LASTER, Vice Chancellor.
In 2012, petitioner Well Union Capital Limited ("WU Parent") and respondent Tom James Company ("James") formed Carlisle Etcetera LLC, a Delaware limited liability company ("Carlisle" or the "Company"). They executed a simple form of operating agreement (the "Initial LLC Agreement") in which they committed to work promptly on a more detailed operating agreement to replace the original one.
After the Company was formed, WU Parent transferred its member interest to a wholly owned subsidiary called Well Union U.S. Holdings, Inc. ("WU Sub"). James knew about the transfer, did not object, and treated WU Sub as a member from that point on. For purposes of the Delaware Limited Liability Company Act (the "LLC Act"), however, the transfer rendered WU Sub an assignee, rather than a member.
WU Parent and James never reached agreement on a replacement operating agreement. Other disputes arose, and the relationship deteriorated. Deadlock prevailed at the manager level, where the Initial LLC Agreement called for a board of directors (the "Board") to serve as the singular manager of the Company. The Board has four members, two appointed by WU Parent and two by James. They split 2-2 on key issues.
Both sides eventually recognized that they could not manage the Company jointly and that one side needed to buy out the other. Despite some initially positive signs, they could not agree on a buyout procedure or a price.
During the venture's halcyon days, the Board appointed a James executive as the Company's CEO. Through the CEO, James controls the Company's day-to-day operations. With the Board deadlocked, the CEO has been operating free of any oversight. Given its advantaged position, James does not see the deadlock as a problem and feels no urgency to alleviate it. During negotiations over the buyout, James sought to use its privileged position to extract concessions from WU Sub.
WU Sub turned to this court for assistance. It filed this action, in which it petitioned to dissolve the Company. James moved to dismiss on the grounds that WU Sub is an assignee, not a member, and that an assignee lacks standing to petition for statutory dissolution under Section 18-802 of the LLC Act. 6 Del. C. § 18-802. In an amended petition, WU Parent joined as a co-petitioner.
This decision holds that WU Parent and WU Sub lack standing to petition for statutory dissolution under Section 18-802. The motion is denied, however, because WU Sub has standing to seek dissolution in equity.
The facts for purposes of the motion to dismiss are drawn from the allegations of the verified amended petition for dissolution, which is the currently operative pleading, as well as from the documents that it incorporates by reference. In the current procedural posture, the well-pled allegations of the petition are assumed to be true, and the petitioners receive the benefit of all reasonable inferences.
James describes itself as the world's largest manufacturer and retailer of custom clothing that uses a business model in which tailors come directly to customers'
The Royal Spirit Group ("Royal Spirit") is a premium apparel supplier headquartered in Hong Kong that serves luxury fashion brands and upscale retailers. Connaught was one of its customers, and Royal Spirit ranked as Connaught's largest trade creditor in bankruptcy. Royal Spirit attempted unsuccessfully to buy Connaught's assets from the estate to carry on its business.
Having failed in their separate acquisition bids, James and Royal Spirit decided to team up. They created the Company to "acquire . . . [Connaught's assets] . . . and operat[e] the Business." Initial LLC Agreement ¶ 2.3(a). Royal Spirit formed WU Parent, a Hong Kong entity, as the vehicle through which it would participate in the joint venture. The Initial LLC Agreement recited that WU Parent and James each contributed $10 million in capital to the Company in return for a 50% member interest. The purchase price for Connaught's assets turned out to be $22.2 million, comprising $20 million in cash plus forgiveness of certain claims by Royal Spirit against the bankruptcy estate. WU Parent and James actually contributed $11.1 million each.
The Initial LLC Agreement established a manager-managed LLC in which the Board served as the sole manager of the Company. The Initial LLC Agreement assigned to the Board the "exclusive responsibility and authority for the conduct of the Company's business, except to the extent that certain matters may be expressly reserved by law or this Agreement to the Members." Id. ¶ 4.1(c). It further specified that the Board possessed "overall authority and responsibility for the conduct of the business and affairs of the Company," including "without limitation, all matters that may be granted or delegated to a `manager' or to a member under the Act." Id. ¶ 4.1(a).
The Initial LLC Agreement created a Board with four members. WU Parent and James each received the right to appoint two members. Id. ¶ 4.1(b). All Board decisions require "unanimous approval." Id. ¶ 4.1(d).
