o |
Confidential,
for Use of the Commission Only (as permitted by Rule
14a-6(e)(2))
|
o |
Definitive
Additional Materials
|
o |
Soliciting
Material Pursuant to Rule 14a-11(c) or
Rule 14a-12
|
x |
No
fee required.
|
o |
Fee
computed on table below per Exchange Act Rules 14a-6(i)(4) and
0-11.
|
1. |
Title
of each class of securities to which transaction
applies:
|
2. |
Aggregate
number of securities to which transaction
applies:
|
3. |
Per
unit price or other underlying value of transaction computed pursuant
to
Exchange Act Rule 0-11 (Set forth the amount on which the filing fee
is calculated and state how it was
determined):
|
4. |
Proposed
maximum aggregate value of
transaction:
|
5. |
Total
fee paid:
|
o |
Fee
paid previously with preliminary
materials:
|
1. |
Amount
Previously Paid:
|
2. |
Form,
Schedule or Registration Statement
No.:
|
3. |
Filing
Party:
|
4. |
Date
Filed:
|
|
|
Sincerely,
|
/s/
Jon E.M. Jacoby
|
||
Jon
E. M. Jacoby
Chairman
of the Board
|
1. |
to
elect two Class II members to the Board of Directors to three-year
terms
expiring at the 2010 Annual
Meeting of Stockholders;
|
2.
|
to
ratify the appointment of the independent auditors for the fiscal
year
ending August 31, 2007; and
|
3. |
to
transact such other business as may properly come before the meeting
or
any adjournments thereof.
|
|
|
BY
ORDER OF THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS
|
/s/
Jerome C. Hafter
|
||
Jerome
C. Hafter
Secretary
|
Shares
Beneficially Owned
|
|||||||
Name
of Beneficial Owner
|
Amount
of
Beneficial
Ownership
|
|
Percentage
Of
Class (1)
|
||||
Alson
Capital Partners LLC (2)
|
2,115,600
|
5.8
|
|||||
W.T.
Jagodinski (3)
(4)
|
515,651
|
1.4
|
|||||
Charles
R. Dismuke (3)
(5)
|
210,052
|
0.6
|
|||||
Stanley
P. Roth (6)
|
166,154
|
0.5
|
|||||
F.
Murray Robinson (7)
|
165,709
|
0.5
|
|||||
Jon
E. M. Jacoby (8)
|
165,163
|
0.5
|
|||||
Rudi
E. Scheidt (9)
|
145,766
|
0.4
|
|||||
Nam-Hai
Chua (10)
|
125,987
|
0.3
|
|||||
Joseph
M. Murphy (11)
|
114,241
|
0.3
|
|||||
R.
D. Greene (3)
(12)
|
112,712
|
0.3
|
|||||
William
V. Hugie (3)
(13)
|
69,896
|
0.2
|
|||||
James
H. Willeke (3)
(14)
|
19,418
|
0.1
|
|||||
All
Directors and Executive Officers as a Group
[20
persons] (15)
|
2,245,485
|
5.9
|
(1) |
Based
on 36,473,176 Shares outstanding on November 30,
2006.
|
(2) |
The
mailing address for Alson Capital Partners LLC is 810 7th
Ave Floor 39, New York, New York
10019.
|
(3)
|
The
mailing address for Messrs. Jagodinski, Dismuke, Greene, Willeke
and Hugie
is One Cotton Row,
Scott,
Mississippi 38772.
|
(4)
|
Includes
8,605 Shares owned beneficially by Mr. Jagodinski, and also includes
494,144 shares of common stock issuable upon exercise of stock
options
vested as of November 30, 2006, or within 60 days thereafter,
and 12,902
shares of restricted
stock.
|
(5)
|
Includes
53,096 Shares owned beneficially by Mr. Dismuke, and also includes
150,812
shares of common stock issuable upon exercise of stock options
vested as
of November 30, 2006, or within 60 days thereafter, and 6,144 shares
of
restricted stock.
|
(6) |
Includes
27,500 Shares owned by North American Capital Corporation,
as to which Mr.
Roth has sole power to vote and sole power of disposition
and 24,969
Shares owned beneficially by Mr. Roth. Also includes 113,685
shares of
common stock issuable upon exercise of stock options vested
as of November
30, 2006, or within 60 days thereafter. The mailing address
for Mr. Roth
is 510 Broad Hollow Road, Suite 206, Melville, New York
11747.
|
(7) |
Includes
38,000
Shares owned by a Charitable Remainder Unit Trust (“CRUT”) as to which Mr.
