
Not long ago, we wrote about the vital need for strict compliance with contractual options to buy or sell closely-held business equity interests. As we noted then, failure to strictly comply with any contractual conditions precedent to the exercise of a buy-sell option may result in the option’s total failure.
The requirement of strict compliance with contractual conditions precedent applies to other areas of business divorce, a lesson the limited partners of a Cayman Islands limited partnership learned the hard way in Molberg v Phoenix Cayman Ltd., ___ AD3d ___, 2025 NY Slip Op 01048 [1st Dept Feb. 20, 2025]).
In Molberg, the limited partners tried – but failed – to exercise a 30-day notice of default and cure provision in the limited partnership agreement for removal of the general partner “for cause.”
Molberg was a truly stunning reversal of fortune for the limited partners, and a valuable lesson for our readers: for those hoping to remove the manager of a closely-held business “for cause” upon written notice and an opportunity to cure, strict compliance with the language of the contract is mandatory. Even if well-intentioned, anything less than strict compliance may prove costly.
Continue Reading No Unforced Errors Please: “For Cause” Removal Provisions Mean What They Say and Say What They Mean