JER Hudson GP XXI LLC v. DLE Investors, LP

   IN THE COURT OF CHANCERY OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE
JER HUDSON GP XXI LLC and                 )
HUDSON HOUSING TAX CREDIT                 )
FUND XXI LP,                              )
                                          )
            Plaintiffs,                   )
                                          )
      v.                                  )       C.A. No. 2021-0478-MTZ
                                          )
DLE INVESTORS, LP,                        )
                                          )
            Defendant.                    )

                                    OPINION
                          Date Submitted: January 6, 2022
                            Date Decided: May 2, 2022

James P. Hughes, Melanie K. Sharp, Craig D. Gear, and Richard J. Thomas,
YOUNG CONAWAY STARGATT & TAYLOR, LLP, Wilmington, Delaware;
Jessica Ragosta Early, Emily A. Robey-Phillips, HOLLAND & KNIGHT LLP,
Boston, Massachusetts; Attorneys for Plaintiffs JER Hudson GP XXI LLC and
Hudson Housing Tax Credit Fund XXI LP.

Christopher Viceconte, GIBBONS P.C., Wilmington, Delaware; Louis E. Dolan,
NIXON PEABODY LLP, Washington, DC, Laura B. Bacon, NIXON PEABODY
LLP, Chicago, IL; Attorneys for Defendant DLE Investors, LP.




ZURN, Vice Chancellor.
      For over three decades, the federal government has created tax subsidies to

promote the development and maintenance of affordable rental housing. Under this

program, tax credits are allocated to each state, which in turn allocate the tax credits

to qualified affordable housing projects. The tax credits are passed along to investors

in those projects, thereby incentivizing investment in affordable housing.

      Affordable housing projects in this program are typically held by a limited

partnership. The investors purchase limited partnership interests, and a general

partner manages the partnership and the property. Investors claim the tax credits

allocated to the property in which they invest over a period of ten years. After that

period expires and the investors have received their tax credits, the investors

frequently sell their limited partnership interests for much less than they paid for

them. The program has additional mandates and features that support keeping the

property as affordable housing for an additional twenty years, including a means of

transferring the property to a qualified affordable housing nonprofit at a below-

market price.

      Recently, a new type of buyer has emerged to buy the investors’ discounted

limited partnership interests. It purchases a limited partnership stake from the initial

investor after the investor harvested the property’s tax credits. As a new limited

partner, the buyer engages in a now-nationally-familiar pattern of tactics to prevent

the property from being transferred to the nonprofit. Around the country, about half


                                           1
a dozen courts have weighed in on the propriety of those strategies under the federal

tax subsidy program. This precedential opinion contributes to that body of law

through the lens of fiduciary duties and the internal affairs of Delaware limited

partnerships.

      The plaintiffs here are the partnership and general partner; the defendant is the

new limited partner. The new limited partner repeatedly sought either a sale of the

property or a buyout of its partnership interests at what it considered fair market

value. When the general partner would not go along, the limited partner claimed the

general partner’s response to the property’s disposition to a nonprofit amounted to a

breach of fiduciary and contractual duties under the limited partnership agreement.

The limited partner attempted to remove the general partner for cause, as is its right

under that agreement. The general partner seeks a declaratory judgment that it was

not validly removed. The limited partner asserts counterclaims for breach of

fiduciary duty, breach of contract, and declaratory relief that the removal was valid.

      This post-trial opinion finds in favor of the general partner and the partnership.

The general partner’s authority and duties are circumscribed by the partnership

agreement. The general partner has modified fiduciary duties, but the limited partner

failed to prove the general partner breached them. The limited partner also failed to

prove the general partner breached the limited partnership agreement. Therefore,

the limited partner lacked cause to remove the general partner. The removal is


                                          2
invalid, the general partner remains in its role as the general partner, and the general

partner is not liable for any breach. The limited partnership agreement dictates that

the general partner receive fees and expenses for surviving an unwarranted removal

attempt.

        I.     BACKGROUND1

        Plaintiff Hudson Housing Tax Credit Fund XXI LP (the “Fund”) is a limited

partnership that holds indirect interests in other limited partnerships, each of which

in turn holds an affordable housing property developed under the federal

Low-Income Housing Tax Credit (“LIHTC”) program.2 The other plaintiff, JER



1
  Citations in the form of “Compl. —” refer to the Complaint, available at Docket Item
(“D.I.”) 1. Citations in the form of “Countercl. —” refer to the Counterclaims, available
at D.I. 24. Citations in the form of “PTO —” refer to the Stipulated Facts that are Admitted
and Require No Proof in the parties’ Joint Pre-Trial Stipulation and Order, available at
D.I. 163 from pages 12 through 30. Citations in the form of “Trial Tr. —” refer to the trial
transcript, and citations in the form of “Last Name Tr. —” refer to the trial testimony of
the identified witness, available at D.I. 179 and D.I. 180. Citations in the form of “JX —”
refer to joint trial exhibits. Citations in the form of “Fund LPA —” refer to the Amended
and Restated Agreement of Limited Partnership of Hudson Housing Tax Credit Fund XXI
LP dated September 30, 2002, Assignment and Assumption Agreement (the “Initial Fund
LPA”) and First Amendment to Amended and Restated Agreement of Limited Partnership
[Hudson Housing Tax Credit Fund XXI LP] dated December 31, 2007 (the “First
Amendment”), available at JX009 HUDSON00018177–238 and HUDSON00018158–74,
respectively. Citations in the form of “First Amendment —” refer the First Amendment
alone, at JX009 HUDSON00018158–74. Citations in the form of “Property LPA —” refer
to the Amended and Restated Agreement of Limited Partnership and Amendment to
Amended and Restated Agreement of Limited Partnership of Kate’s Trace Limited
Partnership, available at JX007 HUDSON00018375–463 and HUDSON00018360–65,
respectively. Citations in the form of “Post-Trial Tr. —” refer to the Post-Trial Oral
Argument Transcript, available at D.I. 195.
2
    PTO ¶¶ 2, 12–14.

                                             3
Hudson GP XXI LLC (“Fund GP”), is the Fund’s general partner (together with the

Fund, “Plaintiffs”).3 The Fund was created in 2002.4 Defendant DLE Investors, LP

(“DLE”) is one of the Fund’s limited partners. DLE became a Fund limited partner

in 2007.5 The Fund distributed all tax credits flowing from one particular property

to its investors by 2015.6 The partners projected that between 2020 and 2021, that

property would be transferred to a nonprofit for a below-market price pursuant to

the LIHTC program and the partnership agreement of the entity holding the

property.7

          By 2020, new owners had taken control of DLE.8 Under new management,

DLE sought either a sale of the property or a buyout of its Fund interest at fair market

value.9 Fund GP declined both transactions. The partnership holding the property,




3
    Id. ¶¶ 1, 14.
4
    Id. ¶ 16.
5
    Id. ¶ 17.
6
    Id. ¶ 41; Trane Tr. 522; Macari Tr. 33, 87.
7
    JX014 at DLE_0007799–801; JX058 at DLE_0002308.
8
    Chiusano Tr. 388–89; Kagey Tr. 483–84; Trane Tr. 522–23.
9
    JX062 at DLE_0002407; JX075 at DLE_0002601.
       DLE objected to the admissibility of JX062 in a footnote in its post-trial answering
brief. D.I. 188 at 31 n.10. That objection is waived: DLE failed to object to JX062 on the
Joint Exhibit List. D.I. 169 at 4. Under the Joint Pre-Trial Stipulation and Order,

                                                  4
in which the Fund held indirect limited partner interests, proceeded to transfer the

property to an affordable housing nonprofit as contemplated by the LIHTC program

and that partnership’s governing documents.10 Fund GP sought the advice of counsel

and concluded it would not challenge the transfer.11 In response, DLE purported to

remove Fund GP as general partner of the Fund, asserting its inaction was a breach

of fiduciary and contractual duties, including a duty to seek DLE’s consent.12 Fund

GP contends it breached no such duty and was improperly removed.13

         Having weighed the evidence and evaluated the credibility of the witnesses, I

find that the facts presented at trial support Plaintiffs’ position. The following facts


         Objections to exhibits shall be noted on the Joint Exhibits List or made at
         trial (if an exhibit is sought to be admitted into evidence at trial). Unless
         specifically raised during trial, any continuing objections to exhibits on the
         Joint Exhibit List shall be briefed in post-trial briefing or be deemed waived.
         All exhibits on the Joint Exhibit List to which an objection is not raised in
         accordance with this paragraph shall be deemed admitted into evidence.
D.I. 163 at 39; see also Trial Tr. 89 (“THE COURT: [A] contemporaneous objection needs
to be lodged, it needs to be consistent with any objection that’s on the JX list, and then, in
the absence of an objection, the exhibit is in evidence.”).
10
     PTO ¶ 55; JX168.
11
     See PTO ¶ 58; JX203 [hereinafter “Holland & Knight Memorandum”].
       DLE objected to my consideration of the Holland & Knight Memorandum as
hearsay under Delaware Rules of Evidence 801 and 802. D.I. 169 at 11; Trial Tr. 145. The
Holland & Knight Memorandum is a summary of legal advice Plaintiffs received from
Holland & Knight. Plaintiffs indicated at trial that the Holland & Knight Memorandum is
not being admitted for the truth of the matter asserted. Trial Tr. 145–46. It is therefore not
hearsay under Rule 801(c)(2). Saudi Basic Indus. Corp. v. Mobil Yanbu Petrochemical
Co., Inc., 866 A.2d 1, 21 (Del. 2005); D.R.E. 801(c)(2). DLE’s objection is overruled.
12
     PTO ¶ 60; JX218.
13
     PTO ¶ 62; JX220.

                                               5
were proven by a preponderance of the evidence presented at trial or are drawn from

judicially noticeable authority.14

               A.      The Low-Income Housing Tax Credit Program

         More background about the LIHTC program may be helpful context. The

LIHTC program is designed to encourage new construction and rehabilitation of

existing buildings as affordable rental housing.15 It is set forth in Section 42 of the

Internal Revenue Code (“Section 42”).




14
     See D.R.E. 202.
15
   26 U.S.C. § 42. Since the Wagner-Steagall Act of 1937, the federal government has
experimented with a wide variety of methods to address home insecurity. E.g., United
States Housing Act of 1937, Pub. L. No. 75-412, 50 Stat. 888 (codified as amended in
scattered sections of 42 U.S.C.). Methods include: “i) publicly-financed, publicly-owned
housing starting in the 1930s (public housing); ii) publicly-financed, privately-owned
housing starting in the 1950s . . . ; iii) vouchers starting in the 1970s; and finally, iv) tax
credits since 1986.” Brandon M. Weiss, Residual Value Capture in Subsidized Housing,
10 HARV. L. & POL’Y REV. 521, 524 (2016) [hereinafter “Residual Value Capture”]
(citations omitted).

                                              6
      As set forth in Section 42, the LIHTC program is a federal subsidy
      program specifically designed to promote the nationwide development
      and preservation of rental housing that is affordable to low and
      moderate income households. The LIHTC program subsidizes low-
      income housing by: (1) making available to a “qualified low-income
      housing project” tax credits, which provide a dollar-for-dollar income
      tax reduction; and (2) permitting institutional investors with large,
      annual, and predicable income tax obligations (known as “tax credit
      investors”), such as banks, to acquire these tax credits in exchange for
      providing capital necessary to develop the project.16

The Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts has described the LIHTC program as

“the most important source of financing for affordable housing . . . across the

nation.”17




16
   Opa-Locka Cmty. Dev. Corp. v. HK Aswan, Inc., 2020 WL 4381624, at *3 (Fla. Circ.
Ct. July 7, 2020) (ORDER) (citing U.S. GOV’T ACCOUNTABILITY OFF., GAO-17-285R,
LOW INCOME HOUSING TAX CREDIT: THE ROLE OF SYNDICATORS 1, 4 (Feb. 16, 2017)),
aff’d sub nom. Aswan Vill. Assocs., LLC v. Opa-Locka Cmty. Dev. Corp., Inc., 2021 WL
4190914 (Fla. Dist. Ct. App. Sept. 15, 2021).
17
   Homeowner’s Rehab, Inc. v. Related Corp. V SLP, L.P., 99 N.E.3d 744, 748 (Mass.
2018) (“[The] LIHTC program now provides more affordable rental units than are provided
in public housing or with Section 8 housing vouchers[.]” (citing America’s Rental Housing:
Expanding Options for Diverse and Growing Demand, JOINT CTR. FOR HOUS. STUD. OF
HARVARD                        UNIV.,                     32–33                    (2015),
https://www.jchs.harvard.edu/sites/default/files/media/imp/America%27s%20Rental%20
Housing%202015_WEB.pdf)); accord Low Income Housing Tax Credit Program, 2018–
2019 Qualified Allocation Plan, MASS. DEPT. OF HOUS. & CMTY. DEV. 6,
https://www.mass.gov/doc/2018-2019-qap/download (explaining that since 1987, the
LIHTC program has helped finance over 67,000 affordable rental units in Massachusetts
and almost 3 million nationwide); Residual Value Capture at 524–25 (“At an annual cost
of approximately eight billion dollars, the LIHTC program is by far the predominant source
of government investment in rental housing development for low-income households.”
(citing JOINT COMM. ON TAX’N, JCX-97-14, ESTIMATES OF FEDERAL TAX EXPENDITURES
FOR FISCAL YEARS 2014–2018 26 (2014))).

                                            7
           The LIHTC program is built on federal allocations of tax credits to state

housing finance agencies in all fifty states.18 The state agencies award tax credits to

real estate developers who win a competitive application process to develop

affordable housing.19 The nonrefundable tax credits are valuable to large financial

institutions with significant federal tax liabilities.20       Those investors’ capital

contributions provide necessary equity to develop the qualified affordable housing

property.21 “[D]evelopers ‘sell’ the tax credits to private investors, usually through

a syndicator, in exchange for an equity investment in the housing project.”22 Those

syndicators connect investors to affordable housing projects offering tax credits.23

18
     Residual Value Capture at 534.
19
     Id.
20
     Id.
21
     Id. at 534–35.
22
   Acevedo v. Musterfield Place, LLC, 98 N.E.3d 673, 675 (Mass. 2018) (Jill Khadduri,
Carissa Climaco, & Kimberly Burnett, What Happens to Low–Income Housing Tax Credit
Properties at Year 15 and Beyond?, U.S. DEPT. OF HOUS. & URB. DEV. 2 (2012),
https://www.huduser.gov/publications/pdf/what_happens_lihtc_v2.pdf); see also Residual
Value Capture at 537 n.79 (“Beginning in the early 1990s, a corporate equity market began
to develop as institutional investors began to understand the asset class, the housing tax
credit program was made permanent, and syndicators quickly came to prefer institutional
capital as a more efficient way to raise equity.”).
23
  See, e.g., In re Mun. Mortg. & Equity, LLC, Sec. & Deriv. Litig., 876 F. Supp. 2d 616,
626–27 (D. Md. 2012) (“Federal income tax law includes LIHTCs to provide an incentive
for developers to construct low-income rental housing. Frequently, low-income housing
developers find it advantageous to sell these tax credits to a syndicator. The syndicator
will form an investment fund (an ‘LIHTC Fund’) to invest in the developer’s low-income
housing projects. The syndicator will assemble a group of investors to invest in the LIHTC
Fund and obtain the benefit of the tax credits.”), aff’d sub nom. Yates v. Mun. Mortg. &
Equity, LLC, 744 F.3d 874 (4th Cir. 2014); Residual Value Capture at 535 n.65 (“The
process typically is more complex, because once the ‘lower-tier’ investor closes on the tax
                                            8
         The syndicators form partnerships to develop and hold LIHTC-eligible

properties, and to facilitate investment in exchange for tax credits.24 Syndicators and

investors often partner in several partnerships holding several affordable housing

projects.25 The partnerships have the purpose of acquiring, financing, developing,

and managing the affordable housing.26 The syndicator is usually the general


credit partnership, it will often syndicate the credits to an ‘upper-tier’ investor or group of
investors.”).
24
     See, e.g., Opa-Locka, 2020 WL 4381624, at *3.
25
  E.g., CED Cap. Hldgs. 2000 EB, L.L.C. v. CTCW Berkshire Club, L.L.C., 2020 WL
6537072, at *2 (Fla. Cir. Ct. Nov. 3, 2020).
26
   See, e.g., Riseboro Cmty. P’ship Inc. v. SunAmerica Hous. Fund 682, 482 F. Supp. 3d
31, 33 (E.D.N.Y. 2020), as corrected (Aug. 31, 2020) (“‘[The] Partnership has been
organized exclusively to acquire the Apartment Complex and to develop, rehabilitate,
finance, construct, own, maintain, operate and sell or otherwise dispose of the Apartment
Complex, in order to obtain long-term appreciation, cash income, [LIHTC Program tax
credits,] and tax losses.’ The [operative partnership] Agreement requires that the
Apartment Complex be ‘developed in a manner which satisfies, and shall continue to
satisfy, all restrictions, including tenant income and rent restrictions applicable to projects
generating [LIHTC Program tax credits].’” (quoting the operative partnership agreement));
SunAmerica Hous. Fund 1050 v. Pathway of Pontiac, Inc., 2021 WL 391420, at *2 (E.D.
Mich. Feb. 4, 2021) (“According to the Agreement’s recitals section, the Partnership was
‘formed to acquire, rehabilitate, own, maintain and operate a 150-unit apartment complex
intended for rental to elderly persons of low and moderate income, known as Presbyterian
Village North, and located in Pontiac, Michigan.’ Section 3.01, however, entitled ‘Purpose
of the Partnership,’ goes on to clarify that the Partnership was ‘organized exclusively to
acquire, finance, rehabilitate, own, maintain, operate and sell or otherwise dispose of the
[Property], in order to obtain long-term appreciation, cash income, [tax credits under the
LIHTC Program,] and tax losses.’” (internal citations omitted)), appeal filed, SunAmerica
Hous. Fund 1050 v. Pathway of Pontiac, Inc., No. 21-1243 (6th Cir.); Opa-Locka, 2020
WL 4381624, at *1 (“OLCDC joined Banc of America Community Development
Corporation (‘BACDC’) in forming the Company for the purpose of acquiring, developing,
and operating Aswan Village as affordable housing, and to finance those activities through
participation in the Low Income Housing Tax Credit (‘LIHTC’) program . . . .”); Senior
Hous. Assistance Gp. v. AMTAX Hldgs. 260, LLC (SHAG I), 2019 WL 687837, at *3 (W.D.
Wash. Feb. 19, 2019) (“The seven Limited Partnership Agreements have . . . two stated
                                              9
partner, and it will often receive fees for its role.27 The general partner has discretion

and control over the partnership’s operations, subject to certain enumerated

restrictions.28 Institutional investors seeking tax credits invest as limited partners

with only a few enumerated consent rights.29

         “Through this framework, Section 42 advances the deliberate policy choice to

replace a typical equity investor’s expectations of economic cash flow or

appreciation from the apartment complex with a comparable or better return on

investment almost solely derived from tax benefits.”30 The limited partner’s receipt

of tax credits is stretched over ten years (the “Credit Period”) to provide a baseline




purposes: (1) to develop, operate, and ‘otherwise deal with’ the projects; and (2) to enter
into operating use lease agreements with SHAG to ensure favorable treatment under federal
and state tax laws.”); Homeowner’s Rehab, 99 N.E.3d at 742 (“The parties in this case are
partners in a limited partnership formed for the purpose of rehabilitating and operating an
affordable housing complex.”); id. 743 (“[T]he limited partnership here was formed for the
purpose of participating in the LIHTC program . . . .”); id. at 754 (“The purpose of the
partnership, as stated in section 2.5.A of the partnership agreement, is to ‘invest[] in real
property and . . . provi[de] . . . low income housing.’”).
27
  See, e.g., Mun. Mortg., 876 F. Supp. 2d at 627; Residual Value Capture at 529 n.155
(“The banks, syndicators, investors, and so on, all require fees or profits in order to entice
their participation.”).
28
  E.g., SHAG I, 2019 WL 687837, at *3; Pathway of Pontiac, 2021 WL 391420, at *3;
Riseboro, 482 F.Supp.3d at 35; Homeowner’s Rehab, 99 N.E.3d at 746; CED Cap. Hldgs.,
2020 WL 6537072, at *2.
29
  E.g., SHAG I, 2019 WL 687837, at *3–4; Pathway of Pontiac, 2021 WL 391420, at *3;
Opa-Locka, 2020 WL 4381624, at *3; Riseboro, 482 F.Supp.3d at 35; CED Cap. Hldgs.,
2020 WL 6537072, at *2.
30
     Opa-Locka, 2020 WL 4381624, at *3 (internal quotations and emphasis omitted).

                                             10
ten-year incentive to maintain the housing as affordable.31 To keep those tax credits

from being clawed back, the partnership must adhere to LIHTC program

requirements, including rental rate restrictions, for another five years (together with

the Credit Period, the fifteen-year “Compliance Period”).32 And even after the end

of the Compliance Period, project owners allocated tax credits after 1989 must

continue to comply with the program for an additional fifteen years, known as the

“Extended Use Period.”33 Thus, investors’ bargain for ten years of tax credits results

in thirty years of affordable housing.

           The program is designed to keep the housing affordable even longer.34 At the

end of the Compliance Period, the partnership can convey the property to a certified

nonprofit under the terms of a right of first refusal (“ROFR”) at a below-market price



31
     Id.
32
  Macari Tr. 13; see also CED Cap. Hldgs., 2020 WL 6537072, at *2; Pathway of Pontiac,
2021 WL 391420, at *1; Opa-Locka, 2020 WL 4381624, at *3.
33
     Pathway of Pontiac, 2021 WL 391420, at *2; Opa-Locka, 2020 WL 4381624, at *3.
34
  Opa-Locka, 2020 WL 4381624, at *3 (“But the LIHTC program’s aim of creating and
preserving low-income housing does not end at thirty years. Rather, the LIHTC program
seeks to preserve low-income housing in perpetuity by creating a special role for
nonprofits, like OLCDC, whose missions are not to profit from a sale of the low-income
housing project, but to continue to develop and preserve the low-income housing in
perpetuity for the betterment of the public and the community in which project is located.”);
see also, e.g., JX021 at DLE_0001175 (“Each Building of the Project must meet the
provisions of [Section 42] regulations during each of 15 consecutive years in order to
remain qualified to receive the [tax] credits. In addition, the Partnership entered into an
Extended Use Agreement, which requires the utilization of the Project pursuant to Section
42 for a minimum of 35 years after the compliance period, even if the Partnership disposes
of the Project.”).

