Benjamin v. Island Management, LLC

341 Conn. 189
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedNovember 2, 2021
DocketSC20501
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 341 Conn. 189 (Benjamin v. Island Management, LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Benjamin v. Island Management, LLC, 341 Conn. 189 (Colo. 2021).

Opinion

HELEN ZIEGLER BENJAMIN, TRUSTEE v. ISLAND MANAGEMENT, LLC (SC 20501) Robinson, C. J., and McDonald, D’Auria, Mullins, Kahn, Ecker and Keller, Js.

Syllabus

Pursuant to the provision (§ 34-255i (b) (2)) of the Connecticut Uniform Limited Liability Company Act describing the conditions under which a member of a manager-managed limited liability company is permitted to inspect the company’s books and records, ‘‘a member may inspect and copy full information regarding the activities, affairs, financial condi- tion and other circumstances of the company as is just and reasonable if . . . [t]he member seeks the information for a purpose reasonably related to the member’s interest as a member . . . the member makes a demand in a record received by the company, describing with reasonable particularity the information sought and the purpose for seeking the information . . . and . . . the information sought is directly connected to the member’s purpose.’’ Page 4 CONNECTICUT LAW JOURNAL February 8, 2022

190 FEBRUARY, 2022 341 Conn. 189 Benjamin v. Island Management, LLC The defendant, a manager-managed limited liability company, appealed from the judgment of the trial court, which determined that the defendant’s refusal to disclose certain information to the substitute plaintiffs, cotrus- tees of a trust that was a member of the defendant, violated both § 34- 255i and the defendant’s operating agreement. Z created trusts for the benefit of each of his six adult children, including H, B, and C. These trusts owned several family businesses from which Z’s children received dividend income. The defendant was created to oversee and build the family’s assets, and each of the children’s trusts were members and equal one-sixth owners of the defendant, which was governed by an operating agreement executed by Z’s children as trustees of their respec- tive trusts. During the relevant time period, B and C served as both comanagers and copresidents of the defendant, and they had significant roles in family owned businesses from which the defendant received income. Sometime after Z’s death, a disagreement arose regarding the amount of the annual distributions. H believed that the family businesses should be making larger distributions to benefit present trust beneficiar- ies, whereas others, including B and C, believed that the distribution levels were satisfactory. H, in her capacity as cotrustee of her trust, made a series of four written demands for inspection of the defendant’s books and records, each of which cited § 34-255i, or its predecessor, as authority for the demand. The final demand, which requested twenty- seven categories of information, stated that the purposes of the demand were to determine the value of her trust’s membership interest in the defendant and to ascertain the condition and affairs of the family owned businesses so that H’s trust could exercise its rights as a member of the defendant in an informed manner. The defendant produced many records in response to each of the successive demands but declined to produce others. H, in her capacity as trustee, thereafter sought to compel the defendant to comply with her inspection demands, alleging that the member trust’s right to inspection under § 34-255i had been violated and that the defendant’s failure to comply with her inspection demands constituted a breach of the defendant’s operating agreement. Prior to trial, the court granted a motion to substitute the successor trustees of H’s trust as the plaintiffs, and the defendant provided additional information to the plaintiffs. By the time trial commenced, the plaintiffs contended that the four remaining categories of information at issue were the defendant’s general ledger, information pertaining to the defen- dant’s management services agreements, information pertaining to the compensation of the defendant’s managers, officers, and employees, and records showing payments made to third parties on behalf of H’s trust. The plaintiffs argued before the trial court that they were entitled to inspect the remaining categories of information because the evidence called into question whether manager and copresident compensation for B and C was excessive, which, in turn, affected the fair value of the defendant, and whether that compensation, if excessive, constituted a February 8, 2022 CONNECTICUT LAW JOURNAL Page 5

341 Conn. 189 FEBRUARY, 2022 191 Benjamin v. Island Management, LLC disguised distribution not made available to the other children or their respective member trusts. The trial court thereafter concluded that the plaintiffs had demonstrated that they were entitled to inspect each of the four outstanding categories of information under § 34-255i. The trial court ultimately rendered judgment for the plaintiffs, and the defendant appealed. Held: 1. There was no merit to the defendant’s claim that, in order for the investiga- tion of mismanagement to be a proper purpose within the meaning of § 34-255i (b) (2) (A), the member of a limited liability company must come forward with facts evidencing a credible basis to infer that misman- agement may have occurred, as the text of § 34-255i neither contains a credible proof requirement nor assigns any particular burden of proof depending on the inspection purpose that is alleged, and there was no policy basis that justified reading a credible proof of mismanagement requirement into § 34-255i: although some jurisdictions, including Dela- ware, have adopted the requirement of credible proof of mismanage- ment, this court found the arguments cited by other jurisdictions against that standard to be more persuasive, including the principle that the books of a corporation are not the private property of the directors or managers but are the records of their transactions as trustees for the shareholders, and the theory that a credible proof of mismanagement requirement would often deny shareholders the right to ascertain whether their affairs have been properly conducted by the directors or managers; moreover, because the determination of whether an obliga- tion exists to provide factual support for the stated purpose of investigat- ing mismanagement turns on whether the court interprets the legal requirements in the applicable statute to include an express or implied condition that the shareholder is seeking the information in good faith, the fact that the Connecticut Business Corporation Act expressly incor- porates a requirement that the shareholder is seeking the information in good faith, whereas the Connecticut Uniform Limited Liability Com- pany Act does not impose such a condition for an inspection by a member of a limited liability company, cuts strongly against imposing a credible proof requirement on limited liability company members; furthermore, the defendant’s claim that, in the absence of a credible proof requirement, there would be no basis to limit inspection to informa- tion directly connected to the stated purpose, as required by § 34-255i (b) (2) (C), was unavailing, as a request seeking inspection of records in order to investigate mismanagement will typically set forth facts evidencing a basis to suspect mismanagement, and, when such facts are not provided, there are mechanisms other than a credible proof requirement to vindicate a limited liability company’s concerns, includ- ing the trial court’s discretion to require the member of a limited liability company to provide greater specificity, or to limit the scope of inspection if the member’s request is too burdensome or inadequately justified, as well as the limited liability company’s right to resist the inspection by Page 6 CONNECTICUT LAW JOURNAL February 8, 2022

192 FEBRUARY, 2022 341 Conn. 189 Benjamin v.

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Bluebook (online)
341 Conn. 189, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/benjamin-v-island-management-llc-conn-2021.