  Compensation.  Section 162(m) of the Internal
Revenue Code of 1986,  as amended (the "Code")  imposes a $1,000,000  ceiling on
tax-deductible  remuneration  paid to any of the five  most  highly  compensated
executive officers of a publicly-held corporation. The limitation does not apply
to  remuneration  that qualifies as  performance-based  compensation  in Section
162(m) of the Code.  Options  granted under the Stock  Incentive Plan qualify as
"performance-based  compensation"  exempt from the deductibility  limitations of
Section  162(m)  of the  Code.  All other  compensation  to the named  executive
officers is below the $1,000,000  per-executive ceiling and was fully deductible
by the Company.

                             COMPENSATION COMMITTEE
                          Claude M. Ballard (Chairman)
                                Martin J. Cleary
                                Winston W. Walker


                                       21



Report of the Audit Committee of the Board Of Directors

     The  information  contained  in  this  report  shall  not be  deemed  to be
"soliciting  material" or to be "filed" with the SEC, nor shall such information
or report be deemed  incorporated  by  reference  into any future  filing by the
Company  under the  Securities  Act of 1933,  as amended,  or the Exchange  Act,
except to the extent that the Company specifically  incorporates it by reference
in such filing.

     The Audit Committee of the Board of Directors of the Company is composed of
three Independent Directors (Winston W. Walker, Chairman,  Claude M. Ballard and
Gary L.  Bryenton) and operates  under an amended and restated  written  charter
adopted by the Board of Directors on February 3, 2004. A copy of the amended and
restated  charter is available and can be accessed in the "Investor  Relations -
Corporate Governance" section of the Company's website at cblproperties.com. The
Company's  Board of  Directors  has  determined  that each of the members of the
Audit Committee is "independent"  pursuant to the listing  standards of the NYSE
as currently applicable.

     Management is responsible for the Company's internal controls and financial
reporting  process.  The Company's  independent  accountants are responsible for
performing  an  independent  audit  of the  Company's  financial  statements  in
accordance with auditing  standards  generally accepted in the United States and
for issuing a report thereon. The Audit Committee's responsibility is to monitor
and oversee these processes.

     In this  context,  the Audit  Committee has met and held  discussions  with
Management and the Company's independent accountants. Management reported to the
Audit  Committee that the Company's  consolidated  financial  statements for the
Company's  2004  fiscal  year  were  prepared  in  accordance   with  accounting
principles  generally accepted in the United States, and the Audit Committee has
reviewed and discussed these consolidated  financial  statements with Management
and the Company's  independent  accountants.  The Audit Committee discussed with
the independent accountants the matters required to be discussed by Statement on
Auditing Standards No. 61 (Communications with Audit Committee), as amended.

     The Company's independent  accountants also provided to the Audit Committee
the written disclosures and the letter required by Independence  Standards Board
Standard No. 1 (Independence  Discussions  with Audit  Committees) and the Audit
Committee discussed with the independent  accountants their firm's independence.
The  Audit  Committee  considered  whether  the  provision  of  services  by the
independent   accountants   (other  than  audit  services)  is  compatible  with
maintaining the independent accountants' independence.

     Pursuant to the mandates of the  Sarbanes-Oxley  Act of 2002, the Company's
Board of  Directors  has  determined  that  Winston W.  Walker,  an  Independent
Director and Chairman of the Audit  Committee,  qualifies as an "audit committee
financial expert" as such term is defined by the SEC.

     Based on the Audit  Committee's  review and discussions  referred to above,
the  Audit  Committee  recommended  that the  Board  of  Directors  include  the
Company's  audited  consolidated  financial  statements in the Company's  Annual
Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2004, filed with the SEC and
provide in such Annual  Report on Form 10-K the  disclosure of Winston W. Walker
as an "audit committee financial expert".

