AJJ Hotel Holdings, Inc. v. The Revocable Trust of John Q. Hammons dated December 28, 1989 as Amended and Restated
Filing
9
MEMORANDUM AND ORDER. The bankruptcy court's rulings against appellants on their claims in this matter are hereby AFFIRMED in part and REVERSED in part, as set forth herein, and the case is remanded to the bankruptcy court for further proceedings consistent with this opinion. Signed by District Judge John W. Lungstrum on 1/18/2022. (ca)
Case 2:21-cv-02218-JWL Document 9 Filed 01/18/22 Page 1 of 17
IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE DISTRICT OF KANSAS
JWJ HOTEL HOLDINGS, INC.,
f/k/a AJJ HOTEL HOLDINGS, INC.;
MIKE KAMMERER, in his capacity as
Co-Manager of W&H Realty, LLC; and
W&H REALTY, LLC,
)
)
)
)
)
)
Appellants,
)
)
v.
)
)
THE REVOCABLE TRUST OF JOHN Q.
)
HAMMONS DATED DECEMBER 28, 1989 )
AS AMENDED AND RESTATED,
)
)
Appellee.
)
)
_______________________________________)
Case No. 21-2218-JWL
MEMORANDUM AND ORDER
In this adversary bankruptcy proceeding, appellants (collectively “AJJ”) brought
claims against debtor appellee (“the Trust”) to enforce a right of first refusal relating to the
transfer by the Trust of its interest in W&H Realty, LLC (“the LLC”), of which AJJ and
the Trust were the sole members owning equal shares. The matter comes before this Court
on appeal, pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 158(a), from the bankruptcy court’s rulings against AJJ
on its claims. As set forth more fully below, the Court affirms in part and reverses in
Case 2:21-cv-02218-JWL Document 9 Filed 01/18/22 Page 2 of 17
part the bankruptcy court’s rulings, and it remands the case to the bankruptcy court for
further proceedings consistent with this opinion.1
I.
Background
In 2016, the Trust and various affiliated entities filed for bankruptcy. At that time,
the Trust owned 50 percent of the shares in W&H Realty, Inc.; the other 50 percent interest
was owned by three other trusts. In 2017, these owners engaged in various transactions to
convert the corporation to a limited liability company (the LLC). After those transactions,
the only two members of the LLC were the Trust and AJJ, with each holding a 50-percent
share. The Trust and AJJ executed the LLC’s First Amended and Restated Operating
Agreement (“the Operating Agreement”), effective May 18, 2017, to govern the LLC.
In early 2018, the debtors reached a settlement of disputes with creditor J.D.
Holdings, L.L.C. (“JDH”), by which JDH would acquire assets of the debtors, including
the Trust’s 50-percent interest in the LLC. The bankruptcy court confirmed the plan
effecting that settlement.
Subsequently, a dispute arose between the Trust and AJJ concerning the Trust’s
appointment of a co-manager for the LLC, and in July 2018, the Trust initiated the present
adversary proceeding to litigate that dispute. AJJ asserted counterclaims for declaratory
1
Neither party has requested oral argument, and the Court has determined, after
examination of the briefs and the record of this appeal, that the facts and legal arguments
have been adequately presented therein, and that oral argument will not significantly aid
the dispositional process and is therefore not needed. See Fed. R. Bankr. P. 8019.
2
Case 2:21-cv-02218-JWL Document 9 Filed 01/18/22 Page 3 of 17
relief, in three counts: in Count I, AJJ asserted a right to purchase the Trust’s membership
interest in the LLC, pursuant to a contractual purchase right; in Count II, AJJ sought a
declaration concerning JDH’s ability to participate in the management or become a
member of the LLC; and in Count III, AJJ sought a declaration that the Trust may no longer
participate in the management of the LLC and that AJJ may now manage the LLC on its
own. The bankruptcy court dismissed Count II, and that count is not at issue in this appeal.
