In thе Matter of the Dissolution of 1545 OCEAN AVENUE, LLC. CROWN ROYAL VENTURES, LLC, Respondent; OCEAN SUFFOLK PROPERTIES, LLC, Appellant, and WALTER T. VAN HOUTEN et al., Respondents.
Second Department
January 26, 2010
893 N.Y.S.2d 590
Rivkin Radler, LLP, Uniondale (Joseph Buzzell and Cheryl Korman of counsel), for appellant.
Barry V. Pittman, Bayshore, for Crown Royal Ventures, LLC, respondent.
OPINION OF THE COURT
Austin, J.
I
1545 LLC was formed in November 2006 when its articles of organization were filed with the Department of State. On November 15, 2006 two membership certificates for 50 units each were issued respectively to Crown Royal and the appellant, Ocean Suffolk Properties, LLC (hereinafter Ocean Suffolk).
On the same date that the membership certificates were issued, an operating agreement was executed by Ocean Suffolk and Crown Royal. The оperating agreement provided for two managers: Walter T. Van Houten (hereinafter Van Houten), who was a member of Ocean Suffolk, and John J. King, who was a member of Crown Royal. Each member of 1545 LLC contributed 50% of the capital which was used to purchase premises known as 1545 Ocean Avenue in Bohemia (hereinafter the property) on January 5, 2007. 1545 LLC was formed to purchase the property, rehabilitate an existing building, and build a second building for commercial rental (hereinaftеr buildings A and B, respectively).
It was agreed by Van Houten and King that they would solicit bids from third parties to perform the necessary demolition and construction work to complete the project. Van Houten, who owns his own construction company, Van Houten Construction (hereinafter VHC), was permitted to submit bids for the project, subject to the approval of the managers.
Ocean Suffolk alleges that when there were no bona fide bidders, the managers agreed to allow VHC to рerform the work, while Crown Royal maintains that VHC began demolition and reconstruction on building A without King‘s consent. In rehabilitating the existing building, Van Houten claims that he discovered and remediated various structural flaws with the claimed knowledge and approval of King or another member of Crown Royal.
King wanted architect Gary Bruno to review the blueprints upon which VHC began demolition since it had been started without the necessary building permits. In addition, King claimed that VHC did not have the proper equipmеnt to ef
Thereafter, Bruno applied to the Town of Islip for the necessary building permits. The Suffolk County Department of Health required an environmental review whеreby a so-called “hot spot” was detected by an environmental engineering firm which proposed to remediate it for $6,500. F&E, the company recommended by Crown Royal to do the remediation work, estimated that the cost for the environmental remediation work would be about $6,675. King claims that Van Houten objected to F&E and had another firm do a separate evaluation without King‘s approval, while Van Houten asserts that although F&E eventually charged $8,229.63 for its work, payment to F&E by 1545 LLC was made with his approval. Moreovеr, Van Houten claimed that the separate evaluation was paid for by Ocean Suffolk out of its own account.
Following this incident, King contended that tensions between King and Van Houten escalated. King asserted that things could not continue as they were or else the project would not be finished in an economical or timely manner. King claimed that Van Houten refused to meet on a regular basis; that he proclaimed himself to be a “cowboy“; and that Van Houten stated he would “just get it done.” Nevertheless, King acknowledged that the construction work undertaken by VHC was “awesome.”
By April 2007, King announced that he wanted to withdraw his investment from 1545 LLC. He proposed to have all vendors so notified telling them that Van Houten was taking over the management of 1545 LLC. As a result, Van Houten viewed King as having resigned as a manager of 1545 LLC.
Ultimately, King sought to have Ocean Suffolk buy out Crown Royal‘s membership in 1545 LLC or, alternatively, to have Crown Royal buy out Ocean Suffolk. In the interim, King had his attorney send a “stop work” request to Van Houten.
There ensued discussions regarding competing proposals for the buyout of the interest of each member by the other. No satisfactory resolution was realized. Nevertheless, despite disagreement among the members during this difficult period, VHC
II
Article 4.1 of the opеrating agreement provides that “[a]t any time when there is more than one Manager, any one Manager may take any action permitted under the Agreement, unless the approval of more than one of the Managers is expressly required pursuant to the [operating agreement] or the [Limited Liability Company Law].”