                                             11
set by statute.35 The ROFR is designed to facilitate the nonprofit’s preservation of

the complex as continued affordable housing.36 This conveyance opportunity is

structured as a ROFR to ensure the tax credits flow to the partnership rather than the

nonprofit.37 It is not unusual for the purchasing nonprofit to be affiliated with a

member of the partnership.38 The general partner may be authorized to exercise the

ROFR without the limited partner’s consent.39

                B.    The Parties’ Partnership Structure Implementing The
                      LIHTC Framework

         The Fund’s structure is typical of a LIHTC partnership in most respects. The

general partner, Fund GP, is a subsidiary of a syndicator, Hudson Housing Capital

LLC (the “Syndicator”); holds management rights;40 and collects fees and a

fractional percentage of the available tax credits.41

         The great majority of the tax credits go to the investor limited partners who

contribute capital to the endeavor. As in most LIHTC limited partnerships, the


35
     Opa-Locka, 2020 WL 4381624, at *3.
36
     Id.; Homeowner’s Rehab, 99 N.E.3d at 754.
37
     Riseboro, 482 F.Supp. at 34–35; Homeowner’s Rehab, 99 N.E.3d 744 at 754.
38
     E.g., SHAG I, 2019 WL 687837, at *2; Pathway of Pontiac, 2021 WL 391420, at *1.
39
    E.g., Pathway of Pontiac, 2021 WL 391420, at *6 (concluding the limited partner
“Plaintiff was not required to form an intent to sell the Property for Presbyterian to exercise
its ROFR”).
40
     See generally Fund LPA at Art. VI.
41
  Id. § 6.8D; id. § 5.1B; PTO ¶ 14 (“The general partner is the Fund GP, which holds a
0.01% interest in the Fund.”).

                                              12
Fund’s limited partners hold certain enumerated consent rights. The consent rights

relevant here are designed to account for the fact that the Fund has not one, but two

limited partners.42 Under the Fund’s 2002 limited partnership agreement (the “Fund

LPA”), the sole limited partner was First Chicago Leasing Corporation (“First

Chicago”), a JPMorgan Chase affiliate.43 In 2007, First Chicago sold part of its

interest, creating DLE as a second limited partner but still staying on as a limited

partner.44 I will refer to First Chicago and its successors as “Fund LP.” The Fund

LPA was amended to accommodate a second limited partner: it provides DLE and

Fund LP hold consent rights as one voice, as the “Investor Limited Partners.”45 Their

“Consent” is defined as being given by “Investor Limited Partners holding more than

fifty percent (50%) of the Percentage Interests held by all of the Investor Limited

Partners.”46 DLE’s Percentage Interest is 49.005%; Fund LP’s is 50.995%.47 This

means Fund LP can give Consent of the Investor Limited Partners without DLE, and




42
  First Amendment at HUDSON00018162 (amending the Initial Fund LPA definition of
“Consent” and amending the Initial Fund LPA definition of “Investor Limited Partner” to
include both limited partners).
43
     Fund LPA at HUDSON00018181.
44
     See generally First Amendment; JX023 at DLE_0004979; Macari Tr. 16; PTO ¶ 14.
45
     First Amendment at HUDSON00018162.
46
     Id.
47
   Id. at HUDSON00018162 (amending the Initial Fund LPA definition of “Percentage
Interest”).

                                          13
DLE can never, alone, give that Consent.48            When the Fund LPA requires

“Supermajority Consent,” then votes reflecting more than two thirds “of the

Percentage Interests held by all of the Investor Limited Partners” are necessary.49

DLE’s consent is required for Supermajority Consent.50

         The Fund is unique from other LIHTC partnerships showcased in recent

litigation in that it does not hold the affordable housing complexes itself: it has held

indirect interests in up to five partnerships, each of which held or holds a property.51

Each holding partnership was formed to own “an affordable housing property

constructed, rehabilitated or acquired by a Property Partnership, which property is

or is planned to be eligible for [LIHTC].”52 The Fund owns “Intermediate Entities”



48
     Chiusano Tr. 389–90.
49
  First Amendment at HUDSON00018163 (adding the definition of “Supermajority
Consent” to the Initial Fund LPA); id. at HUDSON00018167–69 (amending the Initial
Fund LPA Section 6.3 to add Section 6.3B); Fund LPA § 6.3B(viii).
50
  Fund LPA § 12.2 (“A Limited Partner shall be entitled to cast one vote for each Unit
owned by such Limited Partner . . . .”); PTO ¶ 14 (“The current limited partners are DLE,
which holds a 49.0000995% interest in the Fund, and [Fund LP], which holds a
50.9899005% interest in the Fund.”).
51
  In December 2007, the Fund was the sole member of five limited liability companies
that each held a 99.98% limited partnership interest in a corresponding property
partnership. First Amendment at HUDSON00018158. As of December 2017, the Fund
held indirect interests in three of those five property partnerships. Macari Tr. 20. By
August 2020, only two LLC-property partnership pairings remained in the Fund’s
portfolio—Kate’s Trace LLC (Kate’s Trace Limited Partnership) and Hudson Country
Meadow LLC (Country Meadow Residences, L.C.). Id. 50.
52
  Fund LPA at Art. I (defining “Approved Property Partnership,” “Property,” “Property
Partnership,” and “Property Partnership Interests”).

                                           14
that are limited partners in each holding partnership.53 When DLE entered the

partnership in 2007, the Fund owned interests in five Intermediate Entities that each

held a 99.98% limited partnership interest in a corresponding property partnership.54

          This case centers on the Fund’s investment in a LIHTC-eligible 108-unit

housing complex known as Kate’s Trace Apartments in Newport News, Virginia

(the “Property”).55 The Property is held by Kate’s Trace Limited Partnership (the

“Property Partnership”), a Virginia partnership.56 The Fund invests in the Property

Partnership via Hudson Kate’s Trace LLC (the “Intermediate Entity” or “Property

LP”), which is the limited partner in the Property Partnership.57

          The Fund and the Property Partnership, linked by the Fund’s ownership of

Property LP, implemented the LIHTC model by facilitating the flow of capital from

the Fund’s investors to the Property, and the flow of tax credits back up to the Fund’s

investors. Property LP conveyed Fund capital to the Property Partnership, which

used the funds to build, operate, and maintain the Property.58 In exchange for

developing and maintaining an affordable housing project, the Virginia state


53
     Id. (defining “Intermediate Entity”); First Amendment at HUDSON00018158.
54
     First Amendment at HUDSON00018158.
55
   PTO ¶ 13; Property LPA at HUDSON00018376. Elsewhere in the record, the Property
is referenced as having 104 units. See, e.g., JX168 at HUDSON00008086.
56
     PTO ¶ 32.
57
     Id. ¶ 35.
58
     Id. ¶ 39.

                                           15
government allocated a predetermined schedule of tax credits to the Property

Partnership.59

         The partners repeatedly created forecasts reflecting this exchange. Fund LPA

Section 3.3A(ii) requires that when an investor makes a capital contribution, the

investor and the general partner must “execute and confirm a financial forecast

describing the economic and tax benefits that are projected to be generated by the

Fund with respect to its investment (directly or indirectly through an Intermediate

Entity) in the Property Partnership to which such Subscription Agreement relates for

the benefit of the Partners.”60 A set of 2004 projections forecasted $5,910,636 in tax

credits from the Property from 2005 through 2015.61 In 2007, when DLE entered



 See Property LPA at Art. II (defining “Agency” and “Projected Credit”); JX004 at
59

HUDSON00018773.
       DLE objected to my consideration of JX004 under Delaware Rules of Evidence 401,
402, 403, 602 and 901. D.I. 169 at 1; Trial Tr. 25–27. Rules 401, 402, and 403 relate to
whether evidence is relevant. Evidence is relevant if: “(a) it has any tendency to make a
fact more or less probable than it would be without the evidence; [] (b) the fact is of
consequence in determining the action”; and (c) “its probative value is substantially
outweighed by a danger of . . . unfair prejudice, confusing the issues, . . . undue delay,
wasting time, or needlessly presenting cumulative evidence.” D.R.E. 401; D.R.E. 403. I
conclude JX004 is admissible under Rules 401, 402, and 403 because it is relevant to the
expectations of the original parties to the Fund LPA, and its probative value is not
outweighed by any of the factors listed in Rule 403. JX004 is admissible under Rule 602
because Joseph Macari “has personal knowledge” about JX004, as a signatory thereto and
original party to the Fund LPA. D.R.E. 602; Macari Tr. 25. JX004 is also admissible under
Rule901 because it was introduced by a witness with personal knowledge. D.R.E.
901(b)(1); Macari Tr. 25. DLE’s objection is overruled.
60
     Fund LPA § 3.3A(ii).
61
     JX004 at HUDSON00018773; Macari Tr. 29.

                                           16
the partnership, the Fund LPA compelled the creation of another forecast for each

property partnership.62 The price DLE paid for its interest was based off of its

projected tax benefits through 2020.63 The projections created upon DLE’s entry to

the partnership forecasted $2,275,559 in tax credits from the Property from 2008

through 2015, tax benefits through 2020, and no cash flows or positive income.64

And the Property LPA enumerated the projected credits applicable to the Property

through 2015.65 The forecasted 2019 or 2020 end to the tax benefits aligned with




62
     Fund LPA § 3.3A(ii).
63
     Trane Tr. 521–22.
64
   JX011 at DLE_0005420; Trane Tr. 520–22 (confirming the JX011 projections were
attached to the Fund LPA when DLE acquired its interests and what they projected);
Macari Tr. 31 (“Q: Was the Fund limited partner projected to receive any cash flow from
the Kate’s Trace investment? A: No. Q: Was the Fund limited partner projected to receive
any appreciation or equity in the investment? A: No.”); id. 40 (“So, basically, no cash
flow would be forecasted to be paid over this period.”); id. 43 (“Q: So is it correct that you
projected that the Fund would receive no cash flow through at least 2029 from Kate’s
Trace? A: That is correct.”); id. 87 (“We have received the tax credits. We have received
tax losses. We were unlikely to receive any future tax losses or cash flow.”); id. 104 (“Q:
And over the term of Kate’s Trace partnership, is it your testimony that no cash flow has
been received by the partners? A: There’s no cash flow been received by the limited
partner.”).
65
  Property LPA at Art. II (defining “Projected Credit” and stating the final year of
Projected Credits will be 2015); id. § 4.01(q).

                                             17
the end of the Compliance Period and the predicted exercise of the ROFR.66 DLE’s

internal projections also modeled the ROFR and a disposition in 2020 or 2021.67

         The Property Partnership distributed the tax credits, doling out 99.98% to

Property LP.68 Property LP conveyed those tax credits to the Fund, and the Fund

distributed them to its partners commensurate with their interest; the limited

partner(s) received over 99% of the remaining tax credits, and Fund GP received

0.01% of the tax credits.69 By the end of the Credit Period in 2015, DLE and Fund

LP received “materially all” the Property’s projected tax credits.70




66
  Macari Tr. 32 (“Again, it’s industry practice to do these forecasts to terminate at the end
of the compliance period. And the expectation when this investment was made was that
2019 would be the last year of the compliance period.”); PTO ¶ 40 (“The Compliance
Period for the final building in the Apartment Complex ended on December 31, 2020.”);
JX004 at HUDSON00018773; JX011 at DLE_0005420; JX014 at DLE_0007799.
67
   JX014 at DLE_0007799 (expressing an expectation in 2016 that “all of [Hudson’s]
properties [will be] sold in 2020”); JX014 at DLE_0007800–01 (“Also, please provide [a]
schedule that shows the amount of liabilities the fund will accrue from 2017 to the year in
which the final property is expected to be disposed of, I think this is around 2020 or
2021.”); JX015 (“Last year of compliance period: . . . Kates Trace 2020”); JX058 at
DLE_0002308 (“Lower Tier non-profit GP has a non-profit ROFR beginning in 2020 at
the minimum purchase price.”); JX037 at DLE_0004085 (“GP has a ROFR that results in
no value to LP”); JX089 at DLE_0001819 (“If GP exercised ROFR, purchase price would
be ~$0 given LP tax capital is ~$0.”); Chiusano Tr. 390, 392–94; 400–01, 405–06, 410–11
(explaining how the ROFR discounted DLE’s internal valuation of the Property Partnership
Interests).
68
     Property LPA § 5.01(b)(ii).
69
     PTO ¶¶ 9, 14; Fund LPA § 5.1B.
70
     PTO ¶ 41; Trane Tr. 522; Macari Tr. 33, 87.

                                             18
         The Property Partnership has other stakeholders alongside the Fund. The

Property Partnership’s general partner is Kate’s Trace Housing Corporation

(“Property GP”).71 Property GP is a subsidiary of AHC, Inc. (the “Developer”), an

affordable housing developer.72 The Syndicator is represented at the Property

Partnership level through its subsidiary, JER Hudson SLP LLC (“Property SLP”),

which is the Property Partnership’s special limited partner.73 The Fund limited

partners do not have direct representation in the Property Partnership.

         The organizational structure of the Fund and the Property Partnership is

reflected in the diagram below:




71
     PTO ¶ 34.
72
     Id.; Property LPA at Art. II (defining “Developer”).
73
     PTO ¶¶ 33, 36.

                                              19
         The Property Partnership’s limited partnership agreement (the “Property

LPA”) mandates that Property GP maintain the Property and the Property

Partnership in accordance with the LIHTC program.74 And it implements the

program’s feature of a ROFR to a designated affordable housing nonprofit. Five

years after the Property’s allocated tax credits are exhausted, i.e. after the fifteen-

year Compliance Period, the Property LPA grants Property GP “the right to


74
     See, e.g., Property LPA §§ 3.02(i), 4.01(p)–(q), (z), 4.02(j).

                                                20
designate a ‘qualified non-profit organization’” to have a ROFR “for the minimum

price established in accordance with Section 42(i)(7) of the Code, plus” outstanding

debt and taxes attributable to the sale.75 After a post-Compliance Period offer to

purchase the Property, the designated nonprofit may exercise its ROFR and purchase

the Property for the statutory below-market price.

                C.     Post-Compliance Period Investors Pursue Higher Returns.

         At the end of the Credit Period, the investor has reaped all the tax credits it

can from its investment and typically exits the partnership by selling its limited

partner interests, either to the general partner or to a third party.76 The value of those

interests is much lower than it was at the beginning of the Credit Period, as the tax

credits have been harvested. Purchasers of these cheaper limited partner interests

were typically not involved in the partnership when it was created, when it purchased

the affordable housing project, or when it distributed the tax credits.77




75
     PTO ¶ 11; Property LPA § 8.02(e) (citing 26 U.S.C. § 42(i)(7)).
76
  See SHAG I, 2019 WL 687837, at *1; Opa-Locka, 2020 WL 4381624, at *2;
Homeowner’s Rehab, 99 N.E.3d at 744–45.
77
   CED Cap. Hldgs., 2020 WL 6537072, at *2–3; see also Brandon M. Weiss, Clarifying
Nonprofit Purchase Rights in Affordable Housing, 48 FORDHAM URB. L. J. 1159, 1168
(2021) [hereinafter “Clarifying Nonprofit Purchase Rights”] (“Over the last several years,
however, a new trend in the field has emerged, leading to burgeoning disputes around the
country. As a growing number of LIHTC developments have reached the end of their
initial compliance period, various financial entities began to see an opportunity at this
critical moment in the life of the project to extract value.”).

                                             21
       Entry of a certain type of new limited partner after the Credit Period has

proven to introduce tension between that new limited partner and the general partner.

There is “a trend in the LIHTC industry in which certain entities, like Hunt [Capital

Partners], are acquiring limited partner interests in LIHTC partnerships—known as

‘Aggregators’—who then attempt to extract value out of such interests that were not

intended by the original parties to the partnerships.”78




78
   CED Cap. Hldgs., 2020 WL 6537072, at *5; accord id. at *10 (“[P]arties, like Hunt,
have come into LIHTC partnership agreements and attempted to extract value or proceeds
that is not otherwise permitted under the operative contracts like the Partnership Agreement
here.” (collecting cases)); id. at *6 (referring to a financial benefit to Hunt that was not
otherwise intended by the original tax credit investor); id. at *6 (describing the aggregator’s
“bad faith financial motivations”); id. at *5 (“CTCW’s actions in refusing to exit the
Partnership and refusing to consent to a refinance of the Permanent Loan, as explained
above in connection with its efforts to extract a larger than negotiated residual value upon
its exit from the Partnership, were in direct conflict with the original tax credit investor’s
financial expectations and entitlements.” (emphasis added)); Opa-Locka, 2020 WL
4381624, at *2 (“Defendants recognize that, because of the ROFR, they have ‘no real
equity’ in the Company and Aswan Village and have ‘no value except through operating
cash flow.’ Accordingly, when Defendants consummated the aforementioned transaction
to acquire [Bank of America]’s position in the Company, they paid no more than $400,000
because OLCDC’s ROFR preserved all of Aswan Village’s equity for OLCDC, which is
precisely its intent of the ROFR and consistent with the policy goals and objectives of
Section 42 and LIHTC program in general.” (emphasis added)); Full Circle Villagebrook
GP, LLC v. Protech 2004-D, LLC, 2021 WL 4061744, at *1 (N.D. Ill. Sept. 7, 2021)
(describing aggregators as entities that “acquire[] interests in LIHTC affordable housing
partnerships and upon the conclusion of the 15-year compliance period required by Section
42 (the ‘Compliance Period’), challenge[] the contractual transfer rights associated with
those partnerships”); Clarifying Nonprofit Purchase Rights at 1168 (“But in an increasing
number of cases, new investors, sometimes referred to as ‘aggregators,’ buy out original
investor limited partner interests in nonprofit-developed LIHTC partnerships with projects
approaching year 15.” (citing David A. Davenport, Year 15: Facing off with the
                                              22
         Over the last several years, [] a new trend in the field has emerged,
         leading to burgeoning disputes around the country. As a growing
         number of LIHTC developments have reached the end of their initial
         compliance period, various financial entities began to see an
         opportunity at this critical moment in the life of the project to extract
         value. Investors in these disputes use a variety of tactics to pressure
         nonprofits—for example, refusing to consent to applications for
         financing to conduct necessary capital improvements. . . . Other efforts
         focus on removing the nonprofit general partner from the partnership,
         for example, via claims of breach of fiduciary duties. With control of
         the project, an investor can attempt to eliminate the extended rent and
         income restrictions on the property through a technical procedure
         known as the “qualified contract” process. Alternatively, investors can
         simply wait until the extended use restrictions expire and convert the
         property to market-rate use or sell to a third party that sees long-term
         upside value. In all cases where a nonprofit holds a Section 42 ROFR,
         these various investor efforts can only succeed if the nonprofit cannot
         successfully acquire the property pursuant to the ROFR.79

         When the general partner does not accede to the new limited partner’s

demands, the limited partner and general partner clash over the general partner’s

fiduciary duties and the terms of the governing partnership agreement, and litigation

follows.80      In some instances, new limited partners have sought to leverage



Aggregator—Newcomers Try to Toss Partnership Intent Out the Window, TAX CREDIT
ADVISOR, 27 (May 2019))).
79
     Clarifying Nonprofit Purchase Rights at 1168–69 (citations omitted).
80
   Id. at 1169; Nonprofit Transfer Disputes in the Low Income Housing Tax Credit
Program: An Emerging Threat to Affordable Housing, WASH. STATE HOUS. FIN. COMM’N
5 (Sept. 2019), https://www.wshfc.org/admin/Reporton15YearTransferDisputes.pdf (“In
recent years, . . . . some private firms have begun to systematically challenge nonprofits’
project-transfer rights and disrupt the normal exit process in hopes of selling the property
at market value. . . . [These firms], dubbed ‘aggregators,’ often use burdensome tactics that
take advantage of legal ambiguities, resource disparities, and economies of scale to
overwhelm their nonprofit counterparties.”).

                                             23
partnership liabilities in order to secure a profitable buyout and cash return.81 In

other instances, that tension has come to a head over the property’s disposition

through the ROFR.82 New limited partners have attacked the exercise of the ROFR

based on the legitimacy of the triggering offer, whether the partnership was a willing

seller, and other mechanical issues.83 The plaintiffs in those cases have also asserted

a general partner breached its fiduciary duties by permitting the exercise of a ROFR




81
  E.g., CED Cap. Hldgs., 2020 WL 6537072, at *5 (“CTCW’s actions in refusing to exit
the Partnership and refusing to consent to a refinance of the Permanent Loan were
orchestrated by Hunt and were designed to drive a cash return, ultimately to Hunt, that was
never intended by the original tax credit investor or anyone originally involved in the
Project.”); Opa-Locka, 2020 WL 4381624, at *5.
82
     E.g., Opa-Locka, 2020 WL 4381624, at *5.
83
   E.g., Centerline Hous. P’ship I, L.P.-Series 2 v. Palm Cmtys. (Centerline I), 2021 WL
2493255, at *2, *4 (C.D. Cal. Apr. 26, 2021) (ruling on a case where an alleged
“aggregator,” Alden Torch Financial, LLC, opposed the exercise of a ROFR on the “belief
that the Offer was not bona fide, and therefore that the right of first refusal was not triggered
either”); Pathway of Pontiac, 2021 WL 391420 (challenging the nonprofit’s exercise of its
ROFR because the triggering offer was solicited and purportedly not a “bona fide offer”),
appeal filed, SunAmerica Hous. Fund 1050 v. Pathway of Pontiac, Inc., No. 21-1243 (6th
Cir.); Riseboro, 482 F. Supp. 3d 31 (challenging the nonprofit’s potential exercise of a
ROFR for lack of a willing seller and a third-party bona fide offer); Opa-Locka, 2020 WL
4381624, at *12 (finding for the nonprofit plaintiff where defendant challenged plaintiff’s
“ability to exercise the ROFR it bargained for” because, according to defendant, the ROFR
“would confer an unjust windfall on” the nonprofit); Homeowner’s Rehab, 99 N.E.3d at
758 (rejecting the limited partners’ contention that the ROFR can only be triggered by a
“bona fide third-party offer” as the common law requires, because “such a limitation would
be inconsistent with the statutory scheme of § 42 and with the specific terms of the
agreements”); SHAG I, 2019 WL 1417299, at *1, *7 (deciding a case where defendant
challenged plaintiff’s ROFR exercise for an alleged lack of a “bona fide and enforceable
offer”).