By order of March 10, 2020, the court denied AJJ’s motion for judgment on the pleadings
on Counts I and III of the counterclaims. By order of April 29, 2021, the court granted
summary judgment to the Trust on those counterclaims (while denying AJJ’s motion for
summary judgment). AJJ now appeals that adverse judgment on Counts I and III of its
counterclaims.
II.
Governing Standards
In this case, AJJ appeals the bankruptcy court’s legal determinations that the Trust
was entitled to judgment as a matter of law on AJJ’s claims, and such legal determinations
are reviewed by this Court under a de novo standard of review. See In re Hicks, 491 F.3d
1136, 1139 (10th Cir. 2007). The bankruptcy court’s interpretations of the parties’
Operating Agreement are also legal determinations that are reviewed de novo. See Cellport
Sys., Inc. v. Peiker Acustic GMBH & Co. KG, 762 F.3d 1016, 1022 (10th Cir. 2014)
(lower’s court contract interpretation is reviewed de novo). The parties do not dispute that
3
Case 2:21-cv-02218-JWL Document 9 Filed 01/18/22 Page 4 of 17
the Court’s standard of review here is de novo; nor does either party argue that material
facts remain in dispute or that AJJ’s claims may not be decided as a matter of law.2
The parties agree that Ohio law governs the interpretation of the Operating
Agreement, pursuant to the agreement’s choice-of-law provision. Ohio law concerning the
interpretation of a contract has been summarized as follows:
The interpretation of written contracts, including any assessment as to
whether a contract is ambiguous, is a question of law subject to de novo
review on appeal. It is a well-known and established principle of contract
interpretation that contracts are to be interpreted so as to carry out the intent
of the parties, as that intent is evidenced by the contractual language. In
carrying out that mandate, the contract is to be examined as a whole. [The
court] will look to the plain and ordinary meaning of the language used in
the contract unless another meaning is clearly apparent from the contents of
the agreement. When the language of a written contract is clear, a court may
look no further than the writing itself to find the intent of the parties. . . .
Only if the terms of a contract may reasonably be understood in more than
one sense can they be construed as ambiguous. . . . Extrinsic evidence is
admissible to ascertain the intent of the parties when the contract is unclear
or ambiguous . . . .
See Envision Waste Servs., LLC v. County of Medina, 83 N.E.3d 270, 275-76 (Ohio Ct.
App. 2017) (citations and internal quotations omitted).
III.
AJJ’s Claim to Enforce Purchase Right
In Count I of its counterclaims, AJJ seeks a declaration that it has the right to
purchase the Trust’s interest in the LLC. In the bankruptcy court, AJJ cited three separate
2
Summary judgment is appropriate if the moving party demonstrates that there is
“no genuine dispute as to any material fact” and that it is “entitled to a judgment as a matter
of law.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(a).
4
Case 2:21-cv-02218-JWL Document 9 Filed 01/18/22 Page 5 of 17
bases for that right under the LLC’s Operating Agreement, which bases the Court addresses
in turn.
A.
Section 1.6
AJJ argues that a purchase right arises under Section 1.6 of the Operating
Agreement. That section provides as follows:
The parties recognize, acknowledge and agree that the Company [the LLC],
by operation of law and through the prior merger of REW/JQH Holdings,
Inc. into the Corporation before its conversion into the Company assumes all
of the rights and obligations of the predecessor companies, including those
arising under any contract to which the predecessor companies were a party.
Without limitation of the scope of the previous sentence, the parties also
specifically agree that the following documents (collectively the
“Corporation Documents”) remain in force and effect and shall bind the
Company . . . for any claim or right pursuant thereto . . .: [five documents
listed].
One of the Corporation Documents listed in this provision is the W&H REALTY, INC.
Stock Purchase and Buy-Out Agreement dated April 16,1993 (the “Buy-Out Agreement”).
The Buy-Out Agreement was executed by the LLC’s predecessor corporation and the
corporation’s three shareholders, and it includes a provision stating that if one shareholder
“desires” to transfer his shares or an interest therein, the corporation and the other
shareholders have the right to purchase those shares or interest on the same terms. AJJ
argues that the Buy-Out Agreement, applicable through Section 1.6 of the Operating
Agreement, grants it the right to purchase the Trust’s membership interest in the LLC on
the same terms offered by JDH.
