On Petition for Rehearing.
Plaintiff Joel R. Gaff, a shareholder of a now insolvent banking institution, brought suit against the institution and two of its officers. In amended Count V of his complaint, Gaff sought to assert three sets of claims in his individual capacity as a shareholder: (1) federal claims arising under the federal banking laws; (2) federal claims arising under the federal securities laws; and (3) pendent state law claims. The district court dismissed amended Count V in its entirety and Gaff appealed to this court. In an opinion reported at
I.
Because the petition for rehearing is limited to Part IV of our opinion, we will focus primarily on the factual background pertinent to Part IV, namely, the circumstances surrounding the state law claims asserted by Gaff. Gaff and another plaintiff 1 filed a consolidated complaint in state court setting forth five counts. Counts I-IV contained shareholder derivative actions while Count V purported to be a shareholders’ class action brought directly by Gaff as representative of a class of persons owning stock in the National Bank and Trust Company of Traverse City (NBT). In Count V, Gaff alleged that two of NBT’s officers, David Pearce and Bruce Mann, had breached their fiduciary duty owed to NBT’s shareholders when they engineered several stock transactions intended to insulate their positions in and control over NBT. Gaff alleged that false and misleading materials were distributed to shareholders as part of those transactions and that the transactions resulted in violation of the shareholders’ suffrage rights. For relief, Gaff sought: (1) a declaratory judgment that Pearce and Mann breached their fiduciary duty; (2) a declaratory judgment that the preemptive rights of the shareholders were violated; (3) an award of damages “in such amount as the court shall deem appropriate”; (4) an accounting to determine the amount of damages sustained by the shareholders in the value of their stock; and (5) other relief deemed appropriate.
After NBT was declared insolvent, the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) was appointed receiver and removed the consolidated action to federal district court. The FDIC in its corporate capacity then moved to intervene in the case, dismiss Gaff as a party plaintiff, and *1147 stay the proceedings. Defendants Pearce and Mann subsequently moved to dismiss Count V of Gaff’s complaint on the ground that it was merely a derivative action for injuries sustained by NBT, as opposed to a direct shareholder action for injuries sustained personally by the individual shareholders.
The district court granted the FDIC’s motion to intervene but denied the motions to dismiss. Instead, the court stayed the derivative counts of Gaff’s action, Counts I-IV, thus enabling the FDIC to pursue without interference the actions on behalf of NBT while still retaining Gaff as a party pending resolution of the claims. Instead of dismissing Count V, the court granted Gaff leave to amend that count.
Gaff subsequently filed his amended Count V, in which he raised for the first time allegations that Pearce and Mann violated federal banking and securities laws. Gaff also reasserted his state law claims, alleging that certain conduct of Pearce and Mann: “(i) constituted a breach of their fiduciary duty to the stockholders (ii) constituted fraud, deceit and misrepresentation [and] (iii) constituted a violation of the corporate suffrage rights of the stockholders.” For relief, Gaff sought essentially the same declaratory and monetary awards requested previously.
Defendants Pearce and Mann again moved to dismiss Gaff’s amended Count V for failure to state a claim upon which relief could be granted. Defendants argued, as they had before, that the claims asserted in Count V were merely derivative in nature and were not maintainable by a shareholder as a direct cause of action. Defendants premised their argument on the lack of allegations of personal injury to Gaff, as distinguished from harm to the corporate entity.
The district court initially denied the motion to dismiss but upon reconsideration granted the motion on the ground that Gaff lacked standing to assert the claims in a direct cause of action. The court primarily focused on the claims arising under the federal banking acts and the standing provisions of those acts, particularly § 53 of the National Bank Act, 12 U.S.C. § 93. Applying Sixth Circuit precedent, the court concluded that shareholders may bring direct causes of action under § 93 but only if they have sustained a personal, direct injury separate and distinct from injuries occurring to the corporate entity as a whole. The court found that the only injury alleged by Gaff with respect to the alleged violations of the banking laws was the diminution in the value of his stock and that such injury represented direct harm only to the corporation itself; consequently, the harm to Gaff was derivative in nature. Since Gaff had failed to allege sufficient direct injury, the court held that he had no standing to bring his federal banking claims under § 93.
