Lilly Lea Perry v. Dieter Walter Neupert

CourtCourt of Chancery of Delaware
DecidedFebruary 15, 2019
DocketCA 2017-0290-JTL
StatusPublished

This text of Lilly Lea Perry v. Dieter Walter Neupert (Lilly Lea Perry v. Dieter Walter Neupert) 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
Lilly Lea Perry v. Dieter Walter Neupert, (Del. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF CHANCERY OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE

LILLY LEA PERRY, ) ) Plaintiff, ) ) v. ) C.A. No. 2017-0290-JTL ) DIETER WALTER NEUPERT and CÔTE ) D’AZUR ESTATE CORPORATION, ) ) Defendants, ) ) and ) ) THE BGO FOUNDATION, ) ) Relief Defendant. ) ) ------------------------------------------------------ ) CÔTE D’AZUR ESTATE ) CORPORATION, ) ) Counterclaim Plaintiff, ) ) v. ) ) LILLY LEA PERRY, ) ) Counterclaim Defendant. )

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Date Submitted: February 5, 2019 Date Decided: February 15, 2019

Jeremy D. Anderson, FISH & RICHARDSON P.C., Wilmington, Delaware; Counsel for Lilly Lea Perry.

Norris P. Wright, William M. Kelleher, Phillip A. Giordano, GORDON, FOURNARIS & MAMMARELLA, P.A., Wilmington, Delaware; Counsel for The BGO Foundation. Douglas D. Hermann, James H. S. Levine, PEPPER HAMILTON LLP; Counsel for Côte d’Azur Estate Corporation.

Dieter Walter Neupert, pro se.

LASTER, V.C. The parties dispute who owns the equity of defendant Côte D’Azur Estate

Corporation. The entity came into existence in 2001 as a single-member, member-

managed, Delaware limited liability company named Côte D’Azur Estate LLC. Non-party

Israel Igo Perry was its sole member. Israel died in 2015, survived by plaintiff Lilly Lea

Perry (his wife) and non-parties Tamar and Yael Perry (their daughters).1 Lilly contends

that Israel was the LLC’s sole member when he died and that his interest in the LLC passed

to his estate. The disposition of the estate is currently subject to probate proceedings in the

United Kingdom.

In 2016, as part of the events giving rise to this litigation, defendant Dieter Walter

Neupert filed a certificate of conversion with the Delaware Secretary of State that

converted the company into a corporation. For simplicity, this decision refers to the entity

in both manifestations as the “Company.” Neupert also filed a new certificate of

incorporation for the Company that authorized 10,000 shares of stock, and he prepared

minutes and a share certificate which purported to document the fact that all of the

Company’s shares were owned by The BGO Foundation (the “Foundation”).2 Lilly asserts

1 To avoid confusion, this decision uses first names to refer to members of the Perry family. Some of the exhibits that the parties introduced into evidence refer to Lilly as “LLP” or “LP” and Israel as “IIP” or “IP.” Israel also used the alias “Ivor Friedman,” which appears at times in the exhibits. 2 The Foundation originally was named the Ludwig-Polzer-Hoditz Foundation. In 2015, it changed its name to The BGO Foundation. Both of these names and their abbreviated versions, such as “LPH” and “BGO,” appear in the exhibits. The name change does not matter for purposes of this decision.

1 that Neupert had no authority to take these actions.

The Foundation is a private Liechtenstein foundation, which is an entity roughly

analogous to a Delaware statutory trust. The Foundation is one of over thirty entities

comprising Israel’s complex estate plan, which he and his advisors called “the Structure.”

Neupert, a Swiss attorney, was the chief architect of the Structure. Non-party Lopag Trust,

a Swiss commercial trust company, formed and manages many of the entities in the

Structure, including the Foundation. Principals and employees of Lopag, including non-

party Dominik Naeff, served on the Foundation’s governing board of trustees and acted on

its behalf. Neupert was a co-founder of Lopag, and he served on its governing board when

he took the actions that Lilly challenges.

Lilly originally sued the Company and Neupert, seeking to invalidate the conversion

and establish her beneficial ownership of the Company’s equity in her capacity as Israel’s

sole heir under his last will and testament. She subsequently moved for and received leave

to add the Foundation as a relief defendant. The Foundation responded by moving to

dismiss the complaint for lack of personal jurisdiction. I deferred ruling on the

Foundation’s motion, holding that an evidentiary hearing was necessary to resolve whether

personal jurisdiction existed.

A Delaware court can exercise personal jurisdiction over a non-resident co-

conspirator who knew or had reason to know that the conspiracy had a Delaware nexus.

Lilly proved that the Foundation and Neupert conspired to seize the Company’s equity,

thereby extinguishing her beneficial interest and engaging in the tort of conversion. Lilly

proved that as part of that conspiracy, Neupert caused corporate documents to be filed with

2 the Delaware Secretary of State, establishing the necessary Delaware nexus. Lilly proved

that Naeff and his colleagues at Lopag, acting on behalf of the Foundation, helped Neupert

develop his plan and assisted him in his efforts. These activities support the exercise of

personal jurisdiction over the Foundation as Neupert’s co-conspirator.

In response to Lilly’s contentions, the Foundation and its co-defendants claim they

could not have engaged in a conspiracy because (i) the Foundation already owned all of

the equity in the Company long before Neupert acted in 2016, and (ii) the Foundation

granted Neupert a power of attorney in February 2016, executed in its capacity as the

Company’s sole member, which authorized Neupert to act as he did. The defendants

ground their claim on a deed of assignment that Israel executed on May 1, 2013 (the “Deed

of Assignment”), which recites that he was assigning his equity interest in the Company

and three other entities to the Foundation.

The Deed of Assignment did not effectuate a transfer of Israel’s member interests

to the Foundation, nor could it have resulted in the Foundation becoming the Company’s

sole member. The Deed of Assignment documented Israel’s intent to make an inter vivos

gift. Israel never completed the gift, both because he never delivered his member interests

to the Foundation, and because the Deed of Assignment was not an effective donative

instrument. When signing the Deed of Assignment, Israel did not intend to accomplish an

immediate transfer of his equity; he wanted to evaluate the tax implications of the move

before completing it. The transfer was never completed. Instead, Israel revoked the gift in

December 2013 when he decided not to complete the transfer because of adverse tax

consequences in France.

3 Assuming counterfactually that Israel had intended for the transfer of interests to be

immediately effective, the transaction could not have resulted in the Foundation becoming

the Company’s sole member. The transfer at most would have resulted in the Foundation

becoming an assignee. Moreover, under the Delaware Limited Liability Company Act (the

“LLC Act”) as it existed in May 2013, the transfer would have resulted in the Company

having no members, causing it to dissolve. Along this alternative timeline, the Foundation

could not have become the Company’s sole member and could not have authorized

Neupert’s actions.

The evidence proves that the Foundation’s representatives knew that the Deed of

Assignment was never implemented. Despite this knowledge, they caused the Foundation

to participate fully in Neupert’s scheme to assert control over the Company. They did so

in an effort to coerce Lilly into accepting the disposition of Israel’s property that Neupert

and Lopag wanted to implement. As part of that scheme, the Lopag representatives helped

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