OPINION AND ORDER
This is an action brought by a holder of corporate bonds against the corporation, its officer, and various advisors and lenders to the corporation, seeking damages because a corporation’s distribution to its common stockholders of a special dividend caused a decline in the market value of the bonds. Defendants move to dismiss the complaint.
Background
Plaintiff Preston M. Geren, Jr., the owner of $100,000 face amount of the 8.875% subordinated debt securities issued by defendant Quantum Chemical Corporation, sues individually and on behalf of all owners of a variety of subordinated debt securities of Quantum (the “Bonds”), similarly situated on December 27, 1988 (generally, the “Bondholders”). 1 On that date, Quantum issued a statement reflecting its intention to pay a special dividend of $50 per share to its stockholders. This dividend was paid on January 10, 1989.
According to the complaint, Quantum incurred indebtedness of approximately $1,221 billion (including $80 million in various fees) to pay the special dividend. 2 Payment of the dividend allegedly caused the total shareholder’s equity of Quantum to decrease from $748 million to negative $406 million. As a result, payment of the dividend caused the market value of the Bonds to decline by approximately 50%; the complaint states that the market value of Bonds with a face amount of $1.25 billion declined by $625 million.
*731 Along with Quantum,-a Virginia corporation with its principal place of business in New York, defendants include the directors of Quantum, the investment advisors who advised Quantum on the special dividend, the entities that originally funded the special dividend through a bridge loan, the entity that was to underwrite an offer of debt securities to finance the special dividend after the bridge loan, and a valuation consulting firm that assisted the investment advisors.
With one exception, noted below, each of the nine counts of the complaint seeks damages of $600 million, representing the decline in value of the Bonds caused by payment of the special dividend. The various defendants move to dismiss all counts of the complaint. Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(b)(6).
Discussion
On a motion to dismiss, the court must accept the factual allegations in the complaint as true, drawing all reasonable inferences in favor of the plaintiffs, in order to determine whether the complaint is legally sufficient on its face.
Goldman v. Belden,
A. Counts I, V, and VII: Claim for Breach of Duty of Good Faith and Fair Dealing
Counts I, V, and VII all set out essentially the same cause of action. Count I, captioned “misappropriation of assets,” alleges that Quantum and its directors owed to the bondholders a duty of good faith and fair dealing and that they violated this duty by diminishing and misappropriating the assets of Quantum by incurring substantial debt to fund the special dividend. Count V alleges that the bondholders had a contractual relationship with Quantum requiring the company to act with the utmost good faith and to engage in fair dealing and that defendants knowingly interfered with the bondholders contractual rights. Count VII again alleges that the director defendants breached their duty of good faith and fair dealing to the bondholders.
Each of .these counts is based on a contractual duty of good faith and fair dealing running from the corporation to its bondholders: they allege that the actions of Quantum in incurring debt to pay the special dividend violated this contractual duty.
The relationship between Quantum and the Bondholders is governed by contract — the indenture for the Bonds. The indenture contains extensive provisions governing the rights of the parties and the obligations of the corporation. The principle promise by Quantum is
that it will duly and punctually pay or cause to be paid the principal of, premium, if any, and interest, if any, on the Debentures of such series at the place, at the respective, times and in the manner provided in the Debentures in such series.
§ 5.01. To protect the Bondholders against future creditors acquiring prior claims against the assets of the corporation, the indenture also contains an agreement by Quantum not to incur certain secured indebtedness while any of the debentures remain outstanding. § 5.05. With the exception of this prohibition on secured indebtedness, the indenture places no restrictions on the amount or purpose of debt to be incurred by the corporation.
Plaintiff does not claim that defendants violated an explicit covenant in the indenture. The claim set out in Counts I, V, and VII is that defendants violated an implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing not to take an action such as the financing and payment of the special dividend that would reduce the market value of the debentures by diminishing, the likelihood that all interest and principal payments would be met.
Every contract governed by New York law, including the indenture at issue here, contains an implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing.
Hartford Fire Ins. Co. v. Federated Department Stores, Inc.,
For example, in
Van Gemert v. Boeing Co.,
In
Metropolitan Life Insurance Co. v. RJR Nabisco, Inc.,
There being no express covenant between the parties that would restrict the incurrence of new debt, and no perceived direction to that end from covenants that are express, this Court will not imply a covenant to prevent the recent LBO and thereby create an indenture term that ... was not bargained for here and was not even within the mutual contemplation of the parties____ These plaintiffs do not invoke an implied covenant of good faith to protect a legitimate, mutually contemplated benefit of the indentures; rather, they seek to have this Court create an additional benefit for which they did not bargain.
Implying a term barring Federated’s merger with CRTF also would require the court to add a substantive provision for which the parties did not bargain. That is especially troublesome in light of the fact that the Indenture could easily have been drafted to incorporate expressly the terms the Plaintiffs now urge this court to imply. For example, the Indenture could have barred mergers altogether, permitted the Noteholders to participate in a tender offer by making the Notes convertible into stock, or required the Notes to be redeemed in the event of a takeover. It also could have restricted the amount of additional debt Federated could incur or imposed ceilings on the ratios of debt to equity, debt to assets, or earnings to fixed charges.