Article 4.12 of the operating agreement entitled, “Regular Meetings,” does not require meetings of the managers with any particular regularity. Meetings may be called without notice as the managers may “from time to time determine.”
Article 7.4 of the operating agreement provides, “any matter not specifically covered by a provision of the [operating agreement], including without limitation, dissolution of the Company, shall be governed by the applicable provisions of the Limited Liability Company Law.” Accordingly, dissolution of 1545 LLC is governed by
III
This proceeding was commenced by order to show cause and verified petition seeking the dissolution of 1545 LLC and related relief. The sole ground for dissolution cited by Crown Royal is deadlock between the managing members arising from Van Houten‘s alleged violations of various provisions of article 4 of the operating agreement. There was no allegation of fraud or frustration of the purpose of 1545 LLC on the part of Ocean Suffolk, Van Houten, and VHC.
Answering the petition, Van Houten, on behalf of his company and Ocean Suffolk, denied the allegations in the petition and set forth their claim that they did business in accordance with the operating agreement. Van Houten alleged that the only significant dissension among the members arose from the inability of the parties to agree on a buyout of each other‘s interest in 1545 LLC. Significantly, Van Houten alleged, without dispute, that the renovation of building A was within three to four weeks of completion when this proceeding was commenced.
Van Houten also contended that, as a result of King‘s resignation as a managing member, Crown Royal could not reasonably
IV
“On application by or for a member, the supreme court in the judicial district in which the office of the limited liability company is located may decree dissolution of a limited liability company whenever it is not reasonably practicable to carry on the business in conformity with the articles of organization or operating agreement” (emphasis added).
The
Although various provisions of the
Such standard, however, is not to be confused with the standard for the judicial dissolution of corporations (see
The
Limited liability companies thus fall within the ambit of neither the
The language of
The
In the absence of applying
The operating agreement of 1545 LLC does not contain any specific provisions relating to dissolution. It provides only in article 1.5 that “[t]he Company‘s term is perpetual from the date of filing of the Articles of Organization . . . unless the Company is dissolved.”
Crown Royal argues for dissolution based on the parties’ failure to hold regular meetings, failure to achieve quorums, and deadlock. The operating agreement, however, does not require regular meetings or quorums (see 1545 LLC operating agreement arts 4.2, 4.13). It only provides, in article 4.12, for meetings to be held at such times as the managers may “from time to time determine.” The record demonstrates that the managers, King and Van Houten, communicated with each other on a regular basis without the formality of a noticed meeting which appears to conform with the spirit and letter of the operating agreement and the continued ability of 1545 LLC to function in that context.
King and Van Houten did not always agree as to the construction work to be performed on the 1545 LLC property. King claims that this forced the parties into a “deadlock.” “Deadlock” is a basis, in and of itself, for judicial dissolution under It has been suggested that judicial dissolution is only available when the petitioning member can show that the limited liability company is unable to function as intended or that it is failing financially (see Schindler v Niche Media Holdings, 1 Misc 3d 713, 716 [2003]). Neither circumstance is demonstrated by the petitiоner here. On the contrary, the purpose of 1545 LLC was feasibly and reasonably being met. The “not reasonably practicable” standard for dissolution of limited liability companies and partnerships has been examined in other jurisdictions. In Delaware, the Chancery Court has observed, “Given its extreme nature, judicial dissolution is a Here, a single manager‘s unilateral action in furtherance of the business of 1545 LLC is specifically contemplated and permitted. Article 4.1 of the 1545 LLC operating agreement states: “At any time when there is more than one Manager, any one manager may take any action permitted under the Agreement, unless the approval of more than one of the Managers is expressly required pursuant to the Agreement or the Act” (emphasis added). This provision does not require that the managers conduct the business of 1545 LLC by majority vote. It empowers each manager to act autonomously and to unilaterally bind the entity in furtherance of the business of the entity. The 1545 LLC operating agreement, however, is silent as to the issue of manager conflicts. Thus, the only basis for dissolution can be if 1545 LLC cannot effectively operate under the operating agreement to meet and achieve the purpose for which it was created. In this case, that is the development of the property which purpose, despite the disagreements between the managing members, was being met. As the Delaware Chancery Court noted in Matter of Arrow Inv. Advisors, LLC, “The court