MEMORANDUM OPINION
I. FACTUAL BACKGROUND
Mount Vernon Savings and Loan Association (“Mount Vernon”) is a stock savings and loan association organized pursuant to the Virginia Savings and Loan Act, Va. Code § 6.1-195.1 et seq. Its activities are regulated by the Virginia State Corporation Commission, the Federal Home Loan Bank Board, and the Federal Savings and Loan Insurance Corporation. Mount Vernon’s principal place of business is Arlington, Virginia.
Reilly Mortgage Group (“Reilly”) is a District of Columbia Corporation with its principal place of business in the District of Columbia. Reilly owns approximately 24% of Mount Vernon’s outstanding stock. James E. and Susan H. Veccia are residents of the District of Columbia, owning about 1% of Mount Vernon’s outstanding stock.
Donald M. Eversoll, a New York resident, is Chairman of Mount Vernon’s Board of Directors, and owns approximately 24% of Mount Vernon’s outstanding stock. Peter Klein, also a New York resident, is Vice-Chairman of the Board of Directors, and owns approximately 24% of Mount Vernon’s outstanding stock. Daniel H. Shaner, a Virginia resident, is Mount Vernon’s Secretary and General Counsel. James F. Russell, II, a Virginia resident, was until December 1982 Mount Vernon’s President and a member of the Board of Directors. All four of these individuals were at times relevant to this lawsuit members of the Executive Committee and the Loan Committee. The Court will refer to these four individuals collectively as the “Inside Directors.”
The “Outside Directors” consist of J. Earl Herndon, a Virginia resident; Helen H. Reed, a Virginia resident; Rolfe Robertson, a Virginia resident; Peter Badalaty, a Virginia resident; Robert L. Van Fossan, a Virginia resident; and Lawrence A. Ochsman, a resident of the state of Maryland. Van Fossan, Badalaty and Ochsman are no longer members of Mount Vernon’s Board. On December 7, 1982, R. Daniel Lindley, James P. Evans and John C. Simpson were named to the Board of Directors. Simpson was also chosen to serve as Mount Vernon’s President. Lindsey, Evans and Simpson are referred to collectively as the “Non-Defendant Directors.”
On March 25,1983, Reilly and the Veccias brought this action against Mount Vernon and the ten individuals who served on Mount Vernon’s Board during 1981 and 1982. Plaintiffs assert jurisdiction on the basis of diversity of citizenship. See 28 U.S.C. § 1332.
Count I of plaintiffs’ complaint is in the form of a stockholder’s derivative action, brought on behalf of Mount Vernon. Count I contains several substantive allegations of wrongdoing. Count I alleges that during 1981 and 1982, Mount Vernon, acting through the Inside Directors and with the acquiescence of the Outside Directors, entered into a series of loan transactions that violated state and federal statutes and regulations. The complaint further alleges that Inside Directors knew or should have known that such loans were both illegal and imprudent, and that the Outside Directors should have known that the Inside Directors loan activity was both illegal and imprudent. The plaintiffs allege that losses due to such improper loans have cost Mount Vernon in excess of $10,000,000.00.
The plaintiffs also allege that Mount Vernon, acting through its Board, acquired 99% of the outstanding stock of the Middle Peninsula-Northern Neck Federal Savings and Loan Association. Plaintiffs contend that the acquisition was made without stockholder authorization and in direct violation of the Virginia State Corporation Commission’s contingent approval, and that the acquisition cost Mount Vernon approximately $.5 million per year.
The plaintiffs further allege that defendant Russell, while President of Mount Vernon, obtained from Mount Vernon’s loan *1071 portfolio certain negotiable residential mortgage notes, which he had endorsed and transferred to Partridge Associates, a Maryland limited partnership. Partridge Associates in turn gave Mortgage Investors of Washington (“MIW”) a security interest in the notes, and designated Riggs National Bank of Washington as the custodian. MIW later sought to enforce its security interest. On February 24,1983, the Superi- or Court of the District of Columbia declined Mount Vernon’s request that Riggs be barred from transferring the notes to MIW. The plaintiffs claim that these transactions cost Mount Vernon in excess of $2,600,000.00.
