In 1964, petitioner Bangor Punta Corp. (Bangor Punta), through
its wholly owned subsidiary, petitioner Bangor Punta Operations,
Inc., acquired 9.3% of the outstanding stock of respondent Bangor
& Aroostook Railroad Co. (BAR), a Maine railroad, by purchasing
all the assets of BAR's holding company, Bangor & Aroostook
Corp. (B&A). From 1964 to 1969, Bangor Punta controlled and
directed BAR. In 1969, Bangor Punta, again through its subsidiary,
sold all its BAR stock to Amoskeag Co., which then assumed
responsibility for BAR's management and later acquired additional
shares to give it 99% ownership of the outstanding stock. In 1971,
BAR and its subsidiary filed an action against Bangor Punta and its
subsidiary, alleging various acts of corporate mismanagement of BAR
during the period of control from 1960 through 1967 by Bangor Punta
and B&A, and seeking damages for violations of the federal
antitrust and securities laws, the Maine Public Utilities Act, and
the common law of Maine. The District Court first noted that
Amoskeag would be the principal beneficiary of any recovery, and
was thus the real party in interest, and that, since Amoskeag had
acquired its BAR stock long after the alleged wrongs had occurred,
any recovery by it would be a windfall. The District Court then
dismissed the action on the ground that, since Amoskeag would have
been barred from maintaining a shareholder derivative action due to
its failure to satisfy the "contemporaneous ownership" requirement
of both Fed.Rule Civ.Proc. 23.1(1), and state law, equitable
principles precluded the use of the corporate fiction to evade that
requirement. The Court of Appeals reversed primarily on the ground
that, in view of BAR's status as a "public" or
"
quasi-public" corporation and the important nature of the
services it provides, any recovery by BAR would also inure to the
public's benefit, a factor the court found to be sufficient to
support a corporate cause of action and to render any windfall to
Amoskeag irrelevant.
Held:
Page 417 U. S. 704
1. The equitable principles that a stockholder, who has
purchased all or substantially all the shares of a corporation from
a vendor at a fair price, may not seek to have the corporation
recover against that vendor for prior corporate mismanagement, and
that the corporate entity may be disregarded if equity so demands,
preclude respondent corporations from maintaining the action under
either the federal antitrust and securities laws or state law. Pp.
417 U. S.
710-713.
(a) Amoskeag, having purchased 98.3% of the stock of BAR from
Bangor Punta and alleging no fraud, would have no standing in
equity to maintain this action for alleged corporate mismanagement.
Home Fire Insurance Co. v. Barber, 67 Neb. 644, 93 N.W.
1024. Pp.
417 U. S.
711-712;
417 U. S.
713-714.
(b) As the principal beneficiary of any recovery and itself
estopped from complaining of petitioners' alleged wrongs, Amoskeag
cannot avoid the command of equity through the guise of proceeding
in the name of respondent corporations which it owns and controls.
Pp.
417 U. S.
711-712;
417 U. S.
713-714.
2. The Court of Appeals' assumption that any recovery would
necessarily benefit the public is unwarranted, and also overlooks
the fact that Amoskeag, the actual beneficiary of any recovery,
would be unjustly enriched, since it has sustained no injury.
Neither the federal antitrust and securities laws nor the
applicable state laws contemplate a windfall recovery by Amoskeag
in these circumstances. Pp.
417 U. S.
714-716.
3. Deterrence of railroad mismanagement is not, in itself, a
sufficient ground for allowing respondents to recover. If such
deterrence were the only objective, it would suffice if any
plaintiff were willing to file a complaint, and no injury or
violation of a legal duty to the particular plaintiff would have to
be alleged. P.
417 U. S.
717.
482 F.2d 865, reversed.
POWELL, J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which BURGER,
C.J., and STEWART, BLACKMUN, and REHNQUIST, JJ., joined. MARSHALL,
J., filed a dissenting opinion, in which DOUGLAS, BRENNAN, and
WHITE, JJ., joined,
post, p.
417 U. S.
719.
Page 417 U. S. 705
MR. JUSTICE POWELL delivered the opinion of the Court.
This case involves an action by a Maine railroad corporation
seeking damages from its former owners for violations of federal
antitrust and securities laws, applicable state statutes, and
common law principles. The complaint alleged that the former owners
had engaged in various acts of corporate waste and mismanagement
during the period of their control. The shareholder presently in
control of the railroad acquired more than 99% of the railroad's
shares from the former owners long after the alleged wrongs
occurred. We must decide whether equitable principles applicable
under federal and state law preclude recovery by the railroad in
these circumstances.
I
Respondent Bangor & Aroostook Railroad Co. (BAR), a Maine
corporation, operates a railroad in the northern part of the State
of Maine. Respondent Bangor Investment Co., also a Maine
corporation, is a wholly owned subsidiary of BAR. Petitioner Bangor
Punta Corp. (Bangor Punta), a Delaware corporation, is a
diversified investment company with business operations in several
areas. Petitioner Bangor Punta Operations, Inc. (BPO), a New York
corporation, is a wholly owned subsidiary of Bangor Punta.
On October 13, 1964, Bangor Punta, through its subsidiary BPO,
acquired 98.3% of the outstanding stock of BAR. This was
accomplished by the subsidiary's purchase
Page 417 U. S. 706
of all the assets of Bangor & Aroostook Corp. (B&A), a
Maine corporation established in 1960 as the holding company of
BAR. From 1964 to 1969, Bangor Punta controlled and directed BAR
through its ownership of about 98.3% of the outstanding stock. On
October 2, 1969, Bangor Punta, again through its subsidiary, sold
all of its stock for $5,000,000 to Amoskeag Co., a Delaware
investment corporation. Amoskeag assumed responsibility for the
management of BAR and later acquired additional shares to give it
ownership of more than 99% of all the outstanding stock.
In 1971, BAR and its subsidiary filed the present action against
Bangor Punta and its subsidiary in the United States District Court
for the District of Maine. The complaint specified 13 counts of
alleged mismanagement, misappropriation, and waste of BAR's
corporate assets occurring during the period from 1960 through 1967
when B&A and then Bangor Punta controlled BAR. [
Footnote 1] Damages were sought in the amount
of $7,000,000 for violations of both federal and state laws. The
federal statutes and regulations alleged to have been violated
included § 10 of the Clayton Act, 15 U.S.C. § 20; § 10(b) of the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934, 15 U.S.C. § 78j(b); and Rule
10b-5, 17 CFR § 240.10b-5, as promulgated thereunder by the
Securities and Exchange Commission. The state claims were grounded
on § 104 of the Maine Public Utilities Act, Maine
Rev.Stat.Ann.,
Page 417 U. S. 707
Tit. 35, § 104 (1965) and the common law of Maine.