                                 AUDIT COMMITTEE
                          Winston W. Walker (Chairman)
                                Claude M. Ballard
                                Gary L. Bryenton



                                       22


Performance Graph

     The graph set forth below compares the cumulative stockholder return on the
Company's  Common Stock of the Company with the  cumulative  total return of the
Russell 2000 index of small companies ("Russell 2000") and the NAREIT All Equity
REIT Total Return  Index for the period  commencing  December 31, 1999,  through
December 31, 2004. The following  graph assumes that the value of the investment
in the Company and the indices was $100 at the  beginning of the period and that
dividends were reinvested.  The stock price  performance  presented below is not
necessarily indicative of future results:


                                [OBJECT OMITTED]






Index                                        12/31/99   12/31/00    12/31/01   12/31/02   12/31/03   12/31/04
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                                        
CBL & Associates Properties, Inc.              100.00     133.61      179.15     241.87     361.26     511.86
Russell 2000                                   100.00      96.98       99.39      79.03     116.38     137.71
NAREIT All Equity REIT Index                   100.00     126.37      143.97     149.47     204.98     269.70



                                       23



                 CERTAIN RELATIONSHIPS AND RELATED TRANSACTIONS


Management Company and Management Agreement

     The Company is party to a management  agreement with the Management Company
pursuant to which the Management  Company renders  management and administrative
services with respect to the Company's properties. From the Management Company's
inception in 1993 through  March 11, 2004,  the Company,  through the  Operating
Partnership, owned 100% of the preferred stock and a portion (initially, 5% then
increased to 6.23%) of the common stock of the Management  Company,  and Charles
B.  Lebovitz,  his  family  and  certain  of the  Associates  owned the  balance
(initially,  95% then decreased to 93.77%) of the common stock of the Management
Company.  The Management Company was initially structured to comply with certain
technical  requirements of the Code applicable to real estate  investment trusts
and through  the  ownership  of 100% of the  preferred  stock of the  Management
Company,  the Company enjoyed  substantially all of the economic benefits of the
Management  Company's  business.  By virtue  of  certain  revisions  to the Code
eliminating  the necessity of the initial  structure of the Management  Company,
the Company, on March 11, 2004, through the Operating Partnership,  acquired the
93.77% of the common stock of the Management Company from Charles Lebovitz,  his
family and certain of the Associates,  thereby  securing for the Company 100% of
the ownership of all classes of stock of the  Management  Company.  The purchase
price paid to Charles Lebovitz, his family and certain of the Associates for the
93.77% of the common stock of the Management  Company was $75,250,  representing
the amount of their initial capital contributed to the Management Company on its
formation in 1993. The Management Company also provides  management services for
certain  properties  owned by CBL's  Predecessor and certain other third parties
for which  the  Management  Company  is paid a  management  fee.  See  "Retained
Property Interests."

Operating Partnership Agreement; CBL Rights

     The Company,  through  subsidiaries,  serves as the sole general partner of
the  Operating  Partnership  and owns, as of March 14, 2005,  31,399,138  common
partnership units,  representing a 1.6% interest as the sole general partner and
a 53.4%  interest as a limited  partner for an aggregate  55.0%  interest in the
Operating  Partnership.  CBL's  Predecessor  owns 7,335,189  common  partnership
units,   representing  a  12.86%  limited  partner  interest  in  the  Operating
Partnership. CBL's Predecessor also owned 1,492,839 shares of CBL's common stock
at December 31, 2004,  for a combined  total  interest of 15.3% in the Operating
Partnership.  Certain executive and senior officers also own common  partnership
units.

     Pursuant to the Operating Partnership Agreement,  the limited partners were
granted CBL  Rights,  consisting  of the rights to exchange  all or a portion of
their common partnership units in the Operating Partnership for shares of Common
Stock or their cash equivalent, at the Company's election. The CBL Rights may be
exercised at any time and from time to time to the extent that, upon exercise of
the CBL Rights,  the exercising party shall not  beneficially or  constructively
own shares of Common Stock in excess of the applicable  share  ownership  limits
set forth in the Company's Certificate of Incorporation.  The Company,  however,
may not pay in shares of Common  Stock to the extent that this would result in a
limited partner beneficially or constructively owning in the aggregate more than
its  applicable  Ownership  Limit or  otherwise  jeopardize,  in the  opinion of
counsel to the Company, the Company's  qualification as a real estate investment
trust for tax purposes.

