John Halebian, a shareholder of an investment fund within Citifunds Trust III (“CitiTrust” or the “Trust”), appeals from a judgment of the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York (Naomi Reice Buchwald, Judge). The court dismissed his three-count complaint against members of the Trust’s board of trustees, the defendants here, in connection with the sale of an adviser of the Trust and the approval of new invest *199 ment advisory contracts following that sale. Claim One, styled as a derivative claim on behalf of the Trust, alleges that the defendants breached their fiduciary duties to the Trust “in considering the ... transaction and in recommending the new advisory agreements.” Complaint ¶ 54, Halebian v. Berv, No. 06 Civ. 4099 (S.D.N.Y. filed May 30, 2006) (Doc. No. 1) (“Compl.”). Claims Two and Three, styled as direct claims, allege that the defendants violated federal and state law by issuing materially false and misleading statements encouraging their shareholders to approve the new investment advisory contracts.
We conclude that we cannot decide the propriety of the district court’s dismissal of Count One without resolving a question of Massachusetts law which appears to us to be one of first impression. We think that issue would best be decided by the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court in the first instance. Accordingly, we certify that question to the Supreme Judicial Court. Although we are of the view that dismissal of Counts Two and Three was proper, in light of our decision to certify a question to the Supreme Judicial Court in connection with Count One and because our resolution of the propriety of the district court’s dismissal of Counts Two and Three also involves the application of Massachusetts law, we think it the more prudent course to reserve judgment in this respect, too, pending the Supreme Judicial Court’s response to the question certified.
BACKGROUND
The following recitation is based on Halebian’s complaint and other documents “integral” to that complaint,
see Chambers v. Time Warner, Inc.,
The Transaction
On June 23, 2005, Citigroup sold substantially all of its asset management business, including a subsidiary that served as an adviser to CitiTrust, to Legg Mason, Inc. Id. ¶32. In connection with this transaction (the “Transaction”), the Funds’ existing advisory contracts were terminated and new contracts were executed with the Funds’ new advisers, id. ¶ 33, for which the Funds’ shareholders’ approval was required, id. ¶ 34. In August 2005, the Board. approved the Funds’ new investment advisory agreements with Legg Mason. Id. ¶ 39. Thereafter, the Board issued a proxy statement to its shareholders describing the advisory agreements and recommending that they vote to approve the new agreements, id. ¶¶ 34-35, which they did, id. ¶ 61.
Two aspects of the Transaction are relevant to this appeal. First, the new advisory agreements authorize the payment
of
“soft dollars.”
Id.
¶ 43.
1
As described by the district court, soft-dollar payments
*200
“permit the advisor to select brokers or dealers who provide both brokerage and research services to the Funds, even though the commissions charged by such brokers or dealers might be higher than those charged by other brokers or dealers who provide execution only or execution and research services.”
Halebian v. Berv,
Second, the voting procedures employ “echo voting,” in which Citigroup-affiliated service agents who were record holders of shares for which instructions had not been received would vote those shares “in the same proportion as the votes received from its customers for which instructions have been received.” Compl. ¶ 45 (internal quotation marks omitted). 2
The Demand Letter and the Board’s Response
On February 8, 2006, Halebian, through counsel, expressed his dissatisfaction with the Transaction by letter to the Board. Compl. ¶ 48. He asserted that in connection with the Transaction and contrary to its fiduciary duty, the Board “placed the interests of Citigroup before those of the Fund and ... [its] shareholders” and “failed to avail itself of the opportunity presented to seek to negotiate lower fees” on behalf of the Trust “or to seek competing bids from other qualified investment advisers.” Letter from Joel C. Feffer to the Bd. of Trs. of the Citi N.Y. Tax Free Reserves Series of Citi Funds Trust III 1-2 (Feb. 8, 2006). The letter demanded “that the board take action which would include, among other things, the institution of an action for breach of fiduciary duty against any and all persons who are responsible for the board’s dereliction of its duties in connection with the ... transaction” and that “appropriate remedial measures ... be undertaken, including seeking bids for the advisory contract from other qualified investment advisers, negotiating new terms more favorable to the [New York] Fund with Legg Mason, or both.” Id. at 2.