The bankruptcy court rejected this argument in its summary judgment order. The
court ruled that Section 1.6 by its terms makes the Buy-Out Agreement (and the other
5
Case 2:21-cv-02218-JWL Document 9 Filed 01/18/22 Page 6 of 17
Corporation Documents) binding only on the LLC (“the Company”) and not also on the
LLC’s members (the Trust and AJJ).
The court deemed the contractual language
ambiguous, and it relied on the undisputed extrinsic evidence that the parties had changed
“shall bind the Company and its Members” in an earlier draft to “shall bind the Company,”
thereby demonstrating their intent that only the LLC and not its members would be bound
by the Corporation Documents.
On appeal, AJJ renews its argument that Section 1.6 should be interpreted to make
the Corporation Documents also binding on the LLC’s members. AJJ does not dispute that
the provision states that the Corporation Documents shall bind “the Company,” with no
reference to the LLC’s members. It argues, however, that the preceding language – the
parties’ agreement that the Corporation Documents “remain in force and effect” –
represents a separate agreement that binds the LLC members, as analogues to the
shareholders bound by the Buy-Out Agreement. The Court concludes, however, that a
consideration of the entirety of Section 1.6 does not support such an interpretation. The
provision states that the LLC assumes the obligations of the predecessor corporation
executed, and then it proceeds to specify particular agreements that bind the LLC. Giving
the provision its plain meaning, the second sentence of Section 1.6 states first that those
agreements remain in force and effect, meaning they continue to bind the parties that
executed them; and second that they also bind the LLC. Section 1.6 contains no language
indicating that the Corporation Documents also bind the LLC’s members.
In addition, this interpretation is supported by a consideration of the Operating
Agreement as a whole, as the agreement contains its own transfer restrictions in Section 6.
6
Case 2:21-cv-02218-JWL Document 9 Filed 01/18/22 Page 7 of 17
The presence of those restrictions – which are not identical to the transfer restrictions
contained in the Buy-Out Agreement – undermine AJJ’s argument that the parties intended
to bind the LLC’s members to the Buy-Out Agreement in order to make sure that transfers
of ownership interests were still restricted.
Finally, even if Section 1.6 could be considered ambiguous, the bankruptcy court’s
interpretation is supported by extrinsic evidence. As noted by the bankruptcy court, an
earlier draft of Section 1.6 proposed by AJJ explicitly made the Corporation Documents
binding on both the LLC “and its Members,” but the parties eventually agreed to proceed
without the reference to the members. AJJ argues that the reason for that decision is
unknown, but it does not dispute that the parties did ultimately agree not to include a
reference to the members. Thus, the only extrinsic evidence cited by the parties indicates
that the parties considered stating that the Corporation Documents are binding on the
LLC’s members, but chose instead language making the Documents binding only on the
LLC. That evidence supports the interpretation that the Documents are binding only on
the LLC, as Section 1.6 states in plain terms, and in the absence of other evidence, the
Court adopts that interpretation.3
Accordingly, the Court rules as a matter of law that the Buy-Out Agreement’s
transfer restrictions are not enforceable against the Trust through Section 1.6 of the
Operating Agreement. The Court thus affirms the bankruptcy court’s ruling to that effect.
3
AJJ has not cited any other relevant extrinsic evidence on appeal. Nor has AJJ
argued that a question of fact remains concerning the parties’ intent.
7
Case 2:21-cv-02218-JWL Document 9 Filed 01/18/22 Page 8 of 17
B.
Section 6.7
AJJ also contends that the Buy-Out Agreement’s transfer restrictions may
effectively be enforced against the Trust through Section 6.7 of the Operating Agreement.
Section 6.7 provides as follows:
Notwithstanding anything to the contrary contained in this
Agreement, no membership interest shall be transferred in violation of any
franchise agreement (or equivalent) or loan document binding the Company
or any entity owned directly or indirectly by the Company or any of the
Corporation Documents.
