o | Preliminary Proxy Statement | |
o | Confidential, for Use of the Commission Only (as permitted by Rule 14a-6(e)(2)) | |
þ | Definitive Proxy Statement | |
o | Definitive Additional Materials | |
o | Soliciting Material Pursuant to §240.14a-12 |
þ | No fee required. | |
o | Fee computed on table below per Exchange Act Rules 14a-6(i)(1) 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): | ||
(4) | Proposed maximum aggregate value of transaction: | ||
(5) | Total fee paid: | ||
o | Fee paid previously with preliminary materials. | |
o | Check box if any part of the fee is offset as provided by Exchange Act Rule 0-11(a)(2) and identify the filing for which the offsetting fee was paid previously. Identify the previous filing by registration statement number, or the Form or Schedule and the date of its filing. |
(1) | Amount Previously Paid: | ||
(2) | Form, Schedule or Registration Statement No.: | ||
(3) | Filing Party: | ||
(4) | Date Filed: | ||
Paul C. Varga, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer |
Geo. Garvin Brown IV, Presiding Chairman of the Board of Directors |
§ | To elect a board of eleven directors; | |
§ | To vote on the re-approval of performance measures under the Brown-Forman 2004 Omnibus Compensation Plan; and | |
§ | To transact such other corporate business as may properly come before the meeting. |
1 | ||||
4 | ||||
5 | ||||
5 | ||||
5 | ||||
10 | ||||
11 | ||||
12 | ||||
12 | ||||
15 | ||||
15 | ||||
18 | ||||
19 | ||||
20 | ||||
20 | ||||
21 | ||||
21 | ||||
22 | ||||
23 | ||||
23 | ||||
24 | ||||
34 | ||||
35 | ||||
37 | ||||
39 | ||||
42 | ||||
43 | ||||
44 | ||||
48 | ||||
48 | ||||
49 | ||||
51 | ||||
51 | ||||
52 | ||||
54 | ||||
54 |
Q: | Why did I receive these proxy materials? | |
A: | The Board of Directors of Brown-Forman Corporation provides you with these proxy materials so that you may cast your vote knowledgeably on the matters to be considered at the 2009 Annual Meeting of Stockholders. The meeting will take place on Thursday, July 23, 2009, at 9:30 A.M. (Eastern Daylight Time), in the Conference Center at our corporate offices, 850 Dixie Highway, Louisville, Kentucky. We will begin mailing this Proxy Statement and accompanying materials on or about June 26, 2009, to holders of record of our Class A common stock at the close of business on June 15, 2009, the record date for the 2009 Annual Meeting. | |
Q: | What is the record date and what does it mean? | |
A: | The Board has set June 15, 2009, as the record date for the 2009 Annual Meeting. Holders of our Class A common stock at the close of business on the record date are entitled to receive notice of the meeting and to vote at the meeting. If you purchase Class A common stock after the record date, you may vote those shares only if you receive a proxy to do so from the person who held the shares on the record date. | |
Q: | What information is contained in these proxy materials? | |
A: | The information contained in these proxy materials relates to the matters to be voted upon at the Annual Meeting, the voting process, our corporate governance, the compensation of our directors and most highly paid executive officers, and other matters. | |
Q: | May holders of Class B common stock vote at the meeting? | |
A: | Holders of shares of Class B common stock are not entitled to vote on any of the matters to be considered at the 2009 Annual Meeting of Stockholders but are welcome to attend. | |
Q: | How will my dividend reinvestment and employee stock purchase plan shares be voted? | |
A. | Shares of Class A common stock held by participants in Brown-Formans dividend reinvestment and employee stock purchase plans are included in your holdings and reflected on your proxy card. The shares will be voted as you direct. | |
Q: | What am I voting on? | |
A: | The matters to be voted upon this year are the election of our Board of Directors and the re-approval of performance measures under our 2004 Omnibus Compensation Plan. Class A stockholders may also vote on any other matter that is properly brought before the meeting. | |
Q: | Who are the nominees for directors? | |
A: | We have eleven director nominees who are standing for election. We describe each nominee briefly in this Proxy Statement, starting on page 12. | |
Q: | How does the Board recommend I vote? | |
A: | Our Board unanimously recommends that you vote your shares FOR the election of each of the nominees to the Board and FOR the re-approval of performance measures under our 2004 Omnibus Compensation Plan. |
1
Q: | What is the proxy card for? | |
A: | By completing and signing the proxy card, you authorize the individuals named on the card to vote your shares for you, in accordance with your instructions. If you grant a proxy, the persons named as proxy holders will also have the obligation and authority to vote your shares as they see fit on any other matter properly presented for a vote at the meeting. If for any unforeseen reason a director nominee is not available to serve, the persons named as proxy holders may vote your shares at the meeting for another nominee. The proxy holders for this years Annual Meeting are Geo. Garvin Brown IV, Paul C. Varga, and Matthew E. Hamel. | |
Q: | How many shares must be present or represented to conduct business at the Annual Meeting? | |
A: | A majority of the outstanding shares of our Class A common stock must be present in person or represented by proxy to constitute a quorum to conduct business at the Annual Meeting. Abstentions and broker non-votes are counted as present for establishing a quorum. A broker non-vote occurs when a broker does not vote on a matter on the proxy card because the broker does not have discretionary voting power for the particular item and has not received instructions from the beneficial owner. | |
Q: | What votes are necessary for action to be taken? | |
A: | In the election of directors, a nominee is elected if he or she receives a majority of the votes cast. This means that the number of shares voted for a director nominee must exceed the number of shares voted against that nominee in order for that nominee to be elected. Only votes for or against are counted as votes cast in the election of directors abstentions and broker non-votes are not counted as votes cast. For each other proposal, the affirmative vote of the majority of the shares present in person or represented by proxy and entitled to vote on the matter is required for the action to be taken. Abstentions and broker non-votes will have the same effect as votes against the proposal. | |
Q: | What happens if additional matters are presented at the Annual Meeting? | |
A: | We are not aware of any business to be acted upon at the Annual Meeting other than the election of directors and the re-approval of performance measures under our 2004 Omnibus Compensation Plan. If you grant a proxy, the persons named as proxy holders will have the obligation and authority to vote your shares as they see fit on any additional matters properly presented and brought to a vote at the meeting. | |
Q: | What is the difference between a stockholder of record and a street name holder? | |
A: | If your shares are registered in your name with our stock transfer agent, National City Bank, you are considered to be the stockholder of record of those shares. The proxy materials have been sent to stockholders of record directly by Brown-Forman Corporation. As a stockholder of record, you have the right to grant your voting proxy to the proxy holders named above, or to vote in person at the meeting. Only stockholders of record may vote in person at the Annual Meeting. If your shares are held in a stock brokerage account or by a bank, your shares are said to be held in street name. The proxy materials have been forwarded to you in a mailing from your broker or bank, which is, for those shares, the stockholder of record. You have the right to direct your broker or bank how to vote your street name shares by using the voting instruction card included in the mailing. | |
Q: | What is householding and how does it affect me? | |
A: | Householding is a procedure approved by the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) that permits the delivery of a single Proxy Statement and annual report to multiple stockholders who share the same address and last name. Each stockholder in that household receives his or her |
2
own proxy card. We participate in householding to reduce our printing costs and postage fees, and to facilitate voting in households where shares may be held in multiple names and accounts. If you share an address with another stockholder and receive multiple copies of the proxy materials, you may request householding by writing or e-mailing our Secretary, Matthew E. Hamel, 850 Dixie Highway, Louisville, Kentucky 40210, or e-mailing him at Secretary@b-f.com. The proxy materials are available at www.brown-forman.com/proxy. You also may request additional copies at any time by writing or e-mailing our Secretary. If you wish to opt out of householding and receive multiple copies of the proxy materials at the same address next year, you may do so at any time prior to thirty days before the mailing of proxy materials (proxy materials are typically mailed in late June), by writing to our Secretary at the above address. | ||
Q: | What should I do if I receive more than one proxy card? | |
A: | It is important that you complete, sign, and date each proxy card and each voting instruction card that you receive, because they represent different shares. | |
Q: | What if I submit a proxy card and then change my mind as to how I want to vote? | |
A: | If you are a stockholder of record, you may change your vote by granting a new proxy bearing a later date, by providing our Secretary with written notice of revocation of your proxy, or by attending the meeting and casting your vote in person. To change your vote for shares you hold in street name, you will need to follow the instructions in the materials your broker or bank provides you. | |
Q: | Where can I find the voting results of the Annual Meeting? | |
A: | We intend to announce the results at the Annual Meeting and to issue a press release on the day of the Annual Meeting. | |
Q: | Whom may I call with questions about the Annual Meeting? | |
A: | For information about your stock ownership, or for other stockholder services, please contact Linda Gering, our Stockholder Services Manager, at (502) 774-7690, or Linda_Gering@b-f.com. For information about the meeting itself, please contact Matthew E. Hamel, our Secretary, at (502) 774-7631, or Secretary@b-f.com. |
3
4
5
| Owsley Brown II retired from the Board effective July 24, 2008. Mr. Brown served a remarkable 37 years on the Companys Board, including twelve years as the Boards Chairman. | |
| John D. Cook was appointed to the Board effective September 25, 2008. Mr. Cook is a candidate for election at the 2009 Annual Meeting of Stockholders. | |
| Barry D. Bramley retired from the Board, effective September 28, 2008, upon reaching the customary retirement age of 71. Mr. Bramley served on the Companys Board for twelve years. | |
| Matthew R. Simmons retired from the Board effective January 22, 2009. Mr. Simmons served on the Companys Board for seven years. | |
| Donald G. Calder is scheduled to retire from the Board of Directors at the upcoming Annual Meeting, July 23, 2009, following a one-year extension of his term past the customary retirement age. Mr. Calder will have served on our Board for fourteen years. |
6
7
Corporate |
||||||||
Governance & |
||||||||
Name of Director | Audit | Compensation | Nominating | Executive | ||||
Patrick Bousquet-Chavanne
|
X | X | ||||||
Geo. Garvin Brown IV
|
X | X | ||||||
Donald G. Calder
|
Chair | X | ||||||
John D. Cook
|
X | X | ||||||
Richard P. Mayer
|
Chair | Chair | ||||||
William E. Mitchell
|
X | |||||||
William M. Street
|
Vice Chair * | |||||||
Paul C. Varga
|
X | |||||||
James S. Welch, Jr.
|
X |
* | Audit Committee Financial Expert |
8
9
| Stock Ownership. In order to better align the economic interests of our directors and stockholders, each director is expected to own an amount of Brown-Forman stock to be determined periodically by the Corporate Governance and Nominating Committee. | |
| Director Tenure. No director may stand for re-election to the Board after he or she has reached the age of 71, unless requested to do so by special vote of the Board. This change enables an orderly transition of directors at the Annual Meeting, rather than at various times throughout the year. | |
| Change in Director Occupation. If a directors principal occupation or business association changes substantially during his or her tenure as a director, that director must tender his or her resignation for consideration by the Corporate Governance and Nominating Committee. The Corporate Governance and Nominating Committee will recommend for Board approval what action, if any, should be taken with respect to the resignation. | |
| Director Service on Other Public Boards. To ensure that a director has sufficient time to devote to his or her service on the Companys Board, it is expected that any director who serves full-time as an officer or employee of the Company or any other business entity should not serve on more than two boards of public companies in addition to the Companys Board (this includes the board of any public company at which the director may be employed), and other directors should not serve on more than three boards of public companies in addition to the Companys Board. |
10
11
Name, Age as of the July 23, 2009 Annual Meeting, Term
as Director, |
||
Current Position, Business Experience, Other Directorships | ||
Patrick Bousquet-Chavanne, 51, director since 2005. President and Chief Executive Officer of T-Ink Technologies, Inc., a company specializing in advanced conductive technology; President and Chief Executive Officer of Yoostar Entertainment Group, a developer of interactive and immersive entertainment systems; Group President of The Estée Lauder Companies Inc. from 2001 through June 2008; President of Estée Lauder International, Inc., from 1998 to 2001. Other directorships: HSN, Inc.
|
||
Geo. Garvin Brown IV, 40, director since 2006, a thirteen-year employee of Brown-Forman. Our Presiding Chairman of the Board since 2007; Senior Vice President and Managing Director of Western Europe and Africa since 2009; Vice President and Jack Daniels Brand Director in Europe and Africa from 2004 to 2008; Vice President of Brown-Forman Beverages, Europe, Ltd., from 2004 to 2007; Director of the Office of the Chairman and Chief Executive Officer from 2002 to 2004.
|
12
Name, Age as of the July 23, 2009 Annual Meeting, Term
as Director, |
||
Current Position, Business Experience, Other Directorships | ||
Martin S. Brown, Jr., 45, director since 2006. Partner, Adams and Reese LLP, a law firm, since 2005; Partner, Stokes & Bartholomew, P.A. (a predecessor firm to Adams and Reese LLP) since 1999.
|
||
John D. Cook, 56, director since 2008. Director Emeritus of McKinsey & Company; Director, McKinsey & Company from 2003 to 2008.
|
||
Sandra A. Frazier, 37, director since 2006. Founder and Member, Tandem Public Relations, LLC, since 2005; Public Relations Account Manager at Doe Anderson, Inc., from 2002 to 2005; Project Assistant at Schneider and Associates Public Relations from 2000 to 2001. Other directorships: Commonwealth Bank and Trust Company.
|
||
Richard P. Mayer, 69, director since 1994. Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of Kraft General Foods North America (now Kraft Foods Inc.) from 1989 to 1996.
|
||
William E. Mitchell, 65, director since 2007. Chairman of the Board of Arrow Electronics, Inc., since 2006, and President and Chief Executive Officer of Arrow Electronics, Inc. from 2003 to May 2009. Executive Vice President of Solectron Corporation and President of Solectron Global Services, Inc., from 1999 to 2003. Other directorships: Arrow Electronics, Inc., Rogers Corporation, Humana Inc.
|
||
William M. Street, 70, director since 1971. Our President from 2000 to 2003; our Vice Chairman from 1987 to 2000; President and Chief Executive Officer of Brown-Forman Beverages Worldwide (a division of Brown-Forman) from 1994 to 2003. Other directorships: Papa Johns International, Inc.
|
13
Name, Age as of the July 23, 2009 Annual Meeting, Term
as Director, |
||
Current Position, Business Experience, Other Directorships | ||
Dace Brown Stubbs, 62, director since 1999. Private investor. | ||
Paul C. Varga, 45, director since 2003, a twenty-two-year employee of Brown-Forman. Our Company Chairman since August 2007; our Chief Executive Officer since 2005; President and Chief Executive Officer of Brown-Forman Beverages (a division of Brown-Forman) from 2003 to 2005; Global Chief Marketing Officer for Brown-Forman Spirits from 2000 to 2003.
|
||
James S. Welch, Jr., 50, director since 2007, a twenty-year employee of Brown-Forman. Vice Chairman, Executive Director of Corporate Affairs, Strategy, Diversity, and Human Resources since 2007; Vice Chairman, Executive Director of Corporate Strategy and Human Resources from 2003 to 2007; Senior Vice President and Executive Director of Human Resources from 1999 to 2003.
|
14
Amount and Nature of Beneficial Ownership (1) | ||||||||||||||||
Voting and Investment Power |
Percent of |
|||||||||||||||
Name and Address | Sole | Shared | Total | Class | ||||||||||||
Owsley Brown II
|
817,434 | 8,882,811 | 9,700,245 | 17.1 | % | |||||||||||
Preston Pointe Building 333 East Main Street, Suite 400 Louisville, Kentucky 40210 |
||||||||||||||||
J. McCauley Brown
|
2,058,968 | (2) | 5,553,921 | (2) | 7,612,889 | (2) | 13.5 | % | ||||||||
850 Dixie Highway Louisville, Kentucky 40210 |
||||||||||||||||
Ina Brown Bond
|
1,866,749 | 5,299,537 | 7,166,286 | 12.7 | % | |||||||||||
River Bend Farm PO Box 284 Goshen, Kentucky 40026 |
||||||||||||||||
Owsley Brown
Frazier (3)
|
515,514 | 5,553,921 | 6,069,435 | 10.7 | % | |||||||||||
829 West Main Street Louisville, Kentucky 40202 |
||||||||||||||||
Catherine Frazier
Joy (3)
|
164,440 | 5,605,995 | 5,770,435 | 10.2 | % | |||||||||||
PO Box 640 Goshen, Kentucky 40026 |
||||||||||||||||
Laura
Frazier (3)
|
147,049 | 5,553,921 | 5,700,970 | 10.1 | % | |||||||||||
829 West Main Street Louisville, Kentucky 40202 |
15
Amount and Nature of Beneficial Ownership (1) | ||||||||||||||||
Voting and Investment Power |
Percent of |
|||||||||||||||
Name and Address | Sole | Shared | Total | Class | ||||||||||||
OB Tr U/W fbo OB
Frazier (3)
|
0 | 5,553,921 | 5,553,921 | 9.8 | % | |||||||||||
829 West Main Street Louisville, Kentucky 40202 |
||||||||||||||||
ABF Tr U/A fbo OB
Frazier (3)
|
0 | 5,553,921 | 5,553,921 | 9.8 | % | |||||||||||
829 West Main Street Louisville, Kentucky 40202 |
||||||||||||||||
Avish Agincourt, LLC
|
0 | 5,553,921 | 5,553,921 | 9.8 | % | |||||||||||
829 West Main Street Louisville, Kentucky 40202 |
||||||||||||||||
Geo. Garvin Brown
III (4)
|
95,014 | 5,448,290 | (5) | 5,543,304 | 9.8 | % | ||||||||||
6009 Brownsboro Park Blvd., Suite B Louisville, Kentucky 40207 |
||||||||||||||||
Laura Lee Brown
|
32,427 | 5,163,486 | 5,195,913 | 9.2 | % | |||||||||||
710 West Main Street, Suite 201 Louisville, Kentucky 40202 |
||||||||||||||||
Jean W. Frazier
|
276,110 | 4,888,985 | 5,165,095 | 9.1 | % | |||||||||||
4810 Cherry Valley Road Prospect, Kentucky 40059 |
||||||||||||||||
Sandra A. Frazier
|
13,456 | 4,888,985 | 4,902,441 | 8.7 | % | |||||||||||
304 West Liberty Street, Suite 200 Louisville, Kentucky 40202 |
||||||||||||||||
Brooke A. Morrow
|
0 | 4,888,985 | 4,888,985 | 8.6 | % | |||||||||||
1100 Ridgeway Loop Road, Suite 444 Memphis, Tennessee 38120 |
||||||||||||||||
W. L. Lyons Brown, Jr.
|
611,755 | 4,275,027 | 4,886,782 | 8.6 | % | |||||||||||
320 Whittington Parkway, Suite 206 Louisville, Kentucky 40222 |
||||||||||||||||
Martin S. Brown, Sr.
|
0 | 4,256,776 | 4,256,776 | 7.5 | % | |||||||||||
5214 Maryland Way, Suite 405 Brentwood, Tennessee 37027 |
||||||||||||||||
Campbell P.
