Obeid v. Hogan ( 2016 )


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  •                                                       EFiled: Jun 10 2016 08:00AM EDT
    Transaction ID 59126374
    Case No. 11900-VCL
    IN THE COURT OF CHANCERY OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE
    WILLIAM T. OBEID,                 )
    )
    Plaintiff,                 )
    )
    v.                     )        C.A. No. 11900-VCL
    )
    MICHAEL R. HOGAN,                 )
    )
    Defendant,                 )
    )
    and                    )
    )
    GEMINI REAL ESTATE ADVISORS, )
    LLC       and     GEMINI   EQUITY )
    PARTNERS, LLC, Delaware Limited )
    Liability Companies,              )
    )
    Nominal Defendants.        )
    MEMORANDUM OPINION
    Date Submitted: April 27, 2016
    Date Decided: June 10, 2016
    Stephen E. Jenkins, Catherine A. Gaul, ASBHY & GEDDES, P.A., Wilmington,
    Delaware; Stephen B. Meister, Alexander D. Pencu, Remy Stocks, MEISTER SEELIG &
    FEIN LLP, New York, New York; Counsel for Plaintiff William T. Obeid.
    Douglas D. Herrmann, Christopher B. Chuff, PEPPER HAMILTON LLP, Wilmington,
    Delaware; Michael L. Smith, Michael J. Collins, BREWER, ATTORNEYS &
    COUNSELORS, New York, New York; Counsel for Nominal Defendants Gemini Real
    Estate Advisors, LLC and Gemini Equity Partners, LLC.
    LASTER, Vice Chancellor.
    Plaintiff William T. Obeid contends that defendant Michael R. Hogan, a retired
    federal judge, cannot serve as the sole member of two parallel special litigation
    committees, one for nominal defendant Gemini Equity Partners, LLC and the other for
    nominal defendant Gemini Real Estate Advisors, LLC. Obeid is entitled to summary
    judgment on this issue.
    The operating agreement for Gemini Equity Partners, LLC adopts a governance
    structure paralleling that of a corporation, which is perhaps ironic given the word
    “Partners” in its name. To avoid confusion, this decision calls it the “Corporate LLC.” By
    opting for a corporate-style governance structure, the drafters evidenced their desire to
    have corporate-style legal rules govern the entity. Under Zapata v. Maldonodo, 
    430 A.2d 779
    (Del. 1981), Judge Hogan cannot serve as the sole member of a special litigation
    committee for that entity because he is not a director.
    The operating agreement for Gemini Real Estate Advisors, LLC adopts a
    manager-managed governance structure. This decision therefore calls it the “Manager-
    Managed LLC.” The distinction that its operating agreement draws between active
    managers and passive members is likely sufficient to have Zapata control, but this
    decision need not rule on that basis. Specific provisions in the entity’s operating
    agreement make clear that managers only can delegate core governance functions to other
    managers. Judge Hogan cannot serve as the sole member of a special litigation committee
    for that entity either because he is not a manager.
    Separately, Obeid contends that he cannot be removed as a member of the board
    of directors of the Corporate LLC except by a unanimous vote of the members of that
    1
    entity. The plain language of the Corporate LLC’s operating agreement does not support
    his position, so this aspect of his motion is denied.
    I.       FACTUAL BACKGROUND
    The facts are drawn from the affidavits and supporting documents that the parties
    submitted in connection with Obeid’s motion for summary judgment. When considering
    such a motion, “the court must view the evidence in the light most favorable to the non-
    moving party.” Merrill v. Crothall-American, Inc., 
    606 A.2d 96
    , 99 (Del. 1992). In this
    case, the material facts are undisputed.
    A.     The Entities
    The Corporate LLC and the Manager-Managed LLC jointly manage over $1
    billion in real estate assets, including eleven hotels and twenty-two commercial
    properties. Until the disputes giving rise to this litigation, Obeid managed the day-to-day
    operations of the hospitality division. Non-parties Christopher S. La Mack and Dante A.
    Massaro managed the day-to-day operations of the commercial division.
    The Corporate LLC is a Delaware limited liability company. Obeid, La Mack, and
    Massaro are its only members, with each holding a one-third member interest. The
    internal affairs of the Corporate LLC are governed by its limited liability company
    agreement (the “Corporate LLC Agreement”). That agreement establishes a governance
    structure paralleling that of a corporation in which power over the entity is vested in a
    board of directors (the “Corporate Board”). Until Obeid’s purported removal in July
    2014, Obeid, La Mack, and Massaro comprised the Corporate Board.
    2
    The Manager-Managed LLC is also Delaware limited liability company. Obeid,
    La Mack, and Massaro are again the only members, with each again holding a one-third
    member interest. The internal affairs of the Manager-Managed LLC are governed by its
    limited liability company agreement (the “Manager-Managed LLC Agreement”). That
    agreement establishes a governance structure in which power over the entity is vested in
    its managers. Obeid, La Mack, and Massaro serve as the entity’s only managers.
    B.    Litigation Begins.
    On July 1, 2014, La Mack and Massaro voted to remove Obeid as President and
    Operating Manager of the Manager-Managed LLC and to install Massaro in his place.
    They did not attempt to remove Obeid as a manager. Section 5.2.1 of the Manager-
    Managed LLC Agreement provides that Obeid, La Mack, and Massaro are each “entitled
    to serve as a Manager of the Company for so long as he is a Member of the Company.”
    La Mack and Massaro contemporaneously filed an action in North Carolina state court
    asserting claims against Obeid relating to his tenure as Operating Manager of the
    Manager-Managed LLC (the “North Carolina Action”).
    In August 2014, Obeid filed an action against La Mack and Massaro in the United
    States District Court for the Southern District of New York (the “New York Federal
    Action”). The gist of the lawsuit was that La Mack and Massaro had started competing
    companies using assets belonging to the Corporate LLC and the Manager-Managed LLC.
    Obeid’s complaint asserted claims directly based on his rights as a member of the entities
    and derivatively on behalf of the entities themselves. On March 5, 2015, the court in the
    North Carolina Action stayed that action in deference to the New York Federal Action.
    3
    In mid-March 2015, Obeid filed a second action in New York, this time in state
    court, against a third party that competed with the Corporate LLC and Manager-Managed
    LLC (the “New York State Action”). The gist of the lawsuit was that La Mack and
    Massaro were improperly selling properties belonging to the Corporate LLC and the
    Manager-Managed LLC to a competitor in return for side benefits.
    In July 2015, La Mack and Massaro asserted counterclaims against Obeid in the
    New York Federal Action. Among other things, the counterclaims included counts for
    fraud and breach of the LLC agreements governing the entities.
    The Corporate LLC and the Manager-Managed LLC owned the properties that
    were the subject of the New York State Action through subsidiaries. In September 2015,
    La Mack and Massaro caused the subsidiaries to file for bankruptcy. The bankruptcy
    court later approved a stipulated order which lifted the automatic stay to allow the New
    York Federal Action and the New York State Action to proceed.
    In January 2016, the court in the New York Federal Action approved the filing of
    an amended complaint that brought the claims asserted in the New York State Action into
    the federal proceeding. The operative complaint in the New York Federal Action
    currently asserts a total of twenty-one counts against La Mack, Massaro, their affiliates,
    and third parties. Some of the counts assert derivative claims on behalf of the Corporate
    LLC or the Manager-Managed LLC.
    Obeid contended that demand was futile for purposes of the derivative claims
    because La Mack and Massaro “suffer from conflicts of interest and divided loyalties that
    preclude them from exercising their independent business judgment on this matter.” Dkt.
    4
    28 Ex. 1 at 87. The New York Federal Action subsequently progressed well beyond the
    stage where La Mack and Massaro could contest Obeid’s authority to assert derivative
    claims on behalf of the entities on the theory that demand should have been made.
    Indeed, discovery in the New York Federal Action has been completed. Trial is
    scheduled for October 2016.
    C.    The Joint Special Meeting