Robinson disclaims beneficial ownership, and 105,316 Shares
owned
beneficially by Mr. Robinson. Also includes 22,393 shares of
common stock
issuable upon exercise of stock options vested as of November
30, 2006, or
within 60 days thereafter. The mailing address for Mr. Robinson
is 1520
Woodruff Lane, Bloomington, Indiana
47401.
|
(8)
|
Includes
the following shares: 5,437 Shares owned by Jacoby Enterprises,
Inc., as
to which Mr. Jacoby has sole power to vote and sole power of
disposition,
20,094 Shares held in an IRA account, 8,200 Shares held by an
LLC as to
which Mr. Jacoby disclaims beneficial ownership and 26,636 Shares
owned
beneficially by Mr. Jacoby. Also includes 104,796 shares of common
stock
issuable upon exercise of stock options vested as of November
30, 2006, or
within 60 days thereafter. The mailing address for Jacoby Enterprises,
Inc., and Mr. Jacoby is 111 Center Street, Little Rock, Arkansas
72201.
|
(9)
|
Includes
32,081 Shares owned beneficially by Mr. Scheidt. Also includes
113,685
shares of common stock issuable upon exercise of stock options
vested as
of November 30, 2006, or within 60 days thereafter. The mailing
address
for Mr. Scheidt is 54 South White Station Road, Memphis, Tennessee
38117.
|
(10)
|
Includes
10,666 Shares owned by Dr. Chua’s wife as to which Dr. Chua disclaims
beneficial ownership, and 1,636 Shares owned beneficially by
Dr. Chua.
Also includes 113,685 shares of common stock issuable upon
exercise of
stock options vested as of November 30, 2006, or within 60
days
thereafter. The mailing address for Dr. Chua is c/o Laboratory
of Plant
Molecular Biology, Rockefeller University, 1230 York Avenue,
New York, New
York 10021-6399.
|
(11)
|
Includes
698 Shares owned by Mr. Murphy’s wife as to which Mr. Murphy disclaims
beneficial ownership, and 1,636 Shares owned beneficially by
Mr. Murphy.
Also includes 111,907 shares of common stock issuable upon
exercise of
stock options vested as of November 30, 2006, or within 60
days
thereafter. The mailing address for Mr. Murphy is 200 East
42nd
Street, 9th
Floor, New York, New York 10017.
|
(12)
|
Includes
3,664 Shares owned beneficially by Mr. Greene. Also includes 102,302
shares of common stock issuable upon exercise of stock options
vested as
of November 30, 2006, or within 60 days thereafter, and 6,746 shares
of
restricted stock.
|
(13)
|
Includes
2,243 Shares owned beneficially by Mr. Hugie. Also includes 65,046
shares
of common stock issuable upon exercise of stock options vested
as of
November 30, 2006, or within 60 days thereafter, and 2,607 shares
of
restricted stock.
|
(14)
|
Includes
839 Shares owned beneficially by Mr. Willeke. Also includes
17,321 shares
of common stock issuable upon exercise of stock options vested
as of
November 30, 2006, or within 60 days thereafter, and 1,258
shares of
restricted stock.
|
(15)
|
Includes
1,669,289 shares of common stock issuable upon exercise of
stock options
vested as of November 30, 2006, or within 60 days thereafter,
and 50,803
shares of restricted stock.
|
Name
(Age)
|
Position
(1)
|
Offices
Held with Company;
Principal
Occupation for Past Five Years
|
||
W.
Thomas Jagodinski (50)
|
President,
Chief Executive Officer and Director
|
Mr.
Jagodinski has served as President and Chief Executive Officer
and
Director since September 2002 and as Executive Vice President from
June
2002 through August 2002. From September 2000 until June 2002,
he served
as Senior Vice President, Chief Financial Officer, Treasurer and
Assistant
Secretary and from March 2000 until September 2000 he served as
Senior
Vice President-Finance, Treasurer and Assistant Secretary. Until
March
2000, he served as Vice President - Finance and Treasurer and Assistant
Secretary. From 1991, when he joined D&PL, until March 2000, Mr.
Jagodinski held various positions with the Company.
|
||
Charles
R. Dismuke, Jr. (51)
|
Senior
Vice President
|
Mr.
Dismuke has served as Senior Vice President since 1999. From 1997
until
1999, he served as Senior Vice President and as President of Deltapine
Seed Division. From 1989 until 1997, he served as Vice President
-
Operations. Mr. Dismuke was a General Manager of one of the Company’s
subsidiaries, Greenfield Seed Company, from 1982 until 1989. From
1977,
when he joined D&PL, until 1982, Mr. Dismuke held various positions
with the Company.
|
||
R.
D. Greene (36)
|
Senior
Vice President - International and Corporate Development
|
Mr.
Greene has served as Senior Vice President - International and
Corporate
Development since November 2005. Previously he served as Vice President
-
Finance, Treasurer and Assistant Secretary from June 2002 until
November
2005. From September 2000 until June 2002, he served as Vice President
-
Business Development and from 1997, when he joined D&PL, until
September 2000, Mr. Greene served as Director of International
Taxation
and Finance.
|
||
David
W. Albers (48)
|
Vice
President - Technical Services
|
Dr.
