By David Benoit And Matt Jarzemsky 

Some bondholders are having a tough time swallowing Darden Restaurants Inc.'s plan to separate its real estate.

A group of bondholders has informed the Olive Garden parent they will call a default if Darden completes the real estate separation without their consent, according to people familiar with the matter. The bondholders declined to give their consent in exchange for a payout that Darden offered earlier in July, the people said.

The conflict pits the bondholders, which people say include Voya Financial Inc., American International Group Inc. and Reef Road Capital Management LLC, against Starboard Value LP, the activist investment firm that last year won a board coup at Darden and took over the restaurant company.

Starboard in its campaign maintained, among other things, that Darden would be better off selling its real estate and then leasing it back, putting the cash from the sale to other uses. In June, it announced such a plan.

Now, some bondholders are resisting, noting their bonds have restrictions on the company's sale-leaseback activities.

Starboard-led Darden maintains it doesn't need bondholders' consent to press ahead, but nevertheless offered them a deal, which they rejected. "Any transaction we would undertake would be in compliance with our covenants," Darden said in a statement Wednesday.

"We should make it clear that consent is not a requirement to do what we want to do, but it's certainly the preferred route," said Bill White, the company's treasurer, on a conference call in June, when Darden announced the plan.

The company told the bondholder group it has a legal workaround allowing it to pursue the deal without their approval, the people said. But Darden has so far declined to share the structure of that transaction with the creditor group despite its requests, some of the people familiar with the bondholders added.

The company in June launched an offer to pay certain bondholders $5 per $1,000 in notes they hold in exchange for their support of the deal, then doubled that offer to $10. Mr. White said the intent was to work with its bondholders.

Bondholders in the group maintain the offer wasn't enough, the people said. The group represents holders of more than two-thirds of Darden's 6.8% senior notes due in 2037 and hired law firm Stroock & Stroock & Lavan LLP to represent its interests, the people said.

The dustup marks a new challenge to the rising power of activist investors who typically buy stocks and push for measures they think will boost share prices, such as taking on more debt to buy back shares or breaking the company up.

Some big pushes lately have been real estate focused, with investors urging companies to sell their buildings or land and rent it back. The moves can deliver cash that can be used for stock or debt repurchases. Starboard earlier in July revealed it has also been pushing Macy's Inc. for a similar step. Macy's has said it is reviewing its real estate.

Such moves have drawn wary looks from investors in corporate debt, which can suddenly become riskier if a company reduces its cash or adds fixed payments, such as leases.

"Activism is rarely good news for creditors," Moody's Investors Service wrote last year, one of several reports to credit investors warning of increased risk from shareholder activism.

Moody's and other credit rating firms regularly warn they are reviewing for possible downgrade companies that take steps activist shareholders push or even companies under pressure to take steps. Companies, including Darden's previous management, have seized on such warnings as support for their arguments against activists' recommendations.

Starboard led a campaign that removed the entire board of directors at Darden in October. The hedge fund, and before it smaller activist Barington Capital Group LP, said they believed Darden's management was performing poorly and the company's vast real estate holdings were worth billions to shareholders.

In September, Starboard released a presentation detailing what its board would do if it won the shareholder election -- steps as small as salting pasta water and as broad as breaking up the company's brands and its real estate.

Starboard had said throughout its campaign it would keep an investment grade rating on Darden. When the real estate spin off was announced in June, Moody's called it a "credit positive" as Darden plans to repurchase $1 billion in bonds with proceeds from the plan.

Write to David Benoit at david.benoit@wsj.com and Matt Jarzemsky at matthew.jarzemsky@wsj.com

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