o |
Preliminary
Proxy Statement
|
o |
Confidential,
For Use of the Commission Only (As Permitted by Rule
14a-6(e)(2))
|
x |
Definitive
Proxy Statement
|
o |
Definitive
Additional Materials
|
o |
Soliciting
Material under §240.14a-12
|
x |
No
fee required
|
o |
Fee
computed on table below per Exchange Act Rules 14a-6(i)(1) 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.
|
o |
Check
box
if
any part of the fee is offset as provided by Exchange Act Rule
0-11(a)(2)
and identify the filing for which the offsetting fee was paid
previously.
Identify the previous filing by registration statement number,
or the form
or schedule and the date of its
filing.
|
(1) |
Amount
Previously Paid:
|
(2) |
Form,
Schedule or Registration Statement No.:
|
(3) |
Filing
Party:
|
(4) |
Date
Filed:
|
1. |
To
elect five Directors to the Company’s Board, to hold office until his
successor is elected and qualified or until his earlier resignation
or
removal (Proposal No. 1);
|
2. |
To
consider and act upon a proposal to ratify the Board’s selection of
Ehrhardt Keefe Steiner & Hottman PC as the Company’s independent
auditors for the fiscal year ending December 31, 2006 (Proposal No.
2);
and
|
3. |
To
consider and act upon any other business that may properly come before
the
meeting or any adjournments
thereof.
|
· |
By
mail - fill in, sign and date the enclosed proxy card and return
it
promptly in the enclosed postage-paid
envelope.
|
· |
By
telephone - call the toll-free telephone number on your proxy card
to vote
by phone.
|
· |
Via
Internet - visit the website noted on your proxy card to vote via
the
Internet.
|
By Order of the Board of Directors, | ||
James J. Woodcock | ||
Chairman | ||
Page
|
|
|
|
WHO
CAN HELP ANSWER YOUR QUESTIONS?
|
4
|
CORPORATE
GOVERNANCE
|
4
|
BOARD
COMMITTEES
|
5
|
ELECTION
OF DIRECTORS
|
8
|
INFORMATION
ABOUT STOCK OWNERSHIP
|
11
|
INFORMATION
ABOUT EXECUTIVE OFFICERS
|
13
|
EXECUTIVE
COMPENSATION
|
14
|
STOCK
OPTIONS
|
15
|
COMPENSATION
COMMITTEE REPORT
|
19
|
AUDIT
COMMITTEE REPORT
|
21
|
RATIFICATION
OF APPOINTMENT OF INDEPENDENT AUDITORS
|
25
|
•
|
Election of five members of the Board; and |
|
•
|
|
Ratification
of the appointment of Ehrhardt Keefe Steiner & Hottman PC as our
independent registered public accounting firm for the fiscal year
ending
December 31, 2006.
|
•
|
“FOR” each of the nominees to the Board; |
|
•
|
|
“FOR”
ratification of the appointment of Ehrhardt Keefe Steiner & Hottman PC
as our independent registered public accounting firm for the
fiscal year
ending December 31,
2006;
|
•
|
are present and vote in person at the meeting; or |
|
•
|
|
have
properly submitted a proxy card or voted by telephone or by using
the
Internet.
|
Teton
Energy Corporation
Attn:
Investor Relations
410
17th Street, Suite 1850
Denver,
CO, USA 80202
Phone: 1.303.565.4600
|
||
|
|
Ms.
Gillian Kane
|
|
|
Tel.
(303) 565-4600
|
|
|
gkane@teton-energy.com
|
|
|
Teton
Energy Corporation
|
|
|
410
17th Street, Suite 1850
|
|
|
Denver,
Colorado 80202
|
|
|
Tel.
(303) 565-4600
|
Fax.
(303) 565-4606
|
Board Committee Membership | ||||||
Name
|
Audit
Committee
|
Compensation
Committee
|
Governance
and Nominating Committee
|
|||
Mr.
Arleth
|
||||||
Mr.
Connor
|
X (1)
|
|||||
Mr.
Conroy
|
X
|
X
|
X(1)
|
|||
Mr.
White
|
X
|
X
|
||||
Mr.
