MEMORANDUM AND ORDER
Plaintiffs 1 are minority shareholders of de *328 fendant Briggs Leasing Corporation, 2 a public corporation that was in the business of leasing automobiles to individuals and businesses. They commenced this action individually, as a class, and derivatively to rescind and reform a “freeze-out” merger, under federal and state law, and for money damages and other appropriate relief. Plaintiffs’ amended complaint, filed on July 1, 1985, 3 alleges that the merger violated Section 10(b) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, Rule 10b-5 promulgated thereunder, N.Y.Bus. Corp.Law § 605(a), and the exception stated in Section 623, subd. (K) of the N.Y.Bus. Corp.Law. 4 Plaintiffs also seek damages for breach of fiduciary obligation under New York state law.
By order dated August 14, 1986, the Honorable Mark A. Costantino, United States District Judge, granted plaintiffs’ motion to certify this action as a class action, pursuant to Rules 23(a) and 23(b) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure. By order dated March 17, .1994, the Honorable Sterling Johnson, Jr., United States District Judge, entered a default judgment on the issue of liability against defendants Briggs Leasing Corporation (“Briggs”) and Briggs Acquisition Corporation. Judge Johnson further ordered that plaintiffs be permitted to conduct discovery as necessary and directed that an inquest on damages be held. On August 12, 1997, pursuant to a stipulation so ordered by the Honorable David G. Trager, United States District Judge, judgment was entered against Briggs in the amount of $4,028,000 and against Robert Rosenstock, the Vice President and a Director of Briggs, in the amount of $6,912,288. Defendant Edward Rosenstock, the former Chairman, Chief Executive Officer, and President of Briggs, is deceased and no estate has been substituted for him. By stipulation dated November 7, 1997, the remaining parties consented to refer this case to a Magistrate Judge for all purposes, including the entry of judgment.
The primary transaction charged in the amended complaint is the alleged freeze-out merger, on or about February 26, 1985, of the minority shareholders of Briggs. Plaintiffs claim that the self-interested defendants effectuated the merger through the use of a materially false proxy statement, thereby freezing out the minority shareholders at the allegedly inadequate price of $1.50 per share. Specifically, the amended complaint charges that the proxy statement was materially misleading in that it failed to disclose, among other things, the improper diversion of corporate opportunities by Robert Rosenstock (“Rosenstock”) and Robert Genser (“Gen-ser”), who collectively owned seventy-two percent of the outstanding stock of Briggs. The bench trial against Robert Genser, the sole remaining defendant in this case, commenced on March 30, 1998 and ended on April 2,1998.
BACKGROUND
Robert Genser was a Vice President, Secretary-Treasurer and Director of Briggs. (Trial Transcript (“Tr.”) at 352; Plaintiffs’ Exhibit 1 at 2.) On January 10, 1985, Genser and Rosenstock each contributed all of their shares in Briggs (29,961 and 384,350 shares, respectively) to Briggs Acquisition Corporation (“BAC”), a shell corporation, and received one share of common stock of BAC in exchange for each share of Briggs. As a result of that transaction, Genser and Rosen-stock became the sole shareholders of BAC. After an additional contribution of 17,516 shares of Briggs stock by Rosenstock (which he purchased from his father, Edward Ro-senstock, for $1.50 per share), BAC owned approximately seventy-two percent of the outstanding common stock of Briggs.
*329 By letter dated January 28, 1985, Briggs notified its shareholders that a special meeting would be held on February 25, 1985 for the purpose of voting on the proposed merger of BAC and Briggs, with Briggs to be the surviving company wholly owned by Genser and Rosenstock. The letter informed the shareholders, however, that “irrespective of the vote” of the minority shareholders, approval of the merger was assured because BAC, as the majority stockholder, planned to vote in favor of the merger. The notice also informed the shareholders that they would be bought out at $1.50 per share upon consummation of the merger.
The purported reason for the merger was to relieve Rosenstock and Genser of the burden of personally guaranteeing the debt of a public corporation. Briggs had obtained a fair amount of credit from General Motors Acceptance Corporation (“GMAC”) in connection with its purchases of automobiles and, in order to induce GMAC to extend such credit — which in January 1985 was in the amount of approximately $14 million — both Rosenstock and Genser had executed personal guarantees on the debt. As Briggs began to suffer reduced profits, allegedly as a result of increased competition in the auto leasing business from the major automobile manufacturers, Rosenstock and Genser decided to take the company private, purportedly in the hopes of turning it into a franchise for one of the major automobile manufacturers. (Trial Memorandum of Robert Genser at 3-4.)
