I.
FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
Alfred Blasband appeals from a district court order of August 15, 1991, dismissing his complaint pursuant to Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(b)(6) and Fed.R.Civ.P. 23.1 in this shareholder derivative suit. This appeal raises difficult issues regarding shareholder standing and demand futility in derivative actions brought under Delaware law. In view of the procedural posture of the case, we will accept Blasband’s allegations in our disposition of the appeal.
Blasband is a former shareholder of Eas-co Hand Tools, Inc. On September 1,1988, while Blasband was an Easco shareholder, Easco initiated a public offering of $100 million of 12.875% Senior Subordinated Notes (the “Note Offering”). In the prospectus for the Note Offering, Easco disclosed that the proceeds would be used for repayment of outstanding indebtedness, general corporate purposes, and expansion of Easco’s business through internal growth and acquisitions. The prospectus further stated that “[pjending such uses, the Company will invest the balance of the net proceeds from this offering in government and other marketable securities which are expected to yield a lower rate of return than the rate of interest borne by the Notes.”
After the Note Offering was completed, Easco invested at least $61.9 million of the proceeds in high-yield, highly speculative debt securities, commonly known as junk bonds. In its Form 10-K filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission for the year ended December 31, 1988, Easco disclosed these investments as “tempo-rar[y] invest[ments] in marketable securities and cash equivalents.” One year later, in its 1989 Annual Report and 10-K, Easco disclosed that it still held these investments *1038 but that “[d]uring 1989, the market for these securities became volatile and some market values declined significantly.” Explaining that “[gjreater risk is generally associated with these high-yield securities, for which a thinly traded market exists and for which market quotations are not always available[,]” Easco stated that it had reduced the carrying value of its portfolio by $14 million and that it would probably suffer further losses if the remaining issues' were sold. Easco disclosed an additional $1 million loss in its March 81, 1990 Form 10-Q filed with the SEC.
In February 1990, Easco entered into a merger agreement with the nominal defendant Danaher Corporation and Combo Acquisition Corporation, a wholly owned subsidiary of Danaher, providing for Easco shareholders to receive .4175 shares of Danaher common stock for each of their shares of Easco common stock. The merger was consummated in June 1990 with Easco surviving as a wholly owned subsidiary of Danaher. Consequently, Blasband’s 1,100 shares of Easco were converted into 458 shares of Danaher. 1
Prior to the merger, Mitchell P. Rales was Chairman of Easco’s board of directors and owned approximately 25% of Easco’s common stock. His brother, Steven M. Ra-les, was a director of Easco and owned 27% of its stock. Mitchell Rales is also President and a director of Danaher, and Steven Rales is Chairman of the board of directors of Danaher. Together the brothers own 44% of Danaher’s common stock. Beginning sometime in the mid-1980’s, the Rales brothers retained Drexel Burnham Lambert Incorporated to assist in the Rales’ corporate acquisition strategy. Through junk bond financing arranged by Drexel, the Rales brothers expanded Danaher by acquiring Western Pacific Corporation and Chicago Pneumatic Corporation. In 1988 the Rales brothers hired Drexel in connection with an ultimately unsuccessful $2.5 billion bid to acquire another company. In addition, Drexel assisted the Rales brothers in acquiring an interest in Easco in 1986 by partially providing the financing. 2 Furthermore, Drexel was selected as the sole underwriter for the Note Offering.
The junk bond investment of the proceeds of the Note Offering did not go unnoticed for, on October 25, 1990, Blasband’s counsel sent a letter to the boards of directors of Easco and Danaher setting forth the discrepancy between the proposed use of the proceeds in the prospectus for the Note Offering and Easco’s financial statements disclosing the actual investments in junk bonds. The letter requested additional information to explain, inter alia: (1) why the junk bond portfolio had lost $14 million in one year; (2) what securities Eas-co . had purchased and sold between September 1, 1988, and December 31, 1989, and at what prices and through which brokerage house; (3) which Easco officers and directors approved or selected the purchases and sales; and (4) why Easco used the proceeds of the Note Offering in a manner contrary to that described in the prospectus. Counsel for Blasband stated that, although much of this information “could be obtained through a formal demand for inspection of the Company's books and records, we believe that it is in our mutual interest to proceed on a less formal basis.”
Counsel for Danaher and Easco responded in a letter dated December 17,1990, that “it would be inappropriate at this time to provide” the requested information. Further, counsel stated that “Easco fully and fairly complied with the requirements of the federal securities laws and regulations in disclosing all material information concerning the Note Offering and the subsequent use of the proceeds of that offering to its shareholders in its public financing.” Additionally, counsel stated that compliance with the request “would impose a substantial burden on our clients ... [and] would be time-consuming and highly dis *1039 ruptive of the day-to-day management of the business.... ”
Unsatisfied with this response, Blasband filed this derivative action in the United States District Court for the District of Delaware on behalf of Danaher on March 25, 1991. The essence of Blasband’s claim is that the Rales brothers violated their fiduciary duties owed to Easco by investing proceeds of the Note Offering in highly speculative junk bonds as consideration for their business dealings with Drexel and not for a legitimate corporate purpose. Bias-band named the Rales brothers and ten “John Does” who were offiсers and directors of Easco at the time of the Note Offering as defendants. Danaher was joined as a nominal defendant. Blasband has not specifically identified the John Doe defendants and thus the Rales brothers remain the only actual defendants and we therefore refer to them as the appellees.