The court also found that Gaff lacked standing to pursue his federal securities claims because he had not alleged sufficient personal injury. The court observed that a violation of the securities laws causes personal injury to an individual only if that individual purchases or sells stock in connection with the violation. Since Gaff had done neither, he lacked the requisite standing to bring a personal action for violation of the federal securities laws.
The court did not expressly address Gaff’s pendent state law claims. However, since the court dismissed amended Count V in its entirety, it necessarily exercised jurisdiction over the state claims and dismissed them, along with the federal claims, with prejudice.
Gaff pursued a timely appeal to this court which we initially resolved by our decision filed on March 20, 1987. We first addressed the district court’s rejection of Gaff’s federal banking law claims and, upon concluding that Gaff had alleged insufficient personal injury to provide him with standing under 12 U.S.C. § 93, we upheld the dismissal of those claims.
We also upheld the district court’s dismissal of Gaff’s federal securities law claims for lack of standing. We held that a plaintiff asserting a damages claim based on a violation of the federal securities laws must be either a purchaser or seller of securities in connection with the alleged violation and, finding that plaintiff was neither, we concluded that he lacked standing to redress any securities law violation. Id. at 318-19.
We lastly addressed the district court’s dismissal of Gaff’s pendent state law claims and ultimately held that the court erred in dismissing those claims. We noted that in order to have dismissed the claims with prejudice, the court had to have exercised pendent jurisdiction over the claims. Mindful of the Supreme Court’s pronouncements in
United Mine Workers v. Gibbs,
II.
The FDIC in its brief supporting its petition for rehearing, asserts that the district court properly exercised jurisdiction over Gaff's state claims and, once doing so, correctly dismissed the claims on their merits. The FDIC raises several grounds for the first proposition, which we consider below. Although the district court did not expressly address either of these propositions or the arguments asserted by the FDIC, this does not necessarily preclude our consideration of the FDIC’s arguments. It is well settled that when a trial court reaches the correct result the appellate court may properly affirm on any ground, even one not relied on by the lower court.
See Helvering v. Gowran,
A. Exercise of Jurisdiction
The FDIC presents several different theories for holding that the district court properly exercised jurisdiction over the state law claims. The FDIC first argues that the court had an independent basis for exercising jurisdiction over the claims pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1348. Section 1348 provides that “district courts shall have original jurisdiction of ... any civil action to wind up the affairs of any [national banking] association.” The FDIC interprets this provision as granting jurisdiction over any civil action which “affects the liquidation of an insolvent national bank.”
Stevens v. Lowder,
We disagree. Gaff’s state claims do not present an action for winding up the affairs of NBT, as required by § 1348. Instead, the claims seek to redress injuries allegedly resulting from actions taken by several of NBT’s officers prior to NBT’s insolvency. As such, the claims are wholly unrelated to NBT’s liquidation, or transactions arising from it, and therefore do not constitute an action under § 1348.
See Connolly v. First Nat’l Bank,
Furthermore, the case relied upon by the FDIC in urging us to reach the opposite conclusion is inapposite. In
Stevens v. Lowder,
Plaintiffs’ claim that defendants committed fraud in connection with the purchase of [the insolvent bank’s] assets is properly within the scope of winding up the affairs of the bank. Viewing defendants’ activities in relation to [the bank] as a whole, the district court correctly held that this action arises out of [the bank’s] insolvency and the purchase and assumption of [the bank’s] assets and liabilities by defendants’ bank. As such, this is an action to wind up the affairs of a national banking association, and the district court properly exercised its jurisdiction upon removal.
Id. at 1080 (citation omitted). The circumstances of the present appeal are clearly distinguishable from those in Stevens, inasmuch as the activities which comprise the basis for Gaff’s claims transpired before NBT’s insolvency and did not occur in connection with any liquidation of NBT or sale of its assets. As a result, Gaff’s claims did not “arise out of” NBT’s insolvency. We believe, as shown in Stevens, that this is the pertinent inquiry for determining whether a specific case is an action to wind up the affairs of an insolvent national bank. Since Gaff’s claims do not arise out of NBT’s insolvency, the district court could not have exercised jurisdiction over the claims pursuant to § 1348.