The complaint focused on four inter-company transactions which
allegedly resulted in injury to BAR. [
Footnote 2] Counts I and II averred that B&A, and
later Bangor Punta, overcharged BAR for various legal, accounting,
printing, and other services. Counts III, IV, V, and VI averred
that B&A improperly acquired the stock of the St. Croix Paper
Co. which BAR owned through its subsidiary. Counts VII, VIII, IX,
and X charged that B&A and Bangor Punta improperly caused BAR
to declare special dividends to its stockholders, including B&A
and Bangor Punta, and also caused BAR's subsidiary to borrow in
order to pay regular dividends. Counts XI, XII, and XIII charged
that B&A improperly caused BAR to excuse payment by B&A and
Bangor Punta of the interest due on a loan made by BAR to B&A.
In sum, the complaint alleged that, during the period of their
control of BAR, Bangor Punta, and its predecessor in interest
B&A, "exploited it solely for their own purposes" and
"calculatedly drained the resources of BAR in violation of law for
their own benefit."
The District Court granted petitioners' motion for summary
judgment and dismissed the action.
353 F.
Supp. 724 (1972). The court first observed that, although the
suit purported to be a primary action brought in the name of the
corporation, the real party in interest and hence the actual
beneficiary of any recovery, was Amoskeag, the present owner of
more than 99% of the outstanding stock of BAR. The court then noted
that Amoskeag had acquired all of its BAR stock long after the
alleged wrongs occurred and that Amoskeag
Page 417 U. S. 708
did not contend that it had not received full value for its
purchase price, or that the purchase transaction was tainted by
fraud or deceit. Thus, any recovery on Amoskeag's part would
constitute a windfall because it had sustained no injury. With this
in mind, the court then addressed the claims based on federal law
and determined that Amoskeag would have been barred from
maintaining a shareholder derivative action because of its failure
to satisfy the "contemporaneous ownership" requirement of Fed.Rule
Civ.Proc. 23.1(1). [
Footnote 3]
Finding that equitable principles prevented the use of the
corporate fiction to evade the proscription of Rule 23.1, the court
concluded that Amoskeag's efforts to recover under the Securities
Exchange Act and the Clayton Act must fail. Turning to the claims
based on state law, the court recognized that the applicability of
Rule 23.1(1) has been questioned where federal jurisdiction is
based on diversity of citizenship. [
Footnote 4] The court found it unnecessary
Page 417 U. S. 709
to resolve this issue, however, since its examination of state
law indicated that Maine probably followed the "prevailing rule"
requiring contemporaneous ownership in order to maintain a
shareholder derivative action. Thus, whether the federal rule or
state substantive law applied, the present action could not be
maintained.
The United States Court of Appeals for the First Circuit
reversed. 482 F.2d 865 (1973). The court stated that its
disagreement with the District Court centered primarily on that
court's assumption that Amoskeag would be the "sole beneficiary" of
any recovery by BAR. The Court of Appeals thought that, in view of
the rail road's status as a "public" or "
quasi-public"
corporation and the important nature of the services it provides,
any recovery by BAR would also inure to the benefit of the public.
The court stated that this factor sufficed to support a corporate
cause of action and rendered any windfall to Amoskeag irrelevant.
In addition, the court noted that to permit BAR to recover for the
alleged wrongs would provide a needed deterrent to "patently
undesirable conduct" in the management of railroads.
Id.
at 871. Finally, the court confronted the possibility that any
corporate recovery might be diverted to enrich the present BAR
shareholders, mainly Amoskeag, rather than reinvested to improve
the railroad's services for the benefit of the public. Although
troubled by this prospect, the court concluded that the public
interest would nonetheless be better served by insuring that
petitioners would not be immune to civil liability for their
allegedly wrongful conduct. Without deciding the issue, the court
also suggested the possibility of devising "court-imposed
limitations" on the use BAR might make of any recovery to insure
that the public would actually be benefited.
We granted petitioners' application for certiorari. 414 U.S.
1127 (1974). We now reverse.
Page 417 U. S. 710
II
A
We first turn to the question whether respondent corporations
may maintain the present action under § 10 of the Clayton Act, 15
U.S.C. § 20, and § 10(b) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, 15
U.S.C. § 78j(b), and Rule 10b-5, 17 CFR § 240.10b-5. The resolution
of this issue depends upon the applicability of the settled
principle of equity that a shareholder may not complain of acts of
corporate mismanagement if he acquired his shares from those who
participated or acquiesced in the allegedly wrongful transactions.
See, e.g., Bloodworth v. Bloodworth, 225 Ga. 379, 387,
169 S.E.2d
150, 156-157 (1969);
Bookman v. R. J. Reynolds Tobacco
Co., 138 N.J. Eq. 312, 372, 48 A.2d 646, 680 (Ch.1946);
Babcock v. Farwell, 245 Ill. 14, 401, 91 N.E. 683, 692-693
(1910). [
Footnote 5] This
principle has been invoked with special force where a shareholder
purchases all or substantially all the shares of a corporation from
a vendor at a fair price, and then seeks to have the corporation
recover against that vendor for prior corporate mismanagement.
See, e.g., Matthews v. Headley Chocolate Co., 130 Md. 523,
532-535, 100 A. 645, 650-651 (1917);
Home Fire Insurance Co. v.
Barber, 67 Neb. 644, 661-662, 93 N.W. 1024, 1030-1031 (1903).
See also Amen v. Black, 234 F.2d 12, 23 (CA10 1956). The
equitable considerations precluding recovery in such cases were
explicated long ago by Dean (then Commissioner) Roscoe Pound in
Home
Page 417 U. S. 711
Fire Insurance Co. v. Barber, supra. Dean Pound,
writing for the Supreme Court of Nebraska, observed that the
shareholders of the plaintiff corporation in that case had
sustained no injury since they had acquired their shares from the
alleged wrongdoers after the disputed transactions occurred and had
received full value for their purchase price. Thus, any recovery on
their part would constitute a windfall, for it would enable them to
obtain funds to which they had no just title or claim. Moreover, it
would in effect allow the shareholders to recoup a large part of
the price they agreed to pay for their shares, notwithstanding the
fact that they received all they had bargained for. Finally, it
would permit the shareholders to reap a profit from wrongs done to
others, thus encouraging further such speculation. Dean Pound
stated that these consequences rendered any recovery highly
inequitable and mandated dismissal of the suit.
The considerations supporting the Home Fire principle are
especially pertinent in the present case. As the District Court
pointed out, Amoskeag, the present owner of more than 99% of the
BAR shares, would be the principal beneficiary of any recovery
obtained by BAR. Amoskeag, however, acquired 98.3% of the
outstanding shares of BAR from petitioner Bangor Punta in 1969,
well after the alleged wrongs were said to have occurred. Amoskeag
does not contend that the purchase transaction was tainted by fraud
or deceit, or that it received less than full value for its money.