Prior to discovery, the appellees moved to dismiss the complaint pursuant to Rules 12(b)(6) and 23.1 on the grounds that Bias-band had not made an appropriate demand on the directors of Danaher to take action and did not establish demand excusal. 3 Furthermore, the appellees contended that Blasband lacked standing to bring this action.
The district court granted the appellees’ motion. Applying Delaware law, the district court held that demand excusal should be measured with regard to the Danaher board, and that Blasband did not adequately plead that demand would have been futile. Additionally, the court agreed with the appellees that Blasband lacked standing as a result of the merger. Accordingly, on August 15, 1991, the court dismissed the complaint with prejudice.
Blasband on behalf of Danaher Corp. v. Rales,
We agree with the district court that Blasband has not adequately established that he is excused from making a proper demand. However we also believe, contrary to the district court, that Blasband does have standing to maintain this derivative action, and we therefore hold thаt Blasband should be given the opportunity to move to amend the complaint to allege additional facts establishing that a proper demand would have been futile. Accordingly, we will vacate the order of August 15, 1991, and will remand the case for further proceedings. 4
II.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
Blasband argues that our review is plenary to the extent that the district court granted the motion to dismiss pursuant to Rule 12(b)(6).
See Scattergood v. Perelman,
Rule 23.1 requires the plaintiff in a derivative action to allege that he or she was a shareholder at the time of the challenged transaction, and to set forth “with particularity the efforts, if any, made by the plaintiff to obtain the action the plaintiff desires from the directors ..., and the reasons for the plaintiff’s failure to obtain the action or for not making the effort.” As we later discuss, the rule does not require a plaintiff to make a demand upon the directors to take action where to do so would be futile.
*1040
Generally, the district court’s determination of demand futility depends upon the facts of eaсh case and is reviewed for abuse of discretion.
Peller v. Southern Co.,
However, on this appeal Blasband challenges the legal precepts employed by the district court in making its determination that he did not adequately plead demand futility. We exercise plenary review over a district court’s choice and interpretation of legal precepts.
Mellon Bank, N.A. v. Metro Communications, Inc.,
III.
STANDING
Although the district court primarily dismissed Blasband’s complaint because of his failure to satisfy the demand requirement, we will first address the issue of standing. The appellees argue that as a result of the merger Blasband lacks standing to bring this derivative action. Bias-band counters that he meets the statutory standing requirements and further that he has “successor derivative standing” by virtue of his status as a former Easco shareholder and his current status as a Danaher shareholder.
In general under Delaware law which the parties agree is applicable a plaintiff must have beеn a shareholder at the time of the challenged transaction to have standing to maintain a shareholder derivative suit. Delaware General Corporation Law § 327, Del.Code Ann. tit. 8, § 327 (1983).
6
The sole purpose of section 327, as stated by Chancellor Seitz, is “to prevent what has been considered an evil, namely, the purchasing of shares in order to maintain a derivative action designed to attack a transaction which occurred prior to the purchase of the stock.”
Rosenthal v. Burry Biscuit Corp.,
Where there has been a cash-out merger, it is clear that a former shareholder may not maintain a derivative action, for he or she would no longer have an interest in a subsequent corporate recovery.
See, e.g., Kramer,
In Rosenthal v. Burry Biscuit Corp., supra, this Court stated that the sole purpose of § 327, Title 8 Del.C. was to prevent an evil, namely the purchase of shares for the purpose of bringing a derivative action based on transactions antedating such purchase. Plaintiff is not such a purchaser and the fact that she holds two pieces of paper rather than one as evidence of her ... investment ... should not, in my opinion, foreclose her from complaining of acts antedating the incorporation of [the post-merger corporation] when such corporation is in effect a successor to [the pre-merger corporation],
Similarly, in
Schreiber v. Carney,
In view of the principles reflected in cases such as
Schreiber
and in the recognition of the need to avoid the shielding of fraudulent transactions, the Delaware courts regularly indicate that there are two exceptions to the general rule that a plaintiff loses standing where he or she loses stock as a result of a merger. These exceptions apply (1) where the merger itself is the subject of a claim of fraud;
see, e.g., Cede & Co. v. Technicolor, Inc.,
Rather, the focus in this appeal is on
Lewis v. Anderson,
the seminal Delaware Supreme Court case concerning the contemporaneous ownership requirement in the merger context. The plaintiff in
Lewis v. Anderson,
a shareholder of Conoco, Inc. (“Old Conoco”), filed a derivative suit on its behalf against various Old Conoco officers and directors, asserting that “golden parachutes” granted by Old Conoco to these individuals constituted a waste of corporate assets. Shortly after the plaintiff filed his complaint, Old Conoco merged with Du Pont Holdings, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of E.I. Du Pont de Nemours and Company (“Du Pont”) and the surviving corporation was renamed Conoco, Inc. (“New Conoco”). The merger provided for Old Conoco shareholders to receive common stock of Du Pont in exchange for their shares of Old Conoco. Du Pont became the sole shareholder of New Conoco.
