settlement

Bloomberg Law and The Dallas Morning News Report on $60 Million Shareholder Settlement with Biote

July 8, 2024 – Bloomberg Law and The Dallas Morning News report that Biote reached a $60 million settlement with Brewer, Attorneys & Counselors client and Biote shareholder Marci Donovitz in a lawsuit over its merger with a special purpose acquisition company, also known as a “SPAC” or “blank check company.”

Bloomberg Law reported that Donovitz alleged her shares in the hormone therapy company were diluted by the deal. The article reported that the company will buy back her shares over a three-year period, with $30 million paid upfront. Bloomberg reports that the lawsuit filed in Delaware Chancery Court alleged that Biote company insiders benefited from the transaction with Haymaker Acquisition Corp. III that delivered almost no cash to the company.

“This settlement validates our client’s claim that the transaction was a scheme to enrich a few company ‘insiders’ – and reward them with financial and managerial benefits to which they were not entitled,” William A. Brewer III, a partner at the Brewer firm, said in a statement quoted in the media reports.

The Morning News report noted that as part of the settlement, Biote will be forced to repurchase all 8.3 million of Donovitz’s shares at $7.23 each.

The Morning News article observes that SPACs were once a very popular way for companies to go public but have faced scrutiny from the Securities and Exchange Commission in recent years.

Read the Bloomberg Law report here and The Dallas Morning News report here.

 

Biote Shareholder Achieves $60 Million Settlement of Breach of Fiduciary Duty Claims

July 3, 2024 – Brewer, Attorneys & Counselors announced today that its client, Marci Donovitz, reached a $60 million settlement with the company. The settlement resolves a lawsuit alleging that Biote executives breached their fiduciary duties by channeling the hormone therapy company into a speculative transaction with a special purpose acquisition company (“SPAC”) which provided almost no cash for the merger.

The lawsuit was filed by Ms. Donovitz on June 5, 2024, against defendants Biote CEO Teresa “Terry” Weber, Biote Executive Chairman Marc Beer, Biote General Counsel Mary Elizabeth Conlon, Haymaker Sponsor III LLC, Steven J. Heyer, and Cooley LLP. Haymaker was the SPAC sponsor for the transaction and Cooley advised those involved with the deal. Ms. Donovitz is the trustee of the Donovitz Family Irrevocable Trust and a BioTE Holdings, LLC shareholder.

The lawsuit alleged that “Defendants knew for months that astronomical redemptions would eviscerate almost all the cash raised by the SPAC and would cause the transaction to be destructive of value. Nonetheless, Defendants proceeded with their scheme to enrich themselves.” The lawsuit further alleged that as part of the transaction, defendants improperly diverted $70 million from the deal to Biote executives and $135 million in cash and stock in total to all defendants.

“This settlement validates our client’s claim that the transaction was a scheme to enrich a few company ‘insiders’ – and reward them with financial and managerial benefits to which they were not entitled,” says William A. Brewer III, partner at Brewer and counsel to Ms. Donovitz. “Our client hopes this outcome lights a path for those victimized by similar deals. This case underscores the rights of those too often viewed as pawns in these speculative pursuits.”

As explained in the underlying lawsuit, filed in The Court of Chancery of The State of Delaware, a SPAC – also known as a “blank check company” – is a shell company set up by a sponsor that goes public without an operating business to raise funds, but with a plan to find a target private company with an operating business with which it would merge within a fixed period, usually two years.

Ms. Donovitz is the ex-wife of Biote founder Dr. Gary Donovitz, who the lawsuit contends was tricked into waiving a minimum cash closing condition just days before the SPAC deal was completed on May 26, 2022.

As has been publicly reported, Biote was a defendant in a separate lawsuit filed by Dr. Donovitz regarding the SPAC deal. As reported, in February 2024, Biote disclosed it agreed to buy back nearly $77 million of Dr. Donovitz’s stock to settle the matter.

In addition to breaches of fiduciary duties, the lawsuit by Ms. Donovitz also alleged that defendant Biote executives negligently “misled Plaintiff’s trustee regarding the likely impact of this Merger on the value of her shares, failed to disclose material information regarding the risks of this SPAC transaction (including the possibility that it would provide virtually no cash), and failed to disclose that these risks had materialized.”

Under the terms of the settlement with Ms. Donovitz, Biote will repurchase all of the approximately 8.3 million shares she owns. At an average of $7.23 per share, the payout will occur over a three-year schedule:  approximately 4.1 million shares valued at $30 million immediately, followed by 1.4 million shares valued at $10 million for each of the next three years.

NBC DFW Reports on Voting Rights Settlement, Brewer Storefront

August 23, 2023 – NBC DFW reported on Brewer Storefront reaching a positive outcome with the Lewisville Independent School District (LISD) in a voting rights lawsuit against the district. NBC interviewed Dallas Morning News education reporter Talia Richman about the case and its importance to the community.  

Richman noted that the lawsuit alleged the school board’s at large elections resulted in a primarily white Lewisville ISD school board and denied some people of color the opportunity to elect candidates of their choosing. Richman stated that, “The law firm, the Brewer Storefront, has been taking these cases on in suburban districts across North Texas.” She mentioned how the Storefront has brought Voting Rights Act lawsuits against the Richardson and Irving school districts and, “a whole host of districts, that all employed this at large system saying instead of having everyone elect each seat you should have districts based on where you live.” Those school districts and others adopted election systems that included single member districts  and minority “opportunity” districts in which a majority of voters are people of color. As a result, minorities have been elected to the school boards in those communities.

Speaking of school boards across North Texas and the importance of their composition, Richman said, “These are the people who are making huge decisions, they’re hiring the superintendent, and they’re setting the budget. We’ve seen how much political infighting has taken place on school boards when it comes to these education culture wars. So they’re saying we really have to make sure that representatives match the makeup of the student body in Texas, which is increasingly becoming more diverse.”

Learn more about the Brewer Storefront’s voting rights work here.