Cаsh Equivalent Fund is a money market mutual fund with a sweeps feature. Brokers offer the Fund to their customers as an adjunct to their principal accounts. When an account has a cash balance, a computer “sweeps” the money into the Fund, where it earns interest until the customer reinvests in stocks or other financial instruments; the Fund redeems shares automatically to supply the cash for these transactions. The Fund and its investment adviser, Kemper Financial Services, Inc., say that the extra costs of implementing a sweeps feature and the additional transactions it generates, plus the check-writing and wire transfer features of the Fund, justify a fee exceeding the norm for money market funds. Kemper receives an annual administration fee of 0.38% of the Fund’s assets. It also receives an investment management fee starting at 0.22% of the first $500 million of the Fund’s assets and dropping in increments to 0.15% of the assets exceeding $3 billion. As a result of these fees, thе Fund pays interest at a rate approximately 0.2% per annum lower than money market funds that operate passively, including one that Kemper itself manages, the Kemper Money Market Fund.
Despite the difference in fees and payouts, the Fund has grown steadily and now manages more than $5 billion of assets. One might think this judgment of investors dispositive: offered extra services at lower interest, the Fund’s investors chose the extra services; others have sent their money elsewhere to get a higher return. Whether the extra services are “worth” the price is the sort of judgment people make every day when deciding whether to buy a stripped down computer or pay extra for one with bells and whistles; our government does not try to determine whether extra features are worth a higher price.
Things are not so simple when the services are rendered by an investment adviser rather than a manufacturer or retailer of computers. Sectiоn 36(b) of the Investment Company Act of 1940, 15 U.S.C. § 80a-35(b), provides that the adviser of a registered investment company “shall be deemed to have a fiduciary duty with respect to the receipt of compensation for services”. Fiduciary duties require honest dealing. Managers of all corporations owe fiduciary duties to their firms. These duties have never been thought to justify judicial review of levels of compensation paid, short of extreme cases amounting to waste. Nonetheless, § 36(b) has been understood in light of its legislative history to
*1340
put investment advisers on leashes shorter than those of corporate managers generally, and to require the federal courts to decide whether the fees charged by investment advisers are “excessive”.
Daily Income Fund, Inc. v. Fox,
Jill S. Kamen, who owns shares of the Fund, filed this suit under § 36(b), contending that Kemper’s fees are excessive and should be reduced, with excess fees for prior years returned to the Fund. Kamen added a claim that in soliciting the investors’ approval of the fee structure in 1984, the Fund had misleadingly compared the fees it pays to Kemper with the fees the Kemper Money Market Fund pays. Cash Equivalent Fund pays approximately 0.2% of its assets per annum more than the Money Market Fund does; Kamen believes that the proxy statement implied that the Fund’s fees are equivalent to or lower than those paid to the Money Market Fund. Section 20(a), 15 U.S.C. § 80a-20(a), forbids using the mails to send a proxy statement that violates rules established by the Securities and Exchange Commission. The SEC has by rule under the Investment Company Act adopted its rules under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, which forbid materially misleading statements. See 17 C.F.R. §§ 270.20a-1(a), 240.14a-9(a).
Judge Nordberg first held that § 20(a) creates a private right of action,
Although Fox holds that an investor need not made a demand on the directors when proceeding under § 36(b), that claim did not last much longer. Judge Nordberg asked a magistrate to analyze Kemper’s argument that Kamen is not an adequate representative of the other investors in the Fund. The magistrate recommended that the court grant summary judgment for the defendants on the § 36(b) claim because Kamen is not an adequate representative of the class under Fed.R.Civ.P. 23. Magistrate Balog wrote:
[N]o other shareholder has joined in this suit, instituted a claim, or inquired into plaintiff’s action; the other shareholders have approved the fees charged by Kem-per; after notice of plaintiff’s allegations, the shareholders approved an increase in fees. Based on these facts, it can only be said that plaintiff’s interests are antagonistic to those of the other shareholders. In such a case, plaintiff cannot adequately protect those interests .... It is apparent from the record as it stands that plaintiff’s concerns are not those of a class, but are a private matter. As such, plaintiff cannot maintain this suit as a class action.