     The number of shares of Common  Stock  received by the limited  partners of
the  Operating  Partnership  upon  exercise of CBL Rights will be based upon the
equivalent  number of  partnership  units  owned by the  limited  partners  on a
one-for-one  basis and the amount of cash received by the limited  partners upon
such exercise, if the Company elects to pay cash, will be based upon the trading
price of the shares of Common Stock at the time of exercise.

     CBL Rights  will  expire in November  2043 if not  exercised  prior to that
date.


                                       24



Retained Property Interests

     CBL's  Predecessor owns interests in outparcels at certain of the Company's
malls and a minority  interest in one mall,  the  majority  interest of which is
owned by third parties. Certain members of Charles B. Lebovitz's family continue
to own four community and neighborhood centers. The properties retained by CBL's
Predecessor  and the  properties  owned by the  Lebovitz  family are managed and
leased by the Management  Company which receives a fee for its services.  During
fiscal year 2004, CBL's  Predecessor and the Lebovitz family paid the Management
Company approximately $245,000 under such arrangement.

Affiliated Entities

     Certain executive  officers of the Company  collectively have a significant
but non-controlling interest in a major national construction company that built
substantially  all of the  properties  developed by the Company and is currently
building the Company's projects under  construction,  including  renovations and
expansions.  Charles B. Lebovitz is also a director of the construction company.
The majority interest in the construction  company is held by the members of its
senior  management,  none of whom are affiliated  with CBL's  Predecessor or the
Company. As of December 31, 2004, the Company had 17 active contracts (including
contracts  in  respect  of  each  of  the  construction  properties)  with  such
construction  company having an aggregate value of approximately  $135.3 million
($110.7 million of which is the Company's obligation and the balance of which is
the  obligation of third party  partners).  During fiscal year 2004, the Company
and its third party partners paid an aggregate of  approximately  $143.7 million
to this  construction  company  ($116.0 million of which was paid by the Company
and the balance of which was paid by third party partners).  The Company's Audit
Committee  reviews the  relationship  between  the  Company  and the  referenced
construction company pursuant to procedures  established in November 1994. These
procedures include an ongoing review by the Company's independent  accountant of
a cross  section of the Company's  contracts  with the  referenced  construction
company for,  among other things,  the provisions for allocation of cost savings
between owner and contractor.

     The construction  company and CBL's Predecessor own all of the interests of
a  partnership  that owns two  aircraft  and a  fractional  interest  in another
aircraft used by the personnel of the Company and the construction company. Each
partner  contributes equally to fixed costs and shares variable costs through an
hourly charge based on usage.  The Company  reimburses the partnership for costs
on an hourly basis associated with use of the aircraft  relating to the business
of the Company.  During fiscal year 2004,  the Company paid  approximately  $1.6
million as  reimbursement  for operating  expenses  pursuant to such arrangement
with the amount of such reimbursement being previously approved by the Company's
Independent Directors.

     The Bylaws provide that any contract or transaction  between the Company or
the Operating  Partnership  and one or more directors or officers of the Company
or between  the Company or the  Operating  Partnership  and any other  entity in
which one or more of its  directors  or officers are  directors or officers,  or
have a  financial  interest,  must be  approved by  disinterested  directors  or
stockholders  after the material facts as to the relationship or interest and as
to the contract or transaction are disclosed or are known to them.

Certain Leases

     Certain officers and certain Company employees are partners in partnerships
that lease 36 spaces representing  approximately 38,446 square feet in 25 of the
Company's  malls as  tenants.  Such  spaces are  operated  as food  service  and
entertainment establishments. Management believes that, at the time these leases
were entered into, they provided for rental payments at market rates and terms.

     Shumacker Witt Gaither & Whitaker,  P.C.,  local counsel to the Company and
CBL's  Predecessor,  leases 5,418  square feet of office space at the  Company's
office  building.  The  construction  company also leases  20,637 square feet of
office space at the Company's office building.  Management believes that, at the
time these leases were entered into, they provided for rental payments at market
rates and terms.

