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Berkshire Hathaway Settles Valuation Dispute With Pilot

Reuters01-08

(Reuters) - Warren Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway and Pilot on Sunday said they had reached an agreement to settle a Delaware lawsuit and resolve a dispute over the valuation of billionaire Jimmy Haslam's truck stop chain.

Berkshire and Pilot reached an agreement to fully settle the Delaware litigation, including all claims and counterclaims, between Pilot and Berkshire Hathaway, Pilot Travel Centers, and National Indemnity Company, the companies said in a statement.

The companies did not disclose any details about the settlement.

The agreement avoided a billion-dollar trial between Berkshire Hathaway and the Haslam family, which had been set to begin on Monday.

The two-day, non-jury trial in Delaware's Court of Chancery, which was cancelled by the court on Saturday, was meant to determine the value of the Haslam family's remaining 20% stake in Pilot Travel Centers, the largest U.S. truck stop chain.

The Haslams, including Cleveland Browns football team owner Jimmy Haslam, sold Berkshire 80% of Pilot for $11 billion in two separate deals, in 2017 and January 2023.

Each side had accused the other of accounting tricks to manipulate Pilot's earnings before interest and taxes, or EBIT, key to determining the value of the Haslams' remaining 20% stake.

The Haslams sued Berkshire in October last year, alleging it changed its accounting to reduce how much the company would owe if the family exercised their option to sell the 20% stake to Berkshire in 2024.

Berkshire countersued on Nov. 28, saying Jimmy Haslam tried to bribe Pilot executives with millions of dollars to inflate earnings in 2023 at the expense of Pilot's long-term value.

According to court papers, the Haslams believe the 20% stake in Knoxville, Tennessee-based Pilot was worth $3.2 billion before Berkshire's accounting change, an amount Berkshire disputed.

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  • Cosmograph
    ·01-08
    One of Tennessee's most powerful families, the Haslams own 67% of Knoxville-based $31 billion (sales) Pilot Flying J and one of the founder's sons, Bill, is governor of Tennessee. James Haslam II founded Pilot Travel Centers in 1958 and merged the company with Flying J in 2001. In 2013 the company was accused of defrauding trucking companies out of promised fuel rebates. Pilot settled a class-action lawsuit brought by customers in November 2013 and with the Department of Justice in July 2014. The company agreed to pay a $92 million penalty to the government in order to avoid prosecution. In April 2015, Pilot settled with 4 trucking companies not part of the class-action settlement. CEO Jimmy Haslam, the founder's oldest son, has denied any knowledge of the rebate fraud scheme. In 2012 the
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  • selwyn
    ·01-08
    Thanks 
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