Indeed, it does not assert that it has sustained any injury at all.
Nor does it appear that the alleged acts of prior mismanagement
have had any continuing effect on the corporations involved or the
value of their shares. [
Footnote
6] Nevertheless, by causing the present
Page 417 U. S. 712
action to be brought in the name of respondent corporations,
Amoskeag seeks to recover indirectly an amount equal to the
$5,000,000 it paid for its stock, plus an additional $2,000,000.
All this would be in the form of damages for wrongs petitioner
Bangor Punta is said to have inflicted not upon Amoskeag, but upon
respondent corporations during the period in which Bangor Punta
owned 98.3% of the BAR shares. In other words, Amoskeag seeks to
recover for wrongs Bangor Punta did to itself as owner of the
railroad. [
Footnote 7] At the
same time it reaps this windfall, Amoskeag desires to retain all
its BAR stock. Under
Home Fire, it is evident that
Amoskeag would have no standing in equity to maintain the present
action. [
Footnote 8]
Page 417 U. S. 713
We are met with the argument, however, that, since the present
action is brought in the name of respondent corporations, we may
not look behind the corporate entity to the true substance of the
claims and the actual beneficiaries. The established law is to the
contrary. Although a corporation and its shareholders are deemed
separate entities for most purposes, the corporate form may be
disregarded in the interests of justice where it is used to defeat
an overriding public policy.
New Colonial Ice Co. v.
Helvering, 292 U. S. 435,
292 U. S. 442
(1934);
Chicago, M. & St. P. R. Co. v. Minneapolis Civic
Assn., 247 U. S. 490,
247 U. S. 501
(1918). In such cases, courts of equity, piercing all fictions and
disguises, will deal with the substance of the action and not
blindly adhere to the corporate form. Thus, where equity would
preclude the shareholders from maintaining an action in their own
right, the corporation would also be precluded.
Amen v. Black,
supra; Capitol Wine & Spirit Corp. v. Pokrass, 277
App.Div. 184, 98 N.Y.S.2d 291 (1950),
aff'd, 302 N.Y. 734,
98 N.E.2d 704 (1951);
Matthews v. Headley Chocolate Co., supra;
Home Fire Insurance Co. v. Barber, supra. It follows that
Amoskeag, the principal beneficiary of any recovery and itself
estopped from complaining of petitioners' alleged wrongs, cannot
avoid the command of equity through the guise of proceeding in the
name of respondent corporations which it owns and controls.
B
Respondents fare no better in their efforts to maintain the
present actions under state law, specifically § 104
Page 417 U. S. 714
of the Maine Public Utilities Act, Maine Rev.Stat.Ann., Tit. 35,
§ 104 (1965), and the common law of Maine. In
Forbes v. Wells
Beach Casino, Inc., 307 A.2d
210, 223 n. 10 (1973), the Maine Supreme Judicial Court
recently declared that it had long accepted the equitable principle
that a "stockholder has no standing if either he or his vendor
participated or acquiesced in the wrong. . . ."
See Hyams v.
Old Dominion Co., 113 Me. 294, 302, 93 A. 747, 750 (1915).
[
Footnote 9] Thus, Amoskeag
would be barred from maintaining the present action under Maine
law, since it acquired its shares from petitioners, the alleged
wrongdoers. Moreover, the principle that the corporate entity may
be disregarded if equity so demands is accepted by Maine
precedents.
See, e.g., Bonnar-Vawter, Inc. v. Johnson, 157
Me. 380, 387-388,
173 A.2d
141, 145 (1961).
III
In reaching the contrary conclusion, the Court of Appeals stated
that it could not accept the proposition that Amoskeag would be the
"sole beneficiary" of any recovery by BAR. 482 F.2d at 868. The
court noted that, in view of the railroad's status as a
"
quasi-public" corporation and the essential nature of the
services it provides, the public had an identifiable interest in
BAR's
Page 417 U. S. 715
financial health. Thus, any recovery by BAR would accrue to the
benefit of the public through the improvement in BAR's economic
position and the quality of its services. The court thought that
this factor rendered any windfall to Amoskeag irrelevant.
At the outset, we note that the Court of Appeals' assumption
that any recovery would necessarily benefit the public is
unwarranted. As that court explicitly recognized, any recovery by
BAR could be diverted to its shareholders, namely Amoskeag, rather
than re-invested in the railroad for the benefit of the public.
Id. at 871. Nor do we believe this possibility can be
avoided by respondents' suggestion that the District Court impose
limitations on the use BAR might make of the recovery. [
Footnote 10] There is no support for
such a result under either federal or state law. BAR would be
entitled to distribute the recovery in any lawful manner it may
choose, even if such distribution resulted only in private
enrichment. In sum, there is no assurance that the public would
receive any benefit at all from these funds.
The Court of Appeals' position also appears to overlook the fact
that Amoskeag, the actual beneficiary of any recovery through its
ownership of more than 99% of the BAR shares, would be unjustly
enriched, since it has sustained no injury. [
Footnote 11] It acquired substantially all the
BAR
Page 417 U. S. 716
shares from Bangor Punta subsequent to the alleged wrongs and
does not deny that it received full value for its purchase price.
No fraud or deceit of any kind is alleged to have been involved in
the transaction. [
Footnote
12] The equitable principles of
Home Fire preclude
Amoskeag from reaping a windfall by enhancing the value of its
bargain to the extent of the entire purchase price plus an
additional $2,000,000. Amoskeag would, in effect, have acquired a
railroad worth $12,000,000 for only $5,000,000. Neither the federal
antitrust or securities laws nor the applicable state laws
contemplate recovery by Amoskeag in these circumstances. [
Footnote 13]
Page 417 U. S. 717
The Court of Appeals further stated that it was important to
insure that petitioners would not be immune from liability for
their wrongful conduct, and noted that BAR's recovery would provide
a needed deterrent to mismanagement of railroads. Our difficulty
with this argument is that it proves too much. If deterrence were
the only objective, then, in logic, any plaintiff willing to file a
complaint would suffice. No injury or violation of a legal duty to
the particular plaintiff would have to be alleged. The only
prerequisite would be that the plaintiff agree to accept the
recovery, lest the supposed wrongdoer be allowed to escape a
reckoning. Suffice it to say that we have been referred to no
authority which would support so novel a result, and we decline to
adopt it. [
Footnote 14]
Page 417 U. S. 718
We therefore conclude that respondent corporations may not
maintain the present action. [
Footnote 15] The judgment of the Court of Appeals is
reversed.