The court rejected the plaintiffs contention that the derivative cause of action passed not to New Conoco or Du Pont, but rather to the former shareholders of Old Conoco. The court stated that under 8
Del.C.
§ 259(a), any derivative claim against the individual directors of Old Co-noco was a property right of Old Conoco which passed to New Conoco following the merger.
8
However, we believe that the Delaware Supreme Court
sub silentio
recognized an indirect financial interest as a basis for standing in 1988 when in
Stern-berg v. O’Neil,
The holding company owes a duty to use its control of the subsidiary to sue to right wrongs to it, and the shareholder may in effect compel specific performance of these connected duties in a double representative action....
In a ‘double derivative’ action, the shareholder is effectively maintaining the derivative action on behalf of the subsidiary, based upon the fact that the parent or holding company has derivative rights to the cause of action possessed by the subsidiary. The wrong sought to be remedied by the complaining shareholder is not only that done directly to the parent corporation in which he or she owns stock, but also the wrong done to the corporation’s subsidiaries which indirectly, but actually, affects the parent corporation and its shareholders. Notwithstanding that the recognition of double derivative suits relaxes the plaintiff’s contemporaneous ownership requirement, the acceptance of the action acknowledges the realities of the changing teсhniques and structures of the modem corporation. The ultimate beneficiary of a double derivative action is the corporation. that possesses the primary right to sue.
13 Charles R.P. Keating, Gail A. O’Grad-ney,
Fletcher Cyclopedia of Corporations
§ 5977, at 240 (rev. ed. 1991) (footnotes omitted) (emphasis added).
See also Stern-berg,
We believe that this logic applies equally in the context at hand. The plaintiff’s personal stake in the litigation in Sternberg— which was sufficient to confer standing— was no greater than Blasband’s stake in this action. Blasband continues to own shares in Danaher, the parent of the corporation, Easco, that has the primary right to sue to redress the wrongs asserted in his complaint and thus he has an indirect financial interest in the litigation. Therefore, Blasband meets the continuing ownership requirement to the same extent that a plaintiff in a double derivative action satisfies this requirement. Additionally, it is undisputed that Blasband was a shareholder at the time of the challenged transaction as required by 8 Del.C. § 327 and thus could not have purchased his shares to institute a strike suit challenging the investment of the proceeds of the Note Offering.
Overall, we are faced with a case where the literal requirements as well as the purposes underlying both components of shareholder derivative standing — ownership at the time of the challenged transaction and continuing ownership during the litigation — have been satisfied in accordance with Delaware law. Yet the appellees urge that the complaint was properly dismissed on the ground that Blasband lacks standing. We acknowledge that thеir position is understandable, as there is language in Lems that could be read as foreclosing any possibility of maintaining a derivative action in the merger context we face. Furthermore, the facts of Lewis closely paral: lei this case. But this case differs critically from Lewis in a legal sense in that the plaintiff in that case seems not to have claimed to have standing as a shareholder of Du Pont, the parent corporation. Therefore, there is no indication in Lewis that the Supreme Court of Delaware considered an argument comparable to that now raised by Blasband, i.e., that he has standing as a shareholder of Danaher.
To be sure, one could argue that, if the plaintiff could have merely amended his complaint to allege a cause of action on behalf of Du Pont, the court had no need to make an analysis of his possible standing as an Old Conoco shareholder. Yet, as the plaintiff in Lewis apparently did not attempt to amend his complaint to bring a derivative action on behalf of New Conoco by virtue of his status as a Du Pont shareholder, it was not necessary for the court to address the issue. Additionally, as will be apparent from our discussion below, even if the plaintiff had pursued such an argument, the merger would have implicated the adequacy of the plaintiff’s demand *1044 efforts which is a further reason why it may have been premature for the court to address this potential standing argument. Importantly, moreover, the court could not have implicitly rejected thе plaintiff’s standing to bring an action on behalf of the parent without thereby calling into question the standing of anyone in Delaware to bring a double derivative suit. For purposes of standing, there is simply no principled distinction between a derivative action brought by a shareholder of a parent corporation on behalf of its subsidiary following a merger to redress wrongs done to the subsidiary prior to the merger where the plaintiff continuously has held a financial interest in the subsidiary directly, and then after the merger indirectly, and a conventional double derivative action outside the merger context. Therefore we will not assume that the court in Lems intended to reject the plaintiffs standing as a shareholder in Du Pont.
Lewis v. Anderson
recognizes the well-established principle that the board of directors has exclusive control over the affairs of the corporation, “including the disposition'of all choses in action[,]” and recognizes as well that where there has been a merger, this responsibility passes not to the shareholders of the pre-merger company but to the board of the surviving company.
We acknowledge that this case may not fit neatly into existing Delaware corporation law. However, we are guided by the recognition of the Delaware courts that “[a] shareholder derivative suit is a uniquely equitable remedy....”