                                               24
or otherwise thwarting the goals of a new limited partner.84 This matter is one of

several such cases.85 DLE’s counsel and witnesses here appear in many of those

cases.86

         By 2015, the Property’s Credit Period had ended and the Investor Limited

Partners had captured all of the Property’s tax credits.87 Thereafter, between 2015

and 2020, the Fund’s original investors exited DLE, and Hunt Capital Partners




84
   E.g., Centerline Hous. P’ship v. Palm Cmtys. (Centerline II), 2022 WL 247951, at *7–8
(C.D. Cal. Jan. 12, 2022) (alleging the general partner’s trigger and exercise of the ROFR
breached its fiduciary duties to the limited partners), appeal filed Centerline Hous. P’ship
I, L.P.-Series 2 v. Palm Cmtys., No. 22-55367 (9th Cir.); SHAG I, 2019 WL 687837, at *8
(denying the limited partner’s motion for summary judgment on defendant’s breach of
fiduciary duty counterclaim against the nonprofit plaintiff and general partners for the
nonprofit’s attempt to exercise its ROFR for failure demonstrate breach or injury).
85
     CED Cap. Hldgs., 2020 WL 6537072, at *10 (collecting cases).
86
  E.g., id. at *3 (considering a suit brought by a limited partner controlled by Hunt Capital
Partners, and noting, “Mr. Kagey is Hunt’s Chief Financial Officer and he provided
testimony at the aforementioned bench trial, testimony that was evasive and often by the
Court to be not credible” with respect to Kagey’s testimony about a purported purchase
price “analysis” used in an attempt to “achieve a higher purchase price under the Purchase
Option”); Senior Hous. Assistance Gp. v. AMTAX Hldgs. 260, LLC (SHAG II), 2019 WL
1417299, at *1 (W.D. Wash. Mar. 29, 2019) (finding Ryan Trane “generally credible”
where the limited partner challenged the general partner’s ROFR exercise for LIHTC
properties). Kagey and Trane testified in this matter. Kagey Tr. 468–98; Trane Tr. 498–
555. DLE’s forwarding counsel here represents limited partner defendants or appellants in
SunAmerica Housing Fund 1050 v. Pathway of Pontiac, Inc., 2021 WL 391420 (E.D.
Mich. Feb. 4, 2021), (currently on appeal before the United States Court of Appeals for the
Sixth Circuit, No. 21-1243 (6th Cir.)), AMTAX Holdings 227, LLC v. Tenants’
Development II Corp., 15 F.4th 551 (1st Cir. 2021), and Riseboro Community Partnership
Inc. v. SunAmerica Housing Fund 682, 482 F.Supp.3d 31 (E.D.N.Y. 2020).
87
     PTO ¶ 41; Trane Tr. 522; Macari Tr. 13, 33, 87.

                                             25
(“Hunt”) purchased DLE’s interest and the right to manage DLE.88 When Hunt

became DLE’s owner and manager, it stepped into the expectation that material tax

benefits from the Property would end, and the ROFR would be exercised around the

end of the Compliance Period.              Indeed, the Compliance Period ended

December 31, 2020, and DLE received all of its projected tax benefits from the

Property.89 By then, the Fund retained an interest in only two of the original five

Intermediate Entities—Property LP and Hudson Country Meadow LLC, which held

Property Partnership Interests in Country Meadow Residences, L.C.90

       But DLE seeks more, and has made its desires known at various touchpoints.

In late 2017, First Chicago sought to liquidate its stake in Fund LP before the



88
  At the end of 2015, DLE was sold to a fund in which Bank of America, Merrill Lynch
(“BOA”) was the sole investor and MMA Capital Management was the managing member
(“TC Fund I”). JX023 at DLE_0005055; Macari Tr. 16; Chiusano Tr. 388–89; Kagey Tr.
483–84. In late 2017, Hunt Companies acquired MMA Capital Management’s entire
LIHTC management portfolio and became managing agent of DLE. Chiusano Tr. 388–89.
About a year later, Hunt Companies transferred that responsibility to its affiliate, Hunt.
Chiusano Tr. 388. In 2020, one or more Hunt affiliates purchased BOA’s entire interest in
DLE. Kagey Tr. 483–84; Trane Tr. 522–23. They were obligated to do so, including DLE,
pursuant to a “fair market value put.” Kagey Tr. 484; Trane Tr. 522–23.
89
  PTO ¶¶ 40–41; Trane Tr. 522; JX015 (“Last year of compliance period: . . . Kates Trace
2020”); Macari Tr. 32.
90
   Compare Macari Tr. 50, with First Amendment at HUDSON00018158. Between
December 2007 and December 2017, the Fund sold or disposed of its interest in Hudson
Channel Island LLC (Steadfast Channel Island, L.P.) and Hudson/Overton LLC (Overton
Square, L.P.). Compare Macari Tr. 20, and JX030 at HUDSON00005166, with First
Amendment at HUDSON00018158. Between December 2017 and August 2020, the Fund
sold or disposed of its interest in Hudson/Tidwell LLC (Fountains at Tidwell, Ltd.). Macari
Tr. 20.

                                            26
Compliance Period ended in December 2019.91 DLE’s consent was required under

the Fund LPA, and Hunt was at DLE’s helm.92 Fund GP explained the availability

of the ROFR meant First Chicago’s partnership interest had “no economic value.”93

At the time, DLE’s asset manager contended that despite the ROFR, “there [wa]s

the possibility that some value could flow to the Fund upon a disposition event,”

because, he claimed, a designated nonprofit might be unable or unwilling to exercise

the ROFR.94 At trial, DLE’s asset manager conceded that in almost a decade in the

LIHTC industry, he has never seen that happen.95 Eventually, in December 2017, a

subsidiary of the Syndicator, called HHC Investments LLC purchased First

Chicago’s interest in Fund LP.96

        As the end of the Property’s Compliance Period grew near, DLE began

agitating for a way to avoid the ROFR and force either a sale of the Property or a



91
    JX025 at HUDSON00000467; JX026 at HUDSON00000474; JX030 at
HUDSON00005166; Macari Tr. 30–32 (explaining the projected end of the Compliance
Period was December 31, 2019).
92
    Fund LPA § 6.3A(xiii); First Amendment at HUDSON00018163 (defining
“Supermajority Consent”); JX026 at HUDSON00000474 (“The sale of [First Chicago]’s
interest requires the consent of [DLE] as the Fund owns other investments.”).
93
     JX025 at HUDSON00000467.
94
     JX028 at DLE_0000507.
95
   Chiusano Tr. 394–98 (testifying that he had no experience with a “property being sold
for fair market value, despite the Section 42 ROFR” from what he could “recall”). This
refreshing moment of candor stood out in Chiusano’s testimony.
96
 See Macari Tr. 20; JX031 at DLE_0005509; PTO ¶ 14. Whether DLE consented to First
Chicago’s sale is not part of the record and not part of the dispute before this Court.

                                          27
Developer buyout of DLE’s stake at “fair market value.”97 Over the course of 2019

and 2020, the Developer made three offers to purchase the Fund’s interest in the

Property Partnership.98 Fund GP brought all three offers to DLE.99 Fund GP

repeatedly advised that the ROFR meant the Fund was unlikely to see any value

from the Property, and so DLE’s interest was of minimal value.100 The third offer



97
   See, e.g., JX062 at DLE_0002407 (“Year 16 – Force Sale Rights / Execution of the
Qualified Contract provision. . . . An ideal, but highly unlikely, outcome would be to stay
in the deal until year 16 hoping that the SLP forces a Compliance Termination Sale. The
property is comprised of 108 units in Newport News, VA. Theoretically, there could be
value in a [qualified contract] sale, but getting that outcome given the [ROFR] rights in the
near terms seems unlikely.”); JX075 at DLE_0002601 (describing a process by which
“Hudson [could] exercise its rights and be able to sell the property at the fair market
value”); JX096 (“I think that $500k for our interest is reasonable based on the attached
given the ROFR on [the Property], which implies $350k for the [Property] interest. A
realistic full FMV LP value for [the Property] is about $2M. An alternative approach would
be to go out at about $800k for [DLE’s] fund LP interest, which would imply about $1M
for the [Property] interest (midpoint of full FMV LP value). My gut tells me to start at the
$800k. [Macari] is going to balk at it regardless.”).
98
   Macari Tr. 33–34; JX042 at DLE_0002254 (“We have received an inquiry from the
sponsor of [the Property] about purchasing the Fund’s interests in [the Property].”); JX052
at HUDSON00000262 (“I am proposing to acquire all of Hudson’s partnership
interests . . . .”); JX090 at HUDSON00016317 (“The sponsor has asked about purchasing
the Fund’s interests for a price of about $71,000.”); JX135 at HUDSON00017092
(describing the repeated buyout offers); JX142 (“After careful consideration, [the
Developer] ha[s] offered to purchase the limited partnership interests for $200,000.”).
99
     Macari Tr. 33–38.
100
   JX042 at DLE_0002254 (“[T]he sponsor has a ROFR; hence, Fund XXI unlikely to see
any economic value . . . .”); JX053 (“The sponsor has reached out again regarding the
notion of buying back the interests. Given the ROFR and a positive capital account, in
theory they could be entitled to repurchase for -0-.”); JX078 at HUDSON00016266 (“Note:
the sponsor has a ROFR which would result in zero proceeds with the purchase of the
property.” (emphasis omitted)); JX090 at HUDSON00016317 (“The Fund’s capital
account is -0- . . . . Hence, any exercise of the ROFR would result in a sale of the asset for
-0- . . . .”).

                                             28
would have bypassed the Fund LPA’s disposition waterfall and fee structure, and

allocating 100% of the proceeds to DLE even though it owned fewer than 50% of

the Fund’s interests.101 In other words, that buyout would have paid only DLE and

not Fund GP or Fund LP.

       DLE rebuffed each of the Developer’s buyout offers as too low.102 Again,

DLE’s asset manager represented that DLE or Hunt had been involved with other

projects where a fund received value despite similar ROFR language; again, at trial,

he admitted he has never actually seen a fair market value sale despite a Section 42

ROFR.103 As to the third offer in particular, DLE responded to Fund GP with a

broker opinion of value (the “BOV”) from “September 2020 that shows a midpoint




101
    JX142 (“After careful consideration, [the Developer] ha[s] offered to purchase the
limited partnership interests for $200,000. As you know, you would ordinarily be entitled
to only a portion of this amount per the upper tier waterfall (i.e., [DLE’s] ownership is less
than 50%, a Disposition Fee would be due, etc.). I’ve attached, a spreadsheet that estimates
the amount that might ordinarily be distributed: $1,716.”); Macari Tr. 36–38; Fund LPA
§ 6.8E.
102
   JX053 (“[I]t will be difficult for us to prioritize this transaction this year if we are not
receiving any economic benefit.”); JX100 at DLE_0004113 (countering the Developer’s
second offer with a buyout proposal for $800,000); JX147 (declining the Developer’s third
offer as undervaluing the property); JX152 (“[H]ad a call and [DLE] did not find [the
Developer’s] offer acceptable, nor were they willing to counter.”).
103
   Compare JX044 (“We discussed this deal back in December 2017 (see attached email)
and were not able to approve the transaction (which allocated essentially no value to the
Fund interest) given that we have been involved with transactions with similar ROFR
language in the past in which the Fund received some value upon a disposition event.”),
with Chiusano Tr. 394–98.

                                              29
property value of $9.65M ($89k/unit). This property value results in approximately

$2.0M to [DLE] (and additional proceeds if the high value is achieved).”104

         In 2020, Property GP sought Property SLP’s consent to refinance.105 Investor

Limited Partner Consent was needed to support Property SLP’s consent, and Fund

GP (which is, as a reminder, under the Syndicator’s common ownership with

Property SLP) conveyed Property GP’s proposal to DLE.106 DLE rejected Property

GP’s refinancing proposal and instead proposed the Syndicator purchase DLE’s

Fund interests for $787,000.107 This figure purportedly represented DLE’s share

under the Fund’s waterfall based on DLE’s estimated property values of the Property

and the other remaining Fund investment, Country Meadow.108                       When the


104
      JX147; JX146 at DLE_0002038; JX150; JX027.
105
      JX086 at HUDSON00016323; JX135 at HUDSON00017092.
106
   Fund LP’s consent alone would have sufficed. Property LPA § 8.02(b)(vi) (“The
[Property GP] shall not, without the Consent of the Special Limited Partner, have any
authority to: . . . (vi) following Final Closing, refinance the Mortgage Loan”); id. at Art. II
(defining “Final Closing” and “Mortgage Loan”); Fund LPA §§ 6.3B(x), 6.9A, 12.2; First
Amendment at HUDSON00018162; First Amendment at HUDSON00018167–69 (adding
6.3B to the Initial Fund LPA); see also supra note 49 and accompanying text.
107
   JX108 at DLE_0004126 (“Hudson has no interest in buying us out for $787k and they
don’t want to counter. . . . There is no incentive for us to approve [the refinance].”); id.at
DLE_0004126 (“Agree no reason to approve the refi unless they want to use the proceeds
to buy us out.”).
       DLE objected to the admissibility of JX108 in a footnote in its post-trial answering
brief. D.I. 188 at 31 n.10. DLE failed to object to JX108 on the Joint Exhibit List. D.I.
169 at 6. DLE’s objection to JX108 is waived. D.I. 163 at 39; Trial Tr. 89.
  JX104 at HUDSON00013378 (“Hudson XXVIII: Acacia Meadows – No proceeds to
108

LP[.] Hudson XXI: Kate’s Trace – Estimated Property value of $7.4M applied to the
waterfall results in $2.0M+ to the ILP[.] Country Meadow[] – Greystone BOV of $7.38M
                                              30
Syndicator declined, DLE stated there was “no reason to approve the refi unless they

want to use the proceeds to buy us out.”109 The Developer accused DLE of “using

[Property SLP’s] consent right to alter other terms and conditions of the Partnership

Agreement and demand financial benefits they are not due.”110

         DLE’s course of conduct from 2019 through 2021—around the end of the

Compliance Period—resembles the actions taken by other post-Credit Period limited

partners in LIHTC projects.111

                D.    The Disposition

         With the Compliance Period complete, the Property could be transferred to a

nonprofit through the ROFR. In November 2020, Property GP endeavored to solicit

a purchase offer from a nonprofit, NHT Communities (“NHT”), with the aim of

triggering the statutory ROFR.112 This plan was executed in spring 2021.113


applied to the waterfall results in about $750k to the ILP. Fund XXI Waterfall: Kate’s
Trace: $1M (discount to FMV)[;] Country Meadow[]: $750k[;] Assets less liabilities
(including dispo fees): ($110k)[;] Total Cash Available: $1.64M[.] 97% to LP:
$1.59M[.] 49.49% to TC Fund I: $787k ”(formatting altered)). The Country Meadow
compliance period ended in 2019. JX015.
109
      JX108 at DLE_0004126.
110
      JX135 at HUDSON00017094–95.
111
      See supra notes 79–85, and accompanying text.
112
   White Tr. 427–28. Such solicited offers appear to be part of the LIHTC playbook for
partnership general partners and nonprofits, and whether they can validly trigger the
ROFRS is a question underlying many post-Credit Period investors’ claims challenging
the exercise of the ROFRs. See, e.g., Pathway of Pontiac, 2021 WL 391420; Homeowner’s
Rehab, 99 N.E.3d 744.
113
      JX168 at HUDSON00008101–02.

                                            31
         On April 7, Property GP designated Lee Gardens Housing Corporation (“Lee

Gardens”) as the ROFR designee (the “Designated Nonprofit”) under Property LPA

Section 8.02(e).114 Lee Gardens is a subsidiary of the Developer, and therefore an

affiliate of Property GP.115 Property GP and the Designated Nonprofit entered into

a ROFR agreement dated April 7 (the “ROFR Agreement”).116 By letter dated

April 8, NHT offered to purchase the Property.117        Property GP informed the

Designated Nonprofit of NHT’s offer in a letter dated April 9.118 In a separate letter

dated April 9, the Designated Nonprofit notified Property GP and NHT of its intent

to exercise its ROFR and purchase the Property.119 Property GP was willing to sell

the Property.120

         Property GP conveyed the Property to the Designated Nonprofit by a deed

that was dated April 9, but signed April 7 (the “Disposition”).121 The Designated




114
      Id. at HUDSON00008086–87.
115
      PTO ¶ 34; Macari Tr. 12, 90–91.
116
      JX168 at HUDSON00008089–95.
117
      Id. at HUDSON00008101–02.
118
      Id. at HUDSON00008099.
119
      Id. at HUDSON00008103.
120
      Id. at HUDSON00008086; Webdale Tr. 439–40.
  Compare JX215 at HUDSON00018762 (“This DEED is made as of the 9th day of April,
121

2021 . . . .”), with id. at HUDSON00018765 (“GIVEN under my hand and seal on April 7,
2021.”).

                                         32
Nonprofit paid the statutorily predetermined purchase price of $4,197,015.09.122

Property GP did not seek consent from Fund GP, Fund LP, Property LP, or Property

SLP in connection with the Disposition.123

         At the close of business on Friday, April 9, Property GP’s counsel emailed

Fund GP attaching a notice (the “Disposition Notice”) that Property GP had

transferred the Property to the Designated Nonprofit that day.124 This surprised Fund

GP.125

                E.    Fund GP Investigates The Disposition And Seeks Advice
                      From Counsel.

         In response to the Disposition Notice, on or about April 12, Fund GP retained

Holland & Knight LLP, which Fund GP considered “expert in the low-income

housing tax credit business.”126 Fund GP gave Holland & Knight the Disposition

Notice, its internal notes regarding the Disposition Notice, and the Property LPA.127



122
    JX168 at HUDSON000008096; Property LPA § 8.02(c) (describing the “Purchase
Price”) (citing 26 U.S.C. § 42(i)(7)); JX168 at HUDSON000008089 (defining “Refusal
Right Purchase Price” as debt plus taxes); id. at HUDSON000008096 (showing a chart of
components that make up the purchase price); Hickey Tr. 236 (“[T]he purchase price was
actually a little bit higher than the minimum purchase price required under Section 42(i)(7),
because the purchase price required, in addition, amounts owed to the limited partners at
that time. So it was in addition to the minimum that the code requires.”).
123
      Macari Tr. 85–86, 150; PTO ¶¶ 52–54.
124
      JX168.
125
      Macari Tr. 56–57, 137.
126
      JX181; Macari Tr. 60–61.
127
      Macari Tr. 63–64; JX177.

                                             33
It asked Holland & Knight to review the Property LPA, “in particular, language

around right of first refusal,” to determine whether the Developer’s affiliates were

“entitled to do what they did, and if not, . . . to advise [Fund GP] as to what steps [it]

should or should not take.”128

         Holland & Knight completed a memorandum dated April 20 with its advice

to the Fund (the “Holland & Knight Memorandum”).129 Fund GP forwarded the

Holland & Knight Memorandum to DLE.130 Based on its interpretation of the

Property LPA, Holland & Knight concluded: (i) “it appears that [Property GP] acted

within the scope of authority granted to it under the [Property LPA] by designating

[the Designated Nonprofit] as having a right of first refusal and subsequently causing

the [Property] Partnership to enter into the ROFR [Agreement] with [the Designated

Nonprofit[;]” (ii) though “[o]ne could argue that having received the NHT Offer,

[Property GP] had no authority” to dispose of the Property without Property SLP’s



128
     Macari Tr. 59–60 (“[W]e wanted [Holland & Knight] to review the [Property]
partnership agreement, in particular, language around right of first refusal. Again, the
initial thoughts were, was [the Developer] entitled to do what they did, and if not, you
know, to advise us as to what steps we should or should not take.”); id. 60 (“I wanted to
make sure [Holland & Knight] parsed through the [Property LPA] very, very carefully so
that we had a thorough understanding of what had happened, was [the Developer] entitled
to do what they did, and what steps we should take going forward.”); id. 63 (“I wanted
[Holland & Knight] to, you know, look at everything they thought they should look at and
consider to give us some advice, but, specifically, to examine, was [the Developer] entitled
to do what they did.”).
129
      Holland & Knight Memorandum; PTO ¶ 58.
130
      PTO ¶ 58.

                                            34
Consent “as described in Section 8.02(b)(i) . . . . this interpretation would, as a

practical matter, render Section 8.02(e) of the [Property LPA] virtually

meaningless[;]” and (iii) while “an argument exists that Consent of the Special

Limited Partner should have been obtained prior to the disposition,” “it appears

unlikely that a court would conclude that the intent of the parties was to subject the

consummation of a sale pursuant to the ROFR to the Consent of the Special Limited

Partner.”131 It went on to state even if a court were to accept the counterargument,

“it is difficult to see how the [Property Partnership] limited partners were

damaged.”132 Holland & Knight ultimately advised, “[b]ased on our review of the

information provided, we do not recommend challenging the authority of [Property

GP] to consummate the transfer of the [Property].”133             The Fund only had

approximately $200,000 in cash reserves.134 Fund GP “fundamentally agreed with

[Holland & Knight’s] advice that [its] ability to recover damages or any value was

minimal. So, you know, why spend $200,000? And in addition to the $200,000



131
      Holland & Knight Memorandum at HUDSON00000230.
132
      Id.
133
      Id.
134
    Macari Tr. 71 (“The Fund’s resources at the time I think were about net
$200,000. . . . The Fund itself I don’t believe would have had the resources to pursue the
claim.”); Trane Tr. 541 (“Q. Yeah, at your deposition, you were not able to say how the
Fund would have paid for that litigation cost; correct? A. So what I remember from my –
what I remember from my deposition was that I said there was some cash on hand, a couple
hundred – a couple hundred thousand . . . .”).

