Braga Investment & Advisory, LLC v. Musa Yenni

CourtCourt of Chancery of Delaware
DecidedMay 31, 2023
DocketC.A. No. 2019-0408-PAF
StatusPublished

This text of Braga Investment & Advisory, LLC v. Musa Yenni (Braga Investment & Advisory, LLC v. Musa Yenni) 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
Braga Investment & Advisory, LLC v. Musa Yenni, (Del. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF CHANCERY OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE

BRAGA INVESTMENT & ADVISORY, ) LLC, ) ) Plaintiff, ) ) v. ) C.A. No. 2019-0408-PAF ) MUSA YENNI, YENNI INCOME ) OPPORTUNITIES FUND I, L.P., STEVEN ) FELLER P.E., LLC, ) ) Defendants. )

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Date Submitted: February 8, 2023 Date Decided: May 31, 2023

Blake Rohrbacher, Andrew L. Milam, RICHARDS, LAYTON & FINGER, P.A., Wilmington, Delaware; David Lackowitz, Alexandra Kolod, MOSES & SINGER LLP, New York, New York; Attorneys for Plaintiff Braga Investment & Advisory, LLC.

Julia B. Klein, KLEIN LLC, Wilmington, Delaware; Justin S. Stern, FRIGON MAHER & STERN LLP, New York, New York; Attorneys for Defendants Musa Yenni, Yenni Income Opportunities Fund I, L.P.

Francis G.X. Pileggi, Cheneise V. Wright, LEWIS BRISBOIS BISGAARD & SMITH LLP, Wilmington, Delaware; Attorneys for Steven Feller P.E., LLC.

FIORAVANTI, Vice Chancellor In 2016, Braga Investment & Advisory, LLC (“Braga Investment” or

Plaintiff”) invested $700,000 to acquire a 23.3% membership interest in Steven

Feller P.E., LLC (the “Company” or “Newco”), as part of a transaction in which the

Company acquired the business of Steven Feller P.E., PL. Yenni Income

Opportunities Fund, I, L.P. (the “Fund”) and its managing partner, Musa Yenni

(“Yenni”), engineered the deal. The Fund owned a majority of the Company’s

membership interests and became the Company’s managing member.

Among the materials that Braga Investment received in due diligence was an

unsigned, proposed form of the Company’s limited liability company agreement,

which is referred to as the operating agreement. Braga Investment knew that the

proposed operating agreement would be revised before the closing of the transaction.

Braga Investment even received one of the invoices from the lawyers who prepared

those revisions, and it paid the bill. After that, Braga Investment executed and

returned a signature page to the operating agreement. Before executing and

returning the signature page, Braga Investment never asked to see the final operating

agreement.1

1 The trial testimony is cited as “Tr.”; deposition testimony is cited as “Dep.”; trial exhibits are cited as “JX”; stipulated facts in the pre-trial order are cited as “PTO”; and references to the docket are cited as “Dkt.,” with each followed by the relevant section, page, paragraph, exhibit, or docket number. The trial record includes over 71 exhibits, live trial testimony from 3 witnesses, and 9 deposition transcripts. As part of the terms of its investment in the Company, Braga Investment also

entered into a separate agreement with the Fund. In that agreement, Braga

Investment acknowledged that it was a passive investor and gave the Fund an

irrevocable power of attorney, allowing it to “vote [Braga Investment’s] equity

interest in [the Company] . . . at all meetings of equity holders and for any other

purpose equity owners are called to vote or consent.” 2

After disputes later arose between Braga Investment and the Fund, the Fund

sought to amend the operating agreement in connection with a potential debt

refinancing in May 2019. In that process, Braga Investment discerned that the

existing operating agreement materially differed in certain respects from the

proposed form of the operating agreement that it first received in 2016. On May 31,

2019, the Company and its members adopted an amended operating agreement, with

the Fund signing on behalf of Braga Investment under the irrevocable power of

attorney.