Levine v. Smith,
Hence, our conclusion that Blasband has standing is bolstered by the fact that a dismissal of Blasband’s complaint may well leave a wrong unremedied. In contrast to
Lewis v. Anderson,
where the court observed that New Conoco, the successor company, had an opportunity to seek relief for the wrongs alleged in that case,
We also point out that we doubt that Blasband would be entitled to bring a direct action to recover for his alleged inju
*1045
ries as it is clear that Delaware courts would treat any claim asserted by him individually as derivative in nature: “[T]o have standing to sue individually, rather than derivatively on behalf of the corporation, the plaintiff must allege more than an injury resulting from a wrong to the corporation. ... For a plaintiff to have standing to bring an individual action, he must be injured
directly
or
independently
of the corporation.”
Kramer v. Western Pacific Indus.,
We also believe that our result may not be avoided by an argument that Blasband may assert a claim derivative solely to Dan-aher on a theory that the Danaher board’s failure to pursue redress on behalf of Eas-co rose to the level of a breach of fiduciary duty. Under this theory, there would be two alleged wrongs: the alleged wrongs committed by the Rales brothers upon Eas-co by the investment of the proceeds of the Note Offering and Danaher’s failure to seek redress for those acts. A derivative suit to recover for the latter elusive, continuing breach would be highly problematic. For example, a court would have to determine with precision the point in time when Danaher’s failure to act became a breach of fiduciary duty, giving all Danaher shareholders at that time the right, upon satisfying the demand requirement, to maintain a derivative action. It does not matter that Blasband necessarily would be a shareholder at this point in time because if he properly may maintain such an action then anyone could buy into the suit by purchasing shares of Danaher so long as it is determined that that shareholder owned stock at the time the omission rose to the level of a breach of fiduciary duty. 12
We realize that in limited circumstances, Delaware courts have recognized an exception to the contemporaneous ownership requirement where there has been a “continuing wrong.”
Schreiber v. R.G. Bryan,
In the final analysis, . , ,, actl°n 18 abm to a double derivative suit, H®has flled an actl0n as a Eanaher share- hol^erJ° Pu,rsuf acaase of act,(m be‘ ba ^ Banaher s wboby owned subsidiary, Easco- Blasband was a shareholder of the company allegedly wronged at the time of the challenged transactions. Following tbese transactions, Easco merged into a new company, and survived as a wholly owned subsidiary of Danaher. As Lewis v. Anderson makes clear, all of “Old Eas-co’s” causes of action survived as well, passing to “New Easco,” but here “New Easco” has not pursued its cause of action, Throughout this time, Blasband has main-tained a financial interest in Easco, al-though after the merger his interest be-came indirect. Had Blasband been given shares of the post-merger Easco, there would be no doubt that he could now main-tain a derivative action on its behalf. Inas-much as Delaware recognizes double deriv-ative actions, the fact that Blasband has been given shares of Easco’s parent rather than the new subsidiary should be of little consequence. 13 Accordingly, we hold that, despite the rather broad language in Lewis v. Anderson, Blasband has satisfied Dela-ware’s statutory and common law standing requirements to maintain this derivative ac-tion. 14
*1047 IV.
DEMAND
A.
General Principles
As the United States Supreme Court recently recognized, Rule 23.1 “does not
create
a demand requirement of any particular dimension. On its face, Rule 23.1 speaks only to the adequacy of the shareholder representative’s pleadings.”
Kamen v. Kemper Financial Services, Inc.,
— U.S. -, -,
While Delaware courts routinеly permit a shareholder to bring a derivative suit where those in control of the corporation refuse to assert a claim belonging to it,
see Pogostin v. Rice,
Blasband does not claim that he has made a proper demand on either Danaher’s or Easco’s board of directors. Thus, we are concerned not with the adequacy of the demand but rather with demand futility, i.e., whether Blasband should be excused from making a proper demand.
This inquiry “is inextricably bound to issues of business judgment and the standards of that doctrine’s applicability.”
Ar-onson,
In determining the sufficiency of a complaint to withstand demand futility, the controlling legal standard is well established. The trial court is confronted with two related but distinct questions: (1) whether threshold presumptions of director disinterest or independence are rebutted by well-pleaded facts; and, if not, (2) whether the complaint pleads particularized facts sufficient to create a reasonable doubt that the challenged transaction was the product of a valid exercise of business judgment.
Levine,
1.
Director Disinterest and Independence
Under the first prong of the
Aronson
test, the court reviews the factual allegations of the complaint to determine whether they create a reasonable doubt as to the disinterestedness and independence of the directors at the time the complaint was filed.
Pogostin,
2.
The Challenged Transaction
If a plaintiff does not satisfy the first prong of the
Aronson
test, there is a rebuttable presumption that the business judgmеnt rule attaches to the challenged transaction.
Levine,
focuses on the substantive nature of the challenged transaction and the board’s approval thereof. A court does not assume that the transaction was a wrong to the corporation requiring corrective measures by the board. Rather, the transaction is reviewed against the factual background of the complaint to determine whether a reasonable doubt exists at the threshold that the challenged action was a valid exercise of business judgment.
Pogostin,
Proper business judgment includes “both substantive due care (purchase terms) ..., and procedural due care (an informed decision)_”
Grobow,
B.
Demand Applied
1.
