Shareholders have brought a derivative suit against a corporation’s directors for their allégedly deceitful and financially-destructive role in the 2008 housing collapse. Defendants are current and former JPMorgan Chase & Co. (“JPMorgan”) directors. Plaintiffs are California-based shareholders. Plaintiffs argue defendants breached their fiduciary duties, committed securities violations, and unjustly enriched themselves through defendants’ creation and sale of subprime residential mortgage-backed securities (“RMBS”). The court granted defendants’ first motion to dismiss. Order Oct. 23, 2014, ECF No. 69 (“Prior Order”). Defendants have moved to dismiss plaintiffs’ amended complaint, or alternatively, to transfer the case to New York. Id. Mot., ECF No. 128.
The court heard the motion on December 15, 2016. Alexandra Summer, Francis Bottini, Jr., Mark Molumphy and Kelsey Fischer appeared for plaintiffs. Mins., ECF No. 139. Stuart Baskin, Alethea Sargent and Emily Griffen appeared for defendants Bell, Bowles, Burke, Crown, Flynn, Futter, Jackson, Novak, Raymond and Weldon. Id. Gary Kubek and Christopher Banks appeared for nominal defendant JPMorgan and defendants Dimon, Harrison and Lipp. Id. As explained below, the court GRANTS defendants’ motion to dismiss in part and TRANSFERS the remaining claims to the Southern District of New York.
I. BACKGROUND
Plaintiffs complain that defendants fraudulently and carelessly mishandled JPMorgan’s residential mortgage-backed securities business. First Am. Cómpl. ¶¶ 1, 2, ECF No. 122 (“FAC”). Understanding plaintiffs’ claims in full at this point requires a brief review of the mortgage industry in which JPMorgan operates.
A. Residential Mortgage-Backed Securities and the 2008 Financial Crisis
Residential mortgage-backed securities or RMBS are bonds backed by payments homeowners make on their mortgage loans. See id. ¶ 10. JPMorgan uses a process known as “securitization” to bundle hundreds of mortgage loans into RMBS, which they then market and sell to investors. Id. JPMorgan groups or tiers their RMBS based on a risk rating. Risky or subprime RMBS form the lower, cheaper tiers, while safer RMBS form the more expensive tiers. Id. ¶¶ 44-45. RMBS are considered subprime or risky when they are backed by mortgagers with impaired credit records, while safer RMBS are backed by more reliable mortgagers. Id. Investors choose a tier in which to invest, and then their profits mirror the payments mortgagers make. The values of the RMBS fluctuate depending on whether homeowners pay down their mortgage principal early, refinance their mortgages or default.'
After the housing market collapsed in 2008, RMBS investors experienced significant fluctuation in returns on investment because foreclosures increased and home prices and interest rates plummeted. Id. ¶ 10. The downturn exposed • flaws in JPMorgan’s RMBS protocol and enflamed investors who felt defrauded and misled. Plaintiffs here contend the named directors played a key role in JPMorgan’s misconduct in issuing RMBS. Id. ¶¶ 3, 9, 188, 291, 315, 388-89.
B. Criminal Investigation into JPMor-gan’s RMBS Activity
Investors’ fraud allegations prompted the- United States Department of Justice
C. Shareholder Derivative Suits
In this case, three JPMorgan shareholders sue JPMorgan’s directors for their alleged involvement in RMBS activity from 2005 to 2007, focusing particularly on this activity’s impact in California. Id. at 65-88, This suit is one of many derivative suits attacking JPMorgan’s mishandling of RMBS during the financial crisis, which point to the resulting billion dollar settlements as proof of damages. Courts uniformly have dismissed these derivative suits at the outset, at least in part, for not meeting Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 23.1(b)’s pleading requirements.
Rule 23.1(b)(3) requires that shareholders bringing derivative suits specifically plead what efforts they undertook to have a corporation’s board of directors file the suit on the corporation’s behalf; in other words, did shareholders make a pre-suit demand on the board that was rejected? Alternatively, .the Rule requires that shareholders plead the specific reasons they have not asked the board to bring their claims; to show why a demand on the board would have been futile. Fed. R. Civ. P. 23.1(b)(3)(A), (B) (providing that the complaint must “(3) state with particularity — (A) 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 (B) the reasons for not obtaining the action or not' making the effort.”); Potter v. Hughes,
A separate derivative suit brought in the Southern District of New York, and dismissed there, is particularly relevant here. See Steinberg v. Dimon,
D. This Case
. Plaintiffs contend defendants exposed JPMorgan to financial risk and ruin through the corporation’s subprime mortgage business by destabilizing internal standards and controls, fraudulently marketing RMBS, and concealing material information from investors. FAC ¶ 10. Plaintiffs bring three California state claims and one federal claim. They made no pre-suit demand on JPMorgan’s board and allege doing so would have been futile. Id. ¶ 296 (“making a demand would be a futile and useless act as the majority of JPMor-gan’s directors are not able to conduct an independent and objective investigation of the alleged wrongdoing”).
