*522 OPINION
The question for determination is whether plaintiff’s motion to further “amend” 1 her amended complaint (hereinafter “complaint”) to allege a “new cause of action” 1 should be granted over the objection of both the corporate defendant Livingston Oil Company (hereinafter “Oil Company”) and Julius Livingston, the individual defendant. To put this question in proper focus requires a recitation of certain prior proceedings in the case.
The complaint was filed on July 27, 1965. It alleges that plaintiff is and since August 13, 1964 has been the owner of common stock of the Oil Company and that Livingston is its president and director. Neither the residence nor citizenship of plaintiff is alleged, but for purposes of the present motion she will be deemed to be a resident and citizen of Delaware. 2 The Oil Company is alleged to be a Delaware corporation, Livingston, a non-resident of Delaware, and the amount in controversy to exceed $10,000, exclusive of interest and costs. Jurisdiction was acquired over Livingston’s property by sequestration pursuant to Delaware law and Rule 4(e).
The complaint contains two counts denominated Claims I and. II. Claim I is based upon § 16(b) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, 15 U.S.C. § 78p(b) whereunder plaintiff seeks to recover for the Oil Company an alleged profit made by Livingston as a result of the purchase and sale within six months of Oil Company stock. Jurisdiction is based upon § 27 of the Act, 15 U.S.C. § 78aa.
Claim II purports to be brought derivatively on behalf of Oil Company, and to allege a common law cause of action based upon a breach of fiduciary duty by Livingston in selling stock of Oil Company with inside information that a decline in earnings would be shown in its next published earning report. The sale involved in Claim II is the same as that alleged in Claim I.
On August 10,1965 Livingston entered a general appearance and thereby obtained a release of his sequestered property.
On September 10, 1965 Livingston moved to dismiss Claim II because of its failure to contain any allegation which even attempted to comply with Rule 23 (b). Before the motion was acted upon, an order was entered on September 13, 1965 by Wright, C. J. which granted plaintiff leave to file an amendment to Claim II. The amendment consisted of paragraph 27 which alleged that (1) it would have been futile for plaintiff to have demanded that the Board of Directors of Oil Company bring the action since a majority of the directors were controlled by Livingston, and (2) the rejection by the directors of plaintiff’s request to enforce Claim I by suit (alleged in the original complaint) was tantamount to a refusal to enforce Claim II.
On October 8, 1965 Livingston moved to dismiss the complaint, as amended, upon the ground, among others, that plaintiff failed to plead with particularity her efforts to induce corporate action or why it was not taken pursuant to her request. Before this motion was acted upon, plaintiff, on February 25, 1966, again moved to amend Claim II by adding paragraphs 28 and 29. These paragraphs alleged that on September 17, 1965 plaintiff made a demand upon the directors to prosecute Claim II, and that on February 9, 1966 the Board of Directors refused to do so. The allegations of paragraphs 28 and 29 were stated to be “alternative” to the futility of demand allegations of paragraph 27.
*523
On
April 22, 1966 an order was entered which denied plaintiff’s motion for leave to amend (actually to supplement) the complaint and dismissed Claim II, without prejudice, for failure to comply with Rule 23(b). This was for two reasons. The first was that the refusal of the directors to enforce Claim I was not deemed to be tantamount to a refusal to prosecute Claim II. The second reason was because the Court was of the view that since a condition precedent to plaintiff’s right to sue (demand and refusal of the directors to prosecute Claim II)
3
had not occurred before suit was begun, the deficiency could not be cured by events which post-dated the bringing of the action (Oral Opinion April 1, 1966). This latter conclusion was induced in part by the decision in United States for Use of Atkins v. Reiten,
On April 25, 1966, plaintiff filed her present motion seeking leave to file an “amended” complaint alleging a “new cause of action.” Except in form this amendment is no different than the amendment denied by the order of April 22, 1966. Once again Livingston moved to dismiss. Despite the Court’s earlier order of April 22, 1966, the Court determined to reconsider the matter.
The “amended complaint” which plaintiff seeks to file purports to supercede in its entirety Claim II as previously amended. In reality, it is simply a reiteration of Claim II, as amended pursuant to the order of September 13, 1965, plus allegations concerning the demand which plaintiff made upon the Oil Company to sue and its refusal to do so.
Since the demand and refusal took place after the action was begun, the motion is one to supplement the complaint under Rule 15(d), even though plaintiff labels it a motion to amend under Rule 15(a). United States v. L. D. Caulk Co.,
Rule 15(d) reads:
“Upon motion of a party the court may, upon reasonable notice and upon such terms as are just, permit him to serve a supplemental pleading setting forth transactions or occurrences or events which have happened since the date of the pleading sought to be supplemented. Permission may be granted even though the original pleading is defective in its statement of a claim for relief or defense. If the court deems it advisable that the adverse party plead to the supplemental pleading, it shall so order, specifying the time therefor.” (Italics supplied.)
The italicized words were inserted by the 1963 amendment. On their face they would appear to authorize the Court, in its discretion, to supplement Claim II with the allegations concerning plaintiff’s demand and the directors’ refusal to sue even though they took place after suit was begun.
Defendant argues, however, that plaintiff’s proposed supplemental pleading alleges a new cause of action based in part upon facts occurring after her original complaint was filed, and that Rule 15(d) was not intended to permit such a cause *524 of action to be pleaded. No such limitation is to be found in Rule 15(d) and no decision has been brought to the Court’s attention which so construes the Rule. But assuming that defendant’s interpretation of the Rule is valid, still it would have no bearing upon the instant case.