Brown (4)
|
0 | 3,083,686 | 3,083,686 | 5.5 | % | |||||||||||
850 Dixie Highway Louisville, Kentucky 40210 |
||||||||||||||||
Geo. Garvin Brown
IV (4)
|
0 | 3,024,168 | 3,024,168 | 5.3 | % | |||||||||||
850 Dixie Highway Louisville, Kentucky 40210 |
||||||||||||||||
Dace Brown Stubbs
|
2,000 | 2,885,323 | 2,887,323 | 5.1 | % | |||||||||||
135 Sago Palm Road Vero Beach, Florida 32963 |
||||||||||||||||
Marshall B. Farrer
|
210 | 2,885,323 | 2,885,533 | 5.1 | % | |||||||||||
850 Dixie Highway Louisville, Kentucky 40210 |
16
Amount and Nature of Beneficial Ownership (1) | ||||||||||||||||
Voting and Investment Power |
Percent of |
|||||||||||||||
Name and Address | Sole | Shared | Total | Class | ||||||||||||
Dace Polk Maki
|
0 | 2,885,323 | 2,885,323 | 5.1 | % | |||||||||||
PO Box 91206 Louisville, Kentucky 40291 |
||||||||||||||||
Log House Partners Ltd.
|
0 | 2,885,323 | 2,885,323 | 5.1 | % | |||||||||||
4708 Old Brownsboro Court Louisville, Kentucky 40207 |
||||||||||||||||
Garvin Brown Deters
|
101,459 | 2,737,401 | 2,838,860 | 5.0 | % | |||||||||||
710 West Main Street, Suite 201 Louisville, Kentucky 40202 |
(1) | Based upon information furnished to the Company by the named persons and information contained in filings with the SEC. | |
(2) | Amounts listed reflect voting power. J. McCauley Brown holds sole investment power over 283,618 shares of Class A common stock and shared investment power over 6,163,098 shares of Class A common stock. | |
(3) | Owsley Brown Frazier, Catherine Frazier Joy, Laura Frazier, the OB Tr U/W fbo OB Frazier, and the ABF Tr U/A fbo OB Frazier have agreed in principle to act together for the purpose of holding and voting certain shares of Class A common stock, and beneficially own an aggregate of 6,432,998 shares, or 11.4%, of the outstanding shares of Class A common stock. | |
(4) | Geo. Garvin Brown III, Campbell P. Brown and Geo. Garvin Brown IV have agreed in principle to act together for the purpose of holding and voting certain shares of Class A common stock, and beneficially own an aggregate of 4,547,272 shares of Class A common stock, representing 8.0% of the outstanding shares of Class A common stock. | |
(5) | Includes shares over which Geo. Garvin Brown III shares voting and dispositional control but in which he has no pecuniary interest, which shares have not been attributed to the holdings of the other persons referenced in footnote 4. |
17
Class A Common
Stock (2) |
Class B Common
Stock (2) |
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Voting or Investment Power | Investment Power | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
% of |
% of |
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Name (1) | Sole | Shared | Total | Class | Sole | Shared | Total | Class | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
James L. Bareuther
|
20,217 | (3 | ) | 0 | 20,217 | * | 141,768 | (3 | ) | 0 | 141,768 | * | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Donald C. Berg
|
11,518 | (3 | ) | 0 | 11,518 | * | 108,495 | (3 | ),(5) | 0 | 108,495 | * | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Patrick Bousquet-Chavanne
|
0 | 0 | 0 | * | 25,497 | (3 | ) | 0 | 25,497 | * | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Geo. Garvin Brown IV
|
0 | 3,024,168 | 3,024,168 | 5.3% | 11,540 | (3 | ),(5) | 756,041 | 767,581 | * | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Martin S. Brown, Jr.
|
75,618 | 105,434 | 181,052 | * | 31,346 | (3 | ) | 27,857 | 59,203 | * | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Donald G. Calder
|
12,000 | 12,000 | 24,000 | * | 35,304 | (3 | ) | 3,000 | 38,304 | * | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
John D. Cook
|
0 | 0 | 0 | * | 2,793 | (3 | ) | 0 | 2,793 | * | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Sandra A. Frazier
|
13,456 | 4,888,985 | 4,902,441 | 8.7% | 15,961 | (3 | ) | 1,222,245 | 1,238,206 | 1.3% | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Richard P. Mayer
|
6,000 | 0 | 6,000 | * | 36,794 | (3 | ) | 0 | 36,794 | * | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Mark I. McCallum
|
6,475 | (3 | ) | 0 | 6,475 | * | 31,581 | (3 | ) | 18 | 31,599 | * | ||||||||||||||||||||||
William E. Mitchell
|
1,000 | 0 | 1,000 | * | 13,235 | (3 | ) | 0 | 13,235 | * | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
William M. Street
|
1,121,098 | (4 | ) | 552,276 | 1,673,374 | 3.0% | 392,368 | (3 | ) | 138,069 | 530,437 | * | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Dace Brown Stubbs
|
2,000 | 2,885,323 | 2,887,323 | 5.1% | 44,340 | (3 | ) | 721,330 | 765,670 | * | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Paul C. Varga
|
78,288 | (3 | ) | 0 | 78,288 | * | 50,530 | (3 | ) | 0 | 50,530 | * | ||||||||||||||||||||||
James S. Welch, Jr.
|
12,050 | (3 | ) | 0 | 12,050 | * | 68,680 | (3 | ) | 0 | 68,680 | * | ||||||||||||||||||||||
All Directors and Executive Officers as a Group (17 persons, including those named above)(6) | 1,359,862 | (7 | ) | 11,468,186 | 12,828,048 | 22.7% | 1,034,557 | (7 | ),(8) | 2,868,560 | 3,903,117 | 4.2% |
* | Represents less than 1% of the class. | |
(1) | The address for each of the persons named in the table is 850 Dixie Highway, Louisville, Kentucky 40210. | |
(2) | Based upon Company information, information furnished to the Company by the named persons, and information contained in filings with the SEC. Under SEC rules, a person is deemed to beneficially own shares over which the person has or shares voting or investment power or of which the person has the right to acquire beneficial ownership within 60 days (including shares underlying options or stock appreciation rights that are exercisable within 60 days). | |
(3) | Includes the following shares subject to Class B common stock options or stock-settled stock appreciation rights (SSARs) exercisable on or before June 29, 2009 (60 days after April 30, 2009), and performance-based Class A Common and Class B Common restricted stock over which the named persons have sole voting power: |
18
Class A |
Class B | |||||||||||||||
Restricted |
Stock |
Restricted |
||||||||||||||
Name | Stock | Options | SSARs | Stock | ||||||||||||
James L. Bareuther
|
20,217 | 79,116 | 25,893 | 11,573 | ||||||||||||
Donald C. Berg
|
10,489 | 76,485 | 23,166 | 5,861 | ||||||||||||
Patrick Bousquet-Chavanne
|
0 | 564 | 24,933 | 0 | ||||||||||||
Geo. Garvin Brown IV
|
0 | 3,880 | 1,567 | 0 | ||||||||||||
Martin S. Brown, Jr.
|
0 | 0 | 10,550 | 0 | ||||||||||||
Donald G. Calder
|
0 | 18,725 | 13,579 | 0 | ||||||||||||
John D. Cook
|
0 | 0 | 2,793 | 0 | ||||||||||||
Sandra A. Frazier
|
0 | 0 | 10,550 | 0 | ||||||||||||
Richard P. Mayer
|
0 | 14,215 | 13,579 | 0 | ||||||||||||
Mark I. McCallum
|
6,475 | 16,691 | 13,272 | 1,618 | ||||||||||||
William E. Mitchell
|
0 | 0 | 12,985 | 0 | ||||||||||||
William M. Street
|
0 | 88,873 | 13,579 | 0 | ||||||||||||
Dace Brown Stubbs
|
0 | 26,540 | 13,579 | 0 | ||||||||||||
Paul C. Varga
|
78,140 | 0 | 0 | 29,017 | ||||||||||||
James S. Welch, Jr.
|
12,050 | 34,880 | 22,887 | 10,913 |
(4) | Includes 29,000 shares of Class A common stock pledged as security. | |
(5) | Includes Class B common stock held in the Companys 401(k) plan as of the close of business April 30, 2009, as follows: for Donald C. Berg, 2,453 shares; for Geo. Garvin Brown IV, 5,040 shares. | |
(6) | All directors and executive officers as a group includes 17 persons, including those directors and officers named in the table. In calculating the aggregate number of shares and percentages owned by all directors and executive officers as a group, each share is counted only once. | |
(7) | Includes 127,371 shares of Class A and 58,982 shares of Class B restricted stock held by all directors and executive officers as a group. | |
(8) | Includes 375,200 Class B common stock options and 210,925 Class B common stock SSARs held by all directors and executive officers as a group that are exercisable on or before June 29, 2009 (60 days after April 30, 2009). |
19
20
Fiscal Years | |||||||||
2008 | 2009 | ||||||||
Audit Fees
|
$ | 1,733,516 | (1 | ) | $ | 1,720,711 | |||
Audit-Related Fees
|
202,361 | 187,963 | |||||||
Tax Fees
|
0 | 0 | |||||||
All Other Fees
|
0 | 0 | |||||||
Total
|
$ | 1,935,877 | $ | 1,908,674 |
(1) | Includes approximately $60,000 in Audit Fees not reflected in the 2008 Proxy Statement. |
21
22
| The objective of our executive compensation program is to recruit, retain, and motivate a diverse team of talented executives to produce sustainable, superior growth for our shareholders. | |
| We provide those executive officers whose names appear in the Summary Compensation Table on page 35 (our Named Executive Officers, or NEOs) with the following types of direct compensation: salary, cash-based short-term incentives, cash-based long-term incentives, and equity-based long-term incentives. | |
| For fiscal 2009, we targeted total cash compensation at the 55th to 65th percentile of a group of diverse consumer products and manufacturing companies. | |
| We believe in pay for performance and link short-term and long-term incentive compensation to the achievement of measurable performance goals. | |
| We use equity-based compensation as a means of aligning the interests of our executives with those of our stockholders. | |
| Short-term incentives support our pay-for-performance compensation philosophy and reward annual results; long-term incentives serve both as a retention mechanism and as a means to focus our executives on long-range strategic goals and on sustainable growth and performance. | |
| We have never backdated or re-priced equity awards. We do not time our equity award grants relative to the release of material non-public information (or vice-versa). | |
| We endeavor to limit the source of shares for awards made pursuant to our incentive compensation plan to those purchased by the Company in either open market or private transactions in order to minimize dilution to our stockholders. | |
| We offer our NEOs limited perquisites an annual car allowance and reimbursement for certain financial planning-related expenses. | |
| Our NEOs do not have employment, severance, or change-in-control agreements. | |
| Our executives participate in the same group benefit programs available to nearly all of our salaried employees in the United States. | |
| We maintain both tax-qualified retirement plans and non-qualified supplemental excess retirement plans. | |
| Solid underlying growth and strong performance relative to our industry competitors in fiscal 2009 resulted in short-term compensation payouts to our NEOs at 75% of target. | |
| Excellent performance for fiscal 2008 and fiscal 2007, together with solid performance for fiscal 2009, resulted in long-term incentive compensation payouts to our NEOs at 138% of target. |
23
| The market prices of our Class A and Class B common stock decreased during fiscal 2009. This decrease negatively affected the value of our executives accumulated equity-based incentives during fiscal 2009. | |
| We believe our executive compensation program achieves the programs objectives in a reasonable and efficient manner. | |
| During fiscal 2009, the Committee reviewed the Companys short- and long-term incentive compensation program design and approved changes to the program that will be applicable to compensation awarded to the NEOs beginning in fiscal 2010. |
| To reward employees for their efforts in support of the Companys business by offering competitive salaries; | |
| To foster a pay-for-performance culture by offering short-term and long-term incentive-based compensation that is earned upon the achievement of measurable performance goals; and | |
| To align the interests of our executives with those of our stockholders through the use of equity-based compensation. |
| Salary (including a holiday bonus, which we consider part of salary) | |
| Short-term cash incentive compensation | |
| Long-term cash incentive compensation | |
| Long-term equity incentive compensation | |
| Other benefits that are available to nearly all salaried employees |
24
| Limited additional benefits and perquisites | |
| Limited post-employment compensation and benefits |
Consumer Products Companies | ||||
The A.T. Cross Company
Altria Group, Inc. Avon Products, Inc. Bob Evans Farms, Inc. Chiquita Brands International, Inc. The Coca-Cola Company Columbia Sportswear Company ConAgra Foods, Inc. Diageo North America, Inc. Fortune Brands, Inc. General Mills, Inc. Heinz Foodservice |
The Hershey Company The J.M. Smucker Company J.R. Simplot Company Kellogg Company Kraft Foods, Inc. Land OLakes, Inc. Lorillard Tobacco Company Mary Kay, Inc. McDonalds Corporation Mission Foods (Gruma Corp.) Molson Coors Brewing Company Nestle USA, Inc. |
PepsiAmericas, Inc. PepsiCo, Inc. Reynolds American, Inc. Rich Products, Corporation S.C. Johnson & Son, Inc. Sara Lee Corporation The Schwan Food Company Tupperware Brands Corporation Unilever United States, Inc. Wm. Wrigley Jr. Company |
Manufacturing Companies | ||||
3M Company
A.T. Cross Company Abbott Laboratories Advanced Micro Devices, Inc. Air Products and Chemicals, Inc. Alcon Laboratories, Inc. Allergan, Inc. Alliant Techsystems, Inc. Altria Group, Inc. Ameren Corporation Astra Zeneca Pharmaceuticals LP Ball Corporation BIC Corporation The Boeing Company Bristol-Myers Squibb Company The Coca-Cola Company Cytec Industries Inc. DENTSPLY International Inc. Donaldson Company, Inc. |
E. I. du Pont de Nemours and Co. Eastman Chemical Company Eastman Kodak Company Ecolab, Inc. Federal-Mogul Corporation Flowserve Corporation Ford Motor Company Fortune Brands, Inc. Gates Corporation General Mills, Inc. General Motors Corporation Intel Corporation ITT Corporation Johnson & Johnson Johnson Controls, Inc. Kennametal Inc. Kohler Co. Mary Kay, Inc. Masco Corporation |
McDermott International, Inc. Merck & Co., Inc. Molson Coors Brewing Company NIKE, Inc. Noranda Aluminum, Inc. Northup Grumman Newport News Panasonic Corp. of North America Parker Hannifin Corporation Pfizer Inc. Pitney Bowes Inc. PPG Industries, Inc. Praxair, Inc. Robert Bosch LLC Schneider Electric (K-Tech Corp.) Siemens Corporation Steelcase Inc. The Timken Company The Toro Company |
25
Length of Continuous
Service
|
Amount of Holiday
Bonus
|
|
3 months but less than 6 months
|
1/8 of monthly salary | |
6 months but less than 5 years
|
1/4 of monthly salary | |
5 years but less than 10 years
|
3/8 of monthly salary | |
10 years or more
|
1/2 of monthly salary |
26
Depletion-Based |
||||
Attainment Point | Operating Income (1) | Payout (2) | ||
Threshold
|
$674.6 | 0% | ||
Target
|
$715.1 | 100% | ||
Maximum
|
$755.6 | 200% |
(1) | Dollars in millions. Operating income between two points is interpolated using a straight line method. | |
(2) | Payout between two points is interpolated using a straight line method. |
27
28
29
| Donald C. Berg was appointed Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer, effective May 1, 2008. | |
| Mark I. McCallum was appointed Executive Vice President and Chief Operating Officer, effective May 1, 2009. | |
| James L. Bareuther, in connection with a long-term succession plan, was appointed Executive Vice President for Global Business Development, effective May 1, 2009. |
30
Short-Term |
Long-Term |
Restricted |
Total Direct |
|||||||||||
Fiscal Year | Salary(1) | Cash(2) | Cash(3) | Stock(4) | Compensation | |||||||||
2009
|
$950,000 | $937,500 | $1,112,128 | $813,750 | $3,813,378 | |||||||||
2008
|
$936,000 | $2,048,778 | $1,047,834 | $1,733,820 | $5,766,432 |
(1) | Amounts included in this column represent base salary at the beginning of the fiscal year, and exclude holiday bonus. Salary adjustments for salaried employees are typically made as of August 1 each year. | |
(2) | Amounts included in this column represent the short-term cash incentive compensation paid on or about June 15 for the one-year performance period ended April 30. | |
(3) | Amounts included in this column represent the long-term cash incentive compensation paid on or about June 15 for the three-year performance period ended April 30. | |
(4) | Amounts included in this column represent the performance-adjusted value of the restricted stock award granted for the fiscal year. Restricted stock awards are initially determined by the Compensation Committee as a cash value, which is adjusted after the completion of the fiscal year by the short-term incentive compensation performance multiplier. |
31
32
Campbell Soup Co.
