Dec. 7, 2012 /PRNewswire/ -- Capital Properties, Inc. (OTCQX: CPTP) today announced that on December 3, 2012, the Board of Directors voted, subject to closing the below-described Bank Rhode Island loan, to declare an extraordinary dividend of $2.25 per share payable to shareholders of record on December 17, 2012 with a payment date of December 27, 2012. For shareholders owning more than 100 shares, the dividend will be paid 20% ($.45 per share) in cash and 80% ($1.80 per share) by delivery of Dividend Notes issued by the Company. Shareholders owing less than 100 shares of any class of Company capital stock in their own name (not held by a broker) will receive the dividend in cash unless they elect to receive 80% in Dividend Notes. The Dividend Notes will have a term of ten years, bear interest at the rate of 5% per annum, payable semi-annually on June 15 and December 15, and will be subject to mandatory prepayment from the net cash proceeds derived by the Company from the sale of any of its real property, or the real property of any of its subsidiaries. The Dividend Notes will be unsecured but will be pari passu with the obligations of the Company to other creditors. The Dividend Notes will prohibit the Company from mortgaging any of its Capital Center District real property (other than mortgages with respect to Parcels 3S and 5) and the real property owned by the Company's subsidiaries without the approval of the holders of two-thirds of the outstanding principal amount of the Dividend Notes.
Robert H. Eder, Chairman of the Company, said: "On the recommendation of management, the Board decided to proceed with this extraordinary dividend in light of the tax changes which may take place on January 1, 2013 increasing the dividend rate from its current 15% to potentially 43.4%. Given the Company's consistent cash flow from its real estate operations, the Board of Directors was convinced that it would benefit the shareholders if a portion of its future dividend stream was paid in advance at what is today a favorable tax rate."