Alpine Investment Partners v. LJM2 Capital Management, L.P.

794 A.2d 1276, 2002 WL 416954
CourtCourt of Chancery of Delaware
DecidedMarch 28, 2002
DocketC.A.19339-NC
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 794 A.2d 1276 (Alpine Investment Partners v. LJM2 Capital Management, L.P.) 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
Alpine Investment Partners v. LJM2 Capital Management, L.P., 794 A.2d 1276, 2002 WL 416954 (Del. Ct. App. 2002).

Opinion

OPINION

JACOBS, Vice Chancellor.

In this action, brought under 6 Del. C. §§ 17-110 and 17-111, the plaintiffs, who are limited partners of LJM2 Co-Investment, L.P., a Delaware limited partnership (“LJM2” or “the Partnership”), seek a determination that they properly removed the defendant LJM2 Capital Management, L.P. (“Capital Management”) as the General Partner, and installed Partnership Services, LLC (“Partnership Services”) as the new General Partner. 1 Under the LJM2 Partnership Agreement, at least 66 2/3% in interest of the limited partners can remove the General Partner, by vote or written consent, “for any reason or no reason.” It is undisputed that written eon-sents constituting the vote required to remove Capital Management were obtained, and that all other requirements for removal imposed by the Partnership Agreement were satisfied.

Only one issue is presented: were the limited partners legally required to deliver their written consents to the General Partner for the removal vote to become effective, even though delivery is not required by the partnership statute or the Partnership Agreement? If delivery was required, then in these circumstances Capital Management was not validly removed as the General Partner. If, on the other hand, delivery was not a requirement, then Capital Management was validly removed. 2

This is the Opinion of the Court deciding the merits of that issue. For the reasons set forth below, the Court determines that delivery of the written consents was not required to remove the General Partner, that Capital Management was validly removed as LJM2’s General Partner, and that Partnership Services is now the de jure General Partner of the Partnership. Accordingly, judgment will be granted in the plaintiffs’ favor on their claim and against the defendant on its counterclaims.

I. THE PERTINENT FACTS AND THE CONTENTIONS

A. The Parties And The Events That Led To This Lawsuit

The plaintiffs are certain limited partners of LJM2, a Delaware limited partner *1279 ship that, through its General Partner, was affiliated with Enron Corporation (“Enron”). LJM2’s limited partners include several large financial institutions and investment funds. 3

Until the events at issue in this lawsuit, LJM2’s General Partner was Capital Management. On July 25, 2001, Andrew Fas-tow, who at that time was Enron’s Chief Financial Officer and a principal of Capital Management, transferred his interest in Capital Management to Michael Kopper (“Kopper”), who at that time was a senior employee and a Managing Director of Enron. As a result of that transfer, Kopper now owns and controls Capital Management.

The critical event that prompted this lawsuit was the removal, by the limited partners, of Capital Management as the General Partner of LJM2, and the installation of Partnership Services as LJM2’s new General Partner. Partnership Services is an affiliate of Jay Alix and Associates, a firm that specializes in “turnaround” situations. What precipitated the limited partners’ action was the highly publicized financial collapse of Enron, which filed Federal bankruptcy proceedings in December 2001. Enron’s financial demise led to a host of lawsuits and governmental investigations. Messrs. Fas-tow and Kopper are named in many of the lawsuits that arose out of transactions between and among Enron, LJM2 and various third parties. Those two gentlemen and others are also the subject of ongoing governmental investigations being conducted by the United States Securities and Exchange Commission and by certain Congressional committees. After recently being subpoenaed to appear before a Congressional committee investigating Enron’s downfall, Mr. Fastow invoked the Fifth Amendment and refused to testify.

A. Facts That Are Critical To The Issues Presented

To understand the nature and significance of the legal issue presented, it becomes necessary first to discuss (1) the provisions of the LJM2 Partnership Agreement that govern the removal of the General Partner, 4 and (2) the actions taken by the limited partners under those provisions to effect the removal of Capital Management, and the substitution of Partnership Services, as the General Partner of LJM2.

The primary provisions that govern the removal of the General Partner are Sections 6.2(b) and 6.2(c) of the Partnership Agreement. Section 6.2(b) states in pertinent part:

Subject to Section 6.2(c), the Limited Partners may, for any reason or no reason, remove the General Partner and appoint a new general partner to manage the Partnership in accordance with this Section 6.2, upon (i) the recommendation of at least a majority of the members of the Advisory Committee to remove the General Partner, and (ii) a determination by at least 66 2/3% in Interest of the Limited Partners, acting *1280 by written consent or vote, to remove the General Partner....

Section 6.2(c) provides that no removal of the General Partner shall be final and effective until:

a new general partner has been admitted to the Partnership upon such new general partner’s execution of a counterpart signature page of this Agreement, and until the General Partner’s interest has been converted to a limited partner interest in the Partnership, all in the manner specified in this Section 6.2.

Thus, to remove a General Partner, the Partnership’s Advisory Committee must first act to recommend removal, and then two-thirds in Interest of the limited partners must act, by written consent or vote, to remove the General Partner. The removal becomes effective upon the new General Partner executing a counterpart signature page of the Partnership Agreement and upon the (removed) General Partner’s interest becoming converted into a limited partner interest in the Partnership. The Partnership Agreement contains no provision that requires that the Advisory Committee recommendation, or the limited partners’ written consents, be delivered to the General Partner to effect its removal.

It is undisputed that the aforementioned requirements of Section 6.2 for removing the General Partner were all satisfied. First, between December 31, 2001 and January 3, 2002, seven of the eight members of the Advisory Committee executed written consents recommending the removal of Capital Management as General Partner. Second, as of January 3, 2002, the total Interest in the Partnership of the limited partners was $387,145,000. Thus, the votes or consents of limited partners representing 66 2/3% of that amount, or $258,096,667 in Interest, were needed to remove Capital Management. On January 2 and 3, 2002, 45 of the 52 limited partners, representing $300,140,000 — or over 75% in Interest — executed written consents approving (a) the removal of Capital Management as General Partner, and (b) the appointment of Partnership Services as the new General Partner.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
794 A.2d 1276, 2002 WL 416954, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/alpine-investment-partners-v-ljm2-capital-management-lp-delch-2002.