The laws authorizing “oppressed” minority shareholders to petition for corporate dissolution also give the majority shareholders the right to avoid litigating dissolution by electing to purchase the petitioner’s shares for fair value. This week’s New York Business Divorce highlights a recent case in which the court refused to permit an untimely election.
Continue Reading Timing is Everything When it Comes to the Buyout Election in Corporate Dissolution Cases
Dissolution Basics
Dissolution and the 50% Shareholder
In the judicial dissolution arena, one of the trickiest decisions faced by counsel representing a 50% shareholder of a closely held New York corporation is whether to ask for dissolution based on deadlock under Section 1104 of the Business Corporation Law (BCL), or based on allegations that the other 50% shareholder is guilty of illegal, fraudulent or oppressive conduct or has looted, wasted or diverted corporate assets under BCL Section 1104-a, or under both statutes.
The choice can have a dramatic effect on the outcome of the proceedings, not just because of the different proofs required, but because only one of the statutes – BCL Section 1104-a – triggers the other shareholder’s right to avoid dissolution by electing to purchase for “fair value” the shares of the petitioning shareholder. (See previous post on the subject.)
In many business divorce cases involving two 50% shareholders there nonetheless is one natural buyer and one natural seller. Sometimes it’s because one of the two controls more of the client relationships. Sometimes it’s because one of the two personally or through a separate company owns the realty leased by the co-owned company. Sometimes it’s because one of the two has far deeper pockets. In these situations, the 50% shareholder who wants out and his or her counsel must think long and hard about whether they gain or lose bargaining leverage by handing the opposing shareholder the right to force a buyout. In my experience, a deadlock petition under BCL Section 1104 usually packs a bigger wallop than an 1104-a petition by denying the automatic buyout and thereby putting added pressure on the shareholder who may be more motivated to keep the company as a going concern. Continue Reading Dissolution and the 50% Shareholder
Voluntary Dissolution vs. Judicial Dissolution
Dissolution of a closely held New York corporation can be accomplished either voluntarily, by vote of the shareholders, or involuntarily by way of a petition for judicial dissolution. The two methods are fundamentally different and should never be confused.
Article 10 of the Business Corporation Law (BCL) governs voluntary or “non-judicial” dissolution. For corporations formed after…