As filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission on June 18, 2018
Registration No. 333-          
 
 
UNITED STATES
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
Washington, D.C. 20549
 
 


FORM S-8
REGISTRATION STATEMENT
UNDER
THE SECURITIES ACT OF 1933
 


U.S. Xpress Enterprises, Inc.
(Exact name of registrant as specified in its charter)
 
 

 
     
Nevada
 
62-1378182
(State or other jurisdiction of
incorporation or organization)
 
(I.R.S. Employer
Identification No.)
4080 Jenkins Road
Chattanooga, Tennessee 37421
(423) 510-3000
(Address, including zip code, and telephone number, including area code, of registrant’s principal executive offices)
 
 


New Mountain Lake Holdings, LLC Restricted Membership Units Plan
U.S. Xpress Enterprises, Inc. 2018 Omnibus Incentive Plan
U.S. Xpress Enterprises, Inc. Employee Stock Purchase Plan
(Full title of the plan)
 
 


Leigh Anne Battersby
Corporate General Counsel
U.S. Xpress Enterprises, Inc.
4080 Jenkins Road
Chattanooga, Tennessee 37421
(423) 510-3000
(Name, address, including zip code, and telephone number, including area code, of agent for service)
 


Copies to:
Heidi Hornung-Scherr
Scudder Law Firm, P.C., L.L.O.
411 South 13th St., 2nd Floor
Lincoln, Nebraska 68508
(402) 435-3223
 


Indicate by check mark whether the registrant is a large accelerated filer, an accelerated filer, a non-accelerated filer, a smaller reporting company, or an emerging growth company. See the definitions of “large accelerated filer,” “accelerated filer,” “smaller reporting company” and “emerging growth company” in Rule 12b-2 of the Exchange Act.  
             
Large accelerated filer
 
  
Accelerated filer
 
       
Non-accelerated filer
 
☒  (Do not check if a smaller reporting company)
  
Smaller reporting company
 
       
 
 
 
  
Emerging growth company
 
 
If an emerging growth company, indicate by check mark if the registrant has elected not to use the extended transition period for complying with any new or revised financial accounting standards provided pursuant to Section 7(a)(2)(B) of Securities Act. 
 


CALCULATION OF REGISTRATION FEE
 
                 
 
Title of Securities
to be Registered
 
Amount
to be
Registered (7)
 
Proposed
Maximum
Offering Price
per Share 
 
Proposed
Maximum
Aggregate
Offering Price 
 
Amount of
Registration Fee
Class A common stock, $0.01 per share par value
 
             
-            To be issued under the U.S. Xpress Enterprises, Inc. 2018 Omnibus Incentive Plan
 
3,200,000(1)
 
$16.44 (2)
 
$52,608,000(2)
 
$6,550
-            To be issued under the U.S. Xpress Enterprises, Inc. Employee Stock Purchase Plan
 
2,300,000(3)
 
$13.974 (4)
 
$32,140,200(4)
 
$4,002
-            Outstanding and originally issued under the New Mountain Lake Holdings, LLC Restricted Membership Units Plan
 
1,709,165 (5)
 
$16.44 (2)
 
$28,098,672.60(2)
 
$3,499
-            To be issued upon conversion of Class B common stock
 
1,586,666 (6)
 
$16.44 (2)
 
$26,084,789.04(2)
 
$3,248
TOTAL
 
8,795,831
     
$138,931,661.64
 
$17,299
 
 
 

(1)
Represents shares of Class A common stock reserved for issuance under the U.S. Xpress Enterprises, Inc. 2018 Omnibus Incentive Plan (the “2018 Incentive Plan”).
   
(2)
Calculated solely for purposes of this offering under Rule 457(c) and (h) of the Securities Act of 1933, as amended (the “Securities Act”), on the basis of the average of the high and low selling price per share of the registrant’s Class A common stock on June 15, 2018, as reported by the New York Stock Exchange.
   
(3)
Represents shares of Class A common stock reserved for issuance under the U.S. Xpress Enterprises, Inc. Employee Stock Purchase Plan (the “ESPP”).
   
(4)
Calculated solely for the purposes of this offering under Rule 457(h) of the Securities Act on the basis of the average of the high and low selling price per share of the registrant’s Class A common stock on June 15, 2018, as reported by the New York Stock Exchange, multiplied by 85%, which is the percentage of the price per share applicable to purchases under the ESPP.
   
(5)
Represents (i) 469,896 shares of Class A common stock reserved for issuance upon the vesting of Class A restricted stock units outstanding under the RMUP (as defined below) as of the date of this registration statement, and (ii) 1,239,269 shares of Class A common stock that have been previously issued to the selling stockholders named in this registration statement (the “Selling Stockholders”) pursuant to the Merger (as defined below) in exchange for units previously issued under the RMUP that are available for resale pursuant to the reoffer prospectus below.
   
(6)
Represents shares of Class A common stock reserved for issuance upon the conversion of Class B common stock that was issued in the Merger in exchange for units originally issued under the RMUP, consisting of (i) 995,558 shares of Class A common stock to be issued upon conversion of  Class B common stock that will be issued upon vesting of 995,558 outstanding Class B restricted stock units of the Company, and (ii)  591,108 shares of Class A common stock to be issued upon conversion of vested Class B common stock held by certain Selling Stockholders identified in the “Selling Stockholder” section of the reoffer prospectus below that are available for resale pursuant to the reoffer prospectus hereunder, in each case because such vested shares of Class B common stock are convertible at any time into shares of Class A common stock at the option of the holder thereof and will immediately convert into shares of Class A common stock upon sale hereunder.
   
(7)
Pursuant to Rule 416 of the Securities Act, this registration statement shall also cover any additional shares of Class A common stock that become issuable under the 2018 Incentive Plan and ESPP pursuant to this registration statement by reason of any stock dividend, stock split, recapitalization or any other similar transaction effected without the receipt of consideration which results in an increase in the number of our outstanding shares of Class A common stock.


EXPLANATORY NOTE
This registration statement is filed by U.S. Xpress Enterprises, Inc. (the “Company”) for the purpose of registering (i) 3,200,000 shares of Class A common stock available for issuance under the 2018 Incentive Plan, (ii) 2,300,000 shares of Class A common stock available for issuance under the ESPP, (iii) for purposes of reoffer or resale thereof, 1,830,377 shares of Class A common stock originally issued under the RMUP prior to the Merger (as defined below), including shares of Class B common stock that will convert automatically into shares of Class A common stock upon sale hereunder originally issued to certain current and former directors, officers and other employees of the Company named in this registration statement, and (iv) 1,465,454 shares of Class A common stock relating to restricted stock units originally issued under the RMUP prior to the Merger, including Class B restricted stock units, as upon vesting of such units Class B common stock will be issued and such Class B common stock will be convertible at any time into Class A common stock at the option of the holder thereof and will automatically do so upon sale of such stock.
In connection with the Company’s initial public offering of its Class A common stock, New Mountain Lake Holdings, LLC (“NMLH”), the previous owner of 100% of the issued and outstanding shares of capital stock of the Company, merged with and into the Company, with the Company surviving such merger (the “Merger”). At the effective time of the Merger (i) all issued and outstanding shares of capital stock of the Company were cancelled, (ii) each issued and outstanding Class A Voting Membership Unit of NMLH was converted into 4.6666667 shares of Class B common stock of the Company, (iii) each issued and outstanding Class B Voting Membership Unit of NMLH was converted into 4.6666667 shares of Class A common stock of the Company, (iv) each unvested Restricted Class A Membership Unit of NMLH issued pursuant to the NMLH Restricted Membership Units Plan dated December 1, 2010, as amended (the “RMUP”), was converted into 4.6666667 Class B Restricted Stock Units of the Company pursuant to the RMUP, and (v) each unvested Restricted Class B Membership Unit of NMLH issued pursuant to the RMUP was converted into 4.6666667 Class A Restricted Stock Units of the Company pursuant to the RMUP.
This registration statement contains two parts, Part I and Part II.
The first part, Part I, contains a “reoffer prospectus” prepared in accordance with Part I of Form S-3 (in accordance with Instruction C of the General Instructions to Form S-8). The reoffer prospectus permits reoffers and resales on a continuous or delayed basis of certain of those shares referred to above that constitute “control securities” or “restricted securities,” within the meaning of the Securities Act, by certain of the Company’s stockholders consisting of current and former directors, officers and other employees, previously issued to them pursuant to the RMUP prior to the Merger. In addition, certain information relating to future issuances under the 2018 Incentive Plan and the ESPP is omitted from Part I, as further described below in the next paragraph and under the heading “Item 1. Plan Information.”
Part II contains information required to be set forth in the registration statement pursuant to Part II of Form S-8. Pursuant to the Note to Part I of Form S-8, the 2018 Incentive Plan, the ESPP, and the RMUP information specified by Part I of Form S-8 is not required to be filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission (the “Commission”).
The Company will provide without charge to any person, upon written or oral request of such person, a copy of each document incorporated by reference in Item 3 of Part II of this registration statement (which documents are also incorporated by reference in the reoffer prospectus as set forth in Form S-8), other than exhibits to such documents that are not specifically incorporated by reference, the other documents required to be delivered to eligible employees pursuant to Rule 428(b) under the Securities Act and additional information about the plans.
Part I
INFORMATION REQUIRED IN THE SECTION 10(a) PROSPECTUS
Item 1. Plan Information
The documents containing the information in Part I relating to the 2018 Incentive Plan, the ESPP, and the RMUP will be sent or given to participants in the 2018 Incentive Plan, the ESPP, and the RMUP as specified by Rule 428(b)(1) promulgated under the Securities Act. In accordance with the instructions to Part I of Form S-8, such documents will not be filed with the Commission either as part of this registration statement or as prospectuses or prospectus supplements pursuant to Rule 424 promulgated under the Securities Act. These documents and the documents incorporated by reference pursuant to Item 3 of Part II of this registration statement, taken together, constitute the prospectus (the “Section 10(a) Prospectus”) as required by Section 10(a) of the Securities Act in respect of future issuances under the 2018 Incentive Plan, the ESPP, and the RMUP.
 
Item 2. Registrant Information and Employee Plan Annual Information
Upon written or oral request, any of the documents incorporated by reference in Item 3 of Part II of this registration statement, which are also incorporated by reference in the Section 10(a) Prospectus, other documents required to be delivered to eligible participants pursuant to Rule 428(b), or additional information about the 2018 Incentive Plan, the ESPP, or the RMUP, will be available without charge by contacting the Corporate General Counsel, U.S. Xpress Enterprises, Inc., 4080 Jenkins Road, Chattanooga, Tennessee 37421 or by telephone at (423) 510-3000.

Reoffer Prospectus
1,830,377 Shares
 
U.S. Xpress Enterprises, Inc.
Class A common stock, Par Value $0.01 Per Share
 


This reoffer prospectus relates to 1,830,377 shares of Class A common stock (the “Shares”), par value $0.01 per share, of U.S. Xpress Enterprises, Inc., a Nevada corporation (the “Company”), that may be offered from time to time by certain selling stockholders named in this reoffer prospectus (the “Selling Stockholders”). Each of the Selling Stockholders acquired units underlying such Shares pursuant to the RMUP prior to the date of the initial public offering of the Company. Contemporaneously with the Company’s initial public offering of its Class A common stock, New Mountain Lake Holdings, LLC (“NMLH”) was merged with and into the Company, and all vested and unvested membership units issued under the RMUP were converted into shares of our Class A or Class B common stock or Class A or Class B restricted stock units of the Company, as applicable. See the “Reorganization” section contained in this reoffer prospectus below . Upon any sale hereunder, shares of Class B common stock of the Company will convert automatically to an equivalent amount of shares of Class A common stock of the Company.
The Selling Stockholders may sell the Shares directly, or may sell them through brokers or dealers. The Company will not receive any of the proceeds from sales made under this reoffer prospectus. The Company is paying the expenses incurred in registering these Shares, but all selling and other expenses incurred by each of the Selling Stockholders will be borne by that Selling Stockholder.
Our Class A common stock is traded on the New York Stock Exchange under the symbol “USX.” On June 15, 2018, the closing price per share of our Class A common stock on the New York Stock Exchange was $16.62 per share.
 


Investing in our Class A common shares involves risks. Please see the information described under “ Risk Factors ” on page 10.
 


Neither the Securities and Exchange Commission nor any state securities commission has approved or disapproved of these securities or determined if this reoffer prospectus is truthful or complete. Any representation to the contrary is a criminal offense.
 


The date of this reoffer prospectus is June 18, 2018

TABLE OF CONTENTS
 
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No dealer, salesperson or other person is authorized to give any information or to represent anything not contained in this reoffer prospectus. You must not rely on any unauthorized information or representations. This reoffer prospectus is an offer to sell only the shares offered hereby, and only under circumstances and in jurisdictions where it is lawful to do so. The information contained in this reoffer prospectus is current only as of its date.
Except where the context requires otherwise, in this reoffer prospectus the “Company,” “registrant,” “we,” “us” and “our” refer to U.S. Xpress Enterprises, Inc., a Nevada corporation, together with its consolidated subsidiaries.
In this prospectus, we refer to our Class A common stock, par value $0.01 per share, and our Class B common stock, par value $0.01 per share, as our Class A common stock and our Class B common stock, respectively, and, together, as our common stock.
 
SPECIAL NOTE REGARDING FORWARD-LOOKING STATEMENTS

This prospectus contains forward-looking statements, which involve risks and uncertainties. These forward-looking statements are generally identified by the use of forward-looking terminology, including the terms “anticipate,” “believe,” “continue,” “could,” “design,” “estimate,” “expect,” “forecast,” “foresee,” “goal,” “hope,” “intend,” “likely,” “may,” “might,” “plan,” “potential,” “predict,’ “project,” “seek,” “should,” “target,” “will,” “would” and, in each case, their negative or other various or comparable terminology. All statements other than statements of historical facts contained in this prospectus, including statements regarding our strategy, future operations, future financial position, future revenue, projected costs, prospects, plans, objectives of management and expected market growth are forward-looking statements. The forward-looking statements are included throughout this prospectus, including in the sections entitled “Prospectus Summary,” “Risk Factors,” “Use of Proceeds,” “Management’s Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations” and “Business” in the final prospectus filed with the Commission pursuant to Rule 424(b) promulgated under the Securities Act on June 15, 2018 and include, among other things, statements relating to:

• our strategy, outlook and growth prospects;

• our operational and financial targets and dividend policy;

• general economic trends and trends in the industry and markets; and

• the competitive environment in which we operate.

These statements involve known and unknown risks, uncertainties and other important factors that may cause our actual results, performance or achievements to be materially different from any future results, performance or achievements expressed or implied by the forward-looking statements. Important factors that could cause our results to vary from expectations include, but are not limited to:

• any future recessionary economic cycles and downturns in customers’ business cycles or other events that decrease customer demand, particularly in market segments and industries in which we have a significant concentration of customers;

• increased costs and other challenges related to driver recruitment and retention;

• agreements with independent contractors, including those related to equipment financing and fuel reimbursement and the potential impact of more stringent federal leasing regulations;

• independent contractors, whom we contract with to supply one or more tractors and drivers for our use, being deemed to be our employees;

• our ability to maintain profitability and to successfully achieve our business strategies;

• pricing and other competitive pressures;

• potential volatility or decrease in the amount of earnings as a result of increasing collateral requirements of our insurance programs or our retention of high deductibles on our claims exposure, including through our captive insurance company, which is subject to substantial regulation;

• increases in new equipment prices or replacement costs, design changes of new engines, decreases in availability of new equipment and volatility in the used equipment market;

• the absence of financing for new equipment or the failure of equipment investments and upgrades to increase profitability, generate cost savings or match customer demand;

• difficulties in obtaining good and services from our vendors and suppliers;

• potential cybersecurity breaches or failures of our systems, networks and other information technology assets;

• limitations resulting from our existing or future indebtedness;

• any weakening in the credit markets or economy;

• our ability to obtain financing on favorable terms, or at all, and the potential dilution of existing stockholders;

• volatility in the price or availability of fuel;

• the regulatory environment in which we operate, including increased direct and indirect costs of compliance with, or liability for violations of, existing regulations and changes in existing regulations, including those related to the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration's Compliance, Safety, Accountability initiative, Department of Transportation safety ratings, hours-of-service and environmental regulations;

• our ability to successfully defend litigation proceedings, including class action lawsuits that have been increasing recently in the industry;

• our ability to retain or replace key personnel and develop a core group of managers;

• a significant reduction in, or termination of, our services by one or more major customers;

• service instability or pricing increases from third-party providers utilized in our Brokerage segment;

• our ability to make and integrate future acquisitions successfully, or at all;

• compliance with international laws, changes in trade policies, renewal of certifications, and other risks associated with our operations in Mexico;

• our ability to protect our brand name or proprietary and other intellectual property rights;

• legislation affecting our relationship with or the classification of our employees or the attempted organization of a labor union by our employees;

• seasonal factors such as harsh weather conditions and holiday shipping patterns that may increase operating costs and decrease revenues and the impact of catastrophic events;

• impairments of goodwill and other intangibles;

• the impact of recent U.S. federal income tax reform;

• the volatility of our stock price, including the inability for stockholders to sell their shares at or above the initial public offering price of the Company's Class A common stock;

• stock price declines if securities or industry analysts do not publish or cease publishing research reports about our business or publish negative reports;

• future sales or the perception of future sales of our Class A common stock could lead to stock price reductions;

• investors will incur immediate and substantial dilution in the initial public offering of the Company's Class A common stock;

• future issuance of stock-based compensation could dilute stockholders’ value and cause the stock price reductions;

• the dual class structure of our common stock has the effect of concentrating voting control with Messrs. Max Fuller and Eric Fuller and Ms. Pate and certain trusts for the benefit of any of them or their family members or certain entities owned by any of them or their family members, which could limit or preclude investors’ ability to influence corporate matters;

• our expectation not to pay any cash dividends;

• our ability to enter a new revolving credit facility and a new term loan credit agreement;

• the increased time and costs associated with operating as a public company;

• our ability to establish and maintain effective internal controls;

• our charter documents or Nevada law may inhibit a takeover; and

• other risks, uncertainties and factors set forth the final prospectus filed with the Commission pursuant to Rule 424(b) promulgated under the Securities Act on June 15, 2018, including those set forth under “Risk Factors” therein.

These forward-looking statements reflect our views with respect to future events as of the date of this reoffer prospectus and are based on assumptions and subject to risks and uncertainties. Given these uncertainties, you should not place undue reliance on these forward-looking statements. These forward-looking statements represent our estimates and assumptions only as of the date of this reoffer prospectus and, except as required by law, we undertake no obligation to update or review publicly any forward-looking statements, whether as a result of new information, future events or otherwise after the date of this reoffer prospectus. We anticipate that subsequent events and developments will cause our views to change. You should read this reoffer prospectus and the registration statement of which it forms a part and the documents incorporated by reference into these documents and the documents filed as exhibits hereto and thereto, completely and with the understanding that our actual future results may be materially different from what we expect. Our forward-looking statements do not reflect the potential impact of any future acquisitions, merger, dispositions, joint ventures, investments or other strategic transactions we may undertake. We qualify all of our forward-looking statements by these cautionary statements.

PROSPECTUS SUMMARY

The following summary highlights certain information contained elsewhere in, or incorporated by reference into, this reoffer prospectus and does not contain all of the information that you should consider before investing in our common stock. We urge you to read this entire reoffer prospectus carefully, including the section entitled “Risk Factors” and the consolidated financial statements and related notes and other documents incorporated by reference into this reoffer prospectus, before making an investment decision.