    On June 15, 2015, the Corporate LLC and the Manager-Managed LLC hired the
    law firm of Brewer, Attorneys & Counselors (the “Brewer Firm”) to serve as outside
    counsel. Obeid contends that La Mack and Massaro hired the Brewer Firm without his
    input. The Brewer Firm represents the Corporate LLC and the Manager-Managed LLC in
    this proceeding.
    In mid-July 2015, the Brewer Firm suggested that La Mack, Massaro, and Obeid
    hold a joint special meeting of the Corporate Board and the managers of the Manager-
    Managed LLC (the “Joint Special Meeting”). The purpose of the meeting was to address
    various business matters that had gone unattended in light of the pending litigation.
    Through counsel, Obeid, La Mack, and Massaro exchanged emails proposing various
    topics for the agenda. Obeid’s counsel proposed restoring Obeid’s access to his email
    account, addressing issues surrounding the Brewer Firm’s engagement, and discussing
    certain statements that La Mack and Massaro had made to investors. La Mack and
    Massaro’s counsel countered by proposing to discuss Obeid’s allegedly improper
    interference with the operations of the Corporate LLC and the Manager-Managed LLC.
    To this observer, the exchange appears to have been largely unproductive.
    5
    On July 21, 2015, Obeid sent a singular letter in which he formally noticed both a
    special meeting of the Corporate Board (as required by the Corporate LLC Agreement)
    and a special meeting of the managers of the Manager-Managed LLC (as required by the
    Manager-Managed LLC Agreement). The two meetings were noticed for the same date,
    time, and place, giving rise to the Joint Special Meeting.
    The Joint Special Meeting took place on July 28, 2015. No one kept minutes or
    prepared any formal resolutions. During the meeting, the Brewer Firm proposed that a
    retired federal judge should be hired to function as a special litigation committee for each
    entity to “investigate, analyze and make a recommendation whether to pursue the
    derivative claims on behalf of [the Corporate LLC and the Manager-Managed LLC] in
    the New York Federal Action, including the claims asserted against La Mack and
    Massaro.” Pencu Aff. ¶ 9. La Mack and Massaro voted in favor of the concept of a
    special litigation committee. Obeid voted against it.
    It is undisputed that the formal notice for the Joint Special Meeting did not
    identify the potential creation of parallel special litigation committees as items of
    business, nor did it identify the hiring of a retired federal judge to serve as the sole
    member of the parallel committees. None of the preliminary emails mentioned that topic
    either.
    It is undisputed that during the Joint Special Meeting, no formal resolutions
    creating parallel special litigation committees were either presented or adopted. The idea
    was considered, and a vote was held, but only as a concept.
    6
    After the Joint Special Meeting, the Brewer Firm circulated the names and
    resumes of two retired federal judges. Their names had been mentioned during the Joint
    Special Meeting as candidates for service on the parallel special litigation committees.
    No one had voted to hire either one of them during the Joint Special Meeting or to form
    parallel special litigation committees with either as its sole member.
    On August 24, 2015, La Mack and Massaro executed an engagement letter with
    Judge Hogan, one of the retired federal judges. Judge Hogan previously served as a
    federal judge for over forty years, including as Chief Judge of the United States District
    Court for the District of Oregon from 1995 to 2002. He is now a full-time mediator.
    La Mack and Massaro each signed Judge Hogan’s engagement letter as a
    “member-manager” of the Corporate LLC and the Manager-Managed LLC. It is
    undisputed that Judge Hogan is not a director of the Corporate LLC, nor is he a manager
    of Manager-Managed LLC. Formal resolutions have never been approved that would
    establish or empower parallel special litigation committees and appoint Judge Hogan to
    that dual role.
    D.     La Mack And Massaro Attempt To Remove Obeid From The Corporate
    Board.
    On September 22, 2015, La Mack and Massaro convened a telephonic special
    meeting of the members of the Corporate LLC. During that meeting, La Mack and
    Massaro voted to remove Obeid as a director. Obeid voted against his removal.
    Since September 22, 2015, Obeid has not had any managerial role with the
    Corporate LLC. La Mack and Massaro have made all decisions on behalf of the entity.
    7
    E.    Obeid Learns About Judge Hogan’s Engagement.
    In mid-November 2015, Obeid learned through his counsel that La Mack and
    Massaro had hired Judge Hogan. Obeid had not previously known about the engagement.
    By letter dated December 28, 2015, Judge Hogan introduced himself to La Mack,
    Massaro, and Obeid, informed them of his role, and “express[ed] a willingness to begin
    his investigative work in performing the function of a special litigation committee.” Dkt.
    28 at 9. The December 28 letter tracked a draft that the Brewer Firm had provided to
    Judge Hogan several days earlier. Compare Pencu Aff. Ex. 6, with 
    id. Ex. 7.
    In the letter,
    Judge Hogan stated that he planned to seek a stay of the New York Federal Action to
    permit him to perform his work as the sole member of the parallel special litigation
    committees. When Judge Hogan sent the letter, discovery in the New York Federal
    Action was scheduled to conclude at the end of January 2016, making it a strange and
    belated occasion on which to seek a stay. See Carlton Invs. v. TLC Beatrice Int’l Hldgs.,
    Inc., 
    1996 WL 33167168
    (Del. Ch. June 6, 1996) (Allen, C.).
    On January 11, 2016, Obeid’s counsel met with Judge Hogan and representatives
    of the Brewer Firm. During that meeting, Judge Hogan acknowledged that he had not
    been formally appointed as a director of the Corporate LLC or a manager of Manager-
    Managed LLC and that he was serving in an advisory capacity to the Brewer Firm.
    F.    This Litigation
    On January 12, 2016, Obeid filed this action. He seeks (i) a declaratory judgment
    that Judge Hogan cannot act as a special litigation committee for either the Corporate
    LLC or the Manager-Managed LLC and that he has no authority over any derivative
    8
    claims, including those asserted in the New York Federal Action, (ii) an injunction
    preventing Judge Hogan from taking any action on behalf of either the Corporate LLC or
    the Manager-Managed LLC or attempting to exert any influence or control over any
    derivative claim, and (iii) a declaratory judgment that Obeid is still a director of the
    Corporate LLC and that all actions taken by the Corporate Board since Obeid’s purported
    removal are void. Obeid moved for summary judgment.
    II.      LEGAL ANALYSIS
    Summary judgment is an appropriate vehicle for construing entity agreements as a
    matter of law. See Weinstock v. Lazard Debt Recovery GP, LLC, 
    2003 WL 21843254
    , at
    *2 (Del. Ch. Aug. 8, 2003) (Strine, V.C.). Obeid contends that the plain language of the
    Corporate LLC Agreement and the Manager-Managed LLC Agreement calls for the entry
    of summary judgment in his favor.
    A.     Judge Hogan’s Ability To Serve As The Sole Member Of A Special Litigation
    Committee For The Corporate LLC
    Obeid contends that Judge Hogan cannot serve as a one-man special litigation
    committee for the Corporate LLC, which adopted a governance structure paralleling that
    of a Delaware corporation. Judge Hogan is not a director of the Corporate LLC. Under
    Zapata, he therefore cannot serve as a one-man special litigation committee. Summary
    judgment on this issue is granted in favor of Obeid.
    9
    1.     The Implications Of Mimicking A Corporation’s Governance
    Structure
    It is frequently observed that LLCs “are creatures of contract,”1 which they
    primarily are.2 The Delaware Limited Liability Company Act (the “LLC Act”) provides
    1
    TravelCenters of Am., LLC v. Brog, 
    2008 WL 1746987
    , at *1 (Del. Ch. Apr. 3,
    2008); accord, e.g., Henson v. Sousa, 
    2015 WL 4640415
    , at *1 (Del. Ch. Aug. 4, 2015)
    (“LLCs, as this Court has repeatedly pointed out, are creatures of contract.”); Touch of It.
    Salumeria & Pasticceria, LLC v. Bascio, 
    2014 WL 108895
    , at *4 (Del. Ch. Jan. 13,
    2014) (“[R]ecognizing that LLCs are creatures of contract, I must enforce LLC
    agreements as written.”); Kuroda v. SPJS Hldgs., LLC, 
    971 A.2d 872
    , 880 (Del. Ch.
    2009) (“Limited liability companies are creatures of contract . . . .”); see Fisk Ventures
    LLC v. Segal, 
    2008 WL 1961156
