Achaian, Inc. v. Leemon Family LLC

25 A.3d 800, 2011 WL 3505361, 2011 Del. Ch. LEXIS 118
CourtCourt of Chancery of Delaware
DecidedAugust 9, 2011
DocketCivil Action 6261-CS
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 25 A.3d 800 (Achaian, Inc. v. Leemon Family 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
Achaian, Inc. v. Leemon Family LLC, 25 A.3d 800, 2011 WL 3505361, 2011 Del. Ch. LEXIS 118 (Del. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

OPINION

STRINE, Chancellor.

I. Introduction

Omniglow, LLC is a Delaware limited liability company engaged in the manufacture of chemiluminescent novelty items such as “glowsticks.” When it was founded in 2005, Omniglow had a sole “Member,” its “Parent” corporation. 1 As part of a planned spin-off in 2006, Parent sold Omniglow to three business entities. That resulted in Omniglow having three Members, 2 each owning the following Membership “Interests”: (i) 50% were owned by the defendant Leemon Family LLC, a New York limited liability company controlled by its managing member, the individual defendant Ira Leemon (together, “Leemon”); (ii) 30% were owned by the non-party Randye M. Holland and Stanley M. Holland Trust, a revocable inter vivos trust controlled by non-parties Stanley and Randye Holland as trustees (“Holland”); and (iii) 20% were owned by the plaintiff Achaian, Inc., a Nevada corporation wholly owned by non-party William A. Heriot (“Achaian”). 3

For two years, Holland and Leemon, together comprising 80% of the Interests, managed Omniglow’s business with Achai-an taking a passive role as an investor. In 2008, however, Leemon allegedly took sole control of Omniglow over the objection of both Achaian and Holland, and in contravention of Omniglow’s “LLC Agreement” that vests managerial authority in the Members in proportion to their respective *802 Interests. 4 Holland, fed up with controversy, purported to transfer and assign its entire 30% Interest to Achaian in a January 25, 2010 “Purchase Agreement.” 5 Achaian then filed this suit on March 10, 2011, claiming that it and Leemon are now deadlocked, 50/50, as to the management of Omniglow and therefore an order of dissolution is warranted under 6 Del. C. § 18-802 because it is no longer “reasonably practicable to carry on [Omniglow’s] business in conformity with [Omniglow’s] [LLC] [A]greement.” 6 Leemon has moved to dismiss the complaint under Rule 12(b)(6), arguing that Holland’s assignment was only effective to give Achaian an additional 30% economic interest in Omni-glow. Specifically, Leemon says that in order for Achaian to have received a 30% Membership Interest in Omniglow, the LLC Agreement required Leemon’s consent to the assignment because, in its view, Achaian was in effect being readmitted as a Member with respect to its newly acquired 30% Interest.

This case therefore presents a single question of law: may one member of a Delaware limited liability company assign its entire membership interest, including that interest’s voting rights, to another existing member, notwithstanding the fact that the limited liability company agreement requires the affirmative consent of all of the members upon the admission of a new member, or, must the existing member assignee be readmitted with respect to each additional interest it acquires after its initial admission as a member? In this opinion, I find that, consistent with the Delaware Limited Liability Company Act, an enabling statute whose primary function is to fill gaps, if any, in a limited liability company agreement, the answer to that question depends in the first instance on the specific provisions governing the transferability of Interests in Omniglow’s LLC Agreement. When Omniglow’s LLC Agreement is read as a whole, as it must be, 7 it allows an existing Member to transfer its entire Membership Interest, including voting rights, to another existing Member without obtaining the other Members’ consent. Thus, Holland’s assignment of its 30% Interest to an existing Member, Ach-aian, was effective to vest all of the rights associated with that Interest in Achaian, and Omniglow now has two coequal 50% Members.

II. The Relevant Provisions Of The LLC Agreement And The Parties’ Competing Interpretations

This motion presents a discrete question of law. Both parties believe that their dispute must be determined by reference to the terms of the applicable statute, the Delaware Limited Liability Company Act, and Omniglow’s LLC Agreement. 8 Neither argues that there is any relevant par-ol evidence bearing on this dispute, especially because neither Achaian nor Leemon was involved in drafting the original LLC Agreement. 9

To resolve this dispute, it is useful to start with what is now a mundane notion, which is that under the Act, the par *803 ties to an LLC agreement have substantial authority to shape their own affairs and that in general, 10 any conflict between the provisions of the Act and an LLC agreement will be resolved in favor of the LLC agreement. 11

That principle applies here. As Leemon stresses, the default provision of the Act dealing with the transfer of interests in an LLC states:

A limited liability company interest is assignable in whole or in part except as provided in a limited liability company agreement. The assignee of a member’s limited liability company interest shall have no right to participate in the management of the business and affairs of a limited liability company except as provided in a limited liability company agreement .... Unless otherwise provided in a limited liability company agreement, [a]n assignment of a limited liability company interest does not entitle the assignee to become or to exercise any rights or powers of a member [and instead only] entitles the assignee to *804 share in such profits and losses, to receive such distribution or distributions, and to receive such allocation of income, gain, loss, deduction, or credit or similar item to which the assignor was entitled, to the extent assigned.... 12

Likewise, the Act provides that an assign-ee of a limited liability company interest “is admitted as a member of the limited liability company ... as provided in § 18-704(a) of this title 13 and at the time provided in and upon compliance with the limited liability company agreement....” 14

Thus, it is clear that the default rule under the Act is that an assignment of *805 an LLC interest, by itself, does not entitle the assignee to become a member of the LLC; rather, an assignee only receives the assigning member’s economic interest in the LLC to the extent assigned.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
25 A.3d 800, 2011 WL 3505361, 2011 Del. Ch. LEXIS 118, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/achaian-inc-v-leemon-family-llc-delch-2011.