OUR COMPANY

We are the fifth largest asset-based truckload carrier in the United States by revenue, generating over $1.5 billion in total operating revenue in 2017. We provide services primarily throughout the United States, with a focus in the densely populated and economically diverse eastern half of the United States. We offer customers a broad portfolio of services using our own truckload fleet and third-party carriers through our non-asset-based truck brokerage network. As of March 31, 2018, our fleet consisted of approximately 6,800 tractors and approximately 16,000 trailers, including approximately 1,300 tractors provided by independent contractors. All of our tractors have been equipped with electronic logs since 2012, and our systems and network are engineered for compliance with the recent federal electronic log mandate. Our terminal network and information technology infrastructure are established and capable of handling significantly larger volumes without meaningful additional investment.

For much of our history, we focused primarily on scaling our fleet and expanding our service offerings to support sustainable, multi-faceted relationships with customers. More recently, we have focused on our core service offerings and refined our network to focus on shorter, more profitable lanes with more density, which we believe are more attractive to drivers. Over the last three years, we have recruited and developed new executive and operational management teams with significant industry experience and instilled a new culture of professional management. These changes, which are ongoing, helped us to maintain relatively stable profitability during the weak truckload market of 2016 and early 2017 and drive significant improvements to profitability during the strong truckload market beginning in the second half of 2017. This momentum was reflected in our first quarter of 2018, which produced a 300 basis point improvement in our operating ratio, compared to our first quarter of 2017, and a 330 basis point improvement in our Adjusted Operating Ratio (a non-GAAP measure meaning operating expenses, net of fuel surcharge revenue and gain or loss on fuel purchase arrangements, expressed as a percentage of revenue, before fuel surcharge), for the same period. For the definition of Adjusted Operating Ratio and a reconciliation to the most directly comparable GAAP measure, see ‘‘Summary Consolidated Financial Data’’ section of the final prospectus filed with the Commission pursuant to Rule 424(b) promulgated under the Securities Act on June 15, 2018.

The truckload market is cyclical and it is currently experiencing increases in volumes and rates, primarily due to tightening driver supply coupled with increasing industrial and retail freight demand. According to FTR Transportation Intelligence, truckload rates (excluding fuel surcharge) in the first quarter of 2018 were 14.4% higher than rates in the first quarter of 2017. We believe the current truckload market presents us with an opportunity to take advantage of rising rates across all of our service offerings, while continuing to benefit from our operational initiatives. We believe our scale, management team and continued roll-out of tactical operational improvements, as well as our mix of over-the-road, dedicated and brokerage services, position us for long-term success in our industry.

We maintain a diverse, long-standing customer base that includes many Fortune 500 companies, including Amazon, Dollar General, Dollar Tree, FedEx, Home Depot, Kroger, Procter & Gamble, Target, Tractor Supply and Walmart. Our customers fall within a broad spectrum of geographies and end markets, including retail, food and beverage, e-commerce and packages, manufacturing and consumer products. No other category comprised more than five percent of the end markets we served at March 31, 2018. Relationships with our top ten customers exceed ten years on average.

We organize our service offerings into two reportable segments, Truckload and Brokerage. The Truckload segment offers asset-based truckload services, including the over-the-road and dedicated contract services described below. Our Brokerage segment is principally engaged in non-asset-based freight brokerage services. We believe many customers seek truckload operators that offer both asset-based and non-asset-based services to help ensure capacity will be available as needed. We believe that each of our service offerings, on a stand-alone revenue basis, would represent one of the largest participants in its respective market.

Below is a brief overview of our service offerings:

 
______________________
(1)          Based on revenue, before fuel surcharge. Approximately 1% of revenue is attributable to detention and other ancillary services.

Our Transformation

Over the last three years, we have improved our operating performance through the following areas of focus:

Leadership and Culture.

• We appointed Eric Fuller as President in 2015 and Chief Executive Officer in 2017. Under his leadership, we launched a program to identify and attract talent with deep industry knowledge at the executive and operational management levels, ultimately replacing 61 of our 94 executives and senior managers with a combination of external hires from our peers and internal promotions of high achievers.

• We have reconfigured our daily operations to hold our employees accountable for operational metrics over which they have direct control, and we have designed our incentive compensation plan to reward achievement of those metrics. We believe we have the team and culture in place to execute on our performance and profitability initiatives.

• The results of our new leadership team and operational reconfiguration are ongoing, and we believe the impact has been reflected in our peer comparisons over the last three years.

• Asset Optimization.

• In 2015, we began to redesign our fleet renewal and maintenance programs with the goal of improving reliability, reducing downtime for all tractors and reducing maintenance costs on the older tractors in our fleet. These initiatives, among others, were intended to improve the quality of our assets by purchasing, maintaining and trading our tractors in a manner designed to optimize life cycle costs.

• In addition, in early 2016 we began enhancing our asset utilization by analyzing our consolidated Truckload and Brokerage freight demand using optimization software, allocating the most profitable freight to our Truckload assets and outsourcing the remainder to third-party carriers. With more loads to choose from, we have more options for improving the pricing and miles on our company tractor and trailer assets.

• Focus on Front-line Tactics. Tactical execution is critical to our success. Beginning in early 2017, we started making significant changes to our operational infrastructure in order to focus on and measure our frontline tactical execution. The initiatives below are ongoing, and we believe the early results of our load planning, fleet management and customer service initiatives have begun to be reflected in our operating metrics.
 
• Load Planning Initiative. During 2017, we shifted from a load planning strategy based on minimizing empty miles to one that maximizes utilization of our drivers’ available hours. We believe the focus on drivers’ hours more effectively utilizes our scarcest resource and improves driver satisfaction. Following this change, miles per seated tractor per week and driver turnover rate both improved.

• Fleet Management Initiative. In October 2017, we initiated a fleet management pilot program on 250 tractors in which our fleet managers emphasize proactive interactions with drivers to anticipate and fix issues such as home time planning and load scheduling. Inbound driver calls declined and driver turnover decreased, resulting in more time for our managers to proactively solve problems, thereby improving our efficiency and utilization. We have seen similar results as we continue to roll out this program to the rest of our fleet, which we expect to complete during 2018.

• Customer Service Initiative. In January 2018, we redesigned our customer service around regional specialists to drive deeper knowledge of specific markets. Under this new structure, experts in managing freight flows in and out of their respective regions become key points of contact with customers and arrange load pickup and delivery to meet available service hours for our drivers. We believe this service model will contribute to improved equipment utilization, driver satisfaction and network balance.

The following chart depicts the cumulative nature of the changes to our business.

We believe the transformation of business practices described above has been instrumental in (i) maintaining a relatively steady Adjusted Operating Ratio during the negative freight markets of 2016 and early 2017 and (ii) contributing to recent improvements in our Adjusted Operating Ratio. The chart below reflects our recent improvement in Adjusted Operating Ratio, which we attribute to the cumulative effect of our operational initiatives, together with an improved freight market. Our Adjusted Operating Ratio improved year-over-year, 330 basis points during the first quarter of 2018.

The chart below also reflects the meaningful narrowing of the gap between our Adjusted Operating Ratio and the average Adjusted Operating Ratio of a group of publicly traded truckload companies. We attribute the narrowing of the gap in substantial part to our ongoing transformation, which has contributed to greater asset productivity of our tractor fleet. For the past two quarters, our increase in average revenue per loaded mile was strong. Notably, we also generated year-over-year increases in average miles per tractor and seated tractor count in the fourth quarter of 2017 and the first quarter of 2018, while most of the truckload companies included in the chart below announced a decrease in similar metrics.

 
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(1)
The group of publicly traded truckload companies includes Werner Enterprises, Inc., Schneider National, Inc., Swift Transportation Company (prior to 2017, the year of its merger with Knight Transportation, Inc.), Covenant Transportation Group, Inc., USA Truck, Inc., Marten Transport, Ltd., Knight Transportation, Inc. (prior to 2017, the year of its merger with Swift Transportation Company) and Heartland Express, Inc. Adjusted Operating Ratio for these truckload companies is based upon total operating expenses, net of fuel surcharges and excluding gains and losses from fuel purchase arrangements, as a percentage of revenue, excluding fuel surcharge revenue and derived from publicly available information. See the “Non-GAAP Financial Measures” and “Summary Consolidated Financial Data” sections of the final prospectus filed with the Commission pursuant to Rule 424(b) promulgated under the Securities Act on June 15, 2018 for a definition of our Adjusted Operating Ratio and a reconciliation of our Adjusted Operating Ratio to the most directly comparable GAAP measure.

We believe this positive momentum and improvement in operating margin demonstrates our ability to increase our profitability as we continue to improve our operations and take advantage of the current favorable truckload market environment.

Truckload Market

The transportation and logistics industry in which we operate is one of the largest industries in the United States, accounting for approximately 3.3% of U.S. gross domestic product (“GDP”) in the fourth quarter of 2017. The U.S. trucking industry sub-segment, including both for-hire carriers and private fleets, generated approximately $720 billion in revenue in 2017 and is forecasted to grow at a compound annual growth rate (“CAGR”) of 5.4% from 2017 to 2023 according to American Trucking Associations, Inc. (the “ATA”). The for-hire truckload sector, in which we most directly compete, generated approximately $330 billion in revenue during 2017. According to the ATA, in 2017, the truckload sector was responsible for handling 70.7% of the freight transported in the United States, representing an industry 53.6 times the size of the domestic intermodal market. The truckload industry included over 520,000 carriers in 2016, with over 97% of all trucking companies operating 20 or fewer tractors. We believe large truckload carriers, like us, have a competitive advantage in meeting the demands of major shippers.

Cyclicality

Our industry is cyclical and subject to changes in supply (available hours of qualified drivers seated in tractors) and demand (truckload freight tendered by shippers). The balance between supply and demand over time is reflected in spot market and contract market data with over-the-road freight being more subject to market cycles and dedicated contract freight being less susceptible to market cycles. The market cycles since the first quarter of 2009 are indicated by the chart below.

FTR Transportation Intelligence Total Truckload Rates Index (Excluding Fuel Surcharge Revenue) Seasonally Adjusted to 100 in Q1-2008 - Q1-2009 to Q1-2018

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Source: FTR Transportation Intelligence

 
Demand

Demand for freight moves is primarily driven by GDP growth, industrial production and retail demand. There are several data points that demonstrate the current strength of demand for freight, including U.S. GDP growth of 2.3% in the first quarter of 2018, the manufacturing Purchasing Managers’ Index (‘‘PMI’’) registering 57.3 in April 2018, representing the 20th consecutive month of manufacturing expansion, and a year-over-year increase in U.S. retail demand of approximately 4% from 2016 to 2017. We believe certain truckload volumes, including expedited, are also positioned to benefit from secular trends in e-commerce retail, for which retail value is expected to grow at a CAGR of approximately 15% from 2018 to 2022. Similarly, the ATA’s truck tonnage index showed 3.7% year-over-year growth for 2017, the largest annual gain since 2013. The following chart reflects the long-term increase in truck tonnage over time.

ATA Truck Tonnage Index (seasonally adjusted)
Q1-2002 to Q4-2017

______________________
Source ATA, Federal Reserve Bank of St Louis

Supply

Truckload supply consists of seated tractor availability, which is primarily driven by the number of qualified truck drivers working legal hours as determined by hours-of-service regulations. The entire trucking industry is currently seeing a shortage of drivers, primarily the result of low unemployment, retirement of experienced drivers and increased job competition from construction and manufacturing jobs that require less time away from home. In 2017, the ATA estimated a shortfall of 50,000 drivers and projects that the shortage could increase to 174,000 by 2026, limiting truckload carriers’ ability to increase fleet capacity in the future and raising costs. The following chart reflects the long-term decrease of unemployment rate in the U.S. reaching 4.1% in the first quarter of 2018, as per the Bureau of Labor Statistics.

Quarterly Unemployment Rate in the U.S.
Q1-2002 to Q1-2018

 
_________________________
Source: Bloomberg, Bureau of Labor Statistics

Pressure on truckload supply has been exacerbated by increased regulatory constraints. In particular, in December 2017, a federal safety rule requiring drivers to track their hours behind the wheel with electronic logging devices (“ELD”) became effective. Most of the large truckload carriers, including us, have been using electronic logs for many years and have adapted their freight patterns, driver assignments and pricing to conform to levels of utilization consistent with the ELD mandate, which began to be enforced in April 2018. Many industry observers believe that enforcement of the ELD mandate will reduce the miles driven by certain historically non-compliant carriers, which are predominantly smaller operators. This dynamic is expected to further constrain capacity and encourage a level playing field for carriers that previously offered lower rates to customers and covered their costs and compensated their drivers by operating excessive miles.

Current Environment

The combination of tighter supply and increased demand has contributed to a recent improvement in the pricing environment. We believe the improved pricing environment reflects the impact of economic expansion, low unemployment and the expectation of a more level playing field for driver hours-of-service brought on by enforcement of the ELD mandate.

Corporate Information

Our principal executive offices are located at 4080 Jenkins Road, Chattanooga, TN 37421, and our telephone number at that address is (423) 510-3000. Our website is located at https://www.usxpress.com. The reference to our website is intended to be an inactive textual reference only. Our website and the information contained on, or that can be accessed through, our website will not be deemed to be incorporated by reference in, and are not considered part of, this prospectus. You should not rely on our website or any such information in making your decision whether to purchase shares of our Class A common stock.

RISK FACTORS

Investing in our Class A common stock involves risks. Before making a decision to invest in our Class A common stock, investors are urged to review the risk factors set forth under the caption “Risk Factors” in the final prospectus filed with the Commission pursuant to Rule 424(b) promulgated under the Securities Act on June 15, 2018, in connection with the Company’s registration statement on Form S-1 (File No. 333-224711), as amended, which is incorporated in this reoffer prospectus by reference, and the Company’s other public filings made with the Commission, including those made after the date of this reoffer prospectus.

REORGANIZATION
In connection with the Company’s initial public offering of its Class A common stock, NMLH, the previous owner of 100% of the issued and outstanding shares of capital stock of the Company, merged with and into the Company, with the Company surviving such merger. At the effective time of the Merger (i) all issued and outstanding shares of capital stock of the Company were cancelled, (ii) each issued and outstanding Class A Voting Membership Unit of NMLH was converted into 4.6666667 shares of Class B common stock of the Company, (iii) each issued and outstanding Class B Voting Membership Unit of NMLH was converted into 4.6666667 shares of Class A common stock of the Company, (iv) each unvested Restricted Class A Membership Unit of NMLH issued pursuant to the RMUP was converted into 4.6666667 Class B Restricted Stock Units of the Company pursuant to the RMUP, and (v) each unvested Restricted Class B Membership Unit of NMLH issued pursuant to the RMUP was converted into 4.6666667 Class A Restricted Stock Units of the Company pursuant to the RMUP.

USE OF PROCEEDS

If shares of our Class A common stock are resold by the Selling Stockholders, we will not receive any proceeds from such sale. The shares will be offered for the respective accounts of the Selling Stockholders. See the sections titled “Selling Stockholders” and “Plan of Distribution” below.

DETERMINATION OF OFFERING PRICE

The Selling Stockholders may sell the shares of our Class A common stock issued to them from time to time at prices and at terms prevailing or at prices related to the current market price, or in negotiated transactions.

SELLING STOCKHOLDERS
This reoffer prospectus relates to shares of our Class A common stock which may from time to time be offered and sold by the Selling Stockholders named below who have acquired such shares of common stock in the Merger upon conversion of membership units originally issued under the RMUP. The following table sets forth: (1) the name and relationship to the Company of the Selling Stockholder; (2) the percentage of shares of our Class A common stock each Selling Stockholder beneficially owned as of June 18, 2018; (3) the number of shares of our Class A common stock acquired by each Selling Stockholder in the Merger in exchange for units previously issued pursuant to the RMUP and that are being registered under this registration statement, some or all of which shares may be sold pursuant to this reoffer prospectus; and (4) the number of shares of Class A common stock and the percentage, if 1% or more, of the total Class A common stock outstanding to be beneficially owned by each Selling Stockholder following this offering.
Because the Selling Stockholders may from time to time offer all or some of the shares pursuant to this offering, we cannot estimate the number of the shares that will be held by the Selling Stockholders after completion of the offering. For purposes of the table below, we have assumed that, after completion of the offering, none of the shares covered by this reoffer prospectus as of the date of this reoffer prospectus will be sold by the Selling Stockholders.
As of June 18, 2018, there were 32,807,957 shares of our Class A common stock outstanding and 15,486,560 shares of our Class B common stock outstanding, which is convertible to Class A common stock at any time and automatically converts upon certain transfers.
The inclusion in this table of the individuals named therein shall not be deemed to be an admission that any such individuals are “affiliates” of the Company.
   
Percent of Shares of Class A Common Stock Beneficially Owned (1)
 
Shares of 
Class A
Common Stock Covered by This Reoffer Prospectus (2)
       
       
Shares of Class A Common Stock Beneficially Owned After This Offering
Selling Stockholder and Principal Position(s) with the Company
     
Number
 
Percent
Max Fuller, Director and Executive Chairman
 
20.25% (3)
 
66,663
 
8,328,439(3)(5)
 
20.25(4)
Eric Fuller, Director, President and Chief Executive Officer
 
11.35% (3)
 
302,223
 
4,201,980(3)(6)
 
11.35(4)
Lisa Pate, Director and Chief Administrative Officer
 
8.27% (3)
 
222,222
 
2,956,141(3)(7)
 
8.27(4)
Brian Quinn, Vice President and General Manager of International Operations
 
7.82%
 
136,892
 
2,566,425(8)
 
7.82
Scott Adkins, Director Dedicated Operations
 
*
 
6,221
 
6,221
 
*
Leigh Anne Battersby, Executive Vice President and Corporate General Counsel
 
*
 
46,667
 
46,667
 
*
Brian Baubach, Senior Vice President, Corporate Finance
 
*
 
39,279
 
39,279
 
*
Paul Bowman, Senior Vice President Sales and Marketing
 
*
 
40,441
 
40,441
 
*
Lori Casteel, Vice President, Corporate Controller
 
*
 
23,333
 
23,333
 
*
Sara Davis, Vice President National Sales and Marketing
 
*
 
7,000
 
7,000
 
*
Dave Dulaney, Vice President International Operations
 
*
 
37,333
 
37,333
 
*
Brian Everhart, Vice President Regional Sales and Marketing
 
*
 
7,000
 
7,000
 
*
Seth Giddings, Manager Dedicated Regional Operations
 
*
 
4,667
 
4,667
 
*
Mike Hamill, Senior Vice President Brokerage Operations
 
*
 
9,333
 
9,333
 
*
Ray Harlin, former Chief Financial Officer
 
*
 
326,667
 
326,667
 
*
Eric Holcombe, Director Dedicated Operations
 
*
 
7,779
 
7,779
 
*
Morgan Hopkins, Director Total Rewards
 
*
 
3,887
 
3,887
 
*
Janice Houser, former Executive Administrative Assistant
 
*
 
7,000
 
7,000
 
*
James Hudson, Manager Terminal Operations
 
*
 
3,108
 
3,108
  *
Clayton Kibler, Vice President Dedicated Operations
 
*
 
7,779
 
7,779
 
*
Vic Lesage, Director Brokerage Operations
 
*
 
7,779
 
7,779
 
*
Greg McQuagge, Vice President Safety Security
 
*
 
45,108
 
45,108
 
*
Mike Morrissey, Vice President Fleet Operations
 
*
 
37,333
 
37,333
 
*
Eric Peterson, Chief Financial Officer
 
*
 
149,996
 
149,996
 
*
Steve Phillips, Senior Vice President OTR Operations
 
*
 
116,666
 
116,666
 
*
Ryan Rogers, former Chief Operating Officer Brokerage Operations
 
*
 
46,667
 
46,667
 
*
Jeff Seibenhener, Chief Information Officer
 
*
 
21,779
 
21,779
 
*
John Stomps, Chief Executive Officer - Total Transportation of Mississippi LLC
 
*
 
9,333
 
9,333
 
*
Lee Thigpen, Vice President Customer Service
 
*
 
6,221
 
6,221
 
*
Julie Van de Camp, Vice President Pricing
 
*
 
6,221
 
6,221
 
*
Bob Viso, Vice President Safety and Recuriting - Total Transporation of Mississippi LLC
 
*
 
46,667
 
46,667
 
*
John White, Chief Sales and Marketing Officer
 
*
 
23,333
 
23,333
 
*
Michael White, Director of Brokerage Fleet Operations
 
*
 
4,667
 
4,667
 
*
Lamont Williams, Director Fleet Operations
 
*
 
3,113
 
3,113
 
*
 
*
Less than 1% of shares of our Class A common stock outstanding assuming the sale of none of the shares offered under this registration statement.
 
