Tarnjit Singh Gill v. Regency Holdings, LLC

CourtCourt of Chancery of Delaware
DecidedJune 26, 2023
DocketC.A. No. 2023-0349-BWD
StatusPublished

This text of Tarnjit Singh Gill v. Regency Holdings, LLC (Tarnjit Singh Gill v. Regency 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
Tarnjit Singh Gill v. Regency Holdings, LLC, (Del. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF CHANCERY OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE

TARNJIT SINGH GILL and JAGJIT SINGH ) GILL, ) ) Plaintiffs, ) ) v. ) C.A. No. 2023-0349-BWD ) REGENCY HOLDINGS, LLC, a ) Delaware limited liability company, ) ) Defendant. )

MASTER’S POST-TRIAL FINAL REPORT

Final Report: June 26, 2023 Date Submitted: June 21, 2023

David E. Ross and Roger S. Stronach, of ROSS ARONSTAM & MORITZ LLP, Wilmington, Delaware, Attorneys for Plaintiffs Tarnjit Singh Gill and Jagjit Singh Gill.

Paul J. Loughman and Daniel M. Baker, of YOUNG CONAWAY STARGATT & TAYLOR, LLP, Wilmington, Delaware; OF COUNSEL: Reagan D. Pratt and Paul D. Flack, of PRATT & FLACK, Houston, Texas, Attorneys for Defendant Regency Holdings, LLC.

DAVID, M. This post-trial final report resolves one of seven lawsuits involving siblings

Tarnjit “Mitch” Singh Gill, Jagjit “Jag” Singh Gill, and Jagjit “Jackie” Kaur, their

family company, Regency Holdings, LLC (“Regency,” or the “Company”), and

Regency’s subsidiaries. Through this action, Mitch and Jag1 seek an order to compel

inspection of Regency’s books and records pursuant to Section 18-305 of the

Delaware Limited Liability Company Act.

For decades, Plaintiffs managed the family business alongside their father,

who gifted them each 23.05% of the membership interests in the Company. After

their father died unexpectedly in 2020, however, Plaintiffs’ mother removed them

from positions of authority at the Company and its subsidiaries and asked their sister,

Jackie, to manage the Company, due to allegations that Plaintiffs had mismanaged

and misappropriated the Company’s assets. Those and related allegations are the

subject of numerous lawsuits in the United Kingdom and Texas. Plaintiffs now seek

books and records to evaluate the status of the business and financial condition of

the Company, value their membership interests, and investigate potential

wrongdoing. The Company has rejected the demand, asserting, among other

defenses, that the gifts of membership interests Plaintiffs received from their father

are invalid due to breaches of fiduciary duty, fraud, and undue influence, and that

1 For clarity, this report refers to the parties by their first names, but no disrespect is intended. 1 Plaintiffs’ true purposes are to gain a litigation advantage in the six other pending

suits.

In this final report, I reiterate my prior ruling in discovery that this summary

books and records proceeding is not the appropriate forum to litigate the validity of

the underlying transactions through which Plaintiffs acquired their membership

interests, and Plaintiffs are entitled to rely on the Company’s membership ledger to

establish their standing to demand books and records. I further conclude that

Plaintiffs have stated proper purposes for seeking books and records; those purposes

are their actual, primary purposes for making the demand; the Company cannot deny

the inspection under Section 18-305(c); and Plaintiffs are entitled to inspect some,

but not all, of the books and records they seek.

I. BACKGROUND

The following facts are drawn from the factual stipulations in the parties’ pre-

trial order, the deposition testimony of three witnesses that was submitted in lieu of

live testimony at trial, and 95 joint trial exhibits.2

2 The joint trial exhibits are cited herein as “JX __”. The deposition testimony of Mitch Gill, Jag Gill, and Jackie Kaur, located at JX 86-88, is cited herein as “M. Gill at __”, “J. Gill at __”, and “J. Kaur at __”, respectively. Many of the facts presented at trial will be the subject of further litigation in the numerous other lawsuits the parties have filed. Where it is not necessary to my ruling to resolve these factual disputes, I do not, and instead summarize the parties’ positions for context.

2 A. The Parties and Relevant Non-Parties

Regency is a Delaware limited liability company that serves as a holding

company for subsidiaries that own and operate real estate assets in the United

Kingdom and Texas. These assets include airport property, residential and

commercial rental properties, and a hotel.

Regency’s founder, Jagmail Singh Gill (“Jack”), and his wife, Amarjit Gill,

had three children—Plaintiffs Mitch and Jag, and their sister, Jackie. Jack’s father

began the Gill family business in the 1950s as a clothing company in London. Over

the years, operations expanded to include real estate.3 In 1989, the family purchased

the David Wayne Hooks Memorial Airport in Houston, Texas.4 In the late 2000s,

Jack’s brother passed away, prompting a “demerger” through which the business’s

assets were divided between Jack and his brother’s heirs.5

Jack allocated portions of the Gill family assets to himself, Jag, Mitch, and

Jackie, and kept others in the family portfolio.6 Jack then reorganized the portfolio

assets with Regency as the holding company. At the time of Regency’s formation,

Jack executed a limited liability company agreement to govern its operations (as

3 J. Kaur at 198. 4 M. Gill at 168. 5 J. Kaur at 209. 6 Id. at 209-10.

3 amended and restated, the “Operating Agreement”). Jack appointed himself and

Mitch as Regency’s two directors.7 As reflected in a ledger of membership interests

attached to the Operating Agreement, Jack owned 100% of the membership interests

in the Company.8

The Operating Agreement requires that Regency maintain “[p]roper and

complete records and books of account of the business of the” Company “on a basis

consistent with . . . treatment [as a disregarded entity for United States income tax

purposes] and on the same basis utilized in preparing the [Company]’s United States

federal income tax (if required).” JX 3, Operating Agreement §§ 13(b), (d). Under

the Operating Agreement, “[t]he Member and its duly authorized representatives

may, for any reason reasonably related to its interest as a member of the [Company],

examine the [Company]’s books of account and make copies and extracts therefrom

at its own expense.” Id. § 13(e).

7 JX 3, Operating Agreement § 6 (“[T]he business and affairs of the Company shall be managed exclusively by a Board of Directors[.] . . . The number of Directors who shall serve on the Board shall be two (2) . . . . The initial Directors, who are hereby elected by the Member, shall be Jagmail Singh Gill [Jack] and Tarnjit Singh Gill [Mitch], each of whom shall serve as a Director until his or her successor has been elected and qualified or until his or her earlier death, resignation or removal, as the case may be.”). 8 The Operating Agreement provides that “[t]he Company shall maintain records of Membership Interests and certificates in the books and records of the Company.” JX 3, Operating Agreement § 10(d).

4 B. The Role of the Gill Siblings in the Management of Regency’s Businesses Regency wholly owns three subsidiaries—Glissen Properties Ltd. (a U.K.

entity), Transomas Investments Ltd. (a U.K. entity), and Jetson Properties Ltd. (an

Isle of Man entity). Jetson Properties Ltd. wholly owns West Properties Holdings

Ltd. (a U.K. entity) (“West Properties”), which, in turn, wholly owns Transomas

Ltd. (a U.K. entity), as well as 49% of Gill Aviation Inc. (a Texas entity). West

Properties is also a 48.51% limited partner, and Gill Aviation Inc. is the general

partner, of Northwest Airport Management LP (a Texas entity) (“Northwest

Airport”). The following graphic illustrates that organizational structure:

5 Plaintiffs refer to the U.K.

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