The pivotal issue presented in this mandamus proceeding is whether a former-but not current-member of a Texas limited liability company has standing to assert derivative claims on that entity's behalf. At least in the posture of this proceeding, the former member does not.
BACKGROUND
The underlying litigation concerns two successive Texas Department of Transportation contracts to operate TxDOT's "Informational Logo Sign and Tourist-Oriented Directional Sign Program," the program involving the now-familiar blue signs on Texas highways that advise motorists of participating businesses accessible from upcoming exits. In 2006, TxDOT awarded this "logo-sign contract" jointly to Media Choice, LLC (one of the relators here), and Quorum Media, LLC, for an initial five-year term beginning on January 1, 2007, with optional extension (ultimately exercised) for another five-year term (i.e., through December 31, 2016).
As the December 31, 2016, termination of the 2006 logo-sign contract approached, TxDOT solicited bids for a new ten-year logo-sign contract to commence on January 1, 2017. Media Choice bid on this contract, and a new LLC was formed-LoneStar Logos Management Company, LLC (LoneStar 2)-to assist Media Choice with the proposal and to perform its day-to-day operational responsibilities under the contract, similar to LoneStar 1 under the prior logo-sign contract, in the event Media Choice was successful. Media Choice ultimately won the contract, and it and LoneStar 2 have operated the logo-sign program since January 1, 2017. Meanwhile, upon the December 31, 2016, termination of the 2006 logo-sign contract and the Management Agreement, LoneStar 1 ceased business operations, although the entity remains in existence.
At relevant times, the ownership of LoneStar 1 has consisted of six members: Media Choice, which holds approximately 52.26 percent; Dunster Live, LLC, which holds thirty percent; and four members that hold interests of less than ten percent each, which include relator Vincent Hazen, who owns a 5.5 percent interest.
First, the movants sought to establish as a matter of law that Dunster had ceased to be a member of LoneStar 1 in October 2016-before Dunster filed the present lawsuit
The second ground on which the movants relied was purely one of law-the October 2016 cessation of Dunster's member interest, they asserted, had also terminated Dunster's standing to assert derivative claims on that entity's behalf. In response to that assertion, Dunster insisted that the movants had not invoked any standing requirement that was properly applicable to LoneStar 1 and that Texas law at most would have required merely that Dunster had been a member of LoneStar 1 at the time the derivative claims had accrued. Because Dunster had been a member of LoneStar 1 during this time period, it reasoned, it satisfied any standing requirement that Texas law could have imposed on it.
The district court granted the motion as to the movants' first ground but denied it as to the second. The court ruled that "Plaintiff Dunster Live, LLC's membership interest in LoneStar Logo & Signs, LLC was redeemed and Plaintiff Dunster Live, LLC ceased being a member of LoneStar Logo & Signs, LLC as of October 13, 2016." But this cessation of membership did not negate Dunster's standing, the court further held, because "Plaintiff Dunster Live, LLC was a member at the time its derivative claims accrued and, therefore, it has standing to bring its derivative claims."
Relators now seek mandamus relief from the portion of the district court's order that denied its second summary-judgment ground. They urge us to direct the district court to vacate that portion of its order and instead grant their motion in full and dismiss all of the claims that Dunster asserts on LoneStar 1's behalf.
ANALYSIS
We may issue a writ of mandamus to correct a trial court's "clear abuse of discretion" where no "adequate" remedy by appeal exists.
Section 101.451 defines a "derivative proceeding" within Subchapter J, in relevant part, as "a civil suit in the right of a domestic limited liability company."
A member may not institute or maintain a derivative proceeding unless:
(1) the member:
(A) was a member of the limited liability company at the time of the act or omission complained of; or
(B) became a member by operation of law from a person that was a member at the time of the act or omission complained of; and
(2) the member fairly and adequately represents the interests of the limited liability company in enforcing the right of the limited liability company.20
The Texas Supreme Court has described the analogous provision governing shareholder-derivative suits as "statutory standing."
However, Section 101.463 prescribes different requirements with respect to "closely held" LLCs,
The Texas Supreme Court has determined that the statutory standing, demand, and mandatory-dismissal provisions applicable to shareholder-derivative actions represent "a statutory equivalent" enacted by the Legislature to supplant the iteration of the action that had evolved in equity or common law.