(1)
As used in this table, a beneficial owner of a security includes any person who, directly or indirectly, through contract, arrangement, understanding or otherwise has or shares (i) the power to vote or direct the voting of such security or (ii) investment power, which includes the power to dispose or to direct the disposition of such security. In addition, a person is deemed to be the beneficial owner of a security, if that person has the right to acquire beneficial ownership of such security within 60 days. To our knowledge, except as indicated in the footnotes to this table and pursuant to applicable community property laws, the persons named in the table have sole voting and investment power with respect to all shares of our Class A or Class B common stock.
 
 
(2)
Includes the number of shares of our Class A common stock that each Selling Stockholder acquired in the Merger in exchange for units previously acquired under the RMUP, some or all of which may be sold from time to time under to this reoffer prospectus.
 
 
(3)
Reflects shares of our Class B common stock included herein because such shares are convertible at any time into Class A common stock of the Company at the option of the holder and will do so automatically in the event they are sold.
 
 
(4)
For purposes of calculating this percentage, the holder’s convertible Class B common stock was included in the Class A common stock outstanding because such Class B common stock is immediately convertible at any time into shares of Class A common stock at the option of the holder thereof and will be converted automatically upon any sale under this reoffer prospectus and upon certain other transfers.
   
(5) Includes (i) 8,261,776 Class B shares held by a limited liability company in which Mr. Max Fuller and his wife, Ms. Janice Fuller, are the members and have shared dispositive power and Mr. Max Fuller has sole voting power (the "Max Fuller Limited Liability Company") and (ii) 66,663 Class B shares held directly by Mr. Max Fuller. Excludes additional shares subject to the voting agreement among Messrs. Eric Fuller and Max Fuller and Mses. Pate and Janice Fuller, the wife of Max Fuller (the "Voting Agreement"), over which Mr. Max Fuller and Ms. Janice Fuller may be considered the beneficial owners. Mr. and Ms. Fuller disclaim beneficial ownership of the shares held by the Max Fuller Limited Liability Company except to the extent of their pecuniary interest therein.
   
(6) I ncludes (i) 1,993,269 Class B shares held in trust for the benefit of Mr. Eric Fuller, over which Mr. Eric Fuller serves as the sole trustee and has sole voting and dispositive power, (ii) 1,609,613 Class B shares held in a family limited partnership, in which Mr. Eric Fuller serves as the managing general partner and has sole voting and dispositive power (the "Fuller Family Limited Partnership") and (iii) 599,098 Class B shares held directly by Mr. Eric Fuller. Excludes additional shares subject to the Voting Agreement over which Mr. Eric Fuller may be considered the beneficial owner. Mr. Eric Fuller disclaims beneficial ownership of the shares held by the Fuller Family Limited Partnership except to the extent of his pecuniary interest therein.
   
(7) Includes (i) 2,583,914 Class B shares held in trust for the benefit of Ms. Pate, over which Ms. Pate serves as the sole trustee and has sole voting and dispositive power, (ii) 150,005 Class B shares held in a family limited partnership, in which Ms. Pate serves as the managing general partner and has sole voting and dispositive power (the “Quinn Family Partnership”) and (iii) 222,222 Class B shares held directly by Ms. Pate. Excludes additional shares subject to the Voting Agreement over which Ms. Pate may be considered the beneficial owner. Ms. Quinn disclaims beneficial ownership of the shares held by the Quinn Family Partnership except to the extent of her pecuniary interest therein.
   
(8) Includes (i) 2,429,533 Class A shares held in trust for the benefit of Mr. Patrick "Brian" Quinn, over which Mr. Quinn serves as the sole trustee and has sole voting and dispositive power and (ii) 136,892 shares held directly by Mr. Quinn. 
 
Unnamed non-affiliates of the Company, each of whom may sell up to the lesser of 1,000 shares of Class A common stock or 1% of the shares of Class A common stock issuable under the RMUP, may use this reoffer prospectus for reoffers and resales.


PLAN OF DISTRIBUTION

The purpose of this reoffer prospectus is to allow the Selling Stockholders to offer for sale and sell all or a portion of their shares acquired in the Merger in exchange for units pursuant to the RMUP. The Selling Stockholders may sell the shares of Class A common stock offered under this reoffer prospectus directly to purchasers or through broker-dealers or agents, who may receive compensation in the form of discounts, concessions or commissions from the Selling Stockholder or the purchasers. These commissions as to any particular broker-dealer or agent may be in excess of those customary in the types of transactions involved. Neither we nor the Selling Stockholders can presently estimate the amount of this compensation.
The Class A common stock offered under this reoffer prospectus may be sold in one or more transactions at fixed prices, at prevailing market prices at the time of sale, at prices related to the prevailing market prices, at varying prices determined at the time of sale, or at negotiated prices. These sales may be effected in transactions, which may involve block transactions, on the New York Stock Exchange.
The aggregate proceeds to the Selling Stockholders from the sale of the Class A common stock offered by them will be the purchase price of the common stock less discounts and commissions, if any. Each of the Selling Stockholders reserves the right to accept and, together with their agents from time to time, to reject, in whole or in part, any proposed purchase of Class A common stock to be made directly or through agents. We will not receive any of the proceeds from this offering.
Our Class A common stock is approved for listing on the New York Stock Exchange.
Selling Stockholders and any broker-dealers or agents that participate in the sale of the common stock may be “underwriters” within the meaning of Section 2(11) of the Securities Act. Any discounts, commissions, concessions or profit they earn on any resale of the shares may be underwriting discounts and commissions under the Securities Act. If the Selling Stockholder is an “underwriter” within the meaning of Section 2(11) of the Securities Act, the Selling Stockholder will be subject to the prospectus delivery requirements of the Securities Act.
Shares to be offered or resold by means of this reoffer prospectus by the Selling Stockholders may not exceed, during any three-month period, the amount specified in Rule 144(e) under the Securities Act. In addition, any securities covered by this reoffer prospectus which qualify for sale pursuant to Rule 144 of the Securities Act may be sold under Rule 144 of the Securities Act rather than pursuant to this reoffer prospectus.
 
EXPERTS

The consolidated financial statements incorporated in this reoffer prospectus by reference to the prospectus dated June 13, 2018 filed by U.S. Xpress Enterprises, Inc. in connection with the registration statement on Form S-1 (File No. 333-224711), as amended, have been so included in reliance on the report of PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP, an independent registered public accounting firm, given on the authority of said firm as experts in auditing and accounting.
 
INDEMNIFICATION OF DIRECTORS AND OFFICERS

Under Section 78.7502(1) of the Nevada Statutes (meaning the applicable provisions of Chapters 78 and 92A of the Nevada Revised Statutes), a Nevada corporation may indemnify any person who was or is a party or is threatened to be made a party to any threatened, pending or completed action, suit or proceeding, whether civil, criminal, administrative or investigative (except an action by or in the right of the corporation) by reason of the fact that such person is or was a director, officer, employee or agent of the corporation, or is or was serving at the request of the corporation as a director, officer, employee or agent of another corporation, partnership, joint venture, trust or other enterprise, against expenses (including attorneys' fees), judgments, fines and amounts paid in settlement actually and reasonably incurred in connection with such action, suit or proceeding if such person: (i) is not liable for a breach of fiduciary duties that involved intentional misconduct, fraud or a knowing violation of law; or (ii) acted in good faith and in a manner which he or she reasonably believed to be in or not opposed to the best interests of the corporation, and, with respect to any criminal action or proceeding, had no reasonable cause to believe his or her conduct was unlawful.

Section 78.7502(2) of the Nevada Statutes further provides that a Nevada corporation may indemnify any person who was or is a party or is threatened to be made a party to any threatened, pending or completed action or suit by or in the right of the corporation to procure a judgment in its favor by reason of the fact that such person is or was a director, officer, employee or agent of the corporation, or is or was serving at the request of the corporation as a director, officer, employee or agent of another corporation, partnership, joint venture, trust or other enterprise, against expenses (including amounts paid in settlement and attorneys' fees) actually and reasonably incurred in connection with the defense or settlement of the action or suit if such person: (i) is not liable for a breach of fiduciary duties that involved intentional misconduct, fraud or a knowing violation of law or (ii) acted in good faith and in a manner that he or she reasonably believed to be in or not opposed to the best interests of the corporation. Indemnification may not be made for any claim, issue or matter as to which such a person has been adjudged by a court of competent jurisdiction, after exhaustion of all appeals, to be liable to the corporation or for amounts paid in settlement to the corporation, unless and only to the extent that the court in which the action or suit was brought or other court of competent jurisdiction determines upon application that in view of all the circumstances of the case, the person is fairly and reasonably entitled to indemnity for such expenses as the court deems proper.

In accordance with Section 78.7502(3) of the Nevada Statutes, our Second Amended and Restated Articles of Incorporation (“Articles of Incorporation”) provide for mandatory indemnification to the extent that a director, officer, employee or agent has been successful on the merits or otherwise in defense of certain specified actions, suits, or proceedings that are substantially similar to those in subsections (1) and (2) of Section 78.7502 of the Nevada Statutes, as described above, or in defense of related claims, issues, or matters, such that we are obligated to indemnify him or her against expenses (including attorneys' fees) actually and reasonably incurred by him or her in connection with such defense.

Our Articles of Incorporation also provide that we will indemnify any person for certain specified claims that are substantially similar to those in subsections (1) and (2) of Section 78.7502 of the Nevada Statutes, as described above. This indemnity is subject to a case by case determination that indemnification of the director, officer, employee, or agent is proper in the circumstances because he or she has met the applicable standard of conduct. The determination is to be made by (i) the stockholders, (ii) our Board of Directors by majority vote of a quorum consisting of directors who were not parties to such act, suit, or proceeding, (iii) if so ordered by such quorum of disinterested directors, by independent legal counsel in a written opinion or (iv) if such quorum of disinterested directors cannot be obtained, by independent legal counsel in a written opinion. Our Board of Directors is also expressly authorized to advance certain expenses incurred by any director, officer, employee or agent in defending a civil or criminal action, suit or proceeding prior to the final disposition of such action, suit or proceeding, upon receipt of an undertaking by or on behalf of the person to whom expenses are to be advanced, to repay such amount unless it is ultimately determined that he or she is entitled to be indemnified by us. Our Articles of Incorporation also allow us to purchase and maintain insurance on behalf of any person who is or was a director, officer, employee or agent, whether or not we would have the power to indemnify him against liability under the Articles of Incorporation.

Our Articles of Incorporation further provide that the indemnification does not exclude any other rights to which a person seeking indemnification may be entitled under any law, bylaw, agreement, vote of stockholders or disinterested directors or otherwise, both as to action in his or her official capacity and as to action in another capacity while holding such office. Our Amended and Restated Bylaws (“Bylaws”) provide that we shall indemnify our directors and officers to the maximum extent permitted by the Nevada Statutes. Our Bylaws further provide that indemnification shall be provided unless it is determined by a court of competent jurisdiction that the indemnified party did not act in a manner he or she believed in good faith to be in, or not opposed to, our best interests and, with respect to any criminal action or proceeding, the indemnified party had no reasonable cause to believe his or her conduct was lawful. Finally, our Bylaws provide that expenses shall be advanced to an indemnified party upon written confirmation that he or she has not acted in a manner that would preclude indemnification and an undertaking to return any advances if it is ultimately determined by a court of competent jurisdiction that the party is not entitled to indemnification under the standard set forth in our Bylaws.

The registrant maintains standard policies of insurance under which coverage is provided (a) to its directors and officers against loss rising from claims made by reason of breach of duty or other wrongful act and (b) to the registrant with respect to payments which may be made by the registrant to such directors and officers pursuant to the indemnification provisions of our Articles of Incorporation and Bylaws or otherwise as a matter of law.

Insofar as indemnification for liabilities arising under the Securities Act may be permitted to directors, officers or persons controlling the registrant pursuant to the foregoing provisions, the registrant has been informed that in the opinion of the Securities and Exchange Commission such indemnification is against public policy as expressed in the Securities Act and is therefore unenforceable.

WHERE YOU CAN FIND ADDITIONAL INFORMATION
We are subject to the informational reporting requirements of the Exchange Act of 1934, as amended (the “Exchange Act”), and are required to file reports, proxy statements and other information with the SEC. All such filings may be read and copied at the SEC's Public Reference Room at 100 F Street, N.E., Washington, D.C. 20549. Information on the operation of the Public Reference Room may be obtained by calling the SEC at 1-800-SEC-0330. In addition, the SEC maintains an Internet site at www.sec.gov, from which interested persons can electronically access such filings, including the exhibits and any schedules thereto. A copy of any document incorporated by reference in the registration statement of which this reoffer prospectus forms a part but which is not delivered with this reoffer prospectus will be provided by us without charge to any person to whom this reoffer prospectus has been delivered upon oral or written request to that person. Requests for documents should be directed to U.S. Xpress Enterprises, Inc., Attention: Corporate General Counsel, 4080 Jenkins Road, Chattanooga, Tennessee 37421, (423) 510-3000.
INCORPORATION OF DOCUMENTS BY REFERENCE
The following documents, which have been filed with the Commission by U.S. Xpress Enterprises, Inc., a Nevada corporation (“we,” “our,” “us,” the “registrant,” or the “Company”), pursuant to the Securities Act and the Exchange Act, as applicable, are hereby incorporated by reference in, and shall be deemed to be a part of, this registration statement:
 
 
(a)
the Company’s final prospectus filed with the Commission pursuant to Rule 424(b) promulgated under the Securities Act on June 15, 2018, in connection with the Company’s registration statement on Form S-1 (File No. 333-224711), as amended; and
 
 
(b)
the description of the Company’s Class A common stock contained in the Company’s registration statement on Form S-1 (File No. 333-224711), as amended on May 7, 2018, May 23, 2018, June 4, 2018, and June 11, 2018 including any amendments or reports filed for the purpose of updating such description.
All documents, reports or definitive proxy or information statements subsequently filed by the Company pursuant to Sections 13(a), 13(c), 14 and 15(d) of the Exchange Act, subsequent to the date of this registration statement and prior to the filing of a post-effective amendment to this registration statement which indicates that all securities offered hereby have been sold or which deregisters all such securities then remaining unsold, shall be deemed to be incorporated by reference herein and to be a part hereof from the date of filing of such documents.
Any statement contained in a document incorporated or deemed to be incorporated by reference herein shall be deemed to be modified or superseded for purposes of this registration statement to the extent that a statement contained herein (or in any other subsequently filed document which also is incorporated or deemed to be incorporated by reference herein) modifies or supersedes such statement. Any such statement so modified or superseded shall not be deemed, except as so modified or superseded, to constitute a part of this registration statement.
1,830,377 Shares
 
U.S. Xpress Enterprises, Inc.
Class A common stock, Par Value $0.01 Per Share
 


REOFFER PROSPECTUS
 
PART II
INFORMATION REQUIRED IN THE REGISTRATION STATEMENT
Item 3. Incorporation of Documents by Reference.
The following documents, which have been filed with the Commission by the Company pursuant to the Securities Act and the Exchange Act, as applicable, are hereby incorporated by reference in, and shall be deemed to be a part of, this registration statement:
 
 
(a)
the Company’s final prospectus filed with the Commission pursuant to Rule 424(b) promulgated under the Securities Act on June 15, 2018, in connection with the Company’s registration statement on Form S-1 (File No. 333-224711), as amended; and
 
 
(b)
the description of the Company’s Class A common stock contained in the Company’s registration statement on Form S-1 (File No. 333-224711), as amended on May 7, 2018, May 23, 2018, June 4, 2018, and June 11, 2018, including any amendments or reports filed for the purpose of updating such description.
All documents, reports or definitive proxy or information statements subsequently filed by the Company pursuant to Sections 13(a), 13(c), 14 and 15(d) of the Exchange Act, subsequent to the date of this registration statement and prior to the filing of a post-effective amendment to this registration statement which indicates that all securities offered hereby have been sold or which deregisters all such securities then remaining unsold, shall be deemed to be incorporated by reference herein and to be a part hereof from the date of filing of such documents.
Any statement contained in a document incorporated or deemed to be incorporated by reference herein shall be deemed to be modified or superseded for purposes of this registration statement to the extent that a statement contained herein (or in any other subsequently filed document which also is incorporated or deemed to be incorporated by reference herein) modifies or supersedes such statement. Any such statement so modified or superseded shall not be deemed, except as so modified or superseded, to constitute a part of this registration statement.
Item 4. Description of Securities.
Not applicable.
Item 5. Interests of Named Experts and Counsel.
Not applicable.
Item 6. Indemnification of Directors and Officers.

Under Section 78.7502(1) of the Nevada Statutes (meaning the applicable provisions of Chapters 78 and 92A of the Nevada Revised Statutes), a Nevada corporation may indemnify any person who was or is a party or is threatened to be made a party to any threatened, pending or completed action, suit or proceeding, whether civil, criminal, administrative or investigative (except an action by or in the right of the corporation) by reason of the fact that such person is or was a director, officer, employee or agent of the corporation, or is or was serving at the request of the corporation as a director, officer, employee or agent of another corporation, partnership, joint venture, trust or other enterprise, against expenses (including attorneys' fees), judgments, fines and amounts paid in settlement actually and reasonably incurred in connection with such action, suit or proceeding if such person: (i) is not liable for a breach of fiduciary duties that involved intentional misconduct, fraud or a knowing violation of law; or (ii) acted in good faith and in a manner which he or she reasonably believed to be in or not opposed to the best interests of the corporation, and, with respect to any criminal action or proceeding, had no reasonable cause to believe his or her conduct was unlawful.

Section 78.7502(2) of the Nevada Statutes further provides that a Nevada corporation may indemnify any person who was or is a party or is threatened to be made a party to any threatened, pending or completed action or suit by or in the right of the corporation to procure a judgment in its favor by reason of the fact that such person is or was a director, officer, employee or agent of the corporation, or is or was serving at the request of the corporation as a director, officer, employee or agent of another corporation, partnership, joint venture, trust or other enterprise, against expenses (including amounts paid in settlement and attorneys' fees) actually and reasonably incurred in connection with the defense or settlement of the action or suit if such person: (i) is not liable for a breach of fiduciary duties that involved intentional misconduct, fraud or a knowing violation of law or (ii) acted in good faith and in a manner that he or she reasonably believed to be in or not opposed to the best interests of the corporation. Indemnification may not be made for any claim, issue or matter as to which such a person has been adjudged by a court of competent jurisdiction, after exhaustion of all appeals, to be liable to the corporation or for amounts paid in settlement to the corporation, unless and only to the extent that the court in which the action or suit was brought or other court of competent jurisdiction determines upon application that in view of all the circumstances of the case, the person is fairly and reasonably entitled to indemnity for such expenses as the court deems proper.

