Tile Shop Holdings Inc. founder Robert Rucker, who left the firm in 2014 and retook control in 2017, has left again.
His departure comes after the Plymouth-based company took steps to delist itself from the Nasdaq Stock Market, a move that wiped out two-thirds of the firm's market value on the day it was announced in October. A group of outside investors led by Peter Kamin, a Florida investor with a record of turning companies around, moved to quickly buy a controlling stake.
In lawsuits that were subsequently brought by other shareholders, Rucker is accused of working with the outside group to take over the firm at a discount. However, a new filing to securities regulators shows a clear rift between Rucker and the outside group, though the circumstances are less so.
The filing said Rucker, 67, stepped down as interim chief executive in January but kept an office at the firm. Directors earlier this month "determined that Mr. Rucker's role in operations was no longer necessary" and that he didn't need to keep his office.
In the past week, Rucker wrote two letters to the investors who now control Tile Shop, according to the filing. In a letter dated Feb. 12, Rucker said the executive they selected to lead the firm, Philip Livingston, is unqualified and shows no interest in the "actual detail — the business model, theory, soul of the industry."
"Mr. Livingston is an accountant, not a merchant," Rucker wrote. "In my opinion, Mr. Livingston not only doesn't have the sense to run The Tile Shop, he could not run a gas station."
Rucker resigned in that letter.
In a second letter dated Monday, Rucker explained that since 2017 he focused on updating the firm's technology and accounting and that its current board decided to "go a different route" despite what he viewed as the success he was achieving.