Judge Aspen, to whom the case was transferred for decision, adopted the magistrate’s report and granted the “motion for summary judgment on the issue of plaintiff’s adequacy as a class representative. This cause may proceed, if plaintiff so chooses, as a non-class action.” After the parties pointed out that the suit was not filed as a class action, and that adequacy of representation is material (if at all) only under Rule 23.1, which governs derivative actions, the court entered judgment for the defendants, stating that because “plaintiff was adjudicated as a non-adequate representative plaintiff cannot proceed individually”.
Kamen’s appeal presents three questions: whether the § 20 claim should have been dismissed for failure to make a demand on the directors; whether the § 36(b) claim should have been dismissed
*1341
because she stands alone among the Fund’s shareholders; and whether, if the § 36(b) claim should be reinstated, she would be entitled to a jury trial. Defendants maintain that only questions about the adequacy of representation are properly before us, because only that question was resolved in the final decision, and the notice of appeal identified only that decision as the subject of appeal. Defendants misunderstand thе rules governing issues that may be litigated on appeal. An appeal from the final judgment brings up for review all decisions that shaped the contours of that judgment. E.g.,
Chaka v. Lane,
I
Kamen’s complaint as finally amended alleges that she did not make a demand on the board of directors because the seven independent directors (of the ten-member board) “receive aggregate remuneration of approximately $300,000 a year for serving as directors of the Fund and all of the other funds in the Kemper group” and therefоre “are dependent upon and subservient to” Kemper. It alleges in addition that demand would be futile because the Fund solicited the proxies, so a demand would request that the directors sue themselves, and that because the Fund has asked for the dismissal of the suit on the merits the directors obviously are not interested in pursuing the claims. Judge Nord-berg thought these allegations insufficient to excuse a demand under Rule 23.1, as do we.
It is far from clear that Rule 23.1 applies to a suit under § 20 of the Investment Advisers Act. The Rule applies to a “derivative action brought ... to enforce a right of a corporation ..., the corporation ... having failed to enforce a right which may properly be asserted by it”. Violations of § 20 do not yield rights “of the corporation” in the customary sense. Ka-men does not sue in the right of the Fund; she sues the Fund for injury done her by the Fund. The theory of a suit under the proxy rules is that the corporation violated a right of the investor to truthful information. If the investor recovers against the corporation, it may in turn seek to recover from its directors, but the principal wrong is by the corporation against the investors. Kamen conceded in the district court, and again at oral argument in this court, that Rule 23.1 applies to her claim under § 20. Perhaps she did this because she seeks as relief a payment to the Fund, and not a remedy for the investors personally. Whatever the reason for the concession, the question is not presented and we express no opinion on it. Similarly, we express no view on the question whether § 20 creates a private right of action, and if so what the appropriate remedy may be. The district court held that the statute creates a right of action,
The district court asked whether Kamen had satisfied the demand requirement of Rule 23.1, and the briefs on appeal debate the issue in these terms. Yet as we held in
Starrels v. First National Bank of Chicago,
What is the source of the rules requiring or excusing demand? When the claim for relief is based on state law, we held in
Starrels,
the law of the state in
*1342
which the defendant is incorporated governs. See also
Burks,
Even when federal common law supplies the rule of decision, it may obtain that rule not from first principles but from state law.
United States v. Kimbell Foods Inc.,
The scope of the demand requirement depends on why demand ever is required. The demand rule could reflect a hope that the dispute will go away without litigation, that the board of directors will “do something” (or persuade the putative plaintiff that suit is pointless). Demand then initiates a form of alternative dispute resolution, much like mediation. Steps to control the volume of litigation are welcome, yet the demand rule creates more litigation than it prevents. It is difficult to identify cases in which the board’s response to a demand satisfied the shareholder and thus prevented litigation; even if the board acts the shareholder may believe the board did too little. It is easy to point to hundreds of cases, including this one, in which the demand requirement was itself the centerpiece of the litigation. An approach uncertain in scope and discretionary in operation — that is, any rule except one invariably requiring or excusing demand — promotes litigation. When the stakes are high (as they frequently are in cases of this character), even a small disagreement between the parties about the application of a legal rule makes it diffiсult to resolve disagreements amicably.