The gravamen of Dunster's standing theory is that Sections 101.463 and 101.451, as the Texas Supreme Court has construed this same language in regard to shareholder-derivative suits, codifies a version of the derivative action that also eliminates any requirement that a claimant presently possess member status in order to assert derivative claims on behalf of a closely held LLC. In the alternative, Dunster asserts that it satisfies the contemporaneous-ownership requirement in Section 101.452 because it still had member status when the derivative claims accrued; this is the rationale on which the district court expressly relied when ultimately denying summary judgment on the standing issue. Both rationales rest upon the premise that the Legislature in Subchapter J intended to eliminate any requirement of present member status from the "derivative proceeding" it codifies. The statutory language does not go that far, nor has the Texas Supreme Court so held.
As an initial observation, the implications of Dunster's standing theory should give some pause-Dunster's reasoning seemingly would imply that a litigant need not meet standing requirements of any kind in order to bring a derivative suit on a closely held LLC's behalf. Suggesting otherwise, Dunster insists that Section 101.463 's provision allowing trial courts to treat "a derivative proceeding brought by a member of a closely held limited liability company ... as a direct action brought by the member for the member's own benefit" has the effect of making a plaintiff's standing to assert derivative claims contingent on its standing to assert direct claims, in essence collapsing the two requirements into one. Not so. As the Texas Supreme Court has explained regarding parallel statutory language governing closely held corporations, "the proceeding still must be derivative."
The text of Subchapter J confirms that the Legislature contemplated rather than abrogated a "derivative proceeding" having this fundamental, conventional feature of a claimant that presently possesses an ownership interest in the LLC. This is apparent even in Section 101.463, which addresses "a derivative proceeding brought by a member of a closely held limited liability company" and "a recovery in a direct or derivative proceeding by a member. "
Under a correct construction of Subchapter J, the district court abused its discretion in holding that Dunster possessed standing as a former member to prosecute derivative claims on LoneStar 1's behalf. Relators have also demonstrated that they lack an "adequate" remedy by appeal after final judgment. The "adequacy" of an appellate remedy is now evaluated explicitly in light of the benefits versus detriments of the mandamus alternative.
CONCLUSION
Having determined that the trial court abused its discretion by failing to dismiss Dunster's derivative claims for lack of standing, we conditionally grant the petition for writ of mandamus. We lift the temporary stay of the trial-level proceedings and direct the trial court to undertake proceedings consistent with this opinion, including (1) vacating its March 23, 2018 order to the extent that order denies the motion for partial summary judgment, and (2) instead granting summary judgment and dismissing, for want of standing, Dunster's derivative claims brought on behalf of LoneStar 1. The writ will issue only in the unlikely event that the district court does not comply with our order.
Notes
This contract award by TxDOT prompted lawsuits by an unsuccessful incumbent vendor, which in turn gave rise to two appeals to this Court. See generally Texas Logos, L.P. v. Brinkmeyer ,
The Management Agreement provided in relevant part that:
Vendor [previously defined as Media Choice and Quorum Media] does hereby assign to Manager [LoneStar 1] all of the day-to-day operational responsibilities [under the 2006 logo-sign contract] and Manager does hereby assume the obligation to perform same, understanding that Vendor shall remain fully responsible to TxDOT for all obligations thereunder and Manager shall be responsible directly to Vendor for its failure to perform any obligations thereunder.
The LoneStar 1 Company Agreement correspondingly specified that:
The purpose of the Company is to perform all of its obligations set forth in that certain Management Agreement dated effective August 3, 2006, with Media Choice, LLC and Quorum Media Group, LLC for the day to day operations of [the 2006 logo-sign contract] with [TxDOT] ... and for any other lawful purpose approved by the Managers.
The other three members and their respective ownership shares are Drew Cartwright (approximately 7.01 percent), Johnston Media, LLC (4.23 percent), and Brad Scott (1 percent).
Quorum Media is also a plaintiff, but its claims are not directly at issue in this proceeding.
Relators decry Dunster as a "Dallas-based corporate raider" that had effected a "completely unwelcome acquisition and forcible entry" into LoneStar 1 in 2011. According to relators, "Dunster used personal relationships with a bank to purchase the outstanding debt of certain minority members of LoneStar [1] that was secured by the members' interest in the company, threatened to foreclose on that debt, used cash calls Dunster knew could not be met to acquire those members' interest, and thereby accomplished a hostile takeover of a 30 percent share in LoneStar [1]." Relators add that "[t]here were no circumstances under which any of the other members of LoneStar [1]-the 70 percent majority-were ever going to continue in a joint enterprise with Dunster beyond the expiration of the 2006 [logo-sign] contract." Accordingly, relators continue, they executed with Dunster a revised LoneStar 1 company agreement containing a term they view as permitting the very activities of which Dunster now complains:
Each Manager, Member and officer of [LoneStar 1] at any time and from time to time may engage in and possess interests in other business ventures of any and every type and description, independently or with others, including ones in competition with [LoneStar 1], with no obligation to offer to the company or any other Member, Manager or officer the right to participate.