Albers has served as Vice President - Technical Services since
August
2006. From August 1999 to July 2006, he served as Regional Technical
Services Director. From February 1996 to August 1999, Dr. Albers
served as
Vice President - Agronomic Services, Paymaster Division. From 1994
to
1996, he was Product Development Manager at Hartz Seed, a subsidiary
of
Monsanto Company. Previously he served as Assistant Professor of
Agronomy
and Extension Cotton Specialist at University of Missouri from
1991 to
1994, and Area Extension Specialist from 1987 to
1991.
|
Kenneth
M. Avery (40)
|
Vice
President - Chief Financial Officer and Assistant
Secretary
|
Mr.
Avery has served as Vice President - Chief Financial Officer and
Assistant
Secretary since October 2006. Previously he served as Vice President
Finance, Treasurer and Assistant Secretary from December 7, 2005.
Prior to
joining the Company in December 2005, he served as Vice President
-
Controller for Eagle Materials, Inc. Mr. Avery served in the audit
division of Arthur Andersen from July 1990 to May 2002, being promoted
to
partner in 2001.
|
||
Harry
B. Collins (65)
|
Vice
President -Technology Transfer
|
Dr.
Collins has served as Vice President -
Technology Transfer since 1998. From 1985 until 1998, Dr. Collins
served
as the Company’s Vice President - Research. Prior to that, Dr. Collins was
the senior soybean breeder for the Company. Dr. Collins has been
employed
by D&PL since 1974.
|
||
Earl
E. Dykes (53)
|
Vice
President - Field Production
|
Mr.
Dykes has served as Vice President - Field Production
since
September 2003. From 1997 to August 2003, Mr. Dykes served as the
Company’s Vice President - Operations. Prior to that time, Mr. Dykes
served as the General Manager - Arizona Processing, Inc. (which
was
acquired by the Company in 1996). Mr. Dykes was a shareholder of
Arizona
Processing, Inc. at the time of the acquisition.
|
||
Ken
Fearday (53)
|
Vice
President - International
|
Mr.
Fearday has served as Vice President - International since April
2003.
Prior to joining D&PL he served as President of Research Seeds, Inc.
from May 2000 until February 2003. From January 2000 through May
2000 he
served as President of Seed Solutions, a division of Research Seeds,
Inc.
From 1992 through 1999 he served as President of Advanta Seeds,
Inc., a
wholly owned subsidiary of Advanta USA, Inc.
|
||
Kater
D. Hake (54)
|
Vice
President - Technology Development
|
Dr.
Hake has served as Vice President - Technology Development since
May 2001.
From 1996 until May 2001, he served as International Division Vice
President - Technical Services. Prior to joining the Company in
1996, Dr.
Hake was an Associate Professor with Texas A&M University and Manager
of Cotton Physiology for the National Cotton Council of
America.
|
||
William
V. Hugie (47)
|
Vice
President - Research
|
Dr.
Hugie has served as Vice President - Research since 1998. From
1996 until
1998, he served as Vice President - New Technologies. From 1988,
when he
joined D&PL, until 1996, Dr. Hugie held various positions with the
Company.
|
Thomas
A. Kerby (62)
|
Vice
President - Special Projects
|
Dr.
Kerby has served as Vice President - Special Projects since August
2006.
From 1994 until August 2006, he served as Vice President - Technical
Services. From 1993, when he joined D&PL, to 1994, he served as
Director - Technical Services. Prior to joining the Company,
Dr. Kerby
served the cotton industry of California and the University of
California
as an Extension Cotton Agronomist.
|
||
Charles
V. Michell, Jr. (44)
|
Vice
President -Operations
|
Mr.
Michell has served as Vice President - Operations since September
2003.
From August 2001 until August 2003, Mr. Michell served as Vice
President -
Supply Chain Management, Corporate Quality Assurance and Information
Systems. From April 2000 until August 2001, he served as Vice
President -
Supply Chain Management and Information Systems. From 1998 until
April
2000, he served as Vice President - Information Systems. From
1987, when
he joined D&PL, until 1998, Mr. Michell held various positions with
the Company.
|
||
Ann
J. Shackelford (48)
|
Vice
President - Corporate Services
|
Ms.
Shackelford has served as Vice President - Corporate Services since
1997.
Ms. Shackelford has been employed by D&PL since 1994 and has held
various positions in the Company.
|
||
James
H. Willeke (62)
|
Vice
President - Sales and Marketing
|
Mr.
Willeke has served as Vice President - Sales and Marketing since
1999.
From 1997 until 1999, he served as Senior Vice President and as
President
- Paymaster Division. Prior to joining the Company, he served as
President
- Hartz Seed, a subsidiary of Monsanto Company.
|
||
Jerome
C. Hafter (61)
|
Secretary
|
Mr.
