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What's next wrt UMJ

Given this initial statement in the Forbes NR, are they still wanting to follow through with becoming a large shareholder?


http://agoracom.com/ir/Inspiration/forums/discussion/topics/487114-ism-forbes-and-manhattan-ursa-here-s-the-latest/messages/1560846#message


"On the other hand, Inspiration Mining is currently the largest URSA Major shareholder, and Forbes & Manhattan seeks to be one of URSA Major's largest shareholders, and together they are united in a clear focus on creating shareholder wealth."


Let's suppose, in following through with the above statement, had they gone out and picked up 5 or 10 million shares in the market just before the AGM, would that have helped the vote for the "dissidents"? How would that move be viewed/received by UMJ and or Wes Hall?


We know from a past NR, that UMJ's special committee had voiced concerns over previous Forbes/ISM activity.


http://www.ursamajorminerals.com/s/NewsReleases.asp?ReportID=462442&_Type=News-Releases&_Title=URSA-Major-Minerals-Special-Committee-Calls-on-Dissident-Group-for-More-Dis


IMHO it appears that neither party was shy about leveling accusations in either direction when it comes to share purchases by themselves or third parties.


"The Special Committee is concerned that the Dissidents, who beneficially own or control over 20% of the Company's shares, may have continued to purchase shares of the Company while acting jointly and in concert with one another in respect of the Meeting. In an effort to resolve this matter, the Special Committee requested further information from the Dissidents. The Dissidents have refused to cooperate with the Special Committee and are refusing to account for their actions."

about 13 years ago
Globe and Mail: Ursa Major scores in court battle

Ursa Major scores in court battle (RTGAM)


Janet McFarland


A Toronto judge has labelled a court challenge in a proxy battle at Ursa Major Minerals Inc. “nasty, brutish and short” and has ordered the two companies that launched the battle to cover legal bills totalling $110,000.


Mr. Justice David Brown of the Ontario Superior Court issued a ruling Tuesday ordering Forbes & Manhattan Inc. and Inspiration Mining Corp. to pay Ursa Major’s $60,000 legal bill and pay a $50,000 bill incurred by large Ursa Major shareholder Wes Hall.


Forbes, a private merchant bank, and Inspiration, a mining company and large shareholder in Ursa Major, teamed up to launch a proxy battle to take control of Ursa Major’s board.


They filed a hasty court motion last week to seek a ruling on a voting dispute – arguing Mr. Hall’s votes should not count in the proxy battle -- but then withdrew the application two days later, just minutes before a hearing was set to begin.


Judge Brown said he was requiring Forbes and Inspiration to pay substantial legal costs because the last-minute legal maneuver qualified as “reprehensible conduct” as defined by Ontario’s Court of Appeal. In such cases, courts can award higher “indemnity” legal costs to the target company.


“The application brought before me simply marked another tactical skirmish by the applicants in their contest against the management and board of Ursa Major,” the judge wrote in his ruling.


“That the applicants withdrew their request for injunctive relief at the last possible minute underscored the tactical nature of their use of the courts.”


Mr. Hall was working as a proxy solicitor for Ursa Major in the board battle, which meant he was hired by the company to help bring in votes to support the company’s slate of directors instead of the alternative slate proposed by Forbes and Inspiration.


In an unusual move, Mr. Hall announced June 16 that his private investment company had purchased 8.4 per cent of Ursa Major’s shares, and had secured the right to vote most of them in the proxy vote last Thursday. The purchase price was $1.7-million.


Forbes and Inspiration objected to the votes being counted in the battle, arguing Mr. Hall only bought the shares to help sway the vote in favour of his clients. But Mr. Hall said in an interview last week he bought the shares to bolster an investment position in the company that he previously bought earlier this year.


The vote Thursday overwhelmingly supported the company’s slate, according to a release issued by Ursa Major, and the alternative slate proposed by Forbes and Inspiration was rejected.


Forbes and Inspiration argued in their court application that Mr. Hall’s purchase meant he was “acting jointly or in concert” with the company and its insiders, and that they collectively owned over 20 per cent of Ursa Major’s shares. At that threshold, the purchase should be considered a takeover bid, the court application argued.


Judge Brown said the application met several of the tests required to award higher “indemnity” costs, including the fact the applicants made serious allegations of misconduct by Ursa Major and Mr. Hall, that the court filing was “tactical,” and the application required hasty and complex legal work because there was short notice.


He noted it was the third court challenge filed by Forbes and Inspiration against Ursa Major in the last eight months.


“I find that the serious allegations of misconduct levelled by the applicants against the respondents, the lack of merit to those allegations, and the tactical use made by the applicants of this proceeding combine to place the litigation conduct of the applications in the category of ‘reprehensible conduct,’” Judge Brown wrote.

about 13 years ago
Globe and Mail: Ursa Major scores in court battle

Ursa Major scores in court battle (RTGAM)


Janet McFarland


A Toronto judge has labelled a court challenge in a proxy battle at Ursa Major Minerals Inc. “nasty, brutish and short” and has ordered the two companies that launched the battle to cover legal bills totalling $110,000.