Plaintiffs’ state law claims allege: (1) Defendants breached their fiduciary duties by putting their own pecuniary interests above the company’s; (2) defendants wasted corporate assets by compensating executives and directors for illegal conduct; and (3) defendants unjustly enriched themselves. Id. H1Í357, 370, 373. Plaintiffs’ fourth federal claim alleges certain named defendants violated section 14(a) of the Securities Act by issuing false and misleading 2011 and 2012 proxy statements that lured shareholders into blindly reinstating leadership incumbents and approving risky proposals. Id. ¶¶ 377-95. Plaintiffs name defendants Bowles, Burke, Cote, Crown, Dimon, Futter, Jackson, Raymond and Weldon . in connection with both proxy statements, defendants Gray and Novak regarding only the 2011 proxy statement, and defendant Bell, regarding only the 2012 proxy statement.- Id. -¶¶ 378-79.
E. Prior Dismissal and Amended Complaint
The court dismissed plaintiffs’ prior complaint in 2014, with leave to amend. See Prior Order; First Consolidated Compl., E'CF No. 29; Defs.’ First Mot. Dismiss, ECF No. 48. The court found defendants lacked sufficient ties to California to sustain personal jurisdiction as to plaintiffs’ state claims and that plaintiffs’ federal claim failed under Rule 12(b)(6). Prior Order at 24. After two years of jurisdictional discovery, plaintiffs filed the operative first amended complaint. See Order Granting Discovery, ECF No. 92; FAC (filed April 28, 2016). Although the amended complaint raises the same four claims as stated in the original complaint, it offers more detail about JPMorgan’s California-specific RMBS business, FAC at 65-88, bolsters plaintiffs’, theories and explanation as to why JPMorgan’s proxy statements were misleading, and changes the relief sought under its federal claim, compare Compl. ¶¶ 304-08, with FAC ¶¶ 377-95. Defendants now revive their initial jurisdictional arguments in seeking to dismiss the amended complaint. Plaintiffs oppose, Opp’n, ECF No, 132, and defendants reply, ECF No.'133.
II. ORDER OF ANALYSIS
Defendants raise multiple jurisdictional inquiries and so the court must first consider the proper order, of analysis. Potter,
The parties do dispute the court’s personal jurisdiction over defendants with respect to the state law claims. Mot. at 14-19; Opp’n at 22-24. Because JPMorgan is neither incorporated in California nor principally located here, FAC ¶ 23, defendants argue plaintiffs have not shown each defendant has sufficient contacts with California to trigger this court’s personal jurisdiction over them. California’s personal jurisdiction standard requires that each defendant have at least some minimum contacts with California to warrant haling them into court here. Schwarzenegger v. Fred Martin Motor Co.,
Plaintiffs’ federal claim, however, derives from the federal Securities Act, which confers “personal jurisdiction over the defendant in any federal court” provided “[the] defendant has minimum contacts with the United States.... ” Sec. Investor Prot. Corp. v. Vigman,
If plaintiffs’ federal claim withstands dismissal, and if plaintiffs’ state claims factually relate to their federal claim, the court has discretion to exercise pendent personal jurisdiction over the defendants as to all claims in this suit without separately analyzing defendants’ relationships with California. See Action Embroidery Corp. v. Atl. Embroidery, Inc.,
HI. PENDENT PERSONAL JURISDICTION
If plaintiffs’ state claims “arise[ ] out of the same nucleus of operative facts” as the federal claim that granted the court personal jurisdiction, the court may exercise personal jurisdiction over defendants with respect to the entire ease. This discretionary pendent personal jurisdiction doctrine derives from “considerations of judicial economy, convenience and fairness to litigants.” Id. (internal citation and quotation marks omitted). Claims are sufficiently factually related to trigger the doctrine when a plaintiff “ ‘would ordinarily be expected to try them all in one judicial proceeding.’ ” Rep. of the Phil. v. Marcos,
Here, the court previously found plaintiffs’ state and federal claims sufficiently factually related to trigger pendent per
Even if the interest of judicial economy warrants exercising pendent personal jurisdiction over defendants as to plaintiffs’ state law claims, jurisdiction fundamentally is not established. If plaintiffs’ federál claim cannot proceed,’any pendent personal jurisdictional hook vanishes.