Hafter has served as Secretary of D&PL since 1993. From 1976 until
September 2001, Mr. Hafter was a partner in Lake Tindall, LLP,
D&PL
general counsel, where he had performed legal services for D&PL since
1983, and since October 1, 2001, he has been a partner of Phelps
Dunbar,
LLP, now D&PL general counsel.
|
Name
(Year
First Elected a Director)
|
Offices
Held with the Company;
Principal
Occupation for Past Five Years
|
|
CLASS
II
|
||
Joseph
M. Murphy (1992)
|
Since February 1993, Mr. Murphy has been the Chairman of Country Bank, New York, New York. Mr. Murphy has been a certified public accountant since 1961, certified in both New York and New Jersey. Prior to his affiliation with Country Bank, Mr. Murphy practiced public accountancy for public and private companies for nine years, and then participated as an investment banker, investor, officer and director in the purchase, management and sale of numerous domestic and international public and private businesses for over 17 years. Mr. Murphy also has extensive service as a trustee of several substantial non-profit foundations and institutions. Mr. Murphy is 71 years of age. | |
Rudi E. Scheidt (1993) |
Since
1990, Mr. Scheidt has been a private investor. From 1973 to 1989,
he
served as President of Hohenberg Bros. Co., a worldwide cotton merchant,
headquartered in Memphis, Tennessee, and as its Chairman during 1990.
Mr.
Scheidt was Director Emeritus of National Commerce Financial Corporation,
a bank holding company, headquartered in Memphis, Tennessee until
December
2002. Mr. Scheidt also has extensive service as a trustee of several
substantial non-profit foundations and institutions. Mr. Scheidt
is 81
years of age.
|
CLASS
III
|
|
Jon
E. M. Jacoby (1992)
|
Mr. Jacoby has been the non-executive Chairman of the Company since September 2000 and has been employed by Stephens, Inc. and Stephens Group, Inc., companies that engage in investment banking activities, since 1963. On October 1, 2003, Mr. Jacoby retired as Vice Chairman of each of these companies. Mr. Jacoby is presently the Vice Chairman and Senior Principal of the Stephens Group, LLC, a private equity firm founded by Witt Stephens, Jr. and Elizabeth Stephens Campbell. Stephens Inc. and Stephens Group, Inc. are stockholders of D&PL. Mr. Jacoby is a director of Eden Bioscience Corp. and Power-One, Inc. He was a director of Beverly Enterprises, Inc. until May 24, 2001. Mr. Jacoby is 68 years of age. |
F.
Murray Robinson (2000)
|
Mr. Robinson has been a non-executive Vice Chairman of the Company since September 2002 and served as Chief Executive Officer and Vice Chairman from October 2000 until August 2002. Prior to his first retirement from D&PL in April 1999, Mr. Robinson had been employed by D&PL serving as Executive Vice President from December 1998 until April 1999 and President and COO from February 1989 until December 1998 and Executive Vice President from April 1988 until February 1989. Mr. Robinson is 72 years of age. |
CLASS
I
|
|
Nam-Hai
Chua (1993)
|
Dr.
Chua is the Andrew W. Mellon Professor and Head of the Plant Molecular
Biology Laboratory of Rockefeller University, New York, New York,
and has
been with the University for over 20 years. In addition, Dr. Chua
served
as the Chairman of the Management Board of Directors of the Institute
of
Molecular Agrobiology (“IMA”) in Singapore until September 2000, Deputy
Chairman from that time until September 2001, and as the Chairman
of the
Board of IMAGEN Holdings Pte. Ltd, an affiliate of IMA until August
2001.
Dr. Chua was also a member of the Board of Directors of DNAP Holdings
(formerly DNA Plant Technology Corporation), until he resigned in
1998 and
BioInnovations of America (an entity owned by the Government of Singapore,
which invests in United States biotechnology companies) until he
resigned
in 2000. Dr. Chua also acted as a scientific consultant to Monsanto
Company for matters relating to plant biology through 1995. Dr. Chua
has
been a consultant to Pioneer Hi-Bred International, Inc., a DuPont
(NYSE:DD) subsidiary, for several years. Dr. Chua is 62 years of
age.
|
W.
Thomas Jagodinski (2002)
|
See
the description of Mr. Jagodinski’s positions with the Company and
principal occupation under “Officers of the Company”.
|
Stanley P. Roth (1988)
|
Mr.
Roth has been a non-executive Vice-Chairman of the Company since
September
2000 and is the Chairman of North American Capital Corporation, a
private
merchant banking firm. In addition, Mr. Roth serves as the Chairman
of
Royal-Pioneer Industries, Inc., now Stamit, and a director of Hollis
Corporation and GPC International Inc. Mr. Roth previously served
as
Chairman of GPC International until 2001. From September 2002 until
April
2005, Mr. Roth served as a director of Polaroid Holding Company and
as a
member of their audit committee. Mr. Roth is a certified public accountant
with both public accounting and private industry experience. Mr.
