How A Deadlocked Family Business Got Dissolved By The State’s Highest Court
What This Really Cost: The Human Wreckage Behind The Deadlock
Dr. James H. Davis built something for his sons. He spent years setting it up. He created four trusts, one for each boy, and built two LLCs to hold 68 acres of Wake County land. He wrote operating agreements meant to last. He died thinking he had given his family a foundation.
What he actually left behind was a trap.
The trap was the structure itself. He gave two of his four sons the power to manage everything and required them to agree on every single decision. He gave the other two sons a 25% financial stake each and exactly zero ability to influence what happened to their inheritance. Tad and Jon, the two brothers frozen out of management, watched for years as their shares of 68 acres sat unused, unable to be sold, rented, developed, or harvested, because two other people could not agree. Their money was locked inside a deadlock they had no vote in breaking.
The estrangement between Jim and Charles was not an overnight explosion. It grew slowly, starting somewhere around 2018 or 2019, and spread through every conversation they attempted afterward. They talked about agritourism for two years. They could not agree. Jim wanted to sell to outside developers. Charles would only consider a deal where he bought the property himself, but he never put a real offer on the table. Mediation failed. Letters went unanswered. A developer submitted a letter of intent, waited, and eventually gave up when the June 30, 2022 deadline passed with no authorization from Charles.
There is something particular about this kind of conflict within a family. It is not a fight that ends. It does not resolve itself at a dinner table or during a holiday call. It sits in the paperwork, in the unanswered term sheets, in the expired management plans. The North Carolina Supreme Court noted that Charles and Jim maintained “cooperative and cordial” communications throughout. That detail is its own kind of tragedy. These men were not screaming at each other. They were being polite while the inheritance rotted.
The forestry management plan on the Berry Hill property expired in March 2022 and nothing replaced it. The JHD property never had one at all. The last timber sale was 2004. One sale, before their father was gone, and then two decades of quiet inaction while the taxes were paid and the Secretary of State filings were submitted on schedule. Technically compliant. Functionally dead.
The operating agreements were supposed to be an estate planning vehicle, a way to pass real wealth to four sons through an active real estate business. Instead they became a legal cage. The cage did not break anyone’s bones. There was no shouting, no scandal, no fraud. Just a slow erosion of a father’s plan by the structural impossibility of unanimous consent between two men who had stopped being able to work together.
Verbatim From The Court Record: What The Judges Actually Said
Every quote below comes directly from the January 31, 2025 North Carolina Supreme Court opinion in Case No. 32PA24. Nothing paraphrased. Nothing softened.
“The core factual allegations of [p]laintiffs’ Complaint are undisputed and show that the managers cannot agree on the use or disposition of the Property and have not been able to reach agreement for at least three years, there is no mechanism in the Operating Agreements to break the deadlock, the LLCs have not conducted any economically useful activity since 2004, and there is no way for the LLCs to conduct any business, realize any profit, or dispose of any assets so long as the unbreakable deadlock persists.”
— Business Court, November 16, 2023, quoted and affirmed by NC Supreme Court, January 31, 2025
- No useful activity since 2004: The Business Court found as undisputed fact that 21 years passed between the LLCs’ last real business act and the date of this ruling. That is two decades of a vehicle designed to create wealth sitting entirely idle.
- Unbreakable deadlock: The court’s word choice here is precise. “Unbreakable” appears in the Business Court’s own order, reflecting that the operating agreement contained zero mechanisms to resolve disagreement. The structure guaranteed paralysis the moment the two managers stopped agreeing.
- No business, no profit, no asset disposal: These are three distinct legal failures, each of which independently undermines the LLC’s stated purpose of being “an active real estate business.”
“By Charles’ own admission, he did not believe he had any obligation to consider a sale of the Property.”
— NC Supreme Court, January 31, 2025, Opinion of the Court, Section IV.B
- This is a direct admission of bad faith in managerial duty: The operating agreements gave the LLCs a purpose that included selling property. Charles admitted he believed he had no obligation to even consider that legally stated purpose when his personal preference conflicted with it.
