This week’s New York Business Divorce features a nuts-and-bolts issue concerning the limited availability of depositions and other discovery in corporate dissolution cases, prompted by a recent ruling on the subject by Nassau County Commercial Division Justice Timothy S. Driscoll in Matter of Kaufman (L.I. Yellow Cab Corp.).
Continue Reading Do Not Take Pre-Trial Discovery for Granted in Corporate Dissolution Proceedings
Driscoll
Court Requires Demand Upon Receiver for Derivative Action in Dissolution Case
When the court appoints a receiver in a corporate dissolution proceeding, must a shareholder who thereafter seeks to bring a derivative action on the corporation’s behalf make a formal demand upon the receiver before filing the action? A recent decision by Nassau County Commercial Division Justice Timothy S. Driscoll, covered in this week’s New York Business Divorce, gives the answer.
…
Continue Reading Court Requires Demand Upon Receiver for Derivative Action in Dissolution Case
Court Addresses Necessary Party, Res Judicata Issues in Shareholder Oppression Case Pitting Uncle Against Nephews
Must a corporate dissolution petition name all shareholders as respondents? Does the dismissal of a shareholder’s prior lawsuit asserting derivative and employment-based claims preclude his seeking relief as an oppressed minority shareholder? These are the questions answered in a recent decision by Justice Orin Kitzes in Matter of Adelstein (Finest Foods Distributing Co.), featured in this week’s New York Business Divorce.
…
Continue Reading Court Addresses Necessary Party, Res Judicata Issues in Shareholder Oppression Case Pitting Uncle Against Nephews
Winding Up an Acrimonious Partnership Following Death of a Partner
The Partnership Law’s default provisions provide a roadmap for Justice Timothy Driscoll’s recent decision, highlighted in this week’s New York Business Divorce, involving the dissolution of a family real estate partnership following the death of one of its partners.
…
Continue Reading Winding Up an Acrimonious Partnership Following Death of a Partner