Roth is
69 years of age.
|
Type
of Fees
|
2006
|
2005
|
||||||
Audit
Fees (1)
|
$
|
524,500
|
$
|
589,000
|
||||
Audit-Related
Fees (2)
|
11,000
|
49,000
|
||||||
Tax
Fees (3)
|
10,000
|
9,000
|
||||||
All
Other Fees (4)
|
55,000
|
25,000
|
||||||
Total
|
$
|
600,500
|
$
|
672,000
|
(1) |
Represents
the aggregate fees paid or payable by the Company to KPMG LLP for
professional services rendered for the audit of the Company’s annual
consolidated financial statements and internal control over financial
reporting and for the reviews of the consolidated financial statements
included in the Company’s Form 10-Q filings for each fiscal
quarter.
|
(2) |
Represents
the aggregate fees billed to the Company by KPMG LLP for assurance
and related services that are reasonably related to the performance
of the
audit and review of the Company’s financial statements that are not
already reported in Audit Fees. These services include benefit plan
audits
and attestation services that are required by statute or
regulation.
|
(3) |
Represents
the aggregate fees billed to the Company by KPMG LLP for professional
services relating to tax compliance, tax advice and expatriate tax
services.
|
(4) |
Includes
fees paid for due diligence relating to the same international project
in
2006 and 2005.
|
(i) |
A
director who is an employee, or whose immediate family member is
an
executive officer, of the Company is not independent until three
years
after the end of the employment relationship. However, employment
as an
interim Chairman or interim Chief Executive Officer shall not disqualify
a
director from being considered independent following that
employment.
|
(ii) |
A
director who receives, or whose immediate family member receives,
more
than $100,000 per year in direct compensation from the Company, other
than
director and committee fees and pension or other forms of deferred
compensation for prior service that is not contingent in any way
on
continued service, and other than compensation received by a director
for
former service as interim Chairman or interim Chief Executive Officer,
is
not independent until three years after the person ceases to receive
more
than $100,000 per year in such compensation; provided, however, that
compensation received by a director for former service as an interim
Chairman or interim Chief Executive Officer, and compensation received
by
an immediate family member for service as a non-executive employee
of the
Company, need not be considered in determining independence under
this
test.
|
(iii) |
A
director who is affiliated with or employed by, or whose immediate
family
member is affiliated with or employed in a professional capacity
by a
present or former internal or external auditor of the Company, is
not
independent until three years after the end of either the affiliation
or
the employment or auditing
relationship.
|
(iv) |
A
director who is employed, or whose immediate family member is employed,
as
an executive officer of another company where any of the Company’s present
executives serves on the other company’s compensation committee is not
independent until three years after the end of such service or the
employment relationship.
|
(v) |
A
director who is an executive officer or an employee, or whose immediate
family member is an executive officer, of another company that makes
payments to, or receives payments from, the Company for property
or
services in an amount which, in any single fiscal year, exceeds the
greater of $1 million, or 2% of the other company’s consolidated gross
revenues, is not independent until three years after falling below
such
threshold. Any relationship below such threshold shall not preclude
the
director’s independence. In applying this standard, both the payments and
the consolidated gross revenues to be measured shall be those reported
in
the last completed fiscal year. The three-year look-back provision
for
this standard applies solely to the financial relationship between
the
Company and the director or immediate family member’s current employer,
and former employment of the director or immediate family member
need not
be considered. In addition, while charitable organizations are not
considered companies for purposes of this standard, the Company must
disclose in the annual proxy statement any charitable contributions
made
by the Company to any charitable organization in which a director
serves
as an executive officer if, within the preceding three years,
contributions in any single fiscal year exceeded the greater of $1
million, or 2% of the charity’s consolidated gross revenues. Any Company
donations to any charitable organization in which a director serves
as an
executive officer or director shall not preclude the director’s
independence if the aggregate amount of contributions in any single
fiscal
year does not exceed the lesser of $100,000 or 2% of the charitable
organization’s consolidated gross revenues.
|
1. |
Director
and Officer Questionnaires;
|
2. |
Interviews
with nominees (oral or
written);
|
3. |
Summaries
of relevant information about the nominees prepared by management
based on
information generally available;
and
|
4. |
Other
information properly available to the Board of
Directors.
