Limited
Partnership Dissolved At the Request of Assignees of Limited Partners
In a recent decision from Minnesota, a limited partnership
was ordered to be dissolved in an action brought by the assignees of the
limited partners. Storeland v. Nordic
Townhomes Limited Partnership, A18-1564, 2019 WL 1983500 (Minn. Ct. App.
May 6, 2019).
Nordic Townhomes was originally organized with three limited
partners and three general partners. With the passage of time, all of the
original limited partners died. No new limited partners were admitted, and the heirs
of the various limited partners became transferees of their respective interests
in the partnership. The partnership agreement of Nordic Townhomes and the
present situation were summarized by the court as:
Once Nordic did not have any limited partners, the
partnership was to dissolve, liquidate, and cease doing business. Despite the
fact that Nordic does not have any limited partners, continue to exist as an
entity and conduct business.
The plaintiffs, they being some of the assignees of now
deceased limited partners, filed a complaint seeking that Nordic Townhomes wind
up its business, satisfy its debts and obligations and distribute the net
proceeds to those holding the economic rights in the partnership. The limited
partnership responded by claiming that the plaintiffs did not have standing to
seek either judicial or nonjudicial dissolution of the partnership on the basis
that they were neither limited or general partners. The trial court granted the
plaintiffs’ summary judgment, in effect finding that they could enforce the
provision of the limited partnership agreement with respect to the partnership’s
dissolution. This appeal followed.
Applying a “injury-in-fact” paradigm, the Court of Appeals
found that the assignees of the limited partners had standing to enforce that
provision of the limited partnership agreement directing that the partnership
be dissolved upon having no limited partners:
Here, respondents suffered an injury-in-fact sufficient to
give them standing to ask the district court to enforce the partnership
agreement. The partnership agreement is clear: Nordic was to be dissolved when
there were no longer any limited partners. That process involves liquidating
assets, and respondents are entitled to their share of any profits remaining
once partnership obligations are resolved. See Minn. Stat. § 321.0702(b)(2)
(2018) (stating that “upon the dissolution and winding up of the limited
partnership’s activities [a transferee is entitled to] the net amount otherwise
distributable to the transferor”). Because respondents are entitled to their
share of that money, and because Nordic refused to take steps to dissolve the
partnership and liquidate assets, respondents suffered an injury-in-fact
sufficient to confer standing.
2019 WL
1983500, *2.
Further rejecting the claim that the court was allowing a
non-partner to move for judicial dissolution, the court observed that “respondents’
action is more properly characterized as seeking enforcement of the partnership
agreement rather than seeking judicial dissolution of the partnership. And
because we conclude that respondents have standing because they suffered an
injury-in-fact, respondents do not need a statutory basis to have standing.” Id. (citation omitted). Still on that
same point, the court would also write:
[T]he partnership agreement clearly states that Nordic was
to be dissolved when there were no limited partners. Accordingly, as
transferees, respondents had standing to ask the district court to enforce the
partnership agreement and the district court correctly required Nordic to
follow the partnership agreement’s mandate of dissolution and liquidation.
Finally, although our opinion rests on our application of
the law, we observe that adopting Nordic’s position could effectively result in
no one having standing to seek enforcement of the partnership agreement. We do
not discern the Minnesota law leaves transferees like respondents without
redress in cases where remaining general partners fail to abide by the
partnership agreement.
Id.,*3
(footnote omitted).
For
myself, I find this decision somewhat troubling. Yes, all the court is doing is
enforcing the agreement. The court is, however, enforcing the agreement on
behalf of persons who are not parties to it. As transferees of an economic
interest in the limited partnership, the plaintiffs in this action have no
right to participate in the management of the limited partnership. While the
original limited partners may have been parties to the limited partnership
agreement and in that role had the capacity to bring an action for its
enforcement, that right did not devolve to the transferees upon the death of
the limited partner. They are not parties to the limited partnership agreement,
and for that reason an “injury-in-fact” paradigm fails; the failure of strict compliance
with the limited partnership agreement gave no rise to an injury in the transferees
as they were never parties to that agreement to begin with. In effect,
the court is allowing non-parties to an agreement to insist upon its
enforcement. What about the requirement of privity before bringing an action
for enforcement?
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