Schrage v. Schrage
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Leonard sought the involuntary dissolution of the family business. After his brothers, Michael and Joseph, invoked their statutory right to buy Leonard’s interests in the business pursuant to a court-ordered appraisal, the parties stipulated to add five LLCs to the 14 entities that were already subject to the appraisal and buyout proceeding. The court confirmed a valuation of Leonard’s interests and issued an alternative decree ordering that Michael and Joseph had to pay the appraised amount by a certain date and that, if they did not, the entities would be wound up and dissolved. Michael and Joseph did not pay the buyout amount. The court proceeded to wind up and dissolve the business, including the five additional LLCs. Meanwhile, Leonard proceeded on a claim for breach of fiduciary duty; the court awarded Leonard compensatory and punitive damages.
Michael and Joseph argued the alternative decree to wind up and dissolve the business and the “follow-up" orders were void because the trial court lacked jurisdiction to dissolve the five LLCs. The court of appeal affirmed the order of dissolution but reversed the award of damages for breach of fiduciary duty. The trial court had fundamental jurisdiction; Michael and Joseph are estopped from collaterally attacking the alternative decree. Leonard lacked standing to assert breach of fiduciary duty; that cause of action was derivative, not individual.
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