                                           35
there still remained an asset to be managed [the indirect interest in Country

Meadow], so there would be additional costs at the Fund level as well.”135

                F.    DLE Demands Fund GP Reverse Or Prevent The
                      Disposition; Fund GP Refuses; And DLE Attempts To
                      Remove Fund GP As The Fund’s General Partner.

         DLE sent a letter dated April 27 to Fund GP in response to the Holland &

Knight Memorandum, demanding Fund GP “confirm” the Disposition; “confirm”

the Designated Nonprofit was a “qualified nonprofit organization for the purposes

of Section 42(i)(7)”; respond to the Disposition Notice; and “outline, with

specificity, how [Fund GP] intend[s] to regain control of the [Property]” to the extent

it was transferred, or “prevent the transfer” to the extent it was not.136 At this point,

DLE had already hired counsel and confirmed the Disposition on its own.137 Fund

GP responded with a letter dated May 3.138 In reply, DLE sent Fund GP a Notice of




135
      Macari Tr. 71–72.
136
      JX208 at HUDSON00008588–90; PTO ¶ 59.
137
    PTO ¶ 57 (“Shortly after receiving the Disposition Notice, DLE retained outside
counsel.”); Trane Tr. 530 (“Q: After you received the property disposition notice back in
April 2021, DLE had retained counsel almost immediately; correct? A: Yes, I don’t
remember the exact timing, but I think it was -- it was shortly -- shortly after receiving the
notice. Q: And DLE’s counsel confirmed within a few days of receiving the disposition
notice that the transfer of title had actually occurred; correct? A: That’s my recollection.”);
JX201 (emailing with Nixon Peabody on April 19, 2021).
138
      JX213; PTO ¶ 59.

                                              36
Default dated May 10 (the “Default Notice”) in an effort to remove Fund GP as

general partner under Fund LPA Section 7.2A.139

         Section 7.2A defines the procedures by and “Causes” for which the Fund’s

limited partners can remove Fund GP.140 It provides:

         [DLE] shall, by a written Notification, have the right at any time to
         remove the General Partner, effective immediately upon notice to the
         General Partner, for any of the reasons described in (i) through (viii) of
         this Section 7.2A (each constituting “Cause”), provided that in each
         case Notification of the alleged existence of Cause shall first be given
         to the General Partner, describing the basis for such allegation with
         particularity, and the General Partner shall be given 30 days to cure
         such alleged Cause (or such shorter period as is necessary to protect the
         essential interests of the Fund as determined by [DLE]);

         ...




139
      JX218; PTO ¶¶ 60–61.
140
      Fund LPA § 7.2A.

                                            37
         (ii) Any breach of fiduciary duty in the performance of its duties and
         obligations as General Partner under this Agreement, or any act outside
         the scope of the duties and obligations as General Partner pursuant to
         this Agreement that has a material adverse effect on the Fund, or any
         action or inaction by the General Partner, or any of its related entities,
         that would qualify as an event of removal or withdrawal with respect to
         such General Partner under the Act;

         (iii) Failure by the General Partner in any respect to comply with its
         representations or warranties, which failure has a material adverse
         effect on the Fund, or violation by the General Partner in any material
         respect of any other provision of this Agreement, of any agreement
         between the General Partner and the Investor Limited Partner or of the
         Act[.]141

DLE alleged Cause under Sections 7.2A(ii) and (iii) by claiming Fund GP breached

its fiduciary and contractual duties, “including, without limitation, Sections 6.3 and

6.4.”142 DLE claimed Fund GP breached its fiduciary duties and Fund LPA Sections

6.3 and 6.4 by: failing to obtain “Supermajority Consent of the Investor Limited

Partners” before it purportedly “g[a]ve the consent of the Fund or an Intermediate

Entity, in its capacity as a partner of the [Property] Partnership, to the sale of the

[Property]”; “fail[ing] to protect [DLE]’s Interests in the Fund”; and “failing to

protect the Fund’s interests and investment in the [Property] Partnership.”143

According to DLE, “[t]he Property Disposition has caused significant damages to


141
   Id. §§ 7.2A(ii)–(iii); id. at Art. I (“‘Act’ means the Delaware Uniform Revised Limited
Partnership Act as in effect in the State of Delaware and as amended from time to time and
any successor to such statute.”).
142
      JX218 at HUDSON00008228.
143
      Id. at HUDSON00008228.

                                            38
the Investor Limited Partners and the failure to both timely investigate and contest

such Property Disposition by the General Partner is a breach of the General Partner’s

fiduciary duty.”144 With the Default Notice, DLE purported to remove Fund GP as

the Fund’s general partner pursuant to Fund LPA Section 7.2A if Fund GP did not

“cure” the alleged defaults within ten days.145

            Fund GP responded May 14, rejecting the Default Notice as invalid.146

                  G.    Litigation Ensues.

            On June 1, Plaintiffs filed suit in this Court seeking declaratory judgments

pursuant to 6 Del. C. § 17–110, 6 Del. C. § 17–111, and 10 Del. C. § 6501 that: (a)

the Default Notice is invalid because it fails to provide sufficient particularity and

time to cure; (b) the Default Notice was invalid under the terms of the Fund LPA;

(c) DLE lacks Cause to remove Fund GP; and (d) Fund GP has the right to continue

to be general partner of the Fund.147 On June 18, DLE filed its answer and

counterclaims.148 DLE brought two counts seeking declarations pursuant to 6 Del.

C. § 17–110, 6 Del. C. § 17–111, and 10 Del. C. § 6501 that: (a) Fund GP breached

its fiduciary and contractual duties; (b) the Default Notice is valid; (c) DLE may



144
      Id.
145
      Id. at HUDSON00008228–29.
146
      JX220.
147
      Compl. ¶¶ 117–29.
148
      See generally Countercl.

                                             39
validly remove Fund GP as general partner of the Fund; (d) Fund GP is no longer

general partner of the Fund; and (e) Fund GP should ensure that Fund LP cooperates

with DLE in appointing a successor general partner.149 DLE also brought a direct

claim for breach of fiduciary duty, a derivative claim for breach of fiduciary duty,

and a direct claim for breach of contract.150

         I held trial November 3 and 4 with nine witnesses and 274 joint exhibits.151

The parties submitted post-trial briefing and I held post-trial argument on January 6,

2022.152 On January 11, I sent a letter indicating that trial showed that DLE never

validly removed Fund GP as general partner of the fund, and that Fund GP is not

liable for breach of fiduciary duty or breach of contract.153 That letter promised a

post-trial opinion setting forth more detailed findings of fact and conclusions of law;

this is that opinion.

         II.      ANALYSIS

         Limited partnerships are creatures of both statute and contract.154      The

Delaware Revised Uniform Limited Partnership Act (“DRULPA”) rests on the


149
      Id. ¶¶ 79–116.
150
      Id. ¶¶ 117–35.
151
      D.I. 176; D.I. 179; D.I. 180.
152
      D.I. 188; D.I. 189; D.I. 194; D.I. 195.
153
      D.I. 193.
154
  See, e.g., Cantor Fitzgerald, L.P. v. Cantor, 2001 WL 1456494, at *5 (Del. Ch.
Nov. 5, 2001) (“A limited partnership is a creature of both statute and contract.”).

                                                40
fundamental principle of freedom of contract.155 As an enabling statute, DRULPA

provides default provisions subject to modification by limited partnership

agreements.156 DRULPA contains relatively few mandates, and it explicitly assures

that contractual arrangements will be given effect to the fullest permissible extent.157

Although DRULPA provides default and gap-filling provisions,158 the limited

partnership agreement serves as the primary source of rules governing the “affairs

of a limited partnership and the conduct of its business.”159 “Thus, the provisions of

the partnership agreement define the rights and responsibilities of those who are

parties to the agreement and are afforded significant deference by the Courts.”160


155
      See 6 Del. C. § 17–1101(c).
156
   MARTIN I. LUBAROFF, PAUL M. ALTMAN, SRINIVAS M. RAJU & JOSHUA J. NOVAK,
DELAWARE LIMITED PARTNERSHIPS § 1.02 at 1-3 (Supp. 2022) [hereinafter “DELAWARE
LIMITED PARTNERSHIPS”] (“[DRULPA]’s basic approach is to permit partners to have the
broadest possible discretion in drafting their partnership agreements and to furnish answers
only in situations where the partners have not expressly made provision in their partnership
agreement.”).
157
   6 Del. C. § 17–1101(c) (“It is the policy of this chapter to give maximum effect to the
principle of freedom of contract and to the enforceability of partnership agreements.”).
158
    See Achaian, Inc. v. Leemon Fam. LLC, 25 A.3d 800, 803 n.10 (Del. Ch. 2011) (“Like
the LLC Act, the LP Act is an enabling statute whose default rules are designed to fill gaps
in the limited partnership agreement.” (citing DELAWARE LIMITED PARTNERSHIPS § 1.02
at 1–3)); Cantor Fitzgerald, 2001 WL 1456494, at *5 (“The operative document is the
limited partnership agreement and the statute merely provides the ‘fall-back’ or default
provisions where the partnership agreement is silent.”).
159
    6 Del. C. § 17–101(14); El Paso Pipeline GP Co., L.L.C. v. Brinckerhoff (El Paso
Pipeline), 152 A.3d 1248, 1260 (Del. 2016) (“The partnership agreement sets forth the
rights and duties owed by the partners.”).
160
      Cantor Fitzgerald, 2001 WL 1456494, at *5.

                                            41
Delaware’s limited partnership law is “contractarian,”161 and fundamentally regards

and enforces the limited partnership agreement as a contract.162 Our courts construe

such agreements as any other contract, by effectuating the parties’ intent based on

the parties’ words and the plain meaning of those words.163

         At trial, the parties have the burden of proving their respective claims by a

preponderance of the evidence.164 “Proof by a preponderance of the evidence means

proof that something is more likely than not.”165 This “means that certain evidence,

when compared to the evidence opposed to it, has the more convincing force and

makes you believe that something is more likely true than not. By implication, the




161
   ESG Cap. P’rs II, LP v. Passport Special Opportunities Master Fund, LP, 2015 WL
9060982, at *9 (Del. Ch. Dec. 16, 2015).
162
      Norton v. K-Sea Transp. P’rs L.P., 67 A.3d 354, 360 (Del. 2013).
163
    Id.; see also Sonet v. Timber Co., L.P., 722 A.2d 319, 323 (Del. Ch. 1998) (“Once
authorized by law, the decision to adopt and operate under a particular limited liability
structure is the sort of fundamental business decision that courts routinely protect. As a
general matter, courts should be, and are, reluctant to import jurisprudence from one area
of the law—which is loaded with notions of efficiency and fairness that are well developed
for that particular context—into a separate area of the law—where many procedural and
substantive aspects present in other legal regimes are only optional defaults. Mindful of
that caution, I decline to rely unnecessarily on this Court’s traditional analyses involving
fiduciary duties in the corporate context.”).
164
      Martin v. Med-Dev Corp., 2015 WL 6472597, at *10 (Del. Ch. Oct. 27, 2015).
165
  Id. (internal quotation marks omitted) (quoting Agilent Techs., Inc. v. Kirkland, 2010
WL 610725, at *13 (Del. Ch. Feb. 18, 2010)).

                                             42
preponderance of the evidence standard also means that if the evidence is in

equipoise” the party carrying the burden will lose.166

         DLE claims Fund GP breached its fiduciary and contractual duties by failing

to stop, cure, rescind, or unwind the Disposition, which DLE contends was improper

for a host of reasons.167 This decision concludes that Fund GP did not have a

fiduciary or contractual duty to sue either Property GP or the Designated Nonprofit

regarding the ROFR exercise and Disposition, or to otherwise block the Disposition,

regardless of the ROFR’s propriety.

         Second, DLE claims the Disposition occurred in violation of DLE’s direct and

indirect consent rights. DLE argues the Property LPA required Property GP to seek

Property SLP’s consent to the Disposition, and that in turn, the Fund LPA required

DLE to join in Property SLP’s consent. DLE claims Fund GP breached a Fund LPA

contractual obligation to ensure Property GP’s compliance with the Property LPA,

as well as Fund GP’s own obligations under the Fund LPA. I find DLE has failed

to demonstrate Fund GP breached its contractual duties in this regard, to the extent

it owed them at all. DLE did not have Cause to remove Fund GP as general partner

for breach of contract.


166
  Id. (internal quotation marks and footnotes omitted) (quoting Agilent Techs., Inc., 2010
WL 610725, at *13, and then quoting OptimisCorp v. Waite, 2015 WL 5147038, at *55
(Del. Ch. Aug. 26, 2015)).
167
      Countercl. ¶¶ 7, 10, 72, 74, 85, 101, 110; D.I. 184 at 30–31.

                                               43
         In the absence of a breach, it follows that DLE did not have Cause to remove

Fund GP as general partner. The Default Notice is invalid under the terms of the

Fund LPA.       Fund GP remains the Fund’s general partner.         Fund GP is also

exculpated for all breaches that do not materially adversely affect the Fund. Because

DLE tried and failed to remove Fund GP as general partner, Fund GP is contractually

entitled to a penalty, damages, and fee shifting. My analysis follows.

               A.    DLE Failed To Either Make A Demand On Fund GP Or
                     Plead Demand Futility.

         As an initial matter, DLE’s derivative claims are dismissed for failure to

comply with demand requirements. Before a limited partner brings a derivative

action, the limited partner “must make a demand on the general partner[] of a limited

partnership who have the authority to bring the action unless such a demand would

be futile.”168 A limited partner seeking to pursue derivative claims on behalf of the

partnership must “set forth with particularity the effort, if any, of the plaintiff to

secure initiation of the action by a general partner or the reasons for not making the

effort.”169




168
      DELAWARE LIMITED PARTNERSHIPS § 10.03 at 10-20.
169
   Fannin v. UMTH Land Dev., L.P., 2020 WL 4384230, at *27 (Del. Ch. July 31, 2020)
(internal quotation marks omitted) (quoting 6 Del. C. § 17–1003), cert. denied, 2020 WL
5198356 (Del. Ch. Aug. 28, 2020), and appeal refused sub nom. Etter v. Fannin, 238 A.3d
193 (Del. 2020); see also Ct. Ch. R. 23.1(a).

                                          44
      DLE failed to do so. While DLE brought Counterclaim Counts I, II, and IV

derivatively, the Counterclaim does not plead demand futility with particularity, and

DLE did not make any demand arguments at trial. In the absence of such a showing,

the derivative claims of Counterclaim Counts I, II, and IV are dismissed.

             B.     DLE Failed To Demonstrate Cause For Removal Under
                    Fund LPA § 7.2A(ii) Because Fund GP Owed Only
                    Enumerated Fiduciary Duties Limited By The Fund LPA
                    And The Fund’s Purpose, And Fund GP Did Not Breach
                    Them.

      I turn to DLE’s direct claims, and begin by considering whether DLE had

Cause to remove Fund GP for breach of fiduciary duty. This analysis starts with a

consideration of the scope of Fund GP’s duties.

      “Delaware’s limited partnership jurisprudence begins with the basic premise

that, unless limited by the partnership agreement, the general partner has the

fiduciary duty to manage the partnership in its interest and in the interests of the

limited partners.”170 Delaware law presumes general partners owe these fiduciary

duties unless they are explicitly and unambiguously disclaimed.171 And Delaware




170
   Sonet, 722 A.2d at 322 (emphasis omitted) (citing Boxer v. Husky Oil Co., 429 A.2d
995, 997 (Del. Ch. 1981)).
171
   Id.; see, e.g., Miller v. Am. Real Est. P’rs, L.P., 2001 WL 1045643, at *8 (Del. Ch.
Sept. 6, 2001); Morris v. Spectra Energy P’rs (DE) GP, LP, 2018 WL 2095241, at *6 (Del.
Ch. May 7, 2018).

                                          45
courts presume general partners act on an informed basis and in the honest belief

that they acted in the best interest of the partnership and the limited partners.172

         The parties conducted this litigation as if Fund GP owed traditional, default,

and unbounded fiduciary duties to the Fund and its limited partners. But as with

every partnership, the general partner’s duties are circumscribed by the partnership’s

purpose. And the Fund LPA expressly limits Fund GP’s duties. Fund GP only owes

a specific fiduciary duty, and is only empowered to act within the scope of the Fund’s

enumerated purpose.173 Fund GP’s decision not to sue over the Disposition falls

outside the purpose of the Fund, Fund GP’s authority, and the Fund LPA’s expressly

enumerated fiduciary duty. It is not, and cannot be, a breach of fiduciary duty.

                     1.      Fund GP Cannot Owe A Fiduciary Duty To Act
                             Inconsistently With The Fund’s Purpose.

         A partnership is fundamentally a creature of agency: the limited partners

appoint the general partner as their agent only for the purpose they all set for the

partnership.174 That appointment is also the source of the general partner’s fiduciary


172
      Zoren v. Genesis Energy, L.P., 836 A.2d 521, 528 (Del. Ch. 2003).
173
    The Court’s duty is to read the Fund LPA as a whole and give effect to the partners’
intentions as set forth therein, regardless of how those parties interpret their contract at
trial. See Salamone v. Gorman, 106 A.3d 354, 368–69 (Del. 2014); E.I. du Pont de
Nemours & Co., Inc. v. Shell Oil Co., 498 A.2d 1108, 1113 (Del. 1985). The Court is also
bound to ensure this decision is consistent with Delaware’s bedrock principles of agency
law. See D.R.E. 202(a) (“Every court in this State must take judicial notice of the . . .
common law . . . of this State.”).
174
   See, e.g., DELAWARE LIMITED PARTNERSHIPS § 1.02 at 1-4 (“[DRULPA] gives partners
virtually unfettered discretion to define contractually their business understanding, and
                                             46
duties: a general partner owes fiduciary duties to the partnership and the limited

partners because it is their agent.175 Because a limited partner links arms with a

general partner for a specific purpose, the general partner only has the authority to

act as the limited partner’s agent in pursuit of that purpose, and so only owes the

limited partner fiduciary duties to act in pursuit of that purpose.                A limited

partnership’s purpose circumscribes the authority, and therefore the duties, of its

general partner.

       The Delaware Uniform Partnership Law makes plain that a partnership’s

purpose delineates a general partnership’s grant of agency authority. It states that

“[e]ach partner is an agent of the partnership for the purpose of its business, purposes

or activities.”176 “[A] partner has authority to bind the partnership only with respect

to acts the partner performs within the ordinary course of the partnership


then, provides assurance that their understanding will be enforced in accordance with the
terms of their partnership agreement.”).
175
   In re El Paso Pipeline P’rs, L.P. Deriv. Litig., 132 A.3d 67, 83 n.5 (Del. Ch. 2015),
rev’d sub nom. on other grounds El Paso Pipeline GP, 152 A.3d 1248; 6 Del. C. § 17–
403(a); 6 Del. C. § 15–301(1); Sonet, 722 A.2d at 322.
176
    6 Del. C. § 15–301(1). So too for general partners: DRULPA Section 17–403(a) states
“[e]xcept as provided in this chapter or in the partnership agreement, a general partner of
a limited partnership has the rights and powers and is subject to the restrictions of a partner
in a partnership that is governed by the Delaware Uniform Partnership Law.” 6 Del.
C. § 17–403(a); Kan. RSA 15 Ltd. P’ship v. SBMS RSA, Inc., 1995 WL 106514, at *2 (Del.
Ch. Mar. 8, 1995) (stating that a limited partnership’s “general partner’s powers are the
same as those of [] partners of a general partnership” (citing 6 Del. C. § 17–403)); see also
Fund LPA § 6.2B (“The General Partner shall, except as otherwise provided in this
Agreement or in [DRULPA], have all the rights and powers and be subject to all the
restrictions of partners in a partnership without limited partners.”).