    , at *8 (Del. Ch. May 7, 2008) (“In the context of
    limited liability companies, which are creatures . . . of contract, those duties or
    obligations [among parties] must be found in the LLC Agreement or some other
    contract.” (footnote omitted)).
    2
    The adverb “primarily” recognizes the critical but sometimes overlooked non-
    contractual dimensions of the entity. See In re Seneca Invs. LLC, 
    970 A.2d 259
    , 261 (Del.
    Ch. 2008) (“An LLC is primarily a creature of contract. . . .”).
    [T]he purely contractarian view discounts core attributes of the LLC that
    only the sovereign can authorize, such as its separate legal existence,
    potentially perpetual life, and limited liability for its members. See 
    6 Del. C
    . §§ 18-201, 18-303. To my mind, when a sovereign makes available an
    entity with attributes that contracting parties cannot grant themselves by
    agreement, the entity is not purely contractual. Because the entity has taken
    advantage of benefits that the sovereign has provided, the sovereign retains
    an interest in that entity. . . . Put more directly, an LLC agreement is not an
    exclusively private contract among its members precisely because the LLC
    has powers that only the State of Delaware can confer. Those powers affect
    the rights of third parties, who at a minimum must take into account the
    LLC’s separate legal existence and its members’ limited liability shield.
    In re Carlisle Etcetera LLC, 
    114 A.3d 592
    , 605-06 (Del. Ch. 2015); see Feeley v.
    NHAOCG, LLC, 
    62 A.3d 649
    , 659-63 (Del. Ch. 2012); Auriga Capital Corp. v. Gatz
    Props., LLC, 
    40 A.3d 839
    , 849-56 (Del. Ch. 2012) (Strine, C.), aff’d, 
    59 A.3d 1206
    (Del.
    2012). See generally Daniel S. Kleinberger, Two Decades of “Alternative Entities”:
    From Tax Rationalization Through Alphabet Soup To Contract As Deity, 14 Fordham J.
    Corp. & Fin. L. 445, 460-71 (2009) (identifying historical, jurisprudential, and policy
    10
    that “[i]t is the policy of this chapter to give maximum effect to the principle of freedom
    of contract and to the enforceability of limited liability company agreements.” 
    6 Del. C
    . §
    18-110(b). Because of this freedom, “the parties have broad discretion to use an LLC
    agreement to define the character of the company and the rights and obligations of its
    members.” 
    Kuroda, 971 A.2d at 880
    . One “attraction of the LLC form of entity is the
    statutory freedom granted to members to shape, by contract, their own approach to
    common business ‘relationship’ problems.” Haley v. Talcott, 
    864 A.2d 86
    , 88 (Del. Ch.
    2004) (Strine, V.C.). “Virtually any management structure may be implemented through
    the company’s governing instrument.” Robert L. Symonds, Jr. & Matthew J.
    O’Toole, Delaware Limited Liability Companies § 9.01[B], at 9-9 (2015).
    Using the contractual freedom that the LLC Act bestows, the drafters of an LLC
    agreement can create an LLC with bespoke governance features or design an LLC that
    mimics the governance features of another familiar type of entity. The choices that the
    drafters make have consequences. If the drafters have embraced the statutory default rule
    reasons why LLCs should not be regarded as purely contractual entities); Sandra K.
    Miller, The Best of Both Worlds: Default Fiduciary Duties and Contractual Freedom in
    Alternative Business Entities, 39 J. Corp. L. 295, 315-24 (2014) (reviewing empirical
    studies and presenting data about alternative entity agreements that undermine premises
    of purely contractarian approach). Whatever one’s personal thoughts might have been on
    the matter, “the General Assembly in 2013 adopted an amendment to the LLC Act
    inconsistent with the purely contractarian view” of LLCs. 
    Carlisle, 114 A.3d at 605
    (citing H.B. 126, 147th Gen. Assemb. (Del. 2013) (amending 
    6 Del. C
    . § 18–1104 to
    provide that “In any case not provided for in this chapter, the rules of law and equity,
    including the rules of law and equity relating to fiduciary duties and the law merchant,
    shall govern”)); see 
    Miller, supra, at 314
    (noting that the debate over the purely
    contractual status of LLCs “was resolved by legislation that was signed into law on June
    30, 2013”).
    11
    of a member-managed governance arrangement, which has strong functional and
    historical ties to the general partnership (albeit with limited liability for the members),
    then the parties should expect a court to draw on analogies to partnership law.3 If the
    drafters have opted for a single managing member with other generally passive, non-
    managing members, a structure closely resembling and often used as an alternative to a
    limited partnership, then the parties should expect a court to draw on analogies to limited
    partnership law.4 If the drafters have opted for a manager-managed entity, created a board
    of directors, and adopted other corporate features, then the parties to the agreement
    should expect a court to draw on analogies to corporate law.5 Depending on the terms of
    3
    See 
    6 Del. C
    . § 18-402 (establishing the default rule that management of an LLC
    is “vested in its members in proportion to the then current . . . interest of members in the
    profits of the limited liability company owned by all of the members,” with the decision
    of members owning a majority of such profit interest controlling); Kelly v. Blum, 
    2010 WL 629850
    , at *11 n.73 (Del. Ch. Feb. 24, 2010) (identifying parallel between member-
    managed LLC and partnership). As in a general partnership, the LLC Act’s “default
    framework generally contemplates a unity of membership and management control.”
    Symonds & O’Toole, supra, § 9.01[A][1], at 9-5.
    4
    See Kelly, 
    2010 WL 629850
    , at *11 n.73. The field of limited partnership law is
    particularly fertile, because the LLC Act was “modeled on the popular Delaware LP Act”
    and “its architecture and much of its wording is almost identical to that of the Delaware
    LP Act.” Elf Atochem N. Am., Inc. v. Jaffari, 
    727 A.2d 286
    , 290 (Del. 1999). When a
    manager-managed entity has passive members, those members are often “treated much
    like a limited partner under the LP Act.” 
    Id. 5 See
    Kelly, 
    2010 WL 629850
    , at *11 n.73 (suggesting corporate analogy for
    manager-managed LLC where operating agreement created board of managers similar to
    that of corporation); Symonds & O’Toole, supra, § 9.01[B], at 9-9 (“A limited liability
    company may be structured on the basis of a corporate model . . . .”); see, e.g., Fla. R &
    D Fund Inv’rs, LLC v. Fla. BOCA/Deerfield R & D Inv’rs, LLC, 
    2013 WL 4734834
    , at
    *2, *7 (Del. Ch. Aug. 30, 2013) (addressing LLC agreement that created a board of
    directors to manage the entity); Kahn v. Portnoy, 
    2008 WL 5197164
    , at *4 (Del. Ch. Dec.
    12
    the agreement, analogies to other legal relationships may also be informative. See JAKKS
    Pac., Inc. v. THQ/JAKKS Pac., LLC, 
    2009 WL 1228706
    , at *2 (Del. Ch. May 6, 2009)
    (explaining that although a party to the LLC agreement at issue is “technically a member
    of the LLC,” its economic interest “is less that of an equity owner and more akin to a
    licensor with rights to royalties based on sales”).
    It is important not to embrace analogies to other entities or legal structures too
    broadly or without close analysis, because “the flexibility inherent in the limited liability
    company form complicates the task of fixing such labels or making such comparisons.”
    Symonds & O’Toole, supra, § 1.04[C][1], at 1-17. The drafters of an LLC agreement
    may have adopted partnership-like features for particular aspects of their relationship and
    corporate features for others. For example,
    [m]embers of a limited liability company may be similar to stockholders of
    a corporation or to limited partners in a limited partnership insofar as
    members, stockholders, and limited partners all enjoy statutory limited
    liability. The stockholder analogy may falter, however, depending on the
    nature of a member’s stake in the limited liability company. A stockholder
    necessarily is one who holds stock, and stock usually constitutes some sort
    11, 2008) (interpreting LLC agreement which created board of directors to manage the
    entity and which provided that the “‘authority, powers, functions and duties (including
    fiduciary duties)’ of the board of directors will be identical to those of a board of
    directors of a business corporation organized under the Delaware General Corporation
    Law . . . unless otherwise specifically provided for in the LLC Agreement”); Seneca
    