In accordance with Section 78.7502(3) of the Nevada Statutes, our Second Amended and Restated Articles of Incorporation (“Articles of Incorporation”) provide for mandatory indemnification to the extent that a director, officer, employee or agent has been successful on the merits or otherwise in defense of certain specified actions, suits, or proceedings that are substantially similar to those in subsections (1) and (2) of Section 78.7502 of the Nevada Statutes, as described above, or in defense of related claims, issues, or matters, such that we are obligated to indemnify him or her against expenses (including attorneys' fees) actually and reasonably incurred by him or her in connection with such defense.

Our Articles of Incorporation also provide that we will indemnify any person for certain specified claims that are substantially similar to those in subsections (1) and (2) of Section 78.7502 of the Nevada Statutes, as described above. This indemnity is subject to a case by case determination that indemnification of the director, officer, employee, or agent is proper in the circumstances because he or she has met the applicable standard of conduct. The determination is to be made by (i) the stockholders, (ii) our Board of Directors by majority vote of a quorum consisting of directors who were not parties to such act, suit, or proceeding, (iii) if so ordered by such quorum of disinterested directors, by independent legal counsel in a written opinion or (iv) if such quorum of disinterested directors cannot be obtained, by independent legal counsel in a written opinion. Our Board of Directors is also expressly authorized to advance certain expenses incurred by any director, officer, employee or agent in defending a civil or criminal action, suit or proceeding prior to the final disposition of such action, suit or proceeding, upon receipt of an undertaking by or on behalf of the person to whom expenses are to be advanced, to repay such amount unless it is ultimately determined that he or she is entitled to be indemnified by us. Our Articles of Incorporation also allow us to purchase and maintain insurance on behalf of any person who is or was a director, officer, employee or agent, whether or not we would have the power to indemnify him against liability under the Articles of Incorporation.

Our Articles of Incorporation further provide that the indemnification does not exclude any other rights to which a person seeking indemnification may be entitled under any law, bylaw, agreement, vote of stockholders or disinterested directors or otherwise, both as to action in his or her official capacity and as to action in another capacity while holding such office. Our Amended and Restated Bylaws (“Bylaws”) provide that we shall indemnify our directors and officers to the maximum extent permitted by the Nevada Statutes. Our Bylaws further provide that indemnification shall be provided unless it is determined by a court of competent jurisdiction that the indemnified party did not act in a manner he or she believed in good faith to be in, or not opposed to, our best interests and, with respect to any criminal action or proceeding, the indemnified party had no reasonable cause to believe his or her conduct was lawful. Finally, our Bylaws provide that expenses shall be advanced to an indemnified party upon written confirmation that he or she has not acted in a manner that would preclude indemnification and an undertaking to return any advances if it is ultimately determined by a court of competent jurisdiction that the party is not entitled to indemnification under the standard set forth in our Bylaws.

The registrant maintains standard policies of insurance under which coverage is provided (a) to its directors and officers against loss rising from claims made by reason of breach of duty or other wrongful act and (b) to the registrant with respect to payments which may be made by the registrant to such directors and officers pursuant to the indemnification provisions of our Articles of Incorporation and Bylaws or otherwise as a matter of law.


Item 7. Exemption from Registration Claimed.
The shares being reoffered and resold pursuant to the reoffer prospectus included herein were issued in the Merger in exchange for membership interests previously issued pursuant to the RMUP and were deemed to be exempt from registration under the Securities Act in reliance on Section 4(a)(2) of the Securities Act and/or Rule 701 promulgated thereunder, as transactions by an issuer not involving a public offering. The recipients of securities in each such transaction received the securities as compensation and represented their intention to acquire the securities for investment only and not with a view to or for sale in connection with any distribution thereof and appropriate legends were affixed to the share certificates and instruments issued in such transactions. All recipients had adequate access, through their relationship with the Company, to information about the Company.
 
Item 8. Exhibits.
 
See the attached Exhibit Index, which is incorporated herein by reference.

Item 9. Undertakings.
 
(a)
The undersigned registrant hereby undertakes:
 
 
(1)
To file, during any period in which offers or sales are being made, a post-effective amendment to this registration statement:
 
 
(i)
 To include any prospectus required by Section 10(a)(3) of the Securities Act;
 
 
 
 
 
 
(ii)
To reflect in the prospectus any facts or events arising after the effective date of this registration statement (or the most recent post-effective amendment thereof) which, individually or in the aggregate, represent a fundamental change in the information set forth in this registration statement. Notwithstanding the foregoing, any increase or decrease in volume of securities offered (if the total dollar value of securities offered would not exceed that which was registered) and any deviation from the low or high end of the estimated maximum offering range may be reflected in the form of prospectus filed with the Commission pursuant to Rule 424(b) if, in the aggregate, the changes in volume and price represent no more than a 20% change in the maximum aggregate offering price set forth in the “Calculation of Registration Fee” table in the effective registration statement; and
 
 
 
 
 
 
(iii)
To include any material information with respect to the plan of distribution not previously disclosed in this registration statement or any material change to such information in this registration statement;
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
provided, however, that paragraphs (a)(1)(i) and (a)(1)(ii) of this section do not apply if the information required to be included in a post-effective amendment by those paragraphs is contained in periodic reports filed with or furnished to the Commission by the Registrant pursuant to Section 13 or 15(d) of the Exchange Act that are incorporated by reference in this registration statement.
 
 
(2)
That, for the purpose of determining any liability under the Securities Act, each such post-effective amendment shall be deemed to be a new registration statement relating to the securities offered therein, and the offering of such securities at that time shall be deemed to be the initial bona   fide offering thereof.
 
 
(3)
To remove from registration by means of a post-effective amendment any of the securities being registered which remain unsold at the termination of the offering.
 
(b)
The undersigned Registrant hereby undertakes that, for purposes of determining any liability under the Securities Act, each filing of the Registrant’s annual report pursuant to Section 13(a) or 15(d) of the Exchange Act (and, where applicable, each filing of an employee benefit plan’s annual report pursuant to Section 15(d) of the Exchange Act), that is incorporated by reference in this registration statement shall be deemed to be a new registration statement relating to the securities offered therein, and the offering of such securities at that time shall be deemed to be the initial bona fide offering thereof.
 
(c)
Insofar as indemnification for liabilities arising under the Securities Act may be permitted to directors, officers and controlling persons of the Registrant pursuant to the foregoing provisions, or otherwise, the Registrant has been advised that in the opinion of the Commission such indemnification is against public policy as expressed in the Securities Act and is, therefore, unenforceable. In the event that a claim for indemnification against such liabilities (other than the payment by the Registrant of expenses incurred or paid by a director, officer or controlling person of the Registrant in the successful defense of any action, suit or proceeding) is asserted by such director, officer or controlling person in connection with the securities being registered, the Registrant will, unless in the opinion of its counsel the matter has been settled by controlling precedent, submit to a court of appropriate jurisdiction the question whether such indemnification by it is against public policy as expressed in the Securities Act and will be governed by the final adjudication of such issue.

SIGNATURES

Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Act, the registrant certifies that it has reasonable grounds to believe that it meets all of the requirements for filing on Form S-8 and has duly caused this registration statement to be signed on its behalf by the undersigned, thereunto duly authorized, in the City of Chattanooga , in the State of Tennessee, on the 18 th day of June, 2018.
U.S. XPRESS ENTERPRISES, INC.
     
By:
/s/ ERIC FULLER
 
Name:
Eric Fuller
Title:
Chief Executive Officer
 
 
POWER OF ATTORNEY
KNOW ALL PERSONS BY THESE PRESENTS that each person whose signature appears below hereby constitutes and appoints Lisa Quinn Pate, Eric Peterson, and Leigh Anne Battersby, and each of them singly, his or her true and lawful attorney-in-fact and agent with full power of substitution and resubstitution, for him or her and in his or her name, place and stead, in any and all capacities, to sign any and all amendments, including post-effective amendments, to this registration statement (any of which amendments may make such changes and additions to this registration statement as such attorneys-in-fact may deem necessary or appropriate) and to file the same, with all exhibits thereto, and any other documents that may be required in connection therewith, granted unto said attorneys-in-fact and agents full power and authority to be done in and about the premises, as fully to all intents and purposes as he or she might or could do in person, hereby ratifying and confirming all that said attorneys-in-fact and agents, or their substitutes, may lawfully do or cause to be done by virtue hereof.
Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Act, this registration statement has been signed by the following persons in the capacities indicated below on the dates indicated.
 
Signature
 
Title
 
Date
     
/s/ ERIC FULLER
  
Chief Executive Officer, President and
Director (principal executive officer)
 
June 18, 2018
Eric Fuller
  
 
     
/s/ ERIC PETERSON
  
Chief Financial Officer, Treasurer and Secretary
(principal financial officer)
 
June 18, 2018
Eric Peterson
  
 
     
/s/ JASON GREAR
  
Chief Accounting Officer
(principal accounting officer)
 
June 18, 2018
Jason Grear
  
 
     
/s/ MAX FULLER
  
Executive Chairman and Director
 
June 18, 2018
Max Fuller
  
  
     
/s/ LISA QUINN PATE
  
Chief Administrative Officer and Director
 
June 18, 2018
Lisa Quinn Pate
  
  
         
/s/ PHILIP CONNORS
 
Director
 
June 18, 2018
Philip Connors
       
         
/s/ DENNIS NASH
 
Director
 
June 18, 2018
Dennis Nash
       
         
/s/ EDWARD BRAMAN
 
Director
 
June 18, 2018
Edward Braman
       
         
/s/ JOHN RICKEL
 
Director
 
June 18, 2018
John Rickel
       
         
/s/ JON BEIZER
 
Director
 
June 18, 2018
Jon Beizer
       
EXHIBIT INDEX
     
   
 
Second Amended and Restated Articles of Incorporation of U.S. Xpress Enterprises, Inc., dated and effective as of June 8, 2018 (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 3.1 filed with the Company’s Registration Statement on Form S-1/A (File No. 333-224711) filed on June 11, 2018).
   
 
Amended and Restated Bylaws of U.S. Xpress Enterprises, Inc., dated and effective as of June 8, 2018 (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 3.2 filed with the Company’s Registration Statement on Form S-1/A (File No. 333-224711) filed on June 11, 2018).
   
 
New Mountain Lake Holdings, LLC Restricted Membership Units Plan, dated as of December 1, 2010 (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.35 filed with the Company’s Registration Statement on Form S-1/A (File No. 333-224711) filed on June 11, 2018).
     
 
First Amendment to the New Mountain Lake Holdings, LLC Restricted Membership Units Plan, dated as of June 8, 2018 (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.36 filed with the Company’s Registration Statement on Form S-1/A (File No. 333-224711) filed on June 11, 2018).
   
 
U.S. Xpress Enterprises, Inc. 2018 Omnibus Incentive Plan, dated as of June 8, 2018.
   
 
U.S. Xpress Enterprises, Inc. Employee Stock Purchase Plan, dated as of June 8, 2018.
   
 
Opinion of Scudder Law Firm P.C., L.L.O., regarding validity of the shares of Class A common stock registered.
   
 
Consent of PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP.
   
 
Consent of Scudder Law Firm P.C., L.L.O. (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 5.1 hereto).
   
 
Power of Attorney (included in the signature page to this registration statement).
 
*
Filed herewith.
 


Exhibit 4.3
U.S. XPRESS ENTREPRISES, INC.
2018 OMNIBUS INCENTIVE PLAN
Effective June 8, 2018

ARTICLE 1
PURPOSE AND TERM OF PLAN
 
Section 1.1 Purpose . The purpose of the Plan is to provide motivation to selected Employees, Directors and Consultants to put forth their efforts toward the continued growth, profitability and success of the Company by providing incentives to such Employees, Directors and Consultants through the ownership and performance of Common Stock.
 
Section 1.2 Term . The effective date of the Plan is June 8, 2018 (the “Commencement Date”), which is the date that the Plan was approved by the stockholders of the Company. The expiration date of the Plan, on and after which date no Awards may be granted, shall be the tenth anniversary of the Commencement Date; provided, however, that such expiration shall not affect Awards then outstanding, and the terms and conditions of the Plan shall continue to apply to such Awards.
 
ARTICLE 2
DEFINITIONS
 
In any necessary construction of a provision of this Plan, the masculine gender may include the feminine, and the singular may include the plural, and vice versa.
 
Section 2.1 “ Award ” means any form of stock option, stock appreciation right, Stock Award, Restricted Stock Unit, performance unit, Performance Award or other incentive award granted under the Plan, whether singly, in combination, or in tandem, to a Participant by the Committee pursuant to such terms, conditions, restrictions and/or limitations, if any, as the Committee may establish by the Award Notice or otherwise.

Section 2.2 “ Award Notice ” means the document establishing the terms, conditions, restrictions and/or limitations of an Award in addition to those established by this Plan and by the Committee’s exercise of its administrative powers. The Committee will establish the form of the document in the exercise of its sole and absolute discretion.

Section 2.3 “ Board ” means the Board of Directors of USX.

Section 2.4 “ CEO ” means the Chief Executive Officer of USX.

Section 2.5 “ Code ” means the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended from time to time, including the regulations thereunder and any successor provisions and the regulations thereto.

Section 2.6 “ Committee ” means the Compensation Committee of the Board, or such other Board committee as may be designated by the Board to administer the Plan; provided that the Committee shall consist of two or more Directors, all of whom are “Non-Employee Directors” within the meaning of Rule 16b-3 under the Exchange Act and an “independent director” for purpose of the rules of the principal national securities exchange on which the Common Stock is then listed or admitted to trading, to the extent required by such rules.

Section 2.7 “ Common Stock ” means the Class A common stock, par value $.01 per share, of USX.


Section 2.8 “ Company ” means USX and its Subsidiaries.

Section 2.9 “ Consultants ” means the consultants, advisors and independent contractors retained by the Company.

Section 2.10 “ Director ” means a non-Employee member of the Board.

Section 2.11 “ Effective Date ” means the date an Award is determined to be effective by the Committee upon its grant of such Award, which date shall be set forth in the applicable Award Notice.

Section 2.12 “ Employee ” means any person employed by the Company on a full- or part-time basis.

Section 2.13 “ Exchange Act ” means the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended from time to time, including the rules thereunder and any successor provisions and the rules thereto.

Section 2.14 “ Fair Market Value ” means the closing price of the Common Stock on the principal national securities exchange on which the Common Stock is then listed or admitted to trading, and the closing price shall be the last reported sale price regular way on such date (or, if no sale takes place on such date, the last reported sale price regular way on the next preceding date on which such sale took place), as reported by such exchange. If the Common Stock is not then so listed or admitted to trading on a national securities exchange, then Fair Market Value shall be the closing price (the last reported sale price regular way) of the Common Stock in the over-the-counter market as reported by the National Association of Securities Dealers Automated Quotation System (“NASDAQ”), if the closing price of the Common Stock is then reported by NASDAQ. If the Common Stock closing price is not then reported by NASDAQ, then Fair Market Value shall be the mean between the representative closing bid and closing asked prices of the Common Stock in the over-the-counter market as reported by NASDAQ. If the Common Stock bid and asked prices are not then reported by NASDAQ, then Fair Market Value shall be the quote furnished by any member of the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority selected from time to time by USX for that purpose. If no member of the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority then furnishes quotes with respect to the Common Stock, then Fair Market Value shall be the value determined by the Committee in good faith.

Section 2.15 “ USX ” means U.S. Xpress Enterprises, Inc.

Section 2.16 “ Participant ” means either an Employee, Director or Consultant to whom an Award has been granted under the Plan.

Section 2.17 “ Performance Awards ” means the Stock Awards and performance units granted pursuant to Article 7.


Section 2.18 “ Performance Criteria ” means the one or more criteria that the Committee shall select for purposes of establishing the Performance Goal(s) for a Performance Period. The Performance Criteria that may be used to establish such Performance Goal(s) may be expressed in terms of the attainment of specified levels of one or any variation or combination of the following: (a) revenues (including, without limitation, measures such as revenue per mile (loaded or total) or revenue per tractor), (b) net revenues and/or return on revenues, (c) fuel surcharges, (d) accounts receivable collection or days sales outstanding, (e) safety and claims (including, without limitation, measures such as accidents per million miles, number of significant accidents, number of worker's compensation claims, changes in safety scores and ratings), (f) working capital measures, (g) leverage measures, (h) productivity and efficiency measures (including, without limitation, measures such as driver turnover, trailer-to-tractor ratio, tractor-to-non-driver ratio, average revenue per tractor, average percentages of loaded and empty miles, average fuel savings and fuel surcharge revenues), (i) cash position, (j) return on invested capital, (k) market share (in aggregate or by segment), (l) economic value added models or completion of acquisitions (with or without specified size); (m) operating ratio, (n) expenses, cost reductions and savings (or limits on cost increases) (o) debt to capitalization and/or debt to equity (in each case with or without lease adjustment), (p) earnings, (q) earnings before interest and taxes, (r) earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization, (s) earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation, amortization and operating leases, (t) earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation, amortization and rents, (u) earnings per share (or diluted earnings per share or adjusted diluted earnings per share), (v) net income (or adjusted net income) and/or income before taxes and/or cumulative compound net income growth rate , (w) operating income or earnings, (x) increase in total revenue, (y) net sales, (z) assets and return on assets, (aa) return on capital employed, (ab) return on equity, (ac) return on stockholders’ equity or total stockholders’ return, (ad) net margin, gross margin, operating margin, or contribution margin (ae) net profit or profit margins (including profitability of an identifiable business unit or product), (af) operating profits, (ag) profits before tax, (ah) ratio of operating earnings to capital spending, (ai) cash flow measures (including, without limitation, free cash flow), (aj) equity or stockholders’ equity, (ak) Common Stock price per share, (al) attainment of strategic or operational initiatives, (am) book, economic book or intrinsic book value (including book value per share) (an) appreciation in or maintenance of the price of the Common Stock or any other publicly traded securities of the Company, or other stockholder return measures, (ao) credit rating, (ap) borrowing levels, (aq) enterprise value, (ar) improvements in capital structure, (as) customer satisfaction survey results, (at) implementation or completion of critical projects ; or (au) any other metric as may be selected by the Committee; or (av) any combination of the foregoing, which, in each case, may be applied on an absolute basis and/or be relative to one or more peer group companies or indices, and may include comparisons with past performance of the Company (including one or more divisions thereof, if any) and/or the current or past performance of other companies or any combination thereof. In addition, the Committee may establish, as additional Performance Criteria, the attainment by a Participant of one or more personal objectives and/or goals that the Committee deems appropriate, including, without limitation, implementation of Company policies, negotiation of significant corporate transactions, development of long-term business goals or strategic plans for the Company or the exercise of specific areas of managerial responsibility. The Committee may provide for exclusion of the impact of an event or occurrence which the Committee determines should appropriately be excluded, including (a) restructurings, discontinued operations, extraordinary items, and other unusual, infrequently occurring or non-recurring charges or events, (b) asset write-downs, (c) litigation or claim judgments or settlements, (d) acquisitions or divestitures, (e) reorganization or change in the corporate structure or capital structure of the Company, (f) an event either not directly related to the operations of the Company, division, business segment or business unit or not within the reasonable control of management, (g) foreign exchange gains and losses, (h) a change in the fiscal year of the Company, (i) the refinancing or repurchase of bank loans or debt securities, (j), unbudgeted capital expenditures, (k) the issuance or repurchase of equity securities and other changes in the number of outstanding shares, (l) conversion of some or all of convertible securities to common stock, (m) any business interruption event (n) the cumulative effects of tax or accounting changes in accordance with U.S. generally accepted accounting principles, or (o) the effect of changes in other laws or regulatory rules affecting reported results.