                                              47
business.”177 “[A]n act of a partner which is not apparently for the carrying on of

the business of the partnership in the usual way does not bind the partnership unless

authorized by the other partners.”178 Because “the general partner’s powers are the

same as those of [] partners of a general partnership . . . , the general partner may not

bind the partnership to a transaction ‘which is not apparently for the carrying on of

the business of the partnership in the usual way . . . .’”179           For contractarian

alternative entities, like limited partnerships, the ultra vires doctrine remains a

meaningful limitation on agent authority.180


177
   Rudnitsky v. Rudnitsky, 2000 WL 1724234, at *5 n.15 (Del. Ch. Nov. 14, 2000) (noting
the Delaware Uniform Partnership Act, Delaware Revised Uniform Partnership Act, and
hornbook law provide agency law is the bedrock of partnership authority and quoting 6
Del. C. § 15–301); accord Miller v. Gilbert, 1979 WL 2709, at *8 (Del. Ch. May 11, 1979)
(“[E]very partner is an agent for the business and the act of every partner for apparently
carrying on in the usual way the business of the partnership binds the partnership.
Conversely, acts which are not for apparently carrying on the business of the partnership
do not bind it.”).
178
   DELAWARE LIMITED PARTNERSHIPS § 4.16 at 4-35 (citing 6 Del. C. § 1509(b) (repealed
by the 1999 Delaware Revised Uniform Partnership Act and reappearing in 6 Del. C. § 15–
301(2))); accord 6 Del. C. § 15–301(2) (“An act of a partner which is not apparently for
carrying on in the ordinary course the partnership’s business, purposes or activities or
business, purposes or activities of the kind carried on by the partnership binds the
partnership only if the act was authorized by the other partners.”).
179
   Kan. RSA 15, 1995 WL 106514, at *2 (emphasis omitted) (citing 6 Del. C. § 17–403
and quoting 6 Del. C. § 1509(b) (repealed by the 1999 Delaware Revised Uniform
Partnership Act and reappearing in 6 Del. C. § 15–301(2)))).
180
  See, e.g., Symbiont.io, Inc. v. Ipreo Hldgs., LLC, 2021 WL 3575709, at *43 & n.25 (Del.
Ch. Aug. 13, 2021) (collecting cases).
      For corporations, “the ultra vires doctrine is largely a relic of the past because the
DGCL retains only three limitations on corporate capacity or power.” Sciabacucchi v.
Salzberg, 2018 WL 6719718, at *19 n.119 (Del. Ch. Dec. 19, 2018), rev’d on other
                                            48
grounds, 227 A.3d 102 (Del. 2020); 8 Del. C. § 124 (“No act of a corporation and no
conveyance or transfer of real or personal property to or by a corporation shall be invalid
by reason of the fact that the corporation was without capacity or power to do such act . . . ,
but such lack of capacity or power may be asserted: [in three enumerated instances].”); Se.
Pa. Transp. Auth. v. Volgenau, 2012 WL 4038509, at *2 (Del. Ch. Aug. 31, 2012)
(“Section 124[] focus[es] on the validity of corporate acts . . . to prevent both corporations
and those contracting with them from avoiding contracts that could be classified as outside
the scope of the corporation’s authorized powers. . . . Section 124 does not bar all
challenges to the acts it covers. It merely provides that certain acts may not be set aside
because they are ultra vires. A corporation’s act, through its directors, may be deemed
valid and effective, but the act may nevertheless constitute a breach of fiduciary duty.”
(alterations and internal quotation marks omitted) (quoting David A. Drexler et al.,
Delaware Corporation Law and Practice, § 11.05 (2011)), aff’d, 91 A.3d 562 (Del. 2014);
Carsanaro v. Bloodhound Techs., Inc., 65 A.3d 618, 648–54 (Del. Ch. 2013) (discussing
the largely outdated concept of “capacity or power” and its relationship to the ultra vires
doctrine within the context of Section 124), abrogated on other grounds by El Paso
Pipeline GP, 152 A.3d at 1264 n.83.
        Thus, where alternative entity fiduciaries can be restrained to pursue only a
governing purpose, corporate fiduciaries draw freedom to pursue the corporation’s long-
term purpose from the business judgment rule. Compare Cincinnati Bell Cellular Sys. Co.
v. Ameritech Mobile Phone Serv. of Cincinnati, Inc., 1996 WL 506906, at *13 (Del. Ch.
Sept. 3, 1996) (holding the general partner’s “responsibility is to manage the Partnership
in accordance with its purpose” and the general partner “is under no fiduciary obligation
to abandon that purpose”), with, e.g., Paramount Commc’ns, Inc. v. Time Inc., 571 A.2d
1140, 1153 (Del. 1989) (“Indeed, in our view, precepts underlying the business judgment
rule militate against a court’s engaging in the process of attempting to appraise and evaluate
the relative merits of a long-term versus a short-term investment goal for shareholders.”),
and id. at 1154 (“Directors are not obliged to abandon a deliberately conceived corporate
plan for a short-term shareholder profit unless there is clearly no basis to sustain the
corporate strategy.”), and Air Prod. & Chems., Inc. v. Airgas, Inc., 16 A.3d 48, 124–25
(Del. Ch. 2011) (“This course of action has been clearly recognized under Delaware law:
‘directors, when acting deliberately, in an informed way, and in the good faith pursuit of
corporate interests, may follow a course designed to achieve long-term value even at the
cost of immediate value maximization.’” (quoting Paramount Commc’ns, Inc. v. Time Inc.,
1989 WL 79880, at *19 (Del. Ch. July 14, 1989))). “A corporation nevertheless retains the
ability to impose limitations on (and create uncertainty about) its capacity or power by
including provisions in its charter that forbid it from entering into particular lines of
business or engaging in particular acts.” Sciabacucchi, 2018 WL 6719718, at *19 n.119.

                                              49
          Because partnerships are creatures of contract, the partnership agreement’s

purpose clause can offer particularized boundaries on the general partner’s

authority.181 “A Delaware limited partnership is permitted to carry on any lawful

business, purpose or activity, whether or not for profit.”182 But a partnership

agreement “[t]ypically . . . has a description of the purposes of the limited

partnership, the powers of the limited partnership and the restrictions on particular

limited partnership activity.”183 The partnership agreement may also specifically

enumerate the rights, powers, and restrictions of the general partner.184 “Thus, in

determining if a particular Delaware limited partnership has the partnership power

to engage in a particular business activity, . . . an analysis must be made of the

partnership agreement of such limited partnership.185 “A purpose clause that places

limits on what an entity can do deprives the entity of the authority to engage in

activities that otherwise would be permissible under default principles of law.”186


181
      See Cincinnati Bell, 1996 WL 506906, at *13.
182
      DELAWARE LIMITED PARTNERSHIPS § 3.11 at 3-33.
183
      Id. at 3-34.
184
      Id. § 4.16 at 4-36 (citing Kan. RSA 15., 1995 WL 106514); 6 Del. C. § 15–301(2).
185
    DELAWARE LIMITED PARTNERSHIPS § 3.11 at 3-34; see also U.S. W., Inc. v. Time
Warner Inc., 1996 WL 307445, at *9 (Del. Ch. June 6, 1996) (stating the Court’s “ultimate
guide” in determining the scope of a party’s rights and obligations “is to attempt to fulfill,
to the extent possible, the reasonable shared expectations of the parties at the time they
contracted”).
186
   Symbiont.io, 2021 WL 3575709, at *43 (“A limited purpose clause can result in a court
holding that the action was invalid.”); CompoSecure, L.L.C. v. CardUX, LLC, 206 A.3d
807, 816–17 (Del. 2018) (holding that when an operating agreement contains plain
                                             50
“The stated purpose of the limited partnership is significant because if the proposed

transaction is itself within the purpose of the partnership th[e]n, of course, the

general partner may lawfully authorize and effectuate the transaction.”187

         The purpose clause is not the only available evidence of the partnership’s

purpose. In addition, “the Court may consider the partnership’s stated purposes, the

precedent set by the partnership’s prior ‘custom or course of dealing’ and ‘the

general custom’ of analogous partnerships.”188            “A sensible interpretation of

precedent is that the purpose clause is of primary importance, but other evidence of

purpose may be helpful as long as the Court is not asked to engage in speculation.”189

         This Court’s jurisprudence offers a few examples of invalidating acts because

they were inconsistent with the partnership’s usual business. “[I]n a case where the

stated purpose of a partnership was to own and operate a building, a contract to

compensate a third party for services in finding investors for a partnership, was not




language indicating that an act is “‘void and of no force or effect whatsoever’—its
application would trump the common law rule” and render equitable defenses
inapplicable); 6 Del. C. § 17–106(b) (“A limited partnership shall possess and may
exercise all the powers and privileges granted by this chapter or by any other law or by its
partnership agreement, together with any powers incidental thereto, including such powers
and privileges as are necessary or convenient to the conduct, promotion or attainment of
the business, purposes or activities of the limited partnership.”).
187
      Kan. RSA 15, 1995 WL 106514, at *2.
188
   Rudnitsky, 2000 WL 1724234, at *6 (citing 59A Am Jur.2d, Partnership § 264 (1987),
and Abt v. Harmony Mill Ltd. P’ship, 1992 WL 380615, at *3 (Del. Ch. Dec. 18, 1992)).
189
      Meyer Nat. Foods LLC v. Duff, 2015 WL 3746283, at *4 (Del. Ch. June 4, 2015).

                                            51
‘carrying on the business of the partnership’ within the meaning of

6 Del. C. § 1509(b).”190 In another example, where the partnership’s purpose was to

own and operate a building, mortgaging that building to procure funds for unrelated

purposes did not fall within the ordinary course of the partnership’s business, and

therefore was invalid.191 And even actions that the partnership agreement facially

contemplates the general partner can pursue are not feasible if they conflict with the

partnership’s purpose.192

         The partnership’s purpose limits the general partner’s authority and therefore

circumscribes its fiduciary duties. “An agent has a duty to take action only within

the scope of the agent’s actual authority.”193 Because a general partner only has the

authority to act in furtherance of the partnership’s purpose, it cannot owe a duty

190
   Rudnitsky, 2000 WL 1724234, at *6 (citing Abt, 1992 WL 380615, at *3). As explained,
6 Del. C. § 1509(b) was repealed by the 1999 Delaware Revised Uniform Partnership Act
and reappears in 6 Del. C. § 15–301(2).
191
      Rudnitsky, 2000 WL 1724234, at *6.
192
    Schwartzberg v. CRITEF Assocs. Ltd. P’ship, 685 A.2d 365, 366, 375–77 (Del. Ch.
1996) (precluding a general partner from exercising information rights in the partnership
agreement where access was sought “to facilitate his attempt to replace the Partnership in
its sole activity,” which purpose was “fundamentally and importantly in conflict with the
interests of the Partnerships and is an improper purpose from the point of view of the
Partnerships”); cf. Nero v. Littleton, 1998 WL 229526, at *4 (Del. Ch. Apr. 30, 1998)
(declining to dismiss petitioner’s claim that “Respondent breached the fiduciary duties he
owed to her by expending partnership assets for purposes unrelated to the Partnership’s
business”).
193
   Restatement (Third) Of Agency § 8.09(1) (Am. L. Inst. 2006); see also id. § 2.02 cmt. e
(“An agent’s actual authority encompasses acts necessary to accomplish the end the
principal has directed that the agent achieve.”); id. § 2.02 cmt. c, illus. 22 (circumscribing
the agent’s duties within the principal’s known “long-term business plan”).

                                             52
inconsistent with that purpose.194 Where a partnership agreement sets forth a

specific purpose for the partnership, and grants the general partner powers in

furtherance of that purpose, the general partner has no authority to take an act

contrary to that purpose, and so failure to take that act cannot be a breach of fiduciary

duty.195

          This Court has held that because a partnership’s purpose limits a general

partner’s fiduciary duties, a failure to take an ultra vires act cannot be a breach of

fiduciary duty. In Cincinnati Bell Cellular Systems Co. v. Ameritech Mobile Phone

Services of Cincinnati, Inc, plaintiff and limited partner Cincinnati Bell Cellular

Systems sued defendant and general partner Ameritech Mobile Phone Services of

Cincinnati alleging the general partner committed gross negligence and breached its

fiduciary duties by failing to sell the partnership.196 The limited partner argued,



194
    Id. § 8.09(1) (“An agent has a duty to take action only within the scope of the agent’s
actual authority.”); id. § 2.02(1) (“An agent has actual authority to take action designated
or implied in the principal’s manifestations to the agent and acts necessary or incidental to
achieving the principal’s objectives, as the agent reasonably understands the principal’s
manifestations and objectives when the agent determines how to act.”); see also Feeley v.
NHAOCG, LLC, 62 A.3d 649, 662 (Del. Ch. 2012) (“For Section 17–1101(d) to say that
fiduciary duties can be restricted or eliminated ‘[t]o the extent that . . . a partner or other
person’ owes fiduciary duties acknowledges these situationally specific possibilities and
recognizes that epistemological questions about the extent to which a partner or other
person owes duties will be answered by the role being played, the relationship to the entity,
and the facts of the case.”).
195
      Cincinnati Bell, 1996 WL 506906, at *13.
196
      Id. at *1.

                                              53
among other things: (1) the purpose of the partnership was to “generate economic

returns”; (2) the general partner owed a duty to sell the partnership to fulfill the

partnership’s purpose; and (3) the general partner breached that purported duty by

failing to sell and not fulfilling the purported purpose.197

          Then-Vice Chancellor Chandler rejected those arguments.198 The parties’

limited partnership agreement stated the partnership’s purpose was “to fund,

establish and provide Cellular Service” in the specified geographic area; the purpose

was not to generate economic returns.199 “The general partner is given broad powers

in furtherance of this purpose—to market, sell and maintain cellular services in the

limited geographic area for which the Partnership is licensed. In a fundamental

sense, selling the Partnership’s business would be contrary to the Partnership’s stated

purpose.”200 Under the partnership agreement, the general partner had no right or

authority to sell the partnership’s assets with anything less than unanimous

consent.201 The Court held:




197
      Id. at *5, *9.
198
      Id. at *7, *9–13.
199
      Id. at *5.
200
      Id. at *10.
201
      Id. at *10–11.

                                           54
            Unless it is not reasonably practicable to carry on the business in
            conformity with its purpose or unless all the partners agreed to a
            dissolution of the business, [the general partner] is under a duty to carry
            out the Partnership’s purpose as expressed in the Partnership
            Agreement. If a partner does not share [the general partner]’s vision of
            the Partnership’s viability in the cellular market, that partner retains the
            right under the Partnership Agreement to cash out its interest in the
            Partnership or to withdraw from the Partnership.202

The Court concluded the general partner’s “responsibility is to manage the

Partnership in accordance with its purpose,” and so the general partner did not have

a “fiduciary obligation to abandon that purpose and sell the business because one

limited partner—Cincinnati Bell—believes it would be in its own strategic business

interest to do so.”203

            Here, the Fund was formed as a limited partnership.204 The Fund LPA

specifies the Fund’s purpose:




202
      Id. at *13.
203
      Id.
204
      PTO ¶ 2; Fund LPA at 2, Recitals.

                                                55
            The purpose and character of the business of the Fund is to offer and
            sell Units and to acquire, hold, sell, dispose of and otherwise deal
            (directly or indirectly through an Intermediate Entity) with Property
            Partnership Interests in Approved Property Partnerships, including all
            activities necessary or incidental to the foregoing.205

“‘Unit’ means a limited partner interest in the Fund representing a Capital

Contribution of $1 million.”206 “Property Partnership Interests” are limited partner

or member interests of the Fund in Property Partnerships, which in turn are “each

formed to own a Property.”207 “‘Property’ means an affordable housing property

constructed, rehabilitated or acquired or to be constructed, rehabilitated or acquired

by a Property Partnership, which property is or is planned to be eligible for Tax

Credits.” 208 And “Tax Credits” are Section 42 tax credits. 209 Applying these nested

definitions, the Fund’s purpose is to sell stakes in, and hold interests in, partnerships

that in turn hold affordable housing properties that are or are planned to be eligible

for Section 42 tax credits.210


205
   Fund LPA § 2.3; see also Fund LPA § 6.3A(xxvi) (“Without the Consent of the Investor
Limited Partners, but subject to Section 6.3.B hereof, [Fund GP] shall not: . . . (xxvi)
change the Fund’s purpose from those set forth in Section 2.3 hereof[.]”); First Amendment
at HUDSON00018167.
206
      Fund LPA at Art. I.
207
      Id.
208
      Id.
209
      Id.
210
   DLE points to the Property Partnership’s purpose as evidence it is entitled to “long-term
appreciation.” E.g., Post-Trial Tr. 101–02; Property LPA § 3.01 (“The [Property]
Partnership has been organized exclusively to acquire the Land and to develop, finance,
construct, own, maintain, operate and sell or otherwise dispose of the [Property], in order
                                             56
         Other evidence supports that the Fund’s purpose was to syndicate the

exchange of capital for tax credits.211 First, the many Fund and Property forecasts

reflect the partners’ reasonable shared expectations for the partnership: (1) the

Credit Period for Kate’s Trace would end around 2015; (2) the Compliance Period

for Kate’s Trace would end around 2020; (3) the Section 42 ROFR went into effect

“beginning in 2020 at the minimum purchase price”; (4) the Section 42 ROFR would

result in a disposition of the Property; and (5) the Section 42 ROFR “results in no

value” to Property LP, the Fund, or the Fund’s partners.212 In 2004, the Fund’s

original partners created a forecast for Kate’s Trace Apartments providing for

$5,300,917 in investor contributions, and $7,488,306 in total investor tax benefits,

including credits and losses, with the Compliance Period ending on December 31,




to obtain for the Partners long-term appreciation, cash income, and tax benefits consisting
of Tax Credits and tax losses over the term hereof.”). DLE is not a partner to the Property
Partnership or party to the Property LPA, and therefore, is owed no duties under the
Property LPA. Abt, 1992 WL 380615, at *4 (“Every party whose rights are affected by a
contract is not necessarily a party thereto.”).
211
      Meyer Nat. Foods, 2015 WL 3746283, at *4; Rudnitsky, 2000 WL 1724234, at *6.
212
   JX004 at HUDSON00018773; JX011 at DLE_0005420; JX014 at DLE_0007799–801;
JX058 at DLE_0002308; JX037 at DLE_0004085; JX089 at DLE_0001819; Chiusano Tr.
390, 392–98; 400–01, 405–06, 410–11; Trane Tr. 520; Hickey Tr. 242–43; PTO ¶ 40; Fund
LPA § 3.3A(ii) (“The Investor Limited Partner[s] and the General Partner acknowledge
that such Forecasts will reflect the General Partner’s good faith best estimate, as of the date
thereof, of the future performance of the Fund . . . .”); Macari Tr. 32, 62.

                                              57
2019.213 Net operating income was forecasted to be $342,319 per year,214 and cash

flows were projected to total $1,204,733 in 2020;215 these operations resulted in tax

losses, as intended.216 Income was not included on the “Investor Benefits Schedule,”

which reflects only tax losses and tax credits.217 This forecast is consistent with the

Fund LPA’s pronouncement that the purpose of the partnership was to facilitate the

exchange of investment for tax benefits; income from operating the Property was

not in the black. The forecast ended at the end of the Compliance Period, reflecting

the intended disposition of the Property to a designated nonprofit.218

         As an Investor Limited Partner, DLE’s forecasts, projections, and analyses

reflected these same expectations. In 2008, DLE’s forecast projected tax credits

through 2015, and “Taxable Income/(Loss)” and “Annual After Tax Benefits”

through 2020.219 DLE’s forecast predicted a loss each year from 2008 through 2020,

and zero income in 2007 and 2021 through 2025; the forecast never projected




213
    JX004 at HUDSON00018773, HUDSON00018790–91 (forecasting the tax credits
through 2015).
214
      Id. at HUDSON00018775.
215
      Id. at HUDSON00018780–81.
216
      Id. at HUDSON00018790.
217
      Id. at HUDSON00018791.
218
      Macari Tr. 30, 32, 62; JX014 at DLE_0007799–801; JX015; JX058 at DLE_0002308.
219
      JX011 at DLE_0005420; Trane Tr. 520.

                                             58
positive taxable income.220 In 2016, DLE created an “Upper Tier,” or Fund-level,

forecast reflecting its understanding that Kate’s Trace’s Compliance Period ended

in 2020 and it was subject to a ROFR.221 A 2019 internal “Disposition Analysis”

excerpts annotated text from the Property LPA Sections 8.02(b)–(e), Fund LPA

Section 6.3A, Kate’s Trace Limited Partnership Financial Statements,222 and Code

Section 42(i)(7)(B) evidencing anticipation of a Section 42 disposition under Section

8.02(e).223 And a July 2020 “Weekly Detailed Analysis Discussion” included an

agenda item stating “Kate’s Trace – lower tier GP has ROFR at debt plus taxes,”

which is the Section 42 price.224 DLE’s internal evaluations, including those created

after Hunt assumed its ownership and management, evidence a consistent

understanding and expectation that Kate’s Trace would be sold under the ROFR, and

that no value would flow to DLE after the Compliance Period. This progressive




220
    JX011 at DLE_0005420; Trane Tr. 520–21. This progressive decrease in value is
reflected in the discounted price at which DLE purchased its interests in the Fund.
221
      JX015.
222
   JX066; see also id. (“Each Building of the Project must meet the provisions of [Section
42] regulations during each of 15 consecutive years in order to remain qualified to receive
the [tax] credits. In addition, the Partnership entered into an Extended Use Agreement,
which requires the utilization of the Project pursuant to Section 42 for a minimum of 35
years after the compliance period, even if the Partnership disposes of the Project.”).
223
      Id.
224
      JX087.

                                            59
decrease in value as the ROFR date grew nearer is also reflected in the discounted

price at which DLE purchased its interests in the Fund in 2007.225

         In addition to the Fund LPA’s language and requisite forecasts, evidence at

trial illustrated that Fund GP’s mission was to preserve the Property as affordable

housing under the LIHTC program.226 Fund GP’s representative testified:

         I think it was always the expectation -- again, I think it’s, you know,
         part of the legislative intent, part of the expectation of the partners, it’s
         industry practice, that at the end of the day, these properties with
         nonprofits end up in the hands of the nonprofit who developed the
         property.227

         The Fund’s course of conduct through the end of the Property’s Compliance

Period was consistent with its stated purpose: it exchanged investor dollars for tax

credits, and its original investors exited the Fund once the tax credits were

distributed.228 After the properties’ tax credits were harvested, the Fund’s stake in

the Property Partnerships offered no Section 42 value to investors, so the Fund could

no longer sell million-dollar Units to investors.229 And, fundamentally, the Fund is


225
    Compare JX004 at HUDSON00018773 (showing $4,788,565 of First Chicago’s
projected capital contributions before the end of the Credit Period), with JX011 at
DLE_0005420 (showing a $2,571,381 purchase price in 2007, before the end of the Credit
Period).
226
   Macari Tr. 112; JX040; JX114 at HUDSON00013635 (“[DLE’s] position is as I feared,
an aggregator without consideration of the mission.”).
227
      Macari Tr. 62.
228
      Fund LPA § 2.3.
229
   See JX004 at HUDSON00018773 (showing $4,788,565 of First Chicago’s projected
capital contributions before the end of the Credit Period); JX011 at DLE_0005420
                                              60
a LIHTC partnership: its source of value and reason for formation is to participate

in the LIHTC program, which features the ROFR as a means of extending the

property’s viability as affordable housing beyond the Compliance Period.230

         In sum, the Fund’s purpose was to offer and sell limited partner interests, and

to hold interests in Property Partnerships that in turn hold properties that are or are

planned to be eligible for tax credits. In so many words, the Fund’s purpose was to

syndicate the exchange of capital for tax credits. The Fund’s purpose is to invest in

properties that “[are] or [are] planned to be eligible for Tax Credits”231—not

properties that are no longer eligible for tax credits.




(showing a $2,571,381 purchase price in 2007, before the end of the Credit Period); Trane
Tr. 521 (“Q: And DLE’s interest in Kate’s Trace was priced based off of its being projected
to receive these benefits through 2020; correct? A: Yes, that is correct.”); Macari Tr. 19–
20 (describing how First Chicago sold its interests for “less than $200,000” in 2017, after
the Credit Period).
230
    Opa-Locka, 2020 WL 4381624, at *3 (“But the LIHTC program’s aim of creating and
preserving low-income housing does not end at thirty years. Rather, the LIHTC program
seeks to preserve low-income housing in perpetuity by creating a special role for
nonprofits, like OLCDC, whose missions are not to profit from a sale of the low-income
housing project, but to continue to develop and preserve the low-income housing in
perpetuity for the betterment of the public and the community in which project is located.”);
see also, e.g., JX021 at DLE_0001175 (“Each Building of the Project must meet the
provisions of [Section 42] regulations during each of 15 consecutive years in order to
remain qualified to receive the [tax] credits. In addition, the Partnership entered into an
Extended Use Agreement, which requires the utilization of the Project pursuant to Section
42 for a minimum of 35 years after the compliance period, even if the Partnership disposes
of the Project.”).
231
      Fund LPA at Art. I (defining “Property”).