    Invs., 970 A.2d at 261
    (interpreting LLC agreement which provided that, subject to
    certain exceptions, “the Company will be governed in all respects as if it were a
    corporation organized under and governed by the Delaware General Corporation Law . . .
    and the rights of its Stockholders will be governed by the DGCL”); see also Matthew v.
    Laudamiel, 
    2012 WL 2580572
    , at *1 (Del. Ch. June 29, 2012) (interpreting LLC
    agreement that created board of managers to oversee business and affairs of entity); VGS,
    Inc. v. Castiel, 
    2003 WL 723285
    , at *2 (Del. Ch. Feb. 28, 2003) (same).
    13
    of economic stake in the corporation. By contrast, a person may be
    admitted as a member without acquiring a limited liability company interest
    (i.e., economic rights) in the limited liability company.
    
    Id. at 1-17
    to -18 (footnote omitted). The analogy may break down in other areas as well,
    such as in terms of the extent to which the interests and the rights they carry are fully
    alienable. Compare 
    8 Del. C
    . § 202 (establishing default rule of alienability with
    transferee obtaining stockholder status), with 
    6 Del. C
    . § 18-702 (establishing default rule
    of assignability with assignee having “no right to participate in the management of the
    business and affairs of a limited liability company except as provided in a limited liability
    company agreement” or until admitted as a member).
    Analogies to other bodies of law may be stronger in certain substantive areas. For
    example, “[t]he derivative suit is a corporate concept grafted onto the limited liability
    company form.” Elf 
    Atochem, 727 A.2d at 293
    . Absent other convincing considerations,
    case law governing corporate derivative suits is generally applicable to suits on behalf of
    an LLC.6
    In this case, the Corporate LLC Agreement substantially re-creates the governance
    structure of a Delaware corporation using language drawn from the corporate domain. As
    noted, the Corporate LLC Agreement creates a manager-managed LLC and empowers
    the Corporate Board to act as the manager. Section 9(a) of the Corporate LLC Agreement
    6
    Compare VGS, 
    2003 WL 723285
    , at *11 (applying corporate precedent), and
    Gotham P’rs, L.P. v. Hallwood Realty P’rs, L.P., 
    1998 WL 832631
    , at *5 n.14 (Del. Ch.
    Nov. 10, 1998) (same), with CML V, LLC v. Bax, 
    6 A.3d 238
    (Del. Ch. 2010) (declining
    to find that LLC Act confers standing to sue derivatively on creditors of an insolvent
    LLC), aff’d, 
    28 A.3d 1037
    (Del. 2011).
    14
    states:
    Section 9.    Management
    (a)     Board of Directors. The business and affairs of the Company
    shall be managed by or under the direction of a Board of one of more
    Directors designated by the Members. The Members may determine at any
    time in their sole and absolute discretion the number of Directors to
    constitute the Board. The authorized number of Directors may be increased
    or decreased by the Members at any time in their sole and absolute
    direction, upon notice to all Directors. The initial number of Directors shall
    be as set forth on Schedule D. Each Director elected, designated or
    appointed by the Members shall hold office until a successor is elected and
    qualified or until such Director’s earlier death, resignation, expulsion or
    removal. Each Director shall execute and deliver the Management
    Agreement. Directors need not be a Member [sic]. The initial Directors
    designated by the Members are listed on Schedule D hereto.
    This provision establishes a board-centric governance model tracking that of a
    corporation.
    Equally important, when defining the Corporate Board’s ability to delegate
    authority to committees, the Corporate LLC Agreement embraces the language of Section
    141(c) of the Delaware General Corporation Law (“DGCL”). Section 9(f) provides as
    follows:
    (f) Committees of Directors.
    (i) The Board may, by resolution passed by a majority of the
    whole Board, designate one or more committees, each committee to consist
    of one or more of the Directors of the Company. The Board may designate
    one or more Directors as alternate members of any committee, who may
    replace any absent or disqualified member at any meeting of the committee.
    (ii) In the absence or disqualification of a member of a
    committee, the member or members thereof present at any meeting and not
    disqualified from voting, whether or not such members constitute a
    quorum, may unanimously appoint another member of the Board to act at
    the meeting in the place of any such absent or disqualified member.
    15
    (iii) Any such committee, to the extent provided in the
    resolution of the Board, and [sic] shall have and may exercise all the
    powers and authority of the Board in the management of the business and
    affairs of the Company. Such committee or committees shall have such
    name or names as may be determined from time to time by resolution
    adopted by the Board. Each committee shall keep regular minutes of its
    meetings and report the same to the Board when required.7
    The presence of these corporate traits in the Corporate LLC Agreement calls for applying
    corporate precedents to derivative claims involving the entity. For present purposes,
    corporate law analogies should guide whether the Corporate Board can empower a
    special litigation committee comprising a single non-director.
    2.     The Role Of A Special Litigation Committee In Corporate Law
    In Zapata, the Delaware Supreme Court addressed a question of first impression:
    whether a board of directors could assert control over a derivative action after a
    stockholder had obtained the right to represent the corporation and proceed beyond the
    pleading 
    stage. 430 A.2d at 782-84
    . The Delaware Supreme Court held that a board of
    directors possessed the necessary authority under Section 141(a) of the DGCL to assert
    7
    Cf. 
    8 Del. C
    . § 141(c)(2) (“The board of directors may designate 1 or more
    committees, each committee to consist of 1 or more of the directors of the corporation.
    The board may designate 1 or more directors as alternate members of any committee,
    who may replace any absent or disqualified member at any meeting of the committee.
    The bylaws may provide that in the absence or disqualification of a member of a
    committee, the member or members present at any meeting and not disqualified from
    voting, whether or not such member or members constitute a quorum, may unanimously
    appoint another member of the board of directors to act at the meeting in the place of any
    such absent or disqualified member. Any such committee, to the extent provided in the
    resolution of the board of directors, or in the bylaws of the corporation, shall have and
    may exercise all the powers and authority of the board of directors in the management of
    the business and affairs of the corporation . . . .”).
    16
    control over the derivative action and that the board could delegate its authority to a
    committee of directors pursuant to Section 141(c) of the DGCL. 
    Id. at 784-85.
    Stated broadly, a derivative action is simply a claim belonging to an entity that an
    investor in the entity seeks to assert on the entity’s behalf. “‘Any claim belonging to the
    corporation may, in appropriate circumstances, be asserted in a derivative action,’
    including claims that do—and claims that do not—involve corporate mismanagement or
    breach of fiduciary duty.”8 A stockholder, however, does not automatically have the
    ability to sue on behalf of the corporation simply because the stockholder volunteers.
    “[W]hen a corporation suffers harm, the board of directors is the institutional actor
    legally empowered under Delaware law to determine what, if any, remedial action the
    corporation should take, including pursuing litigation against the individuals involved.”
    In re EZCORP Inc. Consulting Agreement Deriv. Litig., 
    130 A.3d 934
    , 943 (Del. Ch.
    2016). “A cardinal precept of the General Corporation Law of the State of Delaware is
    that directors, rather than shareholders, manage the business and affairs of the
    corporation.”9 “Directors of Delaware corporations derive their managerial decision
    8
    3 Stephen A. Radin, The Business Judgment Rule 3612 (6th ed. 2009) (quoting
    Midland Food Servs., LLC v. Castle Hill Hldgs. V, LLC, 
    792 A.2d 920
    , 931 (Del. Ch.
    1999) (Strine, V.C.)); see also 1 R. Franklin Balotti & Jesse A. Finkelstein, The
    Delaware Law of Corporations and Business Organizations § 13.10, at 13-24 (3d ed.
    Supp. 2014) (explaining that a derivative action can be used to bring any corporate right
    that the corporation “has refused for one reason or another to assert”).
    9
    Aronson v. Lewis, 
    473 A.2d 805
    , 811 (Del. 1984). In Brehm v. Eisner, 
    746 A.2d 244
    , 253-54 (Del. 2000), the Delaware Supreme Court overruled seven precedents,
    including Aronson, to the extent those precedents reviewed a Rule 23.1 decision by the
    Court of Chancery under an abuse of discretion standard or otherwise suggested
    17
    making power, which encompasses decisions whether to initiate, or refrain from entering,
    litigation, from 
    8 Del. C
    . § 141(a).” 
    Zapata, 430 A.2d at 782
    (footnote omitted). “Section
    141(a) vests statutory authority in the board of directors to determine what action the
    corporation will take with its litigation assets, just as with other corporate assets.”
    
    EZCORP, 130 A.3d at 943
    .
    In a derivative suit, a stockholder seeks to displace the board’s authority. 
    Aronson, 473 A.2d at 811
    . A stockholder can proceed if the board grants permission to sue. In a
    rare case, a board might grant permission explicitly.10 More often it happens implicitly
    when the board fails to take a position on the litigation or declines to move to dismiss
    pursuant to Rule 23.1.11 “As a matter of Delaware law, a stockholder whose litigation
    deferential appellate review. See 
    id. at 253
    & n.13 (overruling in part on this issue
    Scattered Corp. v. Chi. Stock Exch., 
    701 A.2d 70
    , 72-73 (Del. 1997); Grimes v. Donald,
    
    673 A.2d 1207
    , 1217 n.15 (Del. 1996); Heineman v. Datapoint Corp., 
    611 A.2d 950
    , 952
    (Del. 1992); Levine v. Smith, 
    591 A.2d 194
    , 207 (Del. 1991); Grobow v. Perot, 
    539 A.2d 180
    , 186 (Del. 1988); Pogostin v. Rice, 
    480 A.2d 619
    , 624-25 (Del. 1984); and 
    Aronson, 471 A.2d at 814
    ). The Brehm Court held that going forward, appellate review of a Rule
    23.1 determination would be de novo and plenary. 
    Brehm, 746 A.2d at 253-54
    . The seven
    partially overruled precedents otherwise remain good law. This decision does not address
    the standard of appellate review. Although the technical rules of legal citation would
    require noting that each was reversed on other grounds by Brehm, this opinion omits the
    cumbersome subsequent history, which creates the misimpression that Brehm rejected
    core elements of the Delaware derivative action canon.
    10
    See 
    Zapata, 430 A.2d at 783
    (explaining that in Sohland v. Baker, 
    141 A. 277
    (Del. 1927), “the board supported [the plaintiff] in his efforts [to sue]” and he was
    therefore “allowed to proceed as the corporation’s representative”).
    11
    See Kaplan v. Peat, Marwick, Mitchell & Co., 
    540 A.2d 726
    , 731 (Del. 1988)
    (“When a corporation takes a position regarding a derivative action asserted on its behalf,
    it cannot effectively stand neutral. Because of the inherent nature of the derivative action,
    a corporation’s failure to object to a suit brought on its behalf must be viewed as an
    18
    efforts are opposed by the corporation does not have authority to sue on behalf of the
    corporation until there has been a finding of demand excusal or wrongful refusal.”
    
    EZCORP, 130 A.3d at 943
    .
    Because directors are empowered to manage, or direct the management of,
    the business and affairs of the corporation, the right of a stockholder to
    prosecute a derivative suit is limited to situations where the stockholder has
    demanded that the directors pursue the corporate claim and they have
    wrongfully refused to do so or where demand is excused because the
    directors are incapable of making an impartial decision regarding such
    litigation.
    Rales v. Blasband, 
    634 A.2d 927
    , 932 (Del. 1993) (citation omitted). “The right to bring a
    derivative action does not come into existence until the plaintiff shareholder has made a
    demand on the corporation to institute such an action or until the shareholder has
    demonstrated that demand would be futile.” 
    Kaplan, 540 A.2d at 730
    .
    The Zapata case involved a stockholder who had gained the power to sue, both
    because the corporation had not moved to dismiss and because it appeared that the
    directors had approved the acceleration of their own stock options, rendering them
    interested for purposes of demand futility analysis. Four years into the litigation, the
    board created a special litigation committee comprising two new outside directors, and it
    empowered the committee to investigate the litigation and determine what should happen
    to the claims. The board delegated its full authority to the committee, and the authorizing
    approval for the shareholders’ capacity to sue derivatively.”); see also In re Am. Int’l Gp.,
    Inc., 
    965 A.2d 763
    , 808-09 (Del. Ch. 2009) (Strine, V.C.) (holding that where a special
    litigation committee chose to assert certain claims itself, sought to dismiss others, and
    took no position on a third set, demand was excused as to the latter claims, and the
    stockholder plaintiffs could assert them derivatively).
    19
    resolution provided that the committee’s determination would be “final [and] not subject
    to review by the Board of directors and . . . in all respects . . . binding upon the
    