Section 2.19 “ Performance Formula ” means, for a Performance Period, the one or more objective formulas (expressed as a percentage or otherwise) applied against the relevant Performance Goal(s) to determine, with regards to the Award of a particular Participant, whether all, some portion but less than all, or none of the Award has been earned for the Performance Period.

Section 2.20 “ Performance Goals ” means, for a Performance Period, the one or more goals established by the Committee for the Performance Period based upon the Performance Criteria.

Section 2.21 “ Performance Period ” means the one or more periods of time, which may be of varying and overlapping durations, as the Committee may select, over which the attainment of one or more Performance Goals will be measured for the purpose of determining a Participant’s right to and the payment of a Performance Award.

Section 2.22 “ Plan ” means this 2018 Omnibus Incentive Plan, as amended from time to time.


Section 2.23 “ Restricted Stock Unit Award ” means an Award granted pursuant to Article 11 in the form of a right to receive shares of Common Stock on a future date.

Section 2.24 “ Stock Award ” means an award granted pursuant to Article 10 in the form of shares of Common Stock and/or restricted shares of Common Stock.

Section 2.25 “ Subsidiary ” means a corporation or other business entity in which USX directly or indirectly has an ownership interest of 20 percent or more, except that with respect to incentive stock options, “Subsidiary” shall mean “subsidiary corporation” as defined in Section 424(f) of the Code.

Section 2.26 “Substitute Awards ” means Awards granted or shares of Common Stock issued by the Company in assumption of, or in substitution or exchange for, awards previously granted, or the right or obligation to make future awards, in each case by a company acquired by the Company or with which the Company merges.

ARTICLE 3
ELIGIBILITY
 
Section 3.1 In General . Subject to Section 3.2 and Article 4, all Employees, Directors and Consultants are eligible to participate in the Plan. The Committee may select, from time to time, Participants from those Employees, Directors and Consultants.
 
Section 3.2 Incentive Stock Options . Only Employees shall be eligible to receive “incentive stock options” (within the meaning of Section 422 of the Code).
 
ARTICLE 4
PLAN ADMINISTRATION
 
Section 4.1 Responsibility . The Committee shall have total and exclusive responsibility to control, operate, manage and administer the Plan in accordance with its terms.
 
Section 4.2 Authority of the Committee . The Committee shall have all the authority that may be necessary or helpful to enable it to discharge its responsibilities with respect to the Plan. Without limiting the generality of the preceding sentence, the Committee shall have the exclusive right to:

(a) determine eligibility for participation in the Plan;

(b) select the Participants and determine the type of Awards to be made to Participants, the number of shares subject to Awards and the terms, conditions, restrictions and limitations of the Awards, including, but not by way of limitation, restrictions on the transferability of Awards and conditions with respect to continued employment, performance criteria, confidentiality and non-competition;

(c) interpret the Plan;

(d) construe any ambiguous provision, correct any default, supply any omission and reconcile any inconsistency of the Plan;


(e) issue administrative guidelines as an aid to administer the Plan and make changes in such guidelines as it from time to time deems proper;

(f) make regulations for carrying out the Plan and make changes in such regulations as it from time to time deems proper;

(g) to the extent permitted under the Plan, grant waivers of Plan terms, conditions, restrictions and limitations;

(h) promulgate rules and regulations regarding treatment of Awards of a Participant under the Plan in the event of such Participant’s death, disability, retirement, termination from the Company or breach of agreement by the Participant, or in the event of a change of control of USX;

(i) accelerate the vesting, exercise or payment of an Award or the Performance Period of an Award when such action or actions would be in the best interest of the Company;

(j) establish such other types of Awards, besides those specifically enumerated in Article 5 hereof, which the Committee determines are consistent with the Plan’s purpose;

(k) subject to Section 4.3, grant Awards in replacement of Awards previously granted under this Plan or any other executive compensation plan of the Company;

(l) establish and administer the Performance Goals with respect to Awards and certify whether, and to what extent, they have been attained;

(m) determine the terms and provisions of any agreements entered into hereunder;

(n) take any and all other action it deems necessary or advisable for the proper operation or administration of the Plan; and

(o) make all other determinations it deems necessary or advisable for the administration of the Plan, including factual determinations.
 
The decisions of the Committee and its actions with respect to the Plan shall be final, binding and conclusive upon all persons having or claiming to have any right or interest in or under the Plan.

Section 4.3 Option Repricing . Except for adjustments pursuant to Section 6.2, the Committee shall not reprice any stock options and/or stock appreciation rights unless such action is approved by USX’s stockholders. For purposes of the Plan, the term “reprice” shall mean the reduction, directly or indirectly, in the per-share exercise price of an outstanding stock option(s) and/or stock appreciation right(s) issued under the Plan by amendment, cancellation or substitution (for cash or another Award, except in connection with a change in control of the Company, as such term is defined in the applicable Award Notice), or any other action with respect to an option or SAR that would be treated as a repricing under the rules and regulations of the principal national securities exchange on which the Common Stock is then listed or admitted to trading.


Section 4.4 Allocation and Delegation of Authority . The Committee may allocate all or any portion of its responsibilities and powers under the Plan to any one or more of its members, the CEO or other senior members of management as the Committee deems appropriate, and may delegate all or any part of its responsibilities and powers to any such person or persons, provided that any such allocation or delegation be in writing; provided, however, that only the Committee, or other committee consisting of two or more Directors, all of whom are “Non-Employee Directors” within the meaning of Rule 16b-3 under the Exchange Act, may select and grant Awards to Participants who are subject to Section 16 of the Exchange Act. The Committee may revoke any such allocation or delegation at any time for any reason with or without prior notice.
 
ARTICLE 5
FORM OF AWARDS
 
Section 5.1 In General . Awards may, at the Committee’s sole discretion, be paid in the form of Performance Awards pursuant to Article 7, stock options pursuant to Article 8, stock appreciation rights pursuant to Article 9, Stock Awards pursuant to Article 10, Restricted Stock Unit Awards pursuant to Article 11, performance units pursuant to Article 12, any form established by the Committee pursuant to Section 4.2(j) or a combination thereof. The terms of Substitute Awards may vary from the terms set forth in the Plan to the extent the Committee deems appropriate to conform, in whole or in part, to the provisions of the awards in substitution for which they are granted. Each Award shall be subject to the terms, conditions, restrictions and limitations of the Plan and the Award Notice for such Award. Awards under a particular Article of the Plan need not be uniform and Awards under two or more Articles may be combined into a single Award Notice. Any combination of Awards may be granted at one time and on more than one occasion to the same Participant.
 
Section 5.2 Foreign Jurisdictions .

(a) Special Terms . In order to facilitate the making of any Award to Participants who are employed or retained by the Company outside the United States as Employees, Directors or Consultants (or who are foreign nationals temporarily within the United States), the Committee may provide for such modifications and additional terms and conditions (“Special Terms”) in Awards as the Committee may consider necessary or appropriate to accommodate differences in local law, policy or custom or to facilitate administration of the Plan. The Special Terms may provide that the grant of an Award is subject to (1) applicable governmental or regulatory approval or other compliance with local legal requirements and/or (2) the execution by the Participant of a written instrument in the form specified by the Committee, and that in the event such conditions are not satisfied, the grant shall be void. The Special Terms may also provide that an Award shall become exercisable or redeemable, as the case may be, if an Employee’s employment or Director or Consultant’s relationship with the Company ends as a result of workforce reduction, realignment or similar measure and the Committee may designate a person or persons to make such determination for a location. The Committee may adopt or approve sub-plans, appendices or supplements to, or amendments, restatements or alternative versions of, the Plan as it may consider necessary or appropriate for purposes of implementing any Special Terms, without thereby affecting the terms of the Plan as in effect for any other purpose; provided, however, no such sub-plans, appendices or supplements to, or amendments, restatements or alternative versions of, the Plan shall: (a) increase the limitations contained in Section 6.3; (b) increase the number of available shares under Section 6.1; or (c) cause the Plan to cease to satisfy any conditions of Rule 16b-3 under the Exchange Act.

(b) Currency Effects . Unless otherwise specifically determined by the Committee, all Awards and payments pursuant to such Awards shall be determined in U.S. currency. The Committee shall determine, in its discretion, whether and to the extent any payments made pursuant to an Award shall be made in local currency, as opposed to U.S. dollars. In the event payments are made in local currency, the Committee may determine, in its discretion and without liability to any Participant, the method and rate of converting the payment into local currency.


ARTICLE 6
SHARES SUBJECT TO PLAN
 
Section 6.1 Available Shares . The maximum number of shares of Common Stock which shall be available for grant of Awards under the Plan (including incentive stock options) during its term shall not exceed 3,200,000. Such amount shall be subject to adjustment as provided in Section 6.2. Any shares of Common Stock related to Awards which terminate by expiration, forfeiture, cancellation or otherwise without the issuance of such shares or the payment of cash or other consideration in respect thereof, or are exchanged with the Committee’s permission for Awards not involving Common Stock, shall be available again for grant under the Plan. In the event that (i) any option or other Award granted hereunder is exercised through the tendering of shares of Common Stock (either actually or by attestation) or by the withholding of shares of Common Stock by the Company, or (ii) withholding tax liabilities arising from such option or other Award are satisfied by the tendering of shares of Common Stock (either actually or by attestation) or by the withholding of shares of Common Stock by the Company, then in each such case the shares so tendered or withheld shall be added to the shares available for grant under the Plan on a one-for-one basis.  The shares of Common Stock available for issuance under the Plan may be authorized and unissued shares or treasury shares, including shares purchased in open market or private transactions.

Section 6.2 Adjustment Upon Certain Events . In the event that there is, with respect to USX, a stock dividend or split, reorganization, recapitalization, merger, consolidation, spin-off, combination, combination or transaction or exchange of Common Stock or other corporate exchange, or any distribution to stockholders of Common Stock or other property or securities or any extraordinary cash dividends (other than regular cash dividends) or any transaction similar to the foregoing or other transaction that results in a change to USX’s capital structure, then the Committee shall make substitutions and/or adjustments to the maximum number of shares available for issuance under the Plan, the maximum Award payable under Section 6.3, the number of shares to be issued pursuant outstanding Awards, the option prices, exercise prices or purchase prices of outstanding Awards and/or any other affected terms of an Award or the Plan as the Committee, in its sole discretion and without liability to any person, deems equitable or appropriate. Unless the Committee determines otherwise, in no event shall the Award of any Participant be adjusted pursuant to this Section 6.2.

Section 6.3 Maximum Award Payable . Subject to Section 6.2, and notwithstanding any provision contained in the Plan to the contrary, the maximum number of shares of Common Stock subject to all Awards that are denominated in shares and granted to any one Participant, except for a Director, under the Plan during any calendar year is 1,000,000 shares of Common Stock.  During any calendar year no Participant (other than a Director) may be granted Awards that are denominated in cash under which more than $5,000,000 may   be earned for each twelve (12) months in the vesting or Performance Period.  Each of the limitations in this section shall be multiplied by two (2) with respect to Awards granted to a Participant during the first calendar year in which the Participant commences employment with the Company.  Subject to Section 6.2, the aggregate grant date fair value (computed as of the date of grant in accordance with applicable financial accounting rules) of all Awards granted during a single calendar year to any Director, taken together with any cash fees paid to such Director for services for such calendar year, shall not exceed $400,000 in total value. For the avoidance of doubt, any Director compensation that is deferred shall be counted toward this limit for the year in which the compensation was first earned, and not in the year of payment/settlement.


Section 6.4 Substitute Awards .  Substitute Awards shall not reduce the shares authorized for grant under the Plan or the applicable limitations on grants to a Participant under Section 6.3, nor shall shares subject to a Substitute Award be added to the shares available for Awards under the Plan as provided above.  Additionally, in the event that a company acquired by the Company or with which the Company merges has shares available under a pre-existing plan approved by stockholders and not adopted in contemplation of such acquisition or merger, the shares available for grant pursuant to the terms of such pre-existing plan (as adjusted, to the extent appropriate, using the exchange ratio or other adjustment or valuation ratio or formula used in such acquisition or merger to determine the consideration payable to the holders of common stock of the entities party to such acquisition or merger) may be used for Awards under the Plan and shall not reduce the shares authorized for grant under the Plan (and shares subject to such Awards shall not be added to the shares available for Awards under the Plan as provided above); provided that Awards using such available shares shall not be made after the date awards or grants could have been made under the terms of the pre-existing plan, absent the acquisition or merger, and shall only be made to individuals who were not Employees or Directors prior to such acquisition or merger.
 
ARTICLE 7
PERFORMANCE AWARDS
 
Section 7.1 Purpose . For purposes of Performance Awards issued to Employees, Directors and Consultants, the provisions of this Article 7 shall apply in addition to and, where necessary, in lieu of the provisions of Article 10, Article 11 and Article 12. The provisions of this Article 7 shall control over any contrary provision contained in Article 10, Article 11 or Article 12.
 
Section 7.2 Eligibility . For each Performance Period, the Committee will, in its sole discretion, designate which Employees, Directors and Consultants will be Participants for such period. However, designation of an Employee, Director or Consultant as a Participant for a Performance Period shall not in any manner entitle the Participant to receive an Award for the period. The determination as to whether or not such Participant becomes entitled to an Award for such Performance Period shall be decided solely in accordance with the provisions of this Article 7. Moreover, designation of an Employee, Director or Consultant as a Participant for a particular Performance Period shall not require designation of such Employee, Director or Consultant as a Participant in any subsequent Performance Period and designation of one Employee, Director or Consultant as a Participant shall not require designation of any other Employee, Director or Consultant as a Participant in such period or in any other period.

Section 7.3 Discretion of Committee with Respect to Performance Awards . The Committee shall have the authority to determine which Employees, Directors or Consultants shall be Participants of a Performance Award. With regards to a particular Performance Period, the Committee shall have full discretion to select the length of such Performance Period, the type(s) of Performance Awards to be issued, the Performance Criteria that will be used to establish the Performance Goal(s), the kind(s) and/or level(s) of the Performance Goal(s), whether the Performance Goal(s) is(are) to apply to the Company or any one or more subunits thereof and the Performance Formula. For each Performance Period, with regards to the Performance Awards to be issued for such period, the Committee will exercise its discretion with respect to each of the matters enumerated in the immediately preceding sentence of this Section 7.3 and record the same in writing.

Section 7.4 Payment of Performance Awards .

(a) Condition to Receipt of Performance Award . Unless otherwise provided in the relevant Award Notice, a Participant must be employed by the Company on the last day of a Performance Period to be eligible for a Performance Award for such Performance Period.


(b) Limitation . Unless otherwise provided in the relevant Award Notice, a Participant shall be eligible to receive a Performance Award for a Performance Period only to the extent that: (i) the Performance Goals for such period are achieved; and (ii) and the Performance Formula as applied against such Performance Goals determines that all or some portion of such Participant’s Performance Award has been earned for the Performance Period.

(c) Certification . Following the completion of a Performance Period, the Committee shall meet to review and certify in writing whether, and to what extent, the Performance Goals for the Performance Period have been achieved and, if so, to also calculate and certify in writing the amount of the Performance Awards earned for the period based upon the Performance Formula. The Committee shall then determine the actual size of each Participant’s Performance Award for the Performance Period.

(d) Timing of Award Payments . The Awards granted for a Performance Period shall be paid to Participants as soon as administratively practicable following completion of the certifications required by Section 7.4(c). Performance Awards may be paid in cash, shares of Common Stock, other property, or any combination thereof, in the sole discretion of the Committee.  Performance Awards may be paid in a lump sum or in installments following the close of the Performance Period or, in accordance with procedures established by the Committee, on a deferred basis subject to the requirements of Section 409A of the Code.

ARTICLE 8
STOCK OPTIONS
 
Section 8.1 In General . Awards may be granted in the form of stock options. These stock options may be incentive stock options within the meaning of Section 422 of the Code or non-qualified stock options (i.e., stock options which are not incentive stock options), or a combination of both.
 
Section 8.2 Terms and Conditions of Stock Options . An option shall be exercisable in accordance with such terms and conditions and at such times and during such periods as may be determined by the Committee. Other than in connection with Substitute Awards, the price at which Common Stock may be purchased upon exercise of a stock option shall be not less than 100 percent of the Fair Market Value of the Common Stock, as determined by the Committee, on the Effective Date of the option’s grant. In addition, the term of a stock option may not exceed ten years. Notwithstanding the foregoing, in the event that on the last business day of the term of an option (other than an incentive stock option) (i) the exercise of the option is prohibited by applicable law or (ii) shares may not be purchased or sold by certain employees or directors of the Company due to the “black-out period” of a Company policy or a “lock-up” agreement undertaken in connection with an issuance of securities by the Company, the term of the option shall be extended for a period of thirty (30) days following the end of the legal prohibition, black-out period or lock-up agreement.

Section 8.3 Restrictions Relating to Incentive Stock Options . Stock options issued in the form of incentive stock options shall, in addition to being subject to the terms and conditions of Section 8.2, comply with Section 422 of the Code. Accordingly, the aggregate Fair Market Value (determined at the time the option was granted) of the Common Stock with respect to which incentive stock options are exercisable for the first time by a Participant during any calendar year (under this Plan or any other plan of the Company) shall not exceed $100,000 (or such other limit as may be required by Section 422 of the Code).

Section 8.4 Exercise . Upon exercise, the option price of a stock option may be paid in cash, or, to the extent permitted by the Committee, through net settlement in shares or through tendering, by either actual delivery of shares or by attestation, shares of Common Stock, a combination of the foregoing or such other consideration as the Committee may deem appropriate. The Committee shall establish appropriate methods for accepting Common Stock, whether restricted or unrestricted, and may impose such conditions as it deems appropriate on the use of such Common Stock to exercise a stock option. Stock options awarded under the Plan may also be exercised by way of a broker-assisted stock option exercise program, if any, provided such program is available at the time of the option’s exercise. Notwithstanding the foregoing or the provision of any Award Notice, a Participant may not pay the exercise price of a stock option using shares of Common Stock if, in the opinion of counsel to the Company, there is a substantial likelihood that the use of such form of payment would result in accounting treatment to the Company under generally accepted accounting principles that the Committee reasonably determines is adverse to the Company.

ARTICLE 9
STOCK APPRECIATION RIGHTS
 
Section 9.1 In General . Awards may be granted in the form of stock appreciation rights (“SARs”). SARs entitle the Participant to receive a payment equal to the appreciation in a stated number of shares of Common Stock from the exercise price to the Fair Market Value of the Common Stock on the date of exercise. The “exercise price” for a particular SAR shall be defined in the Award Notice for that SAR. An SAR may be granted in tandem with all or a portion of a related stock option under the Plan (“Tandem SARs”), or may be granted separately (“Freestanding SARs”). A Tandem SAR may be granted either at the time of the grant of the related stock option or at any time thereafter during the term of the stock option. A SAR shall have a term not greater than ten years.   Notwithstanding the foregoing, in the event that on the last business day of the term of a SAR (x) the exercise of the SAR is prohibited by applicable law or (y) shares of Common Stock may not be purchased or sold by certain employees or directors of the Company due to the “black-out period” of a Company policy or a “lock-up” agreement undertaken in connection with an issuance of securities by the Company, the term shall be extended for a period of thirty (30) days following the end of the legal prohibition, black-out period or lock-up agreement.

