Filling in the Gaps: Shareholder Oppression After Ritchie V. Rupe: Part 1
On June 20, 2014, the Texas Supreme Court’s decision in Ritchie v. Rupe1 initiated a seismic shift in Texas law governing the protection of minority shareholders in closely-held corporations and limited liability companies. After almost thirty years of steady appellate court development of a judicial remedy for oppressive conduct against minority shareholders, recognizing the trial court’s power to force an oppressive controlling shareholder to purchase the oppressed minority shareholder’s stock for a fair value, the Texas Supreme Court suddenly announced that no common law cause of action for oppression existed and that Texas courts had no power to order a buy-out under the statutory remedy for oppression. Three dissenting Justices accused the majority of “extinguish[ing] meaningful protections for minority shareholders.” A host of academic articles and continuing legal education papers from practitioners both decried and applauded the demise of the shareholder oppression doctrine. The gloomy assessment: “In the wake of Ritchie, minority shareholders are already having a much tougher time in the courts.”