These conclusions are equally applicable here. As noted, the indenture addresses the possibility of Quantum incurring additional debt and places certain limitations on Quantum’s ability to take on additional secured indebtedness. However, the indentures contain no restriction on the amount of debt Quantum may incur nor does it contain any prohibition against transactions in the nature of the special dividend.
See RJR Nabisco,
In brief, there is no implied covenant restricting any action that might subject plaintiffs investment to greater risk of non-payment. What plaintiffs have failed to allege is that an interest or principal payment due them has not been paid, or than any other explicit contractual right has not been honored.
Plaintiff makes several, unconvincing arguments as to why the conclusion of
Metropolitan Life Ins. Co. v. RJR Nabisco, Inc.
should not apply to the complaint here. Plaintiff first notes that
RJR Nabisco
involved a leveraged buy-out and a more justifiable business transaction.
See
Plaintiff next attempts to distinguish
RJR Nabisco
on the ground that the Bondholders constituting the plaintiff class are not sophisticated investors. It is true that Judge Walker noted the sophistication of the plaintiff bondholders in that suit, two life insurance company with billions of dollars invested in securities.
See
Accordingly, I conclude that the allegations of Counts I, V, and VII, based on the contention that defendant’s actions violated an implied duty of good faith and fair dealing, fail to state a claim. These counts must therefore be dismissed. 4
B. Count II: Claim under Virginia Coco-rote Law
Count II alleges that the special dividend violated Virginia corporate law because it left the corporation with less assets than liabilities. Section 13.1-653(C)(2) of the Virginia Code provides, in pertinent part, “[n]o distribution may be made if, after giving it effect ... [t]he corporation’s total assets would be less than the sum of its liabilities. ...” 3 Va.Code Ann. § 13.1-653(0(2). Count II appears to be asserted both against the directors of Quantum and against the other participants in the payments of the dividend.
Both the director and non-director defendants move to dismiss. Section, 13.1-692 of the Virginia Code provides that
a director who votes for or assents to a distribution made in violation of this chapter ... is personally liable to the corporation or its creditors for the amount of the distribution that exceeds what could have been distributed without violating this chapter or the articles of incorporation.
3 Va.Code Ann. § 13.1-692(A). The statute, it appears, thus makes only the directors of the corporation liable for payment of such a dividend.
See In re C-T of Virginia, Inc.,
In any event, the claim is time-barred. The same section that provides for the liability of directors states that
No suit shall be brought against any director for any liability imposed by this section except within two years after the right of action shall accrue.
3 Va.Code Ann. § 13.1-692(C). Here, plaintiffs cause of action accrued on or before January 10, 1989, the date the special dividend was paid. This action was not filed until May 29, 1992, more than two years later.
Plaintiff contends that this court, sitting in diversity, should apply the longer statute of limitations of New York, the state in which the court sits.
See Martin v. Julius Dierck Equipment Co.,
C. Count III: Ultra Vires
Count III, captioned “ultra vires,” alleges that the actions of defendants in paying the special dividend was beyond the power and authority of Quantum. In response to defendants’ motion to dismiss this count, plaintiff has stated that this claim “will be withdrawn without prejudice.” Pl.Mem. at 33. Count III is therefore dismissed without prejudice.
D. Count IV: Breach of Fiduciary Duty
Count IV alleges that defendants’ actions incurring additional debt on behalf of Quantum breached their common law fiduciary duties of due care and loyalty to Quantum’s bondholders. Defendants contend, inter alia, that this claim is time-barred. I agree.
The parties agree that New York’s statute of limitations is applicable, but disagree as to which of two possible limitations periods applies to this action. Under New York law, “the choice of the applicable Statute of Limitations depends on the substantive remedy which the plaintiff seeks.”
Loengard v. Santa Fe Industries, Inc.,
In Loengard v. Santa Fe Industries, Inc., the New York Court of Appeals noted that,
A claim based on a breach of the fiduciary obligation owed by the majority shareholders to the minority in forcing the minority to sell their shares in a freeze-out merger at a substantially undervalued price is essentially equitable in nature.
the statutory right of appraisal is, in the absence of a showing of fraud or blatant overreaching, the minority’s exclusive remedy. In the exceptional case, where upon a showing of fraud, misrepresentation or self-dealing the appraisal remedy is held not to be adequate, the minority may seek relief from a court of equity.
Id.
at 803,
*736 note[d] that the relief demanded in the complaint here — the restoration of the minority to their status as full stockholders, or, alternatively, a determination of the fair value of their shares and an order directing defendants to pay that value to them — is equitable in nature and that a legal remedy would not be adequate.
Id.
at 803,
Plaintiff here, in contrast, seeks a simple award of damages — $600 million in money damages to compensate for the decline in the value of the bonds.
See Resnick v. Resnick,
E. Count VI: Fraudulent Conveyance Claim
Count VI, brought against the defendants who are directors of Quantum, alleges that the payment of the special dividend was a fraudulent conveyance; this count seeks $600 million in damages and an order voiding the transaction and requiring that the fraudulently conveyed assets be returned to Quantum.