WU Parent appointed Thomas Hebestreit and Sze Sum Chu as its designees. Id. ¶ 4.1(b). James appointed Sergio Casalena and James Brubaker as its designees. Id. Casalena is currently CEO of James; Brubaker was the CFO of James. The Initial LLC Agreement designated Brubaker as CEO of the Company. Id. ¶ 4.2(b).
In early 2012, Royal Spirit analyzed whether, for tax purposes, it should hold its member interest in the Company through a United States-domiciled entity. After exploring the issue internally, Royal Spirit communicated with James about its plan to hold its interest in the Company through a wholly owned subsidiary. Among other communications, James received an email from a Royal Spirit employee dated May 10, 2012, that attached a memorandum analyzing the relevant tax issues. The memorandum contemplated WU Parent forming a wholly owned subsidiary that would act as a "blocker" entity for tax purposes. In response, the Company's CEO, Brubaker, informed Royal Spirit that he had read the memorandum and knew that the "US blocker corporation"—WU Sub—was "already established." From that point on, the Company
During this period, the parties worked on a more detailed LLC agreement (the "Proposed LLC Agreement"). The draft notably referred to WU Sub, not WU Parent, as a member of the Company. The draft contemplated that if an initial member transferred its membership interest to a wholly owned affiliate, then the affiliate would be admitted automatically as a member. The parties did not finalize the Proposed LLC Agreement because their relationship seemed amicable, and business matters took precedence.
Disputes initially arose over additional tax planning measures that Royal Spirit advocated. Among other ideas, Royal Spirit suggested transferring the Company's intellectual property to an offshore entity. James agreed at first, then reconsidered.
By 2013, Royal Spirit became concerned that the Company was not performing as anticipated. Royal Spirit proposed hiring a creative director. James disagreed.
In early 2014, Royal Spirit sought to call a Board meeting to consider removing Brubaker as CEO. In a lengthy response, Casalena took the position that neither side had the votes to call a meeting unilaterally. He expressed James' firm opposition to removing Brubaker, hiring a creative director, and transferring the Company's intellectual property to an offshore entity. Casalena asked that Hebestreit and other Royal Spirit representatives stop contacting Brubaker outside of quarterly Board meetings.
Casalena followed up with a letter dated February 10, 2014. His letter made clear that James no longer wished to continue with the parties' joint venture:
In an e-mail exchange on May 14, a Royal Spirit representative proposed a more nuanced buyout process, which Brubaker approved.
By May 28, 2014, the parties were drafting an interest purchase agreement to use in connection with a buyout. That document referred to WU Sub as a member of the Company, not WU Parent.
By letter dated July 2, 2014, Royal Spirit informed James that it wished to purchase James' interest in the Company. Discussions quickly stalled. During the negotiations, James told Royal Spirit pointedly that if a deal could not be worked out, Royal Spirit was stuck because James could perpetuate the deadlock
On October 24, 2014, WU Sub filed a petition seeking judicial dissolution of the Company because of deadlock at the member and manager levels. The petition named the Company and James as respondents. On November 7, James moved to dismiss on the ground that WU Sub lacked standing to seek a judicial dissolution under Section 18-802 of the LLC Act. WU Sub filed an amended petition on November 13 that added WU Parent as a co-petitioner. James renewed its motion to dismiss.
James has moved to dismiss the petition pursuant to Rule 12(b)(6) for failure to state a claim on which relief can be granted. In a Delaware state court, the pleading standards under Rule 12(b)(6) "are minimal." Cent. Mortg. Co. v. Morgan Stanley Mortg. Capital Hldgs. LLC, 27 A.3d 531, 536 (Del.2011).
Id. The operative test in a Delaware state court thus is one of "reasonable conceivability." Id. This standard asks whether there is a "possibility" of recovery. Id. at 537 n. 13. The test is more lenient than the federal "plausibility" pleading standard. Id. at 537.
James contends that WU Parent and WU Sub lack standing to seek dissolution because (i) Section 18-802 of the LLC Act only permits members and managers to seek dissolution, (ii) neither WU Parent nor WU Sub is a member or manager, and (iii) Section 18-802 is the exclusive extra-contractual method of dissolving an LLC. In my view, James is right on the first two points but wrong on the third.
Section 18-802 of the LLC Act addresses dissolution. It states that "[o]n application by or for a member or manager the Court of Chancery may decree dissolution of a limited liability company whenever it is not reasonably practicable to carry on the business in conformity with a limited liability company agreement." 6 Del. C. § 18-802. By its terms, this language limits the right to seek statutory dissolution under Section 18-802 to members and managers of an LLC. As to this issue, James is correct.