Woodcock
|
X(1)
|
X
|
||||
_____________________
(1) Chairman.
|
· |
high
personal and professional ethics and
integrity;
|
· |
the
ability
to exercise sound judgment;
|
· |
the
ability to make independent analytical
inquiries;
|
· |
a
willingness and ability to devote adequate time and resources to
diligently perform Board and committee duties;
and
|
· |
the
appropriate
and relevant business experience and
acumen.
|
· |
whether
the person possesses specific industry expertise and familiarity
with
general issues affecting our
business;
|
· |
whether
the person’s nomination and election would enable the Board to have a
member that qualifies as an “audit
committee financial expert” as such term is defined by the Securities and
Exchange Commission (the “SEC”);
|
· |
whether
the person would qualify as an “independent” director under the rules of
the SEC and AMEX listing standards;
|
· |
the
importance of continuity of the existing composition of the Board
to
provide long-term stability and experienced oversight;
and
|
· |
the
importance of diversified Board membership, in terms of both the
individuals involved and their various experiences
and areas of expertise.
|
· |
the
recommendation must be made in writing to the attention of the Chairman
of
the Company’s Governance and Nominating
Committee;
|
· |
the
recommendation must include the candidate’s name, home and business
contact information, detailed biographical data and qualifications,
information regarding any relationships between the candidate and
the
Company
within the last three years and evidence of the recommending person’s
ownership of the Company’s Common
Stock;
|
· |
the
recommendation shall also contain a statement from the recommending
stockholder in support of the candidate; professional references,
particularly within the context of those relevant to Board membership,
including issues of character, judgment, diversity, age, independence,
expertise, corporate experience, length of service, other commitments;
and
personal references; and
|
· |
a
statement
from the stockholder nominee indicating that such nominee wants to
serve
on the Board and could be considered independent under SEC rules
and AMEX
listing standards, as in effect at that
time.
|
Name
|
Biographical
Information and Current Directorships
|
Age
|
||
James
J. Woodcock
|
James
J. Woodcock has been a Director since 2002 and Chairman of the Company
since February 2005. Mr. Woodcock also chairs the Company’s Compensation
Committee. Since 1981, Mr. Woodcock has been the owner and CEO of
Hy-Bon
Engineering Company, based in Midland, Texas. Hy-Bon is an engineering
firm and manufacturer of vapor recovery, gas boosters, and casing
pressure
reduction systems for the oil industry. From 1997 to 2002, Mr. Woodcock
was the Chairman of Transrepublic Resources, a private oil and gas
exploration firm located in Midland Texas. From 1996 to 2003, Mr.
Woodcock
was a board member of Renovar Energy, a private waste to energy firm
located in Midland Texas and was its Chairman of the Board from 1996
until
2003.
|
67
|
||
Karl
F. Arleth
|
Karl
F. Arleth has been our President and Chief Executive Officer since
May
2003 and a Director since 2002. From 2002 to 2003, Mr. Arleth was
the
Chief Operating Officer of Sefton Resources, Inc., an oil and gas
exploration and production company. Since 2002, Mr. Arleth has served
as a
Board member of Sefton Resources, Inc. Between 1999 and 2001, he
served as
Chairman and CEO of Eurogas, Inc in London. Ending in 1999, Mr. Arleth
spent 21 years with Amoco and BP-Amoco.
ouston
|
57
|
||
John
T. Connor, Jr.
|
John
T. Connor, Jr. has been a Director since 2003 and chairs the Board’s audit
committee. He is the Founder and Portfolio Manager of the Third Millennium
Russia Fund, a US based mutual fund specializing in the equities
of
Russian public companies, which he founded in 1998. Mr. Connor is
a member
of the Council on Foreign Relations and the American Law Institute.
He is
a Director of Port.ru., Inc., a Delaware corporation, which operates
the
leading internet portal in Russia, mail.ru. and is also a member
of the
board of directors of Swissfone Ltd., based in Washington, D.C.,
an Irish
company which is a telecom wholesaler.
|
65
|
||
Thomas
F. Conroy
|
Thomas
F. Conroy was our interim Chief Financial Officer and Corporate Secretary
from March 2002 until May 1, 2003, and a Director since 2002. Since
2002,
Mr. Conroy has been a principal member of Mann-Conroy-Eisenberg &
Assoc. LLC, a life insurance and reinsurance consulting firm, and
since
2001, has been a managing principal of Strategic Reinsurance Consultants
International LLC, a life reinsurance consulting and brokerage firm.
