Can a 49% shareholder who has co-equal control rights per the shareholders agreement bring an action for deadlock dissolution? Get the answer in this week’s New York Business Divorce.
Continue Reading 49% Shareholder Can’t Seek Deadlock Dissolution Despite Shareholders’ Agreement Granting Co-Equal Control

Intellectual property rights can be the lifeblood of a business. This week’s New York Business Divorce highlights a pair of recent cases involving disputes among the co-owners of closely held firms over the ownership of IP critical to the firms’ prosperity or even existence.
Continue Reading Dissension Follows When Business Owners Don’t Put Their IP House in Order

An eight-year litigation saga in a dispute over a below-market sale of shares in a realty holding company came to end last month when the Appellate Division, First Department, affirmed an order dismissing the complaint in Gourary v Laster. Read more in this week’s New York Business Divorce.
Continue Reading Dead Men Tell No Tales of Shareholder Buy-Outs Gone Sour

In this week’s New York Business Divorce – the first in a three-part series about the statutory triggers, legal rules, and accounting principles of business valuation proceedings – learn about the routes business owners can take to an appraisal proceeding.
Continue Reading Basics of Valuation Proceedings – Litigating an Appraisal from Start to Finish – Part 1

This week’s New York Business Divorce revisits the Kassab case on the occasion of the latest decision in its five-year litigation journey, denying for the second time the minority member’s bid to dissolve a realty holding LLC co-owned with his brother in the wake of having successfully dissolved their related realty holding corporation.
Continue Reading Court Denies Second Bite at Dissolution Cherry in Kassab Brothers Business Divorce

In Hammad v Al-Lid Food Corp., decided last month by Justice Sylvia Ash, the court denied the minority shareholder’s application for various interim remedies sought after the company elected to purchase his shares. Find out more in this week’s New York Business Divorce.
Continue Reading You Sued for Dissolution, They Elected to Buy You Out, What Else Do You Want?

In this week’s New York Business Divorce, we salute recently-retired Commercial Division Justice Shirley Werner Kornreich with a collection of some of her most noteworthy decisions in the area of business ownership disputes.
Continue Reading A Trip Down Business Divorce Lane with Recently Retired Justice Shirley Werner Kornreich

In this week’s New York Business Divorce, find out what happened when the majority shareholder petitioned to rescind the minority shareholder’s unauthorized sale of the corporation’s realty to a third party purchaser in violation of the court’s restraining order.
Continue Reading Bona Fide Purchaser Avoids Rescission of Minority Shareholder’s Unauthorized Sale of Corporation’s Realty

This week’s New York Business Divorce analyzes the use of binding mediation to resolve deadlock between 50/50 business owners, a device whose use was affirmed on appeal in a decision last week by the Appellate Division, First Department.
Continue Reading Anyone Think Binding Mediation to Break Deadlock Is a Good Idea?