WASHINGTON (Reuters) – The attorneys general of California, Illinois and Washington D.C., on Tuesday said they would appeal a federal court’s refusal to temporarily prevent Albertsons Companies Inc, which is being purchased by rival Kroger Co, from paying a $4 billion dividend to shareholders.
The dividend is currently on hold by the order of a Washington state court, which expires on Dec. 19.
Consumer advocates say Albertsons, which owns such grocery brands as Safeway and Star Market, should be use the money to continue to compete against Kroger and that the payout harms grocery consumers and workers.
Kroger in mid-October announced that it was snapping up Albertsons in a $25 billion deal between the No. 1 and 2 standalone grocers, saying that the combined company would better compete against U.S. grocery industry leader Walmart Inc on prices.
Judge Carl Nichols of the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia refused Monday to issue a preliminary injunction halting the payment. The state attorneys general said on Tuesday that they would ask an appeals court for the preliminary injunction.
Last week, a state court in Washington declined to issue preliminary injunction stopping the payment, which was filed by the states’ attorneys general who sought to block the payout until antitrust reviews of the proposed merger were completed.
Albertsons said in a statement that the claims put forward by the four attorneys general in the two separate lawsuits were “meritless and provides no legal basis for preventing the payment of a dividend.”
(Reporting by Diane Bartz; Editing by Aurora Ellis)