                                              61
         This purpose, syndicating investment for tax credits, circumscribes Fund GP’s

authority and fiduciary duties. As a matter of contract and of agency principles,

Fund GP lacks authority to act inconsistently with the Fund’s purpose.232 Fund GP

is an agent of the Fund “for the purpose of its business, purposes or activities.”233

The Fund LPA authorizes Fund GP only to take actions “necessary to, or in

connection with, the accomplishment of the purposes of the Fund.”234 It specifies

that Fund GP lacks authority to cause the Fund to invest in anything other than

Property Partnership Interests (tied to a Property that is or will be eligible for tax

credits).235 And it requires specific consent from the Investor Limited Partners to

“cause the Fund to participate in the development, leasing, operation or disposition



232
   Symbiont.io, 2021 WL 3575709, at *43; Restatement (Third) Of Agency § 8.09(1) (Am.
L. Inst. 2006) (“An agent has a duty to take action only within the scope of the agent’s
actual authority.”); Cincinnati Bell, 1996 WL 506906, at *10 (“The general partners’ power
to market, sell, operate and maintain the cellular service system is necessary for carrying
out the Partnership’s business purpose—promoting and providing cellular services to
subscribers. Based on the terms of the Partnership Agreement, I conclude as a matter of
law that Ameritech, as the general partner, has no authority to sell the Partnership’s
business.”).
233
      6 Del. C. § 15–301(1).
234
   Fund LPA § 6.2A(xi); cf. id. § 6.4F (“The General Partner shall not employ, or permit
another to employ, such funds or assets in any manner except for the exclusive benefit of
the Fund.”).
235
   Id. § 6.3A(xxi); id. at Art. I (“‘Property Partnership Interests’ means the limited partner
or member interests of the Fund (directly or indirectly through an Intermediate Entity) in
the Property Partnerships.”); Fund LPA at Art. I (“‘Property’ means an affordable housing
property constructed, rehabilitated or acquired or to be constructed, rehabilitated or
acquired by a Property Partnership, which property is or is planned to be eligible for Tax
Credits.”).

                                             62
of a Property, except as required to exercise the rights of the Fund under the Property

Partnership Agreements[.]”236 Fund GP does not have authority as general partner

to participate in the disposition of a Property unless the Property LPA or the limited

partners specifically consent. Otherwise, Fund GP only has the authority to act

consistently with the Fund’s purpose of syndicating investment for tax credits. Fund

GP cannot and did not owe a duty to act inconsistently with that purpose.237

                   2.        The Fund LPA Further Restricts The Scope Of
                             Fund GP’s Fiduciary Duties.

         In addition to being circumscribed by the partnership’s purpose, a general

partner’s fiduciary duties may be expressly modified by the limited partnership

agreement. DRULPA Section 17–1101(d) permits parties to “expand[] or restrict[]

or eliminate[]” a general partner’s fiduciary duties “by provisions in the partnership

agreement.”238 The exercise of determining the nature and scope of a general

partner’s fiduciary duties is a contractual exercise, requiring the Court to consider




236
      Fund LPA § 6.3A(xxiv).
237
   Restatement (Third) Of Agency § 8.09(1) (Am. L. Inst. 2006) (“An agent has a duty to
take action only within the scope of the agent’s actual authority.”); Cincinnati Bell, 1996
WL 506906, at *13 (“Unless it is not reasonably practicable to carry on the business in
conformity with its purpose or unless all the partners agreed to a dissolution of the business,
Ameritech is under a duty to carry out the Partnership’s purpose as expressed in the
Partnership Agreement.”).
238
  6 Del. C. § 17–1101(d); Ryan v. Buckeye P’rs, L.P., 2022 WL 389827, at *9 (Del. Ch.
Feb. 9, 2022).

                                              63
“the reasonable shared expectations of the parties at the time they contracted.”239

Where a limited partnership agreement does not clearly and unequivocally eliminate

or limit fiduciary duties, the general partner owes default fiduciary duties.240

“[A]greements’ drafters must [expand, restrict, or eliminate fiduciary duties] clearly,

and should not be incentivized to obfuscate or surprise investors by ambiguously

stripping away the protections investors would ordinarily receive.”241 An expanded

or restricted “‘contractual fiduciary duty’ is a fiduciary duty (1) the scope of which

is established by contract; or (2) compliance with which is measured by a contractual

standard.”242

         The Fund LPA contractually restricts the scope of Fund GP’s fiduciary duties.

It enumerates a particular fiduciary duty, and expressly and repeatedly states that

only that duty is owed. Section 6.4F provides:


239
   U.S. W., Inc., 1996 WL 307445, at *9 (“Of course, the nature and scope of the rights
and obligations created will often be the primary issue to resolve. The court’s ultimate
guide in determining those legal entitlements is to attempt to fulfill, to the extent possible,
the reasonable shared expectations of the parties at the time they contracted.”); see also
Cont’l Ins. Co. v. Rutledge & Co., 750 A.2d 1219, 1234 (Del. Ch. 2000) (“The parties’
reasonable expectations at the time of contract formation determine the reasonableness of
the challenged conduct.”) (citing Schwartzberg, 685 A.2d at 376)).
240
      Feeley, 62 A.3d at 662.
241
   Largo Legacy Gp., LLC v. Charles, 2021 WL 2692426, at *17 (Del. Ch. June 30, 2021)
(internal quotations omitted) (quoting Ross Hldg. & Mgmt. Co. v. Advance Realty Gp.,
LLC, 2014 WL 4374261, at *15 (Del. Ch. Sept. 4, 2014)).
242
   Wenske v. Blue Bell Creameries, Inc., 2018 WL 3337531, at *14 (Del. Ch. July 6, 2018)
(citing Allen v. El Paso Pipeline GP Co., L.L.C., 2014 WL 2819005, at *19 (Del. Ch.
June 20, 2014)).

                                              64
         The General Partner shall have fiduciary responsibility for the
         safekeeping and use of all funds and assets of the Fund, whether or not
         in its immediate possession or control. The General Partner shall not
         employ, or permit another to employ, such funds or assets in any
         manner except for the exclusive benefit of the Fund.243

The Fund LPA does not enumerate any other fiduciary duties. Section 6.4J confirms

that the duty in Section 6.4F replaces default fiduciary duties:

         To the extent that, at law or in equity, the General Partner or its
         Affiliates has duties (including fiduciary duties) and liabilities relating
         thereto to the Fund or to the Partners, the General Partner and its
         Affiliates acting in connection with the Fund’s business or affairs shall
         not be liable to the Fund or to any Partner for its good faith reliance on
         the provisions of this Agreement except to the extent of their gross
         negligence, willful misconduct or breach of fiduciary duty. The
         provisions of this Agreement are agreed by the Partners to replace
         such other duties and liabilities of such Person.244

With this, Fund GP owes only the fiduciary duties expressly provided in

Section 6.4F.245

         Other provisions in the Fund LPA acknowledge this limitation of Fund GP’s

fiduciary duties. Several sections describe Fund GP’s fiduciary duties merely as

those “set forth in this Agreement,” including the provision governing removal of



243
      Fund LPA § 6.4F.
244
      Id. § 6.4J (emphasis added).
245
   See Allen v. Encore Energy P’rs, L.P., 72 A.3d 93, 95, 100–01 (Del. 2013) (affirming
the Court of Chancery in finding “[t]he limited partnership agreement replaces common
law fiduciary duties with a contractually adopted fiduciary duty of subjective good faith,”
so “Encore GP and each Indemnitee only owe the fiduciary duties expressed in the LPA;
they do not owe common law fiduciary duties”).

                                             65
the general partner for “[a]ny breach of fiduciary duty in the performance of its

duties and obligations as General Partner under this Agreement.”246 Otherwise,

subject to limited partners’ consent rights and express limitations on authority, “the

General Partner [has] the full, complete and exclusive discretion and authority to

manage and control the business of the Fund.”247 Fund GP is authorized, “without

limitation,” “to cause the Fund . . . to perform and fulfill its obligations under each

Property Partnership Agreement of each Property Partnership . . . .”248

          And so, under the Fund LPA, Fund GP owes only a fiduciary duty toward the

“safekeeping and use of all funds and assets of the Fund . . . . for the exclusive benefit

of the Fund.”249 The Fund LPA clearly and unambiguously modifies Fund GP’s

default fiduciary duties as general partner of the Fund.250 Fund GP does not owe the

default duties of loyalty and care.




  Fund LPA § 7.2A(ii) (emphasis added); id. § 6.7A (“fiduciary duty set forth in this
246

Agreement”); id. § 6.7B (“fiduciary duty set forth in this Agreement”).
247
      Id. § 6.1A.
248
      Id. § 6.2A(vi).
249
      Id. § 6.4F.
250
   See Kahn v. Icahn, 1998 WL 832629, at *3 (Del. Ch. Nov. 12, 1998) (holding that
limited partners could not bring a duty of loyalty claim where the partnership agreement
contained “clear and unambiguous modifications of fiduciary duties”), aff’d 746 A.2d 267
(Del. 2000); see also supra note 171.

                                           66
                        3.   Fund GP Did Not Breach Any Fiduciary Duties
                             And So, Was Not Validly Removed For Such A
                             Breach.

         With the Fund’s purpose and LPA so limiting Fund GP’s fiduciary duties, I

turn to DLE’s claim of breach of fiduciary duty. DLE asserts Fund GP breached its

duty under Section 6.4F, to safeguard “all funds and assets of the Fund,” by not

taking “action to invalidate or otherwise challenge” the Disposition after what DLE

asserts was an invalid exercise of the ROFR.251 DLE claims that the Property is

worth approximately $9.65 million, and “was a valuable Fund asset as it had

unrealized equity value as well as ongoing tax and other economic benefits by virtue

of the Fund’s ongoing ownership through the Property Partnership,”252 DLE claims

Fund GP failed to protect DLE’s investment by declining to challenge the

Disposition “without considering DLE’s contrary position as to the potential long

term value of holding the [Property].”253 DLE contends Fund GP should have used


251
   D.I. 165 at 28; Countercl. ¶¶ 7, 10, 72, 74, 85, 101, 110; D.I. 184 at 30–31. DLE asserted
deficiencies in Fund GP’s investigation into the Disposition are tantamount to a failure to
investigate such that it is a second breach. See Countercl. ¶ 63; D.I. 165 at 28; D.I. 184 at
43–48; D.I. 188 at 6–9, 36, 39. Because I conclude Fund GP owed no duty to stop the
Disposition, the quality of its investigation also cannot be the source of a breach.
252
      D.I. 165 at 49.
253
   D.I. 184 at 1, 18, 49; D.I. 188 at 39; JX150 at HUDSON00000099 (valuing the Property
between $9,3000,000 and $10,000,000 in a BOV for DLE); see also Kagey Tr. 471 (“Q:
Tell us, what is the role of Hunt Capital Partners with regard to DLE’s interest in [the
Fund]? A: Hunt Capital Partners is the authorized representative. It’s the asset manager
of DLE. Q: In the role as asset manager, what is Hunt’s objective for the DLE investment?
A: Hunt’s objective for the DLE investments is to maximize the return, the yield, to its
owners.”).

                                             67
the Fund’s approximately $200,000 in cash reserves to conduct an additional or

different investigation into the Disposition, and to sue Property GP or one of its

affiliates following the Disposition.254          By not stopping Property GP from

transferring the Property to the Designated Nonprofit, DLE argues, Fund GP failed

to safeguard the assets of the Fund, in breach of Fund LPA Section 6.4F.

         DLE’s theory of breach breaks apart in three places. First, the Property itself

is not an asset of the Fund, so Fund GP owes no duty to safeguard the Property.

Second, while Fund GP has a duty to safeguard the value of Property Partnership

Interests as Fund assets, that value is based on tax benefits and credits; the duty to

safeguard that value does not extend to maximizing or chasing other sources of

value. And finally, DLE’s expectation that Fund GP challenge the Disposition is

fundamentally inconsistent with the Fund’s purpose, and so Fund GP owes no duty

to do so. Fund GP only owes a duty toward “the safekeeping and use of all funds

and assets of the Fund” to the extent consistent with the Fund’s purpose.255

         As an initial matter, the Property itself is an asset of the Property Partnership,

not the Fund. Fund assets include cash and the Fund’s interest in Property LP and




254
   Macari Tr. 71–72; D.I. 184 at 20 (“[T]he Fund had approximately $250,000 cash at the
time of the [Disposition]. That was more than enough to conduct an investigation into the
underlying facts.” (internal citations omitted) (citing Trane Tr. 541, 546–47)).
255
      Fund LPA § 6.4F.

                                             68
the other Property Partnership Interests.256 But Fund assets do not include Property

LP’s assets or the Property Partnership’s assets.257 Indeed, Fund GP is prohibited

from participating in Property management “except as required to exercise the rights

of the Fund under the Property Partnership Agreements.”258 Compare the Property

Partnership, which was created “to develop, construct, own, maintain and operate”

Kate’s Trace, and to “acquire the Land and to develop, finance, construct, own,

maintain, operate and sell or otherwise dispose of the Apartment Complex.”259 Its

definition of “Apartment Complex” is Kate’s Trace, as “owned and operated . . . by

the [Property] Partnership.”260 The Property LPA also contains representations

about the Property’s title and the Property Partnership’s ownership of the

Property.261




256
   Id. at Art. I (defining “Intermediate Entity,” “Property Partnership,” and “Property
Partnership Interests”); id. §§ 6.3A(i), (vii), (viii), (xii)–(xiv).
257
   See id. § 6.8E (indicating the Fund owns Property Partnership Interests “directly or
indirectly through an Intermediate Entity,” while the Property Partnership owns the
Property).
258
      Id. § 6.3A(xxiv).
259
    Property LPA at HUDSON00018376 (emphasis added); id. § 3.01 (emphasis added);
id. § 3.02 (granting the Property Partnership authority to “acquire” the land on which
Kate’s Trace is located, to “construct, operate, maintain, improve, buy, own, sell, convey,
assign, mortgage, rent or lease any real estate and any personal property necessary to the
operation of the Apartment Complex;” and to “maintain and operate the Apartment
Complex” (emphasis added)).
260
      Id. at Art. II (defining “Apartment Complex”).
261
      Id. §§ 4.01(e), (n).

                                              69
          The parties intentionally created a two-tier structure with an upper-level

partnership (the Fund) to indirectly hold the Property Partnership Interests, a series

of lower-level partnerships (the Approved Property Partnerships) to hold the

LIHTC-eligible properties, and corresponding Intermediate Entities to connect the

two levels.262 “Delaware law respects corporate separateness.”263 The Property is

an asset of the Property Partnership, in which Property LP holds an interest and over

which Property GP has “full, complete and exclusive control.”264 Fund GP has

neither the authority, nor the fiduciary duty, to interfere with the Property.265

          Though the Property itself is not a Fund asset over which Fund GP owes a

duty, DLE points out that the Property was the source of value for the Fund’s

Property Partnership Interests, and therefore contends Fund GP owed a duty to

safeguard that value. DLE is correct, as far as Fund GP’s duties go. Fund GP’s sole

duty is over the “safekeeping and use” of the Fund’s assets “for the exclusive benefit

of the Fund.”266 I conclude that duty toward “safekeeping and use” of the Property



262
      See First Amendment at HUDSON00018158; Macari Tr. 14.
263
    NAMA Hldgs., LLC v. Related WMC LLC, 2014 WL 6436647, at *26 (Del. Ch.
Nov. 17, 2014); accord Allied Cap. Corp. v. GC–Sun Hldgs., L.P., 910 A.2d 1020, 1038
(Del. Ch. 2006) (“[O]ur corporation law is largely built on the idea that the separate legal
existence of corporate entities should be respected—even when those separate corporate
entities are under common ownership and control.”).
264
      Property LPA § 8.01(a).
265
      Fund LPA §§ 6.3A(xxiv), 6.4F.
266
      Id. §§ 6.4F, 6.4J.

                                            70
Partnership Interest value contemplates preserving tax credit value but does not

contemplate pursuing equity value after the Compliance Period. My conclusion is

based on the plain text of Section 6.4F, and the Fund’s purpose.

         The key phrase of Section 6.4F—“safekeeping and use of all funds and assets

of the Fund”—imposes a duty to guard, preserve, and distribute the Fund’s presently

held value, i.e., tax benefits. Black’s Law Dictionary defines “safekeeping” or

“safeguarding” as “[t]he act of protecting something in one’s custody; secure

guardianship.”267      Black’s Law Dictionary defines the noun “use” as “[t]he

application or employment of something; esp[ecially], a long-continued possession

and employment of a thing for the purpose for which it is adapted, as distinguished

from a possession and employment that is merely temporary or occasional.”268 The

plain meaning of “safekeeping” and “use” in Section 6.4F imposes on Fund GP a

fiduciary responsibility to preserve and continue to hold the Fund’s existing assets

in a manner consistent with their intended purpose as informed by the Fund LPA. I

interpret Section 6.4F as charging Fund GP with the duty to safeguard the Fund’s

cash and value from tax credits in its possession, to prevent them from being, for

example, commingled, abandoned, entrusted to a party or entity with a “negative

reputation in the industry and repeated regulatory violations,” or used for the benefit


267
      Safekeeping, Black’s Law Dictionary (11th ed. 2019).
268
      Use, Black’s Law Dictionary (11th ed. 2019).

                                             71
of any entity other than the Fund.269 Section 6.4F’s language does not impose a duty

on Fund GP to maximize or chase new value.

       Chasing value over and above tax credits is also inconsistent with the Fund’s

purpose, and therefore beyond the scope of Fund GP’s authority and duty. The Fund

LPA provides that the Fund’s purpose was to solicit investment in the Property and

distribute tax credits from it, so long as those tax credits existed.270 Fund GP’s

investment authority is cabined to Property Partnership Interests in an entity that

owns a Property that “is or is planned to be eligible for Tax Credits.”271 After the

Fund completed its exchange of capital for tax credits at the end of the Compliance

Period, the parties understood that the Property would not generate additional tax

credits or tax benefits, or any income at all.272 The forecast DLE created when it

became an Investor Limited Partner did not project any Fund-level income or tax


269
   See, e.g., Cargill, Inc. v. JWH Special Circumstance LLC, 959 A.2d 1096, 1125, 1127–
28 (Del. Ch. 2008) (finding defendant stated a counterclaim that the Managing Owner
breached its fiduciary duty to “safekeep[] all funds and assets of the Trust and the use
thereof for the benefit of the Trust” by engaging in a transaction with a counterparty with
a “negative reputation in the industry and repeated regulatory violations”); cf. In re Stull,
985 A.2d 391 (Del. 2009) (TABLE) (finding the respondent violated his ethical duty to
safeguard his client’s funds by letting fiduciary accounts reach negative client balances and
by commingling funds).
270
   Fund LPA § 2.3; id. at Art. I (defining “Approved Property Partnerships,” “Property,”
“Property Partnership,” “Property Partnership Interests,” “Tax Credits,” and “Units”).
  Id. § 6.3A(xxi); id. at Art. I (defining “Property,” “Property Partnership Interests,” and
271

“Tax Credits”).
272
   JX004 at HUDSON00018773; JX011 at DLE_0005420; Fund LPA § 3.3A(ii); Trane
Tr. 520.

                                             72
benefits from the Property after the Compliance Period.273 DLE’s own forecasts and

Hunt’s contemporaneous internal documents belie DLE’s present quest for value

other than tax credits.274

         The Fund succeeded: DLE and Fund LP received “materially all” projected

tax credits and benefits from the Property, and the Property received the Fund

investors’ capital.275 After the Compliance Period, when the Fund’s model of

syndicating investment in exchange for tax credits had sunset, Fund GP’s decision

to stick with that model is consistent with its authority, obligations, and duties.276

Disposing of the Property by transferring it to a Designated Nonprofit at the end of




273
      JX011 at DLE_0005420; Trane Tr. 520.
274
   Compare D.I. 165 at 2, 49, and Trane Tr. 510–14, and Chiusano Tr. 394, and D.I. 184
at 6–7, 49, and D.I. 188 at 31, with JX011 at DLE_0005420, and Trane Tr. 520–22, and
JX037 at DLE_0004085, and JX058 at DLE_0002308, and JX089 at DLE_0001819, and
Chiusano Tr. 390, 392–94; 400–01, 405–06, 410–11.
275
      Trane Tr. 522; Macari Tr. 33, 87; PTO ¶ 41.
276
    Cincinnati Bell, 1996 WL 506906, at *13; Kan. RSA 15, 1995 WL 106514, at *2; see
also Ironworkers Dist. Council of Phila. & Vicinity Ret. & Pension Plan v. Andreotti, 2015
WL 2270673, at *31 (Del. Ch. May 8, 2015) (finding even if a principal disagrees with her
agent’s adherence to a business plan, “[d]emonstrating that a business plan or system has
failed is not the same as demonstrating an actionable breach of fiduciary duty”), aff’d sub
nom. Ironworkers Dist. Council of Phila. v. Andreotti, 132 A.3d 748 (Del. 2016). While a
federal court applying California law recently held that a fund general partner breached its
fiduciary duties in connection with a disposition, the reasoning of that case is not rooted in
Delaware fiduciary jurisprudence. See Centerline II, 2022 WL 247951, at *8.