IV. FEDERAL CLAIM
As noted, defendants move to dismiss plaintiffs federal claim, arguing that a New York district court’s dismissal of a related shareholder derivative suit precludes the claim here as a matter of law. Mot. at 13 (citing Steinberg,
The doctrines of claim preclusion and issue preclusion define whether a prior judgment has a preclusive effect. Under claim preclusion, “[a] final judgment on the merits of an action precludes the parties or their privies from .relitigating issues that were or- could have been raised in that action.” Federated Dep’t Stores, Inc. v. Moitie,
The Steinberg court dismissed the derivative suit before it, finding the plaintiff there inadequately pled demand futility. Before assessing whether claim or issue preclusion applies, this court thus.examines the demand futility requirements in shareholder; derivative . suits as relevant here.
A. Proving Demand Futility Under Delaware Law
Under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 23.1(b), a plaintiff may bring a shareholder derivative suit only if she “allege[s] with particularity the efforts, if any, made' by the plaintiff to obtain the action the plain-1 tiff desires from the directors.” Potter,
To assess whether demand is futile, the court applies the law of the state in which the corporation is incorporated. See Kamen v. Kemper Fin. Servs., Inc.,
When a derivative claim does not challenge a particular decision the board made as a whole, Rales governs. See Rattner v. Bidzos,
To determine if the Steinberg court’s Rulé 28.1(b) dismissal precludes plaintiffs from litigating a claim or issue in this court, the court must decide initially whether federal or state preclusion rules govern.
B. Choice of Law for Preclusion Analysis
Determining which preclusion law governs depends on the nature of the potentially precluding judgment. If a federal court sitting in diversity jurisdiction issued the arguably precluding opinion,, then the preclusion rules of the state in which that court sits would apply. Taylor v. Sturgell,
Here, federal common law determines Steinberg’s preclusive effect because Steinberg addressed a federal question. That Steinberg also involved state law claims does not change this court’s conclu
C. Federal Issue Preclusion
Issue preclusion or collateral estoppel prevents parties from relitigating the same issues actually adjudicated in an earlier judgment. This narrow doctrine applies only “[w]hen an issue.of fact or.law is actually litigated and determined by a valid and final judgment, and the determination is essential to the judgment.” B & B Hardware, Inc. v. Hargis Indus., Inc., — U.S. -,
Defendants contend that because the members of the board of directors sued here are the same board members upon whom Steinberg attempted to show demand was futile, the Steinberg court’s Rule 23.1(b) dismissal bars plaintiffs from re-litigating demand futility as to their federal claim. Because plaintiffs must prove demand futility before proceeding on their federal claim, concluding, that issue preclusion applies would defeat their claim. The parties dispute only whether the demand futility question in Steinberg was “identical” to the demand futility question raised here.
1. Federal Common Law on Identicality of Demand Futility Issue
Whether the demand futility inquiry in one case presents an identical question in a later derivative suit against the ' same board is a question of first impression under the federal common law. Three published circuit court opinions have addressed this question, but all three pertained to state preclusion law; they do not help shape federal law, although the reasoning advanced in each may be persuasive. See In re Sonus Networks, Inc., S’holder Derivative Litig.,
a. First Circuit’s Sonus Opinion
The First Circuit’s Sonus opinion articulated a rule that if one court determines demand is futile as to a particular board of directors, issue preclusion bars subsequent attempts to relitigate demand futility against the same board unless a later complaint includes “new” factual allegations that alter the demand futility inquiry. So-nus,
Although .persuasive,. Sonus does not control in this case, because that decision was based on Massachusetts preclusion law, which leniently applies issue preclusion’s “identity” element. See id. at 62. Specifically, the Sonus court cited a Massachusetts case, noting its proposition that “even if there is not complete identity between the issues, issue preclusion may be appropriate where the issues overlap substantially.” Id. (parenthetical following citation to Comm’r of Dept. of Employment
b. Third Circuit’s Freedman Opinion
The Third Circuit in Freedman tackled the same question as did the First in So-nus but reached a different conclusion. In Freedman, the shareholder-plaintiffs derivatively sued a corporation’s board of directors in state court in New York, where the corporation’s principal place of business was located, and the state court dismissed the complaint for failure to show demand futility as to certain directors.
The Third Circuit affirmed the district court decision, explaining that under New York law “a prior ruling on a director’s independence does not necessarily apply in a future proceeding addressing the same topic,” because “[a] determination of a director’s independence [ ] is concerned with a possibly fluid relationship and, accordingly, differs from the determination of a fixed historical fact in the first litigation ...Freedman,
c. The Ninth Circuit’s Arduini Opinion
The Ninth Circuit in Arduini reviewed both Freedman and Sonus in finding that a Nevada state court’s dismissal of a prior suit based on demand futility precluded Arduini from relitigating demand futility in federal court. Arduini,
2. Discussion
The parties dispute whether Steinberg precludes plaintiffs from asserting demand futility here. Defendants argue issue preclusion applies, but plaintiffs contend issue preclusion does not bar the court from analyzing demand futility as to their federal claim because the claim differs materially from that presented by Steinberg. If the demand futility issue here is “identical” to the issue in Steinberg, then plaintiffs’ federal claim fails as a matter of law under Rule 23.1.
