OPINION
This appeal requires that we decide whether claims that respondent and shareholder Kenneth Steiner asserts in a class-action challenge to a merger transaction were properly dismissed. As relevant here, the district court determined that some claims are derivative, rather than direct, and therefore are subject to the demand and pleading requirements of Minn. R. Civ. P. 23.09. Because Steiner failed to comply with that rule, the district court granted the company’s motion to dismiss. With the exception of one claim, the court of appeals reversed, holding that most of the claims are direct and therefore Rule 23,09 does not apply. In re Medtronic, Inc. S’holder Litig., No. A15-0858,
FACTS
The Consolidated Amended Class Action Complaint (“Amended Complaint”) alleges the following facts. On June 15, 2014, Med-tronic, Inc., a Minnesota corporation^ announced its decision to acquire Covidien pic, a public Irish company, in a transaction to be structured as an inversion.
As a result of the inversion transaction, Medtronic, previously a Minnesota corporation, now operates as a wholly owned subsidiary of an Irish company and thus is subject to Ireland’s tax laws. Steiner alleged that Medtronic reduced the interest of its shareholders to 70 percent of new Medtronic in order to secure and protect the tax benefits it sought in this transaction. In addition, because the Internal Revenue Service treats an inversion transaction as a taxable event for the shareholders of the U.S. company, Medtronic shareholders incurred a capital-gains tax on Medtronic shares held in taxable accounts but received no compensation from the company for this tax liability. On the other hand, Steiner alleged, Medtronic officers and directors who incurred an excise-tax liability on their stock-based compensation as a result of the transaction were reimbursed by Medtronic for that expense.
After the transaction was announced, Steiner filed a class-action lawsuit against Medtronic and members of its Board of Directors (collectively, “Medtronic”).
(1) disparate treatment of Medtronic, as compared to Covidien, shareholders;
(2) disparate treatment with respect to the tax liability incurred by Medtronic shareholders and the lack of compensation for that liability as compared to the reimbursement paid to Medtronic’s officers and directors for their excise-tax liability;
(3) violation of provisions of the Minnesota Business Corporation Act that were intended to protect shareholders of Minnesota corporations;
(4) the possibility of a “reduction of shareholders^] interest in the combined company to 60% causing significant dilution to shareholders!”] interest in New Medtronic.”
In the Amended Complaint, Steiner did not allege that Medtronic, as a corporation, was harmed; rather, he alleged that Med-tronic’s shareholders were harmed as a result of the wrongful conduct, regardless of the lack of harm (or even any benefit) to
Before the district court, Medtronic moved to dismiss the claims under Minn. R. Civ. P. 23.09, for failure to make a demand on the Medtronic Board; and under Minn. R. Civ. P. 12.02, for failure to state a claim upon which relief could be granted. Medtronic asserted that Steiner’s claims essentially alleged that Medtronic paid too much for Covidien, which the company argued is “quintessentially” a derivative claim that affects all shareholders equally. Steiner asserted that because he alleged injuries suffered by the shareholders, the claims are direct, not derivative, and therefore Rule 23.09 does not apply. The district court concluded that the harms alleged due to the violations stated in Counts I-X of the Amended Complaint “relate [to] the structure of the merger as an inversion,” and as such, “are direct to Medtronic and derivative to Medtronic’s shareholders.” Thus, these claims were dismissed for failure to comply with Minn. R. Civ. P. 23.09. Counts XI and XII were dismissed under Minn. R. Civ. P. 12.02(e) for failure to state a claim upon which relief could be granted.
Steiner appealed. The court of appeals affirmed in part and reversed in part. Specifically, the court of appeals agreed with the district court that Count VII of the Amended Complaint, which alleged that the excise-tax reimbursement violated Minn. Stat. § 302A.521, alleged “a harm that belongs to the corporation because voiding the Excise Tax Reimbursement would result in a return of funds to the corporation.” In re Medtronic, Inc. S’holder Litig.,
We granted Medtronic’s petition for review to determine whether the court of appeals correctly concluded, under Minnesota law, that Steiner’s claims are direct, rather than derivative.