Attached to the notice of the special meeting was a proxy statement which explained, inte?- alia:
[I]t is proper for Rosenstock and Genser to have the total ownership, and receive all of the earnings, of the Company [because they personally guaranteed the company’s debt incurred by purchasing automobiles] .... Rosenstock and Genser believe that they should receive the full benefit of any future increase in the equity and earnings of the Company.
(Plaintiffs’ Exhibit 1 at 6.) The proxy statement further explained that Briggs had hired Prudential-Bache Securities to render an opinion on the appropriate price for shares owned by the minority shareholders, who |would lose their interests in Briggs as a result of the merger. Based on its review of the corporate records, Prudential-Bache gave the Board of Directors an opinion that $1.50 per share would be a fair price for the minority stock. (Id. at 10.)
In addition, the proxy statement listed the book value of Briggs’s real estate as $884,-503, but disclosed an accumulated appreciation of $419,031 and noted that the company had recently obtained a first mortgage loan on the property in the face amount of $1 million. With regard to the real estate, the financial statement disclosed that there had been some preliminary discussions with architects and community officials about development of the property, but that no such plans had been finalized and that land use regulations “may restrict or totally eliminate the company’s ability to continue to conduct its business at such premises.” (Id. at 15.)
Finally, the proxy statement revealed that any shareholders dissenting from the merger had the right, pursuant to section 623 of New York’s Business Corporation Law, to seek an appraisal by filing a written objection with the company prior to the vote. The proxy statement described the appraisal process in detail, and the full text of section 623 was annexed to it. (Id. at 11-13; C-1-C-5.)
At the meeting on February 26, 1985, plaintiffs voted against the merger. Nonetheless, based solely on BAC’s vote, the proposal was adopted and the merger became effective, with Genser and Rosenstock remaining as the sole shareholders of Briggs, Genser owning seven percent (7%) and Robert Rosenstock owning ninety-three percent (93%) of the common stock.
All of the above facts are undisputed. (See Joint Pretrial Order, dated June 27, 1997, at 1-3.) The parties’ dispute centers around the valuation of the shares of Briggs and whether or not the proxy statement accompanying the notice of special meeting contained materially misleading misrepresentations and omissions concerning the value of the shares. According to plaintiffs, the fair value of Briggs, based on the true value of its real estate holdings at the time, was in excess of $5.00 per share. They claim, based on an appraisal of the real estate that was conducted in 1987, that Rosenstock and Gen-ser deliberately “timed the merger to take *330 advantage of the upward surge in the value of its real estate, and thus to deprive the plaintiffs from participating in that dramatic improvement value.”
Plaintiffs also., contend that the proxy statement accompanying the notice of special meeting contained materially misleading representations and omissions because it
failed to disclose that the individually named defendants voted for and approved the merger because it was a necessary step in the consummation of a plan and scheme to divert to the individually named defendants, as sole shareholders of BRIGGS, the real property owned by BRIGGS which, once diverted to their sole control, was to be developed or sold for the 100% personal benefit of Rosenstock and Genser.
(Plaintiffs’ Pre-Trial Memorandum at 7.) The proxy statement represented that it was proper for Genser and Rosenstock to own one hundred percent of Briggs and receive all of its income because they personally guaranteed the company’s debts. Plaintiffs contend, however, that the proxy statement failed to disclose that Charlotte Rosenstock, Robert Rosenstock’s mother, was the primary guarantor of those debts until January 1985. According to plaintiffs, Genser and Rosenstock first guaranteed the company’s debts in late 1984, “when they did so for the first time in order to add an illusory business purpose and justification for the purported merger.” Id. Plaintiffs further argue that, in fact, those guarantees, principally running to GMAC, “are in a real sense meaningless since such debt is fully collateralized by chattel mortgages on the purchased automobiles” and that it is therefore “extremely unlikely that such guarantees would ever be called by General Motors.” (Id. at 7-8.)
Plaintiffs also argue that the proxy statement was misleading in that it failed to disclose “the existence and value of legal claims of BRIGGS against the individually named defendants for repeated and long standing diversions of corporate funds for their’ own personal use and benefit.” (Id. at 8.) Although the proxy statement listed each director’s cash compensation for 1984, plaintiffs contend that “their actual and unreported compensation vastly exceeded those amounts” because those individuals had been using Briggs “as a personal cash box to defray tax-free the expenses incurred in pursuit of their opulent lifestyles” and charging Briggs excessive amounts and under-compensating it for its services in transactions between Briggs and companies owned by Rosenstock and Genser. (Id.)