So ordered.
Page 417 U. S. 719
[
Footnote 1]
Several of the alleged acts of corporate mismanagement occurred
between 1960 and 1964 when B&A, BAR's holding company, was in
control of the railroad. Liability for these acts was nevertheless
sought to be imposed on Bangor Punta, even though it had no
interest in either BAR or B&A during this period. The apparent
basis for liability was the 1964 purchase agreement between B&A
and Bangor Punta. The complaint in the instant case alleged that,
under the agreement, Bangor Punta, through its subsidiary, assumed
"all . . . debt, obligations, contracts and liabilities" of
B&A.
[
Footnote 2]
Bangor Punta was alleged to have effected these transactions
through its wholly owned subsidiary BPO. For purposes of clarity,
we shall attribute BPO's actions directly to Bangor Punta.
[
Footnote 3]
Rule 23.1(1), which specifies the requirements applicable to
shareholder derivative actions, states that the complaint shall
aver that "the plaintiff was a shareholder or member at the time of
the transaction of which he complains. . . ." This provision is
known as the "contemporaneous ownership" requirement.
See
3B J. Moore, Federal Practice � 23.1
et seq. (2d
ed.1974).
[
Footnote 4]
The "contemporaneous ownership" requirement in shareholder
derivative actions was first announced in
Hawes v.
Oakland, 104 U. S. 450
(1882), and soon thereafter adopted as Equity Rule 97. This
provision was later incorporated in Equity Rule 27 and finally in
the present Rule 23.1. After the decision in
Erie R. Co. v.
Tompkins, 304 U. S. 64
(1938), the question arose whether the contemporaneous ownership
requirement was one of procedure or substantive law. If the
requirement were substantive, then, under the regime of
Erie, it could not be validly applied in federal diversity
cases where state law permitted a noncontemporaneous shareholder to
maintain a derivative action.
See 3B J. Moore, Federal
Practice �� 23.1.0123.1.15[2] (2d ed.1974). Although most cases
treat the requirement as one of procedure, this Court has never
resolved the issue.
Ibid.
[
Footnote 5]
This principle obtains in the great majority of jurisdictions.
See, e.g., Russell v. Louis Melind Co., 331 Ill.App. 182,
72 N.E.2d 869 (1947);
Klum v. Clinton Trust Co., 183 Misc.
340, 48 N.Y.S.2d 267 (1944);
Clark v. American Coal Co.,
86 Iowa 436, 53 N.W. 291 (1892);
Boldenweck v. Bullis, 40
Colo. 253, 90 P. 634 (1907).
See 13 W. Fletcher,
Cyclopedia Corporations § 5866 (1970 ed.); H. Ballantine,
Corporations § 148 (1946 ed.).
[
Footnote 6]
In
Home Fire, Dean Pound suggested that equitable
principles might not prevent recovery where the effects of the
wrongful acts continued and resulted in injury to present
shareholders. 67 Neb. 644, 662, 93 N.W. 1024, 1031. In their
complaint in the instant case, respondents alleged that "[t]he
injury to BAR is a continuing one surviving the aforesaid sale
[from petitioner BPO] to Amoskeag." The District Court noted that
respondents alleged no facts to support this contention and
therefore found any such exception inapplicable.
353 F.
Supp. 724, 727 n. 1 (1972). Respondents apparently did not
renew this contention on appeal.
[
Footnote 7]
Similarly, as to the period before October, 1964, Amoskeag seeks
to recover for wrongs B&A and its shareholders did to
themselves as owners of the railroad.
[
Footnote 8]
Conceding the lack of equity in any recovery by Amoskeag, the
dissent argues that the present action can nevertheless be
maintained because there are 20 minority shareholders, holding less
than 1% of the BAR stock, who owned their shares
"during the period from 1960 through 1967 when the transactions
underlying the railroad's complaint took place, and who still owned
that stock in 1971 when the complaint was filed."
Post at
417 U. S. 722.
The dissent would conclude that the existence of these innocent
minority shareholders entitles BAR, and hence Amoskeag, to recover
the entire $7,000,000 amount of alleged damages.
Aside from the illogic of such an approach, the dissent's
position is at war with the precedents, for the
Home Fire
principle has long been applied to preclude full recovery by a
corporation even where there are innocent minority shareholders who
acquired their shares prior to the alleged wrongs.
See
cases cited at
n 5,
supra, and accompanying text. The dissent also mistakes
the factual posture of this case, since the respondent corporations
did not institute this action for the benefit of the minority
shareholders.
See discussion at
n 15,
infra.
[
Footnote 9]
In addition, the new Maine Business Corporation Act adopts the
contemporaneous ownership requirement for shareholder derivative
actions.
See Maine Rev.Stat.Ann., Tit. 13-A, § 627.1.A
(1974). This provision apparently became effective two days after
the present action was filed. As the District Court noted, it is an
open question whether Maine, in fact, had a contemporaneous
ownership requirement prior to that time. 353 F. Supp. at 727.
See R. Field, V. McKusick & L. Wroth, Maine Civil
Practice § 23.2, p. 393 (2d ed.1970). In the absence of any
indication that Maine would not have followed the "prevailing
view," the District Court determined that the contemporaneous
ownership requirement of Fed.Rule Civ.Proc. 23.1 applied.
[
Footnote 10]
The Court of Appeals noted that its decision "is not conditioned
on the devising of court-imposed limitations on the uses of any
corporate recovery." 482 F.2d 865, 871. Counsel for respondents
also admitted at oral argument that BAR had no legal obligation to
use its recovery to improve the railroad's services in order to
benefit the public. Tr. of Oral Arg. 17.
[
Footnote 11]
The unjust enrichment of Amoskeag is inevitable. As the owner of
more than 99% of the BAR shares, Amoskeag would obviously benefit
from any increase in the value of its investment. Here, the
increased value would be of dramatic proportions, with an influx of
$7,000,000 into a railroad purchased for only $5,000,000. The
dissent's suggestion that this substantial infusion of capital, if
devoted to "plant and equipment," would not enhance "earning
capacity" or "balance sheet strength" (
post, at
417 U. S. 725)
will come as a surprise to regulatory bodies, railroad management,
and investors.
Respondents have also conceded, both in their brief and at oral
argument, that the present action could not be maintained if
Amoskeag were the real party in interest, or, alternatively, if
only an unregulated private corporation were involved. Brief for
Respondents 229; Tr. of Oral Arg.19-20.