                                             73
the Compliance Period for the Section 42 price is consistent with the Fund’s

purpose.277

       Challenging that Disposition, as DLE demands, is beyond the scope of, and

inconsistent with, the Fund’s purpose and Fund GP’s authority. The Fund LPA did

not authorize Fund GP to invest in properties that were not eligible for tax credits.278

More broadly, Fund GP cannot bind the Fund with an act that is not in furtherance

of the Fund’s business “in the usual way.”279 Challenging a Section 42 ROFR

disposition is not in the “usual way” or “ordinary course” of this, or any, LIHTC




277
    Fund LPA § 2.3; id. § 10.3F (requiring Fund GP to provide Property financial reports
to the Investor Limited Partners only through the end of the Compliance Period); Property
LPA § 8.02(c) (describing the “Purchase Price”) (citing 26 U.S.C. § 42(i)(7)); id. at Art. II
(defining “Projected Credit” and projecting tax credits through 2015); id.§ 4.01(q)
(projecting tax credits through 2015); id. § 4.01(z) (representing to Property partners,
including Property LP, that “the General Partner shall at no time develop the Apartment
Complex or manage the Partnership which is not consistent with the award of points
assigned by the Agency to the Partnership’s Low Income Housing Tax Credit Application
for Reservation, except with the prior approval of the Agency and the Special Limited
Partner”); id. § 4.02(d) (imposing on Property GP the duty to “take no action with respect
to the business and property of the Partnership which is not reasonably related to the
achievement of the purpose of the Partnership”); accord id. § 8.01(a) (same); id. § 8.03
(same).
278
    Fund LPA § 6.3A(xxi); id. at Art. I (defining “Property,” “Property Partnership
Interests,” and “Tax Credits”).
279
   Abt, 1992 WL 380615, at *3 (quoting 6 Del. C. § 1509(b) (repealed by the 1999
Delaware Revised Uniform Partnership Act and reappearing in 6 Del. C. § 15–301(2))); 6
Del. C. § 15–301(2); Rudnitsky, 2000 WL 1724234, at *5 (“[A] partner has authority to
bind the partnership only with respect to acts the partner performs within the ordinary
course of the partnership business.”); Cincinnati Bell, 1996 WL 506906, at *13;
DELAWARE LIMITED PARTNERSHIPS § 4.16 at 4-35.

                                             74
partnership.280 Stopping, reversing, or rescinding the Disposition would be outside

of the “usual way.” The Property has already distributed its allocated tax credits,281

so retaining investments in a property that is no longer eligible because a limited

partner “believes it would be in its own strategic business interest to do so” would

not be “the usual way.”282 After the Compliance Period expired and the Property

was no longer eligible for tax credits, pursuing other sources of value from the

Property was not part of the Fund’s purpose. Fund GP did not have the authority to

challenge the Disposition.283

         And so, Fund GP did not owe a duty to challenge the Disposition. Fund GP’s

fiduciary duties do not extend to the Property itself because the Property is a Property

Partnership asset, not a Fund asset, over which the Fund LPA precludes Fund GP

from exercising plenary authority.284 And while the Property is the source of tax

benefits and credits for the Property Partnership Interests, Fund GP does not have a




280
   See Rudnitsky, 2000 WL 1724234, at *6 (“In determining what is ‘carrying on in the
usual way’ or ‘ordinary course,’ of a partnership’s business, the Court may consider the
partnership’s stated purposes, the precedent set by the partnership’s prior ‘custom or course
of dealing’ and ‘the general custom’ of analogous partnerships.” (citations omitted)).
281
      Trane Tr. 522; Macari Tr. 13, 33, 87; PTO ¶ 41.
282
      Cincinnati Bell, 1996 WL 506906, at *13.
283
   Further, Fund GP would have needed Fund LP’s consent to participate in the Disposition
or initiate any lawsuit. Fund LPA §§ 6.3A(v), (xxiv); Macari Tr. 87.
284
      Fund LPA §§ 6.3A(xxiv), 6.4F.

                                             75
duty to squeeze that Property for post-Compliance Period value.285 Neither the Fund

LPA nor the Fund’s purpose contemplate such a duty.

         This is so even if limited partner DLE disagrees with the Fund’s purpose,

goals, or the timing of executing those.286 As this Court held in Cincinnati Bell, a

general partner’s duty and “responsibility is to manage the Partnership in accordance

with” the “Partnership’s purpose as expressed in the Partnership Agreement,” and

so the general partner “is under no fiduciary obligation to abandon that purpose and

[take contrary action] because one limited partner. . . believes it would be in [the

limited partner’s] own strategic business interest to do so.”287 Fund GP does not owe

DLE any duty to pursue DLE’s goal of obtaining fair market value for the Property,

because that goal exceeds and diverges from the Fund’s purpose. It also does not

have a duty to use its cash, in a manner other than “for the exclusive benefit of the



285
   Cf. Cincinnati Bell, 1996 WL 506906, at *5 (declining to incorporate “profit” as the
purpose of a partnership where the limited partnership agreement does not include evidence
that the partnership’s purpose is to “generate economic returns” or any measure of
performance); id. at *13 (“Ameritech’s responsibility is to manage the Partnership in
accordance with its purpose of establishing and providing cellular services in the
Cincinnati, Columbus and Dayton region. Ameritech is under no fiduciary obligation to
abandon that purpose and sell the business because one limited partner—Cincinnati Bell—
believes it would be in its own strategic business interest to do so.”).
286
    JX114 at HUDSON00013635; see Cincinnati Bell, 1996 WL 506906, at *13 (“If a
partner does not share Ameritech’s vision of the Partnership’s viability in the cellular
market, that partner retains the right under the Partnership Agreement to cash out its interest
in the Partnership or to withdraw from the Partnership.”).
287
      Cincinnati Bell, 1996 WL 506906, at *13.

                                              76
Fund,” to interfere with the Disposition simply because DLE “believes it would be

in its own strategic business interest to do so.”288 A fiduciary cannot breach a duty

it does not owe.289

         And so, because Fund GP did not breach any fiduciary duties in connection

with the Disposition, DLE lacked Cause to remove Fund GP as General Partner

under the Fund LPA. The Default Notice purported to remove Fund GP for Cause

under Section 7.2A(ii) for “breach of fiduciary duty in the performance of [Fund

GP’s] duties and obligations as General Partner under [the Fund LPA], or any act

outside the scope of [Fund GP’s] duties and obligations as General Partner pursuant

to [the Fund LPA] that has a material adverse effect on the Fund.”290 With respect

to Counts I and II and Counterclaim Counts I, II, and III, I conclude Fund GP did

not breach its fiduciary duties by failing to challenge the Disposition because it did

not owe a duty to do so. Accordingly, DLE did not have Cause to remove Fund GP

as general partner of the Fund under Fund LPA Section 7.2A(ii), and the Default

Notice is invalid due to the lack of Cause under that section.




288
      Fund LPA § 6.4F; Cincinnati Bell, 1996 WL 506906, at *13.
289
   See Lonergan v. EPE Hldgs., LLC, 5 A.3d 1008, 1024–25 (Del. Ch. 2010) (finding no
breach where “the Holdings LP Agreement eliminates all fiduciary duties”).
290
      Fund LPA § 7.2A(ii).

                                            77
                C.     DLE Failed To Demonstrate Cause For Removal Under
                       Fund LPA § 7.2A(iii) Because DLE Failed To Prove Fund GP
                       Breached The Fund LPA.

         DLE’s Counterclaim Counts I and V assert Fund GP breached the Fund

LPA.291 The Fund LPA is governed by Delaware law.292 Under Delaware law, the

elements of a breach of contract claim are (i) a contractual obligation, (ii) a breach

of that obligation by the contractual party; and (iii) causally related harm to the

counterparty.293 It is undisputed the Fund LPA is a “valid and enforceable written

contract.”294

         “To determine the scope of a contractual obligation, ‘the role of a court is to

effectuate the parties’ intent.’”295 “To determine what contractual parties intended,

Delaware courts start with the text.”296 In doing so, the Court aims to “give priority

to the parties’ intentions as reflected in the four corners of the agreement, construing




291
      Countercl. ¶¶ 106, 129–35.
292
      PTO ¶¶ 2, 18; Fund LPA § 13.2.
293
   Bandera Master Fund LP v. Boardwalk Pipeline P’rs, LP, 2021 WL 5267734, at *51
(Del. Ch. Nov. 12, 2021) (citing WaveDivision Hldgs. v. Millennium Digit. Media Sys.,
L.L.C., 2010 WL 3706624, at *13 (Del. Ch. Sept. 17, 2010)).
294
   Countercl. ¶ 130; D.I. 44, Plaintiffs’ Reply to DLE Investors, LP’s Verified
Counterclaim Against JER Hudson GP XI LLC and Nominally Against Hudson Housing
Tax Credit Fund XXI, LP, ¶ 130.
295
  Bandera, 2021 WL 5267734, at *51 (quoting Lorillard Tobacco Co. v. Am. Legacy
Found., 903 A.2d 728, 739 (Del. 2006)).
296
      Sunline Com. Carriers, Inc. v. CITGO Petroleum Corp., 206 A.3d 836, 846 (Del. 2019).

                                             78
the agreement as a whole and giving effect to all its provisions.”297 “If a writing is

plain and clear on its face, i.e., its language conveys an unmistakable meaning, the

writing itself is the sole source for gaining an understanding of intent.”298 A written

agreement is plain and clear on its face “[w]hen the plain, common, and ordinary

meaning of the words lends itself to only one reasonable interpretation.”299 When

an agreement is plain and clear, the Court “will give priority to the parties’ intentions

as reflected in the four corners of the agreement, construing the agreement as a whole

and giving effect to all its provisions.”300 “Delaware adheres to the objective theory

of contracts, [meaning that] a contract’s construction should be that which would be

understood by an objective, reasonable third party.”301 “Contract terms themselves

will be controlling when they establish the parties’ common meaning so that a

reasonable person in the position of either party would have no expectations

inconsistent with the contract language.”302




297
  Salamone, 106 A.3d at 368 (internal quotation marks omitted) (quoting GMG Cap. Inv.,
LLC. v. Athenian Venture P’rs I, L.P., 36 A.3d 776, 779 (Del. 2012)).
298
      City Investing Co. Liquidating Tr. v. Cont’l Cas. Co., 624 A.2d 1191, 1198 (Del. 1993).
299
      Sassano v. CIBC World Mkts. Corp., 948 A.2d 453, 462 (Del. Ch. 2008).
300
   In re Viking Pump, Inc., 148 A.3d 633, 648 (Del. 2016) (internal quotations omitted)
(quoting Salamone, 106 A.3d at 368).
301
  Osborn ex rel. Osborn v. Kemp, 991 A.2d 1153, 1159 (Del. 2010) (footnotes and internal
quotation marks omitted) (quoting NBC Universal v. Paxson Commc’ns, 2005 WL
1038997, at *5 (Del. Ch. Apr. 29, 2005)).
302
      Eagle Indus., Inc. v. DeVilbiss Health Care, Inc., 702 A.2d 1228, 1232 (Del. 1997).

                                              79
                        1.   Fund GP Did Not Breach Fund LPA Section
                             6.8D Because It Did Not Owe A Contractual
                             Duty Under That Section.

         DLE claims Fund GP breached its contractual obligations under Fund LPA

Section 6.8D, which explains the fees to be paid to Fund GP for its management

services.303 Section 6.8D states, in pertinent part:

         After all other expenses of the Fund are paid, the Fund shall pay to the
         General Partner or an Affiliate of the General Partner designated by the
         General Partner an annual fee (the “Asset Management Fee”) for
         services in connection with the oversight of the performance of the
         Approved Property Partnerships and the compliance by the Property
         General Partners and managing agents thereof with the provisions of
         the Property Partnership Agreements, management agreements,
         regulatory agreements and applicable laws.304

DLE asserts this section imposes on Fund GP a duty to “ensure [] Property GP took

all actions [required] of it [] under the Property LPA;” that Fund GP breached that

duty because Property GP did not seek “Consent from [] Property SLP and

ultimately the Fund” in advance of the Disposition;305 and that this breach supports

Fund GP’s removal as general partner.




303
   Countercl. ¶¶ 39–46; D.I. 165 at 49 (“The Fund GP also breached other provisions of
the Fund LPA, namely (1) the prohibition on giving consent of the Fund to the sale of the
Apartment Complex without the consent of DLE (Sections 6.3A(ii) and 6.9A), and (2) the
duty to ensure that the Property GP and its managing agent ([the Developer]) comply with
the terms of the Property Partnership LPA (Section 6.8D).”); D.I. 184 at 33; D.I. 188 at 5.
304
      Fund LPA § 6.8D; id.§ 6.8 (“Certain Payments”).
305
      D.I. 184 at 33.

                                            80
         As an initial matter, it is not clear that any Fund GP breach of Section 6.8D

could justify Fund GP’s removal as general partner under Sections 7.2A(ii) and (iii).

Fees paid under Section 6.8D are paid to the general partner “other than in its

capacity as a partner of the Fund.”306

         That issue aside, Section 6.8D simply does not impose any duties on Fund GP

that could support a breach. The plain meaning of Section 6.8D imposes a duty on

the Fund to pay the Asset Management Fee for Fund GP’s services, but does not

itself impose any oversight obligation on Fund GP. Specifically, it does not impose

a duty on Fund GP to ensure Property GP complies with the Property LPA.

Section 6.8D’s mandatory directive language is directed at the Fund, not Fund GP.307

The fee is calculated by, and payable upon, the Fund’s receipt of Property

Partnership Interests and capital contributions—not Fund GP’s performance of any

particular services or oversight.308 In context, Section 6.8D lists the management

fee among other Section 6.8 fees (“Certain Payments”) to be paid to the General

306
      Fund LPA § 6.8F.
307
   See id. § 6.8D (“After all other expenses of the Fund are paid, the Fund shall pay to the
General Partner . . . an annual fee (the ‘Asset Management Fee’) for services. . . .”)
(emphasis added); see also id. (“The obligation of the Fund to pay the Asset Management
Fee with respect to a given Approved Property Partnership shall begin to accrue on the
date the Fund acquires the Property Partnership Interest with respect to such Approved
Property Partnership.”) (emphasis added).
308
   Id.; see Tygon Peak Cap. Mgm’t, LLC v. Mobile Invs. Investco, LLC, 2022 WL 34688,
at *15–16 (Del. Ch. Jan. 4, 2022) (finding a provision compelling the payment of a fixed
annual management fee not to be contingent on the counterparty’s performance of its
duties).

                                            81
Partner, including Organization and Offering Expense Reimbursement, an

Acquisition Fee, a Disposition Fee, compensation for providing financing, and

construction oversight fees.309 Section 6.8D also prioritizes the management fee

“[a]fter all other expenses of the Fund are paid,” and quantifies it.310 In contrast,

Fund GP’s duties are described in Section 6.4.311 I conclude the language in Section

6.8D that DLE relies on describes Fund GP’s role as syndicator and fund manager,

but itself imposes no duty. Once again, Fund GP cannot breach a duty it does not

owe: Fund GP cannot have breached Section 6.8D.312

                     2.       Fund GP Did Not Breach Any Consent
                              Provisions.

         DLE asserts a broad claim that the Fund LPA obligated Fund GP to obtain the

Fund’s limited partners’ consent to the Disposition, and Fund GP’s failure to do so

breached the Fund LPA and therefore warrants Fund GP’s removal.313 DLE has



309
      Fund LPA §§ 6.8B–C, E, G–H.
310
      Id. § 6.8D.
311
      Id.§ 6.4 (“Duties and Obligations of the General Partner”).
312
    See, e.g., Brown v. Dover Downs, Inc., 2011 WL 3907536, at *4 n.38 (Del. Super.
Aug. 30, 2011), aff’d, 38 A.3d 1254 (Del. 2012); Lonergan, 5 A.3d at 1024–25 (finding no
breach where the limited partnership agreement “eliminate[d] all fiduciary duties” because
the defendant did not owe a duty).
313
   See, e.g., Countercl. ¶¶ 50–51, 56–58, 64–66; D.I. 165 at 4, 29, 49; D.I. 184 at 36–37.
DLE also argued its lack of consent, or outright resistance, to the Disposition means the
Property Partnership was not a “willing seller” as necessary to implement the ROFR.
While this argument has been a central feature of other LIHTC suits brought by new limited
partners, see supra note 83, it is not dispositive here and so I do not reach it.

                                              82
failed to consistently specify which provisions Fund GP breached by not seeking

DLE’s consent.314 Contemporaneous documents and trial testimony prove DLE

understood its consent was not needed if the Property “GP goes through the ROFR

process outlined in the agreement.”315 DLE’s belief that the Fund LPA requires its

consent to the Disposition appears to have been inspired by litigation. All the same,

I have reviewed the Fund LPA and conclude Fund GP did not breach any of its

consent provisions.

       The Fund LPA and Property LPA contain nested consent requirements that

mention a sale or disposition of the Property, but none require DLE’s consent for the

Disposition. Explaining why requires stepping through first the Fund LPA and then

the Property LPA; nothing in the Fund LPA required DLE’s consent, and the

Property LPA affirmatively granted Property GP the authority to appoint a nonprofit

to hold and exercise a Section 42 ROFR.



314
   DLE has variously alleged Fund GP breached Fund LPA Sections 6.3, 6.3A(ii),
6.3B(viii), and 6.9A. See, e.g., JX218 at HUDSON00008228; D.I. 165 at 49; D.I. 184 at
35–37. Other times, like in Counterclaim Count V, it has failed to point to a specific Fund
LPA section. See, e.g., Countercl. ¶¶ 129–35; D.I. 184 at 33 (failing to point to a Fund
LPA section when arguing Fund GP “ignored” Property GP’s alleged breaches of the
Property LPA, which DLE argues “it itself a material breach”).
315
   JX074 at DLE_0002593; JX088 (“[Property] GP has right to go through ROFR process
without our approval”); Chiusano Tr. 406–07 (confirming his July 2020 understanding that
DLE’s consent was not required).
       DLE objected to the admissibility of JX074 in a footnote in its post-trial answering
brief. D.I. 188 at 31 n.10. DLE failed to object to JX074 on the Joint Exhibit List. D.I.
169 at 5. DLE’s objection to JX074 is waived. D.I. 163 at 39; Trial Tr. 89.

                                            83
         I begin with the Fund LPA. Section 6.3A lists several actions by the General

Partner requiring “the Consent of the Investor Limited Partner.” As a reminder,

under the Fund LPA, Fund LP can give Consent of the Investor Limited Partners

without DLE, but DLE can never, alone, give that Consent.316 Turning to the items

requiring such Consent, Fund LPA Sections 6.3A(ii) and (xxiv) are relevant here:




316
      First Amendment at HUDSON00018162–63; Fund LPA § 12.2; Chiusano Tr. 389–90.

                                          84
         Without the Consent of the Investor Limited Partners, but subject to
         Section 6.3.B hereof, the General Partner shall not:317

         ...

         (ii) [] give the consent of the Fund or an Intermediate Entity in its
         capacity as a partner of a Property Partnership to any action proposed
         to be taken by such Property Partnership or the Property General
         Partner which, under the provisions of its Property Partnership
         Agreement, requires the consent of an Intermediate Entity or the Fund
         as a partner; or to take or cause [Property SLP] to take any action that
         is permitted to be taken by the Fund, the applicable Intermediate Entity
         or [Property SLP] under such Property Partnership Agreement;318

         ...

         (xxiv) manage and operate the Fund as an operating company or cause
         the Fund to participate in the development, leasing, operation or
         disposition of a Property, except as required to exercise the rights of the
         Fund under the Property Partnership Agreements[.]”319

In so many words, these sections require the Investor Limited Partners’ Consent,

subject to Section 6.3B, for Fund GP to: give the consent of Property LP at the

Property Partnership level; take action through Property SLP at the Property




317
    First Amendment at HUDSON00018167 (“The first clause of [Initial Fund LPA]
Section 6.3A is hereby deleted in its entirety, and amended to read in full as follows: ‘A.
Without the Consent of the Invested Limited Partners, but subject to Section 6.3.B hereof,
the General Partner shall not:”).
318
    Fund LPA § 6.3A(ii); First Amendment at HUDSON00018167–69 (amending the
Initial Fund LPA to add Section 6.3B); Fund LPA at Art. I (providing the “Special Limited
Partner” is Property SLP).
319
      Fund LPA § 6.3A(xxiv).

                                             85
Partnership level; or interfere with the operation and management or disposition of

the Property.320

         Section 6.3B(viii) in turn provides:

         Notwithstanding any provision herein to the contrary, without the
         Supermajority Consent of the Investor Limited Partners, the General
         Partner shall not: . . . (viii) cause the Fund to sell, transfer or assign the
         Fund’s interest in any Intermediate Entity [Property LP] or give the
         consent of the Fund or an Intermediate Entity [Property LP], in its
         capacity as a partner of a Property Partnership, to the sale of a
         Property or a Property Partnership Interest[.]321

Again, Investor Limited Partners’ Supermajority Consent requires DLE’s consent to

reach over sixty-six percent of those limited partner interests.322

         The Disposition did not trigger Fund LPA Section 6.3B(viii)’s Supermajority

Consent requirement.         The Disposition did not transfer the Fund’s interest in



320
   In keeping with Section 6.3A(ii), Fund LPA Section 6.9A reiterates the requirement for
Investor Limited Partner Consent for any action by the Property SLP:
         [Property SLP] shall not take any action or exercise any consent, voting or
         other rights pursuant to a Property Partnership Agreement of any Property
         Partnership without the Consent of the Investor Limited Partner[s]. The
         Investor Limited Partner shall have the right to cause [Property SLP] to take
         any action or exercise any consent, voting o[r] other rights pursuant to the
         Property Partnership Agreement of any Property Partnership.
Fund LPA § 6.9A; First Amendment at HUDSON00018162.
       As explained, Fund GP does not have the authority or duty to interfere with the
Disposition because doing so is contrary to the Fund’s purpose. One reading of Section
6.3A(xxiv) crystallizes this, requiring the Investor Limited Partners’ affirmative consent
before Fund GP has authority to interfere with the Disposition. Id. § 6.3A(xxiv).
321
      First Amendment at HUDSON00018168 (emphasis added).
322
      Id. at HUDSON00018163.

                                              86
Property LP or the Property Partnership Interests. And Fund GP did not give Fund

or Property LP consent to the Disposition. Property GP did not seek consent from

Fund GP, the Fund’s Investor Limited Partners, Property LP, or Property SLP in

connection with the Disposition.323 It did not have to under the Property LPA.324

          I turn to the Property LPA to explain why that is so. Article VIII of the

Property LPA sets forth Property GP’s authority and constraints thereof.