AJJ argues that Section 6.7 prohibits a transfer by the Trust that does not allow for AJJ’s
exercise of purchase rights because such a transfer would violate the Buy-Out Agreement
(one of the Corporation Documents).4 The bankruptcy court rejected this theory, ruling
that Section 6.7 did not apply here because the Trust never actually transferred its
membership interest to JDH.
This Court affirms the bankruptcy court’s rejection of this theory, but for a different
reason. As discussed above, Section 1.6 makes the Buy-Out Agreement and the other
Corporation Documents binding only on the LLC and not also on its members. Thus, the
Trust cannot have violated the Buy-Out Agreement by any transfer, and therefore Section
6.7 is not implicated here.
4
AJJ essentially argues that the parties intended, by this paucity of language and
despite the language of Section 1.1, that the Buy-Out Agreement’s transfer restrictions
would apply to the LLC’s members, who were not parties to that agreement, with all
references to shareholders and corporate shares implicitly replaced by references to LLC
members and their membership interests.
8
Case 2:21-cv-02218-JWL Document 9 Filed 01/18/22 Page 9 of 17
C.
Section 6.5
Finally, AJJ argues that it may exercise a purchase right arising under Section 6.5
of the Operating Agreement. That provision provides in relevant part as follows:
6.5
Right of Purchase
Notwithstanding anything to the contrary contained in this Agreement, if a
Person holding, whether as an Assignee or as a Substitute Member, all or any
part of a Membership Interest (herein “Seller”) receives a written offer (the
“Offer”) which Seller is willing to accept from a Third Person(s) (“Offeror”)
to sell or transfer any or all of Seller’s Membership Interest, Seller shall
[provide notice to the LLC and the other members, who may elect to purchase
on the same terms].
The bankruptcy court rejected this basis for the existence of a purchase right. In denying
AJJ’s motion for judgment on the pleadings, the court ruled that Section 6.5 applies only
to assignees and substitute members, and that the provision therefore does not apply to a
transfer by the Trust, an original member of the LLC. In its summary judgment ruling, the
court stated in a footnote that, even if Section 6.5 did apply to the Trust as an original
member, the purchase right in that section has not been triggered because the Trust was
only willing to sell to JDH if AJJ would not exercise purchase rights; AJJ always
maintained that it would exercise such a right; and thus the Trust did not receive an offer
that it was “willing to accept.”
Before addressing the merits of this issue, the Court first rejects the Trust’s
procedural argument by which it seeks to prevent AJJ from pursuing this theory on appeal.
The Trust notes that the bankruptcy court rejected this theory in its 2020 order on the
motion for judgment on the pleadings; and it argues that AJJ’s notice of appeal, to which
AJJ attached only the 2021 summary judgment order, violated the rule requiring the
9
Case 2:21-cv-02218-JWL Document 9 Filed 01/18/22 Page 10 of 17
attachment of all orders being appealed. See Fed. R. Bankr. P. 8003 (a)(3).5 Of course,
even if AJJ were now prohibited from appealing the denial of its motion for judgment on
the pleadings, it could still appeal the summary judgment ruling, which disposed of AJJ’s
counterclaims and which referenced AJJ’s reliance on Section 6.5. Moreover, the Trust
concedes in its brief that such a designation mistake is not necessarily fatal if the intent to
appeal a ruling may be fairly inferred and the other party was not misled or prejudiced. See
Williams v. Akers, 837 F.3d 1075, 1078 (10th Cir. 2016) (cited by the Trust) (noting that
the designation requirement is construed liberally). In its statement of issues filed shortly
after the notice of appeal, AJJ explicitly stated that its was appealing both orders by the
bankruptcy court, and therefore the Trust cannot have been prejudiced by the omission of
one order from the notice of appeal. Accordingly, the Court will consider AJJ’s theory
based on Section 6.5.
The Court also rejects the Trust’s argument that AJJ has improperly relied on new
arguments concerning Section 6.5 that it did not make before the bankruptcy court. AJJ
did sufficiently articulate below the same argument that it makes here, namely that Section
6.5 applies by its terms to original members of the LLC.