A stronger rationale for the demand requirement is the one
Hawes
gives — that it allows directors to make a business decision about a business question: whether to invest the time and resources of the corporation in litigation.
Choosing between litigation and some other response may be difficult, depending on information unavailable to courts and a sense of the situation in which business executives are trained. Managers who make such judgment calls poorly ultimately give way to superior executives; no such mechanism “selects out” judges who try to make business decisions. In the long run firms are better off when business decisions are made by business specialists, even granting the inevitable errors. If principles such as the “business judgment rule” preserve room for managers to err in making an operational decision, so too they preserve room to err in deciding what remedies to pursue.
United Copper Securities Co. v. Amalgamated Copper Co.,
Consider now why plaintiffs may resist making demand, (a) Delay in starting the litigation while the board ponders may injure the firm, perhaps because the statute of limitations is about to expire, perhaps because a questionable transaction is about to occur and it will be hard to unscramble the eggs if it happens before the court can act. (b) Demand may be futile, in the sense that the members of the board are interested in the transaction and unwilling to sue themselves, or because they are so set against litigation that their minds are closed, (c) Demand may be pointless, in the sense that a substantive rule prevents the corporation from controlling the litigation. Fox held that only an investor or the SEC may initiate litigation under § 36(b), and it followed from the firm’s inability to file its own case or prevent the investor from litigating that demand was unnecessary. Other statutes likewise may eliminate the point of making demand, (d) Demand may sometimes be imprudent from the plaintiffs perspective. Counsel who fear that the board will sue may hesitate before making a demand, beсause if the firm sues counsel will not reap the legal fees of victory. Or counsel may think that the board will pursue a strategy in litigation that his client disapproves, or settle for too little.
We will return to these four. Perhaps the most serious difficulty with demand from the perspective of plaintiffs is the link between the making of demand and the standard courts apply to the directors’ decision not to sue. In Delaware, the Mother Court of corporate law, any shareholder who makes a demand is deemed to concede that demand was required.
Spiegel v. Buntrock,
Federal courts have never embraced Delaware’s link between the making of a demand and special deference to the board’s decision not to sue. See
Bach v. National Western Life Insurance Co.,
Four reasons remain why demand may be inappropriate: (a) exigencies of time; (b) futility; (c) irrelevance given a substantive rule; (d) the risk that demand will lead to suit and so deprive counsel of fees that might have been obtained were it necessary to file a derivative suit. We may at once discard (d) as a legal excuse. Cases in categоry (c) obviously never require demand. Cases in category (a) justify filing the complaint before receiving the board’s answer to the demand but do not justify failure to make a demand. When time is tight, the investor should make demand at the same time he files the complaint. See
Delaware & Hudson Co. v. Albany & Susquehanna R.R.,
At least in principle the rationale of the demand requirement implies a futility exception. If courts would not respect the directors’ decision not to file suit, then demand would be an empty formality. When all directors have a financial stake in the transaction, their decision not to sue themselves would carry little weight with a court. Or perhaps all of the directors are so ensnarled in the transaction that even when only the duty of care is аt stake, their judgment could not be respected. Again demand seems an empty gesture. Courts dispense with futile gestures.