|
Dr. Pepper Snapple Group, Inc. | Hershey Co. | Molson Coors Brewing Co. | |||
Clorox Co.
|
Energizer Holdings Inc. | Kraft Foods Inc. | PepsiCo Inc. | |||
Coach Inc.
|
Estee Lauder Companies, Inc. | Levi Strauss & Co. | Polo Ralph Lauren Corp. | |||
Constellation Brands, Inc.
|
Fortune Brands, Inc. | Lorillard, Inc. | J.M. Smucker Co. | |||
Diageo Plc.
|
Harley Davidson Inc. | Miller Brewing Co. | YUM! Brands Inc. |
33
34
Change |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
in |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Pension |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Value |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Non- |
and |
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Equity |
Nonqualified |
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
SSAR/ |
Incentive |
Deferred |
All |
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Stock |
Option |
Plan |
Compensation |
Other |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Name and |
Salary |
Bonus |
Awards |
Awards |
Compensation |
Earnings |
Compensation |
Total |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Principal Position | Year | ($)(5) | ($)(6) | ($)(7) | ($)(7) | ($)(8) | ($)(9) | ($)(10) | ($) | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Paul C. Varga
|
2009 | 1,001,458 | | 1,377,198 | | 2,049,628 | 108,384 | 42,856 | 4,579,524 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Chairman and Chief
|
2008 | 986,083 | | 1,165,139 | | 3,096,612 | 404,184 | 31,303 | 5,683,321 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Executive Officer
|
2007 | 945,000 | | 690,465 | | 2,590,602 | 413,410 | 83,544 | 4,723,021 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Donald C.
Berg (1)
|
2009 | 539,167 | | 181,018 | 166,833 | 506,949 | 1,588 | 37,275 | 1,432,830 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Executive Vice President
and Chief Financial Officer |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
James L.
Bareuther (2)
|
2009 | 565,208 | | 301,736 | 215,273 | 616,948 | 192,930 | 38,456 | 1,930,551 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Executive Vice President
|
2008 | 550,542 | | 302,632 | 125,558 | 968,364 | 300,795 | 39,383 | 2,287,274 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
for Global Business
|
2007 | 526,167 | | 204,127 | 218,514 | 1,080,620 | 309,183 | 49,123 | 2,387,734 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Development
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
James S. Welch,
Jr. (3)
|
2009 | 545,625 | | 226,373 | 147,122 | 658,645 | 479 | 31,676 | 1,609,920 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Vice Chairman
|
2008 | 524,166 | | 202,936 | 140,777 | 858,925 | 123,846 | 32,165 | 1,882,815 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Mark I.
McCallum (4)
|
2009 | 492,500 | | 138,517 | 118,562 | 459,214 | 49,524 | 30,570 | 1,288,887 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Executive Vice President
|
2008 | 462,292 | | 103,079 | 88,474 | 774,276 | 57,233 | 30,384 | 1,515,738 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
and Chief Operating
Officer |
(1) | Mr. Berg was not a Named Executive Officer for fiscal years 2007 and 2008. Therefore, information for those years is not provided. | |
(2) | Mr. Bareuther served as Executive Vice President and Chief Operating Officer until April 30, 2009. He assumed the position of Executive Vice President for Global Business Development effective May 1, 2009. | |
(3) | Mr. Welch was not a Named Executive Officer for fiscal year 2007. Therefore, information for fiscal 2007 is not provided. Mr. Welchs full title is Vice Chairman, Executive Director of Corporate Affairs, Strategy, Diversity, and Human Resources. | |
(4) | Mr. McCallum was not a Named Executive Officer for fiscal year 2007. Therefore, information for fiscal 2007 is not provided. Mr. McCallum served as Executive Vice President and Chief Brands Officer until April 30, 2009. He assumed the position of Executive Vice President and Chief Operating Officer effective May 1, 2009. | |
(5) | Salary includes holiday bonus. Please see page 26 for additional information. | |
(6) | NEOs do not receive non-performance based compensation that would be considered a Bonus under SEC regulations. | |
(7) | Amounts reflect the dollar amount of compensation cost recognized for financial statement reporting purposes, in accordance with SFAS 123(R). Pursuant to SEC regulations, the amounts shown exclude the impact of estimated forfeitures related to service-based vesting conditions. Assumptions used in the calculation of these amounts are included in footnote 16 to the Companys audited financial statements for the fiscal year ended April 30, 2009, which are included in the Companys fiscal 2009 Annual Report on Form 10-K as filed with the SEC. These amounts reflect our accounting expense for these awards and do not correspond to the actual value that will be recognized by the NEOs. |
35
(8) | Amounts listed for the year 2009 include short-term cash incentive compensation paid for the one-year performance period ended April 30, 2009, and long-term cash incentive compensation paid for the three-year performance period ended April 30, 2009, as determined by the Compensation Committee at its May 27, 2009, meeting and paid to the NEOs on or about June 15, 2009. Specific amounts are reflected below. |
Short-Term Cash | Long-Term Cash | |||||||
Paul C. Varga
|
937,500 | 1,112,128 | ||||||
Donald C. Berg
|
195,000 | 311,949 | ||||||
James L. Bareuther
|
195,000 | 421,948 | ||||||
James S. Welch, Jr.
|
195,000 | 463,645 | ||||||
Mark I. McCallum
|
195,000 | 264,214 |
(9) | Amounts listed for the year 2009 reflect the change in pension value for each NEO during fiscal year 2009. Change in pension value is based on an actuarial present value calculation. Amounts attributable to each of our retirement plans are reflected below. Please see the Pension Benefits Table on page 43 for additional information, including assumptions used in the present value calculations. |
Qualified | Non-Qualified | |||||||
Paul C. Varga
|
(22,126) | 130,510 | ||||||
Donald C. Berg
|
(11,809) | 13,397 | ||||||
James L. Bareuther
|
29,455 | 163,475 | ||||||
James S. Welch, Jr.
|
(16,958) | 17,437 | ||||||
Mark I. McCallum
|
5,176 | 44,348 |
(10) | Please see the Fiscal 2009 All Other Compensation Table below for additional information on the amounts reflected in this column. For fiscal 2007 only, amounts reflected in this column include dividends paid on restricted stock. |
Cost of |
||||||||||||||||||||
Company- |
Cost of |
|||||||||||||||||||
401(k) |
Provided |
Company- |
||||||||||||||||||
Matching |
Life |
Leased |
||||||||||||||||||
Name | Contribution | Insurance | Car (1) | Other (2) | Total | |||||||||||||||
Paul C. Varga
|
12,063 | 3,600 | 20,845 | 6,348 | 42,856 | |||||||||||||||
Donald C. Berg
|
12,268 | 2,638 | 18,369 | 4,000 | 37,275 | |||||||||||||||
James L. Bareuther
|
11,600 | 2,956 | 19,741 | 4,159 | 38,456 | |||||||||||||||
James S. Welch, Jr.
|
11,563 | 2,893 | 13,220 | 4,000 | 31,676 | |||||||||||||||
Mark I. McCallum
|
11,625 | 2,694 | 16,251 | | 30,570 |
(1) | Values based on incremental cost to the Company during the fiscal year, including lease payments, maintenance and registration, and annual insurance premiums. | |
(2) | Amounts include reimbursement of financial planning expenses and, for Messrs. Bareuther and Varga, travel-related expenses for their spouses to attend certain business-related events. |
36
All |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Other |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Option |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Awards: |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Number |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Estimated Possible Payouts |
Estimated Possible Payouts |
of |
Exercise |
Grant Date |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Under Non-Equity Incentive |
Under Equity Incentive Plan |
Securities |
or Base |
Fair Value |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Plan Awards(2) | Awards (3) |
Underlying |
Price of |
of Stock |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Thres |
Thres |
Options |
Option |
and Option |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Grant |
Descrip- |
hold |
Target |
Maximum |
hold |
Target |
Maximum |
(4)(6) |
Awards |
Awards(5)(6) |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Name | Date | tion(1) | ($) | ($) | ($) | ($) | ($) | ($) | (#) | ($/Sh) | ($) | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Paul C. Varga
|
STC | 0 | 1,250,000 | 2,500,000 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
LTC | 0 | 1,085,000 | 2,170,000 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
7/24/2008 | RS | 0 | 1,085,000 | 2,170,000 | 2,170,000 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Donald C. Berg
|
STC | 0 | 260,000 | 520,000 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
LTC | 0 | 300,000 | 600,000 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
7/24/2008 | RS | 0 | 120,000 | 240,000 | 240,000 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
7/24/2008 | SSAR | 13,588 | $ | 57.40 | 154,998 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
James L. Bareuther
|
STC | 0 | 260,000 | 520,000 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
LTC | 0 | 375,000 | 750,000 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
7/24/2008 | SSAR | 18,872 | $ | 57.40 | 215,273 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
James S. Welch, Jr.
|
STC | 0 | 260,000 | 520,000 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
LTC | 0 | 300,000 | 600,000 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
7/24/2008 | RS | 0 | 120,000 | 240,000 | 240,000 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
7/24/2008 | SSAR | 13,588 | $ | 57.40 | 154,998 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Mark I. McCallum
|
STC | 0 | 260,000 | 520,000 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
LTC | 0 | 300,000 | 600,000 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
7/24/2008 | RS | 0 | 180,000 | 360,000 | 360,000 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
7/24/2008 | SSAR | 9,059 | $ | 57.40 | 103,336 |
(1) | STC is short-term incentive compensation payable in cash; LTC is long-term incentive compensation payable in cash; RS is performance-based restricted stock; SSAR is stock-settled stock appreciation rights. | |
(2) | Amounts represent the potential value of the payouts for short-term incentive compensation opportunity for the fiscal 2009 performance period and the cash component of long-term incentive compensation opportunity for the three-year performance period fiscal 2009 through fiscal 2011, inclusive. Please see the Non-Equity Incentive Plan Compensation column of the Fiscal 2009 Summary Compensation Table on page 35 for amounts actually paid out in respect of fiscal 2009 performance. No amounts are payable if threshold performance levels are not achieved. STC is capped at 200% of target; long-term incentive compensation is uncapped, but as a point of reference a Maximum number of 200% of target is included. |
37
(3) | Amounts represent the potential value of a NEOs long-term incentive compensation opportunity designated for RS for fiscal 2009. No RS is awarded if threshold performance levels are not achieved. The long-term incentive compensation opportunity designated for RS is capped at 200% of target. The number of shares of RS awarded for fiscal 2009 is determined by multiplying the cash value at target of a NEOs long-term incentive compensation opportunity designated for RS by the short-term performance adjustment factor for fiscal 2009 (75%), and dividing that product by $57.35, which is the value of our Class A common stock as of the close of trading on the date of grant, July 24, 2008. Restricted share awards granted in fiscal 2009 vest on the first day of the fourth fiscal year following the date of grant. The number of Class A common shares issued on June 1, 2009, in respect of the fiscal 2009 awards and the cash value of the awards as of the date of grant are as follows (Mr. Bareuther did not have a restricted stock component to his fiscal 2009 long-term incentive compensation opportunity): |
Cash Value |
Class A Common |
|||||||
as of July 24, 2008 | Restricted Shares | |||||||
Paul C. Varga
|
813,750 | 14,190 | ||||||
Donald C. Berg
|
90,000 | 1,570 | ||||||
James S. Welch, Jr.
|
90,000 | 1,570 | ||||||
Mark I. McCallum
|
135,000 | 2,354 |
(4) | The number of SSARs awarded to our NEOs for fiscal 2009 was determined by dividing the cash value of the opportunity designated for SSARs by the Black-Scholes value of our Class B common stock as of the close of trading on the date of grant, July 24, 2008. SSARs are not exercisable until the first day of the third fiscal year following the fiscal year of grant, and are exercisable for seven fiscal years thereafter. SSARs granted July 24, 2008, are exercisable May 1, 2011, and expire April 30, 2018. | |
(5) | For RS, amounts represent the grant date fair value of each award at the maximum payout level (200%). Please see footnote 3 above for the grant date fair value of the awards actually paid out. For SSARs, amounts represent the grant date fair value as calculated in accordance with SFAS 123(R). | |
(6) | On October 27, 2008, we completed a special distribution of shares of our Class B common stock. For every four shares of Class A or Class B common stock held as of the record date, stockholders received one share of Class B common stock, with fractional shares payable in cash (outstanding option and SSAR awards were rounded up to the next whole share). Outstanding equity award amounts and exercise prices were adjusted as of October 27, 2008, to account for this distribution, and are presented herein on an adjusted basis. |
38
Option and SSAR Awards (1)(2) | Stock Awards (1)(3) | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Number |
Market |
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
of |
Number of |
Number of |
Value of |
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Securities |
Securities |
Shares or |
Shares or |
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Underlying |
Underlying |
Units of |
Units of |
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Unexercised |
Unexercised |
Option |
Stock That |
Stock That |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Options |
Options |
Exercise |
Option |
Class of |
Have Not |
Have Not |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
(#) |
(#) |
Price |
Expiration |
Common |
Vested |
Vested |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Name | Grant Date | Exercisable | Unexercisable | ($) | Date | Grant Date | Stock | (#) | ($)(4) | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Paul C. Varga
|
7/24/2003 | B | 7,587 | 352,796 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
7/24/2003 | B | 1,896 | 88,164 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
7/28/2005 | A | 17,769 | 865,350 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
7/28/2005 | B | 4,442 | 206,553 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
7/27/2006 | A | 19,208 | 935,430 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
7/27/2006 | B | 4,802 | 223,293 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
7/26/2007 | A | 24,138 | 1,175,521 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
7/26/2007 | B | 6,034 | 280,581 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
7/24/2008 | A | 14,190 | 691,053 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Donald C. Berg
|
7/27/2000 | 6,437 | 19.68 | 4/30/2010 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
7/31/2001 | 18,983 | 26.67 | 4/30/2011 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
7/25/2002 | 16,903 | 25.06 | 4/30/2012 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
7/24/2003 | 19,024 | 30.62 | 4/30/2013 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
7/22/2004 | 15,138 | 36.35 | 4/30/2014 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
7/28/2005 | 13,062 | 46.19 | 4/30/2015 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
7/27/2006 | 10,104 | 56.50 | 4/30/2016 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
7/26/2007 | 11,567 | 54.58 | 4/30/2017 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
7/24/2008 | 13,588 | 57.40 | 4/30/2018 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
7/24/2003 | B | 2,592 | 120,528 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
7/24/2003 | B | 648 | 30,132 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
7/28/2005 | A | 2,556 | 124,477 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
7/28/2005 | B | 639 | 29,714 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
7/27/2006 | A | 2,156 | 104,997 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
7/27/2006 | B | 539 | 25,064 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
7/26/2007 | A | 2,206 | 107,432 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
7/26/2007 | B | 551 | 25,622 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
7/24/2008 | A | 1,570 | 76,459 |
39
Option and SSAR Awards (1)(2) | Stock Awards (1)(3) | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Number |
Market |
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
of |
Number of |
Number of |
Value of |
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Securities |
Securities |
Shares or |
Shares or |
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Underlying |
Underlying |
Units of |
Units of |
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Unexercised |
Unexercised |
Option |
Stock That |
Stock That |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Options |
Options |
Exercise |
Option |
Class of |
Have Not |
Have Not |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
(#) |
(#) |
Price |
Expiration |
Common |
Vested |
Vested |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Name | Grant Date | Exercisable | Unexercisable | ($) | Date | Grant Date | Stock | (#) | ($)(4) | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
James L. Bareuther
|
7/27/2000 | 22,245 | 19.68 | 4/30/2010 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
7/31/2001 | 14,885 | 26.67 | 4/30/2011 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
7/25/2002 | 10,824 | 25.06 | 4/30/2012 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
7/24/2003 | 17,013 | 30.62 | 4/30/2013 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
7/22/2004 | 14,149 | 36.35 | 4/30/2014 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
7/28/2005 | 12,225 | 46.19 | 4/30/2015 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
7/27/2006 | 13,668 | 56.50 | 4/30/2016 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
7/26/2007 | 10,280 | 54.58 | 4/30/2017 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
7/24/2008 | 18,872 | 57.40 | 4/30/2018 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
7/24/2003 | B | 5,216 | 242,544 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
7/24/2003 | B | 1,304 | 60,636 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
7/28/2005 | A | 5,382 | 262,103 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
7/28/2005 | B | 1,345 | 62,543 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
7/27/2006 | A | 2,915 | 141,961 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
7/27/2006 | B | 728 | 33,852 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
7/26/2007 | A | 4,412 | 214,864 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
7/26/2007 | B | 1,103 | 51,290 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
James S. Welch, Jr.