                                       25


Other

     Charles  B.  Lebovitz,  certain  members  of  his  family,  certain  of the
Associates,  a partnership consisting of certain of the Associates,  and Eric P.
Snyder have personally  guaranteed an aggregate of $12.99 million of the debt of
the Operating Partnership.  Such guarantee is payable only if, and to the extent
that,  proceeds  from  a  foreclosure  sale  of  all  assets  of  the  Operating
Partnership are not in excess of the guarantee.

     Michael I. Lebovitz and Alan L. Lebovitz,  sons of Charles B. Lebovitz, and
Daniel M. Backer,  the  son-in-law of Charles B.  Lebovitz,  are employed by the
Company and each receives  compensation  from the Company  commensurate with his
level of experience and other Company employees having similar responsibilities.

     Charles B.  Lebovitz is currently an advisory  director of First  Tennessee
Bank, N.A., Chattanooga, Tennessee ("First Tennessee"). The Company is currently
maintaining a $100 million line of credit from First  Tennessee  that matures in
2007. There was approximately  $23.4 million  outstanding on this line of credit
as of December 31, 2004.  First Tennessee also provides  certain cash management
services to the Company. In the future, the Company or the Operating Partnership
may, in the ordinary course of business, engage in other transactions with First
Tennessee on competitive terms.

     John N. Foy is currently an advisory  director of AmSouth Bank of Tennessee
("AmSouth").  The Company is currently  maintaining a $10 million line of credit
from  AmSouth  that  matures in 2007.  There was  approximately  $2.0 million of
letters  of credit  drawn on this line of credit as of  December  31,  2004.  In
addition,  AmSouth is a 25%  participant  in the First  Tennessee line of credit
referred to in the  immediately  preceding  paragraph and provides  certain cash
management  services to the Company and also serves as the  administrator of the
Management  Company's  401(k) Plan. In the future,  the Company or the Operating
Partnership   may,  in  the  ordinary  course  of  business,   engage  in  other
transactions with AmSouth on competitive terms.

                     APPROVAL OF AMENDMENT TO THE COMPANY'S
                AMENDED AND RESTATED CERTIFICATE OF INCORPORATION
                   TO INCREASE THE NUMBER OF AUTHORIZED SHARES
                 OF COMMON STOCK FROM 95,000,000 TO 180,000,000

     The Board of Directors is seeking stockholder  approval for an amendment to
the Company's Amended and Restated Certificate of Incorporation, as amended (the
"Certificate of Incorporation"),  to increase the authorized number of shares of
Common  Stock  from  95,000,000  shares to  180,000,000  shares  (the  "Proposed
Amendment").  On March 14,  2005,  the Board of  Directors  adopted  resolutions
setting  forth the  Proposed  Amendment in the form of an amendment to the first
sentence  of  Section  A of  Article  IV of the  Certificate  of  Incorporation,
determining  the  Proposed  Amendment  to be  advisable  and  recommending  that
stockholders approve the Proposed Amendment.

     The  following  is the text of  Paragraph A of Article IV of the  Company's
Certificate of Incorporation, as proposed to be amended:

       A. Classes and Number of Shares.

          The total  number of shares of all  classes  of Equity  Stock that the
          Corporation  shall have authority to issue is One Hundred  Ninety-Five
          Million  (195,000,000)  shares,  consisting  of  (i)  Fifteen  Million
          (15,000,000)  shares of preferred stock, par value $.01 per share (the
          "Preferred Stock"), and (ii) One Hundred Eighty Million  (180,000,000)
          shares of common stock, par value $.01 per share (the "Common Stock").


                                       26


Purpose and Effect of the Proposed Amendment

     The Board of Directors has considered  authorizing a stock split as a means
of increasing the liquidity of the Company's Common Stock,  taking into account,
among other things,  the experiences of others companies  (including REITs) that
have split their  stock.  The Board of  Directors  currently  expects to adopt a
resolution  authorizing  a two-for-one  split of the  Company's  Common Stock by
means of a stock  dividend.  A primary  purpose of the Proposed  Amendment is to
provide the Company with sufficient  authorized  shares of Common Stock to allow
the Board to make this determination while maintaining sufficient authorized but
unissued shares for other corporate purposes, including acquisitions through the
use of Common  Stock and/or  minority  interests  in the  Operating  Partnership
convertible into Common Stock,  raising  additional capital through the issuance
of Common Stock or of other  securities that are  convertible  into Common Stock
and,  subject  to  applicable   stockholder  approval   requirements,   adopting
additional  equity-based  employee benefit plans or to reserve additional shares
for issuance  under such plans and under plans of any  companies the Company may
acquire.

