Texas v. Delaware web

Earlier this month, the Texas Business Court issued its first ruling in Primexx Energy Opportunity Fund, LP v. Primexx Energy Corporation, addressing the modification of fiduciary duties in limited partnerships. See Cause No. 24-BC01B-0010 Primexx Energy Opportunity Fund, LP, et al v. Primexx Energy Corporation, et al. (First Division).

Two limited partners sued the controlling partner after a forced sale of the partnership, claiming breaches of fiduciary duties due to an unreasonably low sale price and inadequate due diligence.

The court analyzed the fiduciary duties under the Texas Business Organizations Code (TBOC) and an exculpatory clause that sought to limit those duties. It concluded that while partners cannot completely eliminate fiduciary responsibilities, they can define certain permissible conduct. The court ruled that the defendants’ actions did not breach their contractual obligations.

Compared to Delaware law, Texas law imposes stricter limitations on eliminating fiduciary duties, allowing modifications only if they are reasonable. In Delaware, fiduciary duties can be eliminated by contract, except for the covenant of good faith and fair dealing.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR:

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Casey Erick is a Shareholder and focuses on Commercial Litigation and Employment Law. He has represented clients in both litigation and transactional matters that span across commercial law, labor and employment, real estate, consumer protection, and general litigation including, but not limited to breach of contract, corporate trade secret theft, tortious interference, defamation, personal injury, fraud, and various other kinds of civil litigation. He has represented high-profile clients as well as defended against high-profile national and global entities in matters related to commercial litigation, defamation, privacy, negligence, the Stored Communications Act, the Texas Harmful Access by Computer Act, Texas identity Theft Enforcement and Protection Act, and the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act. Casey is Board Certified in Civil Trial Law.