Ie Test, LLC v. Kenneth Carroll(075842)

140 A.3d 1268, 226 N.J. 166, 2016 N.J. LEXIS 722
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedAugust 2, 2016
DocketA-63-14
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 140 A.3d 1268 (Ie Test, LLC v. Kenneth Carroll(075842)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ie Test, LLC v. Kenneth Carroll(075842), 140 A.3d 1268, 226 N.J. 166, 2016 N.J. LEXIS 722 (N.J. 2016).

Opinion

Justice PATTERSON

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This appeal arises from a conflict among the three members of IE Test, LLC (IE Test), an engineering consultant business *170 formed as a limited liability company (LLC). In the wake of a dispute about the terms of an operating agreement between defendant Kenneth Carroll (Carroll) and the LLC’s other members, Patrick Cupo (Cupo) and Byron James (James), IE Test filed an action to expel Carroll as an LLC member, pursuant to the Limited Liability Company Act, N.J.S.A 42:2B-1 to -70 (LLCA). The trial court granted partial summary judgment and ordered that Carroll be disassociated from IE Test. It based its ruling on a provision of the LLCA that authorized the expulsion of an LLC member by “judicial determination” if the court finds that the member has engaged in conduct relating to the LLC’s business “which makes it not reasonably practicable to carry on the business” with the LLC member remaining part of the LLC. N.J.S.A. 42:2B-24(b)(3)(c) (subsection 3(c)). The Appellate Division affirmed the trial court’s judgment.

We construe the Legislature’s intent when it enacted subsection 3(c) of the LLCA, and an analogous provision in the LLCA’s successor statute, the Revised Uniform Limited Liability Company Act, N.J.S.A. 42:2C-1 to -94 (RULLCA). We hold that a disagreement among LLC members over the terms of an operating agreement does not necessarily compel the expulsion of a dissenting LLC member. If an LLC’s members can manage the LLC without an operating agreement, invoking as necessary the default majority-rule provision of the LLCA, then a conflict among LLC members may not warrant a member’s expulsion under the LLCA. To assist trial courts in determining whether it is “not reasonably practicable” to operate an LLC in light of the LLC member’s conduct, we adopt a series of factors.

Applied to the record of this case, the standard of subsection 3(c) does not warrant a grant of partial summary judgment expelling Carroll from IE Test. Accordingly, we reverse the Appellate Division’s judgment and remand this matter to the trial court.

*171 I.

We derive our summary of the facts from the summary judgment record.

The dispute that prompted this litigation stemmed from the failure of a prior business in which IE Test’s three LLC members were involved. In 2004, Carroll and Cupo formed Instrumentation Engineering, LLC (Instrumentation Engineering) pursuant to Delaware’s LLC laws. By agreement, Carroll owned a fifty-one percent interest in Instrument Engineering, and Cupo owned the remaining forty-nine percent. James was employed by Instrumentation Engineering, initially as Business Development Manager and later as Vice President.

In July 2009, following a series of financial setbacks, Instrumentation Engineering filed for Chapter 7 bankruptcy in the United States Bankruptcy Court for the District of New Jersey. In the bankruptcy proceeding, Carroll claimed that Instrumentation Engineering owed him and his companies $2,543,318. Although the record does not reveal whether Instrumentation Engineering’s debt to Carroll was discharged in bankruptcy, the parties agree that the company did not repay the debt.

As Instrumentation Engineering’s business failed, its owners contemplated a new venture. Shortly before Instrumentation Engineering filed for Chapter 7 bankruptcy, Cupo formed IE Test as a New Jersey LLC. The LLC’s business is the design of testing systems used by manufacturers to evaluate their products.

Cupo was initially IE Test’s sole member. According to Cupo, two months after IE Test was formed, he sold a fifty-percent interest in the LLC to James. Carroll purchased the intellectual property and hardware that had been used in the business of Instrumentation Engineering from the trustee of that entity’s estate in bankruptcy. Carroll contends that he transferred those assets to IE Test, but Cupo disputes that contention.

Carroll, Cupo, and James entered into a preliminary agreement. In that document, Carroll, Cupo, and James stated their intention *172 to enter into an operating agreement for IE Test. They acknowledged that from the inception of IE Test, “the Members of the Company and their LLC Percentage Interests have been and are: Kenneth Carroll (33%), Pat Cupo (34%) [and] Byron James (33%).”

The LLC members were assigned divergent roles in the business of IE Test. Cupo managed the engineering, manufacturing, and financial components of the business. James was responsible for business development. Carroll’s role was limited; he was not expected to become involved in the day-to-day management of IE Test, and the record confirms that he did not do so. Carroll maintained no office at IE Test’s facility and participated in only one sales call. IE Test does not contend that Carroll ever intervened, or attempted to intervene, in IE Test’s day-to-day operations.

IE Test developed an increasingly successful business throughout the period in which it operated with Carroll as an LLC member. After a modest beginning in 2009, during which it earned $396,597, IE Test reported revenue in the amount of $1,232,078 during the first half of 2010. Cupo and James drew salaries in the amount of $170,000 per year, and several $10,000 bonuses. IE Test paid Carroll no salary or bonus at any time.

Carroll’s claim that Instrumentation Engineering owed substantial sums to him and his companies became a point of contention among Cupo, James, and Carroll soon after they agreed to share ownership of IE Test. Carroll acknowledged that IE Test had no legal obligation to repay him for losses sustained because of Instrumentation Engineering’s bankruptcy. He pressed, however, for compensation that would allow him to recover some of his lost investment in Instrumentation Engineering.

An e-mail exchange between Cupo and James in October 2009 described the two options proposed by Carroll as alternative frameworks for an operating agreement: either an arrangement whereby Carroll would be paid an equal share of IE Test’s profits with a premium, or the payment of a salary to Carroll plus an *173 equal share of the profits. James and Cupo then agreed that they did not want to work with Carroll. James commented, however, that Carroll would not “walk away” from the business unless Cupo and James agreed to one of his alternative proposals for his compensation.

It is unclear precisely when Cupo and James decided to file an action to disassociate Carroll as an LLC member pursuant to N.J.S.A. 42:2B-24(b)(3). By early January 2010, however, they were actively pursuing that strategy. In a January 5-6, 2010 email exchange about the best way to remove Carroll as an LLC member, Cupo and James discussed the option of filing a lawsuit to expel him from the company. James wrote that “[n]o one is getting rich here and a third partner will most likely lead to the failure of the business.”

The three LLC members met on January 7, 2010.

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Bluebook (online)
140 A.3d 1268, 226 N.J. 166, 2016 N.J. LEXIS 722, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ie-test-llc-v-kenneth-carroll075842-nj-2016.