The demand letter noted that “shareholder approval does not appear to have been obtained properly,” presumably a reference to the echo voting practices described in the proxy statement. The letter did not, however, make a demand with respect to this purported impropriety because, the letter said, the impropriety “gives rise to direct, rather than derivative, claims.” Id. at 1 n. 1.
The Board acknowledged receipt of the demand letter. Compl. ¶ 49. It later advised Halebian that it had created a “Demand Review Committee” to review his complaint, and that the committee had retained counsel. Id. ¶ 50. Throughout this period of time, counsel for both Halebian and the Demand Review Committee remained in communication with one another.
Halebian’s Complaint
On May 30, 2006, more than ninety days after the date of Halebian’s original demand letter, not having received a definitive response from the Demand Review Committee, Halebian filed a three-count *201 complaint in the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York. In it, he alleges that following his demand letter, Halebian waited “the statutory time required” — ninety days — before filing his derivative claim; 3 that such a period “provide[d] more than adequate time” for the Board to have reviewed Halebian’s demand and have taken action; and that “[n]ot surprisingly, defendants have failed to take action against themselves.” Compl. ¶ 51.
Claim One, styled as a derivative claim for breach of fiduciary duty, alleges that members of the Board breached their fiduciary duties of good faith and loyalty under Massachusetts law in them “consideration of] the Citigroup/Legg Mason transaction and in recommending the new advisory agreements.” Id. ¶ 54. The complaint alleges that the “[d]efendants limited their consideration to whether the ... transaction would be worse for CitiTrust’s beneficiaries than their current situation” and “made no effort to investigate whether a transaction could be fashioned which would benefit CitiTrust’s beneficiaries, either with Legg Mason or another asset manager.” Id. ¶ 36. Halebian contends that the soft-dollar arrangements allow for the payment of “higher than necessary brokerage commissions,” id. ¶ 43, referring to those payments as “kickback[s];” id. ¶ 44. 4
Claim Two, styled as a direct claim on behalf of Halebian and members of a class of “all persons and entities who held shares of beneficial interest in CitiTrust on August 22, 2005 (the ‘Class’),” id. ¶ 26, alleges that the proxy statement at issue violated section 20(a) of the Investment Company Act of 1940 (the “ICA”), 15 U.S.C. § 80a-20(a), because it contained material misstatements and omissions. First, the echo voting procedures described in the proxy statement violated federal law — section 15(a) of the ICA, 15 U.S.C. § 80a-15(a) — and unspecified provisions of Massachusetts law, and that the proxy statement was misleading because it did not so state. Compl. ¶¶ 47, 60. Second, the proxy statement failed to disclose that by virtue of the Transaction, assets of CitiTrust were “diverged] ... for the benefit of others,” id. ¶ 60, presumably via soft dollar payments. Based on this “material false and misleading information,” Halebian alleges, the “[defendants secured approval of the new advisory agreements.” Id. ¶ 61.
Claim Three, also styled as a direct claim on behalf of Halebian and members of the Class, id. ¶26, asserts that the trustees violated Massachusetts law, id. ¶ 64, by failing fully and fairly to disclose in the proxy statement all material information within their control, namely, the “[im]propriety of the[ ] voting procedures” *202 and “the diversion of CitiTrust assets for the benefit of others,” id. ¶ 65.
The complaint seeks declaratory and injunctive relief and compensatory damages. See Compl. at 20-21, “Prayer for Relief.”
Board’s Post-Complaint Conduct
By resolution dated July 12, 2006, some six weeks after the timely filing of Halebian’s complaint, the Board expressly declined to accede to Halebian’s demand, effectively rejecting it. See Res. of the Bd. of Trs. of Citifunds Trust III 27 (July 12, 2006). The Board stated that it had “studied a large volume of information on the quality and costs of the adviser’s services, including a study that indicated the Fund’s management fee was in the lowest quintile measured against fees for similar funds, and concluded that the fees were reasonable.” Id. at 22. The Board further “found no authority for the proposition that the 1940 Act or Massachusetts law forbids the use of echo voting by a record holder of shares in a vote to approve an advisory contract with a registered mutual fund” and noted that “[e]cho voting is a common practice in the financial industry [the] utility [of which practice] has been recognized both by the Securities and Exchange Commission and the New York Stock Exchange.” Id. at 25. According to the Board, “the balance of the Trust’s interests weighs against taking the action requested in the Demand Letter.” Id. at 26. On that basis, the Board declined to institute any action against its members. It directed its counsel to move to dismiss Halebian’s derivative claim instead. Id. at 27-28.
