CHICAGO-Equity Residential, a local REIT run by Sam Zell, has now officially jumped into the Archstone fight.

The trust filed a motion this morning to join the lawsuit regarding the Equity's attempt to purchase an interest in Denver-based Archstone for $1.3 billion. Lehman Bros., which owns 47% of Archstone, has sued two banks that own the majority shares, to prevent them from selling half of their interest to Equity.

The trust had not been named in the lawsuit. In a statement today, Equity said it does not believe that the company’s intervention in the case will create any delays in the ongoing proceedings.

On Dec. 14, Lehman announced in an SEC filing that it would buy the 26.5% interest being offered to Equity, instead, for about the same price, exercising the company’s right of first refusal per the joint ownership contract. However, at about the same time, Lehman also filed suit against the banks, asking the entire timetable, and a $66 million deposit fee, be put on hold through a court-ordered injunction.

On Dec. 21, a US Bankruptcy Court judge in Manhattan told Lehman Bros. to sit down and try to work out a dispute with Bank of America and Barclays Bank. It’s not clear if these talks happened. Another injunction hearing has been scheduled at the court for Jan. 5.

In asking for the injunction, Lehman had said in its court filing that there have been certain material breaches of the Archstone agreements.” The company says in its court motion that the banks “failed to include all material terms of the transfers.” Lehman said in the motion, and in its SEC filing, that it has not been provided documents and information agreed to be provided by both parties if a sale was to be made. In the motion, Lehman also asked the judge to force the banks to produce these documents. In the motion and in the Lehman SEC filing, the company claims that it does not believe Equity’s offer values Archstone correctly.

In court answers to the Lehman motion, the banks argued “there’s no need for a preliminary injunction in this case. Plaintiffs are suffering no harm whatsoever – much less any irreparable harm – and plaintiffs themselves seek damages, a fully adequate remedy at law.” Equity and the banks, in the court answers and in Equity’s SEC filings, maintain that Lehman has been given more information than is required by contract. “At base, plaintiffs simply don’t like the fact that defendants have chosen to sell 50% of their interests in the Archstone Entities to a competitor,” the banks said in their court-filed answer.

Zell's firm has indicated that it would be interested in buying the banks' other half interest, which would also be subject to first refusal by Lehman, if the first sale is effectively blocked.

Archstone has 48,922 apartment units, including 14,000 in Germany. Equity owns or has investments in 417 properties in 15 states and Washington, DC. The company has said it would fund the purchase through cash, debt, sales and its $1.2 billion revolving credit facility.

Want to continue reading?
Become a Free ALM Digital Reader.

Once you are an ALM Digital Member, you’ll receive:

  • Breaking commercial real estate news and analysis, on-site and via our newsletters and custom alerts
  • Educational webcasts, white papers, and ebooks from industry thought leaders
  • Critical coverage of the property casualty insurance and financial advisory markets on our other ALM sites, PropertyCasualty360 and ThinkAdvisor
NOT FOR REPRINT

© 2024 ALM Global, LLC, All Rights Reserved. Request academic re-use from www.copyright.com. All other uses, submit a request to [email protected]. For more information visit Asset & Logo Licensing.