I’m pleased to present my sixth annual list of picks for the past year’s ten most significant business divorce cases. This year’s selections, featuring seven appellate decisions, include significant rulings on a variety of issues in dissolution and appraisal cases involving closely held corporations, partnerships and limited liability companies. All ten were featured in this blog previously; click on the case name to read the full treatment. And the winners are:

 

  1. Holdrum Investments, N.V. v. Edelman, 2013 NY Slip Op 30369(U) (Sup Ct NY County Jan. 31, 2013), in which Manhattan Supreme Court Justice Anil C. Singh followed a 1994 First Department precedent in rejecting the argument that a New York court lacks subject matter jurisdiction to dissolve a foreign entity, in that case a Delaware limited partnership.
  2. Doyle v. Icon, LLC, 103 AD3d 440, 2013 NY Slip Op 00797 (1st Dept Feb. 7, 2013), where the First Department dismissed a complaint seeking judicial dissolution of an LLC, holding that allegations by a minority member of systematic exclusion by the controlling members, without more, fail to state adequate grounds for relief under LLC Law § 702.
  3. Sullivan v. Troser Management, Inc., 104 AD3d 1127, 2013 NY Slip Op 01634 (4th Dept Mar. 15, 2013), a 10-year litigation over a stock buy-out where the parties never updated the called-for Certificate of Value, in which the Fourth Department rejected the purchasing shareholder’s contention that the buy-out price should be based on book value.
  4. Gelman v. Buehler, 20 NY3d 534, 2013 NY Slip Op 01991 (Ct App Mar. 26, 2013), in which the Court of Appeals construed the phrases “definite term” and “particular undertaking is specified” as used in Section 62 of the Partnership Law in dismissing a complaint for wrongful termination of an oral partnership agreement.
  5. Mizrahi v. Cohen, 104 AD3d 917, 2013 NY Slip Op 02056 (2d Dept Mar. 27, 2013), where the Second Department ordered a buy-out of the defendant 50% member by the plaintiff 50% member as an equitable remedy in an LLC dissolution case.
  6. Born to Build LLC v. 1141 Realty LLC, 105 AD3d 425, 2013 NY Slip Op 02193 (1st Dept Apr. 2, 2013), in which the First Department ordered dismissal of a complaint for judicial dissolution of an LLC, brought by a party who purportedly acquired an undocumented membership interest at a judgment execution sale, where the LLC agreement negated the existence of the membership interest at issue.
  7. Matter of Sunburst Associates, Inc., 106 AD3d 1224, 2013 NY Slip Op 03368 (3d Dept May 9, 2013), an unusual case in which the Third Department dismissed a deadlock dissolution petition brought by a putative 50% shareholder on the ground that he had transferred his stock to the other 50% shareholder, notwithstanding evidence that, even after the transfer, the respondent shareholder had signed corporate tax returns reflecting the two of them as 50/50 shareholders. 
  8. Breidbart v. Wiesenthal, 108 AD3d 492, 2013 NY Slip Op 05040 (2d Dept July 3, 2013), where the Second Department held that a retired partner, or the estate of a deceased partner, who elects to receive post-withdrawal profits in lieu of interest under Section 73 of the Partnership Law is not entitled to recover appreciation on the value of the partnership assets.
  9. Ruggiero v. Ruggiero, 2013 NY Slip Op 31955(U) (Sup Ct Suffolk County July 29, 2013), in which Suffolk County Justice Emily Pines opted for one appraiser’s income approach over the other appraiser’s market approach in a stock valuation contest involving a family-owned kosher deli.
  10. Feinberg v. Silverberg, Decision and Order, Index No. 3120-11 (Sup Ct Nassau County Sept. 6, 2013), a decision by Nassau County Justice Vito DeStefano in which the court ruled that the petitioner’s alleged bad faith and creation of feigned deadlock is a cognizable defense in a proceeding for judicial dissolution under Business Corporation Law § 1104.