OPINION
In this original proceeding, relator, Crown Castle International Corp., seeks a writ of mandamus ordering the respondent, the Honorable Reece Rondon, presiding judge of the 234th District Court, Harris County, to vacate its May 8, 2006 order to the extent that it denies Crown Castle’s motion for protective order and fails to stay discovery pending real parties’ in intеrest, Edward Britt, Dwight Jones, Dina Michelle, Kent Szabo, and Kritsy Lynch (the “shareholders”), having sufficiently pleaded that presuit demand on the corporation is excused. We conditionally grant the writ.
Background
In the underlying shareholder derivative suit, the shareholders seek to stand in the shoes of Crown Castle and assert claims on its behalf. Crown Castle, a Delaware corporation with its principal corporate office in Houston, owns, operates, and leases towers for wireless communications in the United States, Puerto Rico, and Australia. The shareholders allege that certain Crown Castle officers and directors breached their fiduciary duties by backdating stock options grants, between 1998 and 2001, to coincide with low closing prices of Crown Castle’s common stock without disclosing such practice to the public. 1 The shareholders seek damages allegedly suffered by, and owed to, Crown Castle. 2
On March 5, 2007, Crown Castle filed special exceptions to the shareholders’ consolidated petition. Crown Castle (1) pointed out that the shareholders did nоt make demand on its board of directors, and (2) asserted that the shareholders did not allege particularized facts in their petition demonstrating that at the time their lawsuit was filed, a majority of directors could not impartially evaluate the shareholders’ claims and decide upon the best course of action for the corporatiоn. 3
The shareholders served discovery on Crown Castle, which objected on the basis that such discovery (1) is premature and improper at least until the shareholders establish they are excused from making a litigation demand on the board; (2) is not relevant, and is unduly burdensome and *352 vague; (3) is available to the shareholders through other means; and (4) seeks doсuments that are privileged or outside the possession and control of the company.
On April 4, 2007, Crown Castle filed a motion for protective order, asserting that until the trial court resolves whether the shareholders have standing to prosecute the derivative suit, any discovery is improper and premature. 4 On April 18, 2007, the shareholders moved to сompel discovery, arguing that the filing of special exceptions will not toll or abate discovery, and suggesting that “some of the particular discovery produced will shed light on the very issue complained of’ in Crown Castle’s special exceptions.
On April 24, 2007, the trial court held a hearing on the special exceptions and the discovery issue. By orders dated May 8, and May 29, 2007, the trial court granted Crown Castle’s special exceptions and ordered the shareholders to replead their demand futility allegations with more particularity within 30 days after the discovery date. The trial court also overruled Crown Castle’s objection that it was not obligated to respond to discovery until the shаreholders had adequately pleaded demand futility, and ordered Crown Castle to produce the discovery by June 1, 2007. 5 The trial court further ordered that if Crown Castle filed a petition for writ of mandamus by the June 1 deadline, the order would automatically be stayed and abated pending the mandamus proceedings.
Standard of Review
In order to obtain mandamus relief, the rеlator must show that the trial court clearly abused its discretion as to which the relator has no adequate remedy by appeal.
In re Sw. Bell Tele. Co., L.P.,
Demand Futility Under Delaware Law
Because Crown Castle was incorporated in Delaware, the parties do not dispute that Delaware substantive law applies in this case. Delaware law limits a shareholder’s right to prosecute a derivative suit in cases where (1) the shareholder has demanded that the directors pursue the corporation’s claim, but the directors have wrongfully refused tо do so, or (2) demand is excused because the directors are incapable of making an impartial decision regarding such litigation.
Rales v. Blasband,
Abuse of Discretion
Crown Castle asserts that the trial court abused its discretion in ordering discovery *353 because the shareholders have not pleaded, under Delaware law, particularized facts showing that presuit demand on the board would have been futile. The shareholders, on the other hand, maintain that Texas law governs discovery because (1) discovery is a matter of procedure falling within the Texas Rules of Civil Procedure, 6 and (2) the law of the forum always governs procedural issues, regardless of what state’s law governs the substantive issues. 7
Section 21.562 of the Texas Business Organizations Code 8 is a recodification of Article 5.14(K) of the Texas Business Corporations Act. 9 The texts of these two statutes are essentially identical and the result in our case is the same regardless of which statute is applied. 10 With an inapplicable exception, the Business Organizations Code does not apply to existing domestic or foreign corporations until January 1, 2010. Seе Act of May 29, 2003, 78th Leg. R.S., ch. 182, § 1, 2003 Tex. Gen. Laws 592. A corporation may elect early adoption. See id. There is no evidence in the record that Crown Castle has elected early adoption. Therefore, we analyze the present issue under the common language of Article 5.14(E) of the Texas Business Corporations Act and Section 21.562 of the Texas Business Organizations Code.
In support of their position, the shareholders contend Section 21.562 of the Business Organizations Code, which provides that the law of the state of incorporation governs the derivative proceeding, controls only substantive matters, and specifically excludes “procedural issues not relating to the internal affairs of the foreign corporation.” Tex. Bus. Org.Code Ann. § 21.562. 11 Id. Section 21.562 goes on to identify the three precise “procedural is *354 sues not relating to the internal affairs of the foreign corporation” that it contemplates. None of the specified procedural matters has any bearing on this dispute. Id. 12
The shareholders further rely on
Moonlight Investments, Ltd. v. John
as dispositive of this of this proceeding.