The Court thus turns to the interpretation of the provision. The purchase right in
Section 6.5 arises “if a Person holding, whether as an Assignee or as a Substitute Member,
all or any part of a Membership Interest” receives an offer to sell. “Person” is defined
5
The Trust has not argued that AJJ was required to appeal the rejection of this theory
in 2020 after the bankruptcy court issued its interlocutory ruling on the motion for
judgment on the pleadings, which ruling did not dispose of AJJ’s claims.
10
Case 2:21-cv-02218-JWL Document 9 Filed 01/18/22 Page 11 of 17
broadly in the Agreement to include any individual or entity permitted to be an LLC
member under Ohio law. An “Assignee” is an assignee or transferee of a Membership
Interest. Elsewhere in Section 6 the Agreement provides that an Assignee may not also
become a Substitute Member without the consent of all members and co-managers,
although a non-member Assignee shall nevertheless be entitled to all of the economic
benefits of a Membership Interest.
The Trust argues that Section 6.5 applies only in the event of an offer received by
an Assignee or a Substitute Member, and thus does not apply to the offer it received as an
original member of the LLC. AJJ argues that the key phrase, “whether as an Assignee or
as a Substitute Member,” is illustrative, not restrictive, and that the provision thus applies
to an offer received by any Person.
The Court begins its contract interpretation by applying the ordinary rules of
grammar. See Oliveri v. OsteoStrong, 171 N.E.3d 386, 391 (Ohio Ct. App. 2021). The
Court agrees with AJJ that, as a matter of proper grammar, a phrase beginning with
“whether” that is set off by commas is illustrative and not restrictive, and equates with a
phrase beginning “whether or not.” See State ex rel. Baumruk v. Belt, 964 S.W.3d 443,
447 (Mo. 1998) (citing the “well-established rule that when the word whether is used to
introduce an issue, whether encompasses both the positive and negative resolution of the
issue,” with the effect that “use of or not is superfluous”) (citing Bryan A. Garner, A
Dictionary of Modern Legal Usage 575 (Oxford Univ. Press 1987)); State v. Phillips, 2008
WL 5205457, at *3-4 (Ohio Ct. App. Dec. 12, 2008) (unpub. op.) (a parenthetical
expression set off by commas contains non-essential information, and the meaning of the
11
Case 2:21-cv-02218-JWL Document 9 Filed 01/18/22 Page 12 of 17
sentence would not be changed if the phrase were omitted) (citing Yelin & Samborn, The
Legal Research and Writing Handbook 344 (2006)); State v. Tunney, 895 P.2d 13, 16 &
n.4 (Wash. Ct. App. 1995) (“Under the rules of punctuation, appositives which serve a
nonrestrictive (parenthetic) function are set off by commas; appositives which serve a
restrictive (necessary) function are not.”) (citing Strunk & White, The Elements of Style 14 (3d ed. 1979)), aff’d, 917 P.2d 95 (Wash. 1996). Thus, application of the ordinary rules
of grammar yields the interpretation that Section 6.5 applies to any transferor, whether or
not an Assignee or Substitute Member.6
In arguing that the “whether” phrase should be interpreted restrictively, the Trust
notes that if the parties meant to refer to both original and subsequent members, they could
simply have made the provision applicable to “members” generally. As noted above,
however, a transferee could be denied full membership in the LLC, and thus the use of
“Person” was required (instead of “member”) in order to account for such an Assignee. On
the other hand, as AJJ notes, if the parties had intended the provision to apply only to
Assignees and Substitute Members, they could simply have made the provision applicable
“if any Assignee or Substitute Member” receives an offer.
Finally, the parties have not cited any extrinsic evidence that could aid the Court’s
interpretation, other than the fact that, as AJJ notes, the owners of this company had
6
The Trust notes that each of the cited cases involved the interpretation not of a
contract but of a statute or a charging document. The cases are cited, however, in support
of this particular rule of grammar, to aid the Court in complying with Ohio law that requires
the application of the ordinary rules of grammar. The Trust has not cited contrary authority
or disputed that this is the prevailing rule of grammar.