In addition, the plaintiffs allege that the directors failed to establish sound lending practices; approved excessive salaries for themselves; and caused other undetermined losses. The plaintiffs contend that all of the actions alleged in Count I of the complaint were taken in violation of the directors’ fiduciary duties, and seek for the corporation in excess of $30 million in compensatory and punitive damages.
Count II of the complaint represents the plaintiffs’ individual action to recoup attorneys fees and other costs incurred in attempting to enforce their right to inspect Mount Vernon’s books and to compel stockholders’ meetings. Plaintiffs also seek a constructive dividend representing a pro rata share of the excessive salaries given Eversoll and Russell. Plaintiffs seek approximately $2 million in compensatory and punitive damages under Count II.
On May 27, 1983, Mount Vernon brought a cross-claim against defendant Russell. The cross-claim essentially duplicates the allegations in plaintiffs’ complaint relating to Russell’s misappropriation of negotiable instruments. Russell, in turn, brought a cross-claim against the other individual defendants, essentially seeking to pass through to them any liability on Mount Vernon’s cross-claim.
Mount Vernon’s cross-claim was brought on its behalf by a member of Hazel, Beck-horn & Hanes, a law partnership of which defendant Shaner is a member. However, on June 15, 1983, the Board appointed a special litigation committee to review “the appointment of counsel” in the “defense of the Reilly matter.” Mount Vernon obtained new counsel to represent its interests. New counsel appeared on behalf of Mount Vernon at oral argument of the present motions before the court. In addition, counsel from Hazel, Beckhorn and Hanes has moved his withdrawal from the action, a motion the court grants.
The individual defendants present this court with several arguments for dismissal, among them the lack of sufficient diversity of citizenship between the parties to support jurisdiction and the failure of plaintiffs’ complaint to satisfy the pleading requirements under Rule 23.1. In addition, defendants argue that Count II of plaintiffs’ complaint should be dismissed for failure to state a claim upon which relief may be granted.
In support of their arguments on these motions, counsel have presented the court with a variety of documents and affidavits which fill out the details of the circumstances leading up to this tortured piece of litigation. Plaintiffs present a series of documents which show that beginning in October, 1981, the board of directors received repeated warnings from state and federal regulators that certain of Mount Vernon’s activities constituted serious violations of federal and state regulations. These warnings advised the board of the risk of certain transactions, the directors’ “responsibility for the possible grave results” (See letter from Sidney A. Bailey, Commissioner of Financial Institutions, State Corporation Commission, December 9, 1981), and of the regulators’ determination that improper practices continued in violation of a permanent Federal Home Loan Bank Board Cease and Desist order (See Federal Home Loan Bank Board Report of Examination, November 26, 1982).
Plaintiffs also present affidavits that throughout this period no annual shareholders meetings were held. Plaintiffs’ complaint further alleges that attempts to compel stockholders’ meetings and force a *1072 stockholder’s examination of corporate books were unsuccessful. Finally, plaintiffs present affidavits which show that the stockholders did not participate in the appointment of the three new, Non-Defendant Directors.
Defendants’ affidavits show that the three, Non-Defendant Directors did not own stock in Mount Vernon as of July 1, 1982. Defendants affidavits also show that defendant Shaner owns 50 shares of stock in the corporation.
Both parties present the court with affidavits purporting to fill out details relating to Mount Vernon’s “special litigation committee.” These affidavits show that this litigation committee was not created until June 15, 1983 (See Affidavit of John C. Simpson, ¶ 4, June 30,1983); that the initial purpose was solely to obtain counsel to “represent the association in the defense of the Reilly action and to review with the board members such additional matters as may come before it” (id.); that the committee did “not have authority to determine for the board any matter in connection with [this case]” (id.); and that the composition of the board has changed frequently. Compare Affidavit of John C. Simpson, ¶ 2, June 30, 1982, with Affidavit of John C. Simpson, July 14, 1983; that July 13, 1983 (after this court had heard argument on these motions, and after it had indicated its desire to hear additional argument) the board was given full authority to investigate and litigate matters contained in this and other suits involving the association (See Affidavit of John C. Simpson, July 14, 1983).