     If  stockholders  approve the  Proposed  Amendment,  the Company  presently
expects to use approximately 69% of the 85,000,000  additional authorized shares
of Common Stock for purposes of the contemplated stock split, including, without
limitation,  the  additional  shares of Common Stock to be reserved for issuance
upon any exercise of CBL Rights  (after  adjustment  for the stock  split).  Any
additional  authorized shares of Common Stock may be used for each or any of the
purposes described above. No additional action or authorization by the Company's
stockholders would be necessary prior to the issuance of such additional shares,
unless  required by applicable  law or by NYSE or other  applicable  rules.  The
Company reserves the right to seek a further increase in authorized  shares from
time to time in the future as considered  appropriate by the Board of Directors.
Because the  Certificate  of  Incorporation  does not confer upon the  Company's
stockholders preemptive rights with respect to Common Stock, should the Board of
Directors  elect  to  issue   additional   shares  of  Common  Stock,   existing
stockholders would not have any preferential rights to purchase such shares.

     Other  than  the  contemplated  future  stock  split in the form of a stock
dividend,  future  issuances  under the  Company's  employee  benefit  plans and
dividend  reinvestment  plan, and the rights of the minority limited partners in
the  Operating  Partnership  to  exchange  all or a  portion  of  their  limited
partnership  interests  for  shares  of the  Company's  Common  Stock or, at the
Company's  election,  their  cash  equivalent,  the  Board of  Directors  has no
immediate plans,  understandings,  agreements or commitments to issue additional
Common Stock for any purposes.

     As of March 14,  2005,  the Company had  31,399,138  shares of Common Stock
issued and outstanding.  In addition, as of such date,  approximately  1,554,881
shares were subject to outstanding  equity  compensation  awards,  such as stock
options and restricted  stock awards (which are treated as outstanding  shares),
108,785  shares were  reserved for  issuance  pursuant to  outstanding  deferred
compensation  arrangements  and an additional  964,686  shares were reserved for
additional awards under the Company's Amended and Restated Stock Incentive Plan,
as amended.  Further,  25,630,481  shares were reserved for issuance pursuant to
the rights of each of the minority limited partners in the Operating Partnership
to exchange all or a portion of their limited  partnership  interests for shares
of the  Company's  Common  Stock  or,  at the  Company's  election,  their  cash
equivalent.  Thus,  as of March 14, 2005,  the Company had a total of 35,342,319
shares of authorized and unissued  Common Stock remaining which are not reserved
for one of the purposes described above. Accordingly, the Company presently does
not have  sufficient  authorized and unissued shares to declare a stock split in
the form of a stock  dividend,  should the Board of  Directors  decide to do so,
without effecting the Proposed Amendment.

     If the Proposed Amendment is approved and the Board of Directors thereafter
decides  to  proceed  with a stock  split in the form of a stock  dividend  with
respect to the Company's outstanding Common Stock, equitable adjustments will be
made, as of the effective date of any such stock split,  in the number and price
of shares reserved for issuance under the Company's  equity  compensation  plans
and pursuant to all outstanding awards thereunder,  and to the conversion rights
associated with the outstanding  minority limited  partnership  interests in the
Operating Partnership.