|
7/31/2001 | 9,492 | 26.67 | 4/30/2011 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
7/25/2002 | 9,658 | 25.06 | 4/30/2012 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
7/22/2004 | 15,730 | 36.35 | 4/30/2014 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
7/28/2005 | 14,543 | 46.19 | 4/30/2015 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
7/27/2006 | 8,344 | 56.50 | 4/30/2016 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
7/26/2007 | 14,804 | 54.58 | 4/30/2017 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
7/24/2008 | 13,588 | 57.40 | 4/30/2018 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
7/24/2003 | B | 6,322 | 293,973 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
7/24/2003 | B | 1,580 | 73,470 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
7/28/2005 | A | 2,846 | 138,600 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
7/28/2005 | B | 711 | 33,062 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
7/27/2006 | A | 2,670 | 130,029 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
7/27/2006 | B | 667 | 31,016 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
7/26/2007 | A | 2,824 | 137,529 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
7/26/2007 | B | 706 | 32,829 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
7/24/2008 | A | 1,570 | 76,459 |
40
Option and SSAR Awards (1)(2) | Stock Awards (1)(3) | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Number |
Market |
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
of |
Number of |
Number of |
Value of |
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Securities |
Securities |
Shares or |
Shares or |
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Underlying |
Underlying |
Units of |
Units of |
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Unexercised |
Unexercised |
Option |
Stock That |
Stock That |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Options |
Options |
Exercise |
Option |
Class of |
Have Not |
Have Not |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
(#) |
(#) |
Price |
Expiration |
Common |
Vested |
Vested |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Name | Grant Date | Exercisable | Unexercisable | ($) | Date | Grant Date | Stock | (#) | ($)(4) | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Mark I. McCallum
|
7/24/2003 | 9,799 | 30.62 | 4/30/2013 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
7/22/2004 | 6,892 | 36.35 | 4/30/2014 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
7/28/2005 | 10,418 | 46.19 | 4/30/2015 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
7/27/2006 | 2,854 | 56.50 | 4/30/2016 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
7/26/2007 | 9,869 | 54.58 | 4/30/2017 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
7/24/2008 | 9,059 | 57.40 | 4/30/2018 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
7/27/2006 | A | 3,651 | 177,804 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
7/27/2006 | B | 912 | 42,408 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
7/26/2007 | A | 2,824 | 137,529 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
7/26/2007 | B | 706 | 32,829 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
7/24/2008 | A | 2,354 | 114,640 |
(1) | On October 27, 2008, we completed a special distribution of shares of our Class B common stock. For every four shares of Class A or Class B common stock held as of the record date, stockholders received one share of Class B common stock, with fractional shares payable in cash (outstanding option and SSAR awards were rounded up to the next whole share). Outstanding equity award amounts and exercise prices were adjusted as of October 27, 2008, to account for this distribution, and are presented herein on an adjusted basis. | |
(2) | All option and SSAR awards are Class B common stock. Awards with grant dates prior to July 28, 2005 are stock options; awards with grant dates of July 28, 2005 or later are stock-settled stock appreciation rights (SSARs). All options and SSARs vest and become fully exercisable on the first day of the third fiscal year following the fiscal year of grant. | |
(3) | Restricted stock awards with a July 24, 2003 grant date vest on the first day of the eighth fiscal year following the date of grant; restricted stock awards granted July 22, 2004, July 28, 2005, and July 27, 2006, vest on the first day of the fifth fiscal year following the date of grant; restricted stock awards granted July 26, 2007, and July 24, 2008, vest on the first day of the fourth fiscal year following the date of grant. | |
(4) | Values based on the closing prices on April 30, 2009, of our Class A common stock of $48.70 and Class B common stock of $46.50. |
41
Option/SSAR Awards (1)(2) | Stock Awards(1) | |||||||||||||||||||
Number of |
Number of |
|||||||||||||||||||
Shares |
Shares |
|||||||||||||||||||
Acquired |
Value Realized |
Acquired |
Value Realized |
|||||||||||||||||
on Exercise |
on Exercise
(3) |
Class of |
on Vesting
(4) |
on Vesting
(5) |
||||||||||||||||
Name | (#) | ($) | Common Stock | (#) | ($) | |||||||||||||||
Paul C. Varga
(6)
|
29,277 | 705,837 | A | 17,025 | 829,118 | |||||||||||||||
B | 4,256 | 197,904 | ||||||||||||||||||
Donald C. Berg
|
A | 3,571 | 173,908 | |||||||||||||||||
B | 892 | 41,478 | ||||||||||||||||||
James L. Bareuther
(7)
|
14,980 | 190,246 | A | 7,508 | 365,640 | |||||||||||||||
B | 1,877 | 87,281 | ||||||||||||||||||
James S. Welch, Jr.
(8)
|
15,014 | 551,785 | A | 3,710 | 180,677 | |||||||||||||||
B | 927 | 43,106 |
(1) | On October 27, 2008, we completed a special distribution of shares of our Class B common stock. For every four shares of Class A or Class B common stock held as of the record date, stockholders received one share of Class B common stock, with fractional shares payable in cash (outstanding option and SSAR awards were rounded up to the next whole share). Outstanding equity award amounts and exercise prices were adjusted as of October 27, 2008, to account for this distribution, and are presented herein on an adjusted basis. | |
(2) | All option and SSAR awards are denominated in the form of Class B common stock. | |
(3) | Value realized on exercise equals the difference between the option/SSAR exercise price and the market price of the underlying shares on the date of exercise, multiplied by the number of shares for which the option/SSAR was exercised. | |
(4) | The awards of Class A common stock shown in this column were granted on July 22, 2004. The awards of Class B common stock shown in this column are also considered to have a grant date of July 22, 2004, but were issued on October 27, 2008, in connection with the Companys special stock distribution. The vesting date for all stock awards shown on this table was April 30, 2009. | |
(5) | Value realized on vesting equals the market price of the underlying securities on the vesting date, multiplied by the number of shares that vested. The closing prices of our Class A common stock and Class B common stock on the vesting date, April 30, 2009, were $48.70 and $46.50, respectively. | |
(6) | Mr. Varga exercised 29,277 options for Class B common stock on December 17, 2008. Of those options, 12,064 had an exercise price of $30.62 and a market price of $51.46, and 17,213 had an exercise price of $25.06 and a market price of $51.46. | |
(7) | Mr. Bareuther exercised 14,980 options for Class B common stock on March 11, 2009, with an exercise price of $24.30 and a market price of $37.00. | |
(8) | Mr. Welch exercised 15,014 options for Class B common stock on June 12, 2008, with an exercise price of $24.30 and a market price of $61.05. These options were exercised before the Companys special stock distribution in October 2008, however, the number of options, exercise price and market price are presented herein on an adjusted basis. |
42
Number of |
Present |
|||||||||
Years |
Value of |
Payments |
||||||||
Credited |
Accumulated |
During Last |
||||||||
Service |
Benefit |
Fiscal Year |
||||||||
Name | Plan Name | (#) | ($)(1) | ($) | ||||||
Paul C. Varga
|
Qualified | 22.00 | 156,031 | 0 | ||||||
Non-Qualified | 22.00 | 1,456,213 | 0 | |||||||
Donald C. Berg
|
Qualified | 19.83 | 273,628 | 0 | ||||||
Non-Qualified | 19.83 | 819,086 | 0 | |||||||
James L. Bareuther
|
Qualified | 14.50 | 428,992 | 0 | ||||||
Non-Qualified | 14.50 | 1,459,040 | 0 | |||||||
James S. Welch, Jr.
|
Qualified | 19.75 | 198,997 | 0 | ||||||
Non-Qualified | 19.75 | 627,263 | 0 | |||||||
Mark I. McCallum
|
Qualified | 5.75 | 81,765 | 0 | ||||||
Non-Qualified | 5.75 | 179,214 | 0 |
(1) | The amount in this column represents the actuarial present value of each NEOs accumulated pension benefit as of our SFAS 87 measurement date, April 30, 2009, using a 7.94% discount rate, age 65 expected retirement age, 2008 Static Mortality Table for Annuitants and Non-Annuitants, and life annuity form of payment. |
| Final Average Compensation (FAC) is the average of the highest consecutive five calendar years in the last ten calendar years employed. For this purpose, compensation is considered to be salary and short-term incentive compensation (not long-term cash or equity compensation). |
43
| Social Security Covered Compensation (CC) is the average of the Social Security Taxable Wage Base in effect for each calendar year during the 35 years ending with the calendar year in which a participant attains his or her Social Security Retirement age. | |
| Credited Service (Service) is the number of years and whole months of service the participant is employed by the Company at a location or division that participates in the pension plan, up to a maximum of 30 years. |
| 1.3% multiplied by FAC up to CC; | |
| 1.75% multiplied by FAC above CC; | |
| The sum of the above multiplied by Service; and | |
| Divide by 12 to get the monthly pension (before reduction for early retirement or optional forms of payment). |
.013 X $80,000 =
|
$ | 1,040 | ||
.0175 X $320,000 =
|
$ | 5,600 | ||
Sum
|
$ | 6,640 | ||
Times Service
|
30 | |||
Annual age 65 Pension
$199,200
|
||||
Divide by
|
12 | |||
Monthly Pension
|
$ | 16,600 |
44
45
Involuntary |
Termination |
|||||||||
Voluntary |
Termination |
Upon Change- |
||||||||
Name | Termination | Not for Cause | Retirement | Death | in-Control | |||||
Varga
|
||||||||||
Death Benefit
(1)
|
$0 | $0 | $0 | $2,000,000 | $0 | |||||
Holiday Bonus
(2)
|
0 | 16,753 | 16,753 | 16,753 | 16,753 | |||||
STC (3)
|
0 | 0 | 1,250,000 | 1,250,000 | 1,250,000 | |||||
LTC (4)
|
0 | 0 | 3,523,494 | 3,062,960 | 3,523,494 | |||||
SSARs (5)
|
0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | |||||
RS (6)
|
0 | 2,784,290 | 0 | 0 | 4,818,741 | |||||
Total
|
0 | 2,801,043 | 4,790,247 | 6,329,713 | 9,608,988 | |||||
Berg
|
||||||||||
Death Benefit
(1)
|
0 | 0 | 0 | 2,604,000 | 0 | |||||
Holiday Bonus
(2)
|
0 | 9,028 | 9,028 | 9,028 | 9,028 | |||||
STC (3)
|
0 | 0 | 260,000 | 260,000 | 260,000 | |||||
LTC (4)
|
0 | 0 | 918,345 | 800,098 | 918,345 | |||||
SSARs (5)
|
0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | |||||
RS (6)
|
0 | 400,026 | 0 | 0 | 644,425 | |||||
Total
|
0 | 409,054 | 1,187,373 | 3,673,126 | 1,831,798 | |||||
Bareuther
(7)
|
||||||||||
Death Benefit
(1)
|
0 | 0 | 0 | 1,656,000 | 0 | |||||
Holiday Bonus
(2)
|
9,462 | 9,462 | 9,462 | 9,462 | 9,462 | |||||
STC (3)
|
260,000 | 0 | 260,000 | 260,000 | 260,000 | |||||
LTC (4)
|
1,205,785 | 0 | 1,205,785 | 1,054,378 | 1,205,785 | |||||
SSARs (5)
|
0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | |||||
RS (6)
|
0 | 725,666 | 0 | 0 | 1,069,793 | |||||
Total
|
1,475,247 | 735,128 | 1,475,247 | 2,979,840 | 2,545,040 | |||||
Welch
|
||||||||||
Death Benefit
(1)
|
0 | 0 | 0 | 2,614,000 | 0 | |||||
Holiday Bonus
(2)
|
0 | 9,115 | 9,115 | 9,115 | 9,115 | |||||
STC (3)
|
0 | 0 | 260,000 | 260,000 | 260,000 | |||||
LTC (4)
|
0 | 0 | 1,159,524 | 1,029,174 | 1,159,524 | |||||
SSARs (5)
|
0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | |||||
RS (6)
|
0 | 613,832 | 0 | 0 | 946,967 | |||||
Total
|
0 | 622,947 | 1,428,639 | 3,912,289 | 2,375,606 | |||||
McCallum
|
||||||||||
Death Benefit
(1)
|
0 | 0 | 0 | 2,110,000 | 0 | |||||
Holiday Bonus
(2)
|
0 | 6,250 | 6,250 | 6,250 | 6,250 | |||||
STC (3)
|
0 | 0 | 260,000 | 260,000 | 260,000 | |||||
LTC (4)
|
0 | 0 | 1,022,332 | 880,912 | 1,022,332 | |||||
SSARs (5)
|
0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | |||||
RS (6)
|
0 | 245,966 | 0 | 0 | 505,210 | |||||
Total
|
0 | 252,216 | 1,288,582 | 3,257,162 | 1,793,792 |
46
(1) | Death benefit includes amounts provided by the Company as an insurance benefit in the event of the employees death (generally available to all salaried employees) and additional amounts elected and paid for by each NEO as optional insurance coverage. | |
(2) | Pro-rated holiday bonus is provided in the event of retirement, death, involuntary termination other than for cause, and change-in-control. Holiday bonus is calculated based on a December 1 November 30 payment cycle. | |
(3) | Pro-rated short-term cash incentives are provided in the event of retirement or death based on actual Company performance. Pro-rated short-term cash incentives are provided in the event of termination upon change-in-control based on target Company performance. Amounts shown reflect payments based on target levels of performance for fiscal 2009. | |
(4) | Continued vesting of pro-rated long-term cash awards is provided in the event of retirement or death, based on the number of days worked during the performance period. Accelerated vesting of pro-rated long-term cash awards is provided in the event of termination upon a change-in-control. For retirement and termination upon change-in-control scenarios, amounts shown represent actual performance applied to prior performance periods and target performance applied to the current and future performance periods. For death scenarios, amounts shown represent actual performance applied to prior performance periods and target performance applied to the fiscal 2009 and future performance periods, with the award for the performance period ending April 30, 2010, reduced by 15% and the award for the performance period ending April 30, 2011, reduced by 25%, in accordance with the administrative guidelines to the Plan. | |
(5) | SSARs become non-forfeitable upon retirement and vest immediately in the event of death and change-in-control. Amounts shown in the SSARs line item represent the value realized upon vesting of unvested SSARs, based upon the difference between the exercise price and the closing price of our Class B common stock on April 30, 2009. Amounts shown are $0 because the exercise prices of all outstanding unvested SSARs are lower than the closing price of our Class B common stock on April 30, 2009. | |
(6) | Continued vesting of a pro-rated number of unvested restricted shares is provided in the event of involuntary termination other than for cause based on the number of whole or partial months elapsed at the time of termination divided by the number of months required for full vesting. Accelerated vesting of unvested restricted shares is provided in the event of termination upon a change-in-control. Amounts shown represent the number of restricted shares provided, multiplied by the closing prices of our Class A and Class B common stock on April 30, 2009, of $48.70 and $46.50, respectively. | |
(7) | As a retirement-eligible NEO, Mr. Bareuther would be treated as a retiree in the event of voluntary termination. |
47
| Annual cash retainer | |
| Equity award for the Board Year | |
| Committee member retainer | |
| Committee chairman retainer | |
| Meeting fees for Board and committee meetings | |
| Limited personal benefits and perquisites |
48
Change in |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Pension |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Fees Earned |
Value and |
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||
or |
Non-Equity |
Nonqualified |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Paid in |
Stock |
SSAR |
Incentive Plan |
Deferred |
All Other |
|||||||||||||||||||||||
Cash |
Awards |
Awards |
Compensation |
Compensation |
Compensation |
Total |
||||||||||||||||||||||
Name | ($)(1) | ($) | ($)(2)(3)(4)(5) | ($) | Earnings | ($)(6) | ($) | |||||||||||||||||||||
Patrick Bousquet-Chavanne
|
63,333 | 71,488 | - | 134,821 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Barry D. Bramley
(7)
|
50,000 | 71,488 | 10,874 | 132,362 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Martin S. Brown Jr.
