UNITED STATES
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE
COMMISSION
Washington, D.C.
20549
SCHEDULE 14A
(Rule
14a-101)
INFORMATION
REQUIRED IN PROXY STATEMENT
SCHEDULE
14A INFORMATION
Proxy
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1934
(Amendment
No. )
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the Registrant ¨
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Additional Materials
o Soliciting
Material Under Rule 14a-12
THE
STEAK N SHAKE COMPANY
|
(Name
of Registrant as Specified in Its Charter)
|
|
THE
LION FUND L.P.
BIGLARI
CAPITAL CORP.
WESTERN
SIZZLIN CORP.
WESTERN
ACQUISITIONS L.P.
WESTERN
INVESTMENTS INC.
SARDAR
BIGLARI
PHILIP
L. COOLEY
|
(Name
of Persons(s) Filing Proxy Statement, if Other Than the
Registrant)
|
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The Lion
Fund L.P. (“Lion Fund”) and Western Sizzlin Corp. (“Western Sizzlin”), together
with the other participants named herein, are filing materials contained in this
Schedule 14A with the Securities and Exchange Commission (“SEC”) in connection
with the solicitation of proxies for the election of two nominees as directors
at the next annual meeting of stockholders (the “Annual Meeting”) of The Steak n
Shake Company (the “Company”). Lion Fund and Western Sizzlin have
filed a definitive proxy statement with the SEC with regard to the Annual
Meeting.
Item
1. Press
release regarding letter from Sardar Biglari to the stockholders of the Company,
dated February 21, 2008, to be mailed to stockholders and posted on
www.enhacesteaknshake.com:
FOR
IMMEDIATE RELEASE
SARDAR
BIGLARI ISSUES LETTER TO SHAREHOLDERS OF
THE
STEAK N SHAKE COMPANY
SAN
ANTONIO, TX – February 21, 2008 – Sardar Biglari, Chairman and Chief
Executive Officer of Western Sizzlin Corporation (OTC Bulletin Board: WSZL) and The Lion
Fund, LP, issued the following letter today to the shareholders of The Steak n
Shake Company (NYSE: SNS):
Dear
Fellow Shareholders:
The
annual meeting of stockholders for The Steak n Shake Company can be a highly
productive turning point for the company’s customers, employees, franchisees,
and shareholders. Your vote is imperative, irrespective of the number of shares
you own. My colleague Philip L. Cooley and I plan to replace Alan B. Gilman and
James Williamson, Jr. at the annual meeting scheduled for March 7, 2008. We are
seeking your support for the permanent removal of Messrs. Gilman and Williamson
and your endorsement of our plan for the company as laid out in my January 23,
2008 letter, a copy of which I have enclosed.
The
long-term record — during any period over the last decade — has been dismal for
owners of Steak n Shake stock. Current business prospects are no better. Over
the last several months, we have visited Steak n Shake restaurants and spoken to
current and former employees, franchisees, shareholders, and other constituents,
whose opinions confirm ours that the company is handicapped by a lack of
leadership, lack of execution, and lack of strategic direction from
headquarters. Furthermore, we have found that Gilman and Williamson, through
past and present actions, are a main source of the company’s myriad problems. We
believe that because of the influential positions they hold on the board and
their roles as past CEOs, they have set the wrong tone at the top. They advocate
rules for the company, which, when these stipulations work against them, they
quickly alter for their own self-interest. Here is an example:
I disclosed in my January 23rd letter
that it is our objective to replace Gilman and Williamson at the annual meeting
and then seek to call a special meeting to make further changes in board
composition. The following week the board amended the bylaws to require 80% of
the shares outstanding to call a special meeting instead of the former 25%. This
change effectively eliminates a shareholder’s ability to call a special meeting.