“In principle” is an important qualifier. In practice the futility exception to the demand rule has produced gobs of litigation. It is this exception that has sapped the potential role of the demand requirement as an alternative dispute resolution mechanism. Hundreds of cases opine on whether demand is or is not futile. Difficulties in sorting cases into demand-required and demand-excused bins are not worth incurring, once we sever the link between demand and the standard of review (as we have done). The American Law Institute recommends that courts abolish the “futility” exception to the demand rule, turning demand into an exhaustion requirement with much the same scope and function as the exhaustion requirement in the law of collateral review of criminal convictions. Principles of Corporate Governance §§ 7.03, 7.08, and commentary at 64-71 (Tent. Draft No. 8,1988). “The futility exception ... [is] аmbiguous in scope and has proven a prodigious generator of litigation.” Id. at 64. The time has come to do away with it. If demand is useful, then let the investor make one; if indeed futile, the board’s response will establish that soon enough. In either case, the litigation may proceed free of arguments about whether a demand should have been made in the first place. The virtue of simplification may be seen by considering three of the common battles about the meaning of “futility”.
1. The plaintiff may say that some or all of the members of the board approved or are interested in the transaction and that demand is futile because they will not sue themselves or contest their own acts. Although directors are unlikely to sue themselves, they may well take some ac *1345 tion to palliate the consequences of poorly conceived acts, including their own. Directors want the venture to succeed, and if shown how they can improve its prospects, are likely to act. One mistake at the time of the initial decision does not imply that the member of the board opposes remedial action. Even when the “action” involves suit against some of their number, this does not disable the board. The ALI properly observes, id. at 70-71, that the board may appoint a minority of disinterested members to evaluate the demand and act for the corporation. In the extreme case in which all members are implicated, the board may expand its size and authorize the new members to act for the firm. Of course it may choose to do none of these things, but if so it will just decline the demand. Making a demand is cheap, especially so when the board is disabled from acting. Why prefer extended, costly litigation to the cheap and quick expedient of a demand?
2. The board may be determined not to sue. Perhaps by the time the judge comes to consider whether plaintiff should have made a demand, the defendant will have moved to dismiss the case on the merits. Any demand in such a case would be doomed to failure, and even at an earlier stage it may be transparent that the directors want nothing to do with litigation. This application of the “futility” exception has both a practical and a conceptual difficulty. The practical one is that it is difficult to tell in advance just what position the firm would take if asked; disputes about the demand requirement usually are resolved before the defendants plead to the merits. It is easy for the plaintiffs to say (and for the defendants to deny) that the board has a closed mind; it is much harder to tell who is right.
The conceptual difficulty is that even an adamant unwillingness to sue may reflect the merits. Boards ought not pursue silly or frivolous claims. So certain knowledge that the board is unwilling to authorize litigation may reflect only confidence that the case is feeble or injurious to the firm and other investors. Why should the plaintiffs be authorized to sue, and without so much as a request to the board, just because the complaint is all heat and no light? Once more the ALI hit the nail on the head when observing that a formulation of the futility rule that inquires whether a demand would prompt the board to correct a wrong “assumes that there is a wrong to be corrected. The director’s antagonism to an action may well be justified and flow from a sound judgment that the action is either not meritorious or would otherwise subject the corporation to serious injury.” Id. at 69. A decision not to file a weak lawsuit would be protected by the business judgment rule, so it makes perfect sense to ask for the board’s perspective.
3. A plaintiff may insist that even the independent directors are toadies, so that their judgment could not be respected. Perhaps they are friends of the putative defendants; perhaps they draw hefty directors’ fees and fear loss of their offices if they authorize suit; рerhaps they believe that the courts have no business supervising corporate affairs and would not authorize litigation no matter how meritorious (and no matter how little their regard for holding onto their offices). If demand is futile in fact for any of these reasons, then the board will say no with dispatch and the case may proceed. As we have broken the link between the demand and the standard of review, the plaintiff may employ this arsenal of arguments to argue that the decision not to sue ought not be respected; the board will stand on the business judgment rule. The court will resolve the question on the merits rather than trying to treat it as a procedural hurdle. Framing questions about the independence of the directors as exceptions to the demand requirement diverts attention from the real issues.