12
Case 2:21-cv-02218-JWL Document 9 Filed 01/18/22 Page 13 of 17
enjoyed a right of first refusal for any transfer prior to the conversion to an LLC. In the
absence of any other evidence or any basis to restrict Section 6.5’s application to Assignees
and Substitute Members, the Court will give effect to the terms of the provision as written,
in accordance with the prevailing rules of grammar. The Court therefore concludes as a
matter of law that Section 6.5 of the Operating Agreement is not restricted to offers
received by Assignees and Substitute Members and does apply to offers received by
original members of the LLC, and it reverses the contrary ruling by the bankruptcy court.
The Court next considers whether Section 6.5’s purchase right has been triggered in
this case. The bankruptcy court stated in its summary judgment order that if Section 6.5
did apply to original members, the purchase right would still not be triggered in this case
because the Trust never received an offer that it was willing to accept. AJJ argues,
however, that if a transfer of the Trust’s membership interest actually occurred here, then
the Trust would necessarily have received an offer that it was willing to accept. The Court
agrees with that principle, which the Trust has not disputed on appeal. Section 6.5 contains
a trigger – the receipt of an offer that the seller is willing to accept – that occurs before the
transfer actually takes place in order to allow for notice to the LLC and the other member
and a possible purchase right election. The grant of the purchase right would essentially
be eviscerated, however, if an actual transfer could be effected without triggering the
13
Case 2:21-cv-02218-JWL Document 9 Filed 01/18/22 Page 14 of 17
purchase right under Section 6.5, and the Court thus interprets that provision to mean that
the right is also triggered in the event of an actual transfer.7
In considering the applicability of Section 6.7, the bankruptcy court ruled that no
transfer has taken place here. The court stated that AJJ had conflated the economic benefits
transferred to JDH with the right to those benefits, and it concluded that the right to the
benefits had remained with the Trust under the confirmation orders. This Court agrees
with AJJ, however, that a transfer of the Trust’s Membership Interest, as defined by the
Operating Agreement and in accord with Ohio law, did occur here.
The Agreement defines Membership Interest as a member’s rights in distributions
and allocations from the LLC. As discussed above, Section 6.1 distinguishes a transfer of
all or part of a Membership Interest from the substitution of a new member (the latter
requires additional consent). Similarly, Ohio’s LLC statutes provide that, except as
otherwise provided in the operating agreement, the assignment of a membership interest
does not entitle the assignee to become a member or to exercise all rights of the member,
but only entitles the assignee to receive distributions and allocations from the LLC to the
extent of the assignment. See Ohio Rev. Code Ann. § 1705.18(A). The Ohio Supreme
Court has recognized this distinction between the transfer of an LLC membership interest,
meaning the transfer of the right to receive distributions; and the transfer of the entire
membership, meaning the transfer of all membership rights including management rights.
7
In the same way, if an agreement for a transfer has been reached, then the seller
must have been willing to accept the buyer’s offer. The Court appreciates that the Trust
may have agreed to the transfer of its interest in the LLC only to facilitate its reorganization
in bankruptcy, but for whatever reason, it agreed.
14
Case 2:21-cv-02218-JWL Document 9 Filed 01/18/22 Page 15 of 17
See Holdeman v. Epperson, 857 N.E.2d 583, 586 (Ohio 2006). Thus, under this Operating
Agreement and Ohio law, a membership interest consisting of the right to distributions may
be transferred even while the transferor member retains the membership and other
membership rights.
That is exactly what occurred here. Under the bankruptcy court’s confirmation
orders, all of the Trust’s assets were to vest in JDH. In the case of certain delayed assets,
the Trust retained the asset, but “all economic benefits and interests” from the asset inured
to the benefit of JDH pending the closing on that asset. Specifically with respect to the
LLC, the Trust was to inform AJJ of the mechanism by which the Trust’s interest in the
LLC would be transferred to JDH. Taken together, those provisions in the court’s orders
mean that although the Trust retained (and has not yet transferred) its full membership in
the LLC and the entirety of its membership rights, all economic benefits from the LLC
inured in – and thus were transferred to – JDH (who has in fact been receiving the Trust’s
share of distributions made by the LLC).
