On March 27, 2025, the First Department issued a decision in Pappas v. B & G Holding Co., 2025 NY Slip Op. 01873, holding that where a partnership agreement provided for the transfer of ownership interests at death, a partner could not transfer ownership in his will, explaining:
The partnership agreement between decedent William Egan and defendant Eugene Leogrande (collectively, the partners) prohibited each of them from selling, transferring or otherwise disposing of his partnership interest or his shares in the partners’ jointly owned corporations except in accordance with the terms and conditions set forth in th[e] Agreement. The partnership agreement provided that transfers of each partner’s interest or stock during his lifetime could only be made after, inter alia, giving notice to the other partner and affording him a first option to purchase the interest or stock at a price set by the agreement. Paragraph 4(A) of the agreement further provides: “The death of a Shareholder or Partner shall constitute an offer of the personal representative of such deceased Shareholder’s or Partner’s estate to sell all of his Shares or Partnership Interest held by the estate” at a price determined as provided by the agreement.
Supreme Court correctly determined that decedent breached the partnership agreement by including in his will a bequest to plaintiff of his partnership interest and his shares in the relevant corporations. The parties plainly intended to require that such transfers be made solely in compliance with the terms of the agreement, whether during a partner’s lifetime or after his death. To allow a partner to circumvent those contractual terms posthumously by making a specific testamentary disposition of his interest would defeat the parties’ clear intentions and reasonable expectations at the time of contracting. Since the bequest of the partnership interest was invalid as a breach of the decedent’s contractual obligations, the court properly denied plaintiff’s motion for summary judgment and granted defendants’ cross-motion for summary judgment on their counterclaim for specific performance of the partnership agreement’s provisions for the transfer of a deceased partner’s interest and shares to the surviving partner.
(Internal quotations and citations omitted).