a. Steinberg’s Demand Futility Inquiry
In Steinberg, the New York district court dismissed a derivative suit against JPMorgan because the complaint did not contain sufficient facts to satisfy demand futility. In that case, Steinberg, the shareholder plaintiff, brought three state claims and one federal claim against fifteen current and former directors. See Steinberg Compl. ¶¶ 244-84. Steinberg’s federal claim, which informs the preclusion analysis here, alleged violations of section 14(a) of the Securities Act based on the directors’ allegedly misleading proxy statements. Id. ¶¶ 273-84. Steinberg claimed that making a demand on the board to bring this claim would have been futile, citing eight director-defendants’ alleged lack of independence to conclude a majority of the board’s eleven members were “interested.” See id. ¶¶206, 210-39. Because the parties agreed demand was futile as to one director, Board Chair Dimon, the court considered only the independence of seven, non-management director defendants. Steinberg,
To analyze demand futility as to these seven directors, the Steinberg court framed the rule as follows: Demand is futile “whenever a majority of the board of directors faces a ‘substantial likelihood’ of personal liability” in the face of the particular claim being analyzed. Id. (citing Bales,
The court concluded the likelihood of success of Steinberg’s federal claim was low, and therefore found demand was not futile as to that claim. Id. The court explained that the board’s mere “execution of ... financial reports, without more, is insufficient to create an inference that the directors had actual or constructive notice of any illegality.” Id. (citing Wood,
b. Comparison Between Plaintiffs’ and Steinberg’s Demand ■ Futility Inquiry
Whether the Steinberg dismissal bars plaintiffs from litigating demand futility in this court depends on how similar the demand futility inquiry is when com
. In both cases the shareholders focus their section 14(a) Securities Act claims, in part, on JPMorgan’s 2011 and 2012 proxy statements. But the specific misstatements and omissions identified within those two statements differ in the two complaints. In this case, plaintiffs cite misstatements about the director nojni-nees’
Because plaintiffs here haye a greater likelihood of success on the merits of their federal claim than Steinberg did, the demand futility issue , here is not “identical” to the demand futility issue in Steinberg. Plaintiffs’ federal claim is not barred by issue preclusion.
The court’s conclusion here does ■ not hinge on whether the second suit in this case and-to Steinberg added allegations that were available at the time of the first suit. A focus on the availability of, facts at an earlier time is better suited to analysis of the broader claim preclusion doctrine.
D. Federal Claim Preclusion
Defendants argue that, even without issue preclusion, res judicata bars plaintiffs from bringing their Securities Act claim because the claim arises from the same basic facts as did Steinberg’s Securities Act claim.
“Under the doctrine of res judicata, or claim preclusion, ‘[a] final judgment on the merits of ah action precludes the parties or their privies from relitigating issues that were or couid have been raised in that action.’ ” Moitie,
1. Judgment on the Merits
To show that the Steinberg Rule 23.1(b) dismissal was a final judgment on the merits, defendants cite New York preclusion law for the proposition that because demand futility is a substantive rather than procedural issue, a decision on futility is necessarily a final judgment on the merits. See Mot. at 6 (citing Henik ex rel. LaBranche & Co. v. LaBranche,
Under federal preclusion law, the issue is not as clear-cut as defendants suggest. Defendants cite no controlling authority for the proposition that a dismissal for demand futility is always a final decision on the merits, and the Ninth Circuit has expressly left the question open. See Ar-dmni,
In Steinberg, the court dismissed the complaint because it lacked sufficient factual allegations to excuse the pre-suit demand requirement. Steinberg,
■a. Circuit Court Opinions
The First Circuit in Sorms, supra, is the only federal appellate court to directly answer whether a Rule 23.1(b) dismissal constitutes a final decision on the merits under the claim preclusion doctrine. Sorms,
Sonus ultimately found ■ that applying claim preclusion to a dismissal for failure to plead satisfaction of a precondition to suit is incompatible with the idea that failure to satisfy a precondition generally can be cured. Id. at 61-62 (“dismissal of a derivative suit for failure to plead demand or excuse is of course a type of dismissal for inadequate pleadings, [but] it is also a dismissal for failure to accomplish a precondition ... ”). Sonus based its conclusion on two Supreme Court precedents. Id. at 58, 62. In Costello v. United Stales, the Supreme Court explained dismissal for failure to satisfy a precondition to suit should not trigger claim preclusion if that precondition is satisfied between a first and second suit.