“The gravamen of the action [for fraudulent conveyance] is the right of the creditor to be paid out of assets to which he is actually entitled and to set aside the indicia of ownership which apparently contradict that right.”
Id.,
Count VI fails to state a claim for fraudulent conveyance and must be dismissed. The remedy plaintiff seeks against the director defendants is an award of damages representing the diminution in the market value of the debt securities caused by the payment of the special dividend. Such relief is not within the scope of the cause of action for fraudulent conveyance.
First, the cause of action of fraudulent conveyance does not allow for recovery of the decline in the market value of a creditor’s debt securities allegedly caused by the fraudulent conveyance. “The creditor’s remedy in a fraudulent conveyance action is limited to reaching the property which would have been available to satisfy the judgment had there been no conveyance,” and requiring that it be restored to the debtor’s possession.
Marine Midland Bank v. Murkoff,
Indeed, the action for fraudulent conveyance does not create an independent remedy of money damages against third parties who aided the debtor’s transfer at all.
Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. v. Porco,
The essence of the action is that it seeks to rescind the transfer, requiring transferee to return the transferred property to the transferor. Although Count VI asserts that it seeks nullification of the dividend and return of the distributed cash, plaintiff has named neither the transferees (the shareholders) nor the transferor (Quantum) as defendants in that count. To the degree Count VI seeks an order voiding the special dividend transaction, it fails to name any of the parties to that transaction.
See generally
W.J. Dunn, Annotation,
Necessary Parties Defendant to Action to Set Aside Conveyance in Fraud of Creditors,
Thus, for numerous reasons explained above, Count VI fails to state a cause of action and must be dismissed.
F. Count VIII: Negligent Breach of Contract Claim
Count VIII, captioned “Negligent Breach of Contract” and brought against the investment advisors and the valuation advisor, alleges that they violated their duty of care owed to the bondholders by rendering faulty and deficient advice that payment of the special dividend was in the best interests of Quantum. These defendants move to dismiss on the grounds that negligent breach of contract is not a cognizable cause of action in New York and that plaintiffs allegations fail to state a claim sounding in either contract or tort. In response, plaintiff has withdrawn this claim; accordingly, Count VIII is dismissed without prejudice.
G. Aiding and Abetting
Count IX alleges that the investment advisors and Travelers Insurance Co., which was to underwrite the special dividend by purchasing debt securities, aided and abetted Quantum and its officers and directors in their breaches of fiduciary duty owed to the bondholders. However, the complaint fails to state a claim for aiding and abetting a breach of fiduciary duty. “A plaintiff seeking to establish a cause of action for aiding and abetting a breach of a fiduciary duty must show: ‘(1) the existence of a ... violation by the primary (as opposed to the aiding and abetting) party; (2) “knowledge” of this violation on the part of the aider and abettor; and (3) “substantial assistance” by the aider and abettor in the achievement of the primary violation.’ ”
Samuel M. Feinberg Testamentary Trust v. Carter,
Conclusion
The motion to dismiss is granted as to all counts.
Plaintiff may file an amended complaint not inconsistent with this opinion or with the requirements of Rule 11, Fed.R.Civ.P., within forty-five (45) days of the date of this order.
SO ORDERED.
Notes
. The complaint refers to seven other bond debentures, each with particular interest rates and due dates. Complaint ¶ 23.
. Payment of the special dividend was initially funded by a $1.15 billion bridge loan from several of the defendants; it was subsequently refinanced through Quantum’s public offering in March 1989 of $300 million in senior subordinated notes and $500 million in senior subordinated debentures and Quantum’s sale of one of its divisions for $480 million.
. The American Bar Foundation’s Commentaries on Indentures 1-2 (1971) notes that:
Short of bankruptcy, the debt security holder can do nothing to protect himself against actions of the borrower which jeopardize its ability to pay the debt unless he ... establishes his rights through contractual provisions set forth in the debt agreement or indenture.
. I recognize that technically, this issue might be more appropriately treated on a motion for summary judgment, as my decision relies in part on documents beyond the face of the complaint. Nonetheless, I note that the only extraneous item I have considered is the bond indenture. The contents of this document are not disputed, and the indenture could well have been attached to the complaint. In this context, I believe that this motion is appropriately treated as a motion to dismiss. In contrast to granting summary judgment, dismissing the complaint for failure to state a claim allows plaintiff to replead.
. Moreover, even if the primary violation were not time-barred, the allegations of Count IX would fail to state a claim, for the case law does not support the existence of a fiduciary duty running from a corporation and its directors to the holders of the corporation's bonds.
See generally Metropolitan Life Insurance Co. v. RJR Nabisco, Inc.,
Plaintiff’s brief does not treat Count EX as presenting a claim that the investment and lending advisors themselves breached a fiduciary duty owed to the bondholders, but that count might be read that way. To the degree plaintiff makes such a claim, I believe that it also fails to state a claim, for the investment and lending advisors owed no such duty to the bondholders. These defendants were retained by Quantum to render advice. They had no connection with the bondholders, and the bondholders would hardly have relied on the actions or advice of these defendants.