Section 9.2 Terms and Conditions of Tandem SARs . A Tandem SAR shall be exercisable to the extent, and only to the extent, that the related stock option is exercisable, and the “exercise price” of such a SAR (the base from which the value of the SAR is measured at its exercise) shall be the option price under the related stock option (subject to the requirements of Section 409A of the Code and except in the case of Substitute Awards). However, at no time shall a Tandem SAR be issued if the option price of its related stock option is less than the Fair Market Value of the Common Stock, as determined by the Committee, on the Effective Date of the Tandem SAR’s grant. If a related stock option is exercised as to some or all of the shares covered by the Award, the related Tandem SAR, if any, shall be canceled automatically to the extent of the number of shares covered by the stock option exercise. Upon exercise of a Tandem SAR as to some or all of the shares covered by the Award, the related stock option shall be canceled automatically to the extent of the number of shares covered by such exercise. Moreover, all Tandem SARs shall expire not later than ten years from the Effective Date of the SAR’s grant.

Section 9.3 Terms and Conditions of Freestanding SARs . Freestanding SARs shall be exercisable or automatically mature in accordance with such terms and conditions and at such times and during such periods as may be determined by the Committee. Except in connection with Substitute Awards, the exercise price of a Freestanding SAR shall be not less than 100 percent of the Fair Market Value of the Common Stock on the Effective Date of the Freestanding SAR’s grant. Moreover, all Freestanding SARs shall expire not later than ten years from the Effective Date of the Freestanding SAR’s grant.

Section 9.4 Deemed Exercise . The Committee may provide that a SAR shall be deemed to be exercised at the close of business on the scheduled expiration date of such SAR if at such time the SAR by its terms remains exercisable and, if so exercised, would result in a payment to the holder of such SAR.

Section 9.5 Payment . Unless otherwise provided in an Award Notice, an SAR may be paid in cash, Common Stock or any combination thereof, as determined by the Committee, in its sole and absolute discretion, at the time that the SAR is exercised.

ARTICLE 10
STOCK AWARDS
 
Section 10.1 Grants . Awards may be granted in the form of Stock Awards. Stock Awards shall be awarded in such numbers and at such times during the term of the Plan as the Committee shall determine.
 
Section 10.2 Performance Criteria . For Stock Awards conditioned, restricted and/or limited based on performance criteria, the length of the performance period, the performance objectives to be achieved during the performance period, and the measure of whether and to what degree such objectives have been attained shall be conclusively determined by the Committee in the exercise of its absolute discretion. Performance objectives may be revised by the Committee, at such times as it deems appropriate during the performance period, in order to take into consideration any unforeseen events or changes in circumstances.

Section 10.3 Rights as Stockholders . During the period in which any restricted shares of Common Stock are subject to any restrictions, the Committee may, in its sole discretion, deny a Participant to whom such restricted shares have been awarded all or any of the rights of a stockholder with respect to such shares, including, but not by way of limitation, limiting the right to vote such shares or the right to receive dividends on such shares.

Section 10.4 Evidence of Award . Any Stock Award granted under the Plan may be evidenced in such manner as the Committee deems appropriate, including, without limitation, book-entry registration or issuance of a stock certificate or certificates, with such restrictive legends and/or stop transfer instructions as the Committee deems appropriate.
 
ARTICLE 11
RESTRICTED STOCK UNIT AWARDS
 
Section 11.1 Grants . Awards may be granted in the form of Restricted Stock Unit Awards. Restricted Stock Unit Awards shall be awarded in such numbers and at such times during the term of the Plan as the Committee shall determine.
 
Section 11.2 Rights as Stockholders . Until the shares of Common Stock to be received upon the vesting of such Restricted Stock Unit Award are actually received by a Participant, the Participant shall have no rights as a stockholder with respect to such shares.

Section 11.3 Evidence of Award . A Restricted Stock Unit Award granted under the Plan may be recorded on the books and records of USX in such manner as the Committee deems appropriate.
 
ARTICLE 12
PERFORMANCE UNITS
 
Section 12.1 Grants . Awards may be granted in the form of performance units. Performance units, as that term is used in this Plan, shall refer to units valued by reference to designated criteria established by the Committee, other than Common Stock.
 
Section 12.2 Performance Criteria . Performance units shall be contingent on the attainment during a performance period of certain performance objectives. The length of the performance period, the performance objectives to be achieved during the performance period, and the measure of whether and to what degree such objectives have been attained shall be conclusively determined by the Committee in the exercise of its absolute discretion. Performance objectives may be revised by the Committee, at such times as it deems appropriate during the performance period, in order to take into consideration any unforeseen events or changes in circumstances.

ARTICLE 13
PAYMENT OF AWARDS
 
Section 13.1 Payment . Absent a Plan or Award Notice provision to the contrary, payment of Awards may, at the discretion of the Committee, be made in cash, Common Stock, a combination of cash and Common Stock or any other form of property as the Committee shall determine. In addition, payment of Awards may include such terms, conditions, restrictions and/or limitations, if any, as the Committee deems appropriate, including, in the case of Awards paid in the form of Common Stock, restrictions on transfer and forfeiture provisions; provided, however, such terms, conditions, restrictions and/or limitations are not inconsistent with the Plan.
 
Section 13.2 Withholding Taxes . The Company shall be entitled to deduct from any payment under the Plan, regardless of the form of such payment, the amount of all applicable income and employment taxes required by law to be withheld with respect to such payment or may require the Participant to pay to it such tax prior to and as a condition of the making of such payment. In accordance with any applicable administrative guidelines it establishes, the Committee may allow a Participant to pay the amount of taxes required by law to be withheld from an Award by withholding from any payment of Common Stock due as a result of such Award, or by permitting the Participant to deliver to USX, shares of Common Stock having a Fair Market Value equal to the minimum amount of such required withholding taxes (or, to the extent permitted by the Committee, such greater amount reflecting the Participant’s actual taxes on such Award). Notwithstanding the foregoing or the provision of any Award Notice, a Participant may not pay the amount of taxes required by law to be withheld using shares of Common Stock if, in the opinion of counsel to the Company, there is a substantial likelihood that the use of such form of payment would result in adverse accounting treatment to the Company under generally accepted accounting principles.
ARTICLE 14
DIVIDEND AND DIVIDEND EQUIVALENTS
 
Subject to the provisions of the Plan and any Award Notice, the recipient of an Award other than an option or SAR may, if so determined by the Committee, be entitled to receive amounts equivalent to cash, stock or other property dividends on Common Stock (“Dividend Equivalents”) with respect to the number of shares covered by the Award, as determined by the Committee, in its sole discretion.  The Committee may provide that the Dividend Equivalents (if any) shall be deemed to have been reinvested in additional shares or otherwise reinvested.  Notwithstanding the foregoing, dividends and Dividend Equivalents shall not be paid out on an unvested Award unless and until such underlying Award vests.
 
ARTICLE 15
DEFERRAL OF AWARDS
 
Subject to Section 16.8, at the discretion of the Committee, payment of any Award; salary or bonus compensation; or Company board compensation; dividend or dividend equivalent, or any portion thereof, may be deferred by a Participant until such time as the Committee may establish. All such deferrals shall be accomplished by the delivery of a written, irrevocable election by the Participant prior to the time established by the Committee for such purpose, on a form provided by the Company. Further, all deferrals shall be made in accordance with administrative guidelines established by the Committee to ensure that such deferrals comply with all applicable requirements of the Code. Deferred payments shall be paid in a lump sum or installments, as determined by the Committee. Deferred Awards may also be credited with interest, at such rates to be determined by the Committee, or invested by the Company, and, with respect to those deferred Awards denominated in the form of Common Stock, credited with dividends or dividend equivalents.

ARTICLE 16
MISCELLANEOUS
 
Section 16.1 Nonassignability . Except as otherwise provided in an Award Notice or below, no Awards or any other payment under the Plan shall be subject in any manner to alienation, anticipation, sale, transfer (except by will or the laws of descent and distribution), assignment or pledge, nor shall any Award be payable to or exercisable by anyone other than the Participant to whom it was granted. To the extent and under such terms and conditions as determined by the Committee, a Participant may assign or transfer an Award without consideration (each transferee thereof, a “Permitted Assignee”) (i) to the Participant’s spouse, children or grandchildren (including any adopted and step children or grandchildren), parents, grandparents or siblings, (ii) to a trust for the benefit of one or more of the Participant or the persons referred to in clause (i), (iii) to a partnership, limited liability company or corporation in which the Participant or the persons referred to in clause (i) are the only partners, members or shareholders or (iv) for charitable donations; provided that such Permitted Assignee shall be bound by and subject to all of the terms and conditions of the Plan and the Award Notice relating to the transferred Award and shall execute an agreement satisfactory to the Company evidencing such obligations; and provided further that such Participant shall remain bound by the terms and conditions of the Plan.  The Company shall cooperate with any Permitted Assignee and the Company’s transfer agent in effectuating any transfer permitted under this Section.
 
Section 16.2 Regulatory Approvals and Listings . Notwithstanding anything contained in this Plan to the contrary, USX shall have no obligation to issue or deliver certificates of Common Stock evidencing Stock Awards or any other Award resulting in the payment of Common Stock prior to (i) the obtaining of any approval from any governmental agency which USX shall, in its sole discretion, determine to be necessary or advisable, (ii) the admission of such shares to listing on the stock exchange on which the Common Stock may be listed, and (iii) the completion of any registration or other qualification of said shares under any state or federal law or ruling of any governmental body which USX shall, in its sole discretion, determine to be necessary or advisable.

Section 16.3 No Right to Continued Employment or Grants . Participation in the Plan shall not give any Participant the right to remain in the employ or other service of the Company. The Company reserves the right to terminate the employment or other service of a Participant at any time. Further, the adoption of this Plan shall not be deemed to give any Employee, Director or any other individual any right to be selected as a Participant or to be granted an Award. In addition, no Employee, Director or any other individual having been selected for an Award, shall have at any time the right to receive any additional Awards. The Company shall not be liable for the loss of existing or potential profit from an Award granted in the event of termination of an employment or other relationship.

Section 16.4 Amendment/Termination . The Committee may suspend or terminate the Plan at any time for any reason with or without prior notice. In addition, the Committee may, from time to time for any reason and with or without prior notice, amend the Plan in any manner, but may not without stockholder approval adopt any amendment which would require the vote of the stockholders of USX if such approval is necessary or deemed advisable with respect to tax, securities or other applicable laws or regulations, including, but not limited to, the listing requirements of the stock exchanges on which the securities of USX are listed. Notwithstanding the foregoing, without the consent of a Participant (except as otherwise provided in Section 6.2), no amendment may materially and adversely affect any of the rights of such Participant under any Award theretofore granted to such Participant under the Plan. No Awards shall be granted under the Plan after the tenth anniversary of the Commencement Date, but Awards theretofore granted may extend beyond that date.


Section 16.5 Governing Law . The Plan shall be governed by and construed in accordance with the laws of the State of Nevada, except as superseded by applicable federal law, without giving effect to its conflicts of law provisions.

Section 16.6 No Right, Title or Interest in Company Assets . No Participant shall have any rights as a stockholder as a result of participation in the Plan until the date of issuance of a stock certificate in his or her name, and, in the case of restricted shares of Common Stock, such rights are granted to the Participant under the Plan. To the extent any person acquires a right to receive payments from the Company under the Plan, such rights shall be no greater than the rights of an unsecured creditor of the Company and the Participant shall not have any rights in or against any specific assets of the Company. All of the Awards granted under the Plan shall be unfunded.

Section 16.7 No Guarantee of Tax Consequences . No person connected with the Plan in any capacity, including, but not limited to, the Company and its directors, officers, agents and employees, makes any representation, commitment or guarantee that any tax treatment, including, but not limited to, federal, state and local income, estate and gift tax treatment, will be applicable with respect to the tax treatment of any Award, any amounts deferred under the Plan, or paid to or for the benefit of a Participant under the Plan, or that such tax treatment will apply to or be available to a Participant on account of participation in the Plan.

Section 16.8 Section 409A . This Plan and Awards issued hereunder shall be interpreted in accordance with Section 409A of the Code and Department of Treasury regulations and other interpretative guidance issued thereunder, including without limitation any such regulations or other guidance that may be issued after the Commencement Date. Notwithstanding any provision of the Plan to the contrary, in the event that the Committee determines that any amounts payable hereunder will be taxable to a Participant under Section 409A of the Code and related Department of Treasury guidance prior to payment to such Participant of such amount, the Company may (a) adopt such amendments to the Plan and Awards and appropriate policies and procedures, including amendments and policies with retroactive effect, that the Committee determines necessary or appropriate to preserve the intended tax treatment of the benefits provided by the Plan and Awards hereunder and/or (b) take such other actions as the Committee determines necessary or appropriate to avoid the imposition of an additional tax under Section 409A of the Code; provided, however, that neither the Company, the Committee nor any of the Company’s employees, directors or representatives shall have any liability to Participants with respect to this Section 16.8.

Should any payments made in accordance with the Plan to a “specified employee” (as defined under Section 409A of the Code) be determined to be payments from a nonqualified deferred compensation plan and are payable in connection with a Participant’s “separation from service” (as defined under Section 409A of the Code), that are not exempt from Section 409A of the Code as a short-term deferral or otherwise, these payments, to the extent otherwise payable within six (6) months after the Participant’s separation from service, and to the extent necessary to avoid the imposition of taxes under Section 409A of the Code, will be paid in a lump sum on the earlier of the date that is six (6) months and one day after the Participant’s date of separation from service or the date of the Participant’s death.  For purposes of Section 409A of the Code, the payments to be made to a Participant in accordance with this Plan shall be treated as a right to a series of separate payments.

Section 16.9 Successors and Assigns . The Plan shall be binding on all successors and assigns of the Company and a Participant, including without limitation, the estate of such Participant and the executor, administrator or trustee of such estate, or any receiver or trustee in bankruptcy or representative of the Participant’s creditors.


Section 16.10 Recoupment .  All Awards granted under the Plan will be subject to recoupment in accordance with any clawback policy maintained by the Company or that the Company is required to adopt pursuant to the listing standards of any national securities exchange or association on which the Company’s securities are listed or as is otherwise required by the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act or other applicable law. In addition, the Board may impose such other clawback, recovery or recoupment provisions in an Award Notice as the Board determines necessary or appropriate, including but not limited to a reacquisition right in respect of previously acquired shares or other cash or property upon the occurrence of “cause” (as such term may be defined in an Award Notice or other Company agreement). No recovery of compensation under such a clawback policy will be an event giving rise to a right to voluntary terminate employment upon a “resignation for good reason,” or for a “constructive termination” or any similar term under any plan of or agreement with the Company.

Section 16.11 Stop Transfer Orders .  All certificates for shares delivered under the Plan pursuant to any Award shall be subject to such stop-transfer orders and other restrictions as the Committee may deem advisable under the rules, regulations and other requirements of the SEC, any stock exchange upon which the Common Stock is then listed, and any applicable federal or state securities law, and the Committee may cause a legend or legends to be put on any such certificates to make appropriate reference to such restrictions.

Section 16.12 Nature of Payments .  All Awards made pursuant to the Plan are in consideration of services performed or to be performed for the Company, division or business unit of the Company.  Any income or gain realized pursuant to Awards under the Plan constitutes a special incentive payment to the Participant and shall not be taken into account, to the extent permissible under applicable law, as compensation for purposes of any of the employee benefit plans of the Company except as may be determined by the Committee or by the Board (or as may be required by the terms of such plan).

Section 16.13 Other Plans .  Nothing contained in the Plan shall prevent the Committee or the Board from adopting other or additional compensation arrangements, subject to stockholder approval if such approval is required; and such arrangements may be either generally applicable or applicable only in specific cases.  In addition, the grant of any Award under the Plan and the issuance of shares pursuant to any Award does not affect or restrict in any way the right or power of the Company or the stockholders of the Company to make or authorize any adjustment, recapitalization, reorganization or other change in the Company’s capital structure or its business, any merger or consolidation of the Company, any issue of stock or of options, options or rights to purchase stock or of bonds, debentures, preferred or prior preference stocks whose rights are superior to or affect the shares of Common Stock or the rights thereof or which are convertible into or exchangeable for shares of Common Stock, or the dissolution or liquidation of the Company, or any sale or transfer of all or any part of its assets or business, or any other corporate act or proceeding, whether of a similar character or otherwise.

Section 16.14 Change in Time Commitment .  In the event a Participant’s regular level of time commitment in the performance of his or her services for the Company is reduced (for example, and without limitation, if the Participant is an Employee of the Company and the Employee has a change in status from a full-time Employee to a part-time Employee  or takes an extended leave of absence) after the date of grant of any Award to the Participant, the Board has the right in its sole discretion to (x) make a corresponding reduction in the number of shares or cash amount subject to any portion of such Award that is scheduled to vest or become payable after the date of such change in time commitment, and (y) in lieu of or in combination with such a reduction, extend the vesting or payment schedule applicable to such Award. In the event of any such reduction, the Participant will have no right with respect to any portion of the Award that is so reduced or extended.


Section16.15 No Obligation to Notify or Minimize Taxes; No Liability for Taxes .  The Company has no duty or obligation to any Participant to advise such holder as to the time or manner of exercising an Award.  Furthermore, the Company has no duty or obligation to warn or otherwise advise such holder of a pending termination or expiration of an Award or a possible period in which the Award may not be exercised.  The Company has no duty or obligation to minimize the tax consequences of an Award to the holder of such Award and will not be liable to any holder of an Award for any adverse tax consequences to such holder in connection with an Award.  As a condition to accepting an Award under the Plan, each Participant (i) agrees to not make any claim against the Company, or any of its officers, Directors, or Employees related to tax liabilities arising from such Award or other Company compensation and (ii) acknowledges that such Participant was advised to consult with his or her own personal tax, financial and other legal advisors regarding the tax consequences of the Award and has either done so or knowingly and voluntarily declined to do so.

Section 16.16 Severability .  The provisions of the Plan shall be deemed severable.  If any provision of the Plan shall be held unlawful or otherwise invalid or unenforceable in whole or in part by a court of competent jurisdiction or by reason of change in a law or regulation, such provision shall (a) be deemed limited to the extent that such court of competent jurisdiction deems it lawful, valid and/or enforceable and as so limited shall remain in full force and effect, and (b) not affect any other provision of the Plan or part thereof, each of which shall remain in full force and effect.  If the making of any payment or the provision of any other benefit required under the Plan shall be held unlawful or otherwise invalid or unenforceable by a court of competent jurisdiction or any governmental regulatory agency, or impermissible under the rules of any securities exchange on which the shares of Common Stock are listed, such unlawfulness, invalidity, unenforceability or impermissibility shall not prevent any other payment or benefit from being made or provided under the Plan, and if the making of any payment in full or the provision of any other benefit required under the Plan in full would be unlawful or otherwise invalid or impermissible, then such unlawfulness, invalidity or impermissibility shall not prevent such payment or benefit from being made or provided in part, to the extent that it would not be unlawful, invalid or impermissible and the maximum payment or benefit that would not be unlawful, invalid or impermissible shall be made or provided under the Plan.

Section 16.17 Unfunded Status of the Plan .  The Plan is intended to constitute an “unfunded” plan for incentive compensation.  With respect to any payments not yet made to a Participant by the Company, nothing contained herein shall give any such Participant any rights that are greater than those of a general creditor of the Company.  In its sole discretion, the Committee may authorize the creation of trusts or other arrangements to meet the obligations created under the Plan to deliver the shares of Common Stock or payments in lieu of or with respect to Awards hereunder; provided, however, that the existence of such trusts or other arrangements is consistent with the unfunded status of the Plan.

