Judge clears way for public offering in Empire State Building

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NEW YORK -- A Manhattan judge last week backed a $55-million settlement in a court battle over the Empire State Building, effectively clearing the way for a plan to let the public buy shares in the famous New York City landmark.

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Hey there, time traveller!
This article was published 06/05/2013 (4761 days ago), so information in it may no longer be current.

NEW YORK — A Manhattan judge last week backed a $55-million settlement in a court battle over the Empire State Building, effectively clearing the way for a plan to let the public buy shares in the famous New York City landmark.

Judge O. Peter Sherwood told lawyers at a court hearing he would formally approve the settlement in the coming days with a written ruling.

“I’m satisfied that the settlement reached is fair,” Sherwood said.

Peter Morgan / The Associated Press Archives
The Empire State Building in midtown Manhattan was completed in 1931.
Peter Morgan / The Associated Press Archives The Empire State Building in midtown Manhattan was completed in 1931.

The settlement stems from a long-running dispute over plans by real estate magnates Peter Malkin and his son, Anthony, to offer the public shares in their holdings in Manhattan and Connecticut, including the iconic 102-storey skyscraper. The offering is expected to raise $1 billion for a new company called Empire State Trust Inc.

A lawsuit alleged the building’s owners misled non-controlling investors about the proposal to sell the public shares in a new company that would own the building — an accusation the defendants denied.

The plaintiffs also had claimed the initial public offering would place an unfair tax burden on them. Along with creating a $55-million settlement fund, the deal will allow the investors to defer taxes on capital gains. Both sides had reached a tentative settlement late last year. But final approval was held up by the objections of a small group of investors who still oppose the IPO.

There was no immediate response last week to a message left with a lawyer for the opponents.

Some of the country’s marquee buildings, including the General Motors building in New York and the Embarcadero Center in San Francisco, are owned by publicly traded companies. But the IPO for the Empire State Building is viewed as a rare chance for investors to own a piece of history — an Art Deco icon visited by millions of tourists each year and featured in films such as King Kong and Sleepless in Seattle.

When the Empire State Building changed hands in 1961, the buyers sold 1,100 shares at $10,000 per share to help finance the deal. Some of the 3,300 investors were ordinary New Yorkers who pulled together just enough cash to buy partial shares.

Earlier this week, Sherwood rejected a challenge by the handful of holdouts to the IPO who argued a decades-old provision — one that that would allow the Malkins to buy them out for $100 a share if they voted against the plan — was against the law. The proposed public offering values the shares at more than $300,000 each.

 

— The Associated Press

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