Ending in 2001, Mr. Conroy, spent 27 years with ING and its predecessor
organizations, serving in various financial positions and leading
two of
its strategic business units as President. Mr. Conroy is a Certified
Public Accountant.
|
67
|
||
William
K. White
|
Mr.
White is currently President of Amado Energy L.P., an investment
vehicle
formed to focus on the acquisition of oil and gas minerals in the
United
States. Between 1996-2002, Mr. White was Chief Financial Officer
of Pure
Resources, Inc., a NYSE-listed independent exploration and production
concern.
|
63
|
||
NAME
AND ADDRESS(1)
of Beneficial Owner
|
Common
Stock
Beneficially
Owned
|
Percent
of Class
|
|||||
H.
Howard Cooper (2)
|
1,388,910
|
10.93
|
%
|
||||
Karl
F. Arleth (3)
|
891,745
|
7.34
|
%
|
||||
Parties
Affiliated with PGR Partners LLC (4)
|
650,000
|
5.74
|
%
|
||||
Sound
Energy Partners (5)
|
643,400
|
5.68
|
%
|
||||
ATEC/Apollo
(6)
|
619,992
|
5.44
|
%
|
||||
James
J. Woodcock (7)
|
618,556
|
5.23
|
%
|
(1) |
Unless
otherwise indicated, the address for all beneficial owners is c/o
Teton
Energy Corporation, 410 17th
Street, Suite 1850, Denver, CO
80202.
|
(2) |
Includes
(i) 10,621 shares of common stock, (ii) 375,000 shares underlying
warrants, with an exercise price of $3.24, (iii) 603,289 shares underlying
options exercisable at $3.48 per share and (iv) 400,000 shares underlying
options exercisable at $3.60 per
share.
|
(3) |
Includes
(i) 75,850 shares of common stock, (ii) 105,557 shares underlying
warrants, with exercise prices ranging from $3.24 to $4.92 per share,
(iii) 410,338 shares underlying options exercisable at $3.48 per
share,
and (iv) 300,000 shares underlying options exercisable at $3.60 per
share.
|
(4) |
Includes
650,000 shares of common stock owned directly. 450,000 shares (as
well as
200,000 warrants, which warrants were subsequently exercised) were
issued
directly to five entities controlled by individuals who are affiliated
with PGR Partners, LLC and involved in the sale of the 25% membership
interest in Piceance Gas Resources, LLC, which membership interest
constituted our interest in the Piceance Basin until the fee owner
of the
land on which Piceance LLC’s oil and gas rights and leases are located
consented to transfer the interests directly to each of the members.
The
address for those individuals who are affiliated with PGR Partners,
LLC is
730 17th
Street, Suite 410, Denver, Colorado
80202.
|
(5) |
According
to a Schedule 13G filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission
(the
“SEC”) by Sound Energy Partners, Inc., dated February 9, 2006 and
effective as of December 31, 2005, Sound Energy Partners, Inc., a
registered investment advisor, has shared power to vote or to direct
the
vote with respect to 643,400 shares of our common stock. The address
of
Sound Energy Partners, Inc. listed in the Schedule 13G is 354 Pequot
Avenue, Southport, Connecticut
06890.
|
(6) |
Includes
(i) 436,485 shares of common stock owned directly and (ii) 183,437
shares
of common stock underlying warrants exercisable at $1.75 per share.
The
shares and warrants were issued directly to nine individuals who
are
affiliated with ATEC/Apollo and involved in the sale of the acreage
to the
Company that constitutes our DJ Basin acreage. ATEC/Apollo’s address is
1557 Ogden Street, Suite 300, Denver, Colorado
80218.
|
(7) |
Includes
(i) 115,828 shares of common stock, (ii) 92,590 shares underlying
warrants, with exercise prices ranging from $3.24 to $4.92 per share,
(iii) 210,148 shares underlying options exercisable at $3.48 per
share,
and (iv) 200,000 shares underlying options exercisable at $3.60 per
share.