[
Footnote 12]
The dissent's suggestion (
post at
417 U. S.
723-724) that Amoskeag, a highly sophisticated investor,
was defrauded in the purchase transaction, and that it has suffered
an injury is without support in the record. Not even Amoskeag has
ever so asserted in either the complaint or the briefs or at oral
argument. And in granting the motion for summary judgment, the
District Court expressly observed that Amoskeag did not contend
that it was defrauded in the purchase transaction. 353 F. Supp. at
726. This statement has since stood uncontroverted by Amoskeag. In
short, prior to the dissent today, it has never been alleged or
suggested that Amoskeag did not acquire exactly what it bargained
for in this transaction.
[
Footnote 13]
The dissent makes much of the supposed public interest in
railroads and the power of a court of equity to ensure that the
public will actually be benefited by any recovery.
Post at
417 U. S.
724-725,
417 U. S.
727-730. This argument misses the point. To begin with,
the present action is, in substance, a typical derivative suit
seeking an accounting from the previous controlling shareholder for
various acts of corporate waste and mismanagement. It is settled
law that the fiduciary duty owed by a controlling shareholder
extends primarily to those who have a tangible interest in the
corporation. Similarly, the recovery provided is intended to
compensate not the public generally, but those who have been
injured as a result of a breach of a duty owed to them. In the
present case, however, the actual beneficiary of any recovery,
Amoskeag, has suffered neither an injury nor a breach of any legal
duty. In short, Amoskeag has no cause of action.
The dissent argues that respondents' complaint is based on
federal antitrust and securities statutes and that such laws are
designed in part to benefit the public. With that much we agree.
But the statutory design has not been effectuated through the
indiscriminate provision of causes of action to every citizen.
Rather, these statutes create specifically defined legal duties to
particular plaintiffs and vest the appropriate causes of action in
them alone. Here, the statutorily designated plaintiffs are
respondent corporations. But, as we have stated, these plaintiffs
cannot maintain the present action because a recovery by Amoskeag
would violate established principles of equity.
[
Footnote 14]
As Dean Pound stated in reply to a similar argument in
Home
Fire:
"But it is said the defendant Barber, by reason of his
delinquencies, is in no position to ask that the court look behind
the corporation to the real and substantial parties in interest. .
. . We do not think such a proposition can be maintained. It is not
the function of courts of equity to administer punishment. When one
person has wronged another in a matter within its jurisdiction,
equity will spare no effort to redress the person injured, and will
not suffer the wrongdoer to escape restitution to such person
through any device or technicality. But this is because of its
desire to right wrongs, not because of a desire to punish all
wrongdoers. If a wrongdoer deserves to be punished, it does not
follow that others are to be enriched at his expense by a court of
equity. A plaintiff must recover on the strength of his own case,
not on the weakness of the defendant's case. It is his right, not
the defendant's wrongdoing, that is the basis of recovery. When it
is disclosed that he has no standing in equity, the degree of
wrongdoing of the defendant will not avail him."
67 Neb. at 673, 93 N.W. at 1035.
[
Footnote 15]
Our decision rests on the conclusion that equitable principles
preclude recovery by Amoskeag, the present owner of more than 99%
of the BAR shares. The record does not reveal whether the minority
shareholders who hold the remaining fraction of 1% of the BAR
shares stand in the same position as Amoskeag. Some courts have
adopted the concept of a pro-rata recovery where there are innocent
minority shareholders. Under this procedure, damages are
distributed to the minority shareholders individually on a
proportional basis, even though the action is brought in the name
of the corporation to enforce primary rights.
See, e.g.,
Matthews v. Headley Chocolate Co., 130 Md. 523, 536-540, 100
A. 645, 650-652 (1917). In the present case, respondents have
expressly disavowed any intent to obtain a pro-rata recovery on
behalf of the 1% minority shareholders of BAR. We therefore do not
reach the question whether such recovery would be appropriate.
The dissent asserts that the alleged acts of corporate
mismanagement have placed BAR "close to the brink of bankruptcy,"
and that the present action is maintained for the benefit of BAR's
creditors.
Post at
417 U. S. 726.
With all respect, it appears that the dissent has sought to redraft
respondents' complaint. As the District Court noted, respondents
have not brought this action on behalf of any creditors. 353 F.
Supp. at 726. Indeed, they have never so contended. Moreover,
respondents have conceded that the financial health of the railroad
is excellent. Tr. of Oral Arg. 18.
MR. JUSTICE MARSHALL, with whom MR. JUSTICE DOUGLAS, MR. JUSTICE
BRENNAN, and MR. JUSTICE WHITE join, dissenting.
This suit, brought by and in the name of respondent railroad and
its wholly owned subsidiary, seeks to recover damages for the
conversion and misappropriation of corporate assets allegedly
committed by petitioners, Bangor Punta and its wholly owned
subsidiary, during a period when the latter was the majority
shareholder of the railroad. Ordinarily, of course, a corporation
may seek legal redress against those who have defrauded it of its
assets. And when it does so:
"A corporation and its stockholders are generally to be treated
as separate entities. Only under exceptional circumstances . . .
can the difference be disregarded."
Burnet v. Clark, 287 U. S. 410,
287 U. S. 415
(1932).
See also New Colonial Ice Co. v. Helvering,
292 U. S. 435,
292 U. S. 442
(1934).
The Court finds such exceptional circumstances here because, in
its view, any recovery had by the corporation will be a windfall to
Amoskeag, the present owner of approximately 99% of the
corporation's stock, which purchased most of that stock from the
petitioners, the alleged wrongdoers. The Court therefore concludes
that this suit must be barred under the equitable principles set
forth in
Home Fire Insurance Co. v. Barber, 67 Neb. 644,
93 N.W. 1024 (1903).
I cannot agree. Having read the precedents relied upon by the
majority, I respectfully submit that they not only do not support,
but indeed directly contradict, the result reached today. While
purporting to rely on settled principles of equity, the Court sadly
mistakes the facts of this case and the established powers of an
equity court. In my view, no windfall recovery to Amoskeag is
inevitable, or even likely, on the facts of this case. But even if
recovery by respondents would, in fact, be a windfall
Page 417 U. S. 720
to Amoskeag, the Court disregards the interests of the
railroad's creditors, as well as the substantial public interest in
the continued financial viability of the Nation's railroads which
have been so heavily plagued by corporate mismanagement, and
ignores the powers of the court to impose equitable conditions on a
corporation's recovery so as to insure that these interests are
protected. The Court's decision is also inconsistent with prior
decisions of this Court limiting the application of equitable
defenses when they impede the vindication, through private damage
actions, of the important policies of the federal antitrust
laws.
I
The majority places primary reliance on Dean Pound's decision in
Home Fire Insurance Co. v. Barber, supra. In that case,
all of the shares of the plaintiff corporation had been
acquired from the alleged wrongdoers after the transactions giving
rise to the causes of action stated in the complaint. Since none of
the corporation's shareholders held stock at the time of the
alleged wrongful transactions, none had been injured thereby. Dean
Pound therefore held that equity barred the corporation from
pursuing a claim where none of its shareholders could complain of
injury.
