2009 Caiola Family Trust v. PWA, LLC

CourtCourt of Chancery of Delaware
DecidedDecember 18, 2014
DocketCA 8028-VCP
StatusPublished

This text of 2009 Caiola Family Trust v. PWA, LLC (2009 Caiola Family Trust v. PWA, LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Chancery of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
2009 Caiola Family Trust v. PWA, LLC, (Del. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF CHANCERY OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE

_________________________________ : 2009 CAIOLA FAMILY TRUST, : a New Jersey trust, and LOUIS CORTESE, : : Plaintiffs, : : v. : C.A. No. 8028-VCP : PWA, LLC, a Kansas limited liability : company, and WARD KATZ, : : Defendants, : : and : : DUNES POINT WEST ASSOCIATES, : LLC, a Delaware limited liability : company, : : Nominal Defendant. : _________________________________ :

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Date Submitted: July 17, 2014 Date Decided: December 18, 2014

Kurt M. Heyman, Esq., Patricia L. Enerio, Esq., Dawn Kurtz Crompton, Esq., PROCTOR HEYMAN LLP, Wilmington, Delaware; Gary M. Fellner, Esq., Michael J. Naporano, Esq., PORZIO BROMBERG & NEWMAN P.C., New York, New York; Attorneys for Plaintiffs.

Thomas E. Hanson, Jr., Esq., Patricia A. Winston, Esq., MORRIS JAMES LLP, Wilmington, Delaware; Attorneys for Defendants.

PARSONS, Vice Chancellor. This case concerns a Delaware limited liability company that was formed to own

and operate a residential apartment complex in Kansas. The plaintiffs are non-managing

members of the company who own 90% of its membership interests. The defendants are

a Kansas LLC, which is a 10% interest holder and managing member of the company,

and an individual who is the managing member of the Kansas LLC. The plaintiffs accuse

the defendants of various breaches of the company‟s operating agreement and their

fiduciary duties, which allegedly have resulted in damage to the company. According to

the plaintiffs, these wrongs justify the removal of the Kansas LLC from its position as

managing member.

The defendants have moved to dismiss the complaint on several grounds. Both

defendants contend that the complaint should be dismissed for failure to state a claim

under Court of Chancery Rule 12(b)(6), or in the alternative, on grounds of forum non

conveniens. The individual defendant, who resides in Kansas, also seeks dismissal of the

complaint as it relates to him for the additional reason that he lacks sufficient minimum

contacts with the State of Delaware to be subject to personal jurisdiction in this Court.

Around the same time as the defendants‟ motion to dismiss, the plaintiffs moved for

partial summary judgment, arguing that certain of the defendants‟ alleged actions entitle

the plaintiffs to remove the defendant LLC from its position as managing member.

For the reasons stated in this Memorandum Opinion, I deny the defendants‟

motion, except as it relates to the plaintiffs‟ claim for waste, which I dismiss. I also deny

the plaintiffs‟ motion for partial summary judgment.

1 I. BACKGROUND1

A. Parties

Plaintiffs are the 2009 Caiola Family Trust (“CFT”) and Louis Cortese. CFT is a

New Jersey trust, and Cortese, an individual residing in New York, is its trustee.

Plaintiffs are Non-Managing Members2 of the nominal Defendant, Dunes Point West,

LLC (“Dunes Point” or the “Company”), a Delaware limited liability company with its

principal place of business in Kansas. CFT and Cortese hold respectively 86.1% and

3.9% of the total Member Interests in the Company.

Defendant PWA, LLC (“PWA”) is a Kansas limited liability company, with its

principal place of business in Kansas. Since the Company‟s inception, PWA has been its

Managing Member and the holder of 10% of Dunes Point‟s Member Interests. Defendant

Ward Katz (together with PWA, “Defendants”) is an individual residing in Kansas. He

holds a 10% interest in PWA and is its managing member.

B. Facts

1. The Point West Project

Dunes Point was formed in 2006 for the purpose of acquiring and operating the

Point West Apartments, a 172-unit multi-family apartment complex located in Lenexa,

1 Except as otherwise noted, the relevant facts are drawn from Plaintiffs‟ Amended Verified Complaint (the “Complaint” or “Compl.”) and the documents attached or integral thereto. 2 Capitalized terms not otherwise defined in this Memorandum Opinion are defined in the Dunes Point Operating Agreement which was attached to the Complaint as Exhibit A [hereinafter “OA”].

2 Kansas (“the Project”). PWA, NDC Point West, LLC (“NDC Point West”), and Block

Investment Group Point West, LLC (“Block”) originally held all the Company‟s Member

Interests, with stakes of 10%, 12%, and 78%, respectively. Block later assigned its

interests to Cortese and Louis S. Caiola. CFT succeeded to Caiola‟s interest in January

2009 and acquired and succeeded to NDC Point West‟s stake in June 2012, bringing its

ownership of Dunes Point to its current level.

Around the time of Dunes Point‟s formation, PWA appointed non-party Dunes

Residential Services, Inc. (“DRS”), a Kansas corporation, as the Property Manager

charged with overseeing the Project according to the terms of an August 14, 2006

“Management Agreement” between DRS and the Company. In addition to controlling

PWA as its managing member, Katz owns DRS. Plaintiffs allege, therefore, that Katz

has controlled the operation and management of the Company and the Project at all

relevant times.

2. Discord at Dunes Point

At some point in 2012, Plaintiffs became dissatisfied with the Project‟s

performance, and “sought to exert greater influence to improve its operations.” 3 In July

2012, Plaintiffs called for and obtained by consent a vote of Dunes Point‟s Non-

Managing Members, by which Plaintiffs determined to remove DRS and hire GREP

South L.P. (“GREP”) as Property Manager. GREP is a national company engaged in

residential property management; it is apparently unaffiliated with either Plaintiffs or

3 Compl. ¶ 15.

3 Defendants. Plaintiffs promptly notified PWA of the Non-Managing Members‟ vote and

instructed PWA to implement it, but PWA refused. Through an affiliate, Curo

Enterprises, LLC (“Curo Enterprises”), Plaintiffs then sued in Kansas state court to

remove DRS as Property Manager. In September 2013, DRS resigned from that position.

Thereafter, GREP replaced DRS and it continues to manage the day-to-day operations of

the Project.

Plaintiffs‟ grievances regarding PWA‟s management of Dunes Point and the

Project fall into five categories. They allege that Defendants: (1) improperly paid asset

management fees; (2) provided Plaintiffs with misleading financial reports; (3) failed to

improve and maintain the Project and thereby caused a loss of profits; (4) committed

waste and other breaches of fiduciary duty; and (5) violated the Operating Agreement‟s

“Key Person” provision. I briefly recite the facts relevant to each of these allegations.

a. The asset management fees

DRS and non-party NDC Capital Partners, LLC (“NDC Capital”) were the

original “co-sponsors” of Dunes Point.4 NDC Capital solicited passive equity investors

for the Company and until June 2012 served as “asset manager” of the Project,

distributing operational and financial information about the Project to investors and

acting as a liaison between them and the Company. The Operating Agreement entitled

NDC Capital to receive certain “Asset Management Fees” for performing these services.

According to Section 8.3(c) of the Agreement, however, the Asset Management Fee was

4 Compl. ¶ 11.

4 payable “only to the extent of available Net Cash Flow from Operations and Net Event

Proceeds, after payment of all outstanding party debts and liabilities of the Company then

due and payable . . .

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