|
NAME
AND ADDRESS(1)
of Beneficial Owner
|
Common
Stock
Beneficially
Owned
|
Percent
of Class
|
|||||
Karl
F. Arleth (2)
|
891,745
|
7.34
|
%
|
||||
James
J. Woodcock (3)
|
618,556
|
5.23
|
%
|
||||
John
T. Connor (4)
|
373,718
|
3.25
|
%
|
||||
Thomas
F. Conroy (5)
|
161,031
|
1.41
|
%
|
||||
William
K. White (6)
|
15,000
|
0.13
|
%
|
||||
Patrick
A. Quinn (7)
|
100,000
|
0.88
|
%
|
||||
Directors
and Executive Officers as a Group
(six
(6) persons)
|
2,160,060
|
18.24
|
%
|
(1) |
Unless
otherwise indicated, the address for all beneficial owners is c/o
Teton
Energy Corporation, 410 17th
Street, Suite 1850, Denver, CO
80202.
|
(2) |
Includes
(i) 75,850 shares of common stock, (ii) 105,557 shares underlying
warrants, with exercise prices ranging from $3.24 to $4.92 per share,
(iii) 410,338 shares underlying options exercisable at $3.48 per
share,
and (iv) 300,000 shares underlying options exercisable at $3.60 per
share.
|
(3) |
Includes
(i) 115,828 shares of common stock, (ii) 92,590 shares underlying
warrants, with exercise prices ranging from $3.24 to $4.92 per share,
(iii) 210,148 shares underlying options exercisable at $3.48 per
share,
and (iv) 200,000 shares underlying options exercisable at $3.60 per
share.
|
(4) |
Includes
(i) 183,554 shares of common stock owned indirectly, (ii) 15,164
shares of
common stock owned directly, (iii) 100,000 shares of common stock
underlying options exercisable at $3.71 per share and (iv) 75,000
shares
of common stock underlying options exercisable at $3.60 per
share.
|
(5) |
Includes
(i) 31,261 shares of common stock, (ii) 26,112 shares underlying
warrants,
with exercise prices ranging from $3.24 to $6.00, (iii) 28,658 shares
underlying options exercisable at $3.48 per share and (iv) 75,000
shares
underlying options exercisable at $3.60 per
share.
|
(6) |
Includes
15,000 shares of common stock.
|
(7) |
The
shares owned by Mr. Quinn are held subject to a restricted stock
award
agreement.
|
Name
|
Age
|
Position
|
||
Karl
F. Arleth
|
57
|
Chief
Executive Officer, President, and Director
|
||
Patrick
A. Quinn
|
52
|
Chief
Financial Officer & Secretary
|
Annual Compensation | Long Term Compensation | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Awards | Payouts | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Name
& Principal Position
|
Year
|
Salary
($)
|
Bonus
($)
|
Other
Annual
Compen-
sation
($)
|
Restricted
Stock
awards
|
Securities
Underlying
Options
SARs
(#)
|
LTIP
Payouts
($)
|
All
Other
Compen-sation
|
|||||||||||||||||
Karl
F. Arleth CEO
|
2005
|
205,000
|
265,000
|
(1)(6)
|
17,250
|
0
|
0
|
0
|
0
|
||||||||||||||||
2004 |
180,000
|
80,000
|
(2)
|
16,800
|
0 |
300,000
|
0
|
0
|
|||||||||||||||||
2003
|
85,000
|
0
|
0
|
0
|
410,338
|
0
|
0
|
||||||||||||||||||
H.
Howard Cooper,
Chairman
|
2005
|
200,000
|
(3)
|
0
|
11,181
|
0
|
0
|
0
|
0
|
||||||||||||||||
(until February 2005)CEO | 2004 | 200,000 |
160,000
|
(2)
|
8,200
|
0
|
400,000
|
0 |
0
|
||||||||||||||||
(untilMay 2003) |
2003
|
160,000
|
0
|
0
|
0
|
603,289
|
0
|
0
|
|||||||||||||||||
Patrick
A. Quinn
|
2005
|
0
|
0
|
(6)
|
182,901
|
(4)
|
441,000
|
(5)
|
0
|
0
|
0
|
||||||||||||||
CFO
|
2004
|
0
|
0
|
105,745
|
(4)
|
0
|
0
|
0
|
0
|
(1) |
$60,000
of Mr. Arleth’s bonus was paid in respect of performance during 2004 and
$205,000 was in respect of performance during
2005.
|
(2) |
Bonus
paid for 2003 performance.
|
(3) |
Mr.Cooper
resigned as Chairman in February 2005 and later resigned as
a director in
October 2005. Amounts paid to Mr. Cooper in 2005 included his
service as
executive chairman in January - February 2005 and in respect
of negotiated
severance payments during the balance of
2005.
|
(4)
|
Mr.
