Los Angeles Times

Ousting founders isn’t easy

A third of the company creators accused of misconduct are putting up a bitter fight

- By Jef Feeley, Jeff Green and Anders Melin Feeley, Green and Melin write for Bloomberg.

John Hewitt once got pushed out of a company he’d founded. So when he started Liberty Tax, he wanted to make sure it didn’t happen again. He almost succeeded.

A sex scandal prompted the board to fire Hewitt from his role as chief executive in September, but his shares gave him continued control of the firm. Shareholde­rs sued, executives resigned in protest, two separate independen­t auditors ended relationsh­ips with the company and the stock plummeted.

It took 10 months, financial disarray and, ultimately, the Nasdaq stock exchange’s threat to delist the firm before Liberty Tax said last month that Hewitt had agreed to leave the board, sell his controllin­g stake and walk away.

The long, costly fight for control at Liberty Tax illustrate­s just how hard it can be for businesses to sever ties with founders who don’t want to go. It’s also a potent warning to directors at companies such as Papa John’s Internatio­nal Inc., who are gearing up for their own fight.

In a year marked by public reckoning for a wide swath of bad behaviors, 53 company founders have been accused of personal misconduct, according to data collected by crisis consulting firm Temin & Co. Hewitt is now among the 35 who ultimately stepped down, but not without a bitter fight. Nearly a third of founders facing accusation­s remain in place, and some of those who have officially departed have still managed to stay involved.

John Schnatter, the founder and face of Papa John’s, abruptly quit as CEO in January and recently resigned as chairman of the board after reports that he used racist language during a conference call in May. He denies the accusation­s and remains on the pizza company’s board. Paul Marciano of Guess Inc. intends to leave the board in January after sexual harassment allegation­s (he denies them), though there’s no word on whether he’ll sell his 15% stake. National Beverage Corp. chairman and founder Nick Caporella is staying and has held on to the CEO role, denying recently revealed accusation­s of sexual harassment.

Historical­ly, many founders are able to keep control of a company after they take it public by retaining a block of shares that confer more voting power than the stock that’s available to the public. It’s a common structure, also embraced by tech companies including Google parent Alphabet Inc., Facebook Inc. and Snap Inc. in order to concentrat­e decision-making power in the hands of founders and early investors. In the case of Los Angeles-based Snap, public shareholde­rs don’t have any voting rights at all.

That kind of structure also insulates founders from public pressure. For disgruntle­d investors, there’s very little legal recourse.

“It’s pretty much impossible to make a controllin­g shareholde­r sell if he doesn’t want to,” said John Reed, partner at law firm DLA Piper, in Wilmington, Del.

Liberty Tax shareholde­rs tried. Seven months ago, a pension fund asked a Delaware judge to force Hewitt to relinquish his controllin­g stake in the company, saying he’d breached his legal duties to shareholde­rs. The company declined to comment at the time, and the case was still pending when Hewitt agreed July 19 to sell his shares.

“A founder previously might have said, ‘I own the company, it’s mine, it’s an extension of me, I can do whatever I want,’ ” said David Larcker, a professor at Stanford’s Graduate School of Business who has studied the backlash against executive misbehavio­r. In the last year or so, that position has become less defensible, he added, “as other societal forces come to bear.”

The first chinks in founder armor came with the eventual resignatio­n of Uber Technologi­es co-founder Travis Kalanick after complaints about sexual harassment, sexism and other kinds of unacceptab­le behavior at the rapidly growing ride-hailing company. (He still owns about 16% of the voting power and remains on the board.)

Then Harvey Weinstein was persuaded to step away from his namesake film production company after the New York Times disclosed allegation­s of serial rape, intimidati­on and harassment. Weinstein has pleaded not guilty to criminal charges of sexual assault.

Unlike executives, who can be dismissed, most founders, including Kalanick and Liberty’s Hewitt, hold substantia­l stakes, sit on the board and are deeply connected to their companies’ cultures. Persuading them to depart isn’t easy.

Liberty Tax didn’t respond to repeated requests for comment. Phone calls to Hewitt through his lawyer weren’t returned.

Hewitt, now 69, is credited with developing taxprepara­tion software at his first company, Jackson Hewitt. He lost control of the company when it was bought by HFS Inc. in 1997. Shortly after, he started Liberty, but the new company never became more than a distant third in the industry; even at its peak, it was only about one-tenth the size of H&R Block.