     The  Proposed  Amendment  could,  under  certain  circumstances,   have  an
anti-takeover  effect,  although this is not the intention of this proposal.  In
April 1999,  the Company  distributed  rights to the holders of its  outstanding
shares  of  Common  Stock,  pursuant  to  an  arrangement  designed  to  protect
stockholders  from proposed  takeovers  which the Board  believes are not in the
best  interests  of the  stockholders,  by providing  stockholders  with certain


                                       27


rights to acquire  capital  stock of the Company or of an acquiring  entity upon
the occurrence of certain  events.  Although the rights provide for the issuance
of the Company's Series 1999 Junior  Participating  Preferred Stock in the event
rights become  exercisable,  the Company may,  under certain  circumstances,  be
required to issue a substantial number of shares of Common Stock with respect to
the  rights.  An  increase in the number of  authorized  shares of Common  Stock
could,  therefore,  make a change in control of the Company  more  difficult  by
facilitating  the issuance of additional  shares of Common Stock pursuant to the
rights.  Accordingly,  the Proposed  Amendment may have the effect of permitting
the Company's current management,  including the current Board of Directors,  to
retain its position,  and place it in a better  position to resist  changes that
stockholders may wish to make if they are  dissatisfied  with the conduct of the
Company's business.  However, the Board of Directors is not aware of any attempt
to take control of the Company,  and the Board of  Directors  has not  presented
this  proposal  with the intent that it be  utilized as a type of  anti-takeover
device.

     If the Proposed Amendment is adopted,  it will become effective upon filing
of a Certificate of Amendment to the Company's Certificate of Incorporation with
the  Secretary  of State of the State of  Delaware.  However,  if the  Company's
stockholders approve the Proposed Amendment to the Certificate of Incorporation,
the Board of Directors  retains  discretion  under Delaware law not to implement
the  Proposed  Amendment.  If the  Board  of  Directors  were to  exercise  such
discretion, the number of authorized shares would remain unchanged.

Votes Necessary to Approve the Proposal

     Approval and adoption of the Proposed  Amendment  requires the  affirmative
vote of the holders of a majority of the Company's issued and outstanding shares
of Common Stock,  voting as a class.  Since the Proposed  Amendment concerns the
authorization  of  additional  shares  of  Common  Stock  only,  holders  of the
Company's  issued and outstanding  shares of Preferred Stock are not entitled to
vote on the Proposed Amendment under the terms of the Certificate of Incorporate
or applicable Delaware law.


    THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS RECOMMENDS A VOTE "FOR" THE PROPOSED AMENDMENT TO
               THE COMPANY'S AMENDED AND RESTATED CERTIFICATE OF
                            INCORPORATION, AS AMENDED


                        RATIFICATION OF THE SELECTION OF
                    INDEPENDENT REGISTERED PUBLIC ACCOUNTANTS

     The firm of Deloitte & Touche LLP  ("Deloitte  & Touche") has served as the
auditors  for the  Company  since  May 7,  2002,  and the  Audit  Committee  has
recommended, subject to ratification by the stockholders, that Deloitte & Touche
serve as the Company's independent  registered public accountants for the fiscal
year ended December 31, 2005.

Independent Registered Public Accountant's Fees and Services

     The Company was billed for  professional  services  provided  during fiscal
years 2003 and 2004 by Deloitte & Touche in the amounts set out in the following
table.


                                           2003                  2004
                                   --------------------- ----------------------

                                                                 
Audit Fees (1)                             $587,500               $730,880
Audit-Related Fees (2)                      182,000                537,700
Tax Fees (3)                                374,460                590,780
All Other Fees (4)                               --                 48,043
                                   --------------------- ----------------------
      Total                              $1,143,960             $1,907,403
                                   ===================== ======================

                                       28



(1)  Consists of fees billed for  professional  services in connection  with the
     audit of the Company's  annual  financial  statements  for the fiscal years
     ended  December 31, 2003, and December 31, 2004, the audit of the Company's
     internal controls over financial reporting as of December 31, 2004, reviews
     of the financial  statements included in the Company's quarterly reports on
     Form 10-Q during the 2003 and 2004 fiscal years,  comfort letters and other
     services  normally  provided by the independent  auditor in connection with
     statutory and regulatory filings or engagements.

(2)  Consists  of fees  billed  for  assurance  and  related  services  that are
     reasonably  related  to the  performance  of the  audit  or  review  of the
     Company's  consolidated  financial  statements  and are not reported  under
     "Audit Fees".  These services include audits of the Company's  subsidiaries
     pursuant  to  requirements  of  certain  loan  agreements,   joint  venture
     agreements  and ground  lease  agreements,  as well as fees  related to the
     Company's documentation of its internal controls over financial reporting.

