Wisconsin
Lawyer
Vol. 81, No. 8, August
2008
Shedding Light on Recent Developments Affecting LLCs
Because limited liability companies
are growing in popularity and now dominate all new Wisconsin
business entity filings, attorneys need to remain up to date on
developments affecting LLCs. Here, the authors highlight
several cases and statutes they believe reflect the most important
developments in the last few years.
by Joseph W. Boucher, George R. Kamperschroer
& Jennifer L. Knudson
Sidebar:
he limited liability company (LLC)
legal entity remains the predominant
entity choice for new business formations in Wisconsin. When the
Wisconsin limited
liability company law (WLLCL) went into effect on Jan. 1, 1994, its
primary goal was
to create a form of business entity that would provide limited liability
to its
owners, flow-through taxation, and simplicity. These benefits have led
to the
increasing popularity of the LLC form and its dominance of all new
Wisconsin business
formations. From Jan. 1, 2008 through May 31, 2008, LLCs made up
approximately 86
percent of all new domestic entity filings, while corporations made up
only around 13
percent1 The remaining one percent were
filings for domestic nonprofit
organizations, limited liability partnerships, and limited partnerships.
Today, there are
approximately 193,000 Wisconsin domestic LLCs in existence, compared to
only 128,000
domestic corporations.
In June 2005, more than 11 years after the WLLCL became
effective, the
Wisconsin Supreme Court issued its first opinion directly dealing with
this law,
Gottsacker v. Monnier2 In
Gottsacker, the court addressed two issues: whether certain
members possessed the majority votes necessary to authorize the sale of
a parcel of
real estate (the LLC's sole asset) and whether a material conflict of
interest
prevented these two members from voting to transfer the sole asset. The
court held that
the two members did possess the necessary majority to authorize the
transfer, and that
a material conflict of interest did not prevent them from approving the
transfer
as long as they dealt fairly with the minority member and the
LLC3
Since the supreme court issued its opinion in
Gottsacker, several new developments have affected Wisconsin
LLCs. This article highlights several cases and
statutes relevant to all attorneys who work with LLCs. Although this
article is not
exhaustive as to all cases and regulations affecting LLCs, it emphasizes
the most
important developments in the last few years.
Cases
Decker v.
Decker.4 In this case, the Wisconsin
Court of Appeals dealt with
a situation in which one member of an LLC acted oppressively and without
good
faith. The court held that the LLC's operating agreement provided no
option other than
dissolution and a resulting sale of assets.
Brothers Frederick and David Decker engaged in an investment
real estate
business, which they operated through multiple LLCs. In 1995, the
brothers entered into an
LLC operating agreement containing certain deadlock provisions that
would apply if
a dispute arose between them. If the members (that is, the brothers)
could not
resolve the dispute, then either member could make an offer specifying a
price at which
he would purchase the other member's entire interest in the LLC. The
member who
received the offer then had the option to either sell all his interest
at the
price set in the offer or purchase the other member's interest on the
same terms,
conditions, and price stated in the initial offer. The operating
agreement
anticipated that an accepted offer might not be consummated, but it
failed to provide for penalty provisions if this were to
occur. The operating
agreement provided that if the sale of the interest never closed, then
the LLC would be dissolved.
In 2001, Frederick and David began having business disputes, and
David eventually
sent Frederick a letter declaring a deadlock. Frederick, however, did
not believe a deadlock
existed and asked David to rescind the letter. David refused. Frederick
then made an offer to buy
David's interest in the business for $7 million, which
substantially exceeded the $2.5
million estimated value of the business. Frederick made no efforts to
close on the offer. He
later hinted that he had no intention of closing on the excessive offer
and instead wanted to use
it as a preemptive strike to force dissolution.
Under the operating agreement's terms, dissolution of the
company was the only option.
The operating agreement provided as follows: "If, after the 150th
day following the Statement
Date (or such later date if agreed to by the Members), the dispute is
not resolved, the
Members shall take all necessary actions and use their best efforts to
cause all directors elected
by them to take all necessary actions to liquidate and dissolve the
Company in accordance with
the law."
In September 2002, David filed suit against Frederick based on
Frederick's failure to
purchase David's interest. In an oral order, the circuit court ordered
the sale of the LLC's
assets to David, presumably the proper order. However, the same
court (but presided over by
a different judge) then entered a written order requiring
Frederick to sell his
interest in the LLC to David at the value set by a receiver
appointed by the court and denied David's
motion for enforcement of Frederick's offer.