Dunster perceives the parties' respective rights and duties differently.
The movants sought dismissal of two claims in their entirety, designated by Dunster as "Count Three" and "Count Five," the former of which complained of alleged misappropriation of LoneStar 1 trade secrets and the latter of which sought a declaration that LoneStar 1 had no duty to indemnify the defendants. They also sought dismissal of three additional claims-Count One (breach of fiduciary duty), Count Two (aiding and abetting breach of fiduciary duty), and Count Four (conspiracy to breach fiduciary duties and misappropriate LoneStar 1 trade secrets, assets, and goodwill)-to the extent asserted derivatively or otherwise on behalf of LoneStar 1.
Dunster had first filed suit in federal court-in advance of the January 1, 2017, commencement of the new logo-sign contract-asserting a version of its claims in which it sought, in addition to monetary relief, injunctive relief calculated to prevent LoneStar 2's performance of that contract. Following a temporary-injunction hearing in December 2016, the court (Hon. Lee Yeakel, presiding) denied that relief, explicitly declining to find or conclude that Dunster had proven a substantial likelihood of success on the merits or any other required element. The court assumed for purposes of this analysis that Dunster had standing to pursue its derivative claims, albeit while terming the question "an issue of some concern to the court" that it would address when deciding pending defense motions to dismiss. Dunster thereafter moved for and obtained dismissal of its federal suit, following which it filed its present state-court lawsuit in March 2017.
See, e.g. , In re Prudential Ins. Co. of Am. ,
See, e.g. , Walker ,
Schilling v. Belcher ,
Schilling ,
See Somers ,
See Zauber ,
For this reason, Dunster is mistaken in insisting that "factual disputes regarding the effectiveness of the purported redemption of [its] membership interest" preclude mandamus relief. The district court's summary-judgment ruling encompassed the determinations that the movants had established the redemption and resultant loss of Dunster's member status as a matter of law and that Dunster had failed to raise any genuine issue of material fact regarding alleged breaches of fiduciary duty, lack of business justification, or other ground for invalidating or avoiding the legal consequences of the redemption. Similarly unavailing are protestations by Dunster that this summary-judgment ruling was merely "interlocutory." We do not understand Dunster to assail the merits of that ruling, only its finality. To the extent Dunster does purport to challenge that ruling here, it has not shown any basis for reversal.
See generally Tex. Bus. Orgs. Code §§ 101.451 -.463.
Compare
See
See
Tex. Bus. Orgs. Code § 101.452.
See Sneed ,
See Stubblefield v. Belco Mfg. Co. Inc. ,
See Crowley v. Coles ,
See Tex. Bus. Orgs. Code § 101.463.
See
Ritchie v. Rupe ,
Tex. Bus. Orgs. Code § 101.463(c).
See Sneed ,
Id. at 188.
See, e.g. , Cohen ,
See, e.g. , City of Round Rock v. Rodriguez ,
See Tex. Gov't Code § 311.021(1) ("In enacting a statute, it is presumed that ... compliance with the constitutions of this state and the United States is intended."); In re Allcat Claims Serv., L.P. ,
See Tex. Bus. Orgs. Code § 101.463(c) (emphases added).
Section 101.452, again, provides:
A member may not institute or maintain a derivative proceeding unless:
(1) the member :
(A) was a member of the limited liability company at the time of the act or omission complained of; or
(B) became a member by operation of law from a person that was a member at the time of the act or omission complained of; and
(2) the member fairly and adequately represents the interests of the limited liability company in enforcing the right of the limited liability company.
See
Zauber ,
See Sneed ,
Inge v. Walker , No. 3:16-CV-0042-B,
See
See In re Schmitz ,
Id. at 459 (quoting In re McAllen Med. Ctr. ,
See Schmitz ,
Dunster points out that where a derivative claimant sues on behalf of a closely held LLC, such as LoneStar 1, "it is immaterial whether the board of directors approves or disapproves of the derivative litigation." (quoting Sneed ,
E.g. , Dunster suggests there is no substantive distinction between its direct claims and those it purports to assert derivatively. On the contrary, several of the claims would belong solely to LoneStar 1. See supra note 6.
