Buy-out and retirement obligations in professional practices can trigger a contentious race to be the first to resign or retire when hard financial times hit, which is what happened in the case highlighted in this week’s New York Business Divorce.
Continue Reading Race to the Exit as Professional Practice Falters
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A Decade Later, LLC’s Majority Members Pay The Price For Converting Minority Member’s Interest
By Peter A. Mahler on
The LLC majority members in Bonanni v. Horizons Investors Corp., were ordered to pay the piper in a post-trial decision earlier this month by Justice Elizabeth Emerson in a 10-year old case, finding that they had converted the plaintiff’s minority membership interest. It’s in this week’s New York Business Divorce. …
Continue Reading A Decade Later, LLC’s Majority Members Pay The Price For Converting Minority Member’s Interest
Take My Fiduciary Duty . . . Please!
By Peter A. Mahler on
Posted in LLCs
Remember Gilbert v Weintraub, the case of the LLC member who resigned as manager and started a competing company? A new decision by Justice Timothy Driscoll sheds more light on the question whether a member-manager can shed fiduciary duty.
Continue Reading Take My Fiduciary Duty . . . Please!