To petition for statutory dissolution under Section 18-802, WU Parent and WU Sub must be members or managers of the Company. Neither claims to be a manager. The Initial LLC Agreement makes clear that the Board, acting collectively, is the manager of the Company. WU Parent and WU Sub do claim to be members.
Taking the allegations of the petition as true, WU Parent cannot be a member. WU Parent was a member of the Company, but it assigned its interest to WU Sub. Under Section 18-702(a) of the LLC Act, "[a] limited liability company interest is assignable in whole or in part except as provided in a limited liability company
WU Parent lost its status as a member of the Company when it assigned all of its interest in the Company to WU Sub. Under Section 702(b)(3) of the LLC Act, "[u]nless otherwise provided in a limited liability company agreement: . . . (3)[a] member ceases to be a member and to have the power to exercise any rights or powers of a member upon assignment of all of the member's limited liability company interest." Id. § 18-702(b)(3). By operation of law, once WU Parent assigned its interest in the Company to WU Sub, WU Parent "cease[d] to be a member" and could no longer exercise a member's right to seek statutory dissolution. See Eureka VIII LLC v. Niagara Falls Hldgs. LLC, 899 A.2d 95, 114 (Del. Ch.2006) (Strine, V.C.) (noting that an assignment "typically results in the statutory divestiture of a membership interest"). Under the facts as pled, WU Parent cannot petition for statutory dissolution.
The analysis for WU Sub is more complex. As an initial matter, James is correct that WU Sub did not automatically become a member by receiving WU Parent's interest. Under Section 18-702(b)(1) of the LLC Act, "[u]nless otherwise provided in a limited liability company agreement:. . . (1) [a]n assignment of a limited liability company interest does not entitle the assignee to become . . . a member." 6 Del. C. § 18-702(b)(1). The Initial LLC Agreement did not provide otherwise, so under the facts as pled, the transfer of WU Parent's interest made WU Sub an assignee, not a member.
By default under the LLC Act, only a member can petition for statutory dissolution, not an assignee. Section 18-702(b)(1) reinforces this reading by stating that "[u]nless otherwise provided in a limited liability company agreement: . . . (1) [a]n assignment of a limited liability company interest does not entitle the assignee . . . to exercise any rights or powers of a member." Id. § 18-702(b)(1). Section 18-702(a) similarly provides that
Id. § 18-702(a). The Initial LLC Agreement did not give assignees the right to seek statutory dissolution. Without more, therefore, WU Sub cannot claim to be a member or exercise the rights of a member, so WU Sub cannot seek statutory dissolution.
But there is more. The petition alleges that WU Sub became a de facto member by consent of the parties. Citing Section 18-301(b)(1) of the LLC Act, WU Sub argues that it became a member under the LLC Act once its status as a member was "reflected in the records of the limited liability company." Id. § 18-301(b)(1). WU Sub further argues that the tax forms and draft agreements that identified WU Sub as a member were "records of the [Company]." In my view, WU Sub jumps too hastily to this aspect of Section 18-301.
Several sections of the LLC Act bear on the admission of WU Sub as a member. Section 18-101(11) states that the term "`[m]ember' means a person who is admitted to a limited liability company as a member as provided in § 18-301 of this title." Id. § 18-101(11). Section 18-301, entitled "Admission of members," addresses
Id. § 18-301(b)(2).
Through this language, Section 18-301(b) distinguishes between (i) the act of admitting an assignee as a member and (ii) the point when the admission becomes effective. First, the assignee must be admitted "as provided in § 18-704(a)." Once this has happened, the admission takes effect "at the time provided on and upon compliance with the limited liability company agreement." The subsection continues with an additional clause that addresses the point when the admission becomes effective if the operating agreement is silent, explaining that in that event, the admission becomes effective "when any such person's permitted admission is reflected in the records of the limited liability company." The phrase "permitted admission" relates back to the first step of the process—admission "as provided in § 18-704(a)"—which indicates that an assignee cannot establish membership simply by pointing to "records of the limited liability company." There must have been a "permitted admission."
The statutory path finishes with Section 18-704(a), which identifies two possibilities for a "permitted admission."
