This is thе second appeal from an interlocutory order that has come before us during the three year life of this litigation in the district court.
Two years ago we heard, pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1292(b) (1970), an appeal by defendants in the
Papilsky
action,
*555
which was commenсed in June 1971, from an order of the district court denying their motion for summary judgment on grounds of res
judicata
based on the dismissal of two prior actions that had been commenced in January 1967 and February 1968. We affirmed the order of Judge Wyatt denying summary judgment. Papilsky v. Berndt,
The instant appeal, as to which a § 1292(b) certification was denied by the district court, seeks to bring up for review an interlocutory order entered on March 16, 1973 in the Southern District of New york by Harold R. Tyler, District Judge, denying motions by defendants in both actions to dismiss the complaints for failure to comply with the particularity requirements of Fed.R. Civ.P. 23.1, or in the alternative to strike certain allegations from the complaints pursuant to Fed.R.Civ.P. 11. We dismiss the appeal for lack of appellate jurisdiction.
The gravamen of defendants’ motions below to dismiss was that the complaints do not allege with particulаrity the reasons for plaintiffs’ failure to obtain the action they desired from the directors of the Fund or for not making the effort to obtain the desired action from the directors. Defendants argued that the allegations of domination and control of the unaffiliated directors by the minority affiliated directors are insufficiently precise for purposes of Rule 23.1. They also contended that these allegations are without evidentiary basis and sought to establish this on the instant motions by attempting to introduce voluminous documentary evidence attacking the factual basis of the complaints.
In а reasoned opinion, Judge Tyler denied the motions chiefly on the ground that plaintiffs’ allegations that the unaffiliated dirеctors were dominated by a minority of the affiliated directors, coupled with the allegations that all diree-tors had participated or acquiesced in the challenged transactions, were sufficient as a matter of pleading to show the futility of a demand. The judge also refused to consider the evidence offered by defendants to show that the unaffiliated directors were not dominated.
In dismissing this appeal for lack of appellate jurisdiction, we arе not aware of, and counsel have not cited us to, any case where federal appellate reviеw of an order denying a motion addressed to the pleadings has been permitted. We believe that our decision in Gottesman v. General Motors Corp.,
Appellants place chief reliance on Cohen v. Beneficial Industrial Loan Corp.,
With respect to the collateral right requirement of Cohen, we hold that it would be stretching that doctrine entirely too far to hold that denial of a motion to dismiss for non-compliance with the particularity requirements of Rule 23.1 *556 is appealable. The collаteral right claimed to be destroyed, i. e., the right to have the board of directors exercise its independent business judgment on whether to sue before permitting a stockholder to bring suit, is not of sufficient magnitude to permit an interlocutory aрpeal. In the first place, the right is not of great magnitude for the reason that, if (as might well be anticipated) a majority of the board refuses to sue, plaintiffs presumably would then be permitted to reinstitute their present action. Secоndly, if plaintiffs should prevail on the merits, denial of defendants’ motion to dismiss for non-compliance with Rule 23.1 would be merged in thе judgment and on appeal the judgment could be set aside on the ground that plaintiffs lack standing because they failеd to meet the conditions of Rule 23.1. In essence therefore the order here is not different from the ordinary order dеnying a defendant’s motion to dismiss or for summary judgment, from which an interlocutory appeal does not lie.
Cohen
and its progeny аre all distinguishable because they represented denial of collateral rights which would be forever lost unless the orders were immediately reversed. In
Cohen,
for instance, the defendants, if they ultimately had prevailed on the merits, would have bеen unable to obtain the security for costs and attorneys’ fees to which they would have been entitled prior to trial. In MacAlister v. Guterma,
Finally, to the extent that appellants claim that under Rule 23.1 defendants in a derivative action have a right to a unique proceeding — something more than a motion to dismiss the complaint on its face, but something less than a full-fledged motion for summary judgment — we reject their claim as untenable. The obligation imposed by the second sentence of the Rulе is neither so important nor so unique that it calls for unusual procedural mechanisms.
In view of the ground of our decision dismissing the appeal for lack of appellate jurisdiction, of course we do not reach the merits.
Dismissed.
Notes
. We shall assume familiarity with the underlying allegations, particularly in the
Papilsky
action, as summarized in our prior opinion.
