It was at a November 2012 meeting at the University Club on Fifth Avenue that David A. Handler claims he was promised one of Wall Street’s shiniest brass rings: a senior partnership with equity in top merger advisory boutique Centerview Partners.
But a decade later, Centerview founders Blair Effron and Robert Pruzan contend Handler was never a true partner of theirs as they fight to deny him access to the firm’s financial records. Handler, who left Centerview last year to found Tidal Partners, claims those documents will show he’s entitled to a stake in the boutique investment bank worth hundreds of millions of dollars.
The records dispute, which goes on trial Tuesday in Delaware Chancery Court, could end up opening the books on an elite firm that has worked on deals worth $3 trillion since its 2006 launch. Centerview, which advised Credit Suisse on its takeover by UBS Group AG, does not release financial results, but a person familiar with the matter said its revenue last year was around $1.5 billion.
“That would be of huge interest,” said Steven Eckhaus, a lawyer who specializes in compensation. “People on Wall Street look to companies like Centerview to determine how much they should be making.”
The case could also shine a light on one of the most prestigious but ill-defined titles on Wall Street: partner. Goldman Sachs Group Inc. famously maintains the position at the top of its ranks even though the bank hasn’t been an actual partnership since 1999. Centerview has 70 partners among its 600 staff. But only a handful hold significant equity, and Effron and Pruzan claim they are the only two who have all the rights traditionally associated with the title.
Centerview in a statement called Handler’s claims “baseless.” Handler declined to comment on the case.
Handler and Pruzan are expected to testify at Tuesday’s hearing, which will take place at the Court of Chancery in Georgetown. Both men have already given depositions in the matter. On Wednesday, Handler’s legal team, led by Michael Bowe of Brown Rudnick LLP, will face off against Centerview’s lawyers, led by Michael Carlinsky of Quinn Emmanuel Urquhart & Sullivan LLP.
Charles Elson, a corporate governance expert at the University of Delaware, said the case is a longshot. “To the outside world, if they call you a partner, it carries some authority,” Elson said. “In actuality, you’re in the partnership agreement or you’re not. You know what they say: an oral agreement is worth the paper it’s written on.”
The agreement Handler alleges was reached at the University Club was never put in writing, and Centerview has said in court filings that subsequent emails show that there never a final deal. The firm says other documents show Handler held equity only in a secondary corporate structure, not in the overall company.
But the documents cited by Centerview aren’t exactly clearcut. At a hearing in the case last November, Delaware Chancery Court Judge Samuel Glasscock raised that issue with the founders’ lawyers. “I assume that there’s a list of equity-holders, partners, and Mr. Handler is or isn’t on it, right?” the judge asked.
Centerview lawyers said there was but later backtracked and said the bank’s “primary method” for tracking its equity-holders was its issuance of K-1 forms for top staffers to report their compensation to the Internal Revenue Service. But they also said that K-1s didn’t signify partnership, as Effron and Pruzan were the only true partners at Centerview.
Handler, who never received K-1s, is asking the court to give him those forms for Effron, Pruzan and two other Centerview bankers as part of his records request.
There is a 2013 limited partnership agreement that Handler didn’t sign, but he contends Centerview is inflating its importance. He notes that the company had not treated it like the foundational document Effron and Pruzan claim that it is. In deposition questioning, Pruzan acknowledged that the document had been “thrown in a drawer and never taken out.”
Handler also argues that the circumstances surrounding the University Club meeting show Effron and Pruzan intended to make him a senior partner with equity. Recruited from UBS in 2008, Handler was tasked with building a technology group for Centerview. According to him, his team proved so successful, with a roster of clients led by Motorola Inc., that Effron and Pruzan began looking for ways to restructure his compensation, which was mostly a business-origination percentage at the time.
The founders happily agreed that his annual pay would be lowered in exchange for a stake in Centerview, Handler claims. “We hugged at the end of the meeting,” he said in a deposition.
Hugging definitely seems off the table now. In court filings, Handler has accused Effron and Pruzan of misleading most Centerview bankers about the “profit pool” from which they are paid and making secret adjustments for their own benefit. He raised that argument in pushing back against Centerview’s request to seal many of the Delaware court filings as proprietary company information.
“A fraudulent ruse on your employees and partners is not ‘proprietary,’” Handler’s lawyers said, “and maintaining that ruse is not a bona fide commercial purpose for redaction.”
Centerview denied the allegation in a statement. “Centerview’s partners have full transparency into the firm’s performance and compensation practices,” the firm said. “Any suggestion to the contrary is patently false.”
Handler has also said in court filings that he was pushed out of Centerview as retaliation for complaining to Effron in 2020 and 2021 that Pruzan had created a hostile work environment for bank employees. Centerview, which denies the claim, has called Handler a disgruntled employee who plotted to launch a rival firm.
Even if the court decides he is a partner, Centerview said the issue is moot because departing partners are required to sell back their stake to the firm for a nominal price.
Glasscock could rule quickly on whether to grant Handler access to Centerview’s records after the end of arguments on Wednesday. Though giving them to Handler won’t make them publicly available, such records are typically sought as ammunition for further litigation.
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A lengthy dispute could be embarrassing for Centerview and its founders. The firm has emerged as an M&A powerhouse since its launch — it ranked fifth in Bloomberg’s league table of mergers and acquisitions advisers for the first half of 2023, beating Citigroup Inc. and trailing only JPMorgan Chase & Co., Goldman, Bank of America and Morgan Stanley.
In addition to the Credit Suisse deal, Centerview’s been advising Seagen Inc. on its proposed $43 billion acquisition by Pfizer Inc. and Syneos Health Inc. on its announced buyout by a private equity consortium including Elliott Management and Veritas Capital. The boutique bank’s recent recruits include former Goldman managing director Olga Lewis and ex-Barclays Plc French investment banking co-head Yann Krychowski
Effron began his Wall Street career at Dillon, Read & Co. and eventually became vice chairman at UBS, which took over the US bank in 1998. He has become a significant player in political and cultural circles. A major donor to the Democratic Party, he’s a member of President Joe Biden’s intelligence advisory board. He’s also on the board of the Council of Foreign Relations, Lincoln Center, the Metropolitan Museum of Art and Princeton University, his alma mater.
Pruzan, who keeps a lower profile, started off as a McKinsey & Co. consultant before moving to Wasserstein Perella & Co. Prior to co-founding Centerview, Pruzan was North America head for Dresdner Kleinwort Wasserstein. He’s chairman of the board of New York’s Jewish Museum and is also on the board of Wesleyan University, from which he graduated in 1985.
(updates with details of hearing and law firms in graph seven)