Dean Pound thought it clear, however, that the opposite result
would obtain if
any of the present shareholders
"are entitled to complain of the acts of the defendant and of
his past management of the company; for if any of them are so
entitled, there can be no doubt of the right and duty of the
corporation to maintain this suit. It would be maintainable in such
a case even though the wrongdoers continued to be stockholders and
would share in the proceeds."
67 Neb. at 655, 93 N.W. at 1028.
Cf. Capitol Wine &
Spirit Corp. v. Pokrass, 277 App.Div.
Page 417 U. S. 721
184, 186, 98 N.Y.S.2d 291, 293 (1950),
aff'd, 302 N.Y.
734, 8 N.E.2d 704 (1951).
The rationale for the distinction drawn by Dean Pound is simple
enough. The sole shareholder who defrauds or mismanages his own
corporation hurts only himself. For the corporation to sue him for
his wrongs is simply to take money out of his right pocket and put
it in his left. It is therefore appropriate for equity to intervene
to pierce the corporate veil. But where there are minority
shareholders, misappropriation and conversion of corporate assets
injure their interests as well as the interest of the majority
shareholder. The law imposes upon the directors of a corporation a
fiduciary obligation to all of the corporation's shareholders, and
part of that obligation is to use due care to ensure that the
corporation seek redress where a majority shareholder has drained
the corporation's resources for his own benefit and to the
detriment of minority shareholders. [
Footnote 2/1] Indeed, minority shareholders would be
entitled to bring a derivative action, on behalf of the
corporation, to enforce the corporation's right to recover for the
injury done to it, if the directors turned down a request to seek
relief. [
Footnote 2/2] And any
recovery
Page 417 U. S. 722
obtained in such an action would belong to the corporation, not
to the minority shareholders as individuals, for the shareholder in
a derivative action enforces not his own individual rights, but
rights which the corporation has.
See Meyer v. Fleming,
327 U. S. 161,
327 U. S. 167
(1946);
Ross v. Bernhard, 396 U.
S. 531,
396 U. S. 538
(1970);
Koster v. Lumbermens Mutual Co., 330 U.
S. 518,
330 U. S. 522
(1947).
These elementary principles of corporate law should control this
case. Although first Bangor Punta and then Amoskeag owned the great
majority of the shares of respondent railroad, the record shows
that there are many minority shareholders who owned BAR stock
during the period from 1960 through 1967 when the transactions
underlying the railroad's complaint took place, and who still owned
that stock in 1971 when the complaint was filed. [
Footnote 2/3] Any one of these minority
shareholders would have had the right, during the 1960-1967 period,
as well as thereafter, to bring a derivative action on behalf of
the corporation against the majority shareholder for
misappropriation of corporate assets. As Dean Pound states, such an
action could be brought, "even though the wrongdoers continued to
be stockholders and would share in the proceeds." 67 Neb. at 655,
93 N.W. at 1028.
It is ironic, then, to see the Court adopt a result which bars
the corporation itself from bringing a suit which a minority
shareholder could have brought in the corporation's behalf. And it
is peculiar, to say the least, that the law should prevent the
directors of BAR from fulfilling the fiduciary obligation to
minority shareholders which the law devolves upon them. Such a
result not only cannot be derived from
Home Fire, but is
directly in conflict with its holding.
Page 417 U. S. 723
II
Even assuming, however, that the equitable principles of
Home Fire should be extended to the situation where the
present majority shareholder does not own all the outstanding
shares, there are other features distinguishing this case from
Home Fire and calling for the recognition of the
railroad's right to maintain this action. To begin with, it is not
at all clear from the record that any recovery had by the railroad
will, in fact, be a windfall to Amoskeag, its present majority
shareholder.
The Court relies principally on its own observation that
Amoskeag was not defrauded or deceived in its transaction with
petitioners, that it received full value for its money, and that it
has received no injury whatsoever.
See ante at
417 U. S. 711.
The record, in my view, simply will not support these "findings."
That there is no specific allegation in the complaint that Amoskeag
was deceived or otherwise injured by petitioners is understandable,
since this lawsuit is not brought by Amoskeag, but rather by
respondent railroad in its own name.
Furthermore, a fair reading of the complaint indicates that
Amoskeag most likely has suffered injury. The causes of action
relate primarily to transactions involving the railroad and its
former majority stockholder between 1960 and 1967. Amoskeag
purchased its shares from petitioners on October 2, 1969, after
these events. But nowhere in the record is there any concession
that, at the time of its purchase, Amoskeag was fully aware of the
misuses of corporate assets alleged in the complaint. To the
contrary, the complaint asserts that, at the time of Amoskeag's
purchase, the Interstate Commerce Commission's Bureau of Accounts
was in the middle of an investigation into the relationship between
the railroad and its majority shareholder. Its report, not made
public until July, 1971, laid bare for the first time the
wrongful
Page 417 U. S. 724
intercorporate transactions that are the subject of the present
suit and recommended that legal remedies be explored to require
petitioners to pay back to the carrier assets taken without
compensation and charges made where no services were performed. The
plain import of the complaint is that Amoskeag did not know of
these wrongful transactions prior to public disclosure of this
report. In fact, an introductory paragraph of the complaint
alleges:
"All wrongs hereinafter complained of were discovered by BAR's
new management's investigation of all facets of the inter-corporate
relationships and were not previously known to the new BAR
management."
App. 6. At this stage in the litigation, such allegations must
be accepted as true, the District Court having dismissed the suit
without inquiring into the truth of any of its claims. There is
accordingly no basis in the record for presuming that Amoskeag was
not the victim of any deception.
But even assuming that Amoskeag received close to full value for
its money, it is by no means inevitable that any recovery obtained
by the railroad will inure to Amoskeag's benefit, rather than to
the benefit of the corporation, its creditors, and the public it
aims to serve. The Court makes much of the supposed lack of power
of a court of equity to impose limitations on the use BAR might
make of the recovery.
Ante at
417 U. S. 715.
"Traditionally," however,
"equity has been characterized by a practical flexibility in
shaping its remedies and by a facility for adjusting and
reconciling public and private needs."
Brown v. Board of Education, 349 U.
S. 294,
349 U. S. 300
(1955).
"A court of equity may in its discretion in the exercise of the
jurisdiction committed to it grant or deny relief upon performance
of a condition which will safeguard the public interest."