Quinn has rendered services to the Company as its Chief Financial
Officer
on a contract basis. Amounts paid in respect of Mr. Quinn’s services were
paid to Mr. Quinn’s firm, Quinn & Associates, P.C. in respect of Mr.
Quinn’s services and for services of other employees of Quinn &
Associates, P.C.
|
(5)
|
Mr.
Quinn was awarded 140,000 restricted shares on April 5, 2005. Of
those
shares 40,000 shares were given registration rights pursuant to an
S-8
filing entitling Mr. Quinn to sell such shares for tax purposes.
The
balance of the shares were subject to certain terms pursuant to an
award
agreement. The value of shares held by Mr. Quinn at December 31,
2005 was
$590,000.
|
(6) |
Does
not include amounts issued in respect of the Company’s 2005 Long-Term
Incentive Plan. (Please see discussion of awards made under the Company’s
LTIP under the Long-term
Incentive Plans - Awards in Last Fiscal Year
section below.
|
Number
of
|
||||||||
Shares
|
Securities
|
Value
of
|
||||||
Acquired
|
Underlying
|
Unexercised
|
||||||
On
|
Value
|
Unexercised
|
In-the-money
|
|||||
Name
|
Exercise
|
Realized
|
Options
|
Options
|
||||
Karl
F. Arleth
|
--
|
--
|
710,338
|
$
1,683,018
|
||||
Howard
Cooper
|
--
|
--
|
1,003,289
|
$
2,379,959
|
1. |
The
achievement of certain levels of annual production of crude oil and/or
natural gas, as measured in thousand cubic feet or
mcf.
|
2. |
Management’s
efficiency and effectiveness in operating the
Company.
|
3. |
The
achievement of a certain level of reserves of crude oil and/or natural
gas
reserves, as measured in billion cubic feet or
bcf.
|
4. |
The
Company’s ability to find and develop such reserves at a cost that is
competitive within the industry.
|
5. |
Increases
in the price of the Company’s common stock.
|
|
Estimated
Future Payouts
Under Non-Stock Price-Based Plans |
|
||||||||||||||
Name
|
Number
of Shares, Units or Other Rights
|
Performance
or
Other
Period Until
Maturation
or
Payout
|
Threshold
|
Target
|
Maximum
|
|||||||||||
Karl
F. Arleth
|
30,000
|
(1)
|
2005
|
15,000
|
30,000
|
60,000
|
||||||||||
45,000 | (1) | 2005-2006 | 22,500 | 45,000 | 90,000 | |||||||||||
75,000
|
(1) |
2005-2007
|
37,500
|
75,000
|
150,000
|
|||||||||||
Patrick
A. Quinn
|
15,000
|
(1)
|
2005
|
7,500
|
15,000
|
30,000
|
||||||||||
22,500 | (1) | 2005-2006 | 11,250 | 22,500 | 45,000 | |||||||||||
37,500
|
(1)
|
2005-2007
|
18,750
|
37,500
|
75,000
|
|||||||||||
H.
Howard Cooper(2)
|
4,000
|
(1)
|
2005
|
2,000
|
4,000
|
8,000
|
||||||||||
6,000 | (1) | 2005-2006 | 3,000 | 6,000 | 12,000 | |||||||||||
10,000
|
(1)
|
2005-2007
|
5,000
|
10,000
|
20,000
|
(1) |
Amounts
set forth in the table represent the potential payout of awards under
the
2005 LTIP based on achievement of target composite measurement in
each of
2005, 2006, and 2007. The Award Agreements provide that payment of
any
earned Performance Share Units following the close of the Performance
Period shall be made 100% in shares of the common stock of the Company
(the “Shares”). Participants will receive one Share for each earned
Performance Share Unit. The base composite measures for 2005, 2006,
and 2007 are 100.00, 271.31, and 453.06, respectively. The Performance
Measures are consolidated into a composite measure based on the relative
weighting of each component as a percentage of 100% as determined
by the
Company’s Compensation Committee.
|
(2) |
Although
Mr. Cooper was initially given an award of performance share units
under
the Company’s Long Term Incentive Plan, those units were forfeited upon
his resignation from the Company’s
board.
