Introduction: The Silent Takeover
In a Minnesota close corporation (or closely-held limited liability company), relationships between shareholders should start with mutual trust — but that trust can erode quickly. When majority shareholders begin pushing a minority owner out of management, profits, or decision-making, it’s called a freeze-out (or squeeze-out).
For minority shareholders, freeze-outs are more than unfair — they can devastate your livelihood and destroy the value of your investment. Fortunately, Minnesota law gives you powerful tools to fight back.
What is a Shareholder Freeze-Out?
A freeze-out happens when controlling shareholders or directors use their power to pressure a minority shareholder into selling their shares cheaply or to eliminate their role in the business.
Common Freeze-Out Tactics
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Termination from Employment: Especially harmful when salary is your main return on investment.
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Withholding Dividends: Cutting distributions while paying large salaries or bonuses to majority owners.
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Excluding from Management: Removing you from the board or management roles.
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Information Blackout: Denying access to corporate records or financial statements.
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Dilution of Ownership: Issuing new shares to dilute your voting power.
- Ceasing Tax Payments: Many companies pay the owners taxes each year. If this is the norm but then is halted, it can be a freeze out tactic.
Why Freeze-Outs Happen
In Minnesota close corporations, shareholders are often also employees. Your financial return comes from two sources:
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Salary/benefits as an employee.
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Distributions/dividends as a shareholder.
When personal conflicts arise — or when majority owners want to consolidate power — they may target both sources of your return to pressure you out.
Legal Protections for Minority Shareholders in Minnesota
Statutory Safeguard: Minn. Stat. § 302A.751 (or Minn. Stat. § 322C.0701 for an LLC)
This statute allows a shareholder to petition the court for relief when directors or majority shareholders act in a way that is:
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Unfairly prejudicial toward them.
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In breach of fiduciary duties.
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Oppressive in the context of a close corporation.
Fiduciary Duty Standards
Under Minnesota case law (e.g., Pedro v. Pedro, 489 N.W.2d 798), shareholders in closely held corporations owe each other duties similar to partners — requiring honesty, loyalty, and fair dealing.
Remedies Available to Frozen-Out Shareholders
If you prove a freeze-out, Minnesota courts have broad powers to set things right:
1. Court-Ordered Buyout
The court may order the majority shareholders or the corporation to purchase your shares at fair value — without discounts for minority status or lack of marketability (unless agreed in advance).
2. Injunctive Relief
The court can order the company to resume paying distributions, reinstate you in management, or stop harmful actions.
3. Damages & Disgorgement
Courts can require majority shareholders to repay wrongfully taken funds or profits.
4. Dissolution
In extreme cases, the court can dissolve the corporation — a last resort but sometimes a powerful negotiation tool.
Proving a Freeze-Out
To win a freeze-out case, you’ll need to gather strong evidence:
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Corporate financial statements.
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Board and shareholder meeting minutes.
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Payroll and distribution records.
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Emails and correspondence showing exclusion or intent to force you out.
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Witness testimony from other shareholders, employees, or advisors.
Tip: Document every incident of exclusion, denied access, or suspicious financial activity.
Preventing a Freeze-Out Before It Happens
Negotiate a Strong Shareholder Agreement (Operating Agreement for an LLC)
Include:
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Guaranteed access to records.
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Employment protections for shareholder-employees.
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Buy-sell provisions with fair valuation methods.
Maintain Ongoing Involvement
Attend shareholder meetings, review financials regularly, and stay active in company decisions.
Secure Periodic Valuations
Annual or biannual independent valuations help establish a fair baseline if a buyout becomes necessary.
When to Act
Time is not your ally in a freeze-out. The longer you wait:
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The more your leverage decreases.
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The harder it becomes to prove oppression.
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The more majority owners can restructure finances to reduce your claim value.
Minnesota’s statutes of limitations apply — for example, breach of fiduciary duty claims generally have a six-year deadline (Minn. Stat. § 541.05) but there are exceptions..
FAQs
Q: Is firing a minority shareholder always a freeze-out?
Not necessarily — but if it’s paired with loss of income, exclusion from information, and pressure to sell shares, it can be part of a freeze-out strategy.
Q: Can I be forced to sell my shares?
Only under certain conditions, such as those in a valid shareholder agreement or a court order.
Q: What is the difference between “freeze-out” and “squeeze-out”?
They are often used interchangeably, but “squeeze-out” sometimes refers specifically to forcing a shareholder to sell their shares.
Conclusion: Fight Back Early
Freeze-outs can happen quickly and quietly, leaving you on the outside of a business you helped build. Minnesota law gives you powerful remedies — but only if you act before damage becomes irreversible.
If you believe you are being frozen out, contact MKT Law immediately. We represent Minnesota minority shareholders in high-stakes disputes and know how to protect your rights and maximize your recovery.
