Allied Artists Pictures Corporation (Allied) has appealed from an opinion and order of the Court of Chancery allowing counsel fees and expenses to counsel for plaintiff-appellee Baron, in the amount of $55,-155.70, for their efforts in bringing consolidated shareholder’s actions on Baron’s behalf against Allied. Reference is made to the Vice Chancellor’s thorough opinion,
Baron v. Allied Artists Pictures Corp.,
Del.Ch.,
Baron owned ten shares of Allied’s common stock when he instituted his consolidated actions in Delaware challenging under 8 Del.C. § 225 the 1973 and 1974 elections of directors to Allied’s board. The preferred shareholders had elected the directors due to a delinquency in the payment of preferred dividends, and Baron claimed that the board of directors was wrongfully perpetuating its control of the corporation, to the detriment of the common stockholders, by not paying the accumulated dividend arrearages on the preferred stock, and by failing to comply with sinking fund requirements relating to Allied’s preferred stock.
Summary judgment was entered against Baron,
Baron v. Allied Artists Pictures Corporation,
Del.Ch.,
Allied challenges the Vice Chancellor’s award, relying on what it claims is a crucial distinction between this case and the others from which the exception was formulated. In this case, Allied notes, the mooting event took place after a decision had been reached on the merits, in the form of a summary judgment against Baron, so that only the appeal was mooted, not the underlying cause of action which Baron lost. Therefore Allied claims that the mootness exception does not apply, and the Gottlieb rule should be given effect.
It is true, as appellant argues, that a decision on a motion for summary judgment is a final decision on the merits, which enables the defense of
res judicata
to be raised in subsequent actions between the parties.
Hubicki v. ACF Industries, Inc.,
3rd Cir.,
The reason for allowing an award of attorneys’ fees to plaintiff’s counsel where a defendant corporation takes steps to settle or moot a case and in so doing produces the same or similar benefit sought by the shareholder’s litigation is to prevent frustration of the remedial policy of providing professional compensation for such suits when meritorious. This rule insures that, even without a favorable adjudication, counsel will be compensated for the beneficial results they produced, provided that the action was meritorious and had a causal connection to the conferred benefit.
Rosenthal v. Burry Biscuit Corporation, supra,
Where the action' results in a corporate fund being created or supplemented, counsel’s recovery may be had out of this fund if their efforts helped produce it. But our law recognizes that a pecuniary benefit to the corporation is not a prerequisite to a fee award to counsel.
Chrysler Corporation v. Dann, supra,
Appellant’s next contention, that even if this is a mooted shareholder action, the conditions prerequisite to an award of counsel fees have not been met, centers on an analysis of the “meritoriousness” and “causal connection” standards.
The opinions in the above-cited cases have insisted that a settled or mooted action, in order to form the basis for an award to counsel, must have been meritorious when filed. At least one commentator has suggested that as long as there can be shown a causal connection between the suit and the benefit, e. g., the defendant took it seriously enough to want to settle or take mooting action, it should not matter whether the suit had legal merit. Note,
Recovery of Attorneys’ Fees on Mooted Claims,
63 Cornell L.Rev. 880, 887 (1978). But this Court has been concerned with discouraging baseless litigation (see
Chrysler Corporation v. Dann, supra,
The standard for meritoriousness established in Chrysler provides:
“[a] claim is meritorious within the meaning of the rule if it can withstand a motion to dismiss on the pleadings if, at the same time, the plaintiff possesses knowledge of provable facts which hold out some reasonable likelihood of ultimate success. It is not necessary that factually there be absolute assurance of ultimate success, but only that there be some reasonable hope.”
Appellant contends that the proper inquiry before the Vice Chancellor was whether the appeal, rather than the complaint, was meritorious when filed. They submit that it was inconsistent for him to rule against the plaintiff in the summary judgment motion and also in effect rule that the plaintiff had pleaded provable facts which showed that his action had reasonable hope of success. In this connection we reiterate that the pertinent time to make this latter determination is the time of filing. The question of merit for the purposes of compensation is properly determined as of the commencement of the lawsuit and not by developments thereafter which could not have been known in the exercise of reasonable diligence at the time of filing. Thus, although the entry of summary judgment below must inescapably be considered in evaluating not only the merits of plaintiff’s appeal, but also, as a practical matter, meritoriousness when filed, it would not be decisive to the threshold determination of merit that concerns us here. Since the purpose and the effect of the appeal were to keep the underlying issues alive and susceptible to an opposite resolution, we think the Vice Chancellor was correct in applying the standard to the original cause of action.
Turning to the factual and discretionary rulings of the Vice Chancellor, the issue.is not one for our independent,
de novo
judgment. The Vice Chancellor specifically found that, “when filed”, the suits “had some ‘reasonable hope’ of being successful”, that the defendant “failed to establish” that the “plaintiff’s suits” were not related to “the return of voting power in the new corporate entity to its common stockholders”.
The decision of the Court of Chancery is affirmed.
Notes
. Counsel for plaintiff applied for $276,800. See the opinion below,
. The decision of the Vice Chancellor was nonetheless subject to the following admonition set forth at
“It is clear, however, that Allied’s present board does have a fiduciary duty to see that the preferred dividends are brought up to date as soon as possible in keeping with prudent business management. * * * It cannot be permitted indefinitely to plough back all profits in future commitments so as to avoid full satisfaction of the rights of the preferred to their dividends and the otherwise normal right of the common stockholders to elect corporate management.”
. The Rosenthal and Palley cases were mooted at the trial court level and the Dann case was settled at the trial court level.
. The Vice Chancellor particularly noted that “it becomes significant also that no affidavit in opposition to the fee application has been filed by the defendants in which the inference of a causal connection between plaintiffs suits and the decision to enter into the merger is expressly denied.”
