A recent decision from the Delaware Court of Chancery, Gurney-Goldman v. Goldman, C. A. 2023-1124-JTL (July 12, 2024), addressed a matter of first impression: What is the power of an estate’s executor to exercise an LLC member’s corporate governance rights after that member dies or becomes disabled? The case reveals a tension between the “pick your partner” principle behind much of Delaware LLC law (members choose to enter into an agreement with the other members, and not their executors) and a policy of fairness to that member who has died or suffered a disability. After evaluating the relevant statutes, Vice Chancellor Laster reasoned that, under the default rule, the executor has seemingly broad power characterized as “a proper purpose, defined as the settlement of the estate or the administration of property.” But the decision also makes clear that parties to an LLC agreement are free to contractually define “the member rights that the executor can potentially exercise.” As the decision succinctly put it: “Let a thousand contractarian flowers bloom.”
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