An assignee of a limited liability company interest may become a member:
6 Del. C. § 18-704(a).
The Initial LLC Agreement was silent on the admission of an assignee as a member. Under Section 18-704(a), WU Sub's only route to a "permitted admission" was "upon the affirmative vote or written consent of all of the members of the limited liability company." If that happened, then the "permitted admission" would become effective once WU Sub's admission was "reflected in the records of the limited liability company."
In my view, the reference in Section 18-704(a) to an "affirmative vote or written consent" means the type of formal action of members contemplated by Section 18-302 of the LLC Act, which addresses voting rights. Section 18-302(c) contemplates that action by members will take place at meetings and explains that
Id. § 18-302(c). Section 18-302(d) contemplates the alternative of members taking action by written consent without a meeting.
Id. § 18-302(d). The correspondence between these two methods of action and the language of Section 18-704 leads me to conclude that the latter provision contemplates member action taking one of those forms. The phrase "affirmative vote or written consent" appears rarely in the LLC Act, and other appearances involve similar occasions for formal member action.
The need for formal member action comports with the policies underlying this aspect of the statutory regime. As Chief Justice Strine observed, writing as a Vice Chancellor, "[t]here are likely two motivations for the statutory default rules in §§ 18-702, 18-704(a), and 18-301 concerning the assignment of a limited liability company interest and the assignee's possible (and subsequent) admission as a member of the LLC." Achaian, Inc. v. Leemon Family LLC, 25 A.3d 800, 804 n.14 (Del. Ch.2011). The first was tax-related and is now outdated. The imposition of statutory limitations on the free alienability of LLC member interests formed a critical part of early attempts "to create an entity that, as a matter of tax law, is classified as a partnership with each owner treated as a partner, but whose owners are shielded by state law from automatic personal liability," an effort since rendered superfluous by the Treasury Department's adoption of the "check-the-box" tax classification regime. Daniel S. Kleinberger, Two Decades of "Alternative Entities": From Tax Rationalization Through Alphabet Soup To Contract As Deity, 14 Fordham J. Corp. & Fin. L. 445, 447-54 (2009). When the LLC Act was drafted, however, the tax implications were significant, so it is logical that the LLC Act would require formal member action to admit an assignee.
"The second reason for the default rules in the [LLC] Act regarding the transferability of [member] interests may rest on the notion that one generally is entitled to select his own business associates in a closely held enterprise, like an LLC." Achaian, 25 A.3d at 804 n.14. "The policy that underlies § 18-702(b)(3) is that `it is far more tolerable to have to suffer a new passive co-investor one did not choose than to endure a new co-manager without consent.'" Eureka VIII LLC, 899 A.2d at 115 (quoting Milford Power Co., LLC v. PDC Milford Power, LLC, 866 A.2d 738, 760
In this case, the Company only had two members. Once WU Parent transferred its member interest and WU Sub became an assignee, James was the sole remaining member and controlled the vote on WU Sub's admission. The petition does not plead any formal action by which James voted or acted by written consent to admit WU Sub as a member. Assuming for purposes of analysis that the tax forms and draft agreements were "records" of the LLC for purposes of Section 301(b)(1), there was never a "permitted admission" that could be reflected on those records.
Based on the allegations of the petition, James is correct that WU Sub is not a member who can seek statutory dissolution. Neither petitioner can.
James argues that because neither WU Parent nor WU Sub can seek statutory dissolution under Section 18-802, this case must be dismissed. In my view, James errs in contending that Section 18-802 is the exclusive extra-contractual means of obtaining dissolution of an LLC. Under the facts of this case, WU Sub has standing to seek dissolution in equity.
"[T]his Court, as a court of equity, has the power to order the dissolution of a solvent company and appoint a receiver to administer the winding up of those assets." Weir v. JMACK, Inc., 2008 WL 4379592, at *2 (Del. Ch. Sept. 23, 2008). Justice Story described the "power to dissolve the partnership during the term for which it is stipulated" as one of the "strongest cases to illustrate the beneficial operation of the jurisdiction" of a court of equity. 2 Joseph Story, Commentaries on Equity Jurisprudence § 915 (W.H. Lyon, Jr. ed., 14th ed. 1918) [hereinafter Story]. The implementation of a dissolution decree would require the appointment of a receiver, which is likewise an equitable remedy that forms part of this court's equitable powers.
