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A Litigation Odyssey

Litigated business breakups are often highly intense and emotional for the participants. The intensity and emotion multiply when the litigants are close family members....more

The Worst of Both Worlds: Untimely Buyout Election Yields Full Merits Hearing and Huge Bond

Nine months ago, we wrote about a 20% shareholder, Alvin Clayton Fernandes, whose bare bones petition Manhattan Supreme Court Justice Frank P. Nervo found stated sufficient grounds to judicially dissolve a seemingly...more

Do Non-Manager, Minority LLC Owners Owe Fiduciary Duties?

This important question of whether non-manager, minority limited liability company owners owe fiduciary duties continues to bedevil New York litigants and courts. The prevailing state of the law remains unsettled, with...more

Business Divorce in the Divorce Courts

Folks hearing the phrase “business divorce” for the first time tend to focus unconsciously on the word “divorce,” tuning out the word “business.” The irony is that most business divorce cases have nothing to do with...more

Stock Transfer Restrictions and “Annihilation of Property”

One of the pleasures of being a litigator is that we constantly learn. The pleasure multiplies as a law blogger, where articles we write inspire litigation arguments, and litigations we fight inspire articles....more

The “Illegality” Defense to Partnership Formation

Food trucks have become as ubiquitous on the streets of Manhattan as pigeons in Central Park. Unsurprisingly, the New York City food truck business is highly regulated, requiring licensure of those participating in the...more

The Contract is King: Advancement and Indemnification Under Delaware Law

In last week’s New York Business Divorce, we wrote about an important decision from New York’s highest court, Sage Sys., Inc. v Liss (___ NY3d ___, 2022 NY Slip Op 05918 [Ct App Oct. 20, 2022]). In Sage, the Court of Appeals...more

Warning: If You Want Legal Fee Advancement or Indemnification, You May Need to Amend Your Partnership, Shareholder, or Operating...

The universe works in mysterious ways. Four days ago, when I sat down to write this article, my plan was to feature a decision from Manhattan Commercial Division Justice Andrea J. Masley denying dismissal of a closely-held...more

Summary Judgment in Lieu of Complaint Meets Business Divorce

For most business divorce litigants, a dispositive win on the merits, even in a summary proceeding, can take years. Appraisal proceedings following a cash-out merger, for example, may involve multiple years of difficult...more

Conflicts of Laws and the Internal Affairs Doctrine

The legal concept of “conflicts of laws” is difficult, to say the least, confounding even seasoned litigators and judges, with bulky treatises and entire law school classes devoted to the subject....more

The “Conflict of Interest” Defense to Shareholder Derivative Standing

In shareholder derivative litigation, defendants occasionally argue that the plaintiff – who ostensibly sues on behalf of the company and its owners in a fiduciary capacity – has some form of conflict of interest with the...more

A Fresh Take on Partnership to LLC Conversions

A rarely litigated provision of the New York Limited Liability Company Law (the “LLC Law”), Section 1006, authorizes the conversion of a general or limited partnership to a New York LLC through a statutorily-prescribed...more

Questions Abound in Parallel Cash-Out Merger Rescission / Fair Value Appraisal Lawsuits

The topic of mergers between two business entities designed to involuntarily extinguish the equity interest of a minority owner in exchange for cash is one of our favorites on New York Business Divorce. Almost invariably...more

Three Strikes You’re Out: Sebrow Revisited

A year and a half ago, we blogged about a decision in which Bronx County Supreme Court Justice Llinet M. Rosado ruled that a shareholder’s alleged stock transfer through a bequest in his last will and testament was...more

Gordon Ramsay’s The Fat Cow: Dishing Up Damages and Dissolution

You know you’re in big trouble if the post-trial decision in a lawsuit you filed begins like this: “The court finds the plaintiff, Rowen Seibel, not credible. This is primarily because it appears he fabricated evidence...more

Principles of Fiduciary Deference: The Business Judgment Rule and Exculpatory Clauses

A number of lawsuits have percolated through New York’s courts over the past five years between Adam Max, son of world-renowned visual artist Peter Max, and Adam’s sister, Libra, over control and management of the family...more

The Evidenceless Petition to Dissolve

It’s hard not to feel sorry for the petitioner in Fernandes v Matrix Model Staffing, Inc., Decision and Order, Index No. 160294/2021 [Sup Ct, NY County Apr. 20, 2022]. In Fernandes, Manhattan Supreme Court Justice Frank...more

Binding Nonsignatories to Arbitration Agreements

Closely-held business owners often hope to avoid the costs and delays of litigation by including arbitration provisions in their partnership, shareholder, and operating agreements. Things can get tricky, though, when...more

Anti-Dissolution Provisions and Public Policy

In Congel v Malfitano, New York’s highest court wrote that business partners are free to include in partnership contracts practically “any agreement they wish,” including about “the means by which a partnership will dissolve,...more

Valuation Decision Finds LLC “Worthless, Worthless, Worthless”

Justice Masley’s valuation decision in Quattro Parent LLC v Rakib, 2022 NY Slip Op 30190(U) [Sup Ct, NY County Jan. 14, 2022] is noteworthy for two reasons. First, it is an extraordinarily rare example of a business...more

Defendant Dissolves Mid-Lawsuit: What’s the Creditor’s Remedy?

Generally speaking, New York courts respect the corporate form, regarding the liabilities of the entity as separate from and inapplicable to the entity’s principals. Under this principle, a plaintiff may litigate a difficult...more

#MeToo and Business Divorce: The Flip Side

Two years ago, Peter Mahler wrote about a dissolution lawsuit by a female minority shareholder alleging that her male co-shareholders condoned a pattern of sexually offensive and demeaning conduct by a senior co-worker, which...more

Cooked or Raw? Enforceability of Partly Signed Operating Agreements

The harried realities of modern life are such that business entity organizational documents, like LLC operating agreements, sometimes do not get drafted or executed until long after the entity’s initial formation with the...more

Court Enjoins Dilution of Brewing Company LLC Membership Interest

Most folks associate beer with pleasure. Many craft brewers will tell you they went into business for that reason: to make themselves and others happy (and, oh yeah, make money). ...more

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