The family-owned business at the center of Vaccari v Vaccari, 2018 NY Slip Op 30546(U) [Sup Ct NY County Mar. 28, 2018], decided last month by veteran Manhattan Commercial Division Justice Eileen Bransten, is a classic...more
4/9/2018
/ Accounting ,
Attorney's Fees ,
Breach of Duty ,
Business Litigation ,
Commercial Court ,
Conversion ,
Dissolution ,
Divorce ,
Failure To State A Claim ,
Family Businesses ,
Fiduciary Duty ,
Injunctive Relief ,
Joint Venture ,
Motion to Dismiss ,
Shareholder Oppression ,
Summary Judgment ,
Unjust Enrichment
There’s a lot to digest in last week’s decision by the Court of Appeals — New York’s highest court — affirming and modifying in part the intermediate appellate court’s ruling in Congel v Malfitano, a “wrongful dissolution”...more
The test for judicial dissolution of LLCs under LLC Law § 702, as laid down in 1545 Ocean Avenue, initially asks whether the managers are unable or unwilling to reasonably permit or promote realization of the LLC’s “stated...more
A year ago I wrote a piece called The Elusive Surcharge in Dissolution Proceedings highlighting the rare appearance in the case law of the surcharge provision found in Section 1104-a (d) of the Business Corporation Law. ...more
Having read thousands of court opinions during my 30+ years as a litigator, I’ve learned to assume that there are things going on beyond what can be gleaned from the court’s written decision, and that these hidden factors may...more
As many judges and lawyers know, Superstorm Sandy has been used in litigation over the years as an excuse for things ranging from the seriously bad, like destroyed evidence, to the more mundane, like blown court deadlines. In...more
Regular readers of this blog know it’s been anything but summer doldrums in the world of business divorce, what with case law developments such as the Appellate Division’s potentially far-reaching ruling on the purposeless...more
In 1981, three partners formed a general partnership to own and operate a rental property. Their partnership agreement fixed a 30-year term, to 2011. In 2003, the partners formed a new LLC maintaining the same ownership...more
During her many years as Presiding Justice of the Brooklyn Commercial Division, New York Supreme Court Justice Carolyn E. Demarest (Ret.) decided some of the most important and challenging business divorce matters including...more
Like most civil cases, the vast majority of business divorce disputes get resolved before trial, which is disappointing for us voyeurs since only at trial with live witnesses undergoing cross examination does one get the full...more
3/27/2017
/ Business Ownership ,
Dissolution ,
Estate Claims ,
Family Businesses ,
Foreclosure ,
Limited Liability Company (LLC) ,
Mortgages ,
Partnerships ,
Real Estate Market ,
Transfer of Assets ,
Wills
Whenever I contemplate New York’s unusual case law on the discount for lack of marketability (DLOM) in statutory fair value buy-out proceedings, I cast my eyes westward, to the far banks of the Hudson River, and take comfort...more
There’s little doubt in my mind that “business divorce” has achieved name recognition as a distinct subgenre of commercial litigation whose regular practitioners, by dint of experience dealing in and out of court with the...more
1/10/2017
/ Appraisal ,
Business Entities ,
Business Valuations ,
Choice-of-Law ,
Closely Held Businesses ,
Contract Terms ,
Corporate Dissolution ,
Dissolution ,
Freeze-Out Mergers ,
Internal Controls ,
Jurisdiction ,
Mergers ,
Reverse Stock Splits