After an inconclusive start,
see Untermeyer v. Fidelity Daily Income Trust,
1 Cir., 1977,
It is clear under our cases, which take a strict view, generally, of the requirement of prior demand,
Heit v. Baird, 1
Cir., 1977,
The district court chose to equate an even division with cases where the disinterested directors were in the majority. While it recognized that the trustees, in the case of a demand, “might have deadlocked two to two,” it held that it would be “unfounded speculation . . . to so assume.” It said,
“An evenly divided board presents greater opportunities for conciliation and compromise than exist when an interested majority controls. Confronting the threat of deadlock, one or more of the interested directors may abstain, or even vote to take action to remedy the alleged wrongdoing. If a tie vote does occur, it may be resolved through expansion of the board; or it may even lead, under certain circumstances, to initiation of the litigation by management.” [Footnotes omitted.]
We must agree that such possibilities, and others envisaged by defendants in argument, exist. However, we cannot accept their claim that they are not speculative. The court’s assertion, that it would be speculation to assume that they would not occur, put the shoe on the wrong foot. If we credit the court’s assumption that interested directors might voluntarily renounce their deadlocking ability, it is only a matter of degree to suggest that even an interested majority might find it politic to abstain from voting, or even to approve instituting suit. The court’s reasoning that “one or more of the interested trustees may abstain, or even vote to take action to remedy the alleged wrongdoing” would be applicable if they were in a majority as well as if they stood two to two, and would unsettle the whole doctrine.
While, as the district court recognized, there are strong policy reasons favoring a demand, as long as there are circumstances where demand is to be excused it is important that these be identifiable, both promptly, and with some certainty and simplicity, rather than require extensive subjective inquiry. In
Kauffman
we held that a plaintiff should not be permitted to explore the merits of his case in order to show himself excused from making demand,
Because of defendants’ extended reliance upon the distinction made in
Kauffman
and
Heit
between actions that could, prima facie, serve a legitimate corporate purpose and those that could not,
see
We do not pass on all the nuances of the present, first amended complaint, or of the proffered further amendment raising the excessiveness of the adviser’s fee. The court was content to rest upon the defense of lack of demand in both instances. After so much time has been spent, we regard other possible objections to the pleadings as even less significant. The judgment of the district court is vacated. The court is directed to allow the requested amendment *25 and to permit plaintiff to proceed with the suit.
Notes
. We need not repeat the holdings of Heit and Kauffman which defendants, with some justification, assert that plaintiff persisted in ignoring in a number of aspects.
. Even assuming that Massachusetts, rather than federal law should apply,
but see Levitt v. Johnson,
1 Cir., 1964,
. It was in the interest of this needed prospective certainty that we rejected, even assuming their utmost good faith, the interested trustee defendants’ offer, after commencement of the action, to stipulate to their willingness to abstain from voting.
See Untermeyer,
ante,