The FDIC’s second argument is that Gaff’s state claims are pendent to either or both of (1) the derivative counts of Gaff’s complaint which the district court is holding in abeyance, or (2) the FDIC’s claims. The FDIC observes that both sets of claims are currently pending before the district court, contends that both sets of claims arise out of the same common nucleus of operative fact as Gaff’s state claims, and concludes that it was proper for the district court to have exercised jurisdiction over the state claims.
We find this argument persuasive. As noted in our prior opinion, “[t]he three prerequisites for the existence of pendent jurisdiction are (1) the federal claim must
*1150
have substance sufficient to confer subject matter jurisdiction on the court; (2) the state and federal claims must derive from a common nucleus of operative fact; and (3) the plaintiff’s claims are such that he would ordinarily be expected to try them all in one judicial proceeding.”
Transcontinental Leasing, Inc. v. Michigan Nat’l Bank,
All suits of a civil nature at common law or in equity to which the Corporation shall be a party shall be deemed to arise under the laws of the United States, and the United States district courts shall have original jurisdiction thereof, without regard to the amount in controversy; and the Corporation may, without bond or security, remove any such action, suit, or proceeding from a State court to the United States district court for the district or division embracing the place where the same is pending by following any procedure for removal now or hereafter in effect____
Since the derivative counts are “deemed to arise under the laws of the United States,” they are essentially federal claims over which the district court exercised federal jurisdiction.
See In re Franklin Nat'l Bank Securities Litigation,
In light of this conclusion, the general rule of
Gibbs
simply does not come into play. That is, since we have found that the district court did not dismiss all of the federal issues to which Gaff’s state claims could be pendent, there is no need to consider whether or not the court needed to follow the general rule favoring dismissal of pendent state claims when all federal claims are dismissed before trial. We therefore decline to address the FDIC’s alternative argument that the circumstances of this case warrant departure from the general rule.
See Province v. Cleveland Press Publishing Co.,
B. Dismissal on the Merits
Having concluded that the court properly exercised jurisdiction over the state claims, we must now consider whether the court correctly dismissed those claims. The FDIC argues that it did, relying primarily on the statements in our previous opinion concerning the general corporate law principles that a shareholder has no personal right of action to redress injuries sustained solely by the shareholder’s corporation, that diminution in the value of corporate stock constitutes a direct injury only to the corporation, and that a shareholder can only pursue derivatively an action based on a diminution in the value of corporate stock. Applying these principles to Gaff’s federal claims, we concluded that he had not alleged any viable damages aside from the decrease in the value of his stock and *1151 therefore he lacked standing to bring direct causes of action for violations of the federal banking or securities laws. The FDIC urges us to use the same analysis and also conclude that Gaff lacked standing to pursue his state law claims. The FDIC also relies on our rejection of Gaffs allegations that he sustained personal injury by being deprived of preemptive rights.
On the record before us, we are unable to sustain the dismissal of the state law claims. We noted earlier that the district court did not expressly address the state claims asserted by Gaff, but merely dismissed amended Count V in its entirety. We therefore have no findings on the merits to review. We also have no basis to conclude, as the FDIC does in its petition for reconsideration, that the district court “dismissed the state law claims for the identical reasons that the federal claims were dismissed, namely, lack of standing to sue directly.” There are simply no findings supporting this conclusion. Absent such findings, we cannot determine whether Gaffs allegations fail to state a claim under state law which he can pursue as a direct cause of action. One problem preventing us from making such a determination is Gaffs allegations that Pearce and Mann breached their fiduciary duty owed to NBT’s minority shareholders, including Gaff. Under Michigan law, directors and officers of a corporation owe a fiduciary duty to the corporation’s shareholders.
Berman v. Gerber Products Co.,
Accordingly, we VACATE Part IV of our prior opinion and REMAND the state claims raised in amended Count V for further consideration on their merits.
Notes
. The other plaintiff is not a party to the instant appeal.
. We believe it is not significant for jurisdictional purposes that the district court has stayed amended Counts I through IV, since the court still has jurisdiction over those claims.
. The same analysis and conclusions are equally applicable with respect to the FDIC’s claims currently pending before the district court.
See FDIC
v.
Otero,
. Of course, this holding does not imply that Gaffs state claims cannot he dismissed before trial. We merely require some analysis and findings at the trial court level before reviewing any possible dismissal.