(3)  Consists of fees billed for professional  services for tax compliance,  tax
     advice  and tax  planning.  These  services  include  assistance  regarding
     federal and state tax compliance,  tax audit defense;  tax services related
     to mergers and acquisitions, and tax planning services.

(4)  Consists of fees for products and services other than the services reported
     above.   These   services   included   permitted   software   license   and
     implementation  fees related to tax compliance  software and an agreed-upon
     procedures engagement.



     The Audit  Committee of the Board of Directors has  considered the services
rendered by Deloitte & Touche for services other than the audit of the Company's
financial  statements and has determined that the provision of these services is
compatible with maintaining the independence of Deloitte & Touche.

     The Audit Committee has adopted a policy that it is required to approve all
services (audit and/or non-audit) to be performed by the independent  auditor to
assure  that the  provision  of such  services  does not impair  such  auditor's
independence.  All services,  engagement terms,  conditions and fees, as well as
changes  in such  terms,  conditions  and fees  must be  approved  by the  Audit
Committee  in advance.  The Audit  Committee  will  annually  review and approve
services that may be provided by the  independent  auditor  during the next year
and will  revise  the  list of  approved  services  from  time to time  based on
subsequent  determinations.  The Audit  Committee  believes that the independent
auditor can provide tax  services  to the Company  such as tax  compliance,  tax
planning and tax advice without  impairing such auditor's  independence and that
such tax services do not constitute  prohibited  services pursuant to SEC and/or
NYSE rules.  The  authority  to approve  services  may be delegated by the Audit
Committee to one or more of its members, but may not be delegated to management.
If  authority  to approve  services  has been  delegated  to an Audit  Committee
member, any such approval of services must be reported to the Audit Committee at
its next scheduled meeting.

     The Board of Directors,  in concurrence with the Audit Committee,  proposes
and recommends that the  stockholders  ratify the selection of Deloitte & Touche
to serve as the  independent  registered  public  accountants  for the Company's
fiscal  year  ending  December  31,  2005.  Unless  otherwise  directed  by  the
stockholders,  proxies will be voted for approval of the selection of Deloitte &
Touche to serve as the Corporation's  independent  registered public accountants
for the 2005 fiscal year. A representative  of Deloitte & Touche will attend the
Annual  Meeting and will have an  opportunity to make a statement and to respond
to appropriate questions.

Votes Necessary to Approve the Proposal

     The ratification of the selection of Deloitte & Touche as the Corporation's
independent  registered  public  accountants  for the 2005  fiscal  year must be
approved by a majority of the shares of Common Stock present or  represented  at
the Annual Meeting.

                 THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS RECOMMENDS A VOTE "FOR"
                      THE RATIFICATION OF THE SELECTION OF
                     DELOITTE & TOUCHE LLP AS THE COMPANY'S
               INDEPENDENT REGISTERED PUBLIC ACCOUNTANTS FOR 2005



                                       29


DATE FOR SUBMISSION OF STOCKHOLDER PROPOSALS

     In accordance with the rules established by the SEC, stockholder  proposals
to be included in the Company's  proxy statement with respect to the 2006 Annual
Meeting of Stockholders must be received by the Company at its executive offices
located at 2030  Hamilton  Place  Blvd.,  Suite 500,  CBL  Center,  Chattanooga,
Tennessee 37421-6000 no later than December 2, 2005.

     In addition,  the Company's  Bylaws provide that any  stockholder of record
desiring to nominate a director or have a stockholder  proposal considered at an
annual meeting must provide  written  notice of such  nomination or proposal and
appropriate supporting documentation, as set forth in the Bylaws, to the Company
at its principal  executive  offices not less than 60 days nor more than 90 days
prior  to  the  anniversary  date  of  the  prior  year's  annual  meeting  (the
"Anniversary Date");  provided,  however, that stockholders will have additional
time to deliver the required  notice in the event the annual meeting is advanced
by more than 30 days or delayed by more than 60 days from the Anniversary Date.