Plaintiffs’ primary contention, however, relates to Briggs’s interest in real estate, which consisted of a fee interest in 67,000 square feet, and a lease on an additional 23,000 square feet under a long-term ninety-nine year lease, of property located at 777 Northern Boulevard in Great Neck, New York. (Id. at 7.) According to plaintiffs, the $1.50 share price offered to the minority shareholders was based on a valuation of Briggs’s real estate at $479,000, when in fact it had a fair market value of $2,530,000. (Plaintiffs’ Post-Trial Memorandum at 4.)
Plaintiffs also allege that Rosenstock and Genser caused Briggs to execute various notes and mortgages on that property, the proceeds of which went largely to Rosenstock and Genser personally (or were used for their personal benefit), to Belgrave Oldsmobile, Inc. and RER Motors, Inc. (companies owned by Rosenstock and Genser), or to Briggs Ford, an agency “that was going to be owned” by Robert Rosenstock and his mother, sister, and brother-in-law. (Plaintiffs’ Pre-Trial Memorandum at 9-10.) As a result, plaintiffs claim that Rosenstock and Genser, as directors of Briggs, breached their fiduciary duties to Briggs and to plaintiffs by enriching themselves in the amount of “at least $6,314,000” at Briggs’s expense and by causing Briggs to incur obligations that rendered it insolvent. (Id at 11.)
Discussion
1. Causation Under Rule 10b-5
Rule 10b-5, promulgated under section 10(b) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, 15 U.S.C. § 78n, provides:
It shall be unlawful for any person, directly or indirectly, by the use of any means or instrumentality of interstate commerce, or of the mails or of any facility of any national securities exchange—
(a) To employ any device, scheme, or artifice to defraud,
*331 (b) To make any untrue statement of a material fact or to omit to state a material fact necessary in order to make the statements made, in the light of the circumstances under which they were made, not misleading, or
(c) To engage in any act, practice, or course of business which operates or would operate as a fraud or deceit upon any person, in connection with the purchase or sale of any security.
17 C.F.R. § 240.10b-5 (1996).
Section 10b-5 is a “catch all” that generally prohibits the use of manipulative or deceptive devices “in connection with” the purchase or sale of securities. David M. Brodsky & Daniel J. Kramer,
Federal Securities Litigation
6-1 (1997). To sustain a claim under section 10b-5, a plaintiff must prove (1) a misrepresentation or omission; (2) of a material fact; (3) made with scienter; (4) that plaintiff relied upon; and (6) that caused plaintiffs injury.
See Basic Inc. v. Levinson,
At issue here is whether plaintiffs can demonstrate causation of damages, even assuming,
arguendo,
they can prove a misrepresentation made with the requisite scienter in connection with a purchase or sale of securities.
Virginia Bankshares, Inc. v. Sandberg,
The second issue in that case, however, was causation of damages. Justice Souter’s majority opinion first discussed the Court’s previous consideration of the causation issue in the context of the implied private right of action arising under § 14(a) of the 34 Act. It summarized
Mills v. Electric Auto-Lite Co.,
The minority shareholders in
Virginia Bankshares
had posited two theories of causation. The first theory was that the directors’ desire to avoid the minority shareholders’ ill will by use of a misleading proxy solicitation provides the requisite causal nexus between the proxy statement and the merger. This theory was based on the premise that, in the face of an unfavorable minority shareholder vote, a board of directors might choose not to go forward with the transaction, even though the majority shareholder had the voting power to single-handedly authorize the transaction. The Court rejected this theory because it would “turn on inferences about what the corporate directors would have thought and done without the minority shareholder approval” and therefore would give rise to “speculative claims and procedural intractability.”
Id.
at 1105-06,
*332
The. second theory was that minority approval, while unneeded to authorize. the transaction, would result in a loss of state law remedies. The plaintiffs argued that a favorable minority vote induced by a materially misleading proxy solicitation would preclude a minority suit attacking the merger on state law grounds, and that the forfeiture of such a state law remedy should be sufficient to demonstrate causation. The Court in
Virginia Banlcshares,
although not rejecting this theory, declined to decide its merits because a favorable minority vote would not have rendered the transaction invulnerable to attack under Virginia law, which barred shareholders from seeking to avoid a transaction if the minority shareholders ratified the transaction following disclosure of the material facts and conflicts of interest.