On October 24, 2006, defendants’ counsel moved pursuant to, inter alia, Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(6) to dismiss the complaint.
The District Court Opinion
By Memorandum and Order dated July 31, 2007, the district court granted the defendants’ motion to dismiss.
See Halebian,
In addressing Count One, the court acknowledged that Halebian had satisfied Massachusetts’s statutory universal demand requirement for derivative actions by demanding that the Trust rectify the alleged improprieties in the Legg Mason transaction and then waiting the requisite 90 days before filing his suit. See Mass. Gen. Laws ch. 156D, § 7.42. The district court nonetheless dismissed Count One on two other bases.
First, the court concluded that the complaint failed to comply with Rule 23.1 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure because it “asserts no basis for ‘plaintiffs failure to obtain the action’ from the board as required by Rule 23.1.”
Halebian,
Second, the court concluded that dismissal was appropriate pursuant to a then-recently enacted provision of Massachusetts law authorizing the dismissal of derivative actions based on the corporation’s good-faith business judgment that prosecution of the action would not be in its best interests.
See
Mass. Gen. Laws ch. 156D, § 7.44(a). The district court acknowledged that section 7.44, by its terms, applies only to derivative proceedings “commenced after rejection of a demand” and that Halebian’s suit had been filed before any rejection of his demand.
See id.
Nonetheless, the court concluded that dismissal pursuant to section 7.44 would be required “as long as [CitiTrust] rejected the demand after a good faith review,” irrespective of whether that rejection postdated the timely filing of a derivative claim.
Halebian,
The district court then addressed Counts Two and Three in tandem, concluding that although Halebian had styled both as direct claims they were in fact derivative claims “because they seek to redress an alleged injury to the Funds.”
Id.
at 302. In light of Halebian’s failure to make a demand on the corporation with respect to either of these claims, as is required under Massachusetts’s law for any properly filed derivative claim,
see
Mass. Gen. Laws ch. 156D, § 7.42, the district court dismissed both of them,
Halebian,
The district court also concluded that Claim Two — Halebian’s “direct” claim for violation of section 20(a) of the ICA — failed because, under
Alexander v. Sandoval,
Halebian appeals. We reserve judgment pending a response by the Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts to a question of Massachusetts law that we certify to it.
DISCUSSION
I. Standard of Review
We review dismissals pursuant to Rule 12(b)(6) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure
de novo. See Velez v. Levy,
II. Federal Procedural Requirements
A. Rule 12(b)(6)
In accordance with the Supreme Court’s decision in
Bell Atlantic Corp. v. Twombly,
B. Rule 23.1
In addition to meeting the generally applicable rules for pleading under the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, the pleading of derivative actions must satisfy the requirements set forth in Rule 23.1 of the Rules. Fed.R.Civ.P. 23.1. Rule 23.1 applies “when one or more shareholders or members of a corporation or an unincorporated association bring a derivative action to enforce a right that the corporation or association may properly assert but has failed to enforce.” Fed.R.Civ.P. 23.1(a). Complaints asserting derivative claims must “state with particularity ... any effort by the plaintiff to obtain the desired action from the directors or comparable authority and, if necessary, from the shareholders or members; and ... the reasons for not obtaining the action or not making the effort.” Fed.R.Civ.P. 23.1(b)(3).
Rule 23.1 is a “rule of pleading that creates a federal standard as to the specificity of facts alleged with regard to efforts made to urge a corporation’s directors to bring the action in question.”
RCM Secs. Fund, Inc. v. Stanton,
III. Massachusetts Substantive Requirements
Even where an underlying cause of action is based on the ICA, as Claim Two is, whether the action is properly classified as derivative or direct is ordinarily determined by state law.
See, e.g., Strougo v. Bassini,
A. Claim Classification
Under Massachusetts law, a claim based on a “duty owed to the corporation, not to individual stockholders[,]” is proper
*205
ly characterized as derivative, not direct.
Bessette v. Bessette,
Harm to a corporation may manifest itself as harm to its shareholders in the form of a lower stock price. But the “wrong underlying a derivative action is
indirect,
at least as to the shareholders. It adversely affects them merely as they are the owners of the corporate stock; only the corporation itself suffers the direct wrong.”