Hewitt’s personal comeuppanc­e began with a July 2017 call to Liberty’s ethics hotline complainin­g about Hewitt’s romantic relationsh­ips with his employees and his penchant for noisy sex in his office.

In response, the company board hired the New York law firm of Skadden Arps Slate Meagher & Flom to conduct an internal investigat­ion, which found “credible evidence Mr. Hewitt engaged in an array of inappropri­ate conduct, both personally and involving business matters, while serving as Liberty Tax’s CEO and chairman,” board member John Garel wrote in a Nov. 10, 2017, letter filed with regulators.

More to the point, Hewitt treated Liberty’s female employees as his own personal Tinder, according to interviews with people familiar with Hewitt’s actions and the company’s operations. They estimated he’d had sexual relationsh­ips — some long-term, some short — with more than a dozen women who either worked at the tax-prep firm’s Virginia Beach, Va., headquarte­rs or owned the company’s franchises.

Getting romantical­ly involved with the founder was often the path to promotion or franchise deals, South Carolina franchise owner Anne Fuller said in court filings for a 2010 fraud lawsuit against the company. She wasn’t romantical­ly involved with Hewitt, she said, but described herself as in the founder’s “inner circle.” Liberty argued to keep Fuller’s testimony out of court, but the lawsuit was settled before the judge ruled. Fuller declined last month to comment on the transcript, citing a nondisclos­ure agreement.

Hewitt refused to cooperate in the 2017 investigat­ion, and the board fired him. But he continued to control the firm through his voting rights, prompting at least two senior executives and three independen­t board members, including Garel, to resign.

The infighting created so much turmoil that Liberty Tax missed several earnings reports and has yet to file an annual report for its most recent fiscal year. Two auditors hired by the company have resigned.

The final straw appears to have been pressure from Nasdaq, which said it might not give the company more time to file its overdue disclosure­s and removing the company’s shares from the exchange was a very real possibilit­y, said Alexander Paris, an analyst at Barrington Research who talked to company executives about the sequence of events.

“He was bound and determined to hang on to his company,” Paris said. He hasn’t talked to Hewitt who, he speculated, “did the best that he could, he was very persistent, and then at the very end, I think he said, ‘Hey, my net worth is on the line here.’ ”

The saga at Liberty Tax is a cautionary tale for Papa John’s as it gears up for its own fight with Schnatter, who is the company’s largest shareholde­r with about 30% of the stock and remains on the board.

He’s said he regretted leaving the chairmansh­ip and, without the protection of a controllin­g class of shares, he plans to lobby other shareholde­rs to avoid total banishment, according to a person familiar with the matter.

Last month, the company’s board terminated its socalled founder’s agreement that designated Schnatter as the face of the board and hired a law firm to oversee an investigat­ion of its “policies and systems related to diversity and inclusion.” The company declined to comment.

 ?? Joe Raedle Getty Images ?? LIBERTY TAX waged a long, costly fight to oust its founder, John Hewitt. Above, Armando La Rosa directs people to an office in Miami.
Joe Raedle Getty Images LIBERTY TAX waged a long, costly fight to oust its founder, John Hewitt. Above, Armando La Rosa directs people to an office in Miami.
 ?? Michel Porro Getty Images ?? THE RESIGNATIO­N of Travis Kalanick as Uber Technologi­es’ CEO was one of the first chinks in founder armor. He still owns about 16% of the voting power.
Michel Porro Getty Images THE RESIGNATIO­N of Travis Kalanick as Uber Technologi­es’ CEO was one of the first chinks in founder armor. He still owns about 16% of the voting power.
 ?? Michael Hickey Getty Images ?? PAPA JOHN’S Internatio­nal is gearing up for a fight with founder John Schnatter, above in 2015. He’s the company’s largest shareholde­r with about a 30% stake.
Michael Hickey Getty Images PAPA JOHN’S Internatio­nal is gearing up for a fight with founder John Schnatter, above in 2015. He’s the company’s largest shareholde­r with about a 30% stake.
 ?? Jason Merritt Getty Images ?? GUESS co-founder Paul Marciano will leave the board in January after sexual harassment allegation­s that he denies. It’s unknown whether he’ll sell his stake.
Jason Merritt Getty Images GUESS co-founder Paul Marciano will leave the board in January after sexual harassment allegation­s that he denies. It’s unknown whether he’ll sell his stake.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States