It’s the Wednesday afternoon before Thanksgiving and the phone rings with a new client. The situation in the office has become an emergency. Either someone has been locked out or someone needs to be locked out, or someone is walking out the door with a key client. Many of our…
Articles Posted in Dissolution
Partnership Accounting Not Available from Deceased Partner’s Heirs
Uniform Partnership Act Limits Remedy If a partner dies after having allegedly misappropriated partnership funds, do the other partners have a right to pursue his estate? The answer appears to be no, according to a recent Chancery Court decision. The decision in In re Genet, Docket No.: ESX-C-44-11 (Oct. 13,…
LLC Does Not Distribute Clients on Dissolution
When a limited liability company dissolves, it pays its creditors and distributes the remaining assets in the winding-down process. Many professional practices are organized as LLCs, and their principal assets are the clients they serve. That does not mean, however, that the professional limited liability company in dissolution has to divide up…
Judges and Lawyers: FB Friends?
Is it ok for lawyers to have FaceBook friends who are judges? Francis Pileggi, a Delaware corporate litigator writes about a recent Ohio professional ethics opinion that says it’s alright that FB friends are different than real friends, which is sometimes true and sometimes not. (Blog Post here) Lawyers Use…
American Chopper Feud Generates Shareholder Dispute
I don’t like reality TV, but I will admit that I thought the fights between the Paul Teutul Sr. and his son, Paul Jr., were the most interesting part of the show. Now that they are involved in litigation over the ownership of the company, I suppose I can take…
Derivative Claim in Dispute Between Owners May Require Independent Counsel
A derivative claim is an action brought by an individual, but to enforce a right owned by the company. Any remedy or recovery belongs to the company. An individual claim is brought to vindicate the rights of an individual owner. The recovery or remedy belongs to the individual owner. Although…
Appellate Division Affirms Sale of Business as a Going Concern in Shareholder Dispute
The last-minute motion of a 50-percent shareholder to prevent the sale of a business as part of an oppressed shareholder lawsuit was insufficient to block the receiver from proceeding with the transaction, according to a New Jersey appellate court. The opinion in Georgiadis v. Georgiadis, Docket No.: A-4018-08 (App. Div.…