- The court flagged this separately in a footnote: The Supreme Court noted this raised questions about Charles’s fiduciary duties to the other members under N.C.G.S. Β§ 57D-6-02(2)(ii), but since the parties did not argue that provision, the court did not rule on it. The question was left open on purpose, and it is damaging.
“Although the communications between the managers are cooperative and cordial in tone, there is no evidence of progress toward a reasonable outcome, which would result in any form of active use of the Property. Charles has only proposed two options at this point: to stay the course and not change any use of the land, or to buy the Property, even though he has never provided any firm offer for the Property.”
— NC Supreme Court, January 31, 2025, Opinion of the Court, Section IV.B
- Polite stonewalling is still stonewalling: The court explicitly rejected Charles’s argument that cordial communications proved the LLCs were operable. Tone is irrelevant to function. The business was frozen regardless of how nicely the brothers spoke to each other.
- Charles’s “buy the property” option was never real: The court specifically noted he never provided a firm offer. Proposing to buy something and actually submitting binding terms are different things. Charles used the threat of a purchase as a negotiating tactic without ever converting it into a legitimate proposal.
“We agree with the Business Court that, based upon these definitions, ‘practicable’ is synonymous with ‘feasible’ and does not mean simply ‘possible.’ Something may be possible but not feasible without extra time or resources in a certain circumstance. By that same logic, ‘not practicable’ is synonymous with ‘unfeasible’ and does not mean ‘impossible.'”
— NC Supreme Court, January 31, 2025, Opinion of the Court, Section IV
- This is new law in North Carolina: The Supreme Court had never formally defined “not practicable” under N.C.G.S. Β§ 57D-6-02(2)(i) before this case. This opinion sets binding statewide precedent. Every future LLC dissolution case in North Carolina now uses this “unfeasible” standard.
- The distinction between “impossible” and “unfeasible” is critical for future cases: A party seeking dissolution does not have to prove that operation is literally impossible. They only have to prove it is unreasonably difficult, which is a much lower bar. This significantly expands the circumstances under which courts can force dissolution of a deadlocked LLC.
Who Gets Hurt When Rich Families Can’t Agree: The Real Stakes of This Case
Public Health: Due Process and Access to Legal Remedy
This case is about property rights, fiduciary duty, and access to legal remedy for people locked into defective business structures they cannot escape without years of litigation.
- Two brothers with no management power, Tad and Jon, held 50% of the equity combined and had no legal mechanism to force action. Their inheritance sat idle for over two decades because the structural design of the LLCs stripped them of any ability to vote, negotiate, or demand accountability. This is a specific, documented harm to two individuals’ economic rights.
- The only path to resolution was a lawsuit filed in 2022, meaning Tad and Jon waited roughly 4 years from the start of the deadlock (2018) before the matter even reached a court of final review in 2025. Seven years of frozen assets, ongoing legal costs, and a family permanently fractured by what a judge called an “unbreakable deadlock.”
- The case traveled from the Business Court through summary judgment to the North Carolina Supreme Court before final resolution. That process takes money, legal representation, and time. The structural flaw in Dr. Davis’s estate plan created a legal burden that fell on all four sons equally, whether they caused the deadlock or not.
Economic Inequality: When Estate Planning Fails the People It Is Supposed to Protect
Estate planning tools like LLCs and trusts are supposed to transfer wealth across generations efficiently. When those tools are structurally defective, they transfer poverty of access instead.
- The LLCs’ stated purpose was to engage in “an active real estate business” to generate monetary value for Dr. Davis’s sons. The actual result was 68 acres of undeveloped Wake County land sitting completely idle for over 21 years, from 2004 to the date of dissolution, generating no revenue, no development, and no realized value for any of the four beneficiaries.
- Wake County, North Carolina, where the property is located, has been one of the fastest-growing real estate markets in the country over the past two decades. Sixty-eight acres of undeveloped land in that county would have appreciated significantly in that period. The deadlock trapped that appreciation inside a structure that could not realize it.
- Charles’s consistent position, by his own admission documented in court, was that he had no obligation to consider selling. One person’s unilateral veto power held three other people’s economic interests hostage because the operating agreement contained no protection against exactly this outcome.