Delaware courts hold the heightened pleading requirement for derivative suits is substantive, not simply a technical rule of pleading.
Haber v. Bell,
No Adequate Remedy by Appeal
Crown Castle also asserts it has no adequate remedy by appeal. To determine if a party has an adequate remedy by appeal, we ask whether “any benefits to mandamus review are outweighed by the detriments.”
In re Prudential Ins. Co. of Am.,
The derivative shareholder suit is an action in which the individual shareholder steps into the shoes of the corporation and usurps the board of directors’ authority to decide whether to pursue the corporation’s claims.
15
Therefore, the purpose of the demand futility and heightened pleading requirements is to distinguish between strike suits motivated by the expectation of creating settlement leverage through the likelihood of expensive and time-consuming litigation discovery and suits demonstrating that the board cannot be expected to objectively pursue a reason
*356
able possibility of director malfeasance on behalf of the corporation.
White v. Panic,
The shareholders cannot use discovery to satisfy the threshold requirement that they plead particularized facts showing that demand on the board would be futile.
See Beam,
Conclusion
We therefore conditionally grant Crown Castle’s petition for a writ of mandamus and direct the trial court to vacate its May 8, 2007 order to the extent that it denies Crown Castle’s motion for protective order and fails to stay all discovery pending the shareholders’ having pleaded adequately that demand on the board of directors is excused. The writ will issue only if the trial court fails to act in accordance with this opinion.
Notes
.The individual defendants are Peter G. Abery, Wesley D. Cunningham, Carol Feren-bach, Ari Q. Fitzgerald, Robert E. Giles, Charles C. Green, III, Randall A. Hack, Dale N. Hatfield, E. Blake Hawk, Lee W. Hogan, Kelly (Cole) Hunter, Edward C. Hutcheson, Jr., David L. Ivy, John P. Kelly, J. Landis Martin, Robert F. McKenzie, Ted B. Miller, Jr., W. Benjamin Moreland, Alan Reese, and Edward W. Wallander.
. Five derivative shareholder lawsuits were filed, making the same allegations. Those pеtitions were consolidated into a single matter, and the shareholders filed a consolidated derivative petition on February 2, 2007.
. The individual defendants joined in Crown Castle's special exceptions.
. The individual defendants joined in Crown Castle’s motion for protective order.
. The trial court's orders specifically did not address Crown Castle’s other objections, but, instead, stated that Crown Castle could set its other objections for a hearing subject to the automatic stay.
.
See In re CSX Corp.,
.
See PennWell Corp. v. Ken Assocs., Inc.,
. Tex. Bus. Org.Code Ann. § 21.561 (Vernon Supp.2006).
. Tex. Bus. Corp. Act Ann. art. 5.14(K) (Vernon 2003).
. Because section 21.562 and article 5.14(K) are substantively the same and our analysis and disposition do not differ under each, we need not decide which statute applies.
Cf. Duncan v. Cessna Aircraft Co.,
.The Texas Business Corporations Act provides:
K. In derivativе proceeding brought in the right of a foreign corporation, the matters covered by this Article are governed by the laws of the jurisdiction of incorporation of the foreign corporation, except for Sections D, I, and J of this Article, which are procedural and not matters relating to the internal affairs of the foreign corpоration.
Tex. Bus. Corp. Act Ann. art. 5.14(K).
The Texas Business Organizations Code similarly provides;
(a) In a derivative proceeding brought in the right of a foreign corporation, the matters covered by this subchapter are governed by the laws of the jurisdiction of incorporation of the foreign corporation, except for Sections 21.555, 21.560, and 21.561, which are procedural provisions and do not relate to the internal affairs of the foreign corporation.
Tex. Bus. Org.Code § 21.562(a).
. Section 21.562 excludes procedural matters under sections 21.555, 21.560, and 21.561. See Tex. Bus. Org.Code Ann. § 21.555 (providing for the stay of a derivative proceeding if the corporation that is the subject of such proceeding commences an inquiry into the allegations made in a demand or petition); Id. § 21.560 (providing for the discontinuance or settlement of derivative proceeding); Id. § 21.561 (providing for the payment of expenses by order of the trial court upon termination of the derivative proceeding). Article 5.14(K) likewise excludes procedural matters under sections D, I, and J of Article 5.14. See Tex. Bus. Corp. Act Ann. art. 5.14(D) (providing for the stay of a derivative proceeding if the corрoration that is the subject of such proceeding commences an inquiry into the allegations made in a demand or petition); Id. art. 5.14(1) (providing for the discontinuance or settlement of derivative proceeding); Id. art. 5.14(J) (providing for the payment of expenses by order of the trial court upon termination of the derivative proceeding).
. Sрecial exceptions may be used to challenge the sufficiency of a pleading.
Friesenhahn v. Ryan,
. Shareholders of Delaware corporations enjoy a qualified right to insрect the corporation’s books and records.
Saito v. McKesson HBOC, Inc.,
.
See
8 Del. C. § 141(a) (providing that the directors are granted the authority to manage the business of the corporation;
Braddock v. Zimmerman,