Kamen’s complaint pursues all three of these arguments for futility and has all the weaknesses we have identified. Courts frequently say that consideratiоns of this sort do not demonstrate futility. The district court’s able opinion collects many of the holdings,
Recent cases in several circuits display impatience with the futility exception and have been creative in denying that a demand would be futile even when it is pellucid that the board is not about to authorize a suit. E.g.,
Lewis v. Graves,
Two decisions,
Doctor v. Harrington,
Doctor
raised the question whether the corporation should be aligned as a plaintiff or a defendant for purposes of diversity jurisdiction. The firm is a defendant to the extent the investor complains that it failed to bring suit; it is a plaintiff to the extent that the derivative suit may end in an order compelling the wrongdoers to pay money to the corporation.
Doctor
holds that the firm should be aligned as a defendant when the board is so hostile to the investors that demand would be futile; otherwise it should be aligned as a plaintiff. Many people (including the Supreme Court in
Susquehanna,
Susquehanna
interprets old Equity Rule 94, which codified the holding of
Hawes.
Rule 94 required demand, leaving no (apparent) room for exceptions.
Susquehanna
holds that the rule was not so inflexible. This
holding
is of no consequence; Rule 94 is no longer with us, having been amended many times in the course of the transformation to Rule 23.1. See
Fox,
We conclude that precedent does not prevent us from holding that claims of futility should be tested by
making
the demand rather than by arguing about hypotheticals. If the firm declines to sue, the court can decide whether the board’s decision is entitled to respect under state corporate law, which applies in light of the holding of
Burks.
See also
Pepper v. Litton,
Abolition of the futility exception calls into question our holdings in
Thornton
and
Nussbacher. Thornton
was a suit under ERISA, and the court extensively discussed the policies behind ERISA before deciding that demand would be futile. It may be that
Thornton,
like
Fox,
illustrates our category (c): Demand is not required when under substantive law the board may neither control nor prevent litigation. That question must be left for another day.
Nussbacher,
on the other hand, was founded squarely on the futility exception. The panel held that demand was excused because it was clear from the defendants’ motion to dismiss the suit on the merits that demand would have been futile,
II
After Fox the demand requirement of Rule 23.1 does not apply to a claim under § 36(b). The Court held that § 36(b) creates a right of action that only the investor and the SEC may рursue. Because the mutual fund may not assert a claim against the investment adviser under § 36(b), the Court reasoned, Rule 23.1— which applies only to suits “brought ... to enforce a right of the corporation ..., the corporation ... having failed to enforce a right which may properly be asserted by it” — does not call for a demand on the directors to file suit. What is the point of dunning the directors, if under the statute they may not sue? Our holding with respect to the need for a demand under § 20(a) therefore does not affect the claim under § 36(b).
A
Judge Aspen dismissed the claim under § 36(b) on the basis of Magistrate Balog’s conclusion that Kamen is not an adequate representative of other investors in the Fund. Rule 23.1 requires adequacy: “The derivative action may not be maintained if it appears that the plaintiff does not fairly and adequately represent the interests of *1348 the shareholders or members similarly situated in enforcing the right of the corporation or associаtion.” Yet the very statement of the adequate-representation requirement repeats the theme that Rule 23.1 is limited to suits in which an investor seeks to enforce a corporate right. Rule 23.1 imposes hurdles, including both the pleading requirement and the adequate-representation requirement, before a court will strip the directors of their entitlement to manage the affairs of the corporation, including their right to control the pursuit or compromise of its legal claims. Fox holds that a claim under § 36(b) is not a claim “of the corporation”, and it follows that Rule 23.1 is inapplicable. Demand requirements and adequate-representation requirements go hand in glove. If the claim under § 36(b) is really the investor’s personal claim, it is unimportant whether Ka-men “adequately” represents other investors. Under the statute, she need represent no one.
Kemper relies on footnote 11 of
Fox,
It follows that Rule 23.1 does not apply to an action brought by a shareholder under § 36(b) of the Investment Company Act and that the plaintiff in such a case need not first make a demand upon the fund’s directors before bringing suit.
