IAS Partners, Ltd. v. Chambers

213 P.3d 751, 42 Kan. App. 2d 412, 2009 Kan. App. LEXIS 815
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kansas
DecidedAugust 14, 2009
DocketNo. 98,868
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 213 P.3d 751 (IAS Partners, Ltd. v. Chambers) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
IAS Partners, Ltd. v. Chambers, 213 P.3d 751, 42 Kan. App. 2d 412, 2009 Kan. App. LEXIS 815 (kanctapp 2009).

Opinion

Leben, J.:

Michael Chambers appeals the district court’s order dissolving a hmited-liability company based on statutory authority to dissolve such a company when it is threatened with irreparable harm because its managers are deadlocked. The district court’s decision was based on detailed factual findings and credibility determinations formed after 10 days of testimony.

Chambers tries to avoid any deference to the district court’s factual findings of deadlock and irreparable harm by arguing as a matter of law that a company can’t be threatened by irreparable harm if it’s still profitable. But acceptance of that argument would remove the remedy the legislature provided for deadlocked companies until they had actually suffered harm — and only the harm of actual losses or insolvency would count. That would ignore many other potential and serious harms, like lost profits, lost business opportunities, or the failure to realize other common expectations that may have been part of the company’s business plan before the deadlock. The district court heard ample evidence that the corporate manager of Metcalf Associates-2000, L.L.C., was itself deadlocked and that the company faced irreparable injury. We cannot set aside its judgment that the company should have, been dissolved.

In addition to the main dispute over whether the company should have been dissolved, the parties have raised several other issues ranging from a challenge to our jurisdiction to hear Chambers’ appeal to the award of a finder’s fee to an attorney who is not a party to the case. We will review each of these issues in some detail, but we have found no error in the district court’s careful and thorough work in this case.

[414]*414I. The District Court Properly Found that the Statutory Requirements for Dissolution of a Limited-Liability Company Were Met.

The overriding issue in this case was whether the statutory requirements for the dissolution of a hmited-liability company had been met. The district court found that they had, and we review its ruling under the familiar standard governing an appeal from a judge-tried case: we must determine whether substantial evidence supports the district court’s factual findings and whether those findings are sufficient to support its conclusions of law. U.S.D. No. 233 v. Kansas Ass’n of American Educators, 275 Kan. 313, 318, 64 P.3d 372 (2003).

The plaintiffs, IAS Partners and the Patrick T. Hayes SEP (a simplified-employee-pension plan), owned 50% of the limited-liability company, Metcalf Associates — 2000, L.L.C. (Metcalf Associates), and Chambers owned the other 50%. A limited-liability company may either be managed by its members or by a manager. K.S.A. 17-7693(a). A separate corporation, Metcalf 2000 Manager Corporation (Manager Corp.), served as the general manager of Metcalf Associates; Patrick Hayes and Chambers each personally owned 50% of the stock of Manager Corp. Chambers was named the president of Manager Corp.

Essentially, the working affairs of Metcalf Associates and Manager Corp. were jointly controlled by Patrick Hayes and Chambers. Chambers owned 50% of Metcalf Associates and 50% of Manager Corp. Patrick Hayes was the creator of the Patrick T. Hayes SEP, a tax-deferred retirement plan, which owned 30% of Metcalf Associates. Patrick Hayes also was the vice president of IAS Partners, which owned 20% of Metcalf Associates and was itself owned by the Hayes Family Trust. Bernard Craig, an attorney, was president of IAS Partners. And Patrick Hayes was the 50% owner of Manager Corp., which managed the affairs of Metcalf Associates.

Under the facts as we have related them, Chambers and Hayes each owned 50% of both Metcalf Associates and Manager Corp. While this appeal involves issues that multiple parties raised in several consolidated lawsuits, we will generally refer to Chambers [415]*415and Hayes rather than to all of the separate parties for the convenience of our discussion. We will refer to separate entities that Hayes owned only as necessary to discuss specific issues along the way.

Metcalf Associates purchased five office buildings making up the Metcalf 103 Office Park in Overland Park. Eighty percent of the purchase price was financed with a 3-year loan with Gold Bank. Hayes testified that he, Chambers, and Craig all agreed at the outset that the business plan for Metcalf Associates was to sell the buildings individually at a profit as quickly as possible. Hayes said that the 3-year term was chosen because he assumed they wouldn’t hold any of the buildings longer than 3 years. But Chambers testified that he and Hayes had discussed the possibility that some of the buildings might be retained for long-term ownership.

Four of the five buildings were sold in April 2001, just less than a year after Metcalf Associates bought them. Those buildings sold for $3.3 million, which was $150,000 more than Metcalf Associates had paid to purchase all five buildings. The building that remained to be sold was the largest of the five. To provide a substantial cash distribution on the sale to the members of Metcalf Associates, the pro rata portions of the Gold Bank loan for the four sold buildings were paid back — but the remaining building still served as security for the remaining balance ($1.14 million) of the original loan. By leaving the loan in place against the fifth building, each member of Metcalf Associates received a cash disbursement of two or more times the initial cash investment.

Relations between Chambers and Patrick Hayes deteriorated over time, with noticeable problems beginning around the time the four buildings were sold. The fifth building was listed for sale through Chambers’ real-estate brokerage, and that building remained unsold when IAS Partners and the Patrick T. Hayes SEP filed suit in April 2003 seeking to dissolve Metcalf Associates on the basis that it was deadlocked and to appoint a custodian for Manager Corp. on the basis that it, too, was deadlocked.

The statute that provides for the dissolution of a deadlocked limited-liability company differs somewhat from the one for the dissolution of a deadlocked corporation, but both require a dual [416]*416showing of deadlock and irreparable injury. For limited-liability companies, K.S.A. 17-76,117(b) allows for owners with at least a 25% interest to petition for dissolution if the company’s business “is suffering or is threatened with irreparable injury because the members . . . are so deadlocked respecting the management of the affairs of the . . . company that the requisite vote for action cannot be obtained and the members are unable to terminate such deadlock.” If the court determines “that such irreparable injury and deadlock exists,” then the court is required to order dissolution. K.S.A. 17-76,117(b). For corporations, a custodian may be appointed for a deadlocked corporation if its “business ...

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
213 P.3d 751, 42 Kan. App. 2d 412, 2009 Kan. App. LEXIS 815, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ias-partners-ltd-v-chambers-kanctapp-2009.