ANALYSIS
This ease comes to us on review of an order granting a motion to dismiss. We review de novo the district court’s decision on a motion to dismiss, considering “only the facts alleged in the complaint, [and] accepting those facts as true.” Sipe v. STS Mfg., Inc.,
As an entity distinct from its stockholders, a corporation holds the separate right to sue in its own name. Singer v. Allied Factors, Inc.,
A direct claim, on the other hand, alleges an injury to the shareholder rather than an injury to the corporation. See Nw. Racquet,
This appeal requires that we determine whether Steiner’s claims are derivative, in which case the district court correctly dismissed those claims for failure to comply with Minn. R. Civ. P. 23.09; or direct, in which case the district court erred in dismissing the claims because Steiner did npt have to comply with the rule. The distinction between the two types of claims is in who was injured, the corporation (derivative) or the shareholder (direct). Although the distinction can be easily stated, the line that separates the two claims is not easily drawn. See Agostino,
The court of appeals recognized that the derivative-claim rule is “based on the standing and real-party-in-interest doctrine that preserves , the corporation’s claims to itself.” In re Medtronic, Inc. S’holder Litig.,
Medtronic argues that the court of appeals erred in- embracing the Tooley standard because that standard is inconsistent with Minnesota law. Medtronic asserts that the relevant inquiry is whether the alleged injury is felt similarly and indirectly by all shareholders due to their status as shareholders. If so, Medtronic argues, the claim is derivative. Steiner contends that Delaware law, as reflected in Tooley, is consistent with Minnesota law. Thus, Steiner argues, a direct claim asserts wrongful conduct of the corporation and its directors that results in injury to shareholders alone, not to the corporation. In other words, Steiner argues that the proper test is “who is injured and who will get the recovery—the corporation or shareholders.”
We begin with a discussion of Minnesota law because Medtronic was a Minnesota corporation before its transaction with Co-vidien, and it retains its operational headquarters in Minnesota. See Kratky v. Andrews,
In, Northwest Racquet, a purchaser of subordinated debentures alleged that the debt seller, Midwest Federal Savings & Loan Association, along with its auditor, materially misrepresented its financial condition in offering the debenture investment to the purchaser.
The distinction our cases have articulated between direct and derivative claims focuses on the nature of the injury alleged to determine to whom any recovery will belong. See, e.g., In re UnitedHealth Grp.,
In Seitz I, we held that claims based on an alleged diversion ‘ of corporate funds were derivative because “[t]he wrongs complained of are wrongs against the corporation” and the “funds diverted should be restored to the corporation.”
The key to Seitz I and Seitz II was our determination that the wrongful acts injured the corporation, and, as we observed in those cases, when the corporation is injured, any injury to shareholders is only by reason of the injury to the corporation. See Seitz I,
The court of appeals applied a three-part test derived from its review of the Delaware Supreme Court’s decision in Tooley,
II.
Having clarified the test for distinguishing between direct and derivative claims, we next consider the nature of the injury resulting from the misconduct alleged in Steiner’s claims, and who would benefit from any recovery.