Id.
at 1107-08,
The Second Circuit, however, explicitly adopted the loss-of-state-law remedy causation theory in
Wilson v. Great Am. Indus., Inc.,
While
Virginia Bankshares
and
Wilson
addressed only claims under section 14(a), their reasoning and conclusions apply
to
all types of misrepresentations in connection with a merger, and therefore to claims brought under § 10(b).
See Scattergood v. Perelman,
Plaintiffs here do not contend that they waived any appraisal rights under New York law in reliance on the alleged misrepresentations in the proxy statement, or that an appraisal remedy was unavailable to them. Rather, applying the reasoning of
Wilson
to the instant case, plaintiffs argue that the allegedly deceptive proxy statement caused their injury “because the minority sharehold
*333
ers could have sought an
injunction
under New York law had the defendants not lulled the minority shareholders into security by the deceptive disclosure.” (Letter from Sidney Bender to the Court, dated August 7, 1998, at 6 (emphasis added).)
5
However, plaintiffs cite no authority for the proposition that they would have been entitled to seek an injunction under New York State law.
6
Plaintiffs’ claim for breach of fiduciary duty would not entitle them to injunctive relief-even if they were to prevail on that cause of action — but only to monetary damages.
Benson v. RMJ Secs. Corp.,
Finally, although the Second Circuit in
Goldberg
held that the minority shareholders in that case had the ability to seek injunctive relief under New York State law, such relief was available because the shareholders had no appraisal right in that transaction.
See Goldberg,
At any rate, even if the remedy of seeking an injunction were available, to establish causation under this theory, plaintiffs must do more than simply assert that they would have sought to enjoin a transaction under state law if certain relevant information had been disclosed. They must show by a fair preponderance of the evidence that they would have
succeeded
in preventing the loss they sustained.
Benson,
I therefore find that plaintiffs have failed to demonstrate a loss of a state law remedy sufficient to demonstrate causation under Rule 10b-5. Plaintiffs have not proved that they forfeited or otherwise lost any remedies under New York state law as a result of the alleged misrepresentations in the proxy statement. Accordingly, Virginia Bankshares mandates dismissal of plaintiffs’ claims under § 10(b) and Rule 10b-5.
2. Remedies Under New York State Law
Plaintiffs’ remaining claims allege Briggs’s failure, under New York law, to pay them “fair value” for their shares and seek monetary damages against defendant Genser for breach of fiduciary duty. 28 U.S.C. § 1367(a) states:
in any civil action of which the district courts have original jurisdiction, the district courts shall have supplemental jurisdiction over all other claims that are so related to claims in the action within such original jurisdiction that they form part of the same case or controversy under Article III of the United States Constitution.
Pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1367(c)(3), a district court may decline to exercise supplemental jurisdiction over a state law claim under subsection (a) if “the district court has dismissed all claims over which it has original jurisdiction.” Because plaintiffs’ federal securities law claims have been dismissed, then, the court has discretion to dismiss plaintiffs’ state claims for want of jurisdiction.
Brotherhood of Locomotive Eng’rs Div. 269 v. Long Island R.R. Co.,
Nonetheless, if the court and the parties have expended substantial time and energy on the case prior to the disposition of the federal claim, the court may justifiably retain supplemental jurisdiction over state
*335
claims that derive from a common nucleus of operative fact.
See Enercomp, Inc. v. McCorhill Pub., Inc.,
As explained above, plaintiffs’ state law claims derive from the New York Business Corporation Law (“B.C.L.”) and the common law concerning breach of fiduciary duty. Article 9 of the B.C.L. authorizes any two or more domestic corporations to merge into a single corporation, which shall survive as one of the constituent corporations participating in the merger. See B.C.L. § 901. The B.C.L. establishes procedures for the approval of a plan of merger by the board of each constituent corporation (B.C.L. § 902) and for its submission to the shareholders of each for their authorization by a two-thirds vote. Id. § 903. Section 623 of the B.C.L. recognizes a shareholder’s right to object to corporate action, including merger, and establishes procedures for a dissenting shareholder to elect and demand payment of the fair value of his or her shares. If the corporation fails to make a written offer to each electing shareholder to pay for his or her shares at a specified price that the corporation considers fair, or if any dissenting shareholder or shareholders disagree with the price offered, a special proceeding may be instituted in state court to determine the rights of the dissenting shareholders and to fix the fair value of their shares. Id. § 623(g), (h). Either the corporation (id. § 623(h)(1)) or the dissenter may institute such a proceeding (id. § 623(h)(2)), but the latter may only act upon the former’s failure to do so.