The court of appeals affirmed the circuit court's decision. The
court first addressed
the enforceability of Frederick's $7 million offer. The court explained
that since
Frederick's offer was voluntary, it was unenforceable under the
operating agreement terms. The court
explained that "[w]hile it is true that the operating agreement
obligated the members to
`use their best efforts to make available the assets of the Company to
effect a buyout,' and
while it would appear that Frederick's conduct could hardly be
characterized as using his best
efforts, this language does not automatically make his voluntary offer
enforceable."5
The court also addressed Frederick's claim that the circuit
court lacked authority to
order the sale of his interest in the LLC to David. "[W]e conclude
that in effect, what Frederick
did
was to sabotage the operating agreement's provisions for a
buy-out by making an
outrageous offer of $7,000,000 for David's interest when it was worth
only approximately $2,500,000,
and then making no effort to close on the offer. By doing so, he
foreclosed the possibility
that one of the two would buy out the other according to the terms of
the operating agreement.
This is so because while David was anxious to be the seller at
$7,000,000, he was not inclined to
be the buyer at that figure. This left dissolution as the only remedy
available under the
operating agreement."6
Joseph W. Boucher, U.W. 1978, is a CPA and a
shareholder in Neider & Boucher S.C., Madison, where he practices in
business law, with an emphasis
in emerging companies. He chaired the State Bar committee that
originally drafted Wisconsin's LLC law. He also coauthored LLCs and
LLPs: A Wisconsin Handbook, published by State Bar CLE Books.
George R. Kamperschroer, U.W. 1975, is a CPA and
shareholder in the firm, practicing in the area of business
organizations, mergers and
acquisitions, and other business transactions.
Jennifer L. Knudson, Marquette 1998, is an associate in
the firm, practicing in the areas of business, employment, and health
law.
David's offer to the receiver was for the purchase of all of the
LLC's assets.
While Frederick's position was that David no longer had the ability to
buy him out under the
operating agreement and that the properties owned by the LLC had to be
sold on the open market,
the court of appeals disagreed. "David's offer was no different
from any other third-party
offer, except that it was for all the property interests held by
Frederick and it eliminated
costly real estate commissions and other miscellaneous
costs."7 Frederick's ownership interest
was
in the LLC, not in the real estate. It was the LLC that had the
interests in the real estate
(its assets).
As a side note, there was some confusion with respect to what
was being sold:
Frederick's ownership interest or the assets of the LLC. In an entity
sale, a buyer purchases a
seller's membership (or ownership) interest in the LLC. The buyer
becomes the owner of the LLC, and
all assets and liabilities of the LLC, including unknown liabilities,
remain with the LLC. In
an asset sale, the LLC sells its assets but the selling members keep
their ownership interests
in the LLC. The buyer becomes the owner of the assets, and generally no
unknown liabilities
are transferred. In addressing this issue, the court of appeals ordered
that the circuit
court's written order be corrected to reflect a sale of the assets.
Finally, the court of appeals also held that under Wis. Stat.
section 183.0902, a court
may order the dissolution of an LLC when one or more of the members in
control of the LLC acts in
a manner that is illegal, oppressive, or fraudulent. The court deemed
Frederick's behavior
oppressive. Accordingly, the court concluded that the circuit court had
the authority under
Wis. Stat. section 183.0902 and the operating agreement to order the
dissolution of the LLC's
assets.
Brew City Redevelopment Group LLC v. The Ferchill
Group.8 In this case, the
Wisconsin Supreme Court affirmed the general proposition that LLC
managers or members may be liable
for their conduct, despite the exculpatory language in Wis. Stat.
section 183.0402, if they
engage in conduct that falls outside the scope of their duties with the
LLC.
The factual background for the case is quite complex. In 1996,
Pabst Brewing Company
closed its downtown Milwaukee brewery consisting of 27 buildings. Brew
City Development Group
LLC acquired the right to purchase the property, and on June 5, 2002,
Brew City assigned that
right to Wispark LLC. An entity related to Wispark, Juneau Avenue
Partners, was the actual
purchaser of the property from Pabst. The Ferchill Group also was a
partner of Juneau. After the
purchase, the parties to the transaction had a falling out. Brew City
filed a lawsuit
against multiple defendants based on Juneau's alleged failure to perform
certain obligations under
the assignment agreement.