Mr. Justice David Brown of the Ontario Superior Court issued a ruling Tuesday ordering Forbes & Manhattan Inc. and Inspiration Mining Corp. to pay Ursa Major’s $60,000 legal bill and pay a $50,000 bill incurred by large Ursa Major shareholder Wes Hall.


Forbes, a private merchant bank, and Inspiration, a mining company and large shareholder in Ursa Major, teamed up to launch a proxy battle to take control of Ursa Major’s board.


They filed a hasty court motion last week to seek a ruling on a voting dispute – arguing Mr. Hall’s votes should not count in the proxy battle -- but then withdrew the application two days later, just minutes before a hearing was set to begin.


Judge Brown said he was requiring Forbes and Inspiration to pay substantial legal costs because the last-minute legal maneuver qualified as “reprehensible conduct” as defined by Ontario’s Court of Appeal. In such cases, courts can award higher “indemnity” legal costs to the target company.


“The application brought before me simply marked another tactical skirmish by the applicants in their contest against the management and board of Ursa Major,” the judge wrote in his ruling.


“That the applicants withdrew their request for injunctive relief at the last possible minute underscored the tactical nature of their use of the courts.”


Mr. Hall was working as a proxy solicitor for Ursa Major in the board battle, which meant he was hired by the company to help bring in votes to support the company’s slate of directors instead of the alternative slate proposed by Forbes and Inspiration.


In an unusual move, Mr. Hall announced June 16 that his private investment company had purchased 8.4 per cent of Ursa Major’s shares, and had secured the right to vote most of them in the proxy vote last Thursday. The purchase price was $1.7-million.


Forbes and Inspiration objected to the votes being counted in the battle, arguing Mr. Hall only bought the shares to help sway the vote in favour of his clients. But Mr. Hall said in an interview last week he bought the shares to bolster an investment position in the company that he previously bought earlier this year.


The vote Thursday overwhelmingly supported the company’s slate, according to a release issued by Ursa Major, and the alternative slate proposed by Forbes and Inspiration was rejected.


Forbes and Inspiration argued in their court application that Mr. Hall’s purchase meant he was “acting jointly or in concert” with the company and its insiders, and that they collectively owned over 20 per cent of Ursa Major’s shares. At that threshold, the purchase should be considered a takeover bid, the court application argued.


Judge Brown said the application met several of the tests required to award higher “indemnity” costs, including the fact the applicants made serious allegations of misconduct by Ursa Major and Mr. Hall, that the court filing was “tactical,” and the application required hasty and complex legal work because there was short notice.


He noted it was the third court challenge filed by Forbes and Inspiration against Ursa Major in the last eight months.


“I find that the serious allegations of misconduct levelled by the applicants against the respondents, the lack of merit to those allegations, and the tactical use made by the applicants of this proceeding combine to place the litigation conduct of the applications in the category of ‘reprehensible conduct,’” Judge Brown wrote.

about 13 years ago
Re: Focus and Concentration.

Surething, I would like to take the opportunity to say thanks for helping out on the boards. (UMJ, NZZ, and ISM) I can't always get to everything and keep the board/s as up to date as required sometimes and I want to say I appreciate the help you have given.


I was looking at UMJ from the Canada Stockwatch site and wow all you see is a month full of related NR's and what have you since the proxy battle started.


http://www.stockwatch.com/


Look at this snapshot: June 07-28 2011....

Recent Bulletins

Date ET
Symbol
Price
Type
Headline

2011-06-28 09:38
UMJ
0.155
News Release
Post says Ursa dissidents fume over Kingsdale move

2011-06-24 17:28
UMJ
0.165
News Release
Ursa Major shareholders elect directors Lendon, Moore

2011-06-23 17:47
UMJ
0.17
News Release
Ursa Major concerned shareholders object to HallCo role

2011-06-22 09:20
UMJ
0.175
News Release
Inspiration disputes CEO salary statement by Ursa Major

2011-06-20 11:34
UMJ
0.16
News Release
Ursa urges shareholders to vote blue proxy

2011-06-20 10:08
UMJ
0.16
SEDAR Early Warning Report
SEDAR Early Warning Report

2011-06-17 16:43
UMJ
0.17
SEDAR Early Warning Report
SEDAR Early Warning Report

2011-06-16 10:25
UMJ
0.20
News Release
Ursa Major shareholder 1599597 acquires more shares

2011-06-15 12:28
UMJ
0.14
News Release
Inspiration rehashes reasons Forbes is better for Ursa

2011-06-15 10:11
UMJ
0.20
News Release
Ursa Major says board challengers acting underhandedly

2011-06-14 09:43
UMJ
0.145
In the News
Post says Ursa Major shows its bear knuckles

2011-06-13 12:31
UMJ
0.13
News Release
Ursa says dissidents seek zero-premium takeover

2011-06-10 10:20
UMJ
0.15
News Release
Ursa Major's board nominees endorsed by ISS

