Frontier launches rare attack on payout to its retired CEO in Conn.
A fight between
It's not an everyday occurrence, a large corporation duking it out with a former executive over money. But it does happen in an age of structured payouts well into the millions that can last decades.
Then this month, boom! In a motion to dismiss Tow's lawsuit filed in
The two sides might have settled the dispute late last week. On Friday afternoon, a lawyer for Tow, who turns 96 Thursday, filed to withdraw the complaint. A deal would make sense considering Tow's age and a few other factors. Lawyers in the case are not commenting.
What's notable, though, is not the battle itself but the extraordinary language in Frontier's motion, attacking its former leader.
"Tow's hand-picked board of directors, stacked with friend, allies and even his wife, had lavished him with salary, bonuses, stock options and other benefits far out of proportion to that of other executive compensation among peer companies, despite the Company's tepid performance," the motion, filed
Frontier doesn't dispute that the 2004 retirement deal, as written, calls for payments to Tow. But the payouts, which were expected at the time to total
That's on top of
"From the time the ... arrangements were entered into, they were egregious in size and in scope," the motion said.
Frontier consulted two experts in executive pay, the company said in the motion. Their conclusion: "The arrangements had no plausible business justification and were wildly contrary to industry norms and practice."
I'm not getting into the details here but if nothing else, congratulations to Tow for living long enough and actively enough to see this battle.
"His massive compensation was not justified by the Company's performance, which over the course of his tenure lagged the Company's competitors and that of the market as a whole. During his 14-year tenure as CEO, the Company's annualized return was only 1.12 percent," the motion said, citing a number that's far below any financial standard for returns over time.
On top of that, the motion said, Tow not only had full use of the
And finally, this line, the corporate equivalent of schoolyard trash talking: "The Company made large contributions to Mr. and
Lawyers for Frontier, which is represented by
The attacks are "pretty strong" and unusual, said
Making the attacks rarer still is that Tow has not been accused of wrongdoing by authorities. When that happens, as in the case of
Tow, a cable TV and telecom executive and entrepreneur, became CEO of then-
In 1993, the
Frontier filed for bankruptcy protection, citing
Frontier halted some of the payments to Tow, the lawsuit claimed, after it emerged from bankruptcy. Tow filed the lawsuit in 2023, claiming the company owed him
As the dispute moves toward what appears to be a settlement, we have to wonder: Did the powerfully worded, hardball motion by Frontier have its intended effect?
Perhaps, said Sonnenfeld, who's very outspoken about corporate practices and is credited with leading an exodus of more than 1,000 companies from
"It is very persuasive," Sonnenfeld said. "It doesn't seem like it's motivated by a personal vendetta."
Frontier launches attack on payout to its retired CEO
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