New Jersey recently became the eighth state to adopt the Revised Uniform Limited Liability Company Act including a new provision authorizing judicial dissolution of LLCs on the ground of oppressive acts by the controllling managers or members and also providing a statutory buy-out remedy, much like the dissolution statutes governing close corporations. For more on the new statute’s background, its provisions, and the surrounding policy debate, read this week’s New York Business Divorce.
Continue Reading New Jersey Adopts Revised LLC Act Authorizing Dissolution for Minority Oppression
Grounds for Dissolution
Woe Unto the Undocumented LLC Member Seeking Judicial Dissolution
A tattoo parlor business is the unusual setting for a decision last week by the Appellate Division, Second Department, affirming the lower court’s post-trial dismissal of an LLC dissolution case brought by a member claiming denial of her co-equal management rights. It’s “inked” in this week’s New York Business Divorce.
…
Continue Reading Woe Unto the Undocumented LLC Member Seeking Judicial Dissolution
Majority Member’s “Egregious Breach” of Operating Agreement Leads to LLC’s Judicial Dissolution
Justice Kevin Dowd issued a significant decision last month, granting dissolution of an LLC operating a youth baseball camp near the Baseball Hall of Fame in upstate Cooperstown, based on the majority member’s diversion of hospitality business to offsite facilities. It’s in this week’s New York Business Divorce.
…
Continue Reading Majority Member’s “Egregious Breach” of Operating Agreement Leads to LLC’s Judicial Dissolution
LLC Dissolution Case Highlights Divergent Interests When One Member is Also the Landlord
All other things being equal, the odds of an eventual business divorce go up when one of two business partners is also the business’s landlord. Case in point: Matter of Shure (S&S Eatery, LLC), decided last month by Justice Timothy Driscoll. Learn more in this week’s New York Business Divorce.
…
Continue Reading LLC Dissolution Case Highlights Divergent Interests When One Member is Also the Landlord
Dueling Dissolution Petitions Lead to Forced Buy-Out of 50% Shareholder
Last week the Appellate Division, Third Department, handed down its second ruling in four months in cases involving dueling dissolution petitions. Its latest decision, in Matter of Clever Innovations, Inc., affirms the denial of a deadlock petition and the grant of a compulsory buy-out based on an oppressed shareholder petition. It’s in this week’s New York Business Divorce.
…
Continue Reading Dueling Dissolution Petitions Lead to Forced Buy-Out of 50% Shareholder
A Toxic Mix of Family and Business
Dissension between members of a family-owned business can present especially difficult issues when litigation erupts. This week’s New York Business Divorce highlights recent decisions by Justices Timothy Driscoll (Nassau County), Emily Pines (Suffolk County) and Deborah Kaplan (Manhattan) involving dissolution and related claims among warring family members.
…
Continue Reading A Toxic Mix of Family and Business
Court Orders Dissolution of Unprofitable Real Estate LLC
Those interested in the evolving law of LLC dissolution won’t want to miss this week’s New York Business Divorce featuring a case called Mizrahi v. Cohen decided last week by Justice Carolyn Demarest in which she ordered dissolution of a financially failing real estate holding company.
…
Continue Reading Court Orders Dissolution of Unprofitable Real Estate LLC
Pizza Wars of the Shareholder Kind
With about 1,300 pizzerias in New York City, it’s inevitable that some of them wind up the subject of involuntary corporate dissolution proceedings, such as the one recently decided by Nassau Commercial Division Justice Ira Warshawsky in Matter of DiMaria involving a petition brought by a minority owner alleging shareholder oppression and majority owners counter-alleging that the petitioner himself engaged in wrongful conduct. Learn more in this week’s New York Business Divorce.
…
Continue Reading Pizza Wars of the Shareholder Kind
Statute of Limitations Issue Highlights Distinction Between Bases for Judicial Dissolution of LLCs Versus Other Business Forms
A recent decision by the Brooklyn Surrogate’s Court in a fight over LLC assets highlights the interplay between the statute of limitations and the grounds for LLC dissolution as defined in last year’s appellate ruling in the 1545 Ocean Avenue case. The Surrogate’s Court case, Sealy v. Alston, is featured in this week’s New York Business Divorce.
…
Continue Reading Statute of Limitations Issue Highlights Distinction Between Bases for Judicial Dissolution of LLCs Versus Other Business Forms
Deadlock Over Voluntary Dissolution Agreement Leads to Involuntary Judicial Dissolution
Is the statutory remedy of judicial dissolution available when shareholders fail to implement a prior agreement for a voluntary winding up and dissolution? Nassau County Justice Stephen A. Bucaria answers the question in Matter of Toledano (Home Tower Group, Inc.), featured in this week’s New York Business Divorce.
…
Continue Reading Deadlock Over Voluntary Dissolution Agreement Leads to Involuntary Judicial Dissolution