This action was filed by a group of stockholders of Ono Development Company, Inc., and Ono East, Inc. ("the corporations"), on behalf of themselves and the other stockholders of the corporations, and, derivatively, on behalf of the corporations, against Pannell Kerr Forster, an independent certified public accounting firm and two of its CPA employees, to recover damages for breach of contract and fraud. The trial court entered a summary judgment for the defendants, and the plaintiffs appealed.1 We affirm.
The plaintiffs, all of whom voluntarily sold their stock back to the corporations while this action was pending, alleged that the defendants had failed to disclose in annual audits of the corporations that certain commissions were being improperly paid to and by three of the corporations' principal officers and directors; that, as a result of the defendants' actions, the corporations had been "deprived of the use of large sums of money over an approximate *144
10-year period"; and that the suit had been filed only after each corporation's board of directors had rejected a request that the corporation file suit to recover damages from the defendants.2 The defendants, relying primarily on Shelton v.Thompson,
In Shelton v. Thompson, supra, as in the present case, the plaintiffs filed both derivative and personal claims. InShelton, as here, the individual damages sought to be recovered by the plaintiffs were incident to their status as stockholders. In Shelton, this Court held:
"We affirm that portion of the summary judgment as it relates to the plaintiffs' claim on their own behalf. Whatever damages the plaintiffs may have suffered were incident to their status as stockholders; and whatever recovery may be effected by the derivative action inures to the benefit of all innocent stockholders and not to the plaintiff stockholders individually. Green v. Bradley Construction, Inc.,
(Ala. 1983); see, also, Stevens v. Lowder, 431 So.2d 1226 (5th Cir. 1981)." 643 F.2d 1078
This Court in Shelton also stated as follows:
"The defendants' first 'lack of standing' contention is that, as a matter of substantive law, once the plaintiffs lost their stockholder status in [the Bank of Lexington], they lost their standing to prosecute a derivative action. Unquestionably, this is the rule where, under ordinary circumstances, the stockholder voluntarily divests himself of any interest in the corporation. Of course, where a stockholder sells his stock, either to the corporation or to a third party, that stockholder, generally speaking, can not claim standing to maintain a derivative action on behalf of the corporation in which he no longer owns an interest. Green v. Bradley Construction, Inc., [
(Ala. 1983)]; see, also, Empire Realty Co. v. Harton, 431 So.2d 1226 , *145 176 Ala. 99 (1911) (holding that the plaintiff, who had surrendered his stock involuntarily as a consequence of a levy of execution, lost his standing to maintain a derivative suit)." 57 So. 763
For the foregoing reasons, we hold that the summary judgment was proper, and, therefore, that it is due to be affirmed. Because of our resolution of this question, we find it unnecessary to consider the defendants' argument that the summary judgment was proper based on the "business judgment rule," the application of which allows for deference to be given, under proper circumstances, to a decision of the board of directors of a corporation not to have the corporation file suit. See Roberts v. Alabama Power Co.,
AFFIRMED.
HORNSBY, C.J., and KENNEDY and INGRAM, JJ., concur.
MADDOX, J., concurs in the result.