Jackson v. Stuhlfire,
B. Demand Requirement for Derivative Claims
Courts have traditionally required “as a precondition for [a derivative] suit that the shareholder demonstrate that the corporation itself had refused to proceed after suitable demand.”
Scalisi,
Thus, so long as it is exercising its good faith business judgment, a corporation is ordinarily entitled to decide through its board of directors that refusing, in part or in whole, the demand to take action would be in its best interests.
See Harken,
431 Mass, at 846,
State law generally determines whether, in an action classified as derivative, a pre-suit demand is necessary, and if so, whether the demand made was adequate. “Where a state claim is involved, ... the source of the demand requirement must be the law of the state of incorporation.”
RCM Secs. Fund,
C. Massachusetts Business Corporation Act
Several years ago, the Massachusetts Legislature enacted a comprehensive statute governing Massachusetts corporations. The Massachusetts Business Corporation Act (the “Act”), enacted on November 26, 2003, see 2003 Mass. Acts ch. 127, and made effective as of July 1, 2004, see 2004 Mass. Acts ch. 178, § 49, is codified as Chapter 156D of Title XXII of the General Laws of Massachusetts. Subdivision D of Part 7 of the Act contains various provisions governing derivative suits, see Mass. Gen. Laws ch. 156D, §§ 7.40-7.47, three of which are pertinent here.
First, the Act adopts a “universal demand requirement,”
Johnston v. Box,
Second, the Act authorizes a court to stay any derivative proceeding to allow a corporation to conclude its inquiry into the allegations made in the demand or complaint. See Mass. Gen. Laws ch. 156D, § 7.43. Section 7.43 provides that “[i]f the corporation commences an inquiry into the allegations made in the demand or complaint, the court may stay any derivative proceeding for a period as the court considers appropriate.” Id.
Third, the Act sets forth a procedure by which a corporation can seek dismissal of derivative actions that it concludes would not be in its best interests to prosecute. See id. § 7.44. Section 7.44 mandates dismissal of any “derivative proceeding commenced after rejection of a demand” by motion of the corporation if the court finds that the corporation, by “majority vote of independent directors present at a meeting of the board of directors,” concluded “in good faith after conducting a reasonable inquiry” that the derivative proceeding “is not in the best interests of the corporation.” Id. § 7.44(a), (b)(1).
The corporation must support such a motion with a written filing “setting forth facts” that demonstrate that “a majority of the board of directors was independent at the time of the determination by the independent directors” and that the decision was made “in good faith after ... a reasonable inquiry.” Id. § 7.44(d). Upon the filing of a proper motion, “[a]U discovery proceedings shall be stayed” pending the court’s resolution of that motion, except that “the court, on motion and after a hearing and for good cause shown, may order that specified discovery be conducted.” Id Where the corporation’s pleadings are proper, the court must dismiss the derivative action “unless the plaintiff has alleged with particularity facts rebutting the corporation’s filing in its complaint or an amended complaint or in a written filing with the court.” Id.
IV. Counts Two and Three
We first address Halebian’s argument that the district court erred in characterizing Counts Two and Three as derivative, despite the fact that the complaint styles them as direct, and dismissing both for failure to comply with Massachusetts’s universal demand requirement.
See id.
§ 7.42.
8
The court concluded that the claims were derivative because they “fail[ ] to articulate a theory by which the alleged harm to shareholders which resulted from the [allegations] was separate and independent from the harm allegedly resulting to the Fund itself.”
Halebian,
One aspect of both Counts Two and Three is undoubtedly derivative — that the Board violated its fiduciary duties by
*208
failing to disclose “the diversion of CitiTrust assets for the benefit of others.” Compl. ¶¶ 60, 65. This is plainly an attempt to restate a classic derivative claim — that the corporation was harmed because its assets were diverted, thereby harming the corporation’s shareholders.