In late May, the parties brought the motions which are currently before the court, styled as “Motions to Dismiss.” They later sought to withdraw those motions. The Late Senior District Judge Oren R. Lewis, Sr. permitted the motions to be withdrawn, but directed that if the motions were re-brought, they should be styled as “Motions for Summary Judgment.” However, the court believes these motions are more properly brought under Rule 12; accordingly, the motions presently before the court are treated as motions to dismiss under that Rule.
In examining the present motions, the court limits itself to events alleged to have occurred before July 1,1983. On that date, the court heard argument on these motions and ruled from the bench. The court agreed to hear re-argument on July 15, 1983, but not on the grounds that the parties had changed their positions. Any events subsequent to that date are irrelevant to the issue whether the court’s July 1st ruling was correct.
The court is ordinarily quite loathe to reconsider prior rulings. Rehashing closed matters creates uncertainty and threatens finality. But the court never hesitates to reconsider a prior ruling if further consideration may prevent an injustice from occurring. Because this case is peculiarly troubling, and because the relevant law is peculiarly opaque, the court agreed to reconsider its rulings. The court, for reasons given below, withdraws its prior ruling and substitutes the rulings stated below.
II. LEGAL ANALYSIS
A. Subject-Matter Jurisdiction
Plaintiffs assert that this court’s jurisdiction over this case is proper under 28 U.S.C. § 1332, based upon diversity of citizenship among the parties. One of the first principles of diversity jurisdiction, the complete diversity requirement, posits that there can be no diversity jurisdiction when any opposing parties are citizens of the same state.
See Strawbridge
v.
Curtis,
3 Cranch (7 U.S.) 267,
In a stockholder’s derivative suit, such as the one presently before the court, the claim pressed by the stockholder is “not his own, but the corporation’s”, and the plaintiff stockholder is “at best a nominal plaintiff.”
Koster v. Lumberman’s Mutual Casualty,
If stockholders’ derivative suits were evaluated according to usual principles, the corporation would be aligned as a plaintiff as a matter of course, since the corporation stands to benefit from a successful suit.
See Schmidt v. Esquire,
The determination whether a corporation is sufficiently antagonistic to be aligned as a defendant should be “a practical, not a mechanical determination, and is resolved by the pleadings and the nature of the dispute.”
Smith
v.
Sperling, supra,
If this court were to look solely to plaintiffs’ complaint, it would have little trouble aligning Mount Vernon as a defendant. The complaint alleges that the corporation’s controllers failed to remedy improper activities, failed to permit stockholders’ efforts to compel remedies, and uniformly approved activities to both the corporation’s and the stockholders’ detriment.
The defendants insist that this court must consider the corporation’s cross-claim against defendant Russell, as supporting their assertion that the corporation is not antagonistic to the plaintiffs’ claim. Defendants’ argument has a certain superficial seductiveness. On its face, the cross-claim would seem to refute the suggestion that “the management refuses to take action to undo a business transaction...”
Smith
v.
Sperling,
*1074 However, further reflection suggests several flaws with this analysis. In the first place, the cross-claim itself is of a suspect nature. It was brought on Mount Vernon’s behalf, against defendant Russell, by defendant Shaner’s law firm. A cynical eye could regard the cross-claim as so much finger-pointing between warring defense camps.
But even beyond the cross-claim’s suspect nature, its timing is also questionable. The corporation’s original response to plaintiffs’ complaint was a motion to dismiss. Only later did the corporation change its strategy and bring the cross-claim. If the court were to permit Mount Vernon’s change in strategy to defeat jurisdiction, the court would hazard offense to the venerable principle that jurisdiction is established at the commencement of the action, and, once established, cannot be ousted by later events.
See, e.g., Malian v. Torrance