SEC v. United States Realty & Improvement Co.,
310 U. S. 434,
310 U. S.
455
Page 417 U. S. 725
(1940). [
Footnote 2/4] Indeed,
if there be any doubt as to the power of a court of equity, BAR
informed the District Court that the railroad would voluntarily
enter into a stipulation to ensure that any recovery would be
reinvested in the railroad, for upgrading the right-of-way and for
new equipment, and that Amoskeag would voluntarily join the
stipulation if requested. Brief for Respondents 30.
Improved equipment and rights-of-way, of course, might benefit
Amoskeag indirectly by increasing to some extent the value of its
equity. But such expenditures would hardly bring a
dollar-for-dollar increase in the price Amoskeag would receive if
it were to sell its stock. The value of a solvent railroad's stock
is determined by many factors -- earning capacity; historical
income, excluding nonrecurring items; balance sheet strength;
dividend history; and condition of plant and equipment. Under an
appropriate decree, only the last of these factors would be
enhanced by the railroad's recovery. It is therefore not inevitable
that any recovery had by the railroad would benefit its current
majority shareholder and there is no basis, in any event, for
deeming such a benefit a windfall.
III
But let us assume that the majority is correct in finding some
windfall recovery to Amoskeag inevitable in this case. This is
still but one of several factors which a court of equity should
consider in determining whether
Page 417 U. S. 726
the public interest would best be served by piercing the
corporate veil in order to bar this action. The public interest
against windfall recoveries is no doubt a significant factor which
a court of equity should consider. But in this case, it is clearly
outweighed by other considerations, equally deserving the
recognition of a court of equity, supporting the maintenance of the
railroad's action against those who have defrauded it of its
assets.
Equity should take into account, for example, the railroad's
relationships with its creditors. BAR owes a debt of approximately
$23 million, indicating almost 90% debt ownership of the
enterprise. App. 7. If the allegations of the complaint are true,
the conversion and misappropriation of corporate assets committed
by petitioners placed the railroad close to the brink of
bankruptcy, to the certain detriment of its creditors. The
complaint alleges that net revenue in 1970 was a loss of
approximately $1.3 million.
Id. at 5. And one of the
specific causes of action in the complaint is that Bangor Punta
procured the declaration by BAR of a dividend which was unlawful
under a mortgage bond indenture due to insufficient working
capital.
Id. at 15-18.
Surely the corporation, as an entity independent of its
shareholders, has an interest of its own in assuring that it can
meet its responsibility to its creditors. And I do not see how it
can do so unless it remains free to bring suit against those who
have defrauded it of its assets. The Court's result, I fear, only
gives added incentive to abuses of the corporate form which equity
has long sought to discourage -- allowing a majority shareholder to
take advantage of the protections of the corporate form while
bleeding the corporation to the detriment of its creditors, and
then permitting the majority shareholder to sell the corporation
and remain free from any liability for its wrongdoing.
Page 417 U. S. 727
More importantly, equity should take into account the public
interest at stake in this litigation. As the Court of Appeals
indicated:
"The public's interest, unlike the private interest of
stockholder or creditor, is not easily defined or quantified, yet
it is real, and cannot, we think, be overlooked in determining
whether the corporation, suing in its own right, should be estopped
by equitable defenses pertaining only to its controlling
stockholder."
482 F.2d 865, 868 (CA1 1973).
The public's interest in the financial health of railroads has
long been recognized by this Court:
"[R]ailways are public corporations organized for public
purposes, granted valuable franchises and privileges, among which
the right to take the private property of the citizen
in
invitum is not the least, . . . many of them are the donees of
large tracts of public lands and of gifts of money by municipal
corporations, and . . . they all primarily owe duties to the public
of a higher nature even than that of earning large dividends for
their shareholders. The business which the railroads do is of a
public nature, closely affecting almost all classes in the
community. . . ."
United States v. Trans-Missouri Freight Assn.,
166 U. S. 290,
332-
166 U. S. 333
(1897).
The same public interest has been recognized in a wide variety
of legislative enactments. As early as the Transportation Act of
1920,
"Congress undertook to develop and maintain, for the people of
the United States, an adequate railway system. It recognized that
preservation of the earning capacity, and conservation of the
financial resources, of individual carriers is a matter of national
concern. . . ."
Texas & Pacific R. Co. v. Gulf, C. & S. F. R.
Co., 270 U. S. 266,
270 U. S. 277
(1926). Later,
Page 417 U. S. 728
Congress added § 77 to Chapter VIII of the Bankruptcy Act,
providing that financial reorganization of ailing railroads should
be achieved for the benefit of the public, and not simply in the
interests of creditors or stockholders.
See New Haven Inclusion
Cases, 399 U. S. 392,
399 U. S. 492
(1970).
The significance of the public interest in the financial
wellbeing of railroads should be self-evident in these times, with
many of our Nation's railroads in dire financial straits and with
some of the most important lines thrown into reorganization
proceedings. Indeed, the prospect of large-scale railroad
insolvency in the Northeast United States was deemed by Congress to
present a national emergency, prompting enactment of the Regional
Rail Reorganization Act of 1973, Pub.L. 93-236, 87 Stat. 985
(1974), in which the Federal Government, for the first time,
committed tax dollars to a long-term commitment to preserve
adequate railroad service for the Nation. As the Court of Appeals
held, given this background,
"it would be unrealistic to treat a railroad's attempt to secure
the reparation of misappropriated assets as of concern only to its
controlling stockholder."
482 F.2d at 870. "[T]he public has a real, if inchoate,
interest" in this action.
Id. at 871.
The Court gives short shrift, however, to the public interest.
While recognizing that respondents' complaint is based primarily on
federal antitrust and securities statutes designed to benefit the
public, and while conceding that the statutorily designated
plaintiffs are respondent corporations, the Court nevertheless
holds that these plaintiffs cannot maintain this action because any
recovery by Amoskeag would violate established principles of
equity.
Ante at
417 U. S.
716-717, n. 13. I cannot agree, for the public interest
and the legislative purpose should always be heavily weighed by a
court of equity. As this Court
Page 417 U. S. 729
has frequently recognized, equity should pierce the corporate
veil only when necessary to serve some paramount public interest,
see Schenley Corp. v. United States, 326 U.
S. 432,
326 U. S. 437
(1946);
Anderson v. Abbott, 321 U.
S. 349,
321 U. S. 362
(1944), or "where it otherwise would present an obstacle to the due
protection or enforcement of public or private rights."
New
Colonial Ice Co. v. Helvering, 292 U.S. at
292 U. S. 442.
Here, however, it is the failure to recognize the railroad's own
right to maintain this suit which undercuts the public
interest.