Section 16.18 Indemnity .  To the extent allowable pursuant to applicable law, each member of the Committee or of the Board and any person to whom the Committee has delegated any of its authority under the Plan shall be indemnified and held harmless by the Company from any loss, cost, liability, or expense that may be imposed upon or reasonably incurred by such person in connection with or resulting from any claim, action, suit, or proceeding to which he or she may be a party or in which he or she may be involved by reason of any action or failure to act pursuant to the Plan and against and from any and all amounts paid by him or her in satisfaction of judgment in such action, suit, or proceeding against him or her; provided he or she gives the Company an opportunity, at its own expense, to handle and defend the same before he or she undertakes to handle and defend it on his or her own behalf.  The foregoing right of indemnification shall not be exclusive of any other rights of indemnification to which such persons may be entitled pursuant to the Company’s Certificate of Incorporation or By-laws, as a matter of law, or otherwise, or any power that the Company may have to indemnify them or hold them harmless.
 
Back to Form S-8

Exhibit 4.6
U.S. XPRESS ENTERPRISES, INC.
EMPLOYEE STOCK PURCHASE PLAN

 
1.     Purpose . The purpose of the Plan is to provide employees of the Company and its Designated Companies with an opportunity to purchase Common Stock through accumulated Contributions. The Company intends for the Plan to qualify as an “employee stock purchase plan” under Section 423 of the Code. Accordingly, the Plan will be construed so as to extend and limit Plan participation in a uniform and nondiscriminatory basis consistent with the requirements of Section 423 of the Code. This Plan has been approved by the Company’s stockholders and Board prior to the Registration Date (as hereinafter defined).
 
2.     Definitions .
 
(a)
 
Administrator ” means the Board or any Committee designated by the Board to administer the Plan pursuant to Section 14.
     
(b)
 
Applicable Laws ” means the requirements relating to the administration of equity-based awards and the related issuance of shares of Common Stock under U.S. state corporate laws, U.S. federal and state securities laws, the Code, and any stock exchange or quotation system on which the Common Stock is listed or quoted.
     
(c)
 
Board ” means the Board of Directors of the Company.
     
(d)
 
Code ” means the U.S. Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended. Reference to a specific section of the Code or U.S. Treasury Regulation thereunder will include such section or regulation, any valid regulation or other official applicable guidance promulgated under such section, and any comparable provision of any future legislation or regulation amending, supplementing or superseding such section or regulation.
     
(e)
 
Committee ” means the Compensation Committee of the Board.
     
(f)
 
Common Stock ” means the Class A common stock of the Company.
     
(g)
 
Company ” means U.S. Xpress Enterprises, Inc., a Delaware corporation, or any successor thereto.
     
(h)
 
Compensation ” shall be defined from time to time by the Committee in its sole discretion with respect to any Offering Period. Except as otherwise defined by the Committee from time to time in its sole discretion, “Compensation” means the pre-tax regular base wages paid to such Eligible Employee by the Company or a Designated Company prior to giving effect to any compensation reductions made in connection with plans described under Sections 125, 402(g), or 401(k) of the Code. Except as otherwise determined by the Committee, “Compensation” does not include: (1) any bonuses or commissions, (2) overtime pay, (3) any amounts contributed by the Company or a Designated Company to any pension plan, (4) any automobile or relocation allowances (or reimbursement for any such expenses), (5) any amounts realized from the exercise of any stock options or other equity incentive awards, (6) any amounts paid by the Company or a Designated Company for other fringe benefits, such as health and welfare, hospitalization and group life insurance benefits, or perquisites, or paid in lieu of such benefits, or (7) other forms of compensation.
     
(i)
 
Contributions ” means the payroll deductions used to fund the exercise of options granted pursuant to the Plan.

(j)
 
Designated Company ” means any Subsidiary that has been designated by the Administrator from time to time in its sole discretion as eligible to participate in the Plan. As of the Effective Date, the Company and the Subsidiaries listed on Exhibit A hereto are Designated Companies.
     
(k)
 
Designated Percent ” means the percentage of Fair Market Value determined by the Administrator for purposes of determining the Purchase Price.
     
(l)
 
Effective Date ” means the business day immediately prior to the Registration Date.
     
(m)
 
Eligible Employee ” means any individual who is an employee providing services to the Company or a Designated Company, unless any such employee is specifically excluded by the Administrator from participation. The Administrator, in its discretion, from time to time may, prior to an Offering Date for all options to be granted on such Offering Date in an Offering, determine (on a uniform and nondiscriminatory basis or as otherwise permitted by Treasury Regulation Section 1.423-2) that the definition of Eligible Employee will or will not include an individual if he or she: (i) has not completed at least one (1) year of service since his or her last hire date (or such lesser period of time as may be determined by the Administrator in its discretion), (ii) customarily works not more than twenty (20) hours per week (or such lesser period of time as may be determined by the Administrator in its discretion), (iii) customarily works not more than five (5) months per calendar year (or such lesser period of time as may be determined by the Administrator in its discretion), or (iv) is a highly compensated employee within the meaning of Section 414(q) of the Code, provided the exclusion is applied with respect to each Offering in an identical manner to all highly compensated individuals of the Employer whose employees are participating in that Offering. Each exclusion shall be applied with respect to an Offering in a manner complying with U.S. Treasury Regulation Section 1.423-2(e)(2)(ii).
     
(n)
 
Employer ” means the employer of the applicable Eligible Employee(s).
     
(o)
 
Exchange Act ” means the U.S. Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended, including the rules and regulations promulgated thereunder.
     
(p)
 
Fair Market Value ” means, as of any date, the value of a share of Common Stock determined as follows:
     
    (i) For purposes of the Offering Date of the first Offering Period under the Plan, the Fair Market Value will be the initial price to the public as set forth in the final prospectus related to the Registration Statement.
       
    (ii) For all other purposes, the Fair Market Value will be the closing price of the Common Stock on the principal national securities exchange on which the Common Stock is then listed or admitted to trading, and the closing price shall be the last reported sale price regular way on such date (or, if no sale takes place on such date, the last reported sale price regular way on the next preceding date on which such sale took place), as reported by such exchange. If the Common Stock is not then so listed or admitted to trading on a national securities exchange, then Fair Market Value shall be the closing price (the last reported sale price regular way) of the Common Stock in the over-the-counter market as reported by the National Association of Securities Dealers Automated Quotation System (“NASDAQ”), if the closing price of the Common Stock is then reported by NASDAQ. If the Common Stock closing price is not then reported by NASDAQ, then Fair Market Value shall be the mean between the representative closing bid and closing asked prices of the Common Stock in the over-the-counter market as reported by NASDAQ. If the Common Stock bid and asked prices are not then reported by NASDAQ, then Fair Market Value shall be the quote furnished by any member of the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority selected from time to time by the Company for that purpose. If no member of the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority then furnishes quotes with respect to the Common Stock, then Fair Market Value shall be the value determined by the Committee in good faith .
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(q)
 
Holding Period ” has the meaning set forth in Section 9(b) hereof.
     
(r)
 
Maximum Share Amount ” means the maximum number of Shares that a Participant may purchase on any given Purchase Date, as determined by the Committee in its sole discretion and subject to the limitations set forth in Section 3(b). Until specified otherwise by the Committee, the Maximum Share Amount for any Offering Period shall be determined by dividing (i) $5,000 by (ii) the Fair Market Value of one share of Common Stock on the Offering Date for such Offering Period.
     
(s)
 
New Purchase Date ” means a new Purchase Date if the Administrator shortens any Offering Period then in progress.
     
(t)
 
Offering ” means an offer under the Plan of an option that may be exercised during an Offering Period.
     
(u)
 
Offering Date ” means the first Trading Day of each Offering Period.
     
(v)
 
Offering Periods ” means the period of time during which offers to purchase Common Stock are outstanding under the Plan as further described in Section 4. The Committee shall determine the length of each Offering Period, which need not be uniform; provided that no Offering Period shall exceed twenty-seven (27) months in length, and provided, further, that the first Offering Period under the Plan will commence on the first Trading Day on or after January 1, 2019. No voluntary payroll deductions shall be solicited until after the effective date of a registration statement on Form S-8 filed under the Securities Act of 1933, as amended, covering the shares to be issued under the Plan.
     
(w)
 
Parent ” means a “parent corporation,” whether now or hereafter existing, as defined in Section 424(e) of the Code.
     
(x)
 
Participant ” means an Eligible Employee that participates in the Plan.
     
(y)
 
Plan ” means this U.S. Xpress Enterprises Inc. Employee Stock Purchase Plan.
     
(z)
 
Purchase Date ” means the last Trading Day of the Offering Period.
     
(aa)
 
Purchase Price ” means the Designated Percent of the Fair Market Value of a share of Common Stock on the Offering Date or on the Purchase Date, whichever is lower. Unless otherwise determined by the Administrator, the Designated Percent for purposes of the foregoing sentence is eighty-five percent (85%). The Administrator may change the Designated Percent for any Offering Period but in no event shall the Designated Percent be less than eighty-five percent (85%).
     
(bb)
 
Registration Date ” means the effective date of the Registration Statement.
     
(cc)
 
Registration Statement ” means the registration statement on Form S-1 filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission for the initial public offering of Common Stock.
     
(dd)
 
Securities Act ” means the Securities Act of 1933, as amended from time to time.
     
(ee)
 
Subsidiary ” means a “subsidiary corporation,” whether now or hereafter existing, as defined in Section 424(f) of the Code.
 
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(ff)
 
Trading Day ” means a day on which the New York Stock Exchange is open for trading.
     
(gg)
 
U.S. Treasury Regulations ” means the Treasury regulations of the Code. Reference to a specific Treasury Regulation or Section of the Code shall include such Treasury Regulation or Section, any valid regulation promulgated under such Section, and any comparable provision of any future legislation or regulation amending, supplementing or superseding such Section or regulation.
 
3.     Eligibility; Offering Periods .
 
(a)           Eligibility . Any Eligible Employee on a given Offering Date will be eligible to participate in the Plan, subject to the requirements of Section 5.
 
(b)           Limitations . Any provisions of the Plan to the contrary notwithstanding, no Eligible Employee will be granted an option under the Plan (i) to the extent that, immediately after the grant, such Eligible Employee (or any other person whose stock would be attributed to such Eligible Employee pursuant to Section 424(d) of the Code) would own capital stock of the Company or any Parent or Subsidiary of the Company and/or hold outstanding options to purchase such stock possessing five percent (5%) or more of the total combined voting power or value of all classes of the capital stock of the Company or of any Parent or Subsidiary of the Company, or (ii) to the extent that his or her rights to purchase stock under all employee stock purchase plans (as defined in Section 423 of the Code) of the Company or any Parent or Subsidiary of the Company accrues at a rate which exceeds twenty-five thousand dollars ($25,000) worth of stock (determined at the Fair Market Value of the stock at the time such option is granted) for each calendar year in which such option is outstanding at any time, as determined in accordance with Section 423 of the Code and the regulations thereunder.
 
4.     Offering Periods . The Plan shall be implemented by consecutive Offering Periods with a new Offering Period commencing on the first Trading Day on or after January 1 and July 1 of each year, or on such other date as the Administrator shall determine, and continuing thereafter until terminated in accordance with the Plan; provided, however, that the first Offering Period under the Plan will commence with the first Trading Day on or after January 1, 2019. Unless otherwise determined by the Administrator, each Offering Period shall be for a period of six (6) months during which an option granted pursuant to the Plan may be exercised.  The Administrator will have the power to change the duration of Offering Periods (including the commencement dates thereof) without stockholder approval. Any such change shall be announced prior to the scheduled beginning of the first Offering Period to be affected thereafter.
 
5.     Participation . An Eligible Employee may participate in the Plan by (i) submitting to the Company’s stock administration office (or its designee), on or before a date determined by the Administrator prior to an applicable Offering Date, a properly completed subscription agreement authorizing Contributions in the form provided by the Administrator for such purpose, or (ii) following an electronic or other enrollment procedure determined by the Administrator.
 
6.     Contributions .
 
(a)          At the time a Participant enrolls in the Plan pursuant to Section 5, he or she will elect to have Contributions made on each pay day during the Offering Period in an amount not exceeding fifteen percent (15%) of the Compensation which he or she receives on each pay day during the Offering Period. A Participant’s subscription agreement will remain in effect for successive Offering Periods unless terminated as provided in Section 10 hereof.
 
(b)          Payroll deductions for a Participant will commence on the first pay day following the Offering Date and will end on the last pay day prior to the Purchase Date of such Offering Period to which such authorization is applicable, unless sooner terminated by the Participant as provided in Section 10 hereof.
 
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(c)          All Contributions made for a Participant will be credited to his or her account under the Plan and Contributions will be made in whole percentages only.
 
(d)          A Participant may discontinue his or her participation in the Plan as provided in Section 10. A Participant may decrease the rate of his or her Contributions during an Offering Period by delivery of a subscription agreement to the Administrator or its designee; provided, however, that a Participant may make such a change only once per Offering Period. The change will become effective as soon as administratively practicable after receipt; provided, however, that a ny such change shall be effective no earlier than the first Offering Period that begins at least five (5) business days after the Administrator’s receipt of a new subscription agreement from the Participant, unless a later date for implementation is requested by the Participant.
 
(e)          Notwithstanding the foregoing, to the extent necessary to comply with Section 423(b)(8) of the Code and Section 3(b), a Participant’s Contributions may be decreased to zero percent (0%) at any time during an Offering Period. Subject to Section 423(b)(8) of the Code, Contributions will recommence at the rate originally elected by the Participant effective as of the beginning of the first Offering Period scheduled to end in the following calendar year, unless terminated by the Participant as provided in Section 10.
 
(f)          At the time the option is exercised, in whole or in part, or at the time some or all of the Common Stock issued under the Plan is disposed of (or any other time that a taxable event related to the Plan occurs), in each case, as related to a Participant’s option under the Plan, the Participant must make adequate provision for the Company’s or Employer’s federal, state, local or any other tax liability, if any, which arise upon the exercise of the option or the disposition of the Common Stock (or any other time that a taxable event related to the Participant under the Plan occurs). At any time, the Company or the Employer may, but will not be obligated to, withhold from the Participant’s compensation the amount necessary for the Company or the Employer to meet applicable withholding obligations, including any withholding required to make available to the Company or the Employer any tax deductions or benefits attributable to sale or early disposition of Common Stock by the Eligible Employee. In addition, the Company or the Employer may, but will not be obligated to, withhold from the proceeds of the sale of Common Stock or any other method of withholding the Company or the Employer deems appropriate to the extent permitted by U.S. Treasury Regulation Section 1.423-2(f).
 
7.     Grant of Option . On the Offering Date of each Offering Period, each Eligible Employee participating in such Offering Period will be granted an option to purchase on each Purchase Date during such Offering Period (at the applicable Purchase Price) up to a number of shares of Common Stock determined by dividing such Eligible Employee’s Contributions accumulated during such Offering Period prior to such Purchase Date and retained in the Eligible Employee’s account as of the Purchase Date by the applicable Purchase Price; provided that in no event will an Eligible Employee be permitted to purchase during each Offering Period more than the Maximum Share Amount and provided further that such purchase will be subject to the limitations set forth in Sections 3(b) and 13. The Eligible Employee may accept the grant of such option by electing to participate in the Plan in accordance with the requirements of Section 5. The Administrator may, for future Offering Periods, increase or decrease, in its absolute discretion, the maximum number of shares of Common Stock that an Eligible Employee may purchase during each Offering Period. Exercise of the option will occur as provided in Section 8, unless the Participant has withdrawn pursuant to Section 10. The option will expire on the last day of the Offering Period.
 
8.     Exercise of Option .
 
(a)          Unless a Participant withdraws from the Plan as provided in Section 10, his or her option for the purchase of shares of Common Stock will be exercised automatically on the Purchase Date, and the maximum number of full shares subject to the option will be purchased for such Participant at the applicable Purchase Price with the accumulated Contributions from his or her account; provided that in no event will an Eligible Employee be permitted to purchase during each Offering Period more than the Maximum Share Amount and provided further that such purchase will be subject to the limitations set forth in Sections 3(b) and 13. No fractional shares of Common Stock will be purchased. Any Contributions accumulated in a Participant’s account which are not sufficient to purchase a full share will be refunded to the Participant, without interest. During a Participant’s lifetime, a Participant’s option to purchase shares hereunder is exercisable only by him or her.
 
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(b)          In the event that the number of shares of Common Stock to be purchased by all Participants in any Offering Period exceeds the number of shares of Common Stock then available for issuance under the Plan, (i) the Company shall make a pro rata allocation of the remaining shares of Common Stock in as uniform a manner as shall be practicable and as the Committee shall, in its sole discretion, determine to be equitable and (ii) all funds not used to purchase shares of Common Stock on the Purchase Date shall be returned, without interest to the Participants.
 
9.     Delivery; Holding Period .
 
(a)          As soon as reasonably practicable after each Purchase Date on which a purchase of shares of Common Stock occurs, the Company will arrange the delivery to each Participant of the shares purchased upon exercise of his or her option in a form determined by the Administrator (in its sole discretion) and pursuant to rules established by the Administrator. The Company may permit or require that shares be deposited directly with a broker designated by the Company or to a designated agent of the Company, and the Company may utilize electronic or automated methods of share transfer. The Company may require that shares be retained with such broker or agent for a designated period of time and/or may establish other procedures to permit tracking of disqualifying dispositions of such shares. No Participant will have any voting, dividend, or other stockholder rights with respect to shares of Common Stock subject to any option granted under the Plan until such shares have been purchased and delivered to the Participant as provided in this Section 9.  If the Participant makes a disposition, within the meaning of Section 424(c) of the Code and regulations promulgated thereunder, of any shares issued to such Participant pursuant to the exercise of an option, and such disposition occurs within the two-year period commencing on the day after the Purchase Date or within the one-year period commencing on the day after the exercise date, such Participant shall, within five (5) days of such disposition, notify the Company thereof.
 
(b)           Unless otherwise determined by the Administrator, Participants are required to hold shares of Common Stock acquired under the Plan for the one-year period after the Purchase Date (the “ Holding Period ”). During the Holding Period, a Participant may not sell or transfer shares of Common Stock acquired under the Plan.
 
10.     Withdrawal .
 
(a)          A Participant may withdraw all but not less than all the Contributions credited to his or her account and not yet used to exercise his or her option under the Plan at any time by (i) submitting to the Company’s stock administration office (or its designee) a written notice of withdrawal in the form determined by the Administrator for such purpose (which may be similar to the form attached hereto as  Exhibit B ), or (ii) following an electronic or other withdrawal procedure determined by the Administrator; provided, however, that any notice to withdraw must be received by the Administrator at least ten (10) days prior to the next occurring Purchase Date (or such other notice period as may be established by the Administrator from time to time in its sole discretion) . All of the Participant’s Contributions credited to his or her account will be paid to such Participant promptly after receipt of notice of withdrawal and such Participant’s option for the Offering Period will be automatically terminated, and no further Contributions for the purchase of shares will be made for such Offering Period. If a Participant withdraws from an Offering Period, Contributions will not resume at the beginning of the succeeding Offering Period, unless the Participant re-enrolls in the Plan in accordance with the provisions of Section 5.
 
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(b)          A Participant’s withdrawal from an Offering Period will not have any effect upon his or her eligibility to participate in any similar plan that may hereafter be adopted by the Company or in succeeding Offering Periods that commence after the termination of the Offering Period from which the Participant withdraws.
 