    Corporation.” 430 A.2d at 781
    . After conducting its investigation, the Committee
    concluded that the derivative claims should “be dismissed forthwith as their continued
    maintenance is inimical to the Company’s best interests.” 
    Id. To implement
    its conclusion, the Committee caused the nominal defendant
    corporation to move to dismiss the derivative litigation. The Court of Chancery denied
    the motion, holding that once the stockholder had gained authority to sue in a
    representative capacity, the board lacked the power to divest the stockholder of control
    over the litigation. Maldonado v. Flynn, 
    413 A.2d 1251
    , 1262 (Del. Ch. 1980), rev’d, 
    430 A.2d 779
    (1981). The Court of Chancery held that the business judgment rule was not a
    source of authority and did not confer power on the board to dismiss the claims. 
    Id. at 1257.
    After accepting an interlocutory appeal, the Delaware Supreme Court reversed.
    The senior tribunal’s opinion addressed both legal and equitable arguments, consistent
    with the following insightful observation of corporate scholar and statesman Adolf A.
    Berle:
    [I]n every case, corporate action must be twice tested: first, by the technical
    rules having to do with the existence and proper exercise of the power;
    second, by equitable rules somewhat analogous to those which apply in
    20
    favor of a cestui que trust to the trustee’s exercise of wide powers granted
    to him in the instrument making him a fiduciary. 12
    For purposes of the current case, the more pertinent part of the Zapata decision is the
    portion in which the Delaware Supreme Court addressed the first of the tests, although
    the strongest lessons are drawn from the case as a whole.
    From a theoretical standpoint, the high court agreed with the Court of Chancery
    that the business judgment rule did not provide a basis for the authority that the Zapata
    directors claimed. The Delaware Supreme Court instead located the source of that
    authority in Section 141(a):
    Corporations, existing because of legislative grace, possess authority as
    granted by the legislature. Directors of Delaware corporations derive their
    managerial decision making power, which encompasses decisions whether
    to initiate, or refrain from entering, litigation, from [Section 141(a)]. This
    statute is the fount of directorial powers. The “business judgment” rule is a
    judicial creation that presumes propriety, under certain circumstances in a
    board’s decision. Viewed defensively, it does not create authority. . . . The
    board’s managerial decision making power, however, comes from [Section]
    141(a). The judicial creation and legislative grant are related because the
    “business judgment” rule evolved to give recognition and deference to
    directors’ business expertise when exercising their managerial power under
    [Section] 
    141(a). 430 A.2d at 782
    .
    12
    Adolf A. Berle, Corporate Powers As Powers In Trust, 44 Harv. L. Rev. 1049,
    1049 (1931); see Sample v. Morgan, 
    914 A.2d 647
    , 673 (Del. Ch. 2007) (Strine, V.C.)
    (explaining that corporate acts are “‘twice-tested’—once by the law and again by
    equity.”); accord Carsanaro v. Bloodhound Techs., Inc., 
    65 A.3d 618
    , 641 (Del. Ch.
    2013) (“Corporate acts are ‘twice-tested,’ once for statutory compliance and again in
    equity.”); Reis v. Hazelett Strip–Casting Corp., 
    28 A.3d 442
    , 457 (Del. Ch. 2011) (“A
    reviewing court’s role is to ensure that the corporation complied with the statute and
    acted in accordance with its fiduciary duties.”).
    21
    Having identified the source of the board’s power, the Delaware Supreme Court
    rejected the Court of Chancery’s “determination that a stockholder, once demand is made
    and refused, possesses an independent, individual right to continue a derivative suit for
    breaches of fiduciary duty over objection by the corporation.” 
    Id. When framed
    “as an
    absolute rule,” the high court deemed that proposition “erroneous.” 
    Id. Instead, the
    board
    as an institution “retained all of its corporate power concerning litigation decisions” and
    it therefore possessed the power to determine what would happen to a litigation asset. 
    Id. at 785.
    The fact that demand was excused, futile, or otherwise rendered unnecessary did
    not “strip the board of its corporate power. . . . [T]he board [of the] entity remains
    empowered under [Section] 141(a) to make decisions regarding corporate litigation. The
    problem is one of member disqualification, not the absence of power in the board.” 
    Id. at 786.
    This holding brought the Delaware Supreme Court to a related issue: whether a
    board could delegate its Section 141(a) authority to a committee. On this issue, the high
    court held that Section 141(c) controlled:
    We find our statute clearly requires an affirmative answer to this question.
    As has been noted, under an express provision of the statute, [Section
    141(c)], a committee can exercise all of the authority of the board to the
    extent provided in the resolution of the board. Moreover, at least by
    analogy to our statutory section on interested directors, [Section 144], it
    seems clear that the Delaware statute is designed to permit disinterested
    directors to act for the board.
    
    Id. at 786.
    The senior tribunal rejected the argument that “the interest taint of the board
    majority is per se a legal bar to the delegation of the board’s power to an independent
    committee composed of disinterested board members.” 
    Id. The Delaware
    Supreme Court
    22
    reasoned that “[t]he committee can properly act for the corporation to move to dismiss
    derivative litigation that is believed to be detrimental to the corporation’s best interest.”
    
    Id. Critical to
    the Delaware Supreme Court’s ruling on this point was the observation
    that under Section 141(c), “a committee can exercise all of the authority of the board to
    the extent provided in the resolution of the board.” 
    Id. (emphasis added).
    For the Zapata
    procedure to function, the recipient of the delegation had to be able to wield the full
    authority of the board with respect to the litigation asset. A committee of directors could
    receive and exercise the board’s full authority.13
    Having dealt with the question of the existence of the power, the Delaware
    Supreme Court continued with Professor Berle’s second step: the equitable standard of
    review that a court should use when reviewing a committee’s exercise of its authority. In
    a path-breaking holding, the high court declined to follow other jurisdictions that had
    applied the deferential business judgment rule to a special litigation committee’s decision
    regarding derivative litigation:
    We are not satisfied, however, that acceptance of the “business judgment”
    rationale at this stage of derivative litigation is a proper balancing point.
    While we admit an analogy with a normal case respecting board judgment,
    it seems to use that there is sufficient risk in the realities of a situation like
    the one presented in this case to justify caution beyond adherence to the
    theory of business judgment.
    13
    There are some issues where the DGCL limits the ability of a committee to
    wield the full authority of the board. See 
    8 Del. C
    . § 141(c)(1) (committees formed prior
    to July 1, 1996) and § 141(c)(1) (committees formed on or after July 1, 1996). None of
    the limitations apply to derivative claims.
    23
    ....
    Moreover, notwithstanding our conviction that Delaware law entrusts the
    corporate power to a properly authorized committee, we must be mindful
    that directors are passing judgment on fellow directors in the same
    corporation and fellow directors, in this instance, who designated them to
    serve both as directors and committee members. The question naturally
    arises whether a “there but for the grace of God go I” empathy might not
    play a role. And the further question arises whether inquiry as to
    independence, good faith and reasonable investigation is sufficient
    safeguard against abuse, perhaps subconscious abuse.
    
    Id. at 787.
    Faced with this scenario, the Delaware Supreme Court crafted a new, two-part
    standard for the trial court to apply. First, the trial court “inquire[s] into the independence
    and good faith of the committee and the bases supporting its conclusions.” 
    Id. at 788.
    The
    committee members have the burden of proving their “independence [and] good faith”
    and that they conducted “a reasonable investigation.” 
    Id. If the
    trial court is satisfied that
    “the committee was independent and showed reasonable bases for good faith findings and
    recommendations,” the first step is satisfied. 
    Id. at 789.
    At that point, the trial court may
    proceed “in its discretion, to the next step[,]” under which the trial court “determine[s],
    applying its own independent business judgment, whether the motion should be granted.”
    
    Id. “This means,
    of course, that instances could arise where a committee can establish its
    independence and sound bases for its good faith decisions and still have the corporation’s
    motion denied.” 
    Id. The second
    step was innovative, and the Delaware Supreme Court elaborated on
    its reasoning for including it:
    24
    The second step provides, we believe, the essential key in striking the
    balance between legitimate corporate claims as expressed in a derivative
    stockholder suit and a corporation’s best interests as expressed by an
    independent investigating committee. . . . The second step is intended to
    thwart instances where corporate actions meet the criteria of step one, but
    the result does not appear to satisfy its spirit, or where corporate actions
    would simply prematurely terminate a stockholder grievance deserving of
    further consideration in the corporation’s interest.
    
    Id. at 789.
    As I understand it, “the trial court’s task in the second step is to determine
    whether the SLC’s recommended result falls within a range of reasonable outcomes that a
    disinterested and independent decision maker for the corporation, not acting under any
    compulsion and with the benefit of the information then available, could reasonably
    accept.”14
    14
    In re Primedia, Inc. S’holders Litig., 
    67 A.3d 455
    , 468 (Del. Ch. 2013); see
    Carlton Invs. v. TLC Beatrice Int’l Hldgs., Inc., 
    1997 WL 305829
    , at *13 (Del. Ch. May
    30, 1997) (Allen, C.) (“[T]he second prong of the Zapata test requires that this court
    exercise its own business judgment with respect to the reasonableness of the
    settlement.”); see also Forsythe v. ESC Mgmt. Co. (U.S.), Inc., 
    2013 WL 458373
    , at *2
    (Del. Ch. Feb. 6, 2013) (discussing range of reasonableness inquiry). See generally
    Kenneth B. Davis, Jr., Structural Bias, Special Litigation Committees, and the Vagaries
    of Director Independence, 
    90 Iowa L
    . Rev. 1305, 1360 (2005) (“[T]he court’s review, as
    contemplated [by Zapata], is of the reasonableness of the SLC’s business judgment rather
    than the substitution of its own.”); Gregory V. Varallo et al., From Kahn to Carlton:
    Recent Developments in Special Committee Practice, 53 Bus. Law. 397, 421 (1998)
    (“Delaware courts, even when exercising their independent business judgment, are not
    likely to act as ‘super directors’ who override reasonable SLC decisions; rather, they are
    more likely to limit themselves to an analysis of the reasonableness of the SLC’s
    decision.”); E. Norman Veasey, Seeking a Safe Harbor from Judicial Scrutiny of
    Directors’ Business Decisions—An Analytical Framework for Litigation Strategy and
    Counseling Directors, 37 Bus. Law. 1247, 1268 (1982) (interpreting Zapata to require
    the trial court to “decide whether or not the committee acted reasonably in terminating”
    and thereby adopting “a half-step requiring the court of chancery to invoke its
    independent discretion to analyze the reasonableness of the business judgment reached by
    the independent board committee (as opposed to superimposing its own business
    judgment)” (quotation marks omitted)).
    25
    With the benefit of hindsight, one can discern in Zapata the foundational concepts
    that animate enhanced scrutiny, the intermediate standard of review that the Delaware
    Supreme Court introduced openly some four years later in Unocal Corp. v. Mesa
    Petroleum Co., 
    493 A.2d 946
    (Del. 1985). First, there is a specific and recurring decision-
    making context where the realities of the situation “can subtly undermine the decisions of
    even independent and disinterested directors.”15 Second, there is a need for an
    intermediate position which recognizes that “[i]nherent in these situations are subtle
    structural and situational conflicts that do not rise to a level sufficient to trigger entire
    fairness review, but also do not comfortably permit expansive judicial deference.”16
    15
    In re Trados Inc. S’holder Litig., 
    73 A.3d 17
    , 43 (Del. Ch. 2013); accord Reis v.
    Hazelett Strip-Casting Corp., 
    28 A.3d 442
    , 457 (Del. Ch. 2011); see Paramount
    Commc’ns Inc. v. QVC Network Inc., 
    637 A.2d 34
    , 42 (Del. 1994) (“[T]here are rare
    situations which mandate that a court take a more direct and active role in overseeing the
    decisions made and actions taken by directors. In these situations, a court subjects the
    directors’ conduct to enhanced scrutiny to ensure that it is reasonable.”); In re Dollar
    Thrifty S’holder Litig., 
    14 A.3d 573
    , 598 (Del. Ch. 2010) (Strine, V.C.) (“In a situation
    where heightened scrutiny applies, the predicate question of what the board’s true
    motivation was comes into play. The court must take a nuanced and realistic look at the
    possibility that personal interests short of pure self-dealing have influenced the board to
    block a bid or to steer a deal to one bidder rather than another.”). See generally Julian
    Velasco, Structural Bias and the Need for Substantive Review, 82 Wash. U. L.Q. 821,
    870-83 (2004).
    16
    In re Rural Metro Corp. S’holder Litig., 
    88 A.3d 54
    , 81 (Del. Ch. 2014), aff’d
    sub nom. RBC Capital Markets, LLC v. Jervis, 
    129 A.3d 816
    (Del. 2015); see Dollar
    
