After this appeal had been decided by the panel,
The corporation is wholly in error in urging that, under the rule of Erie R. R. Co. v. Tompkins,
In contrast to the general recognition that “a stockholder who is successful in maintaining * * * an action” for the corporation’s benefit which it has been unwilling to institute “is entitled to reimbursement for reasonable attorney’s fees on the theory that the corporation which has received the benefit of the attorney’s services should pay the reasonable value thereof,” on which this court relied for the award of such reimbursement under § 16(b) in Smolowe v. Delendo Corp.,
The attorney’s letter of April 10, 1962, listed five officers or directors alleged to have made profits recoverable under § 16(b). The letter asserted also,
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and the corporation has not denied, that the two-year statute of limitations in § 16(b) would “bar many of the transactions unless suit is instituted prior to June 2, 1962.” On April 16, 1962, the corporation acknowledged receipt of the letter and told the attorney to “be advised that a preliminary investigation indicates that there has not been any violation by the individuals named * * * ”; there was no offer to communicate with him after further investigation. The attorney’s affidavit states that, faced with this negative attitude and the prospective running of the statute, he set about, surely not unreasonably, to draft a complaint, but decided not to file it until after May 31 — the sixty-day period fixed by the statute for action by the corporation not expiring until shortly thereafter, cf. Henss v. Schneider,
It would run counter to effective enforcement of the statute wholly to deny compensation in such a case. The amount is quite another matter. This should not be as much as if the-attorney had himself instituted and prosecuted the actions; the corporation ought not have to pay both him and its own counsel for the same legal services, save insofar as its delay and initial negative response made duplication of legal services appropriate for the protection of stockholders. Moreover, we do not consider that the statute contemplates an allowance for “watch-dog” services after a corporation has begun an action, as the attorney’s affidavit seeks, see Cook and Feldman, Insider Trading under the Securities Exchange Act, 66 Harv.L.Rev. 385, 422 (1953); compensation for successfully opposing an improvident settlement proposed by the corporation, see 2 Loss, supra, 1050-51, would be a different matter.
The judgment of dismissal is reversed and the case remanded for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
