Daniel Rademeyer was a shareholder in MRF, Inc., a medical technology company in which Michael Farris owned a majority of the stock. After Mr. Farris purchased all the shares of the minority shareholders and sold MRF, Mr. Rademeyer sued him claiming fraud and breach of fiduciary duty. Mr. Rademeyer alleged that Mr. Farris had concealed the true value of MRF and had failed to disclose that, at the time of buy-back negotiations with the minority shareholders, he had received an offer from LaserSight to sell MRF for a higher price per share than the price that he offered (and ultimately paid) the minority shareholders for their shares. Shortly after purchasing the minority shareholders’ interests, Mr. Farris sold MRF to LaserSight at a higher price per share than he had paid to the shareholders.
The district court, noting that the Missouri statute of limitations on claims for common-law fraud and breach of fiduciary duty is five years, held the claims time barred and granted Mr. Farris’s motion for summary judgment.
See Rademeyer v. Farris,
I.
We review grants of summary judgment
de novo,
applying the same standards as the district court.
Dulany v. Carnahan,
II.
We consider the fraud claim first. In Missouri, the limitations period applied to most common-law tort claims is found in the various subsections of Mo. Rev.Stat. § 516.120, which requires that a suit for fraud be brought within five years of the accrual of the cause of action,
see
Mo.Rev.Stat. § 516.120(5). A fraud claim is “deemed not to have accrued until the discovery by the aggrieved party,”
id.,
and Missouri courts have held that “discovery” under this section ordinarily occurs when the plaintiff actually discovers “or in the exercise of due diligence, should have discovered the fraud,”
Burr v. Nat’l Life and Accident Ins. Co.,
*837
It seems self-evident to us that, for purposes of determining what standard of diligence to apply to plaintiffs asserting that a fiduciary has committed a fraud, the fiduciary relationship need only have existed at the time of the alleged fraud, and that the continued existence of the fiduciary relationship beyond that time is irrelevant. In fact, the Missouri Court of Appeals has explicitly held that “the required discovery depends upon and is determined by the relationship of the plaintiff and defendant prior to the commission of the fraud.”
Vogel v. A.G. Edwards and Sons, Inc.,
Mr. Farris suggests that there was evidence that Mr. Rademeyer did in fact have actual notice of the facts that constitute the alleged fraud as early as 1994, but we disagree. He points first to the fact that John Brandvein, another minority shareholder, told Mr. Rademeyer in 1994 that Mr. Farris had sold MRF, that “he didn’t think he [Mr. Brandvein] had been treated fairly,” and that he thought that he (Mr. Brandvein) had “a very good case.” Mr. Farris also observes that Mr. Brandvein even “tried to enlist [Mr. Rademeyer] into joining into the suit with him at that stage.” Mr. Farris maintains that, with a few additional questions, Mr. Rademeyer could have learned about documents revealing the alleged fraud. In other words, Mr. Farris asserts that Mr. Rademeyer was on inquiry notice that he had a cause of action.
We agree that Mr. Brandvein’s attempt to recruit Mr. Rademeyer as a co-plaintiff, and Mr. Brandvein’s statement that he thought that he had “a very good case,” would put a person in Mr. Rademeyer’s circumstances on inquiry notice; but inquiry notice is not relevant here. That is because, as we have already indicated, Missouri courts have held that a person who relies on a fiduciary “ ‘is under no duty to make inquiry,’ ”
Vogel,
Mr. Brandvein’s statement that “he didn’t think he had been treated fairly” could represent nothing more than seller’s remorse, and his unsupported statement of opinion that he had “a very good case” was just that. Without something more, we believe, these facts are insufficient as a matter of law to inform a reasonable person that a fraud had actually been committed. As explained below, we believe that a reasonable person in Mr. Rademeyer’s position would have ascertained the facts underlying Mr. Brandvein’s opinions, but the law of Missouri imposes no such duty of inquiry in the case of a fraud committed by a fiduciary. We conclude on this record that Mr. Rademeyer’s cause of action did not accrue until he learned that Mr. Farris already had a higher offer in hand from LaserSight when he bought out the minority shareholders. Since the present suit commenced within five years of that actual *838 discovery, the statute of limitations does not bar the claim for fraud.
III.
We now pass to a consideration of Mr. Rademeyer’s claim for breach of fiduciary duty. One might expect, as an original matter, that a claim for breach of fiduciary duty would be subject to the same standard of discovery, for limitations purposes, as a claim for fraud committed by a fiduciary, because a breach of fiduciary duty is a constructive fraud under Missouri law,
see Klemme v. Best,
Mr. Rademeyer argues that there was considerable evidence that Mr. Farris tried to conceal his breach of fiduciary duty from him and that under Mo.Rev. Stat. § 516.280 the statute of limitations is therefore tolled. But attempts at fraudulent concealment are of course irrelevant, for tolling purposes, when a plaintiff with a claim for breach of fiduciary duty nonetheless should have known that he had suffered damage.
See M & D Enterprises, Inc. v. Wolff,
Applying an objective standard, we conclude that Mr. Rademeyer should have known that he had suffered damage after his conversation with Mr. Brandvein. If Mr. Rademeyer had exercised reasonable diligence in asking Mr. Brandvein why he thought that he had a “good case” against Mr. Farris, the record is clear that he would have learned of the documents implicating Mr. Farris in a breach of fiduciary duty that caused Mr. Rademeyer damage. Because Mr. Farris’s efforts to conceal his alleged breach of fiduciary duty did not prevent Mr. Rademeyer from discovering that he was damaged, § 516.280 did not toll the statute of limitations.
We must finally consider whether Mo.Rev.Stat. § 516.200, which tolls the statute of limitations when a resident leaves the state, saves Mr. Rademeyer’s claim for breach of fiduciary duty, because Mr. Farris moved from Missouri to Florida after buying out the minority shareholders and selling MRF. The district court, relying on
Bendix Autolite Corp. v. Midwesco Enterprises, Inc.,
In
Bendix,
In this case, Mr. Rademeyer could have used Missouri’s long-arm statute, Mo. Rev.Stat. § 506.500, to bring a timely suit against Mr. Farris. The Missouri Supreme Court has construed the tolling provisions of § 516.200 very broadly, applying the statute to all out-of-state defendants, even those subject to the state’s long-arm jurisdiction.
Poling v. Moitra,
Accordingly, the statute of limitations is not tolled on Mr. Rademeyer’s claim for breach of fiduciary duty, and the claim is time barred.
III.
For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the order of the district court dismissing the claim for breach of fiduciary duty, but we reverse the order dismissing the fraud claim and remand for further proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.
