IN RE 11 WEST PARTNERS, LLC

CourtCourt of Chancery of Delaware
DecidedMarch 20, 2019
Docket2017-0568-SG
StatusPublished

This text of IN RE 11 WEST PARTNERS, LLC (IN RE 11 WEST PARTNERS, 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
IN RE 11 WEST PARTNERS, LLC, (Del. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF CHANCERY OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE

IN RE 11 WEST PARTNERS, LLC ) Consolidated ) C.A. No. 2017-0568-SG

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Date Submitted: December 11, 2018 Date Decided: March 20, 2019

C. Barr Flinn, Emily V. Burton, and Daniel Kirshenbaum, of YOUNG CONAWAY STARGATT & TAYLOR, LLP, Wilmington, Delaware; OF COUNSEL: Michael J. Bowe, Alexander B. Simkin, and John A. Dunn, of KASOWITZ BENSON TORRES LLP, New York, New York, Attorneys for Erwin Gonzalez.

Ryan P. Newell, Kyle Evans Gay, and Shaun Michael Kelly, of CONNOLLY GALLAGHER LLP, Wilmington, Delaware; OF COUNSEL: Stan Chelney and Philipp Smaylovsky, of CHELNEY LAW GROUP PLLC, New York, New York, Attorneys for Adam Goldenberg and Abraham Eisenstat.

GLASSCOCK, Vice Chancellor This matter is the result of an unfortunate rupture in the business relationship

of three former friends, Messrs. Gonzales, Eisenstat, and Goldenberg. Starting in

2015, the three began investing in real estate in Oakland, California. Goldenberg,

who had recently moved to California, was the “genius” who located investment

opportunities and, once acquired, made them valuable; Eisenstat found the investors,

most of whom were recruited from a group of acquaintances who valued his integrity

and business acumen; and Gonzales, detail-oriented and meticulous, handled the

business operations. Gonzales and Eisenstat lived in New York.

With respect to each real property investment, the parties created similar

structures. Omitting pass-through entities, each property was owned by a distinct

partnership of investor-limited partners, controlled by a general partner. That

general partner was a specific Delaware LLC for each property, each with Gonzales,

Eisenstat, and Goldenberg as its sole members, where each member held a one-third

interest. The LLCs at issue here control three properties in Oakland, the “Old

Oakland,” the “West Grand,” and the “American Steel” properties.

The relationship between Gonzales and Goldenberg began to deteriorate in

2016; the parties dispute the cause, but the situation was exacerbated by the two

men’s opposing political inclinations with respect to the presidential election that

year. In any event, purportedly pursuant to the LLC Joint Venture Agreements (the

“JVAs”), Goldenberg attempted to remove Gonzales from any authority with respect to the three ventures. Gonzales brought this action, pointing to the JVAs in

the three projects, which provided that major decisions—like ousting a member—

require unanimous agreement of the members. Goldenberg and Eisenstat (the

“Majority Members”) brought a separate action, in which they sought reformation

of the JVAs.

Currently before me is the Majority Members’ request to reform the JVAs to

conform to what they allege was the parties’ intent: that Goldenberg had the power

to make major decisions unilaterally. They point to language providing such in an

earlier JVA, pertaining to the LLC that controlled the “Peralta” property, and argue

that the failure to include similar language in the later JVAs was a scrivener’s error.

I agreed to try this potentially-dispositive issue first, and a one-day trial on

reformation was held on August 9, 2018. Briefing and further evidentiary

submissions followed.

This Memorandum Opinion addresses only the issue of reformation.

The bulk of the testimony was given by the three principals. The stories of

Gonzalez, Goldenberg, and Eisenstat, with respect to the parties’ intent regarding

each General Partner’s control over major decisions, are divergent. This Court has

previously noted the conclusions of social scientists and psychologists that

witnesses may come to believe in factual scenarios beneficial to them, even though

3 the true facts are otherwise.1 It does not require a social scientist to note, however,

that individuals may come to consider ambiguous circumstances as concrete, where

doing so aligns with their own perception of justice. Nor does it require a

psychologist to note that perceptions of justice may be colored by self-interest.

Such considerations, I believe, led to discrepancies in the testimony here. I

believe all three men are honorable, and are testifying to the truth as they recall it.

My takeaway from the testimony is this: The control issue was debated closely by

the parties as they crafted the Peralta JVA. As time to close on that property grew

short with the issue unresolved, the parties agreed to defer control for that project

to Goldenberg. The parties anticipated future projects, but there was no meeting of

the minds as to control for such projects.

With respect to those future projects, the parties hired new counsel to draft the

subsequent JVAs. The parties gave new counsel the Peralta documents, including

the JVA, as a guide. Counsel expressed to the parties that the Peralta JVA was

deficient, and would need to be amended. In their single face-to-face meeting with

counsel, the parties briefly discussed control and the need to protect Eisenstat’s

investors in that regard. Goldenberg and Eisenstat had the impression, nonetheless,

that counsel would not fundamentally amend the JVAs going forward without

1 See Fox v. CDX Holds., Inc., 2015 WL 4571398, at *3 (Del. Ch. July 28, 2015), aff’d, CDX Holds., Inc. v. Fox, 141 A.3d 1037 (Del. 2016). 4 specifically notifying the partners. Although the parties received the second JVA,

which governed the Old Oakland property, with a cover letter advising them to read

it and communicate any concerns, Goldenberg and Eisenstat executed the JVA, and

the subsequent two JVAs, without reading them. Goldenberg and Eisenstat were

unaware, therefore, that the three JVAs require that major decisions be unanimous.

Gonzales, on the other hand, did read the JVAs, saw that what he considered to have

been the open control question had been settled, in a manner more favorable to him

(and to Eisenstat) than was the case with the Peralta JVA, and signed the document.

Subsequent JVAs tracked the Old Oakland JVA; the Managing Members executed

those sans review, as well.

In order to reform the JVAs to make them consistent with the Peralta JVA, as

the Defendants request, I would have to find, by clear and convincing evidence, that

all three partners intended that Goldenberg have unilateral control, and mistakenly

thought that the JVAs so provided, or that only Gonzales knew that the JVAs did

not comport with the parties’ true agreement but nonetheless executed the JVAs and

failed to inform the others of the error. This, based on the record, I cannot do. More

likely, in my view, is the scenario laid out above. Because I cannot find the elements

for reformation by clear and convincing evidence, the request to reform the JVAs

is denied, and the clear language of the JVAs as to control shall apply to the issues

remaining.

5 My reasoning follows.

I. BACKGROUND

A. The Parties

Erwin Gonzalez, Adam Goldenberg, and Abraham Eisenstat (collectively,

“the parties”) are the only members of 11 West Partners, LLC (“11 West”).2 They

formed 11 West in 2015, to centralize operations of their business ventures, which

involved real estate investment in Oakland, California.3

B. Factual Background
1.

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Related

CDX Holdings, Inc. v. Fox
141 A.3d 1037 (Supreme Court of Delaware, 2016)
Cerberus International, Ltd. v. Apollo Management L.P.
794 A.2d 1141 (Supreme Court of Delaware, 2002)

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