2009 Caiola Family Trust v. PWA, LLC

CourtCourt of Chancery of Delaware
DecidedOctober 14, 2015
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. 2015).

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: June 24, 2015 Date Decided: October 14, 2015

Kurt M. Heyman, Esq., Patricia L. Enerio, Esq., PROCTOR HEYMAN ENERIO 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., Albert J. Carroll, Esq., MORRIS JAMES LLP, Wilmington, Delaware; Attorneys for Defendants.

PARSONS, Vice Chancellor. This case involves a dispute between members of a limited liability company that

owns an apartment complex in Lenexa, Kansas. The plaintiffs include a trust, which

owns 90% of the membership interests in the company, and its trustee. The defendants

include another LLC, which owns 10% of the company‘s membership interests and is the

original managing member of the first LLC, and the managing member and 10% owner

of the second LLC. The plaintiffs are suing the defendants for breaching both the first

LLC‘s operating agreement and their fiduciary duties and are seeking a declaratory

judgment that the second LLC should be removed as the managing member of the

company and replaced by an affiliate of the plaintiffs. The plaintiffs also seek money

damages in favor of the first LLC. Both parties requested that the other side pay their

attorneys‘ fees under a fee-shifting provision in the operating agreement. I tried this

matter for three days in February 2015. For the reasons that follow, I conclude that: (1)

the plaintiffs are entitled to the declaratory judgment they seek; (2) the defendants owe

the company a relatively small fraction of the money damages sought; and (3) the

plaintiffs are entitled to recover one-half of their reasonable attorneys‘ fees.

Before delving into the myriad details relevant to this dispute, I note that it

provides an important object lesson: an alternative entity, like the LLC at the center of

this litigation, is not the same thing as a corporation. In particular, the 90% non-

managing member of an LLC generally does not get to call the shots. By the same token,

the managing member enjoys broad discretion in the management of the entity, but can

be removed for cause if it fails to pay attention to the requirements of the LLC‘s

1 operating agreement. It is critical to the successful and mutually beneficial operation of

an alternative entity that the members and their counsel not lose sight of these

fundamentals.

I. BACKGROUND1

A. The Parties

The plaintiffs are the 2009 Caiola Family Trust (―CFT‖), a Florida trust, and Louis

Cortese, CFT‘s trustee. I refer to CFT and Cortese, collectively, as ―Plaintiffs.‖ CFT is

the 90% owner and the Non-Managing Member of Dunes Point West Associates, LLC

(―DPW‖ or the ―Company‖). Cortese‘s uncle, Louis Caiola, is the settlor of CFT and

operated an investment banking boutique. Cortese, beginning in 1976, served as the

financial manager of Caiola‘s businesses.

Defendant PWA, LLC (―PWA‖), a Kansas limited liability company (―LLC‖),

owns 10% of the Company‘s membership interests and was its original Managing

Member. Whether PWA still remains the Managing Member is the primary issue in this

case. Defendant Ward Katz2 is PWA‘s managing member and owns 10% of its

membership interests. Katz has over thirty years of experience in developing and

1 Citations to testimony presented at trial are in the form ―Tr. # (X)‖ with ―X‖ representing the surname of the speaker, if not clear from the text. Exhibits are cited as ―JX #,‖ and facts drawn from the parties‘ pre-trial Joint Stipulation are cited as ―JS ¶ #.‖ Capitalized terms not defined herein have the meaning assigned to them in the Company‘s Amended and Restated Operating Agreement, executed as of November 28, 2006 (the ―Operating Agreement‖). 2 All references to ―Katz‖ throughout this Opinion should be understood to mean Ward Katz. Any reference to Ward Katz‘s son, Peter Katz, will include his first and last name. 2 managing multifamily properties and is also the President and CEO of Dunes Residential

Services, Inc. (―DRS‖), the former Property Manager of DPW. Together, I refer to PWA

and Katz as ―Defendants.‖ DPW is also a nominal defendant in this case. DPW is a

Delaware LLC that was formed in 2006 to acquire, own, operate, lease, or otherwise

dispose of approximately 12.67 acres of land upon which a 172-unit multifamily

apartment complex, known as the Dunes at City Center, sits in Lenexa, Kansas (the

―Property‖).

There are numerous relevant non-parties in this action. Along with PWA, NDC

Point West LLC (―NDC Point West‖) and Block Investment Group Point West, LLC

(―Block‖) were the Company‘s Members at formation. NDC Capital Partners, LLC

(―NDC Capital‖), an affiliate of NDC Point West and Block, was the Company‘s original

asset manager under the Operating Agreement (the ―Asset Manager‖) and a co-investor

with Katz in another property. Curo Enterprises, LLC (―Curo Enterprises‖), an affiliate

of Caiola, assumed NDC Capital‘s role as the Asset Manager in July 2012.3 DRS, a

Texas corporation and an affiliate of Defendants, was the Company‘s original Property

Manager under the Management Agreement between DRS and the Company, dated

August 14, 2006. DRS also managed several other properties in which Katz or NDC

Capital had invested. DRS resigned as the Property Manager in September 2013 and was

replaced by GREP South L.P. (―Greystar‖), a property manager that is not affiliated with

the parties but was selected for the Company by Plaintiffs. Curo Point West, LLC

3 JS ¶¶ 49, 54.

3 (―CPW‖), an affiliate of Caiola, was designated by Plaintiffs to replace PWA as the

Managing Member. NorthMarq Capital, Inc. (―NorthMarq‖) holds an $8.715 million

mortgage that encumbers the Property. The Ward A. Katz Revocable Trust, the Donna

Katz Revocable Trust, and DLKPWA, LLC are all entities associated with and controlled

by Katz to which Katz transferred his interest in PWA in 2007 or 2008, 2011, and 2013,

respectively.

B. Facts

1. Katz and NDC Capital plan their investment in the Property

Katz‘s initial investment strategy for the Property centered on the acquisition and

repositioning of the then-Point West Apartments to benefit from the City of Lenexa‘s

planned development of the Lenexa City Center (the ―City Center‖). The City Center

was expected to offer 4.5 million square feet of mixed-use development, including retail

and office space, on 200 acres and serve as a ―gathering place for shopping, recreation,

and employment.‖4 Katz monitored the progress of the City Center plan and attended

city council meetings where it was discussed and ultimately approved.5

After a local broker listed the Property for sale, Katz obtained and reviewed the

sales brochure and presented it to Eric Jones of NDC Capital. NDC Capital expressed an

interest, and Katz developed a business plan to purchase and rehabilitate the Property to

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2009 Caiola Family Trust v. PWA, LLC, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/2009-caiola-family-trust-v-pwa-llc-delch-2015.