|
·
|
reviewed
with the independent registered public accountants the scope of the
audit,
the auditors’ fees and related
matters;
|
·
|
received
the annual comments from the independent registered public accountants
on
accounting procedures and systems of
control;
|
·
|
reviewed
with the independent registered public accountants any questions,
comments
or suggestions they may have had relating to D&PL’s internal controls,
accounting practices or procedures or those of D&PL’s
subsidiaries;
|
·
|
reviewed
with management and the independent registered public accountants
D&PL’s quarterly financial statements as required and have reviewed
year end financial statements along with any material changes in
accounting principles or practices used in preparing the statements
prior
to the filing of a report on Form 10-K or 10-Q with the SEC and have
recommended the inclusion of the audited financial statements in
the
report on Form 10-K. This review included the items required by SAS
61 as
in effect at that time in the case of the quarterly
statements;
|
·
|
received
from the independent registered public accountants the report required
by
Independence Standards Board Standard No. 1 as in effect at that
time and
discussed it with the independent registered public accountants;
|
·
|
reviewed,
as needed, the adequacy of the systems of internal controls and accounting
practices of D&PL and its subsidiaries regarding accounting trends and
developments; and
|
·
|
reviewed
compliance with laws, regulations, and internal procedures, and contingent
liabilities and risks that may be material to
D&PL.
|
Stanley P. Roth | ||
Joseph M. Murphy | ||
Rudi E. Scheidt | ||
F.
Murray Robinson
|
Compensation Committee | ||
|
|
|
Jon E. M. Jacoby | ||
Joseph M. Murphy |
· |
character,
personal and professional ethics, integrity and
values;
|
· |
executive
level business experience and
acumen;
|
· |
relevant
business experience or knowledge (although preference may be shown
for
experience in or knowledge of the cotton industry, agribusiness,
molecular
biology or plant sciences, it is not a
prerequisite);
|
· |
skills
and expertise necessary to make significant contributions to the
Company,
its Board and its stockholders;
|
· |
business
judgment;
|
· |
availability
and willingness to serve on the
Board;
|
· |
independence
requirements of the NYSE;
|
· |
potential
conflicts of interest with the Company or its stockholders taken
as a
whole; and
|
· |
accomplishment
within the candidate’s own field.
|
· |
proof
of the stockholder’s eligibility to submit proposals in accordance with
Rule 14a-8(b) of the Exchange Act of 1934, as
amended;
|
· |
a
complete description of the candidate’s qualifications, experience and
background; and
|
· |
the
candidate’s signed consent to serve on the
Board.
|
· |
consider
whether the stockholder candidate will significantly add to the range
of
talents, skills and expertise of the
Board;
|
· |
conduct
appropriate verifications of the background of the candidate;
and
|
· |
interview
the candidate or ask the candidate for additional
information.
|
Annual
Compensation
|
Long
-Term Compensation
|
|||||||||||||||||||||
Name
and
Principal Position |
Year
|
Salary($)
|
Bonus($)
|
Other
Annual
Compensation($) (1) |
Restricted
Stock Awards($) (2) |
Securities
Underlying Options |
All
Other
Compensation($) (5) |
|||||||||||||||
W.
Thomas Jagodinski
|
2006
|
400,000
|
500,000
|
4,000
|
—
|
2,666
|
(4)
|
45,000
|
||||||||||||||
President
and
|
2005
|
348,000
|
420,000
|
2,000
|
568,351
|
151,307
|
(3)
|
44,000
|
||||||||||||||
CEO
|
2004
|
336,000
|
215,000
|
1,000
|
—
|
2,666
|
(4)
|
44,000
|
||||||||||||||
Charles
R. Dismuke, Jr.
|
2006
|
305,000
|
270,000
|
5,300
|
—
|
—
|
—
|
|||||||||||||||
Senior
Vice President
|
2005
|
265,000
|
235,000
|
3,800
|
270,643
|
70,812
|
(3)
|
—
|
||||||||||||||
2004
|
256,000
|
120,000
|
2,500
|
—
|
—
|
—
|
||||||||||||||||
R.
D. Greene
|
2006
|
255,000
|
250,000
|
1,800
|
47,120
|
13,000
|
(4)
|
—
|
||||||||||||||
Senior
Vice President -
|
2005
|
213,000
|
210,000
|
1,700
|
209,061
|
54,702
|
(3)
|
—
|
||||||||||||||
International
and
|
2004
|
206,000
|
105,000
|
1,000
|
—
|
—
|
—
|
|||||||||||||||
Corporate
Development
|
||||||||||||||||||||||
James
H. Willeke
|
2006
|
210,000
|
95,000
|
3,100
|
—
|
—
|
—
|
|||||||||||||||
Vice
President -
|
2005
|
203,000
|
83,000
|
2,800
|
55,424
|
31,823
|
(3)
|
—
|
||||||||||||||
Sales
and Marketing
|
2004
|
197,000
|
40,000
|
1,900
|
—
|
—
|
—
|
|||||||||||||||
William
V. Hugie
|
2006
|
200,000
|
105,000
|
1,100
|
—
|
—
|
—
|
|||||||||||||||
2005
|
193,000
|
92,000
|
1,200
|
114,838
|
30,046
|
(3)
|
—
|
|||||||||||||||
Research
|
2004
|
186,000
|
55,000
|
800
|
—
|
—
|
—
|
(1) |
These
amounts include items such as personal use of a company automobile,
group
term life insurance, moving expenses and/or taxable fringe
benefits.
