Corey Rosen
Court Reduces Settlement in Sentry Equipment Case
In Walsh v. Vinoskey, No. 20-1252 (4th Cir., Dec. 7, 2021), the 4th Circuit reduced a $6.5 million settlement between Adam Vinoskey, the former owner of Sentry Equipment & Erectors Inc., and the Department of Labor, by $4.2 million. The case concerned a second ESOP transaction that brought the ESOP to 100%. The court ruled that the valuation was flawed for three reasons: 1) It assumed the ESOP trust now had effective control when the court concluded sellers retained significant operational control; 2) projections were too optimistic; and 3) the weighted average cost of capital assumptions were flawed. The DOL said that Vinoskey had a duty to make reasonable efforts to remedy the trustee’s breach in approving the valuation, even though he was not involved in it, because he was intimately familiar with the company’s financial situation and its value. Vinoskey argued, in part, that he had provided $4.6 million in loan forgiveness on his seller note and should be credited for that. The district court did not agree.