On Which Board is Demand Made
In view of the merger, we are presented with difficult questions concerning application of
Aronson’s
demand futility formulation. Yet our inquiry under the first
Aronson
prong is simplified for it is clear that, regardless of the board or boards on which the demand for action would ordinarily be required, we review the factual allegations of the complaint to determine whether they create a reasonable doubt as to the disinterestedness and independence of the directors at the time the complaint was filed.
Pogostin,
Thus, the Aronson formulation is not entirely applicable in this case because the Easco board allegedly approved the challenged transaction but plaintiff's de *1050 mand futility allegations concern the Danaher board, and there is no allegation that the membership of the two boards is identical. Plaintiffs argument,, under Aronsoris so-called second prong, that the magnitude of - Easco’s junk bond investments creates a reasonable doubt that the Easco board exercised sound business judgment is, therefore, irrelevant to the question of whether demand on the Danaher board is futile.
Inasmuch as this case is similar to a double derivative action, we believe that the demand required of a plaintiff in a double derivative action is applicable here and thus since Blasband did not make the demand, futility must be determined with respect to a demand required in a double derivative action. In general, to bring a double derivative suit, “[a] plaintiff shareholder must make a demand twice, once of the subsidiary company and once of the holding company.” 13
Fletcher Cyclopedia of Corporations
§ 5977, at 13 (Supp. 1991) (footnote omitted); see
also Brown,
125 I11.2d at 361,
Director Disinterest and Independence
Blasband’s assertion that the Eas-co ari(j Danaher boards were not independent is based on the boards’ written re-sponse to his request for information, Blasband argues that the boards’ letter demonstrates that any further demand would be futile because the boards denied ad wrongdoing by Easco officials, refused to Pr°vide easily obtainable information, and refused to conduct any investigation in response to his letter. Further, Blasband contends that he informed the boards that possessed information that might demonstrate substantial waste, and that the response demonstrated “a complete un-willingness by the Danaher board to con-duct> or allow a stockholder to conduct, an investigation into the conduct of the Rales Mothers, who dominate the company, behavior by the board casts into rea-sonable doubt lts “dependence from the Rales Mothers. Reply Bnef at 16; see also Opening Brief at '36-38. 15
Appellees rejoin first that a response to an inadequate demand should never be con-sidered in determining demand excusal, and second that in any event the response casts n° reasonable doubt on thе ability of the boards to consider a pre-suit demand. Ap-pellees maintain that if we accept Blas-band’s reasoning, shareholders would be able to circumvent the demand requirement by making an inadequate demand and then arguing that the response to the inade-quate demand demonstrates that a proper demand would be futile, thereby reducing the demand requirement to a meaningless formality.
While there is some appeal to this rea-soning, the appellees offer no support for the proposition that a court may not consid
*1051
er a board’s reply to an inadequate demand in considering demand futility.
Shlensky v. Dorsey,
In fact the appellees’ fears are unwarranted since, regardless of the source of a derivative plaintiff’s allegations of futility, the plaintiff always retains the burden of demonstrating a reasonable doubt as to the disinterestedness and independence of the directors. Thus, considering the response to an inadequate demand on the futility issue in no way lessens a plaintiff’s burden of proof required to justify the absence of a demand. Moreover, in the typical case, the plaintiff does not allege both that an adequate demand was made
and
that demand is excused.
Cf. Spiegel,
Nevertheless, even considering the Easco and Danaher boards’ December 17, 1990 letter, Blasband fails to allege particularized facts demonstrating that the directors were incapable of considering a proper demand. Blasband’s letter was merely a request for information. Since it was not a proper demand, the boards were not obligated to take action pursuant to the letter. As the district court noted in
Allison on behalf of General Motors Corp. v. General Motors Corp.,
A generalized claim that the Board failed to take action on the alleged wrongs set out in the demand letter as of the date of filing of the complaint does not in any way explain why the Board is disabled from assuming control of the litigation. This claim only alerts the Board that a shareholder believes management has done something which requires a response by the Board. At a minimum, plaintiff must offer some particularized legally cognizable reason as to why the ... Board is unable to redress the alleged wrong.
Id.
Further, the December 17 letter was not, as Blasband asserts, a “declaration of innocence of wrongdoing.” The letter merely stated that Easco complied with its disclosure requirements under the federal securities laws.
See
app. at 28-29. There is no indication that the boards considered whether a potential claim existed for breach of fiduciary duty under state law, which is the basis of this action. Thus, the letter does not create a reasonable doubt that the boards would have been incapable of considering a proper demand or that the Rales brothers exercised such domination and control over the boards that their discretion was “sterilized.”
See Levine,
Blasband further seeks to support his claim by asserting that the information requested was easily obtainable and thus the boards’ response that the request would be “time consuming and highly disruptive of the day-to-day management,”
*1052
demonstrates that the boards were incapable of exercising independence with regard to the subject matter of this litigation. While we acknowledge that it is not readily apparent why it would have been difficult to supply Blasband with the information he requested, we nevertheless recognize that the failure to provide information does not in itself create a reasonable doubt as to the disinterestedness or independence of a board.
Seibert v. Harper & Row Publishers, Inc.,
No. 6639, slip op. at 8 (Del.Ch. Dec. 5, 1984). Moreover, a board’s failure to take action, even if it is aware of wrongdoing, does not demonstrаte futility.