    Thrifty, 14 A.3d at 597
    (“Avoiding a crude bifurcation of the world into two starkly
    divergent categories—business judgment rule review reflecting a policy of maximal
    deference to disinterested board decisionmaking and entire fairness review reflecting a
    policy of extreme skepticism toward self-dealing decisions—the Delaware Supreme
    Court’s Unocal and Revlon decisions adopted a middle ground.”); Golden Cycle, LLC v.
    Allan, 
    1998 WL 892631
    , at *11 (Del. Ch. Dec. 10, 1998) (locating enhanced scrutiny
    under Unocal and Revlon between the business judgment rule and the entire fairness
    26
    Third, the resulting intermediate standard involves examining the reasonableness of the
    end that the directors chose to pursue, the path that they took to get there, and the fit
    between the means and the end.17 The Zapata test thus can be properly regarded as a
    nascent form of enhanced scrutiny and integrated within the larger body of case law
    applying the intermediate standard.18
    test); see also Stephen M. Bainbridge, Unocal at 20: Director Primacy in Corporate
    Takeovers, 31 Del. J. Corp. L. 769, 795-96 (2006) (explaining the Delaware Supreme
    Court’s creation of an intermediate standard of review between the entire fairness and
    business judgment rule standards); Ronald J. Gilson, Unocal Fifteen Years Later (And
    What We Can Do About It), 26 Del. J. Corp. L. 491, 496 (2001) (“In Unocal, the
    Delaware Supreme Court chose the middle ground that had been championed by no one.
    The court unveiled an intermediate standard of review . . . .”).
    17
    See, e.g., Dollar 
    Thrifty, 14 A.3d at 598
    (explaining that when applying
    enhanced scrutiny, “the court seeks to assure itself that the board acted reasonably, in the
    sense of taking a logical and reasoned approach for the purpose of advancing a proper
    objective, and to thereby smoke out mere pretextual justifications for improperly
    motivated decisions”); 
    id. at 599-600
    (“[T]he reasonableness standard requires the court
    to consider for itself whether the board is truly well motivated (i.e., is it acting for the
    proper ends?) before ultimately determining whether its means were themselves a
    reasonable way of advancing those ends.”); Mercier v. Inter–Tel (Del.), Inc., 
    929 A.2d 786
    , 810-811 (Del. Ch. 2007) (Strine, V.C.) (explaining that when directors take action
    that affects stockholder voting, enhanced scrutiny requires that the defendant fiduciaries
    bear the burden of proving (i) that “their motivations were proper and not selfish,” (ii)
    that they “did not preclude the stockholders from exercising their right to vote or coerce
    them into voting a particular way,” and (iii) that the directors’ actions “were reasonable
    in relation to their legitimate objective”); 
    id. at 811
    (“If for some reason, the fit between
    means and ends is not reasonable, the directors would also come up short.”).
    18
    See In re EZCORP Inc. Consulting Agreement Deriv. Litig., 
    2016 WL 301245
    ,
    at *27 (Del. Ch. Jan. 25, 2016) (describing Zapata as having adopted “a test which
    marked the Delaware Supreme Court’s first deployment of something akin to the two-
    step standard of review that later emerged as enhanced scrutiny”); La. Mun. Police Emps.
    Ret. Sys. v. Morgan Stanley & Co., Inc., 
    2011 WL 773316
    , at *7 (Del. Ch. Mar. 4, 2011)
    (“An SLC’s decision to dismiss a post-demand-excusal derivative claim is reviewed
    under Zapata’s two-step standard, which effectively amounts to reasonableness review
    27
    Since Zapata, boards of directors of numerous Delaware corporations have formed
    special litigation committees to address derivative claims, with varying degrees of
    success.19 The leading treatises do not identify, and the parties have not cited, a single
    occasion in which a Delaware court has approved the use of a special litigation
    committee staffed by a non-director, or even intimated that such a committee would pass
    muster. To the contrary, “the Court of Chancery has expressed an unwillingness to extend
    any deference to other types of investigatory committees of the board formed to
    investigate derivative claims but not formed under [the Zapata] framework.” Drexler et
    al., supra, § 42.04 at 42-41 n.33 (citing cases).
    The absence of any examples of delegations to non-directors does not reflect a
    lack of board authority to rely on non-directors to carry out tasks. In a modern
    corporation, the board is not expected to be involved in every decision, or even most
    and a context-specific application of enhanced scrutiny.”); 
    Varallo, supra, at 423
    n.121
    (“The [Zapata] standard is also reminiscent of the enhanced scrutiny courts use to
    examine the actions of directors engaged in a sale of a corporation or other like
    transactions. . . . Perhaps the similarity . . . is best explained by the fact that in all of these
    situations courts would like to defer to the business judgment of a board, but because the
    scenarios in which these cases arise create a potential conflict of interest for board
    members, the court is only willing to do so if a board first demonstrates it is capable of
    making an independent business judgment and the judgment seems at least to make some
    rational sense.”); 
    Velasco, supra, at 849
    (explaining that Zapata “is quite similar to
    Unocal”).
    19
    See 1 Balotti & Finkelstein, supra, § 13.17, at 13-83 to -91 (collecting cases); 2
    David A. Drexler, et al., Delaware Corporation Law & Practice § 42.04, at 42-35 to -42
    (2012 & Supp. 2015) (same); 3 Edward P. Welch, et al., Folk on the Delaware General
    Corporation Law § 327.04[E], at 13-171 to -188 (2016) (same); Donald J. Wolfe, Jr. &
    Michael A. Pittenger, Corporate & Commercial Practice in the Delaware Court of
    Chancery § 9.02[c], at 9-120 to -141 (2015) (same).
    28
    decisions. “Few modern corporations could function effectively if that was the norm. In
    fact, it is the rare corporation that is actually ‘managed by’ the board; most corporations
    are managed ‘under the direction of’ the board.” J. Travis Laster & John Mark
    Zeberkiewicz, The Rights and Duties of Blockholder Directors, 70 Bus. Law. 33, 36
    (2015) (footnote omitted).
    [A]lthough ultimate responsibility for the direction and management of the
    corporation lies with the board, the law recognizes that corporate boards,
    comprised as they traditionally have been of persons dedicating less than all
    of their attention to that role, cannot themselves manage the operations of
    the firm, but may satisfy their obligations by thoughtfully appointing
    officers, establishing or approving goals and plans and monitoring
    performance. While it is the elected board of directors that bears the
    ultimate duty to manage or supervise the management of the business and
    affairs of the corporation, the duties of a board that oversees professional
    management ordinarily entail the obligation to establish or approve the
    long-term strategic, financial and organizational goals of the corporation; to
    approve formal or informal plans for the achievement of these goals; to
    monitor corporate performance; and to act, when in the good faith,
    informed judgment of the board it is appropriate to act.
    