|
(2)
|
On
May 18, 2005, the named officers were granted the following Restricted
Stock Awards: 21,504 shares for W. Thomas Jagodinski; 10,240 shares
for
Charles R. Dismuke, Jr.; 7,910 shares for R. D. Greene; 2,097 shares
for
James H. Willeke; and 4,345 shares for William V. Hugie. The closing
price
on May 18, 2005 was $26.43. On November 30, 2005, R.D. Greene was
granted
a Restricted Stock Award of 2,000 shares. The closing price on
November
30, 2005 as quoted by the NYSE was $23.56. Restricted Stock vest
as
follows: 40% of the shares vest on the day following the first
anniversary
date, 30% of the shares vest on the second anniversary date, and
the
remaining 30% of the shares vest on the third anniversary
date.
|
(3)
|
Stock
Options granted on May 18, 2005 vested 100% on July 2,
2005.
|
(4)
|
Options
granted in fiscal 2006 and fiscal 2004 vest 20% per annum commencing
on
the first day of the second and each succeeding year following
grant
date.
|
(5)
|
Director’s
and attendance fees for serving as a Director of the
Company.
|
Potential
Realized Value at
Assumed
Annual Rates of Stock
Price
Appreciation of Option
Term
(1)
|
|||||||||||||||||||
Name
|
Number
of
Securities
Underlying
Options
|
Percentage
of
Total
Options
Granted
to
Employees In
Fiscal
Year
|
Exercise
Price
|
Expiration
Date
|
5%
|
10%
|
|||||||||||||
W.
Thomas Jagodinski (2)
|
2,666
|
2.67
|
%
|
22.505
|
1/17/16
|
$
|
37,754
|
$
|
95,656
|
||||||||||
R.
D. Greene
|
13,000
|
13.03
|
%
|
23.600
|
11/30/12
|
$
|
124,807
|
$
|
290,940
|
(1) |
The
dollar amount under these columns are the result of calculations
at 5% and
10% rates arbitrarily set by the Securities and Exchange Commission
and,
therefore, are not intended to forecast possible future appreciation,
if
any, of the Company’s stock price. Any actual gain on exercise of options
is dependent on the future performance of the Company’s
stock.
|
(2)
|
Automatic
grant resulting from service as a
director.
|
(1)
|
Based
on $40.505 per Share, the August 31, 2006 market value as calculated
by
averaging the High and Low as quoted by the
NYSE.
|
Compensation
|
15
|
20
|
25
|
30
|
35
|
|||||||||||
$
25,000
|
$
|
3,470
|
$
|
4,627
|
$
|
5,784
|
$
|
5,803
|
$
|
5,822
|
||||||
$
50,000
|
9,320
|
12,427
|
15,534
|
16,365
|
17,197
|
|||||||||||
$
75,000
|
15,170
|
20,227
|
25,284
|
26,928
|
28,572
|
|||||||||||
$100,000
|
21,020
|
28,027
|
35,034
|
37,490
|
39,947
|
|||||||||||
$150,000
|
32,720
|
43,627
|
54,534
|
58,615
|
62,697
|
|||||||||||
$200,000
|
44,420
|
59,227
|
74,034
|
79,740
|
85,447
|
|||||||||||
$250,000
|
46,058
|
61,411
|
76,764
|
82,698
|
88,632
|
|||||||||||
$300,000
|
46,058
|
61,411
|
76,764
|
82,698
|
88,632
|
|||||||||||
$400,000
|
46,058
|
61,411
|
76,764
|
82,698
|
88,632
|
Name
|
Years
of Credited
Service |
Average
Plan
ompensation
|
|||||
W.
Thomas Jagodinski
|
14
|
$
|
203,000
|
||||
Charles
R. Dismuke, Jr.
|
29
|
203,000
|
|||||
R.
D. Greene
|
9
|
181,150
|
|||||
William
V. Hugie
|
17
|
|
178,467
|
||||
James
H. Willeke
|
10
|
196,320
|
BY
ORDER OF THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS
|
|||
/s/ Jerome C. Hafter | |||
Jerome
C. Hafter
Secretary
|
You
can vote in one of three ways: 1) By Mail, 2) By Internet, 3)
By
Phone.
See
the
reverse side of this sheet for instructions.