See, e.g., Demoulas v. Demoulas Super Mkts., Inc.,
The counts, insofar as they relate to the “propriety of the[] voting procedures,” Compl. ¶ 65; see also id. ¶ 60, are more difficult to classify. Halebian contends that the proxy statement was “materially false and misleading because it fail[ed] to advise beneficial holders that the use of echo voting to approve an investment advisory agreement violate[ed] both the ICA and Massachusetts law.” Halebian Br. 36. He describes these claims as “paradigmatic direct claims because they involve a beneficial holder’s right to cast an informed vote.” Id. at 35. He insists that “the harm caused by a violation of a holder’s right to cast an informed vote is inherently ‘separate and independent’ from any harm caused [to] CitiTrust simply because CitiTrust has no right to cast any vote, much less an informed vote.” Because CitiTrust issued the allegedly improper proxy statement, he says, it could not be harmed by a misrepresentation in that statement. Id. at 43-44.
Indeed, Massachusetts’s highest court has long recognized corporations’ shareholders’ “right to vote” their shares.
See Seibert v. Milton Bradley Co.,
Federal courts interpreting Massachusetts law have observed that although injuries that are not distinct to each affected shareholder generally give rise to derivative claims, not all indistinct injuries do so. As the Ninth Circuit has pointed out, to assert a direct claim, “it is unnecessary to allege an injury distinct from that suffered by shareholders generally if the alleged injury is predicated upon a violation of a shareholder’s voting rights.”
Lapidus,
[W]hat differentiates a direct from a derivative suit is neither the nature of the damages that result from the defendant’s alleged conduct, nor the identity of the party who sustained the brunt of the damages, but rather the source of the claim of right itself. If the right flows from the breach of a duty owed by the defendants to the corporation, the harm to the investor flows through the *209 corporation, and a suit brought by the shareholder to redress the harm is one “derivative” of the right retained by the corporation. If the right flows from the breach of a duty owed directly to the plaintiff independent of the plaintiffs status as a shareholder, investor, or creditor of the corporation, the suit is “direct.”
Stegall v. Ladner,
Based on these principles, Halebian asserts that any claim of the use of improper voting procedures necessarily states a direct rather than a derivative claim. Relying on Delaware law,
see Sarin v. Ochsner,
Halebian points us to no appellate court in Massachusetts that has specifically embraced Delaware law in this regard, and our research has revealed none.
Cf. Weitman v. Tutor,
The essence of Halebian’s claim is not that the defendants failed to inform him and others similarly situated that the voting procedures incorporated echo voting, but that echo voting is unlawful. Many courts have expressed reluctance to conclude that a proxy statement is misleading “when it fail[s] to disclose a legal theory with which the corporation did not agree and which was never called to its attention.”
Ash v. LFE Corp.,
There is no indication that the alleged unlawfulness of echo voting under section 15(a) of the ICA or Massachusetts law was called to the attention of the Board by Halebian or anyone else prior to the institution of this lawsuit. And the Board has consistently and strenuously denied that echo voting violates these laws. 11 Since the Board was apparently not of the view, nor had it been told, that using a Citigroup-affiliated service agent other than a broker-dealer to echo vote shares violated the ICA or Massachusetts law, or indeed any law, its failure to inform shareholders to the contrary does not appear to us to have been potentially false and misleading so as to be cognizable under Massachusetts or federal law. 12
V. Count One
The parties agree that Count One asserts a derivative claim under Massachusetts law, and that the complaint was filed in accordance with'section 7.42’s universal demand requirement. We therefore must decide whether dismissal of the claim pursuant to section 7.44 was proper. We conclude that dismissal was not required because of Halebian’s failure to meet federal procedural requirements. We decline to resolve in the first instance, at least at this time, however, whether dismissal was *211 required under Massachusetts law. Instead, we certify that question of Massachusetts law, which is critical to the resolution of this appeal, to the Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts.
A Federal Procedural Law
The district court decided that the complaint required dismissal because it did not comply with Rule 23.1 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure. Were this conclusion correct, we would have no need to address the court’s alternate conclusion that dismissal of Count One was also required under Massachusetts law. We conclude, however, that the district court erred with respect to Rule 23.1.
Rule 23.1 is a “rule of pleading that creates a federal standard as to the specificity of facts alleged with regard to efforts made to urge a corporation’s directors to bring the action in question.”