Cramer v. General Tel. & Electronics Corp.,
3.
The Challenged Transaction
Since Blasband has not satisfied the first prong of the Aronson test, there is a rebuttable presumption that the business judgment rule attaches to the chal-
lenged transaction.
Levine,
Blasband has pleaded sufficient facts demonstrating that at the time of the challenged transaction the pre-merger Easco board was incapable of responding to a demand under the second prong of the
Aronson
test. Assuming the truth of the pleadings, the complaint alleges that the appellees made a series of highly speculative investments in debt securities using the proceeds of a public offering which, according to its prospectus, were to be more conservatively invested. Moreover, the complaint alleges that these investments were not made for any legitimate corporate purpose, but rather were for the benefit of Drexel, which was experiencing financial difficulties and which had a longtime relationship with the Rales brothers. Clearly, Blasband has pleaded facts raising at least a reasonable doubt that the appellees’ use of proceeds from the Note Offering was a valid exercise of business judgment. Thus, “it may be inferred that the Board is
incapable
of exercising its power and authority to pursue the derivative
*1053
claims directly.”
Levine,
However, the pre-merger Eased board’s business judgment or lack thereof may be thought to be entirely irrelevant at any time
other
than the time of the filing of the complaint.
19
See generally, Starrels,
Sometime after the plaintiff filed his original complaint, the transaction that the plaintiff sought to enjoin was abandoned.
See
The court initially held that, although the original complaint was purportedly brought individually, the claims were actually derivative in nature. Therefore, the court held that futility should be measured at the time the original complaint was filed. Id. at 229. Additionally, the court held that the original complaint’s allegations of waste and fraud were sufficient to raise a reasonable doubt that the challenged transactions would qualify for business judgment protection, and thus demand was excused as futile. But what the court regarded as the “interesting” question was whether the plaintiff also was required to allege facts excusing demand at the time of the amended complaint, as by then there was a new board which presumably was disinterested with respect to a potential claim against the Mascolo and Carter groups. Id.
The court observed that the
Aronson
test for demand futility focuses upon whether the board
that approved the challenged transaction
should be entitled to rely on the business judgment rule. However, since a later change in board composition would not affect this inquiry, “the existence of a new, wholly independent board at the time of the institution of a suit might under the
Aronson
test be thought wholly irrelevant. For this reason
Aron-son
has been criticized as focusing the test for futility on the wrong time.”
Id.
(citing
Starrels,
In the special case, however, where there is a change in board control between the date of the challenged transaction and the date of suit, it might open the way to error to focus on the board existing at the time of the challenged transaction. What, in the end, is relevant is not whether the board that approved the challenged transaction was or was not interested in that transaction but whether the present board is or is not disabled from exercising its right and duty to control corporate litigation.
I do not consider that Aronson intended to determine that demand under [Delaware Court of Chancery] Rule 23.1 upon an independent board that has come into existence after the time of the ‘challenged transaction’ would be excused if the board that approved the challenged transaction did not qualify for business judgment protection.
Id. at 230.
The court, however, did not announce an absolute rule that demand futility should always be measured at the time the complaint is filed. Rather, the court held that, where a derivative suit was properly initiated, the plaintiff need not make a new demand upon the board in the event the plaintiff seeks to amend the complaint to add new claims that relate to those already in litigation, even if there has been a change in the board’s composition. Id. at 231. 23
Blasband had not initiated his suit by the time of the change of ownership. While the challenged transaction raises a reasonable doubt as to the pre-merger Easco board’s exercise of business judgment, the “transaction” prong of Aronson’s test for demand futility would be irrelevant in assessing the Easco’s board’s ability to pur *1055 sue the derivative claim directly after the merger if there was a change in control of the board. This factual issue is open as the parties have not indicated whether control of the Easco board changed following the merger. But if Blasband can show upon remand that a controlling group of Easco board members existing at the time of the challenged transactions continued to control the board at the time he filed his complaint, then he would be able to establish demand futility as to the Easco board under Aronson’s second prong. Otherwise he will not satisfy that prong.
C.
Dismissal With Prejudice
The district court’s decision to deny Bias-band leave to amend his complaint was predicated on an erroneous determination of law, namely, that he lacked standing to pursue this action. Rule 15(a) provides that “leave [to amend] shall be freely granted when justice so requires.” Our case law manifests a strong preference that plaintiffs be given leave to amend where amendment is likely to cure the defects resulting in dismissal.
See Lewis v. Curtis,
D.
Summary on Demand
In summary, upon remand Blasband may seek leave to amend his complaint to allege facts demonstrating that demand was futile as to both the Easco and Danaher boards at the time the complaint was filed under the first Aronson prong. Inasmuch as Blasband has not pleaded particularized facts implicating either board’s disinterest or independence in an amended complaint he must demonstrate that the boards were interested or lacked independence at the time the complaint was filed, in accordance with the above principles.
