Eureka VIII LLC v. Niagara Falls Holdings LLC

899 A.2d 95, 2006 Del. Ch. LEXIS 98, 2006 WL 1579712
CourtCourt of Chancery of Delaware
DecidedJune 6, 2006
DocketC.A. 1203-N
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 899 A.2d 95 (Eureka VIII LLC v. Niagara Falls Holdings 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
Eureka VIII LLC v. Niagara Falls Holdings LLC, 899 A.2d 95, 2006 Del. Ch. LEXIS 98, 2006 WL 1579712 (Del. Ct. App. 2006).

Opinion

*97 OPINION

STRINE, Vice Chancellor.

Plaintiff Eureka VIII LLC (“Eureka”) holds a 50% membership interest in Niagara Falls Redevelopment, LLC (“Niagara Redevelopment”), and alleges that Niagara Falls Holdings LLC (“Holdings”), the owner of the remaining 50% interest in Niagara Redevelopment, has committed several material breaches of the Niagara Redevelopment LLC Agreement (the “LLC Agreement”). As a result, Eureka seeks a declaration that Holdings has relinquished its membership interest and retains only the economic rights of its ownership stake in Niagara Redevelopment. This' claim is before me now on Eureka’s motion for summary judgment.

Specifically, Eureka alleges that Holdings breached the LLC Agreement: 1) by transferring ownership of 32% of Holdings in 1999; 2) by granting a security interest in the trust that owned Holdings in 2001; 3) upon the death of an individual, which occurred in 2003, who was required by the LLC Agreement to retain voting control of Holdings; and 4) when a receiver was appointed to manage the trust that controlled Holdings. Holdings concedes that two of these events, in fact, do breach the LLC Agreement. It contests the remaining two breaches.

Eureka has proffered a remedy for the breaches whereby Holdings would retain only its economic interest and not have the right to participate in the management of Niagara Redevelopment. Eureka’s suggested remedy draws its inspiration from § 18-702(b)(3) of the Delaware Limited Liability Company Act (the “LLC Act”). Eureka concedes that § 18-702(b)(3) does not apply directly to this case, because it applies only when an LLC member assigns its entire interest to a third party, but urges me to consider adopting it as a fitting remedy for the type of breaches committed by Holdings. It requests this remedy because Holdings’ breaches resulted in a creditor of a trust that controls Holdings gaining voting control as well as legal and beneficial ownership of Holdings, which the anti-transfer provisions of the LLG Agreement were designed to prevent.

While admitting that it has breached the LLC Agreement, Holdings argues that extenuating circumstances counsel against a remedy depriving it of its status as a member. Holdings attempts to explain away its breaches as trifles resulting from exigent financial circumstances. Moreover, it advances the notion that if Eureka had fulfilled its duties under the LLC Agreement, it would have paid Holdings $13.2 million for its interest in Niagara Redevelopment when Holdings invoked the buy/ sell provision of the LLC Agreement. Because of Eureka’s breach of the buy/sell provision, Holdings contends that Eureka is in no position to call breach and deprive Holdings of its status a member.

In this opinion, I conclude that Holdings indisputably breached the LLC Agreement in at least four instances. Each of these breaches implicated a clear contractual goal of Eureka evinced in the LLC Agreement, which was to ensure that it would-not find itself jointly owning Niagara Redevelopment with a partner it did not approve. By Holdings’ breaches, Eureka found itself in the very position that the LLC Agreement’s terms were designed to prevent — creditors of Holdings’ owner claiming to be a 50% member of Niagara Redevelopment. As Eureka suggests, it is an entirely fitting and proportionate remedy to hold that Holdings, by virtue of these breaches, should be declared to have lost its status as a member and to be limited to the rights of an assignee as set forth in the *98 LLC Act. Therefore, I enter summary-judgment for Eureka to that effect.

I also dismiss Holdings’ counterclaims, largely for the following reasons. The first material breach of the LLC Agreement by Holdings predated its attempt to invoke the buy/sell provision. That material breach was undisclosed and gave the Cogan Trust’s creditors a security interest in the Cogan Trust’s controlling interest in Holdings. Therefore, Holdings was in no equitable position to invoke the buy/sell provision, having committed a prior material breach.

As important, Holdings claims that the financial straits of Cogan were so extreme that it was forced to breach the Agreement. This claim is at odds with Holdings’ ability to follow through with its stated intent when it invoked the buy/sell provision, which was to buy out Eureka for $26 million. The record is devoid of proof that Holdings was ready, willing, and able to buy out Eureka at the price Holdings itself set. Rather, Holdings’ invocation of the buy/sell provision was an exit ploy, used in the hope that Eureka would buy out Holdings. When Eureka indicated that it would, in fact, buy Holdings’ interest but did not close on the deal, Holdings had only one contractual right — to buy out Eureka at 10% less than the original $26 million purchase price. Holdings never sought to specifically enforce its right to buy Eureka out at a 10% discount and has not proffered evidence that it was financially capable of exercising that right. To this day, approximately three years after Holdings’ purported right to buy at the discounted price ripened, Holdings has never sought specific performance. Eureka’s claim to enforce the buy/sell provision shall therefore be dismissed, given that: 1) Holdings had committed a prior, undisclosed material breach which disentitled it to invoke the buy/sell provision; 2) Holdings did not have the financial resources to buy out Eureka when it first offered to do so nor when it had the chance to buy at a discount; and 8) Holdings never sought specific performance of its only contractual remedy.

I. Factual Background,

From the summary judgment record, the following undisputed facts emerge.

A. Parties

Plaintiff Eureka is a single-purpose entity that was formed in 1998 by Howard and Edward Milstein, who are both New York real estate developers, to obtain a 50% membership interest in Niagara Redevelopment.

Defendant Holdings owned the remaining 50% membership interest in Niagara Redevelopment. Holdings was formed by Edwin Cogan, through a family trust (the “Cogan Trust”), who had been involved in other ventures to develop property in Niagara Falls, New York before entering into this joint venture with Eureka.

Niagara Redevelopment was formed by Eureka and Holdings for the purpose of developing certain properties in Niagara Falls. Holdings contributed the rights to develop those properties, and Eureka initially invested $4 million in Niagara Redevelopment in order to fund the development of the properties. The LLC Agreement names Eureka as the managing member of Niagara Redevelopment, and both Eureka and Holdings have equal voting and financial interests in Niagara Redevelopment.

B. Cogan Obtains Development Rights In Niagara Falls And Brings Eureka Into The Deal

Beginning in 1996, Cogan began negotiating with the City of Niagara Falls and the Niagara Falls Urban Renewal Agency *99 (collectively, the “City”) in an attempt to secure certain development rights in downtown Niagara Falls. Specifically, Cogan was seeking the rights to develop and manage a convention center and water amusement park and the rights to introduce legalized casino gambling into Niagara Falls.

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899 A.2d 95, 2006 Del. Ch. LEXIS 98, 2006 WL 1579712, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/eureka-viii-llc-v-niagara-falls-holdings-llc-delch-2006.