|
Plan
category
|
Number
of securities to be issued upon exercise of outstanding options,
warrants
and rights
|
Weighted
average exercise price of outstanding options, warrants and
rights
|
Number
of securities remaining available for future issuance
|
|||
Equity
compensation plans approved by security holders:
|
||||||
2005
Long-term Incentive Plan(1)
|
800,000(3)
|
(4)
|
(1)
|
|||
2004
Non-Employee Stock Compensation Plan(2)
|
287,500
|
(4)
|
--
|
|||
2003
Employee Stock Compensation Plan(2)
|
2,875,334
|
$3.54
|
--
|
(1) |
The
Company’s Long-Term Incentive Plan, as approved by our Shareholders,
provides for the issuance of a maximum number of shares of common
stock
equal to
20% of the total number of shares of Common Stock outstanding as
of the
effective date for the plan’s first year and for each subsequent plan
year, (i) that number of shares equal to 10% of the total number
of shares
of Common Stock outstanding as of the first day of each respective
plan
year, plus (ii) that number of shares of Common Stock reserved and
available for issuance but unissued during any prior plan year during
the
Term of the Plan; provided, however, in no event shall the number
of
shares of Common Stock available for issuance under the Plan as of
the
beginning of any Plan Year plus the number of shares of Common Stock
reserved for outstanding awards under the Plan exceed 35% percent
of the
total number of shares of Common Stock outstanding at that time,
based on
a three-year period of grants
|
(2) |
The
2004 Non-Employee Stock Compensation Plan and the 2003 Employee Stock
Compensation Plan were terminated upon the adoption of the 2005 Long-term
Incentive Plan.
|
(3) |
Includes
800,000 performance share units awarded in July 2005. A performance
share unit
is
equal in value to one share of the Company’s common stock and subject to
vesting on the basis of the achievement of specified performance
targets
as specified in the applicable administration document or award agreement.
Upon vesting, performance share Units will be settled by delivery
of
shares to the Participant equal to the number of vested performance
share
units. In
January 2006, the Compensation Committee determined that the 2005
performance targets had not been met. As a result, 160,000
performance share units from the original grant of 800,000 will not
vest
under the 2005 Grant.
|
(4) |
Not
applicable.
|
2005
|
2004
|
||||||
Audit
Fees
|
$
|
101,111
|
$
|
74,053
|
|||
Audit-Related
Fees
|
16,034
|
40,508
|
|||||
Tax
Fees
|
9,975
|
8,550
|
|||||
Total
|
$
|
126,920
|
$
|
123,111
|
Abraxas
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Oil & Gas Inc
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Dolphin Energy Co
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Energy Corp
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Res Inc
Contango
Oil & Gas Co
Daugherty
Res Inc
Double
Eagle Petroleum Co
|
Equity
Oil Co
Exploration
Co
Georesources
Inc
Gmx
Res Inc
Gulfwest
Energy Inc New
Isramco
Inc
Kestrel
Energy Inc
Magellan
Pete Corp
Mexco
Energy Corp
|
Parallel
Petroleum Corp
Primeenergy
Corp
Pyr
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Resource Corp
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Inc
Toreador
Res Corp
Tri
Vy Corp
Vaalco
Energy Inc
|
By Order of the Board of Directors, | ||
|
|
|
By: | /s/ James J. Woodcock | |
James J. Woodcock, Chairman |
||
Denver,
Colorado
March
10, 2006
|
PROXY |
PROXY
|
For
|
Withhold
|
|
Nominees:
|
o
|
o
|
Karl
F. Arleth
|
o
|
o
|
John
T. Connor, Jr.
|
o
|
o
|
Thomas
F. Conroy
|
o
|
o
|
William
K White
|
o
|
o
|
James
F. Woodcock
|
o
|
o
|
For
|
Against
|
Abstain
|
|||
2.
To consider and act upon a proposal to ratify the Board’s selection of
Ehrhardt Keefe Steiner & Hottman PC as the Company’s independent
auditors for the fiscal year ending December 31, 2006
|
o
|
o
|
o
|
||
· |
You
can now vote your shares electronically through the Internet or the
telephone.
|
· |
This
eliminates the need to return the proxy
card.
|
· |
Your
electronic vote authorizes the named proxy to vote your shares in
the same
manner as if you marked, signed, dated and returned the proxy
card.
|