Section 6.5 applies to the transfer of a
Membership Interest as defined by in the Operating Agreement, which means that Section
6.5 is triggered by any transfer of a member’s right to receive LLC distributions. JDH has
been given the right to receive the LLC distributions; thus, as a matter of law, a transfer of
the Trust’s Membership Interest has taken place.
The Trust argues that a contractual right to receive money is not the same as the
right to receive distributions from an LLC. Of course, the right to receive distributions
from the LLC is itself a contractual right, arising from the contract governing the LLC, and
thus this distinction urged by the Trust is not readily apparent. Moreover, the Trust has not
15
Case 2:21-cv-02218-JWL Document 9 Filed 01/18/22 Page 16 of 17
cited any authority or offered any additional reasoning why JDH’s right to receive the
distributions that arose under the bankruptcy court’s orders is not the same as the right to
receive distributions made by the LLC, or why something else must have been intended by
the Operating Agreement. It is clear from the entirety of the Operating Agreement that a
purchase right arises under Section 6.5 even when a transfer of less than all of a member’s
rights has occurred (or when the member is willing to accept an offer for such a transfer),
for instance when only economic benefits are transferred.
The Court thus concludes as a matter of law that a transfer of the Trust’s
Membership Interest has occurred, and that AJJ’s purchase right under Section 6.5 of the
Operating Agreement has therefore been triggered. The bankruptcy court’s contrary ruling
is hereby reversed, as is the bankruptcy court’s summary judgment in favor of the Trust on
Count I of the counterclaim.
The bankruptcy court also denied AJJ’s motion for summary judgment on Count I,
but the Court declines to reverse that ruling. The Trust states in its brief that it asserted
other defenses to AJJ’s claim that the bankruptcy court declined to address. Neither party
has discussed those defenses on appeal.
Accordingly, the case is remanded to the
bankruptcy court for further proceedings on Count I to the extent based on Section 6.5,
consistent with this opinion, so that the bankruptcy court may in its discretion consider any
other defense asserted by the Trust.
16
Case 2:21-cv-02218-JWL Document 9 Filed 01/18/22 Page 17 of 17
III.
AJJ’s Claim Concerning Management of the LLC
The bankruptcy court granted the Trust summary judgment on Count III of AJJ’s
counterclaim regarding management of the LLC – and denied AJJ’s cross-motion –
because AJJ had not shown that it has a right to purchase the Trust’s interest. This Court
has reversed the bankruptcy court’s ruling as a matter of law that AJJ has no purchase right;
thus the Court also reverses the bankruptcy court’s summary judgment in favor of the Trust
on Count III. Declaratory relief on that count is discretionary, however. Thus the Court
will not reverse the denial of summary judgment to AJJ, but it instead remands the case to
the bankruptcy court for further consideration of Count III after AJJ’s purchase right claim
(Count I) has finally been resolved.8
IT IS THEREFORE ORDERED BY THE COURT THAT the bankruptcy court’s
rulings against appellants on their claims in this matter are hereby affirmed in part and
reversed in part, as set forth herein, and the case is remanded to the bankruptcy court for
further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
Dated this 18th day of January, 2022, in Kansas City, Kansas.
s/ John W. Lungstrum
John W. Lungstrum
United States District Judge
8
The Trust argues that Count III concerning management of the LLC should be
deemed moot because the liquidation of the LLC, as agreed by the parties, is nearly
complete. The bankruptcy court rejected that same mootness argument by the Trust, and
thus this Court remands the claim to allow the bankruptcy to decide in its discretion
whether declaratory relief is appropriate.
17
Disclaimer: Justia Dockets & Filings provides public litigation records from the federal appellate and district courts. These filings and docket sheets should not be considered findings of fact or liability, nor do they necessarily reflect the view of Justia.
Why Is My Information Online?