OPINION AND ORDER
Bеfore the Court are a large number of related actions arising from the huge losses experienced by Merrill Lynch & Co., Inc. (“Merrill”) as a result of its aggressive investment in collateralized debt obligations and similar mortgage-backed securities. The actions were originally assigned to the Honorable Leonard B. Sand, who divided most of the actions into three
This leaves, inter alia, the derivative actions, which consist of the consolidated lawsuit known as the Derivative Action, 07 Civ. 9696 and the later-filed action, Lambrecht v. O’Neal, 08 Civ. 6582. Bоth actions are brought by persons who, at the time of filing, were Merrill shareholders who sought to recover on behalf of the company from Merrill executives and board members who had allegedly breached their fiduciary duties, wasted corporate assets, and the like, all in violation of Delaware law. The difference between the two actions is that the plaintiffs in the Derivative Action did not make a demand on the Merrill board that it proceed with the action, whereas the plaintiff in Lam-brecht did make such a demand, which the Merrill board rejected.
Although the various defendants seek to dismiss both of the pending derivative actions on a variety of grounds, they all move to dismiss the actions on the ground that, as a result of the acquisition of Merrill by Bank of America in a stock-fоr-stock transaction, the plaintiffs are no longer Merrill shareholders and therefore lack standing to pursue these derivative actions as filed.
The primary issue presented by this motion is whether Delaware law or what plaintiffs call “federal common law” should determine standing to bring a derivative action against a Delaware corporation in federal court. Perhaps predictably, Delaware law takes the view that “[а] plaintiff who ceases to be a shareholder, whether by reason of a merger or for any other reason, loses standing to continue a derivative suit.” Lewis v. Anderson,
Federal courts have also rigorously applied this “continuing ownership” rule. See, e.g., In re Countrywide Fin. Corp. Deriv. Litig.,
One of the many reasons for not following Blasband is that the Delaware courts have themselves clearly stated the two circumstancеs in which the rule of Lewis v. Anderson admits of exception: “(i) if the merger itself is the subject of a claim of fraud, being perpetrated merely to deprive shareholders of the standing to bring a derivative action; or (ii) if the merger is in reality merely a reorganization which does not affect plaintiffs ownership in the business enterprise.” Lewis v. Ward,
Plaintiffs’ primary argument, however, is that “federal common law,” rather than Delaware law, should govern the question of standing to bring a derivative action against a Delaware company in federal court, even where, as here, all the claims asserted in the two derivative complaints are for violations of Delawаre law. In the plaintiffs’ view, the matter of standing in such circumstances is “procedural”
In support of their contention that standing in this context is no more than procedural in nature, plaintiffs cite nо case or treatise but simply point to the requirements of Rule 23.1 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure. But that rule merely states the minimum that must be pleaded to bring a derivative action in federal court ( — Delaware, indeed, has a virtually identical rule — ) and nowhere purports to set forth the requirements of standing to bring such an action. By contrast, evеn Blasband, the case most relied on by plaintiffs, recognizes that state law governs the issue of standing to bring a derivative action against a state-chartered corporatiоn. The Court concludes that Delaware law governs the issue of standing presented by the instant motion.
It follows from the foregoing that none of the plaintiffs presently has standing to рursue either of the derivative actions against Merrill now pending in this Court. It remains only to address plaintiffs’ fallback request that, rather than dismiss the actions now, the Court stay its decision until such time, at a minimum, as the Bank of America responds to Lambrecht’s pending demand or otherwise evidences that making such a demand is futile. The Court declines to do so, however, since the Bank of America board is altogether different from the Merrill board and should be allowed to make its determination free from the pressure of pending litigation. Having so determined, however, the Court notes that its dismissal is without prejudice to plaintiffs’ filing with this Court, if and when they have standing, a renewed action, recast as a derivative action аgainst Bank of America, or as a so-called “double derivative” action, or otherwise, but based on the same underlying allegations as the actions here dismissed.
For the fоregoing reasons, defendants’ motion to dismiss actions 07 Civ. 9696 and 08 Civ. 6582 for lack of standing is hereby granted. Clerk to enter judgment dismissing the actions without prejudice to refiling in the circumstances stаted above.
SO ORDERED.
Notes
. In January, 2009, Lambrecht made a demand on the Bank of America board, which, however, has not yet responded to the demand.
. Although the Court heard argument on Jаnuary 20, 2009 on the defendants' other grounds for moving to dismiss, the Court’s conclusion that the plaintiffs lack standing makes it unnecessary for the Court to reach any of the other issues at this time.
. The Third Circuit in Blasband conceded that neither of these exceptions applied to the derivative action brought there, see Blasband at 1041-42, which is why the court fell back on "equitable principles.”
. As noted above, the Court expresses no opinion on whether those allegations are sufficient to survive á motion to dismiss under Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(b)(6).