We begin "with the harm alleged due to the excise-tax reimbursement paid to Med-tronic’s officers and directors, generally found in Counts VI-X of the Amended Complaint. These claims essentially alleged that Medtronic improperly reimbursed corporate officers and directors for the excise-tax liability that.resulted from the transaction, without following statutory procedures before doing so or in violation of duties owed to Medtronic shareholders. Regardless of the specific theory for these claims, the, alleged wrongful conduct caused an injury to Medtronic as a corporation, not to the individual shareholders, because corporate reimbursement of an excise-tax liability resulting from the transaction is at bottom an alleged waste of corporate assets. See Wessin,
As to the capital-gains-tax claims, the allegations of the Amended Complaint explain that the shareholders are harmed because the tax liability is imposed on them solely in their status as shareholders. Medtronic itself did not incur a capital-gains tax liability on the transaction, .and ..therefore could not recover for the injury caused by this alleged harm. Because any recovery would go only to the shareholders who incur a capital-gains tax liability, rather than to the corporation, the court of appeals correctly held that claims asserting this harm are direct. See Nw. Racquet,
Finally, we turn to the allegations of harm due to dilution of Steiner’s (and class members’) interest in the corporation. Accepting the allegations of the Amended Complaint as true, which we must do, Sipe,
Medtronic asserts that this alleged harm is simply a standard overpayment claim, that is, that Steiner alleged only that Med-tronic paid too much to Covidien shareholders as part of the transaction, which is mismanagement or waste of corporate funds and therefore derivative. Some decisions recognize that claims asserting a dilution in the value of one’s shares are derivative because “such claims naturally assert that the corporation’s funds have been wrongfully depleted, which, though harming the corporation directly, harms the stockholders only derivatively so far as their stock loses value.” El Paso Pipeline GP Co., L.L.C. v. Brinckerhoff,
Unlike a derivative overpayment claim, in which the shareholders claim that their shares have diminished in value by reason of the decrease in value of the corporation’s assets due to overpayment in a transaction, Steiner alleged that class members’ ownership interest and voting power were diluted by Medtronic to provide adequate protection for the tax benefits it sought in the transaction with Covi-dien. In other words, rather- than a simple loss of economic value, Steiner alleged an injury based on the loss of certain rightful incidents of his ownership interest, which is an injury that falls only on shareholders and not on the corporation.
We reiterate that we view the allegations of the Amended Complaint as true at this stage of the case, and therefore we express no opinion on Steiner’s ability to prevail on claims that allege a dilution injury. See Sipe,
CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the court of appeals’ decision in part, reverse in part, and remand to the district court for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Notes
. "An inversion is a corporate merger where a U.S. based company merges with a foreign corporation to create a new corporate entity that is incorporated outside the United States of America.” In re Medtronic, Inc. Derivative Litigation,
. The shareholder class action was brought in two separate complaints, each filed by a different former shareholder of Medtronic, Inc.: Lewis Merenstein and Kenneth Steiner. The district court consolidated the two actions on September 26, 2014, with the Merenstein action serving as the primary case. Because plaintiff Kenneth Steiner has been the only party to appear in the appeal on behalf of the shareholders, we refer only to Steiner in this opinion.
. The court of appeals concluded that Count XI adequately alleged a violation of Minn. Stat. § 80A.68 under the standard for a motion to dismiss, see Walsh v. U.S. Bank, N.A.,
. We noted, for example, that the plaintiffs in Wessin were only "some of the minority shareholders.”
. In his brief, Steiner focused only on his breach-of-fiduciary-duty claims (Counts I-II), asserting that the direct/derivative distinction does not apply to his statutory claims under Minn. Stat. chi 302A because those provisions provide shareholders with personal rights that can be asserted directly. The mere fact that statutory claims are asserted does not render the. direct/derivative analysis inapplicable because "we look not to the theory in which the claim is couched, but instead to the injury itself," Wessin,
. Both the district court and the court of appeals identified Counts VI-X of the Amended Complaint as the claims that asserted allegations of injury due to wrongful conduct based on the excise-tax reimbursement. Steiner did not contend otherwise before our court. At oral argument, counsel for Steiner conceded that he made no claim for damages related to the excise-tax claims, specifically withdrawing the remedies asserted in the Amended Complaint for disgorgement and a constructive trust as they related to the excise-tax allegations. The excise-tax allegations, Steiner's counsel explained at oral argument, are simply evidence of the corporation’s breach of the fiduciary duty owed to its shareholders. The claims for breach of fiduciary duty, however, are asserted in other counts and there is no reason to retain these counts merely to provide evidence of injuries alleged in other counts, particularly because Steiner concedes that there is no shareholder injury with respect to the excise-tax allegations.
. After oral argument, Steiner filed a letter citing to supplemental authority that came to his attention after he filed his brief. Medtronic responded to the citation of supplemental authority by offering reasons why the case did not support Steiner’s claims. Steiner then moved to strike Medtronic’s response letter because it went beyond a ”state[ment] without argument,” Minn. R. Civ. App. P. 128.05. We agree. We therefore grant the motion to strike.