11.     Termination of Employment . Upon a Participant’s ceasing to be an Eligible Employee, for any reason, he or she will be deemed to have elected to withdraw from the Plan and the Contributions credited to such Participant’s account during the Offering Period but not yet used to purchase shares of Common Stock under the Plan will be returned to such Participant or, in the case of his or her death, to the person or persons entitled thereto under Section 15, and such Participant’s option will be automatically terminated. Unless determined otherwise by the Administrator in a manner that is permitted by, and compliant with, Section 423 of the Code, a Participant whose employment transfers between entities through a termination with an immediate rehire (with no break in service) by the Company or a Designated Company shall not be treated as terminated under the Plan.
 
12.     Interest . No interest will accrue on the Contributions of a Participant in the Plan.
 
13.     Stock . Subject to adjustment as provided in Section 19 hereof, the maximum number of shares of Common Stock that will be made available for sale under the Plan will be 2,300,000 shares of Common Stock.

14.     Administration . Unless otherwise designated by the Board, the Committee shall serve as the Administrator. The Administrator will have full and exclusive discretionary authority to construe, interpret and apply the terms of the Plan, to designate separate Offerings under the Plan, to designate Subsidiaries as participating in the Plan, to determine eligibility, to adjudicate all disputed claims filed under the Plan and to establish such procedures that it deems necessary for the administration of the Plan. Without limiting the generality of the foregoing, the Administrator is specifically authorized to adopt rules and procedures regarding eligibility to participate, the definition of Compensation, handling of Contributions, making of Contributions to the Plan, establishment of bank or trust accounts to hold Contributions, obligations to pay payroll tax, determination of beneficiary designation requirements, withholding procedures and handling of stock certificates that vary with applicable local requirements. Every finding, decision and determination made by the Administrator will, to the full extent permitted by law, be final and binding upon all parties. With respect to employees of the Company or any entity that, directly or indirectly, is controlled by the Company, and any entity in which the Company has a significant equity interest, in either case as determined by the Committee, who reside or work outside the United States of America, the Committee may, in its sole discretion, amend the terms of the Plan with respect to such employees in order to conform such terms with the provisions of local law, and the Committee may, where appropriate, establish one or more plans or sub-plans to reflect such amended or varied provisions.
 
15.     Designation of Beneficiary .
 
(a)          If permitted by the Administrator, a Participant may file a designation of a beneficiary who is to receive any shares of Common Stock and cash, if any, from the Participant’s account under the Plan in the event of such Participant’s death subsequent to a Purchase Date on which the option is exercised but prior to delivery to such Participant of such shares and cash. In addition, if permitted by the Administrator, a Participant may file a designation of a beneficiary who is to receive any cash from the Participant’s account under the Plan in the event of such Participant’s death prior to exercise of the option. If a Participant is married and the designated beneficiary is not the spouse, spousal consent will be required for such designation to be effective.
 
(b)          Such designation of beneficiary may be changed by the Participant at any time by notice in a form determined by the Administrator. In the event of the death of a Participant and in the absence of a beneficiary validly designated under the Plan who is living at the time of such Participant’s death, the Company will deliver such shares and/or cash to the executor or administrator of the estate of the Participant, or if no such executor or administrator has been appointed (to the knowledge of the Company), the Company, in its discretion, may deliver such shares and/or cash to the spouse or to any one or more dependents or relatives of the Participant, or if no spouse, dependent or relative is known to the Company, then to such other person as the Company may designate.
 
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(c)          All beneficiary designations will be in such form and manner as the Administrator may designate from time to time.
 
16.     Transferability . Neither Contributions credited to a Participant’s account nor any rights with regard to the exercise of an option or to receive shares of Common Stock under the Plan may be assigned, transferred, pledged or otherwise disposed of in any way (other than by will, the laws of descent and distribution or as provided in Section 15 hereof) by the Participant. Any such attempt at assignment, transfer, pledge or other disposition will be without effect, except that the Company may treat such act as an election to withdraw funds from an Offering Period in accordance with Section 10 hereof.
 
17.     Use of Funds . The Company may use all Contributions received or held by it under the Plan for any corporate purpose, and the Company will not be obligated to segregate such Contributions. Until shares of Common Stock are issued, Participants will only have the rights of an unsecured creditor with respect to the Plan.
 
18.     Reports . Individual accounts will be maintained for each Participant in the Plan. Statements of account will be given to participating Eligible Employees at least annually, which statements will set forth the amounts of Contributions, the Purchase Price, the number of shares of Common Stock purchased and the remaining cash balance, if any.
 
19.     Adjustments; Dissolution or Liquidation; Corporate Transactions .
 
(a)           Adjustments . In the event that there is, with respect to the Company, a stock dividend or split, reorganization, recapitalization, merger, consolidation, spin-off, combination, combination or transaction or exchange of Common Stock or other corporate exchange, or any distribution to stockholders of Common Stock or other property or securities or any extraordinary cash dividends (other than regular cash dividends) or any transaction similar to the foregoing or other transaction that results in a change to the Company’s capital structure, the Committee shall make an adjustment to the number and kind of shares as to which outstanding options then unexercised shall be exercisable, in the available shares set forth in Section 13, and in the Purchase Period limit under Section 7, so that the proportionate interest of the Participants shall be maintained as before the occurrence of such event; provided, however, that in no event shall any adjustment be made that would cause any option to fail to qualify as an option pursuant to an employee stock purchase plan within the meaning of Section 423 of the Code.
 
(b)           Dissolution or Liquidation . In the event of the proposed dissolution or liquidation of the Company, any Offering Period then in progress will be shortened by setting a New Purchase Date, and will terminate immediately prior to the consummation of such proposed dissolution or liquidation, unless provided otherwise by the Administrator. The New Purchase Date will be before the date of the Company’s proposed dissolution or liquidation. The Administrator will notify each Participant in writing or electronically, prior to the New Purchase Date, that the Purchase Date for the Participant’s option has been changed to the New Purchase Date and that the Participant’s option will be exercised automatically on the New Purchase Date, unless prior to such date the Participant has withdrawn from the Offering Period as provided in Section 10 hereof.
 
(c)           Certain Corporate Transactions . In the event of a reorganization, merger, or consolidation of the Company with one or more corporations in which the Company is not the surviving corporation (or survives as a direct or indirect subsidiary of such other constituent corporation or its parent), or upon a sale of substantially all of the property or stock of the Company to another corporation, each outstanding option will be assumed or an equivalent option substituted by the successor corporation or a Parent or Subsidiary of the successor corporation. In the event that the successor corporation refuses to assume or substitute for the option, the Offering Period with respect to which such option relates will be shortened by setting a New Purchase Date on which such Offering Period shall end. The New Purchase Date will occur before the date of the Company’s proposed merger or Change in Control. The Administrator will notify each Participant in writing or electronically prior to the New Purchase Date, that the Purchase Date for the Participant’s option has been changed to the New Purchase Date and that the Participant’s option will be exercised automatically on the New Purchase Date, unless prior to such date the Participant has withdrawn from the Offering Period as provided in Section 10 hereof.
 
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20.     Amendment or Termination .
 
(a)          The Administrator, in its sole discretion, may amend, suspend, or terminate the Plan, or any part thereof, at any time and for any reason. If the Plan is terminated, the Administrator, in its discretion, may elect to terminate the outstanding Offering Period either immediately or upon completion of the purchase of shares of Common Stock on the next Purchase Date (which may be sooner than originally scheduled, if determined by the Administrator in its discretion), or may elect to permit the Offering Period to expire in accordance with its terms (and subject to any adjustment pursuant to Section 19). If the Offering Period is terminated prior to expiration, all amounts then credited to Participants  accounts that have not been used to purchase shares of Common Stock will be returned to the Participants (without interest thereon) as soon as administratively practicable.
 
(b)          Without Participant consent and without limiting Section 20(a), the Administrator will be entitled to change the Offering Periods, designate separate Offerings, limit the frequency and/or number of changes in the amount withheld during an Offering Period, permit Contributions in excess of the amount designated by a Participant in order to adjust for delays or mistakes in the Company’s processing of properly completed Contribution elections, establish reasonable waiting and adjustment periods and/or accounting and crediting procedures to ensure that amounts applied toward the purchase of Common Stock for each Participant properly correspond with Contribution amounts, and establish such other limitations or procedures as the Administrator determines in its sole discretion advisable that are consistent with the Plan.
 
(c)          Without limiting the foregoing, in the event the Administrator determines that the ongoing operation of the Plan may result in unfavorable financial accounting consequences, the Administrator may, in its discretion and, to the extent necessary or desirable, modify, amend or terminate the Plan to reduce or eliminate such accounting consequence including, but not limited to:
 
 
(i)
amending the Plan to conform with the safe harbor definition under the Financial Accounting Standards Board Accounting Standards Codification Topic 718 (or any successor thereto), including with respect to an Offering Period underway at the time;
 
 
(ii)
altering the Purchase Price for any Offering Period including an Offering Period underway at the time of the change in Purchase Price;
 
 
(iii)
shortening any Offering Period by setting a New Purchase Date, including an Offering Period underway at the time of the Administrator action;
 
 
(iv)
reducing the maximum percentage of Compensation a Participant may elect to set aside as Contributions; and
 
 
(v)
reducing the maximum number of Shares a Participant may purchase during any Offering Period.
 
Such modifications or amendments will not require stockholder approval or the consent of any Plan Participants.
 
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21.     Notices . All notices or other communications by a Participant to the Company under or in connection with the Plan will be deemed to have been duly given when received in the form and manner specified by the Company at the location, or by the person, designated by the Company for the receipt thereof.
 
22.     Conditions Upon Issuance of Shares . Shares of Common Stock will not be issued with respect to an option unless the exercise of such option and the issuance and delivery of such shares pursuant thereto will comply with all applicable provisions of law, domestic or foreign, including, without limitation, the Securities Act, the Exchange Act, the rules and regulations promulgated thereunder, and the requirements of any stock exchange upon which the shares may then be listed, and will be further subject to the approval of counsel for the Company with respect to such compliance. As a condition to the exercise of an option, the Company may require the person exercising such option to represent and warrant at the time of any such exercise that the shares are being purchased only for investment and without any present intention to sell or distribute such shares if, in the opinion of counsel for the Company, such a representation is required by any of the aforementioned applicable provisions of law.
 
23.     Code Section 409A. The Plan is exempt from the application of Code Section 409A and any ambiguities herein will be interpreted to so be exempt from Code Section 409A. In furtherance of the foregoing and notwithstanding any provision in the Plan to the contrary, if the Administrator determines that an option granted under the Plan may be subject to Code Section 409A or that any provision in the Plan would cause an option under the Plan to be subject to Code Section 409A, the Administrator may amend the terms of the Plan and/or of an outstanding option granted under the Plan, or take such other action the Administrator determines is necessary or appropriate, in each case, without the Participant’s consent, to exempt any outstanding option or future option that may be granted under the Plan from or to allow any such options to comply with Code Section 409A, but only to the extent any such amendments or action by the Administrator would not violate Code Section 409A. Notwithstanding the foregoing, the Company shall have no liability to a Participant or any other party if the option to purchase Common Stock under the Plan that is intended to be exempt from or compliant with Code Section 409A is not so exempt or compliant or for any action taken by the Administrator with respect thereto. The Company makes no representation that the option to purchase Common Stock under the Plan is compliant with Code Section 409A.
 
24.     Term of Plan . The Plan will be effective as of the Effective Date and will continue in effect through the tenth (10 th ) anniversary thereof, unless sooner terminated under Section 20.
 
25.     Stockholder Approval . The Plan will be subject to approval by the stockholders of the Company. Such stockholder approval will be obtained in the manner and to the degree required under Applicable Laws.
 
26.     Governing Law . The Plan shall be governed by, and construed in accordance with, the laws of the State of Delaware (except its choice-of-law provisions).
 
27.     No Right to Employment . Participation in the Plan by a Participant shall not be construed as giving a Participant the right to be retained as an employee of the Company or a Subsidiary. Furthermore, the Company or a Subsidiary may dismiss a Participant from employment at any time, free from any liability or any claim under the Plan.
 
28.     Severability . If any provision of the Plan is or becomes or is deemed to be invalid, illegal, or unenforceable for any reason in any jurisdiction or as to any Participant, such invalidity, illegality or unenforceability shall not affect the remaining parts of the Plan, and the Plan shall be construed and enforced as to such jurisdiction or Participant as if the invalid, illegal or unenforceable provision had not been included.
 
29.     Compliance with Applicable Laws . The terms of this Plan are intended to comply with all Applicable Laws and will be construed accordingly.
 
**************
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The foregoing is hereby acknowledged as being the U.S. Xpress Enterprises, Inc. Employee Stock Purchase Plan as adopted and approved by the Board on  June 8, 2018 and by the Company’s sole stockholder on June 8, 2018.
 
 
U.S. XPRESS ENTERPRISES, INC.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
By:
/s/ LEIGH ANNE BATTERSBY
 
 
Name:
Leigh Anne Battersby
 
 
Its:
Executive Vice President and Corporate General Counsel
 

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
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EXHIBIT A
 
U.S. XPRESS ENTERPRISES, INC.
EMPLOYEE STOCK PURCHASE PLAN
DESIGNATED COMPANIES
 
 
1.
U.S. Xpress, Inc.
 
2.
Total Transportation of Mississippi, LLC
 
3.
Xpress Internacional, S.A. de C.V.



 
 
 
 

EXHIBIT B
 
U.S. XPRESS ENTERPRISES INC.
EMPLOYEE STOCK PURCHASE PLAN
SUBSCRIPTION AGREEMENT
 
 
 
____  Original Application
Offering Date:
____  Reduction in Payroll Deduction Rate
 
 
Capitalized terms used but not otherwise defined herein shall have the meaning given to
such terms in the U.S. Xpress Enterprises, Inc. Employee Stock Purchase Plan.
 
1.    I,                              , hereby elect to participate in the U.S. Xpress Enterprises, Inc. Employee Stock Purchase Plan (the “Plan”) and subscribe to purchase shares of Common Stock in accordance with this Employee Stock Purchase Plan Subscription Agreement (the “Subscription Agreement”) and the Plan.
 
2.    I hereby authorize payroll deductions from each paycheck in the amount of      % of my Compensation on each payday (from 0 to 15%) during the Offering Period in accordance with the Plan. (Please note that no fractional percentages are permitted.)
 
3.    I understand that said payroll deductions will be accumulated for the purchase of shares of Common Stock at the applicable Purchase Price determined in accordance with the Plan. I understand that if I do not withdraw from an Offering Period, any accumulated payroll deductions will be used to automatically exercise my option and purchase Common Stock under the Plan.
 
4.    I have received a copy of the complete Plan and its accompanying prospectus. I understand that my participation in the Plan is in all respects subject to the terms of the Plan. The Company reserves the right to modify the Plan and to impose other requirements on my participation in the Plan, on the option and on any shares of Common Stock purchased under the Plan, to the extent the Company determines it is necessary or advisable for legal or administrative reasons. I agree to be bound by such modifications regardless of whether notice is given to me of such event, subject, in any case, to my right to withdrawal from participation in the Plan. I further agree to sign any additional agreements or undertakings that may be necessary to accomplish the foregoing.
 
5.    I hereby agree to be bound by the terms of the Plan and this Subscription Agreement. The effectiveness of this Subscription Agreement is dependent upon my eligibility to participate in the Plan.

Employee’s Tax ID Number:                                               ___________________
 
I ACKNOWLEDGE AND UNDERSTAND THAT THIS SUBSCRIPTION AGREEMENT INCLUDING ITS APPENDICES AND MY PARTICIPATION IN THE PLAN WILL REMAIN IN EFFECT THROUGHOUT SUCCESSIVE OFFERING PERIODS UNLESS AFFIRMATIVELY TERMINATED BY ME.
                          
Dated:
 
 
Signature of Employee:
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

 
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Exhibit 5.1
 

411 SOUTH 13 TH STREET, SUITE 200 · LINCOLN NE 68508 · P: 402.435.3223 · F: 402.435.4239 · WWW.SCUDDERLAW.COM

 
June 18, 2018
 
U.S. Xpress Enterprises, Inc.
4080 Jenkins Road
Chattanooga, Tennessee 37421
 
Re:     Registration Statement on Form S-8
 
Ladies and Gentlemen:
 
We have acted as counsel to U.S. Xpress Enterprises, Inc., a Nevada corporation (the "Company"), in connection with its preparation and filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission (the "Commission") of a Registration Statement on Form S-8 (including the reoffer prospectus therein, the "Registration Statement") relating to (i) 3,200,000 shares of Class A common stock available for issuance under the U.S. Xpress Enterprises, Inc. 2018 Omnibus Incentive Plan (the “2018 Incentive Plan”), (ii) 2,300,000 shares of Class A common stock available for issuance under the U.S. Xpress Enterprises, Inc. Employee Stock Purchase Plan (the “ESPP”),  and (iii) 3,295,831 shares of Class A common stock issued or issuable in exchange for membership interests originally granted under the New Mountain Lake Holdings, LLC (“NMLH”) Restricted Membership Units Plan, as amended (the "RMUP" and together with the ESPP and the 2018 Incentive Plan, the "Plans"), prior to the merger of NMLH with and into the Company or upon conversion of Class B common stock of the Company issued in exchange for such membership units (collectively, the “S-8 Securities”).
  
We have examined originals, or copies certified or otherwise identified to our satisfaction, of (a) the Registration Statement; (b) the Second Amended and Restated Articles of Incorporation of the Company; (c) the Amended and Restated Bylaws of the Company; (d) certain resolutions adopted by the Board of Directors of the Company relating to the filing of the Registration Statement; and (e) such other documents, records, certificates, and other instruments as in our judgment are necessary or appropriate for purposes of this opinion. We have relied upon statements and representations of officers and other representatives of the Company as to factual matters.
 
In our examination of the aforesaid documents, we have assumed without verification the genuineness of all signatures, the legal capacity of all natural persons, the accuracy and completeness of all documents submitted to us, the authenticity of all original documents, the conformity to authentic original documents of all documents submitted to us as copies, and that the Company will have sufficient authorized and unissued shares of common stock available with respect to any of the S-8 Securities issued after the date of this letter. This opinion letter is given, and all statements herein are made, in the context of the foregoing.
 
This opinion letter is based as to matters of law solely on the internal laws of the State of Nevada. We express no opinion herein as to any other laws, statutes, ordinances, rules, or regulations.
 
Based upon, subject to, and limited by the foregoing, we are of the opinion that the S-8 Securities to be issued under the Plans are duly authorized for issuance and, when issued in accordance with the provisions of the Plans, will be validly issued, fully paid, and nonassessable.
 
This opinion letter is limited to the specific issues addressed herein, and no opinion may be inferred or implied beyond that expressly stated herein. This opinion letter speaks as of the date hereof.
 
We consent to the use of this opinion as an exhibit to the Registration Statement and further consent to all references to us, if any, in the Registration Statement, the prospectuses constituting a part thereof and any amendments thereto. We do not thereby admit that we are within the category of persons whose consent is required under Section 7 of the Securities Act or the rules and regulations of the Commission thereunder. 
 
 
 
Very truly yours,
 
 
 
 
 
/s/   SCUDDER LAW FIRM, P.C., L.L.O.
 
 
 
 
 
SCUDDER LAW FIRM, P.C., L.L.O.
     
 

Back to Form S-8

Exhibit 23.1
CONSENT OF INDEPENDENT REGISTERED PUBLIC ACCOUNTING FIRM
 
We hereby consent to the incorporation by reference in this Registration Statement on Form S-8 of our report dated March 21, 2018 relating to the financial statements, which appears in the prospectus dated June 13, 2018 filed by U.S. Express Enterprises, Inc. in connection with the Registration Statement on Form S-1 (333-224711), as amended.  We also consent to the reference to us under the heading “Experts” in this Registration Statement.

/s/ PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP
Birmingham, Alabama 
June 18, 2018
 
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