Section 8.01(a) grants Property GP “full, complete and exclusive discretion” to

exercise the authority granted to it “[e]xcept as otherwise set forth in” the Property

LPA.325 Section 8.02(a) enumerates five actions Property GP cannot take, and

Section 8.02(b) enumerates fourteen actions Property GP cannot take without

Property SLP’s consent, including “sell or otherwise dispose of, at any time, all or

substantially all of the assets of the [Property Partnership].”326         And then

Section 8.02(e) addresses a Section 42 disposition:




323
      Macari Tr. 85–86, 150; PTO ¶¶ 52–54.
324
   Again, contemporaneous documents show DLE’s management did not believe its
consent was required at the time. JX088 (“[Property] GP has right to go through ROFR
process without our approval”); Chiusano Tr. 406–07 (confirming that understanding).
325
      Property LPA § 8.01(a).
326
      Id. §§ 8.02(a), (b), (b)(i).

                                             87
          Notwithstanding anything to the contrary contained herein,
          commencing on the fifteenth (15th) anniversary of the first day of the
          first taxable year of the applicable Tax Credit compliance period, the
          [Property] General Partner shall have the right to designate a ‘qualified
          non-profit organization’ at that time, as having the right of first refusal
          to purchase the [Property] subject to the Extended Use Agreement for
          the minimum price established in accordance with Section 42(i)(7) of
          the Code, plus any outstanding amounts owed to the [Property SLP]
          and [Property LP] pursuant to this [Property LPA] including any federal
          income tax liability incurred by the Limited Partners as a result of the
          payment of amounts pursuant to this clause.327

          DLE’s position at trial, that Property GP had to seek consent for the

Disposition that in turn triggered the Fund LPA’s Supermajority Consent provision,

hinges on the interplay between Property LPA Sections 8.02(e) and 8.02(b). DLE

contends Section 8.02(e) is still subject to Section 8.02(b)’s consent requirement,

and that Section 8.02(e) does not encompass a final ROFR disposition. Plaintiffs

argue Section 8.02(e) controls entirely, permitting Property GP to designate a

nonprofit to hold and exercise the ROFR. I conclude Section 8.02(e)’s specific

enabling language, independent from and “notwithstanding” Section 8.02(b)’s

broader consent requirements, authorizes Property GP to appoint a designated

nonprofit to hold and exercise a Section 42 ROFR without Property SLP’s

consent.328


327
      Id. § 8.02(e).
328
   The Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts construed a similar set of provisions the
same way. See Homeowner’s Rehab, 99 N.E.3d at 760 (“As stated, the partnership
agreement confers broad powers on the general partner, while circumscribing the powers
of the limited partners. The partnership agreement identifies only a few actions that the
                                              88
       Resolving this dispute over the interpretation of the Property LPA requires

construing it in accordance with the laws of the Commonwealth of Virginia.329

Virginia law construes contracts “as a whole, giving terms their ordinary meaning

unless some other meaning is apparent from the context.”330 “The guiding light in

the construction of a contract is the intention of the parties as expressed by them in

the words they have used, and courts are bound to say that the parties intended what

the written instrument plainly declares.”331




general partner cannot take without the consent of the special limited partner. Of relevance
here, section 5.5.B(iv) prohibits the general partner from ‘sell[ing] all or any portion’ of
the property, ‘except with the Consent of the Special Limited Partner.’ This prohibition is
‘subject to the provisions contained in Section 5.4,’ which grant the general partner the
authority to sell “all or substantially all of the assets of the Partnership; provided, however,
that except for a sale pursuant to the Option Agreement, the terms of any such sale . . . must
receive the Consent of the Special Limited Partner before such transaction shall be binding
on the Partnership.’ The limited partners concede that, under section 5.4, the special
limited partner need not consent to the terms of a sale if the sale is pursuant to the option
agreement, for example where the nonprofit developer has exercised its right of first
refusal.”).
329
    Property LPA at HUDSON00018376; Va. Code Ann. § 50-73.84(b) (West) (“The law
of this Commonwealth shall govern relations among the partners and between the partners
and the partnership, and the liability of partners for debts, obligations and liabilities
chargeable to the partnership, in a partnership that has filed a statement of registration as a
registered limited liability partnership in this Commonwealth.”).
330
  Schuiling v. Harris, 747 S.E.2d 833, 836 (Va. 2013) (citing Virginian Ry. Co. v. Hood,
146 S.E. 284, 285 (Va. 1929)).
331
   Id. at 836 (quotation marks and citation omitted) (quoting Wilson v. Holyfield, 313
S.E.2d 396, 398 (1984)).

                                              89
          The parties dispute the meaning and effect of Section 8.02(e)’s first clause,

which begins: “Notwithstanding anything to the contrary contained herein . . . .”332

DLE contends the word “herein” means the clause applies only to the same

paragraph Section 8.02(e), thereby preserving Section 8.02(b)’s consent

requirements for the ROFR exercise.333 DLE contends “herein” is narrower than

other language that could have been chosen, like “[n]otwithstanding anything to the

contrary contained in this Agreement.”334 Alternatively, DLE argues the prefatory

clause is ambiguous and so, citing Delaware law, any inference must be drawn in

DLE’s favor.335 Plaintiffs argue Section 8.02(e)’s “notwithstanding” clause “applies

not only to the granting of a Section 42 ROFR, but also to its exercise.”336 Virginia

law supports Plaintiffs’ interpretation: I conclude “herein” refers to Article VIII and

not merely Section 8.02(e).


332
      Property LPA § 8.02(e).
333
      Post-Trial Tr. 81–82.
334
    Id. 82 (internal quotation marks omitted) (citing Tygon Peak, 2022 WL 34688, at *17);
id. 105 (citing Property LPA § 7.07).
335
    D.I. 184 at 4, 38 (citing Bandera, 2021 WL 5267734, at *71); D.I. 188 at 27, 30. This
interpretation would be contrary to Property LPA Section 15.10 which provides: “[A]ny
rule of law or legal decisions that would require interpretation of any ambiguity in this
Agreement against the party that has drafted it shall not apply and are hereby waived.”
Property LPA § 15.10. “A contract is not ambiguous merely because the parties disagree
as to the meaning of the terms used.” TM Delmarva Power, L.L.C. v. NCP of Va., L.L.C.,
557 S.E.2d 199, 200 (Va. 2002). Elsewhere, DLE has affirmed “[t]he plain language of
the Partnership Agreements is not ambiguous and constitutes the best evidence of the
parties’ intent.” D.I. 184 at 12.
336
      D.I. 185 at 9; D.I. 189 at 36.

                                            90
          I find these provisions of the Property LPA are unambiguous and so, I

construe them according to their plain meaning.337 Applying Virginia law, I cannot

treat any word or phrase as meaningless if a reasonable meaning can be given to it.338

Virginia law also gives specific guidance on interpreting “notwithstanding anything

to the contrary” clause: courts must locate a contrary provision or provisions to give

meaning to the clause. In Shepherd v. Davis, the Virginia Supreme Court interpreted

a lease agreement granting the lessee both a fixed-price purchase option and a right

of first refusal.339 The lessee attempted to invoke the fixed-price option instead of

exercising its right of first refusal, so the Virginia Supreme Court considered de novo

whether the right of first refusal “overr[o]de” the fixed-price option.340 The right of

first refusal provision contained prefatory language: “Notwithstanding anything

contained in this Agreement to the contrary . . . .”341 Giving that unambiguous

language its plain and ordinary meaning, the court found:




337
      See Golding v. Floyd, 539 S.E.2d 735, 736 (Va. 2001).
338
      See Dominion Savings Bank, FSB v. Costello, 512 S.E.2d 564, 567 (Va. 1999).
339
      574 S.E.2d 514, 516 (Va. 2003).
340
   Id. at 516–18; id. at 519 (“[W]e are not bound by a chancellor’s interpretation of a
contract because we have the same opportunity as the chancellor to consider the contract
language.”).
341
      Id. at 517.

                                             91
          [T]he prefatory language modifies the fixed-price option and gives the
          right of first refusal precedence. The fixed-price option is the only
          provision in the lease that, by its terms, is “contrary” to Shepherd’s right
          of first refusal. We agree with the Davises’ argument that “the use of
          the term ‘contrary’ suggests the terms being overridden are not
          complementary.” The phrase “notwithstanding anything to the
          contrary” means irrespective of the fixed-price option. To read this
          phrase as Shepherd suggests would render meaningless not only the
          prefatory language but also two other sentences found in
          Paragraph 23.11, which created the right of first refusal.342

          With this guidance, I look for contrary terms in the Property LPA to give

Section 8.02(e)’s “notwithstanding” clause meaning. There is nothing contrary to

Section 8.02(e) within Section 8.02(e) itself. To have meaning, “herein” must mean

something broader. One need not look far: Article VIII offers a contrary term in

Section 8.02(b)’s consent requirement.

          This broader meaning is consistent with how the Property LPA uses

“notwithstanding” clauses. The Property LPA uses “[n]otwithstanding anything to

the contrary contained herein” seven times, “[n]otwithstanding the forgoing” three

times,      “[n]otwithstanding       any   provisions   set   forth   herein”   once,    and

“[n]otwithstanding any other provision of this Agreement” once.343 In reading the

Property LPA as a whole and interpreting terms within the context in which they are



342
      Id. at 520 (alterations omitted).
343
   Compare Property LPA §§ 4.01(l)(i), 5.01(c)(iii), 8.01(b), 8.02(e), 8.08(c), 12.03, 15.06,
with id. §§ 8.02(c), 8.12(b), 12.07(e), and id. § 4.02(t), and id. § 7.07(a). Section 11.02(b)
includes the phrase “notwithstanding the provisions of Sections 7.02 and 7.04.” Id. §
11.02(b).

                                               92
used,344 I find the drafters wrote “notwithstanding the forgoing” to refer to the

paragraph or subsection in which the proviso is found;345 wrote “notwithstanding

any other provision of this Agreement” to mean what it says;346 and wrote

“notwithstanding anything to the contrary contained herein” to refer to something in

between, and at a minimum the article in which the provision appears.347 In the

specific context of Section 8.02(e), I find “herein” means Article VIII, in which

Section 8.02(b)’s contrary consent requirement is found. Accordingly, I conclude

Section 8.02(e) authorizes Property GP to designate a nonprofit to hold the ROFR,

notwithstanding Section 8.02(b)’s consent requirement. This is consistent with the




344
      See Schuiling, 747 S.E.2d at 836 (citing Virginian Ry., 146 S.E. at 285).
345
   Property LPA § 8.02(c) (notwithstanding Property GP’s option, also in Section 8.02(c),
Property SLP may request a “Continued Compliance Sale” or a sale after the submission
of a “Qualified Contract”); id. § 8.12(b) (requiring Property SLP to give “Notice . . . of its
determination that the General Partner shall be removed” unless, “the event giving rise to
[that] determination” arises under Sections 8.12(a)(ii)(G)–(I), “then there shall be no
requirement for Notice”); id. § 12.07(e) (stating the Property Partnership “shall indemnify
and reimburse the Tax Matters Partner . . . . Notwithstanding the foregoing, the provisions
on liability and indemnification of the General Partner set forth in Section 8.07 . . . shall be
fully applicable to the Tax Matters Partner”).
346
      Id. § 7.07(a).
347
    E.g., id. § 4.01(l)(i) (stating “procurement of . . . public and general liability insurance
must be completed no later than February 8th, 2004” notwithstanding when closing occurs,
contrary to Section 4.01(e)’s requirement to obtain title insurance before closing); see also
id. § 4.02(t) (stating that Property GP “shall not alter or permit [any person] to alter” the
Property in a way “which would increase [Property GP’s] responsibilities for compliance
with the Access Laws without prior written approval of” Property SLP, notwithstanding
Section 8.02(b)(i) which permits alterations to the Property under $50,000 without Property
SLP’s consent and does not require Property SLP’s consent to be written).

                                               93
Property LPA’s grant of general partner authority, which is plenary “[e]xcept as

otherwise set forth in” the Property LPA.348

            Having   concluded      that   Section   8.02(e)’s   grant   of   authority   is

“notwithstanding” Section 8.02(b)’s consent requirement, the next task is to

determine the scope of that grant of authority. Upon a designation, Section 8.02(e)

bakes in the timing and price of the disposition, to be no sooner than “on the fifteenth

(15th) anniversary of the first day of the first taxable year of the applicable Tax Credit

compliance period,” at the “minimum price established in accordance with

Section 42(i)(7) of the Code.”349 And it describes “payment of amounts pursuant to

this clause,” which can logically only occur upon an exercise of the ROFR and

subsequent disposition. The clause “notwithstanding anything to the contrary” also

requires including a disposition in Section 8.02(e)’s grant of authority; limiting

Section 8.02(e) to a designation alone would mean Section 8.02(b)’s consent

requirement would still apply to a disposition, such that nothing in the Property LPA

would be “contrary” to Section 8.02(e) and the “notwithstanding” clause would be

meaningless. The ROFR’s exercise and disposition must also be “notwithstanding”

Section 8.02(b)’s consent requirement.350 Finally, Virginia law requires interpreting



348
      Property LPA § 8.01(a).
349
      Id. § 8.02(e) (citing 26 U.S.C. § 42(i)(7)).
350
      Id.

                                                94
a right of first refusal in consideration of its purpose to benefit the party who has the

right of first refusal, here the Designated Nonprofit.351 That principle supports an

efficient designation and disposition under the Property GP’s singular authority.

       And so, I conclude Section 8.02(e) grants Property GP authority to unilaterally

designate a nonprofit to hold a Section 42 ROFR, which can then exercise that ROFR

in a disposition. Section 8.02(b)’s consent requirements do not apply to Property

GP’s designation of a Section 42 ROFR, or to the exercise of or disposition under

that ROFR.      That means the Fund LPA’s consent requirements, specifically

Sections 6.3A(ii) and 6.3B(viii), are not triggered by a Property LPA ROFR

designation. Property GP had the authority to dispose of the Property to the

Designated Nonprofit under Section 8.02(e) without Consent from Property SLP,

Fund GP, or Fund LP, and without Supermajority Consent from DLE.

       In conclusion, DLE has not demonstrated that Fund GP breached any Fund

LPA consent provision. Therefore, DLE has not demonstrated that Fund GP violated

the Fund LPA “in any material respect,” as is required to constitute Cause for

removal under Section 7.2A(iii). With respect to Counts I and II and Counterclaim




351
   See Cities Serv. Oil Co. v. Estes, 155 S.E.2d 59, 63 (Va. 1967) (“Since a right of first
refusal is inserted in a lease for the benefit of the lessee, we must interpret it with that
purpose in mind.” (citing First Nat. Exch. Bank v. Roanoke Oil Co., 192 S.E. 764, 770 (Va.
1937))).

                                            95
Counts I and V, I find: (i) Fund GP did not breach any contractual duties;352 (ii) the

Default Notice is invalid as to Fund LPA Section 7.2A(iii); and (iii) DLE did not

have Cause to remove Fund GP as general partner of the Fund under Fund LPA

Section 7.2A(iii).

              D.     Fund GP Is Not Liable For Breaches That Do Not Have A
                     Material Adverse Effect On The Fund.

       DLE not only seeks declaratory judgments seeking removal of Fund GP, but

also asserts breach claims seeking to hold Fund GP liable. As explained, Fund GP

has not breached the Fund LPA or its fiduciary duties. Further, liability is precluded

by the Fund LPA’s limitation of liability provision.

       Fund LPA Section 6.7A, Limitation on Liability of General Partner, requires

that any breach of fiduciary duty or breach of contract have a material adverse effect

on the Fund in order for Fund GP to be liable.353 Fund GP would only be liable to

DLE for a breach if the breach materially affects the entire Fund. This is a high




352
   While DLE has alleged a breach of Section 6.4F as a breach of contract, and a potential
Cause for removal under Section 7.2A(iii), this opinion treats the claim as a breach of
fiduciary duty.
353
   Fund LPA § 6.7A. Plaintiffs raised Section 6.7A once in their Complaint and once in
their pretrial brief. Compl. ¶ 36; D.I. 168 at 9. While the parties did not focus on this
limitation of liability, I must read the Fund LPA as a whole. See Salamone, 106 A.3d at
368; E.I. du Pont, 498 A.2d at 1113; see also In re Rural/Metro Corp. S’holders Litig., 102
A.3d 205, 219–20, 249 (Del. Ch. 2014) (explaining that the Court considered exculpation
even though the parties “did not ask the court to rule on the availability of exculpation”).

                                            96
bar.354 As the claimant, DLE bears the burden to prove that Fund GP is not

exculpated.355 DLE has wholly failed to brief this element of its liability case.

         At the risk of straying from my task, I will share that I do not believe that a

failure to sue over an improperly exercised ROFR can cause a material adverse effect

on the Fund after the Compliance Period. As explained, Fund GP’s duties to

safeguard the funds and assets of the Fund encompass the Property Partnership

Interests and cash reserves, but not the Property itself.356 As explained, Fund GP is

authorized and charged to protect those interests only as consistent with the purpose

of the Fund. And as explained, under that purpose, the Fund’s Property Partnership

Interests have always been valued as sunsetting with a ROFR disposition. Because

the partners understand and intend the Property Partnership Interests will terminate

with a ROFR disposition, it seems to me that an improperly exercised ROFR does

not change the value of the Fund’s Property Partnership Interests, and so cannot

constitute a material adverse event on the Fund. Consequently, failure to correct or




354
   See Abry P’rs V, L.P. v. F & W Acq. LLC, 891 A.2d 1032, 1064 (Del. Ch. 2006) (finding
where the parties contracted for a limitation of liability, “the Buyer may not escape the
contractual limitations on liability by attempting to show that the Seller acted in a reckless,
grossly negligent, or negligent manner”); AB Stable VIII LLC v. MAPS Hotels & Resorts
One LLC, 268 A.3d 198, 216 (Del. 2021) (characterizing a material adverse effect as a high
bar); Hexion Specialty Chems., Inc. v. Huntsman Corp., 965 A.2d 715, 738 (Del. Ch. 2008)
(describing proving a material adverse effect as a “heavy burden”).
355
      See Rural/Metro, 102 A.3d at 252.
356
      Fund LPA §§ 6.4F, 6.8E.

                                              97
rescind an improperly exercised ROFR would be exculpated due to the absence of a

material adverse effect on the Fund.

      DLE theorizes there is other value that can only be realized if DLE can stop

the exercise of the ROFR, and in turn the Disposition.357 DLE’s own projections

and admissions at trial belie this trial theory of “other value,” particularly combined

with the projections called for by the Fund LPA.358 And I analyzed the consent

requirements and concluded DLE does not have an applicable or meaningful consent

right om the context of a ROFR disposition, so it cannot impose its unwillingness to

sell on the Property Partnership.

      The decision not to challenge the Disposition, even if it were a breach, is

exculpated because that decision did not, and perhaps cannot, create a material

adverse effect on the Fund.

             E.     Upon A Final Judgment Not Subject To Appeal, Fund GP
                    Will Be Entitled To Damages, Costs, And Attorneys’ Fees.

      If this opinion’s conclusions become a final judgment not subject to appeal,

Fund GP will be entitled to damages and all reasonable costs and expenses, including




357
   See Clarifying Nonprofit Purchase Rights at 1169 (“In all cases where a nonprofit holds
a Section 42 ROFR, these various investor efforts can only succeed if the nonprofit cannot
successfully acquire the property pursuant to the ROFR.”).
358
   Fund LPA § 3.3A(ii); JX004 at HUDSON00018773; JX011 at DLE_0005420; Trane
Tr. 520–22; JX037 at DLE_0004085; JX089 at DLE_0001819; JX014 at DLE_0007799–
801; Chiusano Tr. 390, 392–98; 400–01, 405–06, 410–11.

                                           98
attorneys’ fees under Fund LPA Section 7.2B. Section 7.2B provides, in pertinent

part:

          [I]f it shall thereafter be determined by a final judgment not subject to
          appeal or the execution of an agreement by the General Partner and the
          Investor Limited Partner [who sought removal] that no Cause for such
          removal existed, then the Investor Limited Partner shall be obligated to
          pay to the General Partner an amount equal to the sum of (i) the fair
          market value of the General Partner’s Interest (as determined by the
          applicable court), (ii) any and all damages determined by the applicable
          court to be due to the General Partner from the Fund or the Investor
          Limited Partner as a result of such wrongful removal by the Investor
          Limited Partner and (iii) all reasonable costs and expenses (including
          attorney fees) incurred by the General Partner in connection with such
          removal.359

Fund GP successfully challenged a purported removal by DLE where no Cause for

such removal existed.360 For the same reasons, DLE is not entitled to damages under

Section 7.2B. Upon a final judgment, DLE must pay for Fund GP’s damages,

expenses, costs, and fees.

          Pursuant to my July 9, 2021 Order, this matter is bifurcated with respect to

damages.361 But Fund GP’s award under Section 7.2B may only be considered after

entry of a final judgment not subject to appeal.362 I invite either a stipulated

implementing order reflecting a designation of this opinion as a partial final



359
      Fund LPA § 7.2B.
360
      D.I. 168 at 9; D.I. 185 at 57.
361
      D.I. 47.
362
      Fund LPA § 7.2B.

                                             99
judgment under Rule 54(b), or a motion for such designation.363 After the time for

appeal has passed or a final and nonappealable judgment in Fund GP’s favor is

entered, the parties should confer as to the manner in which they would like to

present their submissions to the Court on the issue of Fund GP’s award under Fund

LPA Section 7.2B, and inform the Court by joint letter how, and on what timeline,

they propose to proceed.

         III.   CONCLUSION

         For the reasons stated above, I find for Fund GP on all counts and

counterclaim counts. DLE lacked Cause to remove Fund GP as general partner

because DLE failed to demonstrate Fund GP breached its fiduciary or contractual

duties. The Default Notice is invalid, and Fund GP remains the general partner of

the Fund. Fees are contractually shifted in favor of Fund GP; this Court will

determine any remaining damages after entry of a partial final judgment not subject

to appeal.




363
      Ct. Ch. R. 54(b).

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