For Section 18-802 to provide the exclusive method of dissolving an LLC, it would have to divest this court of a significant aspect of its traditional equitable jurisdiction. Section 18-802 does not state that it establishes an exclusive means to obtain dissolution, nor does it contain language overriding this court's equitable authority. To the contrary, the LLC Act elsewhere recognizes that equity backstops the LLC structure by providing generally that "the
If Section 18-802 did purport to establish an exclusive means to obtain dissolution and override a significant portion of this court's traditional equitable jurisdiction, then the validity of that aspect of the provision would raise serious constitutional questions. Article IV, Section 10 of the Delaware Constitution provides that this court "shall have all the jurisdiction and powers vested by the laws of this State in the Court of Chancery." Del. Const. art. IV, § 10. The Delaware Supreme Court has held that this provision vested in the Court of Chancery "all the general equity jurisdiction of the High Court of Chancery of Great Britain as it existed prior to the separation of the colonies," except "where a sufficient remedy exists at law." DuPont v. DuPont, 85 A.2d 724, 727 (Del. 1951). In light of this provision, the high court held that the General Assembly cannot enact legislation that reduces this court's jurisdiction below the constitutionally established minimum, unless there is an adequate remedy at law. Id. at 729. As the Delaware Supreme Court explained, Article IV, Section 10
Id. See generally Lyman Johnson, Delaware's Non-Waivable Duties, 91 B.U. L.Rev. 701, 702, 716-18 (2011).
Although this court's equitable jurisdiction is measured by the "the general equity jurisdiction of the High Court of Chancery of Great Britain as it existed prior to the separation of the colonies," the Delaware Supreme Court has recognized that the scope of that jurisdiction is not limited by the extent of British scientific, technological, and legal knowledge at the time of the handover. "Historically, equity jurisdiction `has taken its shape and its substance from the perceived inadequacies of the common law and the changing demands of a developing nation.'" Schoon v. Smith, 953 A.2d 196, 204 (Del.2008) (quoting Donald J. Wolfe, Jr. & Michael A. Pittenger, Corporate and Commercial Practice in the Delaware Court Of Chancery § 2-2[a], at 2-2 (2006)). "It cannot be said too forcefully that the general powers of the Court of Chancery refers to that complete system of equity as administered by the High Court of Chancery of Great Britain." Glanding v. Indus. Trust Co., 45 A.2d 553, 558-59 (Del.1945) (emphasis added). It is the "complete system" of equity that this court inherited and administers, not the temporally specific subject matter of eighteenth century cases.
To stress this point, the Delaware Supreme Court in Schoon quoted from a wide range of sources that demonstrate the continuing and evolving role of equity. The high court started with Pomeroy:
Id. (quoting 1 Woolley's Delaware Practice § 56 (1906)).
Given the weight of these authorities, the extensive discussion in Schoon, and the decisions in DuPont and Glanding, I cannot accept the contention that because the nascent practice of entity law as it existed at the time of the colonies' separation had not yet envisioned LLCs, they fall outside the domain of equity.
This case also differs from Bax, where the Delaware Supreme Court affirmed a decision of this court holding that creditors of an insolvent LLC lacked standing to sue derivatively under Section 18-1002 of the LLC Act. On appeal, the plaintiff-appellant contended that the LLC Act could not deprive the Court of Chancery of jurisdiction to recognize a creditor's standing in equity to sue derivatively. The Delaware Supreme Court rejected that argument for a series of reasons, culminating in its recognition that creditors of an LLC have ample remedies available at law. Bax, 28 A.3d at 1046. As Chief Justice Strine had explained while a member of this court, the premise of granting creditors equitable standing to sue derivatively
Prod. Res. Gp., L.L.C. v. NCT Gp., Inc., 863 A.2d 772, 789-90 (Del. Ch.2004) (footnotes omitted). In a later decision, then-Vice Chancellor Strine revisited these themes:
Trenwick Am. Litig. Trust v. Ernst & Young, L.L.P., 906 A.2d 168, 199 (Del. Ch.2006) (footnotes omitted), aff'd sub nom. Trenwick Am. Litig. Trust v. Billett, 931 A.2d 438 (Del.2007) (TABLE). The LLC Act provides even more means for a creditor to protect itself at law. See CML V, LLC v. Bax, 6 A.3d 238, 250-53 (Del.