RCM Secs. Fund,
The district court dismissed Count One for failure to state “the reasons for not obtaining the [desired] action” from the Board as required by Rule 23.1. Fed. R.Civ.P. 23.1(b)(3)(B);
see also Halebian,
For a derivative proceeding to have been properly filed pursuant to section 7.42, Halebian had to have made “written demand ... upon the corporation to take suitable action” and waited “90 days ... from the date the demand was made” to file suit. Id. Halebian’s complaint alleges both. And Halebian’s complaint specifically alleges the reason that the corporation declined to accede to his demands — that the members of the board were motivated by self-interest to reject his demand. Nothing else was required to allow the court to determine whether, as a matter of Massachusetts law, Halebian’s complaint was properly filed. Halebian’s complaint satisfies the heightened pleading requirements of Rule 23.1 on this score.
Count One therefore stands or falls on whether it was properly dismissed pursuant to Massachusetts substantive law.
B. State Substantive Law
Halebian contends that the district court erred in concluding that section 7.44 and its protection for a board of directors’ good faith decision that litigation is not in the defendant corporation’s best interests applied in this case.
13
He initiated this action following the expiration of the post-demand statutory waiting period set forth in section 7.42, but
before
the corporation rejected his demand. And section 7.44, by its terms, applies to “derivative proceeding[s] commenced
after
rejection of a demand.” Mass. Gen. Laws Ch. 156D, § 7.44(a) (emphasis added). The district
*212
court nonetheless held that section 7.44 applies, concluding that the section is applicable to derivative proceedings commenced
before
rejection of a demand “as long as [the corporation’s board] rejected the demand after a good faith review.”
Halebian,
Relying on statutory commentaries, the district court concluded that the state legislature contemplated “that section 7.44 could be applicable to cases ... where a plaintiff has waited the requisite ninety days after the written demand to file a complaint, but the corporation did not reject the demand until after the filing of the complaint” because in some situations “a board would need more than ninety days to evaluate a shareholder’s demand before determining whether to pursue the litigation.” Id. at 295. 14
The district court also explained that reading section 7.44 as written, and thereby preventing corporations that “had not completed a good faith, reasonable inquiry into the efficacy of the maintenance of the derivative proceeding after ninety days” from being “able to avail themselves of Massachusetts’ codification of the business judgment rule,” would “render[ ] meaningless” section 7.43, the stay provision. Id. The court considered this to be a “curious result” that would encourage “a race to the courthouse for shareholder plaintiffs, as filing on the ninety-first day after a written demand would automatically foreclose corporate boards that otherwise were proceeding appropriately in response to the demand from availing themselves of section 7.44.” Id.
We have doubts about the district court’s reasoning in this regard. Assuming
arguendo
that relevant statutory commentary and policy arguments suggest otherwise, it is a well-established principle of Massachusetts law that when “the language of the statute is clear, we must enforce it according to its terms.”
Town of Milford v. Boyd,
We recognize, of course, that under Massachusetts law, as elsewhere, context matters. “[Statutes ... enacted together ... as part of a carefully-crafted statutory plan ... must be construed together so as to constitute a harmonious whole consistent with the legislative purpose.”
Commonwealth v. Renderos,
To be sure, and as the district court noted, the commentary to section 7.44 clearly anticipates that in some instances, a corporation might require more than ninety days to investigate and respond to the shareholder’s demand. And, as the district court explained, section 7.43 might be rendered meaningless if section 7.44 were categorically inapplicable to corporations that did not complete their investigations prior to institution of the derivative proceeding. To this extent, the terms of section 7.44 may need to bend to accommodate contrary statutory provisions.
But here, no stay was sought or obtained. And the district court’s reading of section 7.44, ignoring its language appearing to limit its application to suits commenced after rejection of a demand by a board directors, seems to leave section 7.43 with little purpose, if any. If a corporation can invoke section 7.44 at any time based on a good-faith rejection of the demand even after the litigation is under way and without a stay in place, ■ then there would appear to be little need for the stay provision of section 7.43.
If, by contrast, section 7.43 operates to extend the time period within which a corporation is able to invoke section 7.44, then the stay provision would play a critical role in the statutory scheme. Construing these two sections together, it may well be that 7.44 applies to timely derivative actions filed before the rejection of the demand that serves as the basis for the action not in all circumstances, as the district court’s ruling suggests, but only when such an action was actually stayed in accordance with section 7.43.