The Court's result substantially impairs enforcement of the
state and federal statutes upon which the railroad bases many of
its claims. For example, § 10 of the Clayton Act, 15 U.S.C. § 20,
relied on in two substantial counts of the complaint, provides:
"No common carrier engaged in commerce shall have any dealings
in securities, supplies, or other articles of commerce . . . to the
amount of more than $50,000, in the aggregate, in any one year,
with another corporation . . . when the said common carrier shall
have upon its board of directors or as its president . . . any
person who is at the same time a director [or] manager . . . of . .
. such other corporation . . . unless . . . such dealings shall be
with, the bidder whose bid is the most favorable to such common
carrier, to be ascertained by competitive bidding. . . ."
As we have earlier had occasion to note, § 10 is not an ordinary
corporate conflict of interest statute, but is part of our Nation's
antitrust laws, specifically designed to protect common carriers
such as railroads.
See United States v. Boston & Maine R.
Co., 380 U. S. 157
(1965);
Minneapolis & St. Louis R. Co. v. United
States, 361 U. S. 173,
361 U. S. 190
(1959). The purpose of § 10
"was to prohibit a
Page 417 U. S. 730
corporation from abusing a carrier . . . through overreaching
by, or other misfeasance of, common directors, to the financial
injury of the carrier and the consequent impairment of its ability
to serve the public interest."
361 U.S. at
361 U. S.
190.
The private causes of action brought by respondent railroad
under § 10 serve to vindicate this important congressional policy.
See Klinger v. Baltimore & Ohio R. Co., 432 F.2d 506
(CA2 1970). And by barring this suit, notwithstanding the plain
allegations in the complaint that the carrier as well as the public
interest it serves were injured through violations of this section
committed by petitioners, [
Footnote
2/5] the Court directly frustrates the ends of Congress.
Indeed, the Court encourages the very kind of abuses § 10 was
designed to prohibit. The majority shareholder of a carrier can
convert and misappropriate its assets through improper
intercorporate transactions, with the "consequent impairment of its
ability to serve the public interest," and then wash its hands of
and remain free from any legal liability for its statutory
violation by selling off its interest. [
Footnote 2/6]
Page 417 U. S. 731
I would find counsel instead in this Court's opinion in
Perma Life Mufflers v. International Parts Corp.,
392 U. S. 134,
392 U. S.
138-139 (1968). The Court took note in that case
that
"[w]e have often indicated the inappropriateness of invoking
broad common law barriers to relief where a private suit serves
important public purposes."
As we recognized,
"the purposes of the antitrust laws are best served by insuring
that the private action will be an ever-present threat to deter
anyone contemplating business behavior in violation of the
antitrust laws. The plaintiff who reaps the reward of treble
damages may be no less morally reprehensible than the defendant,
but the law encourages his suit to further the overriding public
policy in favor of competition. A more fastidious regard for the
relative moral worth of the parties would only result in seriously
undermining the usefulness of the private action as a bulwark of
antitrust enforcement."
These principles have even greater force here, since Amoskeag,
"whatever its own lack of equity, is neither a
Page 417 U. S. 732
wrongdoer nor a participant in any wrong." 482 F.2d at
870-871.
In the final analysis, the Court's holding does a disservice to
one of the most settled of equitable doctrines, reflected in the
maxim that "[e]quity will not suffer a wrong without a remedy."
Independent Wireless Tel. Co. v. Radio Corp. of America,
269 U. S. 459,
269 U. S. 472
(1926). Because I would follow that maxim here and permit
respondent railroad to maintain this action to seek redress for the
wrongs allegedly done to it and to the public interest it serves, I
respectfully dissent.
[
Footnote 2/1]
See generally 3 W. Fletcher, Cyclopedia Corporations §
1012 (1965). Indeed, the failure to exercise reasonable care to
seek redress for wrongs done the corporation might well subject the
directors to personal liability.
See, e.g., Briggs v.
Spaulding, 141 U. S. 132
(1891);
Kavanaugh v. Commonwealth Trust Co. of New York,
223 N.Y. 103, 119 N.E. 237 (1918).
[
Footnote 2/2]
"[Stockholders' derivative suits] are one of the remedies which
equity designed for those situations where the management through
fraud, neglect of duty or other cause declines to take the proper
and necessary steps to assert the rights which the corporation
has."
Meyer v. Fleming, 327 U. S. 161,
327 U. S. 167
(1946). And it is irrelevant that the shareholders bringing the
derivative action own only a small percentage of the total
outstanding shares.
See Ashwander v. TVA, 297 U.
S. 288,
297 U. S. 318
(1936);
Subin v. Goldsmith, 224 F.2d 753, 761 (CA2),
cert. denied, 350 U.S. 883 (1955).
[
Footnote 2/3]
According to the complaint, there were 20 individual minority
shareholders, many of whom acquired their shares in the 1950's. App
7, 22-23.
[
Footnote 2/4]
It is interesting to note that the majority's restrictive
notions as to the power of a court of equity to direct the
application of a recovery are in conflict with the majority's own
suggestion for protecting the interests of innocent minority
shareholders.
See ante at
417 U. S. 718
n. 15. If a court of equity lacks power to direct a corporation to
apply the proceeds of a recovery in any particular fashion, how can
the court direct the corporation to distribute a pro-rata recovery
to some, but not all, of its shareholders?
[
Footnote 2/5]
The complaint alleges that the special and illegal dividends
which petitioners caused BAR to declare
"served to deprive plaintiff BAR of a source of cash which could
and would have been utilized for necessary maintenance and
equipment acquisitions and replacements, all to the injury of BAR
and the public which it serves."
App. 16.
[
Footnote 2/6]
These arguments are applicable as well to the causes of action
stated under § 104 of the Maine Public Utilities Act, Maine
Rev.Stat.Ann., Tit. 35, § 104 (1965), which provides in pertinent
part:
"No public utility doing business in this State shall . . . make
any contract or arrangement, providing for the furnishing of . . .
services . . . with any corporation . . . owning in excess of 25%
of the voting capital stock of such public utility . . . unless and
until such contract or arrangement shall have been found by the
commission not to be adverse to the public interest and shall have
received their [
sic] written approval."
While different from § 10 of the Clayton Act in certain details
(applying to all public utilities, rather than only to carriers,
and relying on the supervision of an administrative agency, rather
than the device of competitive bidding), the Maine statute clearly
has the same underlying purpose: to protect the public interest
from abuses of public utilities through intercorporate transactions
with a major shareholder. While Maine law governs the causes of
action under this section and the courts of Maine have, in other
cases, accepted the general equitable principle that a stockholder
has no standing to sue if he or his vendor participated in the
wrong,
see ante at
417 U. S. 714,
there is no basis in Maine law for applying this equitable doctrine
where the direct result is to leave remediless the very abuses §
104 was designed to prohibit.