DUE TO TECHNICAL GLITCH, THIS ENTRY WAS PUBLISHED THIS MORNING INCOMPLETE. THIS WILL LINK TO THE COMPLETE ENTRY. MY APOLOGY FOR THE DUPLICATE EMAIL NOTIFICATION. P.A.M.
The statute governing buyouts in oppressed shareholder dissolution cases dictates that the fair value of the shares is to be determined as of the day before the date on which the dissolution petition was filed. This week’s New York Business Divorce looks at a quirky case involving a fight over which of two proposed valuation dates was the proper one, with $1,000,000 in assets hanging in the balance.
Continue Reading Court Rejects Attempt to Vary Statutory Valuation Date in Oppressed Shareholder Buyout
December 2008
Fiduciaries, the Duty to Disclose and the Incredible Shrinking Release
A recent decision by Commercial Division Justice Charles E. Ramos in the case of Arfa v. Zamir grabs the spotlight in this week’s New York Business Divorce. The subject is an important one to business owners and their counsel: Does a general release in an out-of-court agreement between business partners/fiduciaries provide any protection against allegations of fraudulent nondisclosure?
…
Continue Reading Fiduciaries, the Duty to Disclose and the Incredible Shrinking Release
Court Bars Minority Member From Intervening in Creditor’s Suit Against LLC
Does a minority member of an LLC have a right to intervene in an action against the LLC by a creditor? How about if the creditor’s claim arises from collusion or other impropriety by the controlling member? This week’s New York Business Divorce provides answers courtesy of a recent appellate court ruling in the curious case of Baron v. Rocketboom LLC.
…
Continue Reading Court Bars Minority Member From Intervening in Creditor’s Suit Against LLC
Appellate Court Finds Operating Agreement “Silent” on Sale of LLC’s Sole Asset, Upholds Approval by Majority Vote Under Statute’s Default Rule
Last month the Appellate Division, Second Department issued an important decision concerning the application of the LLC Law’s default rules where the operating agreement is silent on a disputed issue. Get up to speed with this week’s New York Business Divorce.
…
Continue Reading Appellate Court Finds Operating Agreement “Silent” on Sale of LLC’s Sole Asset, Upholds Approval by Majority Vote Under Statute’s Default Rule
Poorly Drafted Disability Clause in Operating Agreement Provides Novel Defense to LLC Dissolution Proceeding
If you think you’ve seen it all when it comes to corporate dissolution contests, think again as you read this week’s New York Business Divorce which looks at a case in which one LLC member opposed the other’s dissolution petition based on the latter’s alleged mental disability.
…
Continue Reading Poorly Drafted Disability Clause in Operating Agreement Provides Novel Defense to LLC Dissolution Proceeding