In this action, Braga Investment alleges that the Fund and Yenni fraudulently

induced Braga Investment to invest in the Company in 2016 and that they breached

the operating agreement by purporting to amend it twice without Braga Investment’s

authorization. Braga Investment seeks rescission and a return of its original

2 JX 5 (“Co-Investment Agreement”) § 5.

2 investment or, alternatively, damages and an order declaring that the form of

operating agreement that it first received in August 2016 is the Company’s “valid

and effective” operating agreement.

In this post-trial decision, the court concludes that Braga Investment failed to

establish its claims. Accordingly, judgment is entered in favor of the defendants.

The defendants’ application for an award of its attorneys’ fees and expenses,

however, is denied.

I. BACKGROUND The following recitation reflects the facts as the court finds them after trial.

A. The Players The Fund is a Delaware limited partnership and private equity fund.3 Musa

Yenni is the Fund’s managing partner. 4 The Fund created the Company in October

2015 to facilitate the acquisition of the assets that made up the business of Steven

Feller P.E., PL (“Oldco”),5 an engineering firm owned by Steven Feller and Louise

Feller (together, the “Sellers”). 6 On or about November 16, 2015, the Fund entered

3 PTO ¶ 14; Tr. 292:3–5 (Yenni). 4 PTO ¶ 15. 5 See JX 18 YENNI0046682; Tr. 293:12–294:4 (Yenni). 6 Tr. 73:13–15 (Ricardo); id. 16:8–16:l5 (Ricardo); PTO ¶ 17.

3 into a Membership Interest Purchase Agreement (the “Purchase Agreement”) with

the Sellers and Oldco. 7 The transaction did not close until ten months later.8

Braga Investment is a Delaware limited liability company headquartered in

New York, New York. 9 Ricardo Braga has served as Braga Investment’s managing

member since 2011. Ricardo Braga’s son, Rodrigo Braga, has served as a director

and member of Braga Investment since 2015. 10

In August 2016, the Fund presented Braga Investment with an opportunity to

invest in the Company. 11 At this point, the transaction contemplated by the Purchase

Agreement had not yet closed. Braga Investment expressed interest in the

opportunity and began due diligence.12 On August 26, 2016, Yenni sent an email to

Braga Investment attaching a copy of the Purchase Agreement. The text of the email

stated in pertinent part:

Here is the definitive purchase agreement we executed with the Seller in November both with and without all its exhibits. The purchase agreement without the exhibits has the signatures of the parties. Please note that Section 9 of the Operating Agreement (Exhibit D) addresses the issues of transfer of shares for all members. We could specify in

7 PTO ¶ 17. 8 Id. 9 Id. ¶ 13. 10 Tr. 5:13–22 (Ricardo); id. 8:1 (Ricardo); id. 250:19–21 (Rodrigo). For clarity, this opinion refers to Ricardo Braga and Rodrigo Braga by their first names. No familiarity or disrespect is intended. 11 PTO ¶ 18. 12 Tr. 297:24–298:6 (Yenni).

4 our operating agreement that we would abide by this Exhibit D. We look forward to our likely partnership.13

The operating agreement attached as Exhibit D to the Purchase Agreement

(the “2015 OA” or “2015 Operating Agreement”) 14 was unsigned and undated.

Unsurprisingly, the 2015 OA did not refer to Braga Investment, which only arrived

on the scene in August 2016, ten months after the Fund, Sellers, and Oldco had

executed the Purchase Agreement. Thus, there was no signature block for Braga

Investment to sign on the 2015 OA’s signature page.15 Schedule A to 2015 OA

(“2015 Schedule A”), which set out the members and managers of the Company’s

capital accounts, had blanks where the dollar amount of the capital account should

have been and did not provide a line for Braga Investment.16 It did, however, provide

lines for the Fund and Oldco.17

B. The Co-Investment Agreement After receiving the August 26, 2016, email, Braga Investment began

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