|
61,167 | 38,761 | - | 99,928 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Owsley Brown II
(8)
|
10,833 | - | - | 10,833 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Donald G. Calder
|
132,000 | 38,761 | - | 170,761 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
John D. Cook
(9)
|
57,967 | 31,860 | - | 89,827 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Sandra A. Frazier
|
61,167 | 38,761 | - | 99,928 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Richard P. Mayer
|
143,667 | 38,761 | - | 182,428 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
William E. Mitchell
|
58,750 | 71,488 | - | 130,238 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Matthew R. Simmons
(10)
|
24,167 | 71,488 | - | 95,655 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
William M. Street
|
92,000 | 38,761 | - | 130,761 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Dace Brown Stubbs
|
56,167 | 38,761 | - | 94,928 |
(1) | Amounts in this column include: annual Board retainer, if paid in cash; annual committee chair and committee member retainers; and Board and committee meeting fees. Fees vary based on the length of Board service during the year, the Board members attendance at Board and committee meetings, and whether such Board member is chair of a committee. | |
(2) | Amounts include: annual Board retainer, if paid in equity; and annual equity awards for fiscal 2009. For fiscal 2009, Mr. Bousquet-Chavanne, Mr. Bramley, Mr. Mitchell and Mr. Simmons elected to receive their Board retainer in SSARs. | |
(3) | Amounts reflect the dollar amount of compensation cost recognized for financial statement reporting purposes for the fiscal year ended April 30, 2009, in accordance with SFAS 123(R). Assumptions used in the calculation of |
49
these amounts are included in footnote 16 to the Companys audited financial statements for the fiscal year ended April 30, 2009, which are included in the Companys Annual Report on Form 10-K as filed with the SEC. The grant date fair value of each SSAR granted to our non-employee directors as of July 24, 2008, was $57.40. The grant date fair value of the SSARs granted to John D. Cook on September 25, 2008, was $58.45. All SSARs granted to non-employee directors are immediately vested and fully exercisable. | ||
(4) | The aggregate number of Class B common stock options and SSARs outstanding for each of our non-employee directors as of April 30, 2009, is set forth below. All such options and SSARs are fully vested and exercisable. |
Name | ||||
Patrick Bousquet-Chavanne
|
25,497 | |||
Martin S. Brown Jr.
|
10,550 | |||
Donald G. Calder
|
32,304 | |||
John D. Cook
|
2,793 | |||
Sandra A. Frazier
|
10,550 | |||
Richard P. Mayer
|
27,794 | |||
William E. Mitchell
|
12,985 | |||
William M. Street
|
102,452 | |||
Dace Brown Stubbs
|
40,119 |
(5) | On October 27, 2008, we completed a special distribution of shares of our Class B common stock. For every four shares of Class A or Class B common stock held as of the record date, stockholders received one share of Class B common stock, with fractional shares payable in cash (outstanding option and SSAR awards were rounded up to the next whole share). Outstanding equity award amounts and exercise prices were adjusted as of October 27, 2008, to account for this distribution, and are presented herein on an adjusted basis. | |
(6) | For Mr. Bramley, this amount includes an international travel allowance of $9,000 ($3,000 per meeting attended in fiscal 2009), product gift of $1,157, and $717 in travel-related expenses for Mr. Bramleys spouse to attend certain Board-related events. | |
(7) | Mr. Bramley retired from the Board effective September 28, 2008. | |
(8) | Owsley Brown II retired from the Board effective July 24, 2008. | |
(9) | Mr. Cook joined the Board effective September 25, 2008. | |
(10) | Mr. Simmons retired from the Board effective January 22, 2009. |
50
51
52
| earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and/or amortization; | |
| operating income or profit; | |
| operating efficiencies; | |
| return on equity, assets, capital, capital employed or investment; | |
| after tax operating income; | |
| net income; | |
| earnings or book value per share; | |
| cash flow(s); | |
| total sales or revenues, or sales or revenues per employee; | |
| production (separate work units or SWUs); | |
| stock price or total shareholder return; | |
| dividends; or | |
| strategic business objectives, consisting of one or more objectives based on meeting specified cost targets, business expansion goals or goals relating to acquisitions or divestitures; | |
| or any combination thereof. |
53
Number of securities |
|||||||||||
Number of securities to be |
Weighted-average |
remaining available for |
|||||||||
issued upon exercise of |
exercise price of |
future issuance under |
|||||||||
outstanding options and |
outstanding options and |
equity compensation |
|||||||||
Plan Category | SSARs | SSARs | plans | ||||||||
Equity compensation plans approved by security holders
|
4,173,651 | $ | 40.11 | 5,028,571 | |||||||
Equity compensation plans not approved by security holders
(1)
|
141,036 | $ | 26.09 | (2) | |||||||
Total
|
4,314,687 | $ | 39.65 | 5,028,571 |
(1) | Our Non-Employee Directors Plan, which was discontinued in 2004 upon our stockholders approval of the 2004 Omnibus Compensation Plan, was not submitted to stockholders for approval. | |
(2) | No further awards may be made under the Non-Employee Directors Plan. |
54
Exhibit A
BROWN-FORMAN 2004 OMNIBUS COMPENSATION PLAN
Unless the context clearly requires otherwise, references to Sections and Articles are to sections and articles of this plan, and capitalized terms have the meaning assigned to them below. All references to statutes or regulations mean those statutes or regulations as amended from time to time, and any successors to those statutes or regulations.
ARTICLE 1
ESTABLISHMENT, OBJECTIVES AND DURATION
1.1 | ESTABLISHMENT. Brown-Forman Corporation, a Delaware corporation (the Company), hereby establishes an incentive compensation plan to be known as the Brown-Forman 2004 Omnibus Compensation Plan (the Plan), as set out in this document. The Plan permits the Plan Administrator to grant Awards (as defined below). |
1.2 | OBJECTIVES. The Plans objectives are: |
(a) | to optimize the Companys profitability and growth through incentives which are consistent with the Companys goals and which link the personal interests of Participants to those of the Companys stockholders; | |||
(b) | to provide Participants with an incentive for excellence in individual performance; | |||
(c) | to promote teamwork among Participants; | |||
(d) | to provide flexibility to the Company in its ability to motivate, attract and retain the services of Participants who make significant contributions to the Companys success; and | |||
(e) | to allow Participants to share in the Companys success. |
1.2 | DURATION. Subject to (a) approval by the Companys stockholders, and (b) the Boards right to amend or terminate the Plan at any time pursuant to Article 12, the Plan shall take effect as of the Effective Date, and remain in effect until Participants have bought or acquired all Shares subject to the Plan. The Plan Administrator may not, however, grant any Awards under the Plan on or after July 22, 2014. |
ARTICLE 2
DEFINITIONS
Whenever used in the Plan, the following terms shall have the following meanings:
2.1 | ADJUSTED MARKET VALUE is defined in Section 11.2(b). | |||
2.2 | AFFILIATE shall mean (i) any entity that, directly or indirectly, is controlled by the Company, (ii) any entity in which the Company has a significant equity interest, (iii) an affiliate of the Company, as defined in Rule 12b-2 promulgated under Section 12 of the Exchange Act, and (iv) any entity in which the Company has an ownership voting interest, in each case as designated by the Plan Administrator (subject to the Boards approval) as being a participating employer in the Plan. | |||
2.3 | ANNUAL INCENTIVE AWARD means a short-term incentive Award granted under Article 6. | |||
2.4 | AWARD means, individually or collectively, a grant under this Plan of Annual Incentive Awards and/or Long Term Incentive Awards. | |||
2.5 | AWARD AGREEMENT shall mean any written agreement, contract or other instrument or document evident in any Award, which may, but need not, be executed or acknowledged by a Participant. | |||
2.6 | AWARD OPPORTUNITY means the total Award that a Participant may earn under the Plan with respect to a Plan Year or other Performance Period, as established by the Plan Administrator. | |||
2.7 | BASE PERIOD means the three-month period ending three months prior to the first date on which a Potential Change in Control occurs. | |||
2.8 | BASE PERIOD FAIR MARKET VALUE means, with respect to an Option (or SAR), the average Fair Market Value per Share for each date on which Shares were traded during the Base Period, or portion of the Base Period, during which the Option (or SAR) was outstanding. If an Option (or SAR) is granted during the Restricted Period prior to a Change in Control, the Base Period Fair Market Value for the Option (or SAR) shall be its exercise price (or grant price). | |||
2.9 | BENEFICIAL OWNER or BENEFICIAL OWNERSHIP shall have the meaning ascribed to such term in Rule 13d-3 under the Exchange Act. | |||
2.10 | BOARD means the Companys board of directors. | |||
2.11 | CAUSE shall mean, unless otherwise defined in the applicable Award Agreement, with respect to any Participant: |
(a) | the willful and continued failure of the Participant to perform substantially the Participants duties with the Company (other than any such failure resulting from incapacity due to physical or mental illness), after a written demand for substantial |
E-2
performance is delivered to the Participant by the Board, the chief executive officer of the Company or the senior officer of the Company supervising the Participant, which demand identifies the manner in which the Board, the chief executive officer of the Company or the senior officer of the Company supervising the Participant believes that the Participant has not substantially performed the Participants duties, or | ||||
(b) | the engaging by the Participant in illegal conduct or gross misconduct that is materially and demonstrably injurious to the Company. |
For purposes of this definition, no act or failure to act on the part of the Participant shall be considered willful unless it is done, or omitted to be done, by the Participant in bad faith or without reasonable belief that the Participants action or omission was in the best interests of the Company. Any act or failure to act based upon authority given pursuant to a resolution duly adopted by the Board or upon the instructions of the chief executive officer or a senior officer of the Company or based upon the advice of counsel for the Company shall be conclusively presumed to be done, or omitted to be done, by the Participant in good faith and in the best interests of the Company. Any determination of Cause for purposes of the Plan or any Award shall be made by the Plan Administrator in its sole discretion. |
2.12 | CHANGE IN CONTROL of the Company means, and shall be deemed to have occurred upon, any of the following events: |
(a) | individuals who, as of the close of business on July 22, 2004, constitute the Board (the Incumbent Board) cease for any reason to constitute at least a majority of the Board; provided, however, that any individual becoming a director after such time on July 22, 2004 and whose election, or nomination for election by the Companys stockholders, was approved by a vote of at least a majority of the Directors then comprising the Incumbent Board shall be considered a member of the Incumbent Board, but excluding, for this purpose, any individual whose initial assumption of office occurs as a result of an actual or threatened election contest with respect to the election or removal of Directors or other actual or threatened solicitation of proxies or consents by or on behalf of a Person other than the Board; | |||
(b) | consummation by the Company of a reorganization, merger or consolidation or sale or other disposition of all or substantially all of the assets of the Company or the acquisition of assets or stock of another entity (a Business Combination), in each case, unless, following the Business Combination, |
(1) | all or substantially all of the Beneficial Owners of the combined voting power of the then Outstanding Voting Securities of the Company immediately before the Business Combination beneficially own, directly |
E-3
or indirectly, more than fifty percent (50%) of the combined voting power of the Outstanding Voting Securities of the corporation resulting from the Business Combination (including, without limitation, an entity that as a result of such transaction owns the Company or all or substantially all of the Companys assets either directly or through one or more affiliates) in substantially the same proportions that they owned the Outstanding Voting Securities of the Company immediately before the Business Combination, and | ||||
(2) | no Person, excluding any employee benefit plan (or related trust) of the Company or such corporation resulting from the Business Combination, beneficially owns, directly or indirectly, twenty percent (20%) or more of the combined voting power of the Outstanding Voting Securities of the corporation resulting from the Business Combination except to the extent that such ownership existed before the Business Combination, and | |||
(3) | at least a majority of the directors of the corporation resulting from the Business Combination were Directors on the Incumbent Board at the time of the execution of the initial agreement, or of the action of the Board, providing for the Business Combination; or |
(c) | the approval by the Companys stockholders of a plan of liquidation and dissolution. |
2.13 | CHANGE IN CONTROL PRICE shall mean, unless otherwise defined in the applicable Award Agreement, the closing sale price on the principal securities exchange on which the Shares are traded, or the highest price per share paid or offered in any bona fide transaction related to a Potential Change in Control or Change in Control of the Company at any time during the sixty (60) day period immediately preceding the occurrence of the Change in Control (or, where applicable, the occurrence of the Potential Change in Control event), in each case as determined by the Plan Administrator except that, in the case of Incentive Stock Options and Stock Appreciation Rights relating to Incentive Stock Options, such price shall be based only on transactions reported for the date on which the optionee exercises such Stock Appreciation Rights. |
2.14 | CODE means the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended from time to time. |
2.15 | COMPANY means Brown-Forman Corporation, a Delaware corporation, and to the extent it is appropriate in the context of the Plan provision, the Companys Affiliates, as well as any successor to any of such entities as provided in Section 15.4. |
2.16 | COMPENSATION COMMITTEE means the members of the Board who are serving as its Compensation Committee at the time of the action to be taken. Each member of the Compensation Committee shall be (a) an independent director within the meaning of |
E-4
the listing standards of the New York Stock Exchange; (b) a non-employee director as that term is defined by the rules and regulations of the Securities and Exchange Commission (including Rule 16b-3); and (c) an outside director as that term is defined by the regulations applicable to Internal Revenue Code Section 162(m), but each such qualification shall be applicable only so long as the respective requirement is necessary under applicable law or rule or any successor provision to such applicable rule or law. |
2.17 | DESIGNATED EXECUTIVE OFFICER shall mean at any date (i) any individual who, with respect to the previous taxable year of the Company, was a covered employee of the Company within the meaning of Section 162(m) of the Code; provided, however, that the term Designated Executive Officer shall not include any such individual who is designated by the Plan Administrator, in its discretion, at the time of any Award or at any subsequent time, as reasonably expected not to be such a covered employee with respect to the current taxable year of the Company and (ii) any individual who is designated by the Plan Administrator, in its discretion, at the time of any Award or at any subsequent time, as reasonably expected to be such a covered employee with respect to the current taxable year of the Company or with respect to the taxable year of the Company in which any applicable Award will be paid. |
2.18 | DIRECTOR means any individual who is a Board member. |
2.19 | DISABILITY shall mean, unless otherwise defined in the applicable Award Agreement, a disability that would qualify as a total and permanent disability under the Companys (or an Affiliates, if applicable) then current long-term disability plan. |
2.20 | EFFECTIVE DATE means July 22, 2004. |
2.21 | EMPLOYEE means any employee of the Company or an Affiliate. |
2.22 | EXCHANGE ACT means the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended from time to time. |
2.23 | EXECUTIVE OFFICER means an Employee whom the Board has determined is an officer as defined in Rule 16a-1(f) under the Exchange Act (or its successor rule), as of the date of vesting and/or payout of an Award, as applicable. |
2.24 | FAIR MARKET VALUE means (i) the closing sale price on the principal securities exchange on which the Shares are traded on the relevant date (or, if no Shares are traded on the relevant date, the last previous day on which a sale was reported), or (ii) in the event there is no public market for the Shares on such date, the fair market value as determined in good faith by the Plan Administrator in its sole discretion. |
2.25 | FREESTANDING SAR means a SAR granted independently of any Options, as described in Section 7.5. |
E-5
2.26 | IMMEDIATE FAMILY means, with respect to a Participant, such Participants children and grandchildren, including adopted children and grandchildren, stepchildren, parents, stepparents, grandparents, spouse, siblings (including half brothers and sisters), father-in-law, mother-in-law, daughters-in-law and sons-in-law. |
2.27 | INCENTIVE STOCK OPTION or ISO means an option to buy Shares granted under Section 7.4 that is designated an Incentive Stock Option and that is intended to meet the requirements of Code Section 422. | |||
2.28 | INDEXED OPTION means an Option with an exercise price that either increases by a fixed percentage over time or changes by reference to a published index. | |||
2.29 | LONG TERM INCENTIVE AWARD means a long-term incentive Award granted under Article 7. | |||
2.30 | MARKET VALUE UNIT or MVU means an Award, designated as an MVU, granted pursuant to Section 7.3. | |||
2.31 | NON-EMPLOYEE DIRECTOR means a Director who is not an Employee. | |||
2.32 | NON-QUALIFIED STOCK OPTION or NQSO means an option to buy Shares granted under Section 7.4 which is not intended to meet the requirements of Code Section 422. | |||
2.33 | OPTION means an Incentive Stock Option, Indexed Option or a Non-qualified Stock Option, as described in Section 7.4. | |||
2.34 | OPTION PRICE means the price at which a Participant may buy a Share under an Option. | |||
2.35 | OUTSIDE DIRECTOR means, with respect to the grant of an Award, a member of the Board then serving on the Compensation Committee. | |||
2.36 | OUTSTANDING VOTING SECURITIES means, with respect to a corporation, the then outstanding voting securities entitled to vote generally in the election of directors of the corporation. | |||
2.37 | PARTICIPANT means any Employee or Director. | |||
2.38 | PERFORMANCE-BASED EXCEPTION means the performance-based exception from the tax deductibility limitations of Code Section 162(m). |
E-6
2.39 | PERFORMANCE PERIOD means such period of time as determined by the Plan Administrator. | |||
2.40 | PERFORMANCE UNIT means an Award granted to a Participant as described in Section 7.6. | |||
2.41 | PERIOD OF RESTRICTION means the period during which the transfer of Shares of Restricted Stock is limited in some way (based on the passage of time, the achievement of performance goals, or upon the occurrence of other events as determined by the Plan Administrator), and during which the Shares are subject to a substantial risk of forfeiture, as provided in Section 7.2. | |||