Although no other circuit court has examined whether a demand futility dismissal constitutes a final decision on the merits for res judicata purposes, several circuits have addressed the question in the context
b. District Court and State Court Decisions
District and state courts that have analyzed the claim preclusive effect of a dismissal for failure to plead demand futility have reached contradictory conclusions. For example, in Kaplan v. Bennett,
A recent Delaware state court decision has specifically analyzed Steinberg’s pre-clusive effect. See City of Providence v. Dimon, No. CV 9692-VCP,
Other courts assessing whether a dismissal based on demand futility is a final decision on the merits have focused on whether the failure to plead futility was a fatal error rather than a curable pleading defect. See, e.g., In re Bed Bath & Beyond Deriv. Litig., No. GIV.A. 06-5107(JAP),
At least one court, howevér, has rejected a focus on curability. See Bazata v. Nat’l Ins. Co. of Wash.,
In sum, the law on whether a prior dismissal based on demand futility precludes a later action based on the same underlying claims is unsettled.
c. Discussion
Given the absence of controlling authority answering the question whether the Steinberg dismissal for failure to plead demand futility is a final decision on the merits for purposes of claim preclusion, this court must fashion a rule drawn from persuasive principles in other cases. The most consistent and persuasive rule recognizes that whether a prior court’s Rule 23.1(b) dismissal constitutes a final judgment on the merits depends on whether that court treated the error in not pleading demand futility as fatal rather than curable. In applying this “fatal versus curable” rule here, the court notes an important distinction between a shareholder’s omission of sufficient detail to assess if demand was futile, a curable defect, and a shareholder’s affirmative pleading of facts that show demand was not futile, a defect more likely to be fatal. The latter would more likely prompt a dismissal that is final for purposes of claim preclusion.
This rule squares with the two Supreme Court precedents on which the First Circuit relied on Sonus. See Costello,
Whether-Steinberg is preclusive of plaintiffs’ federal claim depends on whether the Steinberg dismissal was final. The Steinberg court did not address finality: It did not expressly say whether th'e dismissal was with prejudice or whether the pleading defect was curable. But without a contrary directive, the court assumes the dismissal was with prejudice. See Fed. R. Civ. P. 41(b) (“Unless the dismissal order states otherwise, a dismissal under this subdivision .,. operates as an adjudication on the merits.”); see also Martin v. Beck, No. 2:14-CV-2956 KJM KJN,
Also, the nature of the opinion and its language indicates that the dismissal for failure to plead demand futility was permanent and final. As -noted above, the Stein-berg court analyzed the substance-of the demand futility issue by assessing the likelihood of success of Steinberg’s underlying claims. See Steinberg, 2014-WL 3512848, at *3M5. After analyzing each claim independently, the court concluded that even if Steinberg could prove all ■ allegations, he could not show demand on the defendant board was futile with respect to any claim; the court granted the defendants’ motion to dismiss the complaint, directing the clerk to enter judgment “and close this case.” Id. at *5. The court did not mention the potential for amendment or curability, nor did Steinberg ask. See generally id.= In short, Steinberg treated'the pleading deficiency as a fatal error that could not be cured.
The persuasive opinions reviewed above, and res judicata principles generally, compel the conclusion that Steinberg was a final decision on the merits. This conclusion is a narrow one; the court does not determine that dismissal for failure to plead demand futility is always a final decision. on the merits for res judicata purposes. Rather, there are many conceivable scenarios in which a dismissal for failure to plead demand futility may not be a final determination. In this qase, however, defendants have satisfied the first element of res judicata.
2. Same Parties
To successfully argue that Stein-berg . precludes plaintiffs from bringing their federal claim, defendants must also show the parties in the Steinberg suit ai*e the same parties or in privity with the parties in this action. Plaintiffs do not. dispute that they are in privity with Stein-berg. See Opp’n at 9 (arguing only that Steinberg did not involve the same claims).
As a matter of law, plaintiffs and Stein-berg are in privity. Arduini,
The defendants in both suits also are in privity despite the slight variation in the set of directors the. respective plaintiffs chose to name in the two suits. Altering the mix of director-defendants does not bar claim preclusion unless defendants named only in the second suit either were inadequately represented in the prior suit or were unknown or unavailable at the time of the prior suit. See Sturgell,
Each defendant named here was known and available when Steinberg filed suit. Plaintiffs raise no contrary arguments. That the two suits were filed within one month of each other reinforces this conclusion. See Original Compl., ECF No. 1 (filed March 2014); Steinberg Compl. (filed February 2014). The parties in this case are in privity with the parties in Steinberg, which satisfies the second res judicata element.
3. Same Claims
Finally, to successfully argue that Stein-berg precludes plaintiffs from bringing their federal claim here, defendants must show plaintiffs’ claim is either the same claim or a claim derived from the same underlying facts as Steinberg’s claim. Plaintiffs argue their federal claim is not the same claim because it varies significantly from Steinberg’s.