                                       30


                          OTHER BUSINESS OF THE MEETING


     Management  is not aware of any matters to come  before the Annual  Meeting
other than those stated in this Proxy Statement. However, inasmuch as matters of
which the  management  is not now  aware  may come  before  the  meeting  or any
adjournment,  the proxies confer discretionary  authority with respect to acting
thereon,  and the persons named in such proxies  intend to vote, act and consent
in accordance  with their best judgment  with respect  thereto.  Upon receipt of
such proxies (in the form enclosed and properly signed) in time for voting,  the
shares represented  thereby will be voted as indicated thereon and in this Proxy
Statement.

                                 By Order of the Board of Directors

                                 /s/ Stephen D. Lebovitz

                                 STEPHEN D. LEBOVITZ
                                 Secretary


Chattanooga, Tennessee
April 1, 2005


COPIES OF THE COMPANY'S  ANNUAL REPORT ON FORM 10-K FOR THE YEAR ENDED  DECEMBER
31, 2004, MAY BE OBTAINED  WITHOUT CHARGE BY ANY  STOCKHOLDER TO WHOM THIS PROXY
STATEMENT IS SENT UPON WRITTEN REQUEST TO INVESTOR  RELATIONS,  CBL & ASSOCIATES
PROPERTIES, INC., 2030 HAMILTON PLACE BLVD., SUITE 500, CBL CENTER, CHATTANOOGA,
TENNESSEE 37421-6000.


                       ANNUAL MEETING OF STOCKHOLDERS OF
                        CBL & ASSOCIATES PROPERTIES, INC.
                                 ON MAY 9, 2005

           This Proxy is Solicited on Behalf of the Board of Directors

The undersigned  hereby appoints CHARLES B. LEBOVITZ and STEPHEN D. LEBOVITZ and
each or any of them proxies,  with power of substitution,  to vote all shares of
the undersigned at the Annual Meeting of Stockholders to be held on Monday,  May
9, 2005, at 4:00 p.m., local time, at The Chattanoogan, 1201 South Broad Street,
Chattanooga, Tennessee or at any adjournment thereof, upon the matters set forth
in the Proxy Statement for such meeting, and in their discretion,  on such other
business as may properly come before the meeting.

1. TO  RE-ELECT  FOUR  DIRECTORS  TO SERVE  FOR  THREE  YEARS  AND  UNTIL  THEIR
RESPECTIVE SUCCESSORS HAVE BEEN DULY ELECTED AND QUALIFIED.

[ ] FOR THE NOMINEES LISTED BELOW     [ ] WITHHOLD AUTHORITY 
                                          to vote for the nominees listed below

(INSTRUCTION: To withhold authority to vote for the nominee strike a line
through the nominee's name below:)
Charles B. Lebovitz     Claude M. Ballard      Gary L. Bryenton     Leo Fields

2. To act upon a proposal to approve an amendment to the  Company's  Amended and
Restated  Certificate  of  Incorporation  to increase  the number of  authorized
shares of the Company's Common Stock, par value $0.01 per share, from 95,000,000
to 180,000,000 shares.

              [ ] FOR              [ ] AGAINST             [ ] ABSTAIN

                           (Continued on reverse side)

                           (Continued from other side)

3. TO  RATIFY  THE  SELECTION  OF  DELOITTE  &  TOUCHE,  LLP AS THE  INDEPENDENT
REGISTERED PUBLIC  ACCOUNTANTS FOR THE COMPANY'S FISCAL YEAR ENDING DECEMBER 31,
2005.
              [ ] FOR              [ ] AGAINST             [ ] ABSTAIN


Dated:   _________________________, 2005
                                           ______________________________
                                           Signature

                                           ______________________________
                                           Signature if held jointly

                                           NOTE:  When shares are held by joint
                                           tenants,  both should sign. Persons 
                                           signing as Executor, Administrator,
                                           Trustee, etc. should so indicate.
                                           Please sign  exactly as the name
                                           appears on the proxy.

IF NO CONTRARY  SPECIFICATION IS MADE, THIS PROXY WILL BE VOTED FOR PROPOSALS 1,
2 AND 3.  PLEASE  MARK,  SIGN AND  RETURN  THIS PROXY  CARD  PROMPTLY  USING THE
ENCLOSED ENVELOPE.