Chef’s Table at Brooklyn Fare. It’s not just fining dining. It’s litigation warfare.
First Department Upholds Minority’s Unilateral Termination of Majority-Appointed CEO Over Majority’s Objections
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, …
Winter Case Notes: A Partnership Masquerading as an LLC, and Other Recent Decisions of Interest
Corporate Afterlife: Deadlock and Accounting in the Winding-Up Phase
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: A Powerful Defense. With Limits.
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.
Ownership Without Partnership: A Lesson from the Second Department on the Plight of the Assignee
In Delaware, You Live or Die Under Your LLC Operating Agreement
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
For Close Business Owners, the Toothless Notice of Pendency Remedy Unexpectedly Gets Some Bite
New York appellate case law invariably holds that a closely-held business owner lacks a direct property interest or right in the entity’s underlying real estate asset to support a Notice of Pendency. But in this week’s New York Business Divorce, we feature an uncommon motion court decision declining to vacate a Notice of Pendency placed by an LLC member upon the entity’s real estate asset to thwart the property’s sale to a third-party buyer. Is this recent decision an outlier, or the birth of an exception to the rule?…
Can an Equitable Accounting Find the Missing Cash?
When cash never hits the books, can an accounting still deliver meaningful relief? A recent decision offers answers—and warnings.…
Continue Reading Can an Equitable Accounting Find the Missing Cash?
The Pick-Your-Partner Principle
General partnerships are supposed to be the easiest of all business organizations for co-owners to separate. Not in the case featured on this week’s New York Business Divorce, where it took almost ten years for the majority partners of a New York general partnership to secure a court ruling that a formal written notice of withdrawal by one of the partners dissolved the business by operation of law.…