Aronson’s second prong may be useful to assess the futility of requiring demand upon the Easco, but not the Danaher, board. Moreover, if there was a change of control of the Easco board, we believe that the Delaware Supreme Court would follow the reasoning of the chancellor in Harris, and require that the adequacy of demand in this case be measured at the time of the complaint rather than at the time of transaction. Thus, in this instance the second Aronson, or “transaction” prong, would be inapplicable to Easco. But inasmuch as Blasband has established that the challenged transactions raise a reasonable doubt as to the pre-merger Easco board’s exercise of business judgment, if Blasband shows that a controlling group of Easco board members that sat on that board at the time of the challenged transactions continued to control the board at the time he filed his complaint, he will have adequately demonstrated demand futility as to Easco.
V.
CONCLUSION
While we agree with the district court that Blasband did not adequately plead that demand was excused, inasmuch as we disagree with its conclusion that Blasband did not have standing to pursue a derivative claim on Danaher’s behalf, we will vacate the order of August 15, 1991, and will remand the matter to the district court with leave to Blasband to move to amend his complaint to allege demand futility and to add Easco as a party to this action. Of course, we are not directing how the district court should rule on the motion as it is for that court to determine whether Bias-band adequately pleads that demand was excused in a proposed amended complaint.
See Adams v. Gould Inc.,
Notes
. According to our calculations Blasband should have received 459 shares.
. According to the complaint the Rales brothers acquired Easco through another company of which they were 65% owners. Blasband acquired his interest in Easco in 1987. The complaint does not explаin all the steps in these transactions but they are not important to our disposition of this case.
. Blasband admits that he did not make a proper demand and contends only that demand should be excused.
. The district court had subject matter jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1332(a)(1) and we have jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1291.
. The appellees attempt to distinguish
Salve Regina
on the ground that the district court did not determine any "uncertain or evolving” issues of state law. But plenary review of a district court's choice and interpretation of state law precepts is appropriate without regard for whether the state law is uncertain or evolving. In
Salve Regina
the Court held that it was inappropriate for the court of appeals to apply a deferential standard of review of a district judge's determination of an unsettled issue of state law in a diversity action where the district judge had extensive experience as a state trial judge.
See also Craig v. Lake Asbestos of Quebec, Ltd.,
. Section 327 of the Delaware General Corporation Law provides:
In any derivative suit instituted by a stockholder of a corporation, it shall be averred in the complaint that the plaintiff was a stockholder of the corporation at the time of the transaction of which he complains or that his stock thereafter devolved upon him by operation of law.
Del.Code Ann. tit. 8, § 327.
Citations to the General Corporation Law will hereafter appear as "8 Del.C.” followed by the section number, or simply as a section number.
. The Supreme Court of the United States reached a result consistent with the Delaware reorganization exception in
Gollust v. Mendell,
— U.S. -,
. Section 259(a) provides that all rights, privileges, powers and franchises pass to the surviving or resulting corporation in the event of a merger.
. The main issue in
Sternberg
was whether the Delaware courts could exercise personal jurisdiction over an Ohio corporation in an action brought by a shareholder of that corporation to redress the alleged wrongs to that company’s wholly owned subsidiary, a Delaware corporation. The court never suggested that Delaware courts would not recognize the double derivative suit. This is not surprising as such suits are well recognized, though there are some jurisdictions that refuse to permit them.
See generally
13 Charles R.P. Keating, Gail A. O’Gradney,
Fletcher Cyclopedia of Corporations
§ 5977 (rev. ed. 1991). Indeed, double derivative actions have been recognized by the inferior Delaware courts for at least the last two decades.
See, e.g., Levine v. Milton,
. Thus, Blasband could not claim that the investment in junk bonds caused him direct injury, as this rationale was squarely rejected in Kramer:
Kramer's position is tantamount to saying that, in the context of a cash-out merger, whenever a shareholder asserts a claim against management for breach of fiduciary duty based upon waste or other acts causing a monetary loss to the corporation, the shareholder’s claim should also be construed: (i) as asserting a ‘special injury’ to the shareholder, as distinct from the corporation; and (ii) as amounting to a direct attack on the terms of the merger, thus giving the shareholder standing to continue, or bring forward, a suit after the merger. Such a position is contrary to well-established principles of Delaware law and cannot be accepted by this Court.
Kramer,
. We conclude that the class action filed in Sullivan v. Easco Hand Tools, No. 11427 (Del. Ch.), which sought to prevent Easco’s merger into Danager would not háve afforded recovery for the breach of fiduciary duty alleged in Bias-band’s complaint. To the extent that the class in Sullivan sought damages for its direct injuries, the action would have been inconsistent with Kramer, as discussed above. Moreover, the complaint in Sullivan does not even suggest that the Rales brothers breached their fiduciary duties to Easco and thus is unrelated to Bias-band’s claims.
We also observe that while a dissenting shareholder in certain circumstances may have a right to an appraisal where the shareholder contends that he or she has received an inadequate price for the shares and has objected to the merger terms, the appellees do not contend that this procedure was available to Blasband and, of course, therefore do not contend that it afforded him an adequate remedy. In any event, even if Blasband has appraisal rights, that would not provide a remedy to Easco for the breaches of fiduciary duty alleged in Blasband’s complaint.
.Of course, if Blasband could assert a claim derivative solely to Danaher then he certainly has standing as he acquired his Danaher shares when Danaher acquired Easco.
. We note that permitting this claim on behalf of Easco would not result in a windfall to Dan-aher as suggested by the district court.