    Id. (footnotes and
    internal quotation marks omitted).
    These general principles apply equally to litigation. Boards delegate responsibility
    for handling much of the litigation that a corporation faces to officers, including the
    company’s General Counsel or Chief Legal Officer. Boards receive periodic updates on
    material litigation items, and they may approve settlements or address significant
    strategic decisions in major cases, but by and large, officers and their subordinates
    manage the litigation. Officers and other non-directors, however, cannot exercise the full
    power of the board of directors. They ultimately must report to the board of directors.
    29
    The absence of examples of delegations to non-directors reflects the fact that
    control over a derivative action, after the stockholder has gained authority to sue, is not
    an ordinary-course-of-business affair that a board can delegate to whomever it chooses.
    Zapata requires the involvement of a committee made up of directors because once a
    stockholder has gained authority to litigate derivatively on behalf of the corporation, the
    board’s disinterestedness and independence has been called into doubt, either explicitly
    through a Rule 23.1 decision or implicitly because of the lack of any timely challenge to
    the stockholder’s authority. Before the board can re-assert its power under Section
    141(a), it must re-establish the existence of a disinterested and independent decision
    maker who is capable of exercising the full authority of the board. A full delegation is
    required because, as the Zapata case recognized, the decision over the litigation must be
    final and not reviewable by the conflicted directors.
    A committee of directors is the only vessel that is capable of receiving and
    exercising the full authority of the board in this context. Under Section 141(c), a board
    may delegate to a committee all of the Section 141(a) authority that it possesses over a
    litigation asset. See 
    8 Del. C
    . §§ 141(c)(1) & (2). A board may not make a similarly
    complete delegation to an officer or a non-director. Doing so would risk an improper
    abdication of authority.20 Hence the requirement exists that a Zapata committee be made
    up of directors.
    20
    See, e.g., Rich ex rel. Fuqi Int’l, Inc. v. Yu Kwai Chong, 
    66 A.3d 963
    , 979 (Del.
    Ch. 2013) (holding that complaint stated a claim that board had abdicated its
    responsibilities by failing to conduct meaningful investigation and allowing management
    30
    3.     The Lessons Of Zapata For The Corporate LLC
    The Corporate LLC Agreement embraces a governance structure resembling that
    of a corporation, so Zapata applies fully to the special litigation committee that the
    Corporate Board purported to establish. The New York Federal Action had proceeded
    past the Rule 23.1 stage, which meant that Obeid had gained authority to pursue
    derivative claims on behalf of the Corporate LLC. Separately, the allegations of his
    complaint indicated that La Mack and Massaro were interested in the challenged
    transactions for purposes of demand futility. For both reasons, although the Corporate
    Board could re-assert its authority over the derivative claims that were at issue in the
    to make decisions without oversight); In re Walt Disney Co. Deriv. Litig., 
    825 A.2d 275
    ,
    278 (Del. Ch. 2003) (holding that complaint stated a claim for breach of duty of loyalty
    and action not in good faith where it alleged that board failed to act on executive’s
    compensation and abdicated decision-making responsibility to the company’s CEO);
    Nagy v. Bistricer, 
    770 A.2d 43
    , 64 (Del. Ch. 2000) (Strine, V.C.) (holding that a board
    abdicated its statutory duty under Section 251(b) when it delegated the determination of
    the merger consideration to an investment bank selected by the acquirer); Grimes v.
    Donald, 
    1995 WL 54441
    , at *11 (Del. Ch. Jan. 11, 1995) (finding that complaint stated a
    claim that board had improperly delegated its authority under Section 141(a) to the CEO,
    where the board agreed not to engage in “unreasonable interference, in the good faith
    judgment of the Executive, by the Board . . . in the Executive’s carrying out of his duties
    and responsibilities”), aff’d, 
    673 A.2d 1207
    (Del. 1996); Jackson v. Turnbull, 
    1994 WL 174668
    , at *4-5 (Del. Ch. Feb. 8, 1994) (holding board impermissibly abdicated statutory
    obligation to set merger consideration by delegating task to its investment bankers), aff’d,
    
    653 A.2d 306
    (Del. 1994) (TABLE); Sealy Mattress Co. of N.J. v. Sealy, Inc., 
    532 A.2d 1324
    , 1338 (Del. Ch. 1987) (holding that board “could not abdicate its obligation to make
    an informed decision on the fairness of the merger by simply deferring to the judgment of
    the controlling stockholder”). See generally In re Bally’s Grand Deriv. Litig., 
    1997 WL 305803
    , at *4 (Del. Ch. June 4, 1997) (“[O]ur courts will not uphold an agreement
    wherein the directors delegate duties which lie at the heart of the management of the
    corporation or which have the effect of removing from directors in a very substantial way
    their duty to use their own best judgment on management matters.” (quotation marks
    omitted)).
    31
    New York Federal Action, the Corporate Board only could do so by re-establishing the
    existence of an independent and disinterested actor that was capable of wielding the full
    authority of the Corporate Board for purposes of making decisions regarding the
    derivative claims. The Corporate Board could have done that by forming a committee of
    independent directors and delegating the full authority of the Corporate Board over the
    derivative claims to that committee. Instead, La Mack and Massaro attempted to form a
    quasi-committee staffed by a non-director. However illustrious the credentials of that
    non-director might be, his involvement is not a sufficient substitute under Zapata.
    In an effort to avoid this result, the Corporate LLC points to a provision in the
    LLC Act which permits managers and members to delegate their authority. It states:
    Unless otherwise provided in the limited liability company agreement, a
    member or manager of a limited liability company has the power and
    authority to delegate to 1 or more other persons the member’s or
    manager’s, as the case may be, rights and powers to manage and control the
    business and affairs of the limited liability company, including to delegate
    to agents, officers and employees of a member or manager of the limited
    liability company, and to delegate by a management agreement or another
    agreement with, or otherwise to, other persons.
    