If Rule 23.1 does not require adequate representation, defendants maintain, then the due process clause of the fifth amendment must. Due process requires adequate representation, though, only when the plaintiff is
representing
someone else. A judgment in a class action will bind persons who are not before the court. Before resolving the legal entitlements of missing persons, the court must ensure that they have an effective voice.
Hansberry v. Lee,
Rules 19 and 24 are designed for such cases. Rule 19 allows and sometimes requires the joinder of persons who will be affected by a judgment; Rule 24 allows intervention. Defendants do not maintain that Rule 19 requires the joinder of other investors. Rule 24 may allow them to intervene on the other side to argue for or against Kemper’s management fees.
Bethune Plaza, Inc. v. Lumpkin,
B
At all events, Kamen is no less adequate a representative than are most plaintiffs in class actions. Securities actions, like many suits under Rule 23, are lawyers’ vehicles. Investors diversify their holdings, so it is no surprise that Kamen, like most plaintiffs in securities cases, does not hold very much stock in the defendants and has delegated the investigation and prosecution of the suit to counsel. Class actions are valuable precisely because they allow the vindication of claims too small to prosecute individually but worth litigating in the aggregate. See
In re American Reserve Corp.,
Magistrate Balog’s conclusion that Ka-men has only a private grievance misses the point. Kamen is not trying to get even because she bears a grudge — say, because a member of the Fund’s board trampled her petunias. She seeks a higher rate of return on her investment. So do all other shareholders in the Fund. It may well be that most other shareholders believe that the Fund’s special services are worth the 0.2% cost, but shareholders have a common interest in ensuring that the Fund pays Kemper no more than the extra services are worth. Commonality of interest is the essence of adequate representation.
Sosna v. Iowa,
Given that Kamen and other investors win or lose together, the adequacy of her representation (more realistically, of her lawyer’s) matters if the suit is strong. Suppose the Fund has a well-grounded claim against Kemper for $40 million in excessive fees. A feeble litigant, or one willing to sell out for satisfaction of her personal claim, would injure other investors in the Fund by extinguishing the claim against Kemper without producing its full value for the Fund. Other investors therefore could be worried that the first one to step forward and sue will be insufficiently vigorous, or have divided loyalties. No suсh investor has appeared to complain that Kamen will do too little for them, and neither the Fund nor Kemper seems worried that Kamen will under-prosecute this suit. Why is it that the defendants insist that the plaintiff is a poor representative of the other stockholders? Perhaps defendants fear that Kamen will be too vigorous?
Defendants’ principal fear is not of inadequate representation but of legal error— that a court playing rate regulator may think the fees excessive even when they are not. Such a mistake would injure all investors, and the injury would fall more heavily on investors other than Kamen who use the sweeps and redemption services the Fund provides. Kamen would find other *1350 money market funds suited to her passive investment strategy; active investors would be especially aggrieved by a cutback in services. In this sense, even though Kamen’s interests are the same as those of other investors — all want the Fund to pay no more than the markеt price for the services Kemper renders — Kamen has less to fear from an error and therefore is not the optimal champion. Still, such differences in incentives pervade class actions. Even if the members of the class were perfectly homogeneous (they never are), the representative’s small stake might lead her to settle for too little or to press arguments that favored her position (or her attorney’s) at the potential expense of those she represents. See Kenneth W. Dam, Class Actions: Efficiency, Compensation, Deterrence, and Conflict of Interest, 4 J. Legal Studies 47 (1975); Andrew Rosenfield, An Empirical Test of Class-Action Settlement, 5 J. Legal Studies 113 (1976). Agency costs of this kind, even when coupled with differential sensitivity to error costs, are not the same as concrete conflict of interest between the “representative” and other members of the class. They inhere in representative actions. The real bogies, the costs of defense and the risk of error, haunt аll litigation. False positives and the potential for self-serving conduct are endemic to the system under § 36(b); the costs of legal error in regulating prices are attributable to the existence of § 36(b) and not to the selection of Ka-men as a plaintiff.