In the event an appraisal proceeding is commenced, B.C.L. § 623(h)(4) provides:
The court shall determine whether each dissenting shareholder ... is entitled to receive payment for his shares. If the ... court finds that any dissenting shareholder is so entitled, it shall proceed to fix the value of the shares, which, for the purposes of this section, shall be the fair value as of the close of business on the day prior to the shareholders’ authorization date.
In addition, B.C.L. § 623(k) provides, in pertinent part:
The enforcement by a shareholder of his right to receive payment for his shares in the manner provided herein shall exclude the enforcement by such shareholder of any other right to which he might otherwise be entitled by virtue of share ownership, ... except that this section shall not exclude the right of such shareholder to bring or maintain an appropriate action to obtain relief on the ground that such corporate action will be or is unlawful or fraudulent as to him. (emphasis added)
It is the exception stated in subdivision (k) that plaintiffs invoke in support of their right to bring state law claims against Robert Gen-ser in this action, which leads to the obvious question: what is an “appropriate” action?
The “appropriate” action referred to in subdivision (k) has been held to be “one in which a dissenting shareholder seeks some form of equitable relief.”
Breed,
At this point in the case, plaintiffs are no longer seeking any form of traditional equitable relief, such as dissolution or reeission of the merger. Their state law claims against Robert Genser, as the sole remaining defendant in this case, seek purely monetary relief. Although plaintiffs’ complaint originally requested the equitable remedy of rescission, the case — in its present state-seeks only damages. It therefore suffers from a “fatal absence of any primary request for equitable relief’
(Breed,
In addition, derivative claims brought by shareholders on behalf of the corporation, and not in their individual capacities, do not fall under the exception to the exclusivity rule in § 623(k).
Norte & Co.,
Conclusion
For the reasons stated above, this case is dismissed with prejudice.
SO ORDERED.
Notes
. Named plaintiffs Oliver R. Grace and Morgan H. Grace are deceased. By order dated November 6, 1996, plaintiffs were permitted to substitute named plaintiff Lorraine Grace, as Executrix of the Estate of Oliver R. Grace, for Oliver R. Grace and plaintiff Gerald I. White, as Executor *328 of the Estate of Morgan H. Grace, for Morgan H. Grace in this action.
.The named plaintiffs were the beneficial owners of 7,476 common shares of Briggs, or approximately 1.25 percent of the 595,728 outstanding shares of Briggs common stock. (See Plaintiffs' Pre-Trial Memorandum at 3.) As of September 25, 1985, Briggs had approximately 190 shareholders. (Id.) Robert Rosenstock’s sister and brother-in-law, Adrienne Rosenstock Halperin and James Halperin, owned 79,170 shares of Briggs, or approximately 13 percent of the outstanding common stock. (Id. at 5 n. 2.)
. Plaintiffs originally commenced this action by a complaint dated June 3, 1985.
. By order dated September 30, 1996, the court granted plaintiffs' motion to withdraw their claim under the Martin Act, N.Y.Gen.Bus.Law § 352-c.
. I am compelled to note that plaintiffs raised this issue for the first time four months after the trial in response to a request from the court that they address the impact of Virgin Bankshares on their claims.
. Although the amended complaint alludes to “[t]he likely ability to enjoin the merger under New York law” (Amended Complaint 1121), plaintiffs never specifically allege that they would have sought to enjoin the merger had the facts not been concealed.
. As will be explained in more detail
infra,
an exception to the exclusivity of the appraisal remedy applies where a shareholder suing in his or her individual capacity seeks equitable relief based on the assertion that the corporate action is fraudulent or illegal.
Pellman v. Cinerama, Inc.,
. Plaintiffs point out that in February of 1986, Judge Costantino denied a motion by Briggs and BAC to stay the proceedings in this court in order to permit appraisal proceedings to go forward in state court. In his Memorandum and Order, Judge Costantino held that the exception in § 623(k) applied to this case because it was an equitable action. At that time, obviously, Briggs and BAC were parties to this action and plaintiffs were seeking the equitable remedy of rescission. Plaintiffs have since settled their claims against Briggs, Robert Genser is the sole remaining defendant in this case, and there is no indication that plaintiffs continue to seek any equitable relief. Nothing in plaintiffs' pre-trial or post-trial submissions indicates a desire on plaintiffs' part for the court to award equitable relief, other than "rescissory damages,”
i.e.,
money damages, against Genser.
See Randall v. Loftsgaarden,