See
. The district court dismissed Blasband’s stand-. , . *• u mg to bring a double derivative action because . ? , f? x 1<t . , , ^ . * believed that [t]he difficulty with charactenz-*ls actlon as a double derivative is that [Blasband] has not alleged (nor does he seek leave to amend the Complaint to allege) that Danaher was an Easco stockholder at the time of the purported wrongdoing. Thus, Danaher apparently cannot satisfy § 327’s contemporane-ous ownership requirement."
Additionally, orie might argue that section 327’s requirement that "the plaintiff [be] a stockholder of the corporation at the time of the transaction ...” means that Blasband must have been a Danaher stockholder at that time to bring this derivative suit. Clearly, however, the statute contemplates that the corporation made the nominal defendant at the time of the complaint will be the same corporation that was allegedly harmed by the challenged transaction. Where the corporation merges and the plaintiff receives shares of the successor corporation, section 327 poses no obstacle to a derivative suit on behalf of the successor corporation for pre-merger acts, because the successor corporation succeeds to the cause of action under section 259, as explained in Lewis v. Anderson. The only difference here is that Blasband has received shares of the successor’s parent rather than the successor corporation itself. Yet, since the Delaware courts have recognized a shareholder’s right to bring a double derivative suit, it follows that this fact in itself is an insufficient basis to deny standing.
We are aware that Blasband has stated in the district court and before us that he is not bringing a double derivative suit. Rather he contends that he has "successor derivative standing.” However, Blasband has in fact argued that he meets Delaware’s statutory and common law standing requirements, an argument with which essentially we agree, and the appellees have addressed these arguments in detail. Thus, any disagreement lies in the name accorded the cause of action, not its substance. In any event while this action is a first cousin to a double derivative suit it is not a twin so that Blasband’s concession that this is not a double derivative action technically is correct. Furthermore, “[w]hen an issue or claim is properly before the court [of appeals], the court is not limited to the particular legal theories advanced by the parties, but rather retains the independent power to identify and apply the proper construction of governing law.”
Kamen v. Kemper Financial Services, Inc.,
— U.S. -, -,
. Although Blasband refers merely to the Dan-aher board, the letter was sent to both the Dan-aher and Easco boards, and counsel responded to the letters on behalf of both boards.
. Similarly,
Herd v. Major Realty Corp.,
No. 10707, slip op. at 17-18,
. This case is, of course, distinguishable from Spiegel in that the shareholder in Spiegel actually made a demand after the complaint was filed. Blasband is not taking an inconsistent position since he acknowledges that he has not made an adequate demand.
. See generally Dennis J. Block, Stephen A. Radin & James P. Rosenzweig, The Role of the Business Judgment Rule in Shareholder Litigation at the Turn of the Decade, 45 Bus.Law. 469, 478-79 (1990) ("it is settled that, under Delaware law, demand will not be excused merely because a majority of directors are named as defendants, approved the challenged transaction, are threatened with personal liability for approving the transaction, failed to take corrective action prior to the filing of the lawsuit, refused to reconsider a challenged transaction or rejected a prior demand, would have to sue themselves, are alleged in conclusory language to be dominated and contrоlled by those bene-fitting from the challenged conduct, or have financial ties to the corporation”) (collecting cases) (footnotes omitted).
. Although the merger resulted in a change of ownership, there is no indication as to whether the composition of the Easco board changed following the merger.
. The plaintiff did not make any allegations regarding demand in his original complaint as it was not filed as a derivative action.
. See abo R. Franklin Balotti, Anne C. Foster & Frederick L. Cottrell, III, Defense of Derivative Claims, in 2 Securities Litigation 77, 93 (Practicing Law Institute 1990) ("As a theoretical matter there is little justification in requiring the court to examine the prior board or its action because even if the action challenged was not the product of a valid exercise of business judgment, the current board might well determine that the corporation’s interests would be best served by not pursuing the cause of action.”).
. This is why Blasband is incorrect in stating that the district court has established a "departure from established law" in looking to the time of the filing of the complaint. While it is true that Delaware cases suggest that the second Aronson prong is determined at the time of the transaction, this is so, as observed by the Harris court, because typically the composition of the board is the same at the time the complaint is filed and thus the question never arises as to the propriety of making a demand at that point in time where the plaintiff is unable to satisfy the first prong of Aronson.
. The court reasoned that a board that is comprised of new directors who are under no conflict with respect to a pending derivative claim may cause the corporation to: (1) move the court to take control of the litigation by being re-aligned as a party plaintiff; (2) move to dismiss the case as not in the corporation’s best interest; or (3) allow the representative plaintiff to carry the litigation forward.
that rule and the policy behind it ought not to be so construed as to stall the derivative suit mechanism where it has been properly initiated. When claims have been properly laid before the court and are in litigation, neither [Delaware Court of Chancery] Rule 23.1 nor the policy it implements requires that a court decline to permit further litigation of those claims upon the replacement of the interested board with a disinterested one. In that circumstance a new board should be required to take one of the [three] steps outlined above, should it decide to act at all with respect to the matter. As in Zapata Corporation v. Maldonado, 'some tribute must be paid to the fact that the lawsuit was properly initiated.’430 A.2d at 787 .
Id.