To require 80% of the votes cast by the shareholders to call a meeting when only
50% is needed to replace directors strips shareholders of a fundamental right
they ought to enjoy. Thus, this ill-advised amendment provides the board with
immunity, not the accountability they should embrace. Their actions designed to
disenfranchise shareholders do not deter us; rather, they reinforce the presence
of the firm’s problems and energize our desire to solve them.
The
board, led by Gilman and Williamson, wrote you a letter on February 14 with the
headline, “Don’t let short-term investors gain control of your company.” The
board is being less than candid with you. I have repeatedly said both privately
to the current company leaders as well as publicly to you via my letters that we
have invested in Steak n Shake stock for the long-term.
In
addition, the board’s letter reiterates the falsity that we are seeking to
control the company for our own personal benefit and therefore should pay a
control premium. Nothing could be further from the truth. This is another
erroneous argument designed, in my view, to distract you from the serious
problems confronting Steak n Shake. The truth is that Steak n Shake will stay in
the hands of its shareholders, and we will remain a significant minority
shareholder working for the benefit of all shareholders. To change the minority
or majority of the board’s composition requires over 50% shareholder approval.
Plainly, shareholders are the only ones who can cast votes on whether or not
they prefer current
leaders or support a change in leadership. Most importantly, we would not obtain a return on
investment different from that of any other shareholder. We seek to make money
with you, not off you.
What is
absolutely disingenuous of the board is their writing, “As fellow shareholders,
your Board and management team share your displeasure and have experienced
similar returns on their holdings.” We do not consider their ownership by way of
stock option grants as equal to the investment shareholders have made by laying
out cash. While the incumbent directors may own stock, they have been net
sellers over the past several years, disposing a considerable amount of their
holdings. In contrast, we paid cash for our stock purchase, have not sold a
single share, and own more than the entire board combined.
The board
may discuss and write about maximizing value, through setting up committees and
hiring costly consultants, but their record clearly shows that all their ideas
espoused over the years have resulted in a significant decline in the company’s
value. Steak n Shake’s stock price has decreased over a three-, five-, and
ten-year period, whereas the S&P Restaurant Index has increased in the same
timeframe. The record speaks for itself.
We are
seeking your vote to replace Gilman and Williamson with the recommendation in my
letter of January 23rd
outlining our plan for the company. Our victory would be the basis on which the
remaining directors are obliged to act to benefit you, the owners of the
company. Once elected, we are hopeful that the remaining directors
will not take action against your wishes because doing so certainly is not in
anyone’s best interests. Otherwise, these directors would risk their reputation.
We are optimistic that we will be able to work with the reelected directors who
place shareholder interests above director interests. Entrenchment strategies
may be defendable under Indiana law but not under the ethical laws that govern
one’s reputation. We will remain resolute in our pursuit because in order to
resuscitate Steak n Shake, we need to change its corporate culture.
In my October 1, 2007
letter to you, I wrote, “Our principle is to tell you the facts that we
would want to know if our roles were reversed.” That assertion encapsulates the
code by which we operate, and which we will maintain when we assume leadership
positions. We wish to create a new ethos, one that cares about shareholder
rights and value and treats owners as they should be — like true partners, both
large and small.
Towards that end, we have
arranged for a shareholder gathering on March 6, 2008, the evening before the
annual meeting, at 6:00 pm at the Marriott Indianapolis Downtown, 350
West Maryland Street, First Floor. This first meeting will provide you with an
opportunity to meet Phil and me and ask about our plans and about anything else
that is on your mind. We hope you can join us and be there to support our
candidacy. If you are going to attend, we ask that you RSVP by emailing
rsvp@enhancesteaknshake.com or calling 800-607-0088.
We look
forward to turning Steak n Shake around so once again it can be a place where
customers love to eat, where employees love to work, and which shareholders love
to own.
Sincerely,
/s/
Sardar Biglari
Sardar Biglari
************
Contact:
Thomas
Ball
Morrow
& Co., LLC
(203)
658-9400
Or
Robyn B.
Mabe, Chief Financial Officer
Western
Sizzlin Corporation
(540)
345-3195