There is a well recognized distinction between a cause of action and a right of action. A cause of action is a legal wrong — the thing which becomes a ground for suit. A right of action, on the other hand, is a right presently to enforce a cause of action by suit. McMahon v. United States,
In the case of a stockholder’s derivative suit, the cause of action does not belong to the stockholder; it belongs to the corporation. The wrong which the suit seeks to redress is one which the corporation has sustained. 13 Fletcher Cyclopedia Corporation (Perm.Ed.), Vol. 13, § 5908, p. 361; see also Koster v. (American) Lumbermens Mutual Casualty Co.,
Thus it will be seen that from the time when plaintiff first filed her complaint, a common law cause of action was alleged on behalf of the Oil Company against Livingston based upon the charge that the latter had violated the fiduciary duty which he owed to the corporation by utilizing inside information to benefit himself. Under these circumstances, the fact that plaintiff was without standing to sue when suit was begun cannot deprive her of the right to allege in a supplemental complaint that after suit was instituted she complied with all conditions required to give her a right to sue. Analogous cases, some of which even antedated the 1963 amendment to Rule 15(d), support this view.
In United States for Use of Atkins v. Reiten, supra, plaintiff, who had not been paid for material and equipment furnished on a Government contract, brought suit on the payment bond under the Miller Act, 40 U.S.C. § 270a et seq. Section 270b (a) authorized such a suit where payment had not been made before the expiration of the period of ninety days after the date of last delivery of material. Plaintiff’s suit was begun before the ninety day period had expired. Later, plaintiff filed an “amended” complaint alleging that the ninety days period had passed and that he was still unpaid. The District Court dismissed the action stating that the passage of ninety days time from the date of last delivery was a “condition precedent” to the commencement of a suit (191 F.Supp. p. 866), and that plaintiff’s
“ * * * right to recovery against the surety depended upon its right at the inception of this suit and that the non-existence of a cause of action when the suit was started is a fatal defect which cannot be cured by the accrual of a cause of action pending suit.” (p. 867.)
This decision was reversed in United States for Use of Atkins v. Reiten, supra even though the Court construed the supplemental pleading as introducing “a cause of action not alleged in the original complaint and not in existence when the original complaint was filed.” (313 F.2d p. 674.) The Court noted that the statute of limitations had not run when the supplemental pleading was filed, (p. 675.)
In Security Insurance Co. of New Haven, Conn. v. United States, supra, the Court, relying in part upon the 1963 amendment to Rule 15(d), followed the rule announced in Reiten. It did this *525 despite the fact that when the supplemental complaint was filed the statute of limitations against the enforcement of the claim had run.
In Missouri, Kansas & Texas Ry. Co. v. Wulf,
Taken together, the three decisions last cited support the conclusion that when a cause of action exists at the time when the original complaint is filed, but at that time a plaintiff lacks standing to enforce it, a Court has the power to permit the plaintiff to file a supplemental pleading to establish his right to sue, by reasons of facts occurring after the suit was begun. 5 This interpretation of Rule 15(d) is not only consonant with its language, but also is in conformity with the general principle of interpretation prescribed by Rule 1 which mandates that the rules be construed so as to secure the just, speedy and inexpensive determination of every action.
Defendant argues that if plaintiff were to institute a new action this Court would not have subject matter jurisdiction because of an absence of diversity of citizenship. Hence, defendant argues that it is inequitable to permit plaintiff to file a supplemental complaint which will put her in a position to assert that the Court has pendant jurisdiction over Claim II because it is joined with the federal cause of action alleged in Claim I. A similar argument was made and rejected in Otis Elevator Co. v. 570 Building Corp.,
United States v. Fisher,
Townsend Corp. of America v. Davidson,
The motion of plaintiff “to amend the complaint” (actually to supplement the complaint) will be granted. In so ruling, the Court is not passing upon the question whether Claim II states a good cause of action or whether the Court has pendant jurisdiction of that claim.
Notes
. Plaintiff’s characterization.
. Plaintiff is the wife, so it has been stated, of the Delaware attorney who represents her. Throughout the proceedings thus far all parties have considered that she is a citizen of Delaware. If this is the fact, it should be alleged in an amendment which it is hoped the parties will stipulate to.
. Apparently the allegation of futility of demand because of director control was overlooked and was not acted upon by the Court. Now, by letter dated August 3, 1966, plaintiff asserts that the allegation “is no longer in the case.”
. Rev.Stat. § 954 et seq. provided that a District Court “may at any time permit either of the parties to amend any defect in the process or pleadings, upon such conditions as it shall, in its discretion and by its rules, prescribe.”
. This may be done, at least one Court has held, United States for Use of Atkins v. Reiten, supra, even though the supplemental pleading is construed to embody a new cause of action.
. 8 U.S.C. (Supp. II) § 1451(a) reads in part:
“It shall be the duty of the United States attorneys for the respective districts, upon affidavit showing good cause therefor, to institute proceedings * * * for the purpose of revoking and setting aside the order admitting such person to citizenship and cancelling the certificate of naturalization on the ground that such order and certificate of naturalization were illegally procured * * etc.
. The reason underlying the decisions was foretold by United States v. Zucca,
