Terramar Retail Centers, LLC v. Marion 2 Seaport Trust U/A/D/ June 21, 2002

CourtCourt of Chancery of Delaware
DecidedAugust 18, 2017
DocketCA 12286-VCL
StatusPublished

This text of Terramar Retail Centers, LLC v. Marion 2 Seaport Trust U/A/D/ June 21, 2002 (Terramar Retail Centers, LLC v. Marion 2 Seaport Trust U/A/D/ June 21, 2002) 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
Terramar Retail Centers, LLC v. Marion 2 Seaport Trust U/A/D/ June 21, 2002, (Del. Ct. App. 2017).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF CHANCERY OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE

TERRAMAR RETAIL CENTERS, LLC, ) ) Plaintiff, ) ) v. ) C.A. No. 12875-VCL ) MARION #2-SEAPORT TRUST U/A/D/ ) JUNE 21, 2002 ) ) Defendant. )

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Date Submitted: July 18, 2017 Date Decided: August 18, 2017

Kenneth J. Nachbar, Lauren Neal Bennett, Colleen W. Hill, MORRIS, NICHOLS, ARSHT & TUNNELL LLP, Wilmington, Delaware; Richard A. Heller, PROCOPIO, CORY, HARGREAVES & SAVITCH LLP, San Diego, California; Counsel for Terramar Retail Centers, LLC.

Thad J. Bracegirdle, WILKS LUKOFF & BRACEGIRDLE, LLC; Counsel for Marion #2-Seaport Trust U/A/D/ June 21, 2002.

LASTER, Vice Chancellor. Defendant Marion #2-Seaport Trust U/A/D June 21, 2002 (the “Trust”) is an

investment vehicle affiliated with non-party Michael Cohen. The Trust holds a 25%

member interest in Seaport Village Operating Company, LLC (the “Company”), which is

a Delaware limited liability company. Cohen negotiated the terms of the underlying

business deal that was implemented through the formation of the Company. He also

negotiated the terms of the Company’s operating agreement.

Plaintiff Terramar Retail Centers, LLC (“Terramar”) holds a 75% member interest

in the Company. Terramar seeks declarations that it (i) properly exercised a buy-out

provision, (ii) has the power to dissolve the Company and can sell the Company’s

property and assets in its sole discretion, and (iii) can distribute the proceeds in

accordance with its interpretation of a waterfall provision in the Company’s operating

agreement.

The Trust moved to dismiss the action pursuant to Court of Chancery Rule

12(b)(2).1 According to the Trust, a Delaware court cannot exercise personal jurisdiction

over the Trust for purposes of Terramar’s suit to enforce the operating agreement.

1 The Trust also argued that this dispute was not ripe. On the day before oral argument on the motion to dismiss, the Trust submitted a copy of a complaint it filed in the Superior Court of the State of California for the County of Los Angeles in which the Trust sought declarations that (i) Terramar had not validly exercised the buy-out provision, which in turn means that Terramar cannot dissolve the Company and (ii) the waterfall provision in the Company’s operating agreement gives the Trust a priority claim to the Company’s cash flows and any sales proceeds. See Dkt. 44, Ex. ¶¶ 70-71. The Trust’s decision to seek declaratory judgments on these issues in California rendered moot its contention that Terramar’s suit to obtain comparable declarations in this court was not ripe for resolution.

1 The motion to dismiss is denied.

I. FACTUAL BACKGROUND

The facts are drawn from Terramar’s Amended and Supplemental Complaint (the

“Complaint”) and the documents that the parties submitted in connection with the motion

to dismiss.2 The court has taken judicial notice of prior proceedings in a related action

between Terramar and a third member of the Company. On a motion to dismiss for lack

of personal jurisdiction, “the record is construed in the light most favorable to the

plaintiff.”3

A. Seaport Village

Seaport Village is a specialty shopping center and tourist attraction in San Diego,

California. The Port of San Diego owns the land on which Seaport Village operates.

Seaport Village was developed beginning in 1978, when the Taubman family secured a

forty-year lease on the land. The Taubman family used San Diego Sea Port Village, Ltd.

(“Limited”), a California limited partnership, as its vehicle for entering into the lease and

developing the property.

To finance the development of Seaport Village, Limited borrowed $40 million

from The Yasuda Trust & Banking Company, Ltd., a Japanese bank (the “Yasuda

2 See Sprint Nextel Corp. v. iPCS, Inc., 2008 WL 2737409, at *5 (Del. Ch. July 14, 2008) (noting that on a motion to dismiss for lack of personal jurisdiction “[t]he court may consider the pleadings, affidavits, and any discovery of record”). 3 Id.

2 Loan”). In 1998, Limited defaulted on the Yasuda Loan. By this point, Anne Taubman

had become the principal of Limited.

Taubman engaged Cohen to help her refinance Limited’s obligations. Cohen is a

real estate professional who sources capital for real estate transactions.4

With Cohen’s assistance, Taubman formed San Diego Seaport Lending Co., LLC

(“Lending”), a Delaware limited liability company. Lending borrowed $24 million , then

used the proceeds to purchase the Yasuda Loan.

As part of the restructuring, Cohen, Limited, Lending, and Taubman entered into a

consulting agreement. The agreement is complex, but in substance it gave Cohen the

right to receive cash flows from Limited and Lending that mimicked a 50% interest in

those entities. Taubman personally guaranteed the payments to Cohen. As the consulting

agreement specified, Cohen did not receive, and never held, actual member interests in

Limited or Lending. Instead, he became a party to a contract that gave him cash-flow

rights similar to what he would have received if he owned a 50% equity interest in

Limited and Lending.

B. The Terramar Transaction

By 2002, Limited needed additional capital. Cohen secured additional capital from

Terramar, a real estate development company.5 To implement the recapitalization, Cohen,

4 See Dkt. 31, Ex. D at 19:6-7. 5 At the time, Terramar was known as GMS Realty. For simplicity, this opinion consistently refers to the entity as “Terramar.”

3 Taubman, and Terramar formed the Company. Terramar received 50% of the member

interests in the new entity and became its manager. In return, Terramar (i) made a capital

contribution of $7 million, (ii) guaranteed half of the outstanding balance of Lending’s

outstanding loan, (iii) took over the management of Seaport Village, and (iv) agreed to

seek to renew the lease with the Port of San Diego and to attempt to obtain a lease from

the Port for an adjacent property.

Cohen and Taubman received the other 50% of the member interests in the

Company, which they split 50/50 in accordance with their effective split of the cash-flow

rights from Limited and Lending. To hold his 25% member interest, Cohen formed the

Trust. Taubman held her 25% member interest through Limited.

To govern the business and affairs of the Company and further specify the terms

of the investment, the Trust, Limited, and Terramar entered into an operating agreement

dated September 1, 2002 (the “Operating Agreement”). The preamble to the Operating

Agreement recited that the members “wish[ed] to form a Delaware limited liability

company for the purpose and on the terms and conditions set forth herein.”6 The

Operating Agreement declared that the Company was “formed as a limited liability

company pursuant to the provisions of the [Delaware Limited Liability Company] Act”

and that its existence “commence[d] upon the filing for record of the Company’s

Certificate with the Delaware Secretary of State . . . .”7 The Operating Agreement further

6 Dkt 26, Ex. A. at 1. 7 Id. at 8-9.

4 specified that the Delaware Limited Liability Company Act governs “[t]he rights and

obligations of the Members and the affairs of the Company . . . .”8

The Operating Agreement named Terramar as the Company’s sole manager with

“full, exclusive, and complete discretion to manage and control the business affairs of the

Company . . .

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