This court has held that the parties to an LLC agreement can waive by contract the right to seek statutory dissolution under Section 18-802. See R & R Capital, LLC v. Buck & Doe Run Valley Farms, LLC, 2008 WL 3846318, *4 (Del. Ch. Aug. 19, 2008). In my view, the ability to waive dissolution under Section 18-802 does not extend to a party's standing to seek dissolution in equity.
In concluding that parties to an LLC agreement could waive the right to seek dissolution under Section 18-802, the R & R Capital decision relied heavily on arguments by commentators to the effect that a Delaware LLC should be viewed as a purely contractual entity to which principles of equity (including fiduciary duties) do not apply.
Of particular relevance to dissolution, the purely contractarian view discounts core attributes of the LLC that only the sovereign can authorize, such as its separate legal existence, potentially perpetual life, and limited liability for its members. See 6 Del. C. §§ 18-201, 18-303. To my mind, when a sovereign makes available an entity with attributes that contracting parties cannot grant themselves by agreement, the entity is not purely contractual. Because the entity has taken advantage of benefits that the sovereign has provided, the sovereign retains an interest in that entity. That interest in turn calls for preserving the ability of the sovereign's courts to oversee and, if necessary, dissolve the entity. Put more directly, an LLC agreement
This approach finds support in Huatuco v. Satellite Healthcare and Satellite Dialysis of Tracy, LLC, 2013 WL 6460898 (Del. Ch. Dec. 9, 2013), aff'd, 93 A.3d 654 (Del. 2014) (ORDER). The Huatuco opinion followed R & R Capital in holding that the members of an LLC had waived their right to seek statutory dissolution under Section 18-802 when they "specifically considered, and addressed, dissolution and dissolution rights." Id. at *5. But the Huatuco court reserved decision on "[w]hether the parties may, by contract, divest this Court of its authority to order a dissolution in all circumstances, even where it appears manifest that equity so requires—leaving, for instance, irreconcilable members locked away together forever like some alternative entity version of Sartre's Huis Clos." Id. at *1 n. 2. The Huatuco court did not have to answer that question because "considerations fundamental to equity [were] absent." Id.
This case presents the type of situation anticipated in Huatuco where equity should intervene. If the opportunities for dissolution are limited to Section 18-802 and the specific terms of the Initial LLC Agreement, then dissolution is not an option. WU Parent and WU Sub lack standing to seek it, and James does not want it. The Company will continue, with Royal Spirit locked-in as a silent and powerless passive investor.
That situation is contrary to the bargain the parties struck. WU Parent and James formed the Company as equal business partners. They contributed equal amounts of capital and brought comparable expertise, with one side acting as a major supplier and the other as a day-to-day manager. Desiring to seize the opportunity to buy Connaught's assets quickly, they agreed to start with a basic operating agreement in which they committed to negotiate a more detailed replacement agreement. As reflected by the Proposed LLC Agreement, the terms of that more detailed agreement contemplate that an affiliate transfer from WU Parent to WU Sub would result in the automatic admission of WU Sub as a substitute member. In other words, had the parties finalized the Proposed LLC Agreement, or acted in accordance with their agreement in principle, then WU Sub would be a member and have standing to seek dissolution under Section 18-802. Based on the allegations of the petition, WU Parent engaged in the affiliate transfer with James' knowledge and participation, and James subsequently treated WU Sub as a member.
Likewise, the "real relations" of the parties point to a scenario warranting dissolution. For a time, both sides recognized the need to go their separate ways. James only changed its mind because of its fortuitous position as the entity's de facto manager. But that reality does not make the status quo a satisfactory alternative. "Although the LLC is technically functioning at this point, this operation is purely a residual, inertial status quo that just happens to exclusively benefit one of the 50% members. . . ." Id. at 96. The Initial LLC Agreement made the Board the singular manager of the Company. Because its four members are deadlocked, the duly authorized manager of the Company cannot exercise its statutory and contractual authority or carry out its obligation to manage and direct the business and affairs of the entity. Brubaker may be managing the Company because of the power vacuum created by the deadlock, but Brubaker is not the Board. Under the prevailing state of affairs, the Company is operating contrary to the governance structure set forth in its constitutive agreement.
When considering whether holders of equity in other entities can pursue equitable causes of action, despite their lack of formal record ownership status, this court has relied on the substance of the relationship and permitted the suits to proceed.
WU Parent and WU Sub lack standing to seek statutory dissolution under Section 18-802. Nevertheless, because WU Sub has standing to seek dissolution in equity, the motion to dismiss is denied.