2.42 | PERMITTED TRANSFEREE means a Participants Immediate Family, a Permitted Trust or a partnership of which the only partners are members of the Participants Immediate Family. | |||
2.43 | PERMITTED TRUST means a trust solely for the benefit of a Participant or a Participants Immediate Family. | |||
2.44 | PERSON shall have the meaning ascribed to such term in Section 3(a)(9) of the Exchange Act and used in Sections 13(d) and 14(d) thereof, including a group as defined in Section 13(d) thereof. | |||
2.45 | PLAN ADMINISTRATOR shall mean, for all Persons other than Outside Directors, the Compensation Committee, and shall include any person or committee to whom authority is delegated from time-to-time pursuant to Section 3.3 hereof. With respect to Outside Directors, the Plan Administrator shall mean the entire Board. | |||
2.46 | PLAN YEAR means the Companys Fiscal Year. | |||
2.47 | POTENTIAL CHANGE IN CONTROL of the Company means, and shall be deemed to have occurred upon, any of the following events: |
(a) | the Company enters into an agreement, the consummation of which would result in the occurrence of a Change in Control of the Company; | |||
(b) | any Person (including the Company) publicly announces an intention to take or to consider taking actions which if consummated would constitute a Change in Control of the Company; | |||
(c) | any Person (other than the Company, a Person who as of May 1, 2004 is reporting its Outstanding Voting Securities on Schedule 13D or who subsequently files a Schedule 13D solely by virtue of acquiring Outstanding Voting Securities from such a Person under the laws of descent and distribution or upon liquidation of a |
E-7
trust, or a Person reporting its acquisition of Outstanding Voting Securities on Schedule 13G) becomes the Beneficial Owner, directly or indirectly, of securities of the Company representing five percent (5%) or more of the combined voting power of the Outstanding Voting Securities of the Company; or | ||||
(d) | the Board adopts a resolution to the effect that, for purposes of this Plan, a potential Change in Control of the Company has occurred. |
2.48 | RESTRICTED PERIOD shall mean the period beginning upon the occurrence of a Potential Change in Control and ending at the end of the twelfth month following the month in which the Potential Change in Control occurs, if a Change in Control has not occurred prior to the end of such month. Notwithstanding the foregoing, in the event of a Potential Change in Control described in Section 2.47(a), the Restricted Period shall end upon the first to occur of the end of the period described in the immediately preceding sentence or the sixtieth day following the termination of the agreement described in Section 2.47(a). If a Change in Control occurs before the end of the twelfth month following the Potential Change in Control, the Restricted Period shall continue until all Options (and SARs) granted hereunder have been exercised or canceled. | |||
2.49 | RESTRICTED STOCK means an Award granted to a Participant pursuant to Section 7.2. | |||
2.50 | RETIREMENT shall mean, unless otherwise defined in the applicable Award Agreement, the voluntary, elective separation of a Participant from the employ or service of the Company or any of its Affiliates after the Participant has attained (a) age 60, or (b) both age 55 and at least fifteen (15) years of service with the Company or any of its Affiliates. | |||
2.51 | SHARES means the shares of the Companys Class A or Class B Common Stock, or any combination of Class A or Class B Common Stock, as the Plan Administrator determines. | |||
2.52 | STOCK APPRECIATION RIGHT or SAR means an Award, granted alone or in connection with a related Option, designated as an SAR, pursuant to Section 7.5. | |||
2.53 | TANDEM SAR means a SAR granted in connection with a related Option pursuant to Section 7.5. A holder exercising a Tandem SAR must forfeit the right to buy a Share under the related Option; conversely, a holder of a Tandem SAR buying a Share under the Option will have the Tandem SAR canceled proportionately. | |||
2.54 | TARGET INCENTIVE AWARD is defined in Section 5.7(c). |
E-8
ARTICLE 3
ADMINISTRATION
3.1 | AUTHORITY OF PLAN ADMINISTRATOR. The Plan shall be administered by the Plan Administrator, provided however, with respect to Awards to Outside Directors, all references in the Plan to the Plan Administrator shall be deemed to be references to the Board. |
(a) | Powers of Plan Administrator. Subject to the terms of the Plan and applicable law, and in addition to other express powers and authorizations conferred on the Plan Administrator by the Plan, the Plan Administrator shall have full power and authority in its discretion to: |
(i) | designate Participants; | |||
(ii) | determine the type or types of Awards to be granted to a Participant; | |||
(iii) | determine the number of Shares to be covered by, or with respect to which payments, rights or other matters are to be calculated in connection with Awards; | |||
(iv) | determine the timing, terms, and conditions of any Award; | |||
(v) | accelerate the time at which all or any part of an Award may be settled or exercised; | |||
(vi) | determine whether, to what extent, and under what circumstances Awards may be settled or exercised in cash, Shares, other securities, other Awards or other property, or canceled, forfeited or suspended and the method or methods by which Awards may be settled, exercised, canceled, forfeited or suspended; | |||
(vii) | determine whether, to what extent, and under what circumstances cash, Shares, other securities, other Awards, other property and other amounts payable with respect to an Award shall be deferred either automatically or at the election of the holder thereof or of the Plan Administrator; | |||
(viii) | interpret and administer the Plan and any instrument or agreement relating to, or Award made under, the Plan; | |||
(ix) | except to the extent prohibited by the Plan, amend or modify the terms of any Award at or after grant with the consent of the holder of the Award; |
E-9
(x) | establish, amend, suspend or waive such rules and regulations and appoint such agents as it shall deem appropriate for the proper administration of the Plan; and | |||
(xi) | make any other determination and take any other action that the Plan Administrator deems necessary or desirable for the administration of the Plan, subject to the exclusive authority of the Board under Section 12.1 hereunder to amend or terminate the Plan. |
(b) | Limitations on Authority. Notwithstanding the provisions of Section 12.2 hereof and except as permitted by the provisions of Section 4.4 hereof, the Plan Administrator shall not have the power to: |
(i) | amend the terms of previously granted Options to reduce the Option Price of such Options; | |||
(ii) | cancel such Options and grant substitute Options with a lower Option Price than the canceled Options; or | |||
(iii) | adjust upwards the amount payable with respect to any Awards granted to comply with the Performance-Based Exception or waive or alter the performance goals associated therewith. |
3.2 | PLAN ADMINISTRATOR DISCRETION BINDING. Except as otherwise expressly provided in the Plan, all designations, determinations, interpretations and other decisions under or with respect to the Plan or any Award shall be within the sole discretion of the Plan Administrator, may be made at any time by the then applicable Plan Administrator and shall be final, conclusive and binding upon all Persons, including the Company, any Affiliate, any Participant and any holder or beneficiary of any Award. |
3.3 | DELEGATION. Subject to the terms of the Plan and applicable law, the Plan Administrator may delegate to one or more officers, employees or Directors of the Company or of any Affiliate, or to a committee of such persons, the authority, subject to such terms and limitations as the Plan Administrator shall determine, to grant Awards to, or to cancel, modify or waive rights with respect to, or to alter, interpret, discontinue, suspend or terminate Awards held by Participants who are not Executive Officers or Directors of the Company, and such delegee, or delegees, shall have all of the powers, discretion and protections of the Compensation Committee regarding all matters within the scope of such delegation. The Compensation Committee may revoke any such delegation at any time. Notwithstanding anything in this Plan to the contrary, (i) all awards to Executive Officers must be administered by the Compensation Committee or a committee of the Board that is composed solely of two or more Non-Employee Directors as that term is used in Rule 16(b)-3 promulgated under the Exchange Act, and (ii) unless the Plan Administrator specifically determines that an Award shall not qualify |
E-10
for the Performance-Based Exception, Awards to Designated Executive Officers must be administered by the Compensation Committee or a committee that consists of members who are outside directors under Section 162(m) of the Code. Subject to the foregoing limitation with respect to Executive Officers and Designated Executive Officers, unless and until revoked or modified by the Compensation Committee by written resolution, the Brown-Forman Management Compensation Review Committee, or the committee serving similar functions from time to time, shall be designated as the Plan Administrator. | ||||
3.4 | NO LIABILITY. No member of the Board or Plan Administrator shall be liable for any action taken or determination made in good faith with respect to the Plan or any Award granted hereunder. |
ARTICLE 4
SHARES SUBJECT TO THE PLAN AND MAXIMUM AWARDS
4.1 | SHARES AVAILABLE FOR GRANTS. Subject to adjustment as provided in Section 4.4, the number of Shares or share equivalents (Award units whose underlying value is based on Shares) reserved for issuance to Participants under the Plan shall be 4,900,000 Shares, plus the Shares remaining from the Brown-Forman Omnibus Compensation Plan, as amended (the 1994 Plan), which were authorized but not granted (1,046,051 Shares as of April 30, 2004). Notwithstanding the foregoing and subject to adjustment as provided in Section 4.4, the maximum number of Shares with respect to which Awards may be granted under the Plan shall be increased by the number of Shares with respect to which Options or other Awards were granted under the 1994 Plan as of the effective date of this Plan, but which terminate, expire unexercised or are settled for cash, forfeited or cancelled without the delivery of Shares under the terms of the 1994 Plan, as the case may be, after the effective date of this Plan. |
4.2 | DESIGNATED EXECUTIVE OFFICER MAXIMUMS. Unless and until the Plan Administrator determines that an Award to a Designated Executive Officer shall not be designed to comply with the Performance-Based Exception, the following rules shall apply to grants of such Awards: |
(a) | Shares. For any Plan Year, no Designated Executive Officer may receive, pursuant to an Award, Shares, MVUs, Performance Units, stock Options and/or SARs for more than 250,000 Shares in the aggregate, which limit shall include any Shares represented by an Award that has been canceled. | |||
(b) | Cash. The maximum aggregate amount of any Award or Awards settled in cash that may be granted to any Designated Executive Officer shall be as follows: |
E-11
Plan Years |
Applicable Maximum |
|||
1-3 |
$ | 4,000,000 | ||
4-6 |
$ | 5,000,000 | ||
7-10 |
$ | 6,000,000 |
Plan Year 1 shall begin on the Effective Date and end on the first fiscal year end of the Company following the Effective Date. |
4.3 | LAPSED AWARDS. If any Award granted under this Plan is canceled, terminates, expires or lapses for any reason (except the termination of a Tandem SAR upon exercise of the related Option, or the termination of a related Option upon exercise of the corresponding Tandem SAR), any Shares subject to such Award shall be available for the grant of another Award under the Plan, except that this provision shall not be executed to increase the maximum number of authorized shares under Section 4.2. | |||
4.4 | ADJUSTMENTS. In the event the Plan Administrator determines that any dividend or other distribution (whether in the form of cash, Shares, other securities or other property), recapitalization, stock split, reverse stock split, reorganization, merger, consolidation, split-up, spin-off, combination, repurchase or exchange of Shares or other securities of the Company, issuance of warrants or other rights to purchase Shares or other securities of the Company, or other similar corporate transaction or event affects the Shares such that an adjustment is determined by the Plan Administrator, in its sole discretion, to be appropriate, then the Plan Administrator shall, in such manner as it may deem equitable: |
(a) | adjust any or all of (1) the aggregate number of Shares or other securities of the Company (or number and kind of other securities or property) with respect to which Awards may be granted under the Plan; (2) the number of Shares or other securities of the Company (or number and kind of other securities or property) subject to outstanding Awards under the Plan; and (3) the grant or exercise price with respect to any Award under the Plan, provided that the number of shares subject to any Award shall always be a whole number; | |||
(b) | if deemed appropriate, provide for an equivalent award in respect of securities of the surviving entity of any merger, consolidation or other transaction or event having a similar effect; or | |||
(c) | if deemed appropriate, make provision for a cash payment to the holder of an outstanding Award. |
ARTICLE 5
ELIGIBILITY AND PARTICIPATION
5.1 | ELIGIBILITY. Participation in this Plan is open to all Employees and Directors. |
E-12
5.2 | OUTSIDE DIRECTOR ELIGIBILITY. Notwithstanding Section 5.1, Directors who are not Employees shall be eligible to receive only Awards granted consistent with Section 10.2. | |||
5.3 | ACTUAL PARTICIPATION. The Plan Administrator may from time to time select, from all eligible Persons, those to whom Awards shall be granted and shall determine the nature and amount of each Award Opportunity and Award. | |||
5.4 | EMPLOYMENT. |
(a) | Rights Not Affected. Nothing in the Plan shall interfere with or limit in any way the Companys right to terminate any Participants employment at any time, nor confer upon any Participant any right to continue in the Companys employ. | |||
(b) | Transfer Not Termination. A transfer of a Participants employment between the Company and an Affiliate, or between Affiliates, shall not be deemed to be a termination of employment. Upon such a transfer, the Plan Administrator may, subject to Sections 12.2 and 12.3, make such adjustments to outstanding Awards as it deems appropriate to reflect the changed reporting relationships. | |||
(c) | No Right to Award. An Employees status as an Employee confers no right on that Employee to receive an Award under this Plan, or, having received any Award, to receive a future Award. |
5.5 | PRO RATA PLAN YEAR OR PERFORMANCE PERIOD PARTICIPATION. Except as otherwise provided in this Section 5.5, the Plan Administrator may allow Employees who become eligible after the Plan Year or Performance Period begins to participate under this Article on a pro rata basis. Such situations include, but are not limited to: |
(a) | new hires; | |||
(b) | the promotion of an Employee from a position which did not previously meet the eligibility criteria; or | |||
(c) | the transfer of an Employee from an entity which does not participate in the Plan. |
A Designated Executive Officer who becomes eligible after the Plan Year or Performance Period begins may participate under this Article on a pro rata basis, but only if (i) such Designated Officer is granted the Award during the first twenty-five percent (25%) of the Performance Period, or (ii) the Plan Administrator specifically determines such Award will not comply with the Performance-Based Exception. Notwithstanding the foregoing, Options may be granted under this Plan to Designated Executive Officers at any time. |
E-13
5.6 | CHANGE IN POSITION. |
(a) | If, during a Plan Year or Performance Period, a Participant other than a Designated Executive Officer changes employment positions at the Company or an Affiliate to one which corresponds to a level of Award Opportunity different than that existing on the first day of such Plan Year or Performance Period, the Participants Award Opportunity may be adjusted by the Plan Administrator to reasonably reflect the appropriate level of the Participants Award Opportunity for the entire Plan Year or Performance Period. | |||
(b) | Except as provided in Section 12.3, the Plan Administrator may not adjust the Award Opportunity of a Designated Executive Officer. |
5.7 | AWARD OPPORTUNITIES. |
(a) | Timing. As soon as practicable in each Plan Year or Performance Period, the Plan Administrator shall establish an Award Opportunity for each Participant. An Award Opportunity may consist of an Annual Incentive Award, a Long-Term Incentive Award or both types of Awards. As soon as is necessary to comply with Code Section 162(m), the Plan Administrator shall establish an Award Opportunity pursuant to Article 8 for each Designated Executive Officer. | |||
(b) | Measures. An Award Opportunity shall be a function of one or more performance measures and goals selected by the Plan Administrator, and shall reflect the Participants job responsibilities and opportunity and authority to affect overall financial results. For Designated Executive Officers, the Plan Administrator can apply performance measures only as set forth in Article 8. | |||
(c) | Alignment. The Plan Administrator shall align the potential levels of achievement of the performance goals with the Award Opportunities (the Target Incentive Award), such that the level of achievement of the pre-established performance goals at the end of the Plan Year or Performance Period will determine the final Award amounts. |
5.8 | AWARD DETERMINATIONS. |
(a) | Following the completion of each Plan Year or Performance Period, the Plan Administrator shall certify, in writing, whether the applicable performance targets have been achieved and the amounts, if any, payable to Designated Executive Officers for such Performance Period. |
(b) | Upon that certification, the final Award shall be computed for each Participant as determined by the Plan Administrator according to the pre-established performance measures and goals and the requirements of this Plan. |
E-14
(c) | Subject to Section 5.8(d), Award amounts may vary above or below the Target Incentive Award based on the level of achievement of the applicable pre- established corporate, division, business unit and/or individual goals or financial measures, or such other measures as the Plan Administrator shall, from time to time, determine, unless otherwise limited by the Plan. | |||
(d) | For Designated Executive Officers, the final Award determination shall be solely a function of the degree to which the pre-established objective performance measures and goals have been achieved but the Plan Administrator may adjust such final Award determinations downward. |
ARTICLE 6
ANNUAL INCENTIVE AWARDS
6.1 | PAYMENT OF AWARDS. |
(a) | Subject to Section 5.8(a), Annual Incentive Awards shall be paid in cash or Shares within ninety (90) calendar days after the end of each Plan Year. In the event the Plan Administrator determines that an Annual Incentive Award shall be payable in Shares, the Plan Administrator may attach such restrictions to these Shares as the Plan Administrator determines is in the best interests of the Company. | |||
(b) | No Participant or any other party claiming an interest in amounts earned under the Plan shall have any interest whatsoever in any specific Company asset. To the extent that any party acquires a right to receive payments under the Plan, such right shall be equivalent to that of an unsecured general creditor of the Company. |