.Typically, res.judicata principles require that once a claim is brought to a final conclusion, all other claims “arising] out of the ■ same transactional nucleus of facts”, are barred. Frank v. United Airlines, Inc.,
The rationale for precluding claims that parties could have brought, but did not, mirrors the rationale underlying issue preclusion: A party who has had . a full and fair opportunity to litigate a claim should not be allowed to try again. See Kremer v. Chemical Const. Corp.,
a. Parties’ Arguments
Plaintiffs do not dispute that their federal claim and Steinberg’s federal claim rely, in part, on allegations that JPMorgan’s 2011 and 2012 proxy statements contained false or misleading statements regarding effective oversight of risk management. Opp’n at 12. Instead, plaintiffs cite multiple ways in which they say their claim materially differs from Steinberg’s and argue “[bjecause of the material differences ... neither res judicata nor collateral es-toppel is applicable.” Id. at 13. Plaintiffs maintain that, unlike their claim, Stein-berg’s claim mentioned neither director independence nor shareholder proposals regarding Dimon’s role as chairman as grounds for the proxy statements’ falsity. Id. at 12 (citing Steinberg Compl. ¶¶71-95). Plaintiffs also emphasize the difference in the relief they seek, namely that Steinberg sought monetary damages, while plaintiffs here renounce monetary damages. Id. at 13. Plaintiffs add that the Steinberg complaint differs materially from theirs because Steinberg’s complaint named defendants that plaintiffs did not name: Braunstein, Cavanaugh, Cote, Drew and Gray; and Steinberg’s complaint did not name three defendants plaintiffs named: Flynn, Harrison and Lipp. Id. at 9. Finally, plaintiffs detail how Steinberg’s complaint did not include the extensive allegations or identify defendants’ RMBS strategy in California as the fundamental basis for any of their claims. Id.
Defendants maintain that plaintiffs miss the mark because claim preclusion applies irrespective of these alleged differences “as long as the same claims were or could have been raised in the prior action.” Reply at 8. Alternatively, defendants argué, plaintiffs’ argument is factually incorrect because the federal claims in both cases are virtually identical. Id.
b. Discussion
Although the differences between Stein-berg’s federal claim and the federal claim here are relevant to the court’s issue preclusion analysis, they lack force when it comes to claim preclusion. Contrary to plaintiffs’ assertions, whether claim preclusion applies does not depend on whether Steinberg’s complaint raised the exact facts, theories of recovery, or even prayers for relief as plaintiffs do here. Woman’s Health,
Rather, the claim preclusion analysis turns on whether the federal claims in both suits arise from the same basic events. Plaintiffs cite JPMorgan’s 2011 and 2012 proxy statements as grounds for their federal claim; Steinberg relied on the very same documents in bringing her federal
The federal claim in each case derives from the same underlying facts. Both claims are based, in large part, on the same 2011 and 2012 proxy statements. That Steinberg’s complaint references a 2013 proxy statement as well does not change the complaints’ sufficient overlap for claim preclusion purposes. Both claims allege misstatements regarding the independence of the JPMorgan director nominees, the shareholder proposal to divest Dimon of his role as chairman, defendants’ misrepresentation of information about the underlying mortgage loans in securities filings, and the omission of material information regarding JPMorgan’s true financial condition and risk management structure. Compare Steinberg Compl. ¶¶ 273-84, with FAC ¶¶ 377-95. Plaintiffs’ federal claim could have brought in Steinberg.
To the extent plaintiffs argued claim preclusion does not apply because they have alleged different and better theories of recovery, and more evidence and greater evidentiary support for their claims than Steinberg did, the Supreme Court has expressly rejected that argument: “[The argument that] petitioners now have better evidence than they did at the time of the first case ... is contrary to a cardinal rule of res judicata, namely, that a plaintiff who loses in a first case cannot later bring the same case simply because it has now gathered better evidence. Claim preclusion, does not contain a ‘better evidence’ exception.” Woman’s Health,
Defendants have satisfied res judicata’s final element: Plaintiffs could have raised their federal claim in Steinberg because the same facts form the basis of the claim in each suit. Claim preclusion bars plain- . tiffs’ Securities Act claim as a matter of law.
E. Conclusion Regarding Preclusion
Because plaintiffs’ federal claim is precluded as a matter of law, the court GRANTS defendants’ motion to dismiss this claim, with prejudice. As noted above, the court therefore does not have pendent personal jurisdiction over defendants based on plaintiffs’ state law claims. The court might still maintain personal jurisdiction over defendants if they have sufficient contacts with California. The court dismissed plaintiffs original complaint in part based on inadequate California-specific contacts to trigger specific personal jurisdiction over defendants. The court now assesses whether plaintiffs’ amended complaint has overcome this previous shortcoming.