- The new six-factor test established by this Supreme Court opinion gives future LLC members a clearer path to judicial dissolution when they find themselves in structurally defective agreements. That precedent is a concrete public benefit, but it arrived only after this family spent years in litigation to get here.
- Operating agreements drafted without deadlock-breaking mechanisms are not rare. Attorneys, estate planners, and small business formation services routinely create two-manager LLC structures with unanimous consent requirements and no buyout or arbitration clause. This case is a documented warning about the economic damage that design choice causes when relationships break down.
The Price of a Structural Flaw
What You Can Do If You Are Locked Inside a Broken Business Structure
This case is now settled law in North Carolina. Here is what it means for anyone currently trapped in an LLC, a family business, or an estate-planning vehicle with a deadlock baked into its design.
The People and Roles Involved in This Outcome
- Charles B.Q. Davis Trust (Intervenor-Defendant-Appellant): The party that fought dissolution at the Business Court level, appealed to the Supreme Court, and lost. Represented by Joseph H. Nanney Jr. of Meynardie & Nanney, PLLC.
- James H.Q. Davis Trust and William R.Q. Davis Trust (Plaintiffs-Appellees): The parties who filed suit in July 2022 and prevailed. Represented by E.D. Gaskins Jr., James M. Hash, and Andrew M. Simpson of Everett Gaskins Hancock Tuttle Hash LLP.
- Justice Barringer, NC Supreme Court: Authored the opinion. Established the binding six-factor test for “not practicable” under N.C.G.S. Β§ 57D-6-02(2)(i).
- Chief Business Court Judge Louis A. Bledsoe III: Trial court judge who issued the original dissolution order on November 14 and November 16, 2023.
- North Carolina Forestry Association, Inc. and Forest Landowner’s Association, Inc.: Filed as amici curiae (friends of the court) to argue that sound forest management is economically useful. The Supreme Court acknowledged their argument but ruled it did not overcome the deadlock finding.
Regulatory and Legal Watchlist: Who Governs This Space
- North Carolina Secretary of State, Business Registration Division: The state body responsible for LLC formation filings in North Carolina. All LLCs must file with this office. Operating agreement defects, like missing deadlock clauses, are not reviewed at formation. The state accepts whatever the founders file.
- North Carolina Business Court: The specialized court that handled this case at the trial level. Mandatory complex business cases, including LLC dissolution disputes, are routed here by the Chief Justice under N.C.G.S. Β§ 7A-45.4(a).
- North Carolina Supreme Court: Issued the final binding ruling on January 31, 2025. The new six-factor test is now the law of the state. Any future LLC dissolution case under N.C.G.S. Β§ 57D-6-02(2)(i) must be evaluated against these factors.
- North Carolina State Bar: Regulates attorneys who draft LLC operating agreements. If your attorney created a two-manager LLC with unanimous consent requirements and no deadlock resolution clause, this case is evidence of the foreseeable harm that design causes.
What You Can Do Right Now
- If you are in an LLC with a 50/50 management split: Read your operating agreement today. Search for the words “deadlock,” “arbitration,” “buyout,” and “tiebreaker.” If none of those words appear, your operating agreement has the same structural defect that drove this case to the North Carolina Supreme Court.
- If you are the minority member with no management rights: You have legal standing to seek dissolution under N.C.G.S. Β§ 57D-6-02(2) if your interests are being blocked. This case confirms that the court will weigh your situation seriously, even if you cannot force a vote.
- If you are an estate planning attorney or small business attorney in any state: This opinion, alongside the Colorado, Delaware, Mississippi, South Dakota, and New York cases cited within it, represent a national body of case law establishing that operating agreements without deadlock-breaking mechanisms are legally defective. Draft accordingly.
- Mutual aid and community alternatives: If you are a small business owner or cooperative member who cannot afford years of litigation to resolve a structural deadlock, connect with your local legal aid organization, community development financial institution (CDFI), or worker cooperative support organization. Many offer free or low-cost operating agreement review services specifically designed to prevent exactly this kind of structural failure.
- Know what this precedent does: This ruling does not require you to prove impossibility to get out of a broken structure. You only need to prove it is unfeasible. In North Carolina, that bar is now clearly defined. Use it.
The source document for this investigation is attached below.
additional source:
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