6.2 | TERMINATION OF EMPLOYMENT. If a Participants employment is terminated before the end of the Plan Year for any reason (including termination as a result of not returning from a leave of absence granted by the Company), the Participant shall forfeit all of the Participants rights to a final Annual Incentive Award for the Plan Year then in progress. The Plan Administrator may, however, adopt policies and procedures pursuant to which a Participant may receive a part or all of the Annual Incentive Award for the Plan Year in which a Participants employment terminates, depending on the circumstances of such termination. |
ARTICLE 7
LONG TERM INCENTIVE AWARDS
7.1 | GENERALLY. |
(a) | Grant of Awards. Subject to Article 4, the Plan Administrator, at any time and from time to time, may, in its discretion, grant or award Options, MVUs, |
E-15
Restricted Stock, Shares, Freestanding SARs, Tandem SARs, Performance Units, cash or any combination thereof to Participants in such amounts as the Plan Administrator shall determine. The Plan Administrator may apply Performance Periods and performance measures, and may set threshold, target and maximum goals for each type of Award, as it chooses. | ||||
(b) | Source of Shares. The Company will endeavor to limit the source of Shares delivered to Participants under this Plan to Shares purchased by the Company from time to time on the open market, in private transactions or otherwise. If the Company determines that the timing of such purchases may unduly influence the market price of the Shares, the purchases may be spread over a period of time sufficient to alleviate such influence. The Company shall maintain a separate accounting of Shares purchased for this purpose. Should there be insufficient shares in the separate account to cover exercises or other Award redemptions, the Company may use other available shares including newly issued shares to cover those exercises or redemptions, and then purchase that equal number of shares on the open market or otherwise as quickly as is reasonably practicable. In determining the number of Shares to be purchased for these purposes, the Company need only to take into account the net number Shares actually delivered rather than any Shares withheld pursuant to any exercise for tax or any other purposes. | |||
(c) | Termination of Employment. The Plan Administrator shall have the full power and authority to determine the terms and conditions that shall apply to any Award upon a termination of employment with the Company, its Affiliates, including a termination by the Company or any Affiliate with or without Cause, by a Participant voluntarily or by reason of death, Disability or Retirement, and may provide such terms and conditions in the Award Agreement or in such rules and regulations as it may prescribe. Such provisions need not be uniform among all Awards granted or issued pursuant to this Plan and may reflect distinctions based on the reasons for termination of employment and the needs of the Company as they are determined from time to time. | |||
(d) | Other Restrictions. Subject to Article 8, the Plan Administrator may impose such other conditions and/or restrictions on any Long Term Incentive Awards granted pursuant to the Plan as the Plan Administrator deems advisable, including time-based restrictions on vesting following the attainment of the performance goals, and/or restrictions under applicable Federal or state securities laws. | |||
(e) | Limited Transferability of Awards. Except as otherwise provided in the Plan, no Award shall be assigned, alienated, pledged, attached, sold or otherwise transferred or encumbered by a Participant, except (i) by will or the laws of descent and distribution, (ii) to a Permitted Transferee and/or (iii) as may be provided by the Plan Administrator in its discretion, at or after grant, in the Award |
E-16
Agreement; provided, however, that an Incentive Stock Option shall not be assigned, alienated, pledged, attached, sold or otherwise transferred or encumbered by a Participant except by will or the laws of descent and distribution. No transfer of an Award by will or by laws of descent and distribution shall be effective to bind the Company unless the Company shall have been furnished with written notice thereof and an authenticated copy of the will and/or such other evidence as the Committee may deem necessary or appropriate to establish the validity of the transfer. A Permitted Transferee may not transfer an Award other than by will or the laws of descent and distribution. |
7.2 | SHARES; RESTRICTED STOCK. |
(a) | Award Agreement. Each grant of Shares or Restricted Stock shall be evidenced by an Award Agreement that shall specify the Period(s) of Restriction (if any), the number of Shares or Shares of Restricted Stock granted and such other terms as the Plan Administrator shall determine. | |||
(b) | Non-Transferability of Restricted Stock. Except as provided in this Article, the Shares of Restricted Stock granted herein may not be sold, transferred, pledged, assigned or otherwise alienated until the end of the applicable Period of Restriction established by the Plan Administrator and specified in the Award Agreement, or upon earlier satisfaction of any other conditions, as specified by the Plan Administrator and set out in the Award Agreement. During a Participants lifetime, only that Participant may exercise any rights with respect to the Restricted Stock granted to that Participant. | |||
(c) | Other Restrictions on Restricted Stock. |
(1) | The Company shall keep custody of the certificates representing Shares of Restricted Stock until all conditions and/or restrictions applicable to such Shares have been satisfied. | |||
(2) | Except as otherwise provided in this Article, Shares of Restricted Stock covered by each Restricted Stock grant made under the Plan shall become freely transferable by the Participant after the last day of the applicable Period of Restriction. |
(d) | Voting Rights. Awards of Shares shall have whatever voting rights accompany the class of Shares awarded. During the Period(s) of Restriction, Participants holding Shares of Restricted Stock may exercise full voting rights with respect to those Shares to the extent the Shares normally have such voting rights. |
E-17
(e) | Dividends and Other Distributions. |
(1) | During the Period of Restriction, Participants holding Shares of Restricted Stock may be credited with regular cash dividends paid with respect to the underlying Shares while they are so held. The Plan Administrator may apply any restrictions to the dividends that it deems appropriate. | |||
(2) | Without limiting the generality of the preceding paragraph, if the grant or vesting of Restricted Shares granted to a Designated Executive Officer is designed to comply with the requirements of the Performance-Based Exception, the Plan Administrator may apply any restrictions it deems appropriate to the payment of dividends declared with respect to such Restricted Shares, such that the dividends and/or the Restricted Shares maintain eligibility for the Performance-Based Exception. | |||
(3) | Participants holding unrestricted Shares will be entitled to receive any cash dividends paid with respect to the Shares. |
7.3 | MARKET VALUE UNITS (MVUS). |
(a) | Award Agreement. Each MVU grant shall be evidenced by an Award Agreement that shall specify the duration of the MVU, the number of Shares on which the MVU grant is based, and such other terms as the Plan Administrator shall determine. | |||
(b) | Non-Transferability. Except as provided in this Article, the MVUs granted herein may not be sold, transferred, pledged, assigned or otherwise alienated until specified in the Award Agreement, or upon earlier satisfaction of any other conditions, as specified by the Plan Administrator and set out in the Award Agreement. During a Participants lifetime, only that Participant may exercise any rights with respect to the MVUs granted to that Participant. | |||
(c) | Dividends and Other Distributions. |
(1) | During the MVUs duration, Participants holding MVUs may be credited with regular cash dividends paid with respect to the underlying Shares while they are so held. The Plan Administrator may apply any restrictions to the dividends that it deems appropriate. | |||
(2) | Without limiting the generality of the preceding paragraph, if the grant or vesting of MVUs granted to a Designated Executive Officer is designed to comply with the requirements of the Performance-Based Exception, the Plan Administrator may apply any restrictions it deems appropriate to the payment of dividends declared with respect to such MVUs, such that the |
E-18
dividends and/or the MVUs maintain eligibility for the Performance-Based Exception. | ||||
(3) | Notwithstanding any other plan term, the Plan Administrator may impose such conditions on the accrual or payment of dividends with respect to MVUs, as may be required to comply with Section 16 of the Exchange Act. |
(d) | Payment of MVU Amount. |
(1) | Each MVU shall have a value equal to the Fair Market Value of a Share. | |||
(2) | MVUs shall be paid in cash, Shares, other securities or other property, as determined in the sole discretion of the Plan Administrator, upon the lapse of the restrictions thereto, or otherwise in accordance with the applicable Award Agreement. |
7.4 | STOCK OPTIONS. |
(a) | Award Agreement. Each Option grant shall be evidenced by an Award Agreement that shall specify the Option Price, the Options duration, the number of Shares to which the Option pertains, and such other terms as the Plan Administrator shall determine. The Award Agreement shall also specify whether the Option is intended to be an ISO, Indexed Option or an NQSO, and what Performance Period (if any) applies. Even if an Option is designated as an ISO, it shall be treated as an NQSO to the extent the Fair Market Value of the Shares with respect to which ISOs are exercisable for the first time during any calendar year by any Participant exceeds $100,000. | |||
(b) | Option Price and Duration. The Plan Administrator, in its sole discretion, shall establish the Option Price at the time each Option is granted. The Option Price for each grant of an Incentive Stock Option under this Plan and for each grant of any Option to a Designated Executive Officer shall be at least one hundred percent (100%) of the Fair Market Value of a Share on the date the Option is granted. Options may be Indexed Options. Each Option granted to an Employee shall expire as the Plan Administrator shall determine at the time of grant but no Option shall be exercisable later than the tenth anniversary of its grant. | |||
(c) | Exercise of Options. Options granted under this Section shall be exercisable at such times and be subject to such restrictions and conditions as the Plan Administrator shall in each instance approve, which need not be the same for each grant or for each Participant. |
E-19
(d) | Payment. |
(1) | Options granted under this Section shall be exercised by the delivery of a written notice of exercise to the Company, setting forth the number of Shares with respect to which the Option is to be exercised, accompanied by full payment for the Shares. | |||
(2) | The Option Price upon exercise of any Option shall be payable to the Company in full either: |
(A) | in cash or its equivalent, or | |||
(B) | by tendering previously acquired Shares having an aggregate Fair Market Value at the time of exercise equal to the total Option Price (but only if the Shares which are tendered have been held by the Participant for at least six (6) months before their tender to satisfy the Option Price); or | |||
(C) | by a combination of (A) and (B). |
(3) | The Plan Administrator also may allow cashless exercise as permitted under Federal Reserve Boards Regulation T, subject to applicable securities law restrictions, or by any other means which the Plan Administrator determines to be consistent with the Plans purpose and applicable law. | |||
(4) | As soon as practicable after receipt of a written notification of exercise and full payment, the Company shall deliver to the Participant, in the Participants name, Share certificates in an appropriate amount based upon the number of Shares bought under the Option(s). |
(e) | Ten Percent Stock Rule. Notwithstanding any other provisions in the Plan, if at the time an Incentive Stock Option or Tandem SAR is to be granted pursuant to the Plan, the Participant owns directly or indirectly (within the meaning of Section 424(d) of the Code) Shares of the Company possessing more than ten percent (10%) of the total combined voting power of all Share classes of the Company or its parent or Affiliate corporations (within the meaning of Section 422(b)(6) of the Code), then any Incentive Stock Option or Tandem SAR to be granted to such Participant pursuant to the Plan shall satisfy the requirement of Section 422(c)(5) of the Code, and the Option Price shall be not less than one hundred ten percent (110%) of the Fair Market Value of the Shares of the Company, and the Option by its terms shall not be exercisable after the expiration of five (5) years from the date the Option is granted. |
E-20
7.5 | STOCK APPRECIATION RIGHTS (SARS). |
(a) | Award Agreement. Each SAR grant shall be evidenced by an Award Agreement specifying the grant price, the SARs duration, and such other terms as the Plan Administrator shall determine. | |||
(b) | Grant Prices and Duration of SARs. The grant price of a Freestanding SAR shall equal the Fair Market Value of a Share on the date of the SAR grant. The grant price of Tandem SARs shall equal the Option Price of the related Option. The term of an SAR granted under the Plan shall be determined by the Plan Administrator but such term shall not exceed ten years. | |||
(c) | Exercise of Tandem SARs. |
(1) | Tandem SARs may be exercised for all or part of the Shares subject to the related Option upon the surrender of the right to exercise the equivalent portion of the related Option. A Tandem SAR may be exercised only with respect to the Shares for which its related Option is then exercisable. | |||
(2) | Notwithstanding any other contrary Plan provision, with respect to a Tandem SAR granted in connection with an ISO: |
(A) | the Tandem SAR will expire no later than the expiration of the underlying ISO; | |||
(B) | the payout value with respect to the Tandem SAR may not exceed one hundred percent (100%) of the difference between the Option Price of the underlying ISO and the Fair Market Value of the Shares subject to the underlying ISO at the time the Tandem SAR is exercised; and | |||
(C) | the Tandem SAR may be exercised only when the Fair Market Value of the Shares subject to the ISO exceeds the Option Price of the ISO. |
(d) | Exercise of Freestanding SARs. Freestanding SARs may be exercised upon whatever terms and conditions the Plan Administrator imposes upon them. | |||
(e) | Payment of SAR Amount. |
(1) | Upon exercise of an SAR, a Participant shall be entitled to receive payment from the Company in an amount determined by multiplying: |
E-21
(A) | the difference between the Fair Market Value of a Share on the date of exercise and the grant price; by | |||
(B) | the number of Shares with respect to which the SAR is exercised. |
(2) | The Plan Administrator may allow for payment upon SAR exercise to be in cash, in Shares of equivalent value or in some combination of cash and Shares. |
7.6 | PERFORMANCE UNITS. |
(a) | Award Agreement. Each Performance Unit grant shall be evidenced by an Award Agreement specifying an initial value for each Performance Unit as of its grant date, as well as performance goals which will determine the number and/or value of Performance Units that will be paid out to the Participant at the end of the Performance Period. Performance goals may be based on the performance of: the Company; its Shares; any of its divisions, affiliates or other business units; or any combination of such performance measures as set forth in Section 8.3. | |||
(b) | Form and Timing of Payment of Performance Units. |
(1) | The Plan Administrator may allow for payment of Performance Units to be in cash, in Shares of equivalent value or in some combination of cash and Shares. | |||
(2) | Payment of earned Performance Units shall be made as soon as practicable following the close of the applicable Performance Period. | |||
(3) | The Plan Administrator may allow Participants to elect to defer the receipt of Performance Unit pay-outs upon such terms as the Plan Administrator deems appropriate, as long as Participants make such deferral elections before the relevant Performance Period begins, or as otherwise permitted for U.S. federal income tax purposes. |
(c) | Non-Transferability. Except as otherwise provided in an Award Agreement: |
(1) | During a Participants lifetime, only the Participant or the Participants legal representative may exercise any Plan rights related to Performance Units. | |||
(2) | Participants may not sell, pledge, assign or otherwise alienate their Performance Units. |
E-22
(3) | Participants may transfer Performance Units only by will or by the laws of descent and distribution. |
7.7 | CASH PAYMENT OF AWARDS OTHERWISE PAYABLE IN SHARES. The Plan Administrator may allow for payment of a Long Term Incentive Award otherwise payable in Shares to be paid in cash. Such a cash equivalent Award shall be: |
(a) | computed as the value of the Participants long-term bonus opportunity at the end of the Performance Period, adjusted for the actual performance results; and | |||
(b) | paid to the Participant upon vesting after the end of the Performance Period. |
ARTICLE 8
PERFORMANCE MEASURES
8.1 | GENERALLY. No later than ninety (90) days following the commencement of each Performance Period (or such other time as is necessary to comply with Code Section 162(m)), the Plan Administrator shall in writing, (1) select the performance goal or goals applicable to the performance period, (2) establish the various targets and bonus amounts which may be earned for such performance period, and (3) specify the relationship between performance goals and targets and the amounts to be earned by each Designated Executive Officer for such performance period. Following the completion of each performance period, the Plan Administrator shall certify in writing whether the applicable performance targets have been achieved and the amounts, if any, payable to Designated Executive Officers for such performance period. In determining the amount earned by a Designated Executive Officer for a given performance period, subject to any applicable Award Agreement, the Plan Administrator shall have the right to reduce (but not increase) the amount payable at a given level of performance to take into account additional factors that the Plan Administrator may deem relevant to the assessment of individual or corporate performance for the performance period. |
8.2 | PERFORMANCE MEASURES FOR OTHER PARTICIPANTS. For Participants other than Designated Executive Officers, the Plan Administrator may approve and adopt either the performance measures set out in Section 8.3 or other performance measures without obtaining stockholder approval. |
8.3 | PERFORMANCE MEASURES FOR DESIGNATED EXECUTIVE OFFICERS. The Plan Administrator may grant Awards that are intended to qualify for the Performance-Based Exception to Designated Executive Officers based solely upon the attainment of performance targets related to one or more performance goals selected by the Plan Administrator from among the goals specified below. For the purposes of this Article 8, performance goals shall be limited to one or more of the following Company, Affiliate, operating unit or division financial performance measures: |
E-23
(a) | earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and/or amortization; | |||
(b) | operating income or profit; | |||
(c) | operating efficiencies; | |||
(d) | return on equity, assets, capital, capital employed or investment; | |||
(e) | after tax operating income; | |||
(f) | net income; | |||
(g) | earnings or book value per Share; | |||
(h) | cash flow(s); | |||
(i) | total sales or revenues or sales or revenues per employee; | |||
(j) | production (separate work units or SWUs); | |||
(k) | stock price or total stockholder return; | |||
(l) | dividends; or | |||
(m) | strategic business objectives, consisting of one or more objectives based on meeting specified cost targets, business expansion goals and goals relating to acquisitions or divestitures; |