Defendants all are citizens of states other than California and they resist plaintiffs’ efforts to hale them into this court. When, as here, defendants contend the court lacks personal jurisdiction over them, the burden lies with the plaintiffs to allege “facts that if true would support jurisdiction” over each defendant. Ballard v. Savage,
California’s specific personal jurisdiction test requires plaintiffs to show: (1) Each defendant purposefully directed his or her activities to California or purposefully availed him or herself of California’s forum; • and (2) plaintiffs’ claims arise from or relate to those activities. Schwarzenegger,
A. Purposeful Availment Generally
Plaintiffs must first show defendants purposefully directed activities to, or availed themselves of, California. Id. Plaintiffs need not prove defendants ever stepped foot in California. Burger King Corp. v. Rudzewicz,
Here, because JPMorgan is incorporated elsewhere and principally located outside California, plaintiffs must show each defendant had sufficiently purposeful contact with California to warrant haling them into court here.
B. Purposeful. Availment in Shareholder Derivative Suits
Derivative suits are tools for shareholders to protect a corporation from
The court’s prior order framed the limitations of specific personal jurisdiction when shareholders derivatively sue directors in a state where the corporation is neither incorporated nor principally located. In these scenarios, shareholders must plead other foundational facts to connect the defendants to the forum. See Prior Order at .13 (citing Beene v. Beene, No. C 11-6717 JSW,
For example,, in .Greenspun, the Ninth Circuit affirmed the presence of personal jurisdiction where the corporation held board meetings and developed real property in the forum state. Greenspun v. Del E. Webb Corp.,
In Openwave, a California district court found jurisdiction proper when the defendants had no personal contact with California, but had conceived of and participated in a “plan or scheme” targeting California. See Openwave Sys. Inc. v. Fuld, No. C 08-5683 SI,
In sum, these cases s,how that to sustain their derivative action here, plaintiffs must allege foundational facts proving each defendant had direct and, purposeful contact
C. Discussion
In their amended complaint, plaintiffs provide more details about JPMorgan’s California-specific contacts and business. See generally FAC at 65-88. Plaintiffs do not aver that defendants ever stepped foot in California, arguing instead defendants were instrumental in enacting a plan that targeted California. Because plaintiffs stake personal jurisdiction on Openwave’s plan or scheme premise, they must “clearly” and “substantially” allege how defendants specifically targeted California to withstand dismissal. See Prior Order at 13-14.
Upon close review, as explained below, the court finds the amended complaint does not offer the link that was missing from plaintiffs’ prior complaint. Plaintiffs now allege that more than half of JPMorgan’s subprime loans underlying the RMBS issued between 2005 through 2007 originated in California, id. ¶222, that JPMorgan purchased the defective loans primarily from California-based originators, id. ¶¶ 111, 194-227, and that California was particularly hard hit by the housing collapse that plaintiffs partially attribute to JPMorgan’s misconduct, id. ¶¶ 194, 198-200, 205, 207, 209, 247. Plaintiffs also allege JPMorgan’s Risk Policy Committee regularly provided defendants California-specific data, id. ¶¶ 239-52, and that each defendant knew the harm JPMorgan was causing to California but chose to pursue growth in its business here regardless, id. ¶¶ 194, 198-200, 205, 207, 209, 239-52. Plaintiffs characterize JPMorgan’s focus on California’s mortgage market as a key component of its unlawful RMBS program. Id. ¶¶ 194-238. These new allegations, plaintiffs contend, “are sufficient to exercise personal jurisdiction.” Opp’n at 23:12-13. But they are not, under the law as this court discerns it after much careful consideration.
Although plaintiffs detail JPMorgan(s impact in California, this impact, no matter how great, does not establish personal jurisdiction over any individual defendant. The sheer magnitude of JPMorgan’s California-based business, though significant, does not show any defendant targeted California. Plaintiffs do not mention, let alone argue against, the logical conclusion that natural market forces, not defendants’ purposeful business decisions, could explain California’s consistently prominent presence in JPMorgan’s business statistics and data reports. Specifically, as defendants argue, California’s sizable population and the dynamism of California’s real estate market undermine plaintiffs’ purposeful direction argument: These factors explain how California could have more of JPMor-gan’s RMBS business than any other state without any director having pursued a conscious strategy. See Mot. at 17. To accept plaintiffs’ argument, the court would have to infer that because the individual defendants knew JPMorgan did substantial RMBS business in California, JPMorgan logically was harmed in California, and defendants in knowing as much purposefully directed their actions here. See Opp’n at 23. But knowledge does not equate to intent or purposeful direction. The complaint must plead more than the passive receipt of information to establish defendants purposefully directed activity to
Plaintiffs’ new allegations do not show defendants consciously decided to package more mortgage loans here than in other states, or that any defendant specifically discussed, proposed or approved a California-focused policy. Although plaintiffs add a bare allegation that defendants “targeted” California, FAC ¶ 194, without factual support this statement is an unsupported legal conclusion. Papasan v. Allain,
Many of plaintiffs’ exhibits incorporated into the complaint do not discuss California. See Exs. D, F, K, M, N, O, Q & R. Of the board documents that do reference California, several relate to the subprime market or real estate market generally; they do not relate to the RMBS activity on which plaintiffs stake their claims. See ECF Nos. 122-4 at 36-38 (Ex. L), 122-5 at 9-10 (Ex. P) & 122-7 at 42-50 (Ex. V) (depicting weakening real estate markets in many states and regions, including California; ECF Nos. 122-7 at 16-27 (Ex. U), 122-8 at 41-49 (Ex. Y) & 122-8 at 65-75 (Ex. Z) (all displaying graphs and price increases for the housing market across various regions).