Although the investors by majority vote approved Kemper’s fees in 1986, the vote was not unanimous. Of the 5.3 billion shares of the Fund’s money market portfolio in 1986, 2.97 billion were voted at the meeting (almost all by proxy). Approximately 2.44 billion were voted for the management agreement, 364 million against, and 169 million abstaining. The contract was ratified, then, by 82% of the shares present at the meeting, although only 46% of the outstanding shares. These figures do not suggest that Kamen is in a teensy minority; she had as of 1986 the company of the holders of 364 million shares of the Fund. Section 36(b)(2) provides that investors’ approval of a management fee should inform the court’s judgment on the merits; it does not imply that approval foreclosеs suit by one of the dissenters — if it did, § 36(b) would be dead, for all fees challenged under the statute have been approved by the investors at one or another time. So, too, it is not disposi-tive that none of the other investors has intervened to support Kamen's suit. Many a class action proceeds with a single representative; conservation on the number of litigants is a virtue of the device. Even if this were a case in which the plaintiff must represent others “adequately”, then, Ka-men would be a proper plaintiff.
Ill
Because the action may proceed under § 36(b), we need to decide whether Kamen is entitled to a jury trial in the event there are disputed issues of material fact. Judge Nordberg held not, following
In re Evangelist,
Novel statutes such as § 36(b), establishing requirements and procedures that Fox repeatedly called “unique”, do not fit well into a constitutional framework requiring the rights to jury trial as of 1791 to be “preserved”. Federal courts abolished the distinction between law and equity with the adoption of the Rules of Civil Procedure in 1938, and changes in both the nature of legal rights and the preferred remedies make it difficult to reconstruct what our forbears would have seen as “common law”. See Douglas G. Baird, The Seventh Amendment and Jury Trials in Bankruptcy, 1989 Sup.Ct.Rev. 261. No rights comparable to those of § 36(b) existed two centuries ago; the closest equitable action dealt with corporate “waste” and not with *1351 determining whether prices are reasonable. Although enforcing fiduciary duties was equitable in English practice, awarding damages was a job for a common law court. Squeezing a hybrid action into one category or the other is bound to cause friction. Recognizing that no answer can be wholly satisfactory, and not wanting to add unnecessarily to the clutter of opinions on the subject, we adopt both the holding and rationale of Evangelist.
One case postdating the First and Second Circuits’ decisions calls for comment.
Teamsters Local No. 391 v. Terry,
— U.S. -,
Although any prediction is hazardous, we conclude that the Court would think an action under § 36(b) equitable under the analysis it used in
Terry.
Seven Justices accepted the proposition, central to cases such as
Evangelist,
that “an action by a trust beneficiary against a trustee for a breach of fiduciary duty” is equitable because it was “within the exclusive jurisdiction of the courts of equity” in 1791.
The analogy between the union’s duty and a trustee’s broke down in Terry because the union was supposed to be enforcing a contract, and the claim against the union depended on proof that the employer broke its contract. The remedy, although measured by pay lost, came from the union rather than the employer, which made it loоk more like damages than restitution. An action under § 36(b), quite unlike the action for a breach of the duty of fair representation, is one to annul a contract rather than to enforce it. Reformation or cancellation of a contract was equitable in 1791 and until the distinction between law and equity broke down in this century. Restitution under § 36(b) comes from the party that received the benefits, which further separates this case from Terry. Four different opinions in Terry, advocating four different approaches to the constitutional question, render parlous any predictions. Nonetheless, the combination of a fiduciary duty with a restitutionary remedy in § 36(b) continues to put this statute on the equitable side of the constitutional line.
The judgment of the district court is affirmed in part, reversed in part, and remanded for further proceedings on the claim under § 36(b).
Notes
Because this decision overrules an opinion of this court, it was circulated before release to all judges in active service. See Circuit Rule 40(f). No judge voted to hear the case in banc.