The circuit court dismissed all causes of action, including one
for tortuous
interference with contract. This claim was against, among others, two
individuals - Jerome Franke, the
president of Wispark, and John Ferchill, a member of one of the LLCs
affiliated with the
Ferchill Group. The court of appeals affirmed the dismissal of the
tortious interference claim but
modified the dismissal to be without prejudice, to permit Brew City to
replead its claims
against Franke and Ferchill.
At issue was the application of Wis. Stat. section 183.0304,
which provides as
follows: "Liability of members to 3rd parties. (1) The debts,
obligations and liabilities of a
limited liability company, whether arising in contract, tort or
otherwise, shall be solely the
debts, obligations and liabilities of the limited liability company.
Except as provided in
ss. 183.0502 and 183.0608, a member or manager of a limited liability
company is not
personally liable for any debt, obligation or liability of the limited
liability company, except that
a member or manager may become personally liable by his or her acts or
conduct other than as
a member or manager."9
Franke and Ferchill argued that this exculpatory language
protected them because they
were not "independent from the legal entity." The court
rejected this argument, pointing out
the last clause in the statute: "
except that a member or
manager may become personally liable
by his or her acts or conduct other than as a member or manager."
The court noted that this
language clearly "preserves the liability of a member of an LLC for
conduct `other than as a
member or manager.'"10
The supreme court ultimately affirmed the decision of the court
of appeals dismissing
the cause of action without prejudice. Franke and Ferchill were not
automatically immune from
liability for intentional-interference-with-contract claims under Wis.
Stat. section
183.0304. Brew City was allowed to replead facts that could lead to
Franke's and Ferchill's
personal liability, despite their status as members or managers.
The supreme court did not give any hints as to what these facts
could be, but if this
litigation continues and Brew City opts to replead its claims, perhaps
light will be shed on
the potential personal liability of members or managers and how the
determination should be made
as to whether they are acting other than as members or managers of an
LLC.
Kasten v. Doral Dental USA
LLC11 This case concerns a member's
request to inspect
an LLC's records under Wis. Stat. section 183.0405. The supreme court
held that a member has
the right to inspect the LLC's information, particularly if the
information affects a
member's financial interest in the LLC, but the request cannot place an
undue financial burden on
the LLC and will be scrutinized as to its breadth, time, and form.
An LLC is required to keep certain business information at its
principal place of
business12 Wisconsin Statute section
183.0405(2) additionally provides the following:
"Upon reasonable request, a member may, at the member's own
expense, inspect and copy during
ordinary business hours any limited liability company
record required to be kept under subsection
(1) and, unless otherwise provided in an operating agreement, any other
limited liability
company record, wherever the record is
located."13
Doral Dental USA LLC (Doral) was formed on April 29, 1996 by,
among others, Craig and
Marie Kasten. Craig and Marie were married at the time of the formation
but they divorced in
2001, each taking a 23.13 percent interest in the business. Another
company, MOA Investments,
owned more than 51 percent of Doral.
Doral's primary business created and administered dental health
programs for state
governments and health maintenance organizations. In 2000, Doral had
reported revenues of $98.3
million. Marie asserted that Doral's success resulted in large part from
the claims
processing software developed by Craig.
In the beginning of 2003, Marie, as a nonmanaging member, sought
to assert her rights
under the operating agreement and Wis. Stat. section 183.0405(2) to
inspect and copy Doral's
records and documents. She asserted these rights, she said, because she
began to "suspect that
Doral's management was engaging in various actions adverse to her
interests, such as the
transfer, without adequate consideration of Doral's assets, including
the [software] at the heart of
the Company's success, to entities
Craig Kasten/MOA [Investments]
owned, but she did
not."14
Throughout 2003, Marie made multiple requests to inspect Doral's
records. Doral
complied with some, but not all, of her requests. In November 2003,
Marie filed a circuit court
action seeking an order pursuant to Doral's operating agreement and Wis.
Stat. section 183.0405(2)
to compel Doral to produce all of the documents she requested and to
respond to her request
for information.
In July 2004, Marie filed a motion asking the court to compel
production of documents and
to require Doral to respond to her request for information. The motion
to compel sought some
information and emails contained on computer equipment that had in the
interim been sold to
a third party. The circuit court ruled that the emails and draft
documents were neither
records under Wis. Stat. section 183.0405(2) nor company documents under
the operating agreement.
It further ruled that Doral was unable to make available the records
because they were stored
on equipment no longer in its control.
After additional litigation and motions, the circuit court
granted Doral's motion for
summary judgment, concluding that "Doral Dental had `complied with
[all requests for record
inspection] that they were supposed to comply
with."15 Marie appealed to the court of
appeals,
which in turn certified the case to the supreme court to determine the
scope of a member's right
to inspect records of an LLC and whether this right included the right
to review an LLC's
email and document drafts.
