An investment group with ties to a wealthy industrialist family in India can take ownership of the former US presidential yacht Sequoia with no payment to its current owner, a Delaware judge ruled Monday.
Vice Chancellor Sam Glasscock ruled that FE Partners, an investment entity formed by Washington, DC-based Equator Capital Group and members of the Timblo family, can exercise an option to acquire the Sequoia at an adjusted option price of zero.
After years of legal wrangling that at times tried his patience, the judge noted in his 21-page opinion how far the Sequoia has fallen since its glory days. Presidents from Herbert Hoover to Jimmy Carter once entertained dignitaries and diplomats aboard the yacht or simply sought refuge there from the Oval Office.
In more recent years, the 104-foot wooden vessel, which has changed hands several times since Carter had it sold at auction in 1977 for $286,000, has been used for entertaining and sightseeing tours of the Potomac River, offering four-hour charters for $10,000 (plus food and drink) from its dock at a Washington, DC, marina.
Currently, the National Historic Landmark lies rotting at a shipyard in Deltaville, Virginia.
Monday's ruling stems from a lawsuit filed in 2013 by Sequoia Presidential Yacht Group LLC.
Sequoia sued to prevent FE Partners from exercising its purchase option, but after the judge found that the loan was fraudulently induced, Sequoia agreed to a default judgment in favor of FE.
After accounting for undisputed deductions, Glasscock wrote that the maximum exercise price amounted to a little more than $2.4 million, which is less than the $2.75 million that an expert for FE Partners testified it would cost to rebuild the yacht's wooden hull.
(With inputs from AP)
(At The Quint, we are answerable only to our audience. Play an active role in shaping our journalism by becoming a member. Because the truth is worth it.)