    6 Del. C
    . § 18-407. By its terms, this provision permits delegation to persons who are not
    managers of the LLC, including to “other persons.”
    In my view, Section 18-407 is intended to make clear that the individuals
    empowered to manage an LLC do not have to do everything themselves. Section 18-407
    validates the vast array of ordinary-course-of-business delegations that are part of the
    operation of an entity. Just as a corporate board of directors can rely on and delegate
    tasks and responsibilities to officers, employees, advisors, and other persons, so too can
    32
    the members in a member-managed LLC or the managers in a manager-managed LLC.
    Section 18-407 does not validate every theoretically possible delegation, and it does not
    extend to the conflict-laden delegation of authority involved in the creation of a special
    litigation committee. Notably, several jurisdictions have addressed this latter issue by
    taking the additional step of including a specific provision in their LLC statutes that
    authorizes the formation of a special litigation committee made up of non-directors.21
    Moreover, as a general default provision addressing the delegation of managerial
    authority, Section 18-407 does not trump the specific provisions of the LLC Act that
    address derivative actions. Section 18-1001, entitled “Right to Bring Action,” provides
    that any member or assignee may bring a derivative suit “if managers or members with
    authority to do so have refused to bring the action or if an effort to cause those managers
    or members to bring the action is not likely to succeed.” 
    6 Del. C
    . § 18-1001. Section 18-
    1003, entitled “Complaint,” similarly provides that the complaint in a derivative action
    involving an LLC “shall set forth with particularity the effort, if any, of the plaintiff to
    secure initiation of the action by a manager or member or the reasons for not making the
    effort.” 
    6 Del. C
    . § 18-1003. The language of Section 18-1001 implies, consistent with
    Zapata, that in a member-managed LLC, decisions regarding a derivative action must be
    made by the “members with authority to do so,” and in a manager-managed LLC, by
    “managers . . . with authority to do so.” The language of Section 18-1003 reinforces this
    21
    See, e.g., Colo. Rev. Stat. Ann. § 7-80-716 (2002); Fla. Stat. Ann. § 605.0804
    (2014); Miss. Code Ann. § 79-29-1109 (2011); N.C. Gen. Stat. Ann. § 57D-8-03 (2014);
    Tex. Bus. Orgs. Code Ann. § 101.454 (2006).
    33
    implication. Together, the sections indicate that only the duly authorized decision-making
    body of the entity, be it the members or the managers, can make the necessary decision.
    This in turn implies that in a manager-managed LLC, control over derivative litigation
    must rest with the managers (or a subset of them).
    Regardless, in this case, Section 18-407 cannot validate the Corporate Board’s
    attempted delegation to a special litigation committee because the drafters of the
    Corporate LLC Agreement “provided otherwise.” By embracing the governance structure
    of a corporation and including provisions paralleling Sections 141(a) and (c), the drafters
    of the Corporate LLC Agreement evidenced their intent to have corporate principles
    govern the Corporate Board. Those principles include Zapata, under which only a duly
    empowered committee of directors can serve as a special litigation committee.
    Judge Hogan is not a director of the Corporate LLC. Consequently, under the
    Corporate LLC Agreement, he cannot function as a one-man special litigation committee
    on behalf of the Corporate LLC. Summary judgment is granted in Obeid’s favor on this
    issue.
    B.       Judge Hogan’s Ability To Serve As The Sole Member Of A Special Litigation
    Committee For The Manager-Managed LLC
    Obeid additionally seeks a declaratory judgment that Judge Hogan cannot serve as
    a one-man special litigation committee for the Manager-Managed LLC. The governance
    structure of the Manager-Managed LLC also exhibits corporate features, albeit not so
    pervasively as the Corporate LLC. It nevertheless seems likely that the reasoning
    applicable to the Corporate LLC compels the same result for the Manager-Managed LLC.
    34
    In this case, however, the language of the Manager-Managed LLC Agreement, read as a
    whole, decides the issue and prohibits the type of delegation that La Mack and Massaro
    attempted. Because Judge Hogan is not a manager of the Manager-Managed LLC, he
    cannot serve as a one-man special litigation committee for the Manager-Managed LLC.
    The Manager-Managed LLC Agreement establishes a corporate-style division
    between members and managers in which members are passive and managers operate the
    business of the entity. Section 5.1 of the Manager-Managed LLC Agreement states:
    “Except as expressly provided otherwise in the [LLC] Act, the Certificate of Formation
    or this Agreement, the powers of the Company shall be exercised by or under the
    authority of, and the business and affairs of the Company shall be managed by, one or
    more Managers.” Through this language, the Manager-Managed LLC Agreement
    departed from the default rule of member management under the LLC Act. Moreover, the
    drafters chose to do so by stating that the “the business and affairs of the Company shall
    be managed by, one or more Managers,” which recalls similar language in Section 141(a)
    of the DGCL. See 
    8 Del. C
    . § 141(a) (“The business and affairs of every corporation
    organized under this chapter shall be managed by or under the direction of a board of
    directors, except as may be otherwise provided in this chapter or in its certificate of
    incorporation.”). In my view, the resulting structure is sufficient to cause the reasoning
    that governed the Corporate LLC to apply equally to the Manager-Managed LLC.
    This decision need not reach that holding, however, because other sections of the
    Manager-Managed LLC Agreement, read as a whole, evidence a distinction between
    matters relating to the ordinary course of business of the LLC and more significant
    35
    matters that must be handled by the managers. In Section 5.1, the Manager-Managed
    LLC Agreement states that the “powers of the Company,” which the managers have
    authority to exercise, include various items identified in a series of twelve subsections.
    They bear an obvious relationship to the Manager-Managed LLC’s real estate business
    and fit with Section 2.8 of the Manager-Managed LLC Agreement, which states that the
    business purpose of the Corporate LLC is to “1) acquire, own, operate, develop, improve,
    manage and dispose of commercial real estate, 2) own and/or operate any subsidiaries
    and/or affiliates deemed necessary to the purposes stated in the previous clause, and 3)
    [engage in] an[y] other lawful act or activity for which a Limited Liability Company may
    be formed under the laws of the State of Delaware.”
    Among the “powers of the Company” that the managers are empowered to
    exercise on its behalf is the power of
    [e]mploying from time to time persons, firms or corporations for the
    operation and management of various aspects of the Company’s business,
    including, without limitation, managing agents, contractors, subcontractors,
    architects, engineers, laborers, suppliers, accountants and attorneys on such
    terms and for such compensation as the Managers shall determine,
    notwithstanding the fact that the Managers or any Member may have a
    financial interest in such firms or corporations.
    Manager-Managed LLC Agreement § 5.1.7. All of the types of “persons, firms or
    corporations” identified in Section 5.1.7 have a facial connection to “the Company’s
    business.”
    By contrast, Section 5.9 of the Manager-Managed LLC Agreement addresses the
    degree to which managers may delegate their core governance functions. It states:
    36
    The Managers may delegate to one or more of their number the authority to
    execute any documents or take any other actions deemed necessary or
    desirable in furtherance of any action that they have authorized on behalf of
    the Company as provided in Section 5.1 hereof. In addition, the Managers
    may restrict or limit the power or authority of any one or more of the
    Managers to such extent as deemed advisable by the Managers.
    Furthermore, the Managers may designate one or more Managers of the
    Company as the Company’s duly appointed representative with specific
    authority to take certain actions on behalf of the Company.
    Another informative section is Section 5.16, which discusses the role of the Operating
    Manager. It states, in pertinent part: “[E]xcept as otherwise provided in this Agreement,
    the Managers may delegate to any Manager the power, acting alone, to bind the Company
    and to carry out the directive of the Managers.”
    Taken together, these sections demonstrate that the drafters of the Manager-
    Managed LLC Agreement intended to limit the ability of managers to delegate their core
    governance functions. Authority over those types of issues only could be delegated to
    other managers. For purposes of Section 18-407 of the LLC Act, Sections 5.9 and 5.16 of
    the Managing-Member LLC Agreement “provides otherwise” and do not permit an issue
    as serious as the exercise of authority over derivative claims to be delegated to a non-
    manager. Because Judge Hogan is not a manager, he cannot serve as the sole member of
    a special litigation committee for the Manager-Managed LLC. Summary judgment is
    granted in Obeid’s favor on this issue.
    C.     The Effectiveness Of Obeid’s Removal As A Director Of The Corporate LLC
    Obeid finally challenges his removal from the Corporate Board. The plain
    language of the Corporate LLC Agreement does not support his position.
    37
    Under Section 18-402 of the LLC Act, “a manager shall cease to be a manager as
    provided in a limited liability company agreement.” Section 9(h) of the Corporate LLC
    Agreement provides that “[u]nless otherwise restricted by law, any Director or the entire
    Board of Directors may be removed or expelled, with or without cause, at any time by the
    Members, and any vacancy caused by any such removal or expulsion may be filled by
    action of the Members.” The Corporate LLC Agreement does not provide a standard for
    determining when the members have taken action. The default rule in the LLC Act is that
    “the decision of members owning more than 50 percent of the said percentage or other
    interest in the profits [is] controlling.” 
    6 Del. C
    . § 18-402.
    Under this analysis, Obeid could be removed as a member of the Corporate Board
    by members owning “more than [a] 50 percent” interest in the profits of the Corporate
    LLC. That standard would make sense for the additional reason that the default rule
    under the DGCL is that “[a]ny director of the entire board of directors may be removed,
    with or without cause, by the holders of a majority of the shares then entitled to vote at an
    election of directors.” 
    8 Del. C
    . § 141(k). As noted, the Corporate LLC adopted a
    corporate-style governance structure, so a parallel rule is a logical result.
    Together, Massaro and La Mack had a two-thirds interest in the profits of the
    Corporate LLC, giving them the necessary votes. Obeid argues against this result by
    pointing to Section 7(a) of the Corporate LLC Agreement, which states that the Corporate
    LLC may engage in “any lawful businesses or investments as the Members shall
    determine upon the vote of a majority in Interest.” Obeid contends that Section 7(a)
    demonstrates that the drafters of the Corporate LLC Agreement knew how to choose a
    38
    majority of the profit interest as a voting standard, so they must have meant something
    else when they referred to “action of the Members.” Obeid contends that “the Members”
    meant unanimity, because Schedule A of the Corporate LLC Agreement identifies the
    members as “each of William T. Obeid, Dante A. Massaro and Christopher F. La Mack,
    as initial members of the Company,” plus any later added members.
    The Corporate LLC Agreement, uses the term “members” to refer to Obeid,
    Massaro, and La Mack collectively on more than forty-five occasions. In addition to
    Section 9(h), seven use this phrase in a manner that seems to address the threshold
    necessary for action:
          Section 9(a): “The Members may determine at any time in their sole and
    absolute discretion the number of Directors to constitute the Board. The
    authorized number of Directors may be increased or decreased by the
    Members at any time in their sole and absolute discretion….”
          Section 11: “In the event that no officers are designated, all of the power
    and authority of the officers shall be vested in the Members and the
    Members shall have all power and authority to act on behalf of the
    Company as if the Members were an officer.”
          Section 11(a): “The initial Officers of the Company shall be designated by
    the Members.”
          Section 14: “[T]he Members may make additional capital contributions to
    the Company at any time upon the written consent of such Members.”
          Section 17: “The Company’s books of account shall be kept using the
    method of accounting determined by the Members. The Company’s
    independent auditor, if any, shall be an independent public accounting firm
    selected by the Members.”
          Section 22: “A Member may not resign, except as permitted by the other
    Members.”
          Section 23: “One or more additional members of the Company may be
    admitted to the Company with the written consent of the Members.”
    39
         Section 31: “This Agreement may only be modified, altered, supplemented
    or amended pursuant to a written agreement executed and delivered by the
    Members.”
    If Obeid were correct, then the Corporate LLC Agreement would require unanimity on
    each of these issues, and any single member could create deadlock. Given the range of
    issues where this language appears, that is not a reasonable reading of the agreement.
    Two other factors contribute to this conclusion. First, Section 7(a) is the only
    section of the Corporate LLC Agreement that uses the phrase “majority in Interest.” The
    phrase itself is not defined, and although “Interest” is capitalized, that phrase is not
    defined either. This suggests that the inclusion of this language was not by design, but
    resulted from human error.
    Second, Obeid, La Mack, and Massaro knew how to create a unanimity
    requirement, and they did so in the Manager-Managed LLC Agreement. Section 4.2.2 of
    that document requires the “approval of all of the Members” to take certain actions. The
    Manager-Managed LLC Agreement also explicitly grants each member a lifetime right to
    remain a manager, which is what Obeid’s reading would accomplish for his status as a
    director under the Corporate LLC Agreement. To achieve this result, Section 4.14 of the
    Manager-Managed LLC Agreement states: “[T]he Members agree that each Member . . .
    shall be a Manager for so long as he or she is a Member of the Company and is living and
    competent . . . .” Despite knowing how to draft language that incorporated a unanimity
    standard or made a position permanent, Obeid, La Mack, and Massaro did not deploy
    those skills when preparing Section 9(h) of the Corporate LLC Agreement.
    40
    Obeid’s reading of Section 9(h) is not a reasonable one. Members holding a
    majority of the interests in the profits of the Corporate LLC could remove him as a
    director. His motion for summary judgment on this issue is denied.
    III.       CONCLUSION
    Obeid’s motion for summary judgment is granted as to Judge Hogan’s ability to
    serve as the sole member of the dual special litigation committees for the Corporate LLC
    and the Manager-Managed LLC. To be clear, this decision intends no criticism of Judge
    Hogan. The issue is solely one of authority under the LLC agreements.
    In his motion, Obeid sought both (i) a declaratory judgment that Judge Hogan
    cannot act as a special litigation committee for either the Corporate LLC or the Manager-
    Managed LLC and that he has no authority over any derivative claims, including those
    asserted in the New York Federal Action, and (ii) an injunction preventing Judge Hogan
    from taking any action as a special litigation committee on behalf of either the Corporate
    LLC or the Manager-Managed LLC or attempting to exert any influence or control over
    any derivative claim. This decision has addressed item (i). There is no need to consider
    item (ii), as there is no indication that either of the defendants or Judge Hogan would
    attempt to act contrary to a judicial ruling.
    As to his challenge to his removal from the Corporate Board, Obeid’s motion for
    summary judgment is denied.
    41