2011-06-08 12:40
UMJ
0.14
News Release
Ursa drills 43.61 m of 0.26% Ni at Shakespeare

2011-06-07 08:24
UMJ
0.135
News Release
Inspiration, Forbes file dissident circular re Ursa

about 13 years ago
Re: Liberty to take Downtime for Maintenance

Found this on the Environmental Registry government site. At least you can see what it is that were the issues when the NR described "some issues with it's tailings pond" in the Feb 22 NR.


http://www.ebr.gov.on.ca/ERS-WEB-External/displaynoticecontent.do?noticeId=MTEyNTY4&statusId=MTY4ODMx&language=en


Instrument Holder: Liberty Mines Inc.
Instrument Type: Order for preventative measures. - EPA s. 18
Direction for maintaining sewage works. - OWRA s. 61

about 13 years ago
Globe and Mail: In rare move, Wes Hall buys shares in proxy client

http://www.theglobeandmail.com/globe-investor/investment-ideas/streetwise/in-rare-move-wes-hall-buys-shares-in-proxy-client/article2077019/


In rare move, Wes Hall buys shares in proxy client



JANET MCFARLAND


Globe and Mail Update

Posted on Monday, June 27, 2011 11:43AM EDT



A proxy battle to replace the board of junior mining company Ursa Major Minerals Inc. has taken an unusual twist after dissident shareholders complained that a prominent proxy solicitor working for Ursa Major bought a big chunk of the company’s shares himself to help sway the vote in favour of his client.

More related to this story



But Wes Hall, chief executive officer of Kingsdale Shareholder Services Inc., says he bought 8.4 per cent of Ursa Major’s shares on June 16 to bolster an investment position in the company that he previously bought earlier this year -- and not to swing last week’s vote.


The unusual proxy battle saw investment firm Forbes & Manhattan Inc. team up with junior miner Inspiration Mining Corp. in a bid to oust the board of Ursa Major and replace the directors with their own dissident slate.


Ursa Major hired Mr. Hall’s Kingsdale as its proxy solicitor in the battle, which means his firm was hired to help sell the company’s side of the story and gather votes from shareholders in support of the company’s slate of directors.


In an unusual move, Mr. Hall issued a news release June 16 announcing his private investment firm -- 1599597 Ontario Inc. or “HallCo” -- had acquired 6.64 million shares of Ursa Major representing 8.4 per cent of the company’s shares. The purchase price was $1.7-million.


Forbes and Inspiration, who lost the proxy vote battle last week, issued a press release Thursday complaining about Mr. Hall’s purchase, and arguing he bought the shares to secure the election of Ursa Major’s nominees.


“HallCo and its related parties, Kingsdale and Mr. Hall, have exceeded the customary role of a proxy solicitation agent, and must in these circumstances be found to be acting jointly or in concert with Ursa Major management and its director nominees,” the firms argued in their release.


They said Mr. Hall’s shares should not have been counted in the final vote tally as a result.


In an interview, Mr. Hall acknowledged it is unusual for a proxy solicitor to buy the company’s shares, saying he has never done it before in a long career working with many of Canada’s largest companies on contested voting matters.


He said he bought the shares in mid-June, taking advantage of an unexpected opportunity to buy when another shareholder had decided to put his stake up for sale.


“I have an investment company,” Mr. Hall said. “I said of course I’d be interested.”


He already owned 6.3 per cent of the company, which he acquired in a financing earlier this year, and the new purchase brought his total stake to 14.7 per cent.


Mr. Hall said he would not have bought the shares simply to sway the vote, noting his $60,000 fee as a proxy solicitor wasn’t worth spending $1.7-million to acquire shares. His fee did not include a “success fee,” he added, which means he did not personally stand to earn more if the vote passed.


Ursa Major issued a release Friday saying its director nominees had received “overwhelming” support, but did not disclose the detailed vote tally.


The complaint about Mr. Hall’s investment comes at the end of a long and bitter battle over Ursa Major that has seen Forbes and Inspiration clash in public and in several court hearings already this year.


The company said in the release it has “been plagued by a group of opportunistic dissident shareholders,” who have “repeatedly attempted to hijack the company for the own ends.” The two investors are being advised by Northern Shareholder Services, run by dissident investor Vic Alboini, who was also a proposed director nominee on the dissident slate.


The dissident investors filed a new court challenge last week to try to have Mr. Hall’s votes rejected in the deal. But the application was withdrawn before the hearing was held last Wednesday.


Mr. Hall said he does not believe the purchase was a conflict of interest because his client -- Ursa Major -- was well aware of his ownership stake, it was clear to other investors that he was acting for Ursa Major in his role as a proxy solicitor, and he publicly disclosed the purchase immediately after he bought the shares in June.


As to whether the unusual purchase could set a dangerous precedent with future clients expecting a similar investment to help win their contested votes, Mr. Hall said he has no intention of investing large sums of his family investment company’s money in other companies just to secure proxy solicitation work.


“At the end of the day you’re not going to make a stupid decision,” he said.


about 13 years ago
whaler
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24936
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10/22/2004
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