Other exhibits address only JPMorgan’s home mortgage business: These exhibits not only appear irrelevant to an RMBS-focused lawsuit, but also show a well-diversified, as opposed to California-focused, distribution of outstanding real estate loans. See ECF No. 122-2 at 69 (Ex. H) (“the geographic distribution of outstanding consumer real estate loans is well diversified”); ECF No. 122-3 at 72 (Ex. I) (same).
Of the exhibits ’ that reference RMBS activity, not one isolates California. Rather, they show general trends and conditions in multiple states. See, e.g., FAC' ¶¶ 254, 261 (citing Exhibit U, showing trends in California plus nine other states, and listing California second of ten states affected by sub-prime mortgages); id. ¶259 (citing Exhibit X, which explains “market influences on subprime mortgage performance and highlights California, New York, and Florida”); Id. ¶ 260 (citing Exhibit Y, showing home mortgage price appreciation across four markets, Los An-geles being the only one in California); id. ¶ 262 (citing Exhibit Z pages 70-71 and 76, showing “house price appreciation trends” in southern California, the Midwest and the Northeast); see also FAC ¶¶ 46-47, 250, 257-58 (citing Exhibit L, showing signs of weakening in “many regions” including “Massachusetts, California,, portions of the Midwest among others,” and Exhibits P, V,"W, each showing “weaknesses in Massachusetts, California among others” plus “Michigan, Ohio, and other Midwest states”).
Plaintiffs might establish jurisdiction by showing defendants targeted a defined group of states, including California. But plaintiffs’ allegations, taken together, depict ever-changing trends and regions and do not show purposeful targeting of California alone, or a group of states that includes California. Plaintiffs have not met their jurisdictional burden.'
D. Conclusion
Plaintiffs do not sufficiently allege facts showing defendants purposefully directed
VI. VENUE TRANSFER
Defendants seek transfer of this case under 28 U.S.C. § 1404(a)
Rather than dismiss the remaining state law , claims based on defendants’ insufficient contacts with California, the court elects to transfer these claims to the Southern District of New York where venue . and jurisdiction are proper. See 28 U.S.C. § 1401. The court thus need not analyze the convenience of litigating the case here as compared to New York. See Piper Aircraft Co. v. Reyno,
The court therefore' GRANTS defendants’ alternative motion to transfer plaintiffs’ remaining claims to the Southern District of New York.
VIL . CONCLUSION
The court GRANTS defendants’ motion to dismiss in part as follows:
(1) The court DISMISSES with prejudice plaintiffs’ fourth claim, alleging violations of section 14(a) of the federal Securities Act, as barred by res judicata;
(2) The court does not have specific personal jurisdiction, over defendants as to plaintiffs’ first, second and third state law claims and accordingly TRANSFERS them to the Southern District of New York under 28 U.S.C. § 1406(a); and
(3) The court DENIES as moot the remainder of defendants’ motion to dismiss. This resolves ECF No. 123.
Notes
. See, e.g., Wietschner v. Dimon,
. . A director nominee is ”[a]n individual who is' given the role of a non-executive director on the.firm’s board of directors, in place of another person....” Nominee Director Definition, Black’s Law Dictionary (2d Online Ed.).
. In Matter of Lozada, 19 I. & N. Dec. 637, 637 (BIA 1988), the Board of Immigration Appeals held that to perfect an ineffective assistance of counsel claim, the immigrant must first (1) file a motion to reopen, (2) file an affidavit detailing the agreement his counsel allegedly violated, (3) inform the counsel what he did wrong and give him a chance to respond, and (4) explain whether a complaint has been filed with the appropriate authorities regarding counsels’ ethical or legal responsibilities, and if not, explain why not. See id. at 639. See also Castillo-Perez v. I.N.S.,
. 28- U.S.C. § '1404(a) provides, “[f]or the convenience of parties and witnesses, in the interest of justice, a district court may transfer any civil action to any other district or division where it might have been brought or to any district or division to which all parties have consented."
. 28 U.S.C. § 1406(a) provides, "[t]he district court of a district in which is filed a case laying venue in the wrong division or district shall dismiss,' or if it be in the interest of justice, transfer such case to any district or division in which it- could have been brought."