IF
YOU ARE
NOT VOTING BY TELEPHONE OR BY INTERNET, COMPLETE BOTH SIDES
OF
PROXY CARD,
DETACH
AND
RETURN IN THE ENCLOSED ENVELOPE TO:
Illinois
Stock Transfer Co.
209
West
Jackson Boulevard, Suite 903
Chicago,
Illinois 60606
|
IMPORTANT
Please
complete both sides of the PROXY CARD, sign, date,
detach
and return in the enclosed envelope.
|
DETACH
ATTENDANCE CARD HERE
AND
MAIL WITH PROXY CARD
|
This
proxy is solicited on behalf of the Board of Directors. If
not otherwise
specified on the reverse side, this proxy will be voted FOR
all the
director nominees listed,
and FOR the ratification of independent auditors. The undersigned
revokes
all proxies heretofore give to vote at such meeting and all
adjournments
or
postponements.
V
A
O
B
T
O
E
V
R
E
C
N
O
A
N
M
T
E
R
O
H Dated
___________________________________________
L
E
R ________________________________________________
N
E
U
________________________________________________
M
(Please sign here)
B
E
R
Please
sign your name as it appears above. If executed by a corporation,
a duly
authorized officer should sign. Executors, administrators,
attorneys, guardians and trustees should so indicate when signing.
If
shares are held jointly, at least one holder must sign.
|
DELTA
AND PINE LAND COMPANY
If you personally plan to attend the Annual
Meeting of Shareholders, please check the
box below and list names of attendees on
reverse side.
Return this stub in the enclosed envelope
with your completed proxy card.
I/We do plan to attend
the 2007
meeting. o
|
TO
VOTE BY MAIL
To
vote by mail, complete both sides, sign and date the proxy card
below.
Detach the card below and return it in the envelope provided.
|
TO
VOTE BY INTERNET
Your
Internet vote is quick, confidential and your vote is immediately
submitted. Just follow these easy steps:
1. Read the accompanying Proxy Statement.
2. Visit our Internet voting Site at http://www.illinoisstocktransfer.com
and follow the instructions on the screen.
3. When prompted for your Voter Control Number, enter the number
printed
just above your name on the front of the proxy card.
Please
note that all votes cast by Internet must be completed
and
submitted
prior
to Saturday, February 17, 2007 at 11:59 p.m. Central Time.
Your
Internet vote authorizes the named proxies to vote your shares
to the same
extent as if you marked, signed, dated and returned the proxy
card.
This
is a “secured” web page site. Your software and/or Internet provider must
be “enabled” to access
this site. Please call your software or Internet provider for
further
information if needed.
|
If
You Vote By INTERNET, Please Do Not Return Your Proxy Card By
Mail
|
TO
VOTE BY TELEPHONE
Your
telephone vote is quick, confidential and immediate. Just follow
these
easy steps:
1. Read the accompanying Proxy Statement.
2. Using a Touch-Tone telephone, call Toll Free 1-800-555-8140
and follow
the instructions.
3. When asked for your Voter Control Number, enter the number
printed just
above your name on the front of the proxy card below.
Please
note that all votes cast by telephone must be completed
and
submitted
prior
to Saturday, February 17, 2007 at 11:59 p.m. Central Time.
Your
telephone vote authorizes the named proxies to vote your shares
to the
same extent as if you marked, signed, dated and returned the
proxy
card.
|
If
You Vote By TELEPHONE Please Do Not Return Your Proxy Card By
Mail
|
PLEASE
LIST
NAMES
OF PERSONS ATTENDING
_____________________________
_____________________________
_____________________________
_____________________________
|
DELTA
AND PINE LAND COMPANY
REVOCABLE
PROXY
THIS
PROXY IS SOLICITED ON BEHALF OF THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS
The
undersigned hereby appoints Jerome C. Hafter and Kenneth M. Avery
as
Proxies, each with the power to appoint his substitute, and hereby
authorizes each of them to
represent and to vote, as designated below, all the shares of
Common Stock
of Delta and Pine Land Company which the undersigned is entitled
to vote
at the Annual Meeting of Shareholders to be held on February
19, 2007 or
any adjournment thereof. If any other business is presented at
the Annual
Meeting, including whether or not to
adjourn the meeting, this proxy will be voted, to the extent
legally
permissable, by those named in this proxy in their best
judgement.
Proposal
1 - Election of Class II Directors with a term ending at the
2010 Annual
Meeting of Stockholders
[
]
For All NomineesListed
Below (except as marked to the contrary below)
[
]
Withhold Authorityto
vote for all nominees below.
(Instructions:
To withhold authority to vote for any individual nominee, strike
a line
through the nominee's name.)
01Joseph
M. Murphy 02Rudi
E. Scheidt
Proposal
2 - To ratify the appointment of the independent auditors for
the fiscal
year ending August 31, 2007
[ ]
For [
]
Against
[
]
Abstain
(to be signed on the other
side)
|