TIFD III-X LLC v. Fruehauf Production Co.

883 A.2d 854, 2004 Del. Ch. LEXIS 94
CourtCourt of Chancery of Delaware
DecidedJune 28, 2004
DocketC.A. 20488-NC
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 883 A.2d 854 (TIFD III-X LLC v. Fruehauf Production Co.) 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
TIFD III-X LLC v. Fruehauf Production Co., 883 A.2d 854, 2004 Del. Ch. LEXIS 94 (Del. Ct. App. 2004).

Opinion

OPINION

STRINE, Vice Chancellor.

This case involves an interesting question regarding the doctrine of recoupment. A limited partnership agreement contains provisions governing the distribution of the partnership’s economic benefits to its equity holders. Those provisions grant 1% of the profits to the general partner until a certain calculation comparing the sole limited partner’s capital contributions to the economic benefits it receives from the partnership yields a positive balance, and then increases to 25% after that time. The limited partner has exercised its right to cause dissolution and has sought a declaration regarding the proper interpretation and application of the distributional provisions of the agreement.

*856 As one of its responses, the general partner filed a recoupment claim alleging that the limited partner breached the partnership agreement in several respects many years ago, to the economic detriment of the partnership — i.e., the general partner has pled a recoupment claim based on time-barred derivative claims belonging to the partnership itself. In that vein, the general partner says that the partnership would have reaped greater profits had the limited partner not breached the partnership agreement, profits that, if reaped, would bring the parties much closer to the point at which the upward change from 1% to 25% in the general partner’s share of profits occurs. Thus, the general partner says that in the liquidation the partnership’s books and records should reflect the value of the recoupment claim, allowing the general partner to receive a greater share of the remaining assets of the partnership.

In this opinion, I address the limited partner’s motion for judgment on the pleadings against the recoupment claim. I find that the general partner’s authority to act as liquidator does not include the unilateral right to itself determine the value of its recoupment claim. More importantly, the general partner cannot revive stale derivative claims belonging to the partnership under the guise of recoupment. In this case, the limited partner has sought declaratory relief seeking an interpretation and application of the distributional provisions of the partnership agreement. The general partner argues that the required transactional nexus exists between its re-coupment claim and the interpretative claim because if the partnership had not been injured by the limited partner, it would have been more profitable and the 25% payout percentage would apply to a larger portion of the assets in the liquidation. That is, under the general partner’s reasoning, whenever the percentage to be paid to the different equity holders of a business entity is influenced by the value of the entity, and one equity holder seeks a determination of how the entity’s proceeds are to be distributed, such as in the context of a liquidation, time-barred derivative claims spring back alive as recoupment claims. In essence, the general partner contends that any value-affecting claim of breach of a business entity’s governing instrument (such as a partnership agreement or certificate of incorporation) that arises at any time during the life of a business entity is transactionally related to any claim for an interpretation and application of the payout provisions of the entity’s governing instrument, at least so long as a determination of the claim of breach would affect the distributional split of the entity’s proceeds.

For a variety of reasons set forth in the opinion, I conclude that this reasoning is flawed and leads to inefficient and inequitable results. Investors of capital ought to be able to exercise their contractual and statutory rights to dissolve or liquidate business entities without fear that every derivative (or other internal affairs-related) damage claim that ever arose during the life of the entity will thereby be resuscitated for the purpose of ascertaining who gets what’s left of the entity’s assets. Delaware public policy is to the contrary and encourages the timely assertion of claims involving the internal affairs of business entities, providing certainty to investors and fair treatment of fiduciaries who would otherwise be forced to defend claims at a time when exculpatory evidence and accurate memories may well be gone. Therefore, I grant the limited partner’s motion for judgment on the pleadings.

I also address the general partner’s motion to dismiss the limited partner’s claim requesting an application of the partnership agreement’s payout provisions and to *857 dismiss the general partner’s own recoupment claim, which is premised on the argument that those claims are not justiciable because they are not ripe. I find that this argument is based on a misreading of the limited partner’s complaint and otherwise lacks merit, and therefore deny that motion.

I. Factual Background,

TIFD III-X LLC (“TIFD”) is a Delaware limited liability company that is the sole limited partner of Fruehauf Antrim Limited Partnership (the “Partnership”), also a Delaware entity. Fruehauf Production Company, LLC (“Fruehauf’), a Michigan limited liability company, is the general partner of the Partnership. The Partnership, formed by a partnership agreement between TIFD and Fruehauf executed in 1996 (as amended, the “Partnership Agreement”), is in the business of developing natural gas wells in Michigan.

When the Partnership was formed, TIFD, which is wholly owned by a division of General Electric Corporation, contributed 99% of the funding for the Partnership. Fruehauf, which (either itself or through affiliated entities) has operated natural gas wells in Michigan since 1940 and owned interests in and operated over 100 wells in Michigan, contributed only 1%, but as general partner it was given responsibility over the day-to-day management of the Partnership.

The Partnership Agreement’s allocation of the economic benefits and burdens generated by the Partnership to TIFD and Fruehauf, as equity owners of the Partnership, is determined by a contractual formula whose meaning is disputed in this lawsuit. Its precise mechanics are unimportant for purposes of the present motions, but its general terms are relevant. To simplify, the allocation differs depending on whether the Partnership is in the “Phase I Period” or “Phase II Period.” During the Phase I Period, the “LP Sharing Percentage” (or TIFD’s share) is 99% and the “GP Sharing Percentage” (or Fruehaufs share) is 1%, while during the Phase II Period, the LP Sharing Percentage is 75% and the GP Sharing Percentage is 25%. 1 The “flip” from Phase I to Phase II occurs at “the end of the first month in which Cumulative Payout is greater than or equal to zero.” 2 “Cumulative Payout,” in turn, means “with respect to each month, the sum of such month’s Monthly Payout [to TIFD] plus all previous months’ Monthly Payouts minus the Capital Contributions made by the Limited Partner pursuant to the terms hereof times the Discount Factor.” 3 The meaning of Cumulative Payout is the central question in this litigation.

The parties have not always seen eye-to-eye on the management of the Partnership. In 2002, TIFD wished to explore a sale of assets of the Partnership, but Frue-hauf resisted.

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Bluebook (online)
883 A.2d 854, 2004 Del. Ch. LEXIS 94, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tifd-iii-x-llc-v-fruehauf-production-co-delch-2004.