The supreme court overruled the circuit court. It did not
address whether informal
stored information and emails were records for purposes of Wis. Stat.
section 183.0405(2) because
in fact Doral's operating agreement provided a greater right of
inspection than
section 183.0405(2). The supreme court held that the term "Company
documents" in Doral's
operating agreement is a broader category of information than the term
"records" in the statute.
In its opinion, the court compared the record-inspection
provisions of the corporation
and partnership statutes and noted that an LLC is a hybrid of both of
these entities. Although
a partner in a limited partnership holds the right to inspect and copy
records on
reasonable request, the limited partnership statute limits inspection to
those records enumerated in
the statute, in contrast to the WLLCL, which provides for no such
limitation. The corporation
statute, in contrast, limits shareholder access to the records and
requires that "the requests
be made `in good faith and for a proper purpose,' and that the request
identify `with
reasonable particularity' the records sought and the purpose of the
request."16 The corporation
record-inspection statute contains several precise requirements not
contained in the WLLCL.
The court noted that while chapter 183 does not define what
constitutes an LLC "record,"
a "company document," or a "reasonable request," the
scope of a member's right of
inspection under Wis. Stat. section 183.0405(2) is broad. The member's
right "hinges on what
constitutes an LLC `record,' and the degree and kind of restrictions on
access that `upon reasonable
request' may impose."17 The court
concluded that "the operating agreement provides member
access to business-related company emails and document drafts. This
right is subject to `upon
reasonable request' language contained in Wis. Stats. § 183.0405(2)
and the operating
agreement
."18
The court next considered what effect Wis. Stat. section
183.0405(3) would have on a
member's request to inspect LLC documents or records. This statute
states that "[m]embers or,
if the management of the limited liability company is vested in one or
more managers,
managers shall provide, to the extent that the circumstances render it
just and reasonable, true
and full information of all things affecting the members to any member
or to the legal
representative of any member upon reasonable request of the member or
legal
representative."19 The court construed
the phrase "all things affecting the members" to mean all
information affecting
the member's financial interest in the company. "To the extent that
the records and documents
requested by Marie under Wis. Stats. § 183.0405(2) contain
information affecting her
financial interest in the company, subsection 3 requires that the
information contained in the records
or documents be furnished to Marie."20
Finally, the court analyzed what constituted a "reasonable
request" with respect to a
member's inspection rights. Doral argued that the "upon reasonable
request" language was
intended to limit the types of records subject to inspection. Marie
argued that Wis. Stat.
section 183.0405(2) should be interpreted in the same manner as the
partnership record-inspection
statute. Neither argument convinced the court. The court said that Wis.
Stat. chapter 183 does
not address whether the "upon reasonable request" language
encompasses the extent, timing, or
form of the request. It concluded that "[t]he scope of items
subject to inspection under Wis.
Stats. § 183.0405(2)
is so broad that to permit any
inspection request, no matter its breadth,
could impose unreasonable burdens upon the operations of the company.
Because we do not believe
that the drafters intended the inspection statute to threaten the
financial well being of the
company, we read `upon reasonable request' to pertain to the breadth of
an inspection request
as well as the time and form of the
inspection."21
The court stressed that the purpose of the language is to
protect an LLC from member
requests that are an unreasonable financial burden on the LLC.
"Whether an inspection request
is so burdensome as to be unreasonable requires balancing the statute's
bias in favor of
member access to records against the cost of inspection to the company.
When applying this
balancing test, a number of factors may be relevant, including, but not
limited to: (1) whether the
request is restricted by date or subject matter; (2) the reason given
(if any) for the
request and whether the request is related to that reason; (3) the
importance of the information to
the member's interest in the company; and (4) whether the information
may be obtained from
another source."22
Marie was granted access under Doral's operating agreement to
draft documents and
emails. Additionally, the court concluded that the reasonableness test
of Wis. Stat.
section 183.0405(2) balances the statute's bias in favor of a member's
right of inspection against
the burden the request places on the LLC.
Accordingly, LLC members now have affirmation that they may
inspect the company's
information, especially if it affects their financial interest in the
LLC. Members must be
aware, however, that the request will be scrutinized as to its financial
burdens, timing, and
form. Attorneys should review clients' LLC operating agreement forms,
because if the agreement is
not carefully drafted a member's inspection rights may be inadvertently
expanded from what is
allowed under Wis. Stat. section 183.0405.