or any combination thereof. Each goal may be expressed on an absolute and/or relative basis, may take into account the exclusion of certain items deemed appropriate by the Plan Administrator, may be based on or otherwise employ comparisons based on internal targets, the past performance of the Company or any Affiliate, operating unit or division of the Company and/or the past or current performance of other companies, and in the case of earnings-based measures, may use or employ comparisons relating to capital, stockholders equity and/or Shares outstanding, or to assets or net assets. |
8.4 | ADJUSTMENTS. The Plan Administrator may adjust the compensation payable upon the attainment of the pre-established performance goals, but the Plan Administrator may not adjust upward any Awards which are designed to qualify for the Performance-Based Exception, and which are held by Designated Executive Officers. |
8.5 | OTHER CHANGES. If applicable tax and/or securities laws change to permit Plan Administrator discretion to change the governing performance measures without obtaining stockholder approval of such changes, the Plan Administrator may make such |
E-24
changes without obtaining stockholder approval. In addition, if the Plan Administrator determines that it is advisable to grant Awards which shall not qualify for the Performance-Based Exception, the Plan Administrator may make such grants without satisfying the requirements of Code Section 162(m). |
ARTICLE 9
BENEFICIARY DESIGNATION
9.1 | GENERALLY. Each Participant under the Plan may, from time to time, name any beneficiary or beneficiaries (who may be named contingently or successively) to whom any benefit under the Plan is to be paid if the Participant dies before receiving any or all of such benefit. |
9.2 | MANNER OF DESIGNATION. Each such designation shall revoke all prior designations by the same Participant, shall be in a form prescribed by the Company, and will be effective only when filed by the Participant in writing with the Company during the Participants lifetime. |
9.3 | DEFAULT. Absent such designation, benefits remaining unpaid at the Participants death shall be paid to the Participants estate. |
ARTICLE 10
DEFERRALS/GRANTS TO NON-EMPLOYEE DIRECTORS
10.1 | DEFERRALS BY EMPLOYEES. The Plan Administrator may permit a Participant to defer receipt of the payment of cash or the delivery of Shares that would otherwise be due to such Participant by virtue of the satisfaction of any requirements or goals with respect to Awards, the exercise of an Option or SAR, or the lapse or waiver of restrictions with respect to Restricted Stock or MVUs. If any such deferral election is required or permitted, the Plan Administrator shall establish rules and procedures for such payment deferrals. Such rules and procedures shall be consistent with the provisions of Code Section 162(m) where applicable. |
10.2 | NON-EMPLOYEE DIRECTOR AWARDS. |
(a) | The Board may provide that all or a portion of a Non-Employee Directors annual retainer, meeting fees and/or other awards or compensation as determined by the Board, be payable (either automatically or at the election of a Non-Employee Director) in the form of Non-Qualified Stock Options, Restricted Shares, Restricted Share Units and/or other stock-based awards, including unrestricted Shares. The Board shall determine the terms and conditions of any such Awards, including the terms and conditions which shall apply upon a termination of the Non-Employee Directors service as a member of the Board, and shall have full |
E-25
power and authority in its discretion to administer such Awards, subject to the terms of the Plan and applicable law. | ||||
(b) | The Board may also grant Awards to Outside Directors pursuant to the terms of the Plan, including any Award described in Articles 6 and 7 above. With respect to such Awards, all references in the Plan to the Plan Administrator shall be deemed to be references to the Board. |
ARTICLE 11
CHANGE IN CONTROL
11.1 | TREATMENT OF AWARDS UPON A CHANGE IN CONTROL. Notwithstanding anything in this Plan to the contrary, upon the occurrence of a Change in Control, unless otherwise specifically prohibited under applicable laws, or by the rules and regulations of any governing governmental agencies or national securities exchanges: |
(a) | Any and all Options and SARs granted shall become immediately vested and non-forfeitable upon the occurrence of the Change in Control; provided, that such Options and SARs shall become exercisable pursuant to their original vesting schedule, notwithstanding any earlier termination of employment of a Participant, except that if within one year following a Change in Control, a Participants employment is terminated by the Company without Cause or by the Participant within 60 days after the Participant becomes aware of an event constituting a Constructive Discharge, upon the effective date of such employment termination, the Participants Options and SARs shall become immediately exercisable and shall remain exercisable until 30 days following the original scheduled vesting date of such Options and SARs. If a Participant is no longer an Employee as of the original vesting date under the vesting schedule for an Option or SAR, and has not terminated employment under one of the circumstances described in the immediately preceding sentence, the Participants Option and SAR shall nonetheless become exercisable on the original vesting date and remain exercisable for 30 days following the original vesting date. | |||
(b) | If within one year following a Change in Control, a Participants employment is terminated by the Company without Cause or by the Participant within 60 days after the Participant becomes aware of an event constituting a Constructive Discharge, upon the effective date of such employment termination: |
(1) | any restriction periods and restrictions imposed on Restricted Stock or MVUs granted to a Participant shall lapse, | |||
(2) | the Target Incentive Awards attainable under all outstanding Awards of the Participant shall be deemed to have been earned, and |
E-26
(3) | the vesting of all outstanding Awards of the Participant shall be accelerated, and the Company shall pay out in cash to the Participant within 30 days following the effective date of the employment termination a pro rata portion of all Target Incentive Award cash payout opportunities associated with outstanding Awards, based on the number of complete and partial calendar months within the Performance Period which had elapsed as of such effective date. This subparagraph (b)(3) shall not apply to Options and SARs. |
11.2 | TREATMENT OF OUTSTANDING OPTION AND SAR AWARDS UPON A POTENTIAL CHANGE IN CONTROL. Notwithstanding anything in this Plan to the contrary, with respect to Options and SARs, in the event of a Potential Change in Control, the following restrictions shall apply to any such outstanding Options and SARs: |
(a) | Except as otherwise provided in this Section 11.2, any Option (or SAR) exercised by a Participant during a Restricted Period shall be exercisable solely for a lump sum cash payment from the Company equal to the product of (i) the number of Shares for which the Option (or SAR) is being exercised, times (ii) the excess, if any, of (A) the Adjusted Market Value per Share of the Shares subject to the Option (or SAR), over (B) the exercise (or grant price) per Share of such Option (or SAR). The Compensation Committee may, in its discretion, provide the Participant with Shares with a Fair Market Value equal to the cash payment otherwise due upon exercise pursuant to the immediately preceding sentence, in lieu of the cash payment. This Section 11.2(a) shall not be applicable if the Fair Market Value per Share is less than the Adjusted Market Value per Share of the Shares subject to an Option (or SAR) upon the date a Participant exercises a Stock Option (or SAR), unless the Compensation Committee specifically determines it to be applicable in its sole discretion. | |||
(b) | For purposes of this Section 11.2, Adjusted Market Value shall mean the Base Period Fair Market Value as adjusted, on a pro rata monthly basis at the beginning of each month, from the end of the Base Period (the date of grant for Options (and SARs) granted during the Restricted Period prior to a Change in Control shall be the end of the Base Period for such Options and SARs) until the exercise date of the Option (or SAR), by the greater of (i) 5% per year or (ii) the percentage increase (or decrease) in the S&P 500 composite index for the previous calendar month. | |||
(c) | This Section 11.2 shall continue to apply following a Change in Control; provided, that in the event that in connection with a Change in Control, Shares are converted into or exchanged for cash, or for securities that are not publicly traded, the Company shall, immediately before such Change in Control, set aside in an escrow account for the benefit of each Participant an amount equal to the potential |
E-27
cash payment (under subparagraph (a) above) for the Participant, with such escrow amount to be adjusted on a quarterly basis following the Change in Control to provide for sufficient funding to pay such amounts to Participants. |
11.3 | ACCELERATION OF AWARD VESTING. Notwithstanding any provision of this Plan or any Award Agreement provision to the contrary, other than during a Restricted Period or in anticipation of the occurrence of a Potential Change in Control or of a Change in Control, the Plan Administrator may at any time accelerate the vesting of any Award granted under the Plan to a Participant, including without limitation acceleration to such a date that would result in said Awards becoming immediately vested. |
11.4 | TERMINATION, AMENDMENT AND MODIFICATIONS OF CHANGE IN CONTROL PROVISIONS. Sections 11.1, 11.2, 11.3 and any other provisions of the Plan that would materially impact the operation or intent of Sections 11.1, 11.2 and 11.3, shall not be amended by the Board or waived by the Company in a manner favorable to Participants without approval by more than 75 percent of the combined voting power of the Outstanding Voting Securities of Brown-Forman Corporation; provided, that if following a Change in Control, Brown-Forman Corporation (or its successor corporation) is not a publicly-traded corporation, and is a direct or indirect subsidiary of a publicly-traded corporation, the stockholder approval required by this Section 11.4 must be approval by more than 75 percent of the combined voting power of the Outstanding Voting Securities of the publicly-traded corporation that is the direct or indirect parent of Brown-Forman Corporation (or its successor corporation). Notwithstanding the foregoing, the Board Compensation Committee may, in its discretion, waive the effect of Section 11.2 following a Potential Change in Control described in Section 2.47; provided, that, the waiver must by approved by the Compensation Committee prior to the occurrence of a Change in Control. Notwithstanding any other Plan term or any Award Agreement term, this Article may not be terminated, amended or modified on or after the date of a Change in Control to affect adversely any Award already granted under the Plan without the prior written consent of the Participant with respect to said Participants outstanding Awards. |
11.5 | OPTIONAL GROSS-UP FOR EXCISE TAXES. If, for any reason, any part or all of the amounts payable to a Participant pursuant to this Plan (or otherwise, if the Company or any of its Affiliates pays amounts after there has been a Change in Control) are deemed to be excess parachute payments within the meaning of Code Section 280G(b)(1), the Plan Administrator may, in its sole discretion, provide in the Award Agreement that the Company shall pay to such Participant, in addition to any other amounts the Participant may be entitled to receive pursuant to this Plan, an amount which after all Federal, state and local taxes (of whatever kind) imposed on the Participant with respect to such amount are subtracted therefrom, equals the excise taxes imposed on such excess parachute payments under Code Section 4999. |
E-28
ARTICLE 12
AMENDMENT, MODIFICATION AND TERMINATION
12.1 | GENERALLY. |
(a) | Except as limited by the provisions of Section 11.4 above, the Board may at any time and from time to time, alter, amend, suspend or terminate the Plan in whole or in part but no amendment needing stockholder approval in order for the Plan to continue to comply with Rule 16b-3 under the Exchange Act, the rules or listing standards of the principal securities exchange on which the Shares are traded or Section 162(m) of the Code shall be effective unless such amendment shall be approved by the requisite vote of Company stockholders entitled to vote on it. | |||
(b) | Except as provided by the Plan or by the terms of an Award, the Plan Administrator may not cancel outstanding Awards and issue substitute Awards without the written consent of the Participant holding such Award. |
12.2 | OUTSTANDING AWARDS. Subject to the restrictions of Sections 3.1 and 7.4 the Plan Administrator may waive any conditions or rights under, amend any terms of or alter, suspend, discontinue, cancel or terminate any Awards theretofore granted, prospectively or retroactively; provided that any such waiver, amendment, alteration, suspension, discontinuance, cancellation or termination that would adversely affect the rights of any Participant or any holder or beneficiary of any Award theretofore granted shall not to that extent be effective without the consent of the affected Participant, holder or beneficiary. |
12.3 | COMPLIANCE WITH CODE SECTION 162(M). At all times when Code Section 162(m) applies, all Awards granted to Designated Executive Officers under this Plan shall comply with its requirements, unless the Plan Administrator expressly determines that compliance is not desired with respect to any Award or Awards available for grant under the Plan. In addition, such Award(s) need not comply if changes are made to Code Section 162(m) to permit greater flexibility with respect to any Award or Awards available under the Plan, in which case the Plan Administrator may, subject to this Article, make any adjustments it deems appropriate. However, an Award made available for grant to a Designated Executive Officer as performance-based cannot be replaced by a non-performance-based Award if performance goals are not achieved, nor can the characterization of an Executive Officer as a Designated Executive Officer, once made, be changed for a given Performance Period. |
ARTICLE 13
WITHHOLDING
13.1 | TAX WITHHOLDING. The Company may deduct or withhold, or require a Participant to remit to the Company, an amount sufficient to satisfy federal, state and local taxes and |
E-29
withholding obligations, domestic or foreign, required by law or regulation to be withheld with respect to any taxable event arising as a result of this Plan. | ||
13.2 | SHARE WITHHOLDING. With respect to withholding required upon the exercise of Options or SARs, upon the lapse of restrictions on Restricted Stock, the payment of MVUs, or upon any other taxable event arising as a result of Awards granted hereunder, Participants may elect, subject to the approval of the Plan Administrator, to satisfy the withholding requirement, in whole or in part, by having the Company withhold Shares having a Fair Market Value on the date the tax is to be determined equal to the statutory total tax which could be imposed on the transaction. All such elections shall be irrevocable, shall be made in writing, shall be signed by the Participant and shall be subject to any restrictions or limitations that the Plan Administrator deems appropriate. |
ARTICLE 14
INDEMNIFICATION
14.1 | GENERALLY. The Company shall indemnify and hold harmless each current and former Director against and from any loss, cost, liability or expense that may be imposed upon or reasonably incurred by such Director in connection with or resulting from any claim, action, suit or proceeding to which such Director may be a party or in which such Director may be involved by reason of any action taken or failure to act under the Plan and against and from any and all amounts paid by such Director in settlement thereof, with the Companys approval, or paid by such Director in satisfaction of any judgment in any such action, suit or proceeding against such Director but only if such Director gives the Company an opportunity, at its own expense, to handle and defend the same before such Director undertakes to handle and defend it personally. |
14.2 | NON-EXCLUSIVITY. This right of indemnification shall not exclude any other indemnification rights to which such persons may be entitled under the Companys Certificate of Incorporation or Bylaws, as a matter of law, or otherwise, or any power that the Company may have to indemnify them or hold them harmless. |
ARTICLE 15
LEGAL CONSTRUCTION
15.1 | SEVERABILITY. If any Plan section is held illegal or invalid for any reason, the illegality or invalidity shall not affect the remaining parts of the Plan, and the Plan shall be construed and enforced as if the illegal or invalid provision had not been included. |
15.2 | REQUIREMENTS OF LAW. The granting of Awards and the issuance of Shares under the Plan shall be subject to all applicable laws, rules and regulations, and to such approvals by any governmental agencies or national securities exchanges as may be required. |
E-30
15.3 | NO LIMIT ON OTHER COMPENSATION ARRANGEMENTS. Nothing contained in the Plan shall prevent the Company or any Affiliate from adopting or continuing in effect other compensation arrangements, which may, but need not, provide for the grant of Options, Restricted Shares, Restricted Share Units, Other Stock-Based Awards or other types of Awards provided for hereunder. |
15.4 | SUCCESSORS. All Company obligations under the Plan with respect to Awards granted shall be binding on any successor to the Company, whether the existence of such successor is the result of a direct or indirect purchase, merger, consolidation or otherwise, of all or substantially all of the Companys business and/or assets. |
15.5 | GOVERNING LAW. To the extent not preempted by Federal law, the Plan and all agreements made under it, shall be construed in accordance with and governed by the laws of the State of Delaware. |
E-31
4.4 | ADJUSTMENTS. In the event the Plan Administrator determines that any dividend or other distribution (whether in the form of cash, Shares, other securities or other property), recapitalization, stock split, reverse stock split, reorganization, merger, consolidation, split-up, spin-off, combination, repurchase, or exchange of Shares or other securities of the Company, issuance of warrants or other rights to purchase Shares or other securities of the Company, or other similar corporate transaction or event affects the Shares, then the Plan Administrator shall: |
(2) | The Option Price upon exercise of any Option shall be payable to the Company in full either: |
(A) | in cash or its equivalent; or | ||
(B) | by tendering previously acquired Shares having an aggregate Fair Market Value at the time of exercise equal to the total Option Price; or | ||
(C) | by withholding from Participant sufficient Shares, subject to an underlying Award, having an aggregate Fair Market Value at the time of exercise equal to the total Option Price of such underlying Award; or | ||
(D) | by a combination of (A), (B) or (C). |
E-32
850 Dixie Highway
|
||
Louisville, KY 40210 |
||
Signature | ||||
Signature (if held jointly) |
||||
Dated: | ||||
Signature should be
exactly as name or
names appear on
this proxy. If
stock is held
jointly, each
holder should sign,
if signature is by
attorney, executor,
administrator,
trustee or
guardian, please
give full title.
|
BROWN-FORMAN CORPORATION | PROXY |
1. | Election of Directors: |
FOR | AGAINST | ABSTAIN | FOR | AGAINST | ABSTAIN | |||||||||||||
(01)
|
Patrick Bousquet-Chavanne | o | o | o | (07) | William E. Mitchell | o | o | o | |||||||||
(02)
|
Geo. Garvin Brown IV | o | o | o | (08) | William M. Street | o | o | o | |||||||||
(03)
|
Martin S. Brown, Jr. | o | o | o | (09) | Dace Brown Stubbs | o | o | o | |||||||||
(04)
|
John D. Cook | o | o | o | (10) | Paul C. Varga | o | o | o | |||||||||
(05)
|
Sandra A. Frazier | o | o | o | (11) | James S. Welch, Jr. | o | o | o | |||||||||
(06)
|
Richard P. Mayer | o | o | o |
2. | Re- approval of the
performance measures set forth in the 2004 Omnibus Compensation Plan,
as described in the Proxy Statement. |
q FOR q AGAINST q ABSTAIN |