I’m pleased to present my seventh annual list of the past year’s ten most significant business divorce cases. This year’s crop includes noteworthy rulings on a variety of issues in dissolution, appraisal, books-and-records, and other cases involving closely held corporations and limited liability companies. All ten were featured on this blog previously; click on the case name to read the full treatment. And the winners are:

  1. Zacharius v Kensington Publishing Corp., 42 Misc 3d 1208, 2014 NY Slip Op 50011(U) [Sup Ct, NY County Jan. 6, 2014], a lawsuit involving a family-owned publishing business in which Justice Eileen Bransten upheld a stock voting agreement that gave board control to the minority shareholders/step-children of the majority shareholder, although she allowed the majority owner’s suit to proceed on a claim challenging the authenticity of her late husband’s signature on the voting agreement.
  2. Pokoik v Pokoik, 115 AD3d 428, 2014 NY Slip Op 01502 [1st Dept Mar. 6, 2014], a first impression ruling in which the Appellate Division, First Department, in granting summary judgment against an LLC manager for breach of fiduciary duty, rejected the manager’s reliance on the safe-harbor provisions of LLC Law § 409.
  3. Mintz v Pazer, Decision and Order, Index No. 502127/13 [Sup Ct, Kings County Mar. 12, 2014], in which Justice David Schmidt enforced an unusual, “quick draw” buy-sell provision in the shareholders’ agreement of a real estate holding company owned 50/50 by two families, compelling a sale to the family that gave the first notice of purchase following unsuccessful mediation of a deadlock.
  4. JPS Partners v Binn, 2014 NY Slip Op 31204 [Sup Ct, NY County May 6, 2014], in which Justice Melvin Schweitzer held that the restructuring of an LLC, in which substantially all of its assets were transferred to a subsidiary, unintentionally triggered the LLC’s dissolution under a provision in the operating agreement.
  5. Budis v Skoutelas, Short Form Order, Index No. 702060/13 [Sup Ct, Queens County July 16, 2014], in which Justice Orin Kitzes held that the estate of a deceased LLC member had no standing to assert derivative claims on the LLC’s behalf.
  6. Retirement Plan for General Employees v McGraw-Hill Cos., 120 AD3d 1052, 2014 NY Slip Op 06154 [1st Dept Sept. 11, 2014], in which the Appellate Division, First Department, reversed the trial court’s ruling dismissing a books-and-records proceeding brought against McGraw-Hill, and held that the petitioning pension fund’s stated purpose of the requested inspection, to investigate the board’s oversight of McGraw-Hill’s subsidiary, Standard & Poor’s, was a proper purpose even if the inspection ultimately establishes that the board engaged in no wrongdoing.
  7. Zelouf International Corp. v Zelouf, 45 Misc 3d 1205(A), 2014 NY Slip Op 51462(U) [Sup Ct, NY County Oct. 6, 2014] [click here for Part 2], a post-trial ruling in a dissenting shareholder appraisal case in which, among other significant rulings, Justice Shirley Kornreich rejected a discount for lack of marketability and granted the petitioner a separate award on her quasi-derivative claims against the controlling shareholders.
  8. Ferolito v AriZona Beverages USA, LLC, 2014 NY Slip Op 32830(U) [Sup Ct, Nassau County Oct. 14, 2014], in which Justice Timothy Driscoll awarded close to $1 billion (that’s not a typo) to the 50% owner of the AriZona Iced Tea business in a fair value buy-out proceeding under BCL § 1118. The court’s many significant rulings included its sole reliance on the DCF method and its rejection of potential acquirers’ expressions of interest.
  9. Cortes v 3A N. Park Ave. Rest Corp., 2014 NY Slip Op 24329 [Sup Ct, Kings County Oct. 28, 2014], in which Justice Carolyn Demarest conditionally ordered the dissolution of a restaurant business from which the controlling shareholders were found to have skimmed about $3.7 million cash, unless they purchased the minority owner’s shares for about $1.2 million.
  10. Slayton v Highline Stages, LLC, 2014 NY Slip Op 24333 [Sup Ct, NY County Oct. 30, 2014], in which Justice Shirley Kornreich ruled that LLC Law § 407’s default rule, permitting members to act by written consents without a meeting, trumped the meeting requirement in LLC Law § 1002(c) governing member approval of mergers.

Two of the above cases — Ferolito and Zelouf — also made it onto the nationwide top-ten list published in the January 2015 issue of Business Valuation Update, the business valuation profession’s leading monthly newsletter.