will not dissolve an LLC merely because the LLC has not experienced a smooth glide to profitability or because events have not turned out exactly as the LLC‘s owners originally envisioned; such events are, of course, common in the risk-laden process of birthing new entities in the hope that they will become mature, profitable ventures. In part because a hair-trigger dissolution standard would ignore this market reality and thwart the expectations of reasonable investors that entities will not be judicially terminatеd simply because of some market turbulence, dissolution is reserved for situations in which the LLC‘s management has become so dysfunctional or its business purpose so thwarted that it is no longer practicable to operate the business, such as in the case of a voting deadlock or where the defined purpose of the entity has become impossible to fulfill. . . “Dissolution of an entity chartered for a broad business purpose remains possible upon a strong showing that a confluеnce of situationally specific adverse financial, market, product, managerial, or corporate governance circumstances make it nihilistic for the entity to continue” (2009 WL 1101682, *2-3, 2009 Del Ch LEXIS 66, *9-14 [2009]). Here, the operating agreement avoids the possibility of “deadlock” by permitting each managing member to operate unilaterally in furtherance of 1545 LLC‘s purpose. After careful examination of the various factors considered in applying the “not reasonably praсticable” standard, we hold that for dissolution of a limited liability company pursuant to Dissolution is a drastic remedy (see Matter of Arrow Inv. Advisors, LLC, 2009 WL 1101682, *2, 2009 Del Ch LEXIS 66, *9 [2009]). Although the petitioner has failed to meеt the standard for dissolution enunciated here, there are numerous other factors which support the conclusion that dissolution of 1545 LLC is inappropriate under the circumstances of this case. King never objected to the quality of Van Houten‘s construction work, but only to its expense. The work on building A was all but complete when this proceeding was commenced. King approved and praised it. Further, the parties were operating in conformity with the operating agreement. Second, there is a remedy available in the The notion that 1545 LLC could void the contract with VHC in its entirety may serve as a check on Van Houten‘s unilaterally hiring his own company for future construction work on the property, and may result in Van Houten being made to disgorge excess moneys paid in derogation of 1545 LLC‘s best interest at the time of the accounting of the members. In any event, a fair reading of Finally, if Crown Royal is truly aggrieved by Van Houten‘s aсtions as manager, the Court of Appeals has found that a derivative claim is available (see Tzolis v Wolff, 10 NY3d 100 [2008]). Nevertheless, such remedy cannot serve as the basis for dissolution unless the wrongful acts of a managing member which give rise to the derivative claim are contrary to the contemplated functioning and purpose of the limited liability company. “The appropriateness of an order for dissolution of [the] limited liability company is vested in the sound discretion of the court hearing the petition” (Matter of Extreme Wireless, 299 AD2d 549, 550 [2002], citing Fisher, J.P. (concurring in part and dissenting in part). A limited liability company may be judicially dissolved when the court, in the exercise of its discretion, finds that it is nо longer reasonably practicable for the company to carry on its business in conformity with its articles of organization or operating agreement (see Matter of Extreme Wireless, 299 AD2d at 550; Here, 1545 Ocean Avenue, LLC (hereinafter 1545 LLC), was formed to purchase a certain piece of property, to rehabilitate a building that stood on it, and to build a second building on the property fоr commercial rental. The majority recounts the growing disputes between the managers of 1545 LLC, John King and Walter Van Houten, which ultimately led to King‘s withdrawal from management of 1545 LLC, amid claims, inter alia, that Van Houten had turned the project “into a construction job for [his] own company,” that he did work at excessive cost without King‘s consent, that he violated the parties’ agreement that all construction work was to be procured through a competitive bidding process, that he submitted invoices billing 1545 LLC on a time-and-materials basis which King believed was unacceptable for a commercial project, and that Van Houten had refused In my view, without a factual finding, we cannot meaningfully decide whether the Supreme Court providently exercised its discretion in finding that the actions of the parties rendered it not reasonably practicable for 1545 LLC to carry on its business in conformity with its articles of organization or operating agreement. Accordingly, I would remit the matter to the Supreme Court, Suffolk County, for a fact-finding hearing and thereafter for a new determination on the petition (cf. Dillon and Miller, JJ., concur with Austin, J.; Fisher, J.P., concurs in part and dissents in part in a separate opinion in which Chambers, J., concurs. Ordered that the order is reversed, on the facts and in the exercise of discretion, with costs, the petition is denied, and the proceeding is dismissed.
V
VI
