Three states, three LLC disputes, three appellate rulings. Who could ask for more?
Continue Reading A Cross-Country Trio of Appellate Decisions Tackles Novel LLC Disputes
Commentary on Dissolution and Other Disputes Among Co-Owners of Closely Held Business Entities
Three states, three LLC disputes, three appellate rulings. Who could ask for more? …
Continue Reading A Cross-Country Trio of Appellate Decisions Tackles Novel LLC Disputes
When an LLC operating agreement permits action upon majority consent, can a minority member nonetheless challenge that action as a breach of the majority’s fiduciary duties? The Fourth Department weighs in. …
Continue Reading Can Majority-Authorized Action Still Breach Fiduciary Duty?
Chef’s Table at Brooklyn Fare. It’s not just fining dining. It’s litigation warfare.…
Can a three-person minority outvote a four-person majority to oust the majority-appointed, longtime CEO of a profitable company (who also happens to be the founder of the company) in a vote requiring supermajority approval?
The math ain’t mathing, you may be saying to yourself.
But today, we explore a case—SJI Renewable Entery Ventures LLC, …
A recent Brooklyn Supreme Court case bring useful insight on three post-dissolution fundamentals: when (and how) a dissolution can be annulled, the court’s supervisory power under BCL 1008, and why, when shareholders are deadlocked as to dissolution procedure, a public sale—not a private deal—is the default endgame.…
Continue Reading Corporate Afterlife: Deadlock and Accounting in the Winding-Up Phase
The BCL § 1118 buyout election is a mighty litigation tool, capable of thwarting judicial dissolution, capable even of thwarting an injunction. But it is not a panacea. Read about the powers and limitations of the statutory buyout election in this week’s New York Business Divorce.…
Continue Reading The BCL § 1118 Buyout Election: A Powerful Defense. With Limits.
This week’s NYBD visits a recent Delaware Chancery Court decision involving, the Court wrote, a “poorly drafted” LLC agreement with “lamentable” consequences for one side that the parties “must live with.”…
Continue Reading In Delaware, You Live or Die Under Your LLC Operating Agreement