Statutes
In addition to the recent case law developments, several statutory
changes affect LLCs.
Mergers/Conversions. The Wisconsin Legislature enacted a
new merger and conversion
real estate report statute affecting LLCs in June
200623 If either an acquired business
entity in
a merger or a converted business entity in a conversion owned a fee
simple interest in any
Wisconsin real estate immediately before the merger or conversion, the
surviving entity now
must submit a report to the Wisconsin Department of Revenue
(DOR)24 The report must be submitted within
60 days of the effective date of the merger or conversion and must
contain the
following information: the effective date of the merger or conversion;
the name, address, and
federal employer identification number (FEIN) of any person or business
entity that is a party to
the merger or conversion; the name, address, and telephone number of a
contact person at the
surviving entity; the parcel identification number; a sworn statement
that the ownership
interests remain the same before and after the conversion; and a copy of
the documentation showing
the merger or conversion25 This same act
repealed the short-lived requirement to file real
estate transfer documents and real estate transfer
returns26
Delinquent Annual Reports. Previously, LLCs that were
administratively dissolved
because they filed annual reports late could only apply for
reinstatement within 30 days of their
dissolution27 According to the Department
of Financial Institutions (DFI), the 30-day time
limit was too burdensome for businesses and created unnecessary
administrative burdens on the
DFI28 Accordingly, 2005 Wisconsin Act 132
removed the 30-day limit on seeking
reinstatement29 To seek reinstatement, an
LLC now only need provide its name, the date on which it was
administratively dissolved, a statement that each ground for dissolution
either did not exist or has
been cured, and a statement that its name satisfies Wis. Stat. section
183.010330
Tax Issues. IRS Notice
99-631 which addresses whether a
disregarded entity may either
use its own FEIN or the FEIN of its owner for reporting and payment of
employment taxes,
becomes obsolete as of Jan. 1, 2009 for employment taxes and Jan. 1,
2008 for excise
taxes32 After these dates, a disregarded
entity for federal tax purposes is treated as a separate entity
for employment tax and reporting purposes and must file separate
employment and excise tax
returns using its own FEIN.
Additionally, the DOR updated its LLC publication in February
200833
For tax years beginning on or after Jan. 1, 2006, an LLC
nonresident member's share of
income from a pass-through entity will be exempt from withholding if the
nonresident member
files an affidavit with the DOR on form
PW-234 The nonresident must agree to file a
Wisconsin
earned income or franchise tax return.
Department of Financial Institutions.
Except for delinquent LLC reports, an LLC's
annual report now must be filed online. These reports must be filed
through the DFI's Web
site, www.wdfi.org/apps/corpar. Any
changes to an LLC's registered office or agent and articles
of merger also may be filed online.
Conclusion
Since the creation of the LLC legal entity in 1994, the popularity of
this form of legal
entity has grown each year. The cases decided since
Gottsacker in 2005 have provided attorneys
with some practical answers to questions unanswered in the WLLCL.
Through these cases,
attorneys have learned that courts hold the right to order an LLC's
dissolution if a member in
control acts in a manner that is illegal, oppressive, or fraudulent.
Additionally, certain conduct
of managers and members of an LLC may be outside the scope of their
duties, and accordingly,
they might not be immune from liability under Wis. Stat. section
183.0402 (although the nature
of those type of activities has not yet been defined). Finally,
attorneys have learned that an
LLC member has the right to the LLC's information, particularly if the
information affects a
member's financial interest in the LLC. However, this request is subject
to scrutiny with
respect to its breadth, time, and form and cannot place an undue
financial burden on the LLC.
Additionally, attorneys should review their clients' operating
agreements to confirm that the
members' inspection rights provided by these documents do not
unintentionally exceed the statutory
inspection rights.
Statutorily, several things have changed with respect to LLCs.
LLCs can apply at any
time for reinstatement after an administrative dissolution based on
delinquency. If real estate
is acquired in a merger or conversion of an LLC, a report must be
submitted to the DOR.
Disregarded entities are now treated as a separate entity for employment
tax and reporting purposes
and will need to file separate employment and excise taxes using their
own employer
identification number. Several LLC reports, with the exception of
delinquent reports, presently may be
filed online.
The continuing influence of LLCs in Wisconsin is evident by
their growth in numbers
and their more frequent treatment by cases and statutory changes. As the
LLC entity form
continues to grow in popularity, attorneys can anticipate further
statutory and case law developments.
Endnotes
Wisconsin Lawyer