This reading, although not without its difficulties,
15
appears to be consistent with other statutory commentary, including commentary that the district court itself identified. According to the commentary to section 7.42, where a corporation needs more time than the provisions of section 7.42 give it to investigate, and perhaps reject, the shareholder demand, it “ ‘may request counsel for the shareholder to delay filing suit until the inquiry is completed or, if [the] suit is commenced, ... apply to the court for a stay under § 7.43.’ ”
Halebian,
Both passages suggest that the Massachusetts Legislature anticipated that a corporation that had not completed its investigation following the expiration of the period set forth in section 7.42 and which was unwilling or unable to convince the shareholder to refrain from filing suit would seek court approval for further delays to permit further investigation. And as a result of court supervision as a condition of extending the time within which a demand can be investigated, the legislature seems to have anticipated that the *214 court would “monitor the course of the [corporation’s] inquiry to ensure that it is proceeding expeditiously and in good faith.” Id. Reading section 7.44 as written except insofar as it is modified by the operation of section 7.43 seems to us to be consistent with this commentary.
Moreover, such a reading does not, we think, pose an unfair hardship on Massachusetts corporations. Rather it would appear to facilitate the Massachusetts Legislature’s goal, as stated in the statutory commentary, to ensure that derivative actions are dismissed so long as the corporation “promptly determine[s]” to reject the demand. Mass. Gen. Law Ann. ch. 156D, § 7.44, cmt. (West 2009).
VI. Certification
We have endeavored to identify relevant issues raised with respect to the Massachusetts Business Corporation Act and to proffer our best reading of section 7.44. We think it appropriate, however, to reserve judgment and certify a question necessary to the resolution of this appeal to the Supreme Judicial Court pursuant to Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court Rule 1:03.
16
We do so because the appeal presents “unsettled and significant questions of state law [that] will control the outcome of [the] case.”
Colavito v. N.Y. Organ Donor Network, Inc.,
We therefore certify the following question to the Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts for its consideration:
Under Massachusetts law, can the business judgment rule, established under Mass. Gen. Laws ch. 156D, § 7.44, be applied to dismiss a derivative complaint filed timely under section 7.42 but prior to a corporation’s rejection of the demand that serves as the basis for the suit?
We certify that this question is to the best of our understanding determinative of a claim in this case and that it appears to us that there is no controlling precedent in either the decisions or rules of practice of the Supreme Judicial Court.
We respectfully invite any additional guidance about relevant Massachusetts law or practice that the Supreme Judicial *215 Court may wish to offer in responding to the certified question. The certified question may be deemed to cover any pertinent further issues of Massachusetts law that the Supreme Judicial Court thinks is appropriate and advisable to address, including those issues addressed in the portion of our opinion discussing the propriety of the district court’s dismissal of Counts Two and Three. For this reason, although we have stated our conclusions with respect to Counts Two and Three as though they were definitive, we reserve decision on all issues on appeal pending the Supreme Judicial Court’s response to our certification.
This Court will issue a Certification Order pursuant to Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court Rule 1:03. The Clerk of this Court is directed to forward to the Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts, under the official seal of this Court, the Certification Order, this opinion, and the briefs and appendices filed by the parties. Pending the receipt of a response, this Court and this panel shall retain appellate jurisdiction.
CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, we reserve judgment and certify the stated question to the Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts.
Notes
. The prior advisory agreements also permitted soft-dollar payments.
See Halebian v. Berv,
. This practice is described in the Trust’s most recent prospectus, in the "Trust Instrument” (the source of the shareholders’ contractual rights), and in the relevant proxy statement.
Halebian,
With respect to any shares for which a Citigroup-affiliated service agent (other than a broker-dealer) is the holder of record and for which it does not receive voting instructions from its customers, such service agent intends to vote those shares in the same proportion as the votes received from its customers for which instructions have been received.
Id. at 289.
. As discussed in greater detail below, prior to the filing of a derivative claim under Massachusetts law, a shareholder must give the corporation the opportunity to resolve the issue that forms the basis of the claim. See Mass. Gen. Laws ch. 156D, § 7.42.
. In 2006, the SEC issued an Interpretive Release that provides guidance on the use of "soft dollars” under section 28(e) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, 15 U.S.C. § 78bb(e)(l). It provides "a safe harbor that allows money managers to use client funds to purchase 'brokerage and research services' for their managed accounts under certain circumstances without breaching their fiduciary duties to clients.” Commission Guidance Regarding Client Commission Practices Under Section 28(e) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, Exchange Act Release No. 54,165, 71 Fed.Reg. 41,978, 41,978 (July 24, 2006). To qualify under the safe-harbor provision, money managers must "make a good faith determination that the commissions paid are reasonable in relation to the value of the brokerage and research services received.” Id. at 41,991.
. Massachusetts law appears to comport with the approach of federal law in this regard. In determining whether a suit is derivative for purposes of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, “the term 'derivative action' ... has long been understood to apply only to those actions in which the right claimed by the shareholder is one the corporation could itself have enforced in court.''
Daily Income Fund, Inc.,
. A derivative action has been described as an “equitable device” developed "to enable shareholders to enforce a corporate right ... that the corporation had either failed or refused to assert on its own behalf.”
Scalisi,
. As noted, "Rule 23.1 [of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure] is a rule of pleading [regarding] the specificity of facts alleged with regard to efforts made to urge a corporation's directors to bring the action in question,” but "the adequacy of those efforts is to be determined by state law absent a finding that application of state law would be inconsistent with a federal policy underlying a federal claim in the action.”
RCM Secs. Fund,
. Halebian does not contest that, assuming the claims are in fact derivative, they fail to comply with section 7.42. Nor does he contest the district court’s conclusion that "[t]he nature or character of a claim against a corporation is determined according to the law of the state of the corporation, and not dictated by the form the plaintiff chooses to plead in his or her complaint.”
Halebian,
. A corporation is, however, entitled to "vote any shares, including its own shares, held by it, directly or indirectly, in a fiduciary capacity.” Mass. Gen. Laws ch. 156D, § 7.21(c).
. Delaware courts have also recognized, as a corollary, that shareholders have the “right not to attend a meeting” and the “right not to vote on any matter,” i.e., the “right to withhold [the shareholder's] vote on any particular proposal.” Berlin v. Emerald Partners, 552 A.2d 482, 493 (Del.1988) (emphasis added) (internal quotation marks omitted).
. In connection with the demand-review process, the corporation found “no authority for the proposition that the 1940 Act or Massachusetts law forbids the use of echo voting by a record holder of shares in a vote to approve an advisory contract with a mutual fund” and noted that "[e]cho voting is a common practice in the financial industry whose utility has been recognized both by the Securities and Exchange Commission and the New York Stock Exchange.” See Res. of the Bd. of Trs. of Citifunds Trust III 25 (July 12, 2006). Although Halebian vehemently insists that echo voting, in this context, is unlawful, we note that he has failed to cite any court decision that has so suggested or held. We do not address the merits of Halebian’s claim that echo voting violates section 15 of the ICA and Massachusetts law.
. We note that Halebian’s contention that the proxy statement should also have disclosed that the Securities Exchange Commission and the New York Stock Exchange (“NYSE”) have ruled that NYSE member broker-dealers may not echo vote shares to obtain shareholder approval of an investment company’s investment advisory contract with a new investment advisor is utterly without merit, as the proxy statement explicitly contains this information. See Finn Declaration Exhibit D (“Schedule 14A”), at 8, Halebian v. Berv, No. 06 Civ. 4099 (S.D.N.Y. filed May 30, 2006) (Doc. No. 22).
. He also argues in the alternative that even if section 7.44 applied the district court erred by barring him from seeking discovery and by failing to convert the corporation's motion to dismiss to a motion for summary judgment. At this stage of the proceedings, however, we need only address Halebian's first argument.
. The decision by a corporation to reject a demand, according to the commentary to section 7.44, " 'can be made prior to the commencement of the suit in response to a demand
or after commencement upon examination of the allegations of the complaint.’ " Halebian,
. For example, this reading leaves unresolved the issue of whether a stay must be sought or entered within a certain period of time following the filing of the original complaint in order to toll the provisions of section 7.44.
. The Rule provides in part:
§ 1. Authority to Answer Certain Questions of Law. This court may answer questions of law certified to it by the Supreme Court of the United States, a Court of Appeals of the United States, or of the District of Columbia, or a United States District Court, or the highest appellate court of any other state when requested by the certifying court if there are involved in any proceeding before it questions of law of this state which may be determinative of the cause then pending in the certifying court and as to which it appears to the certifying court there is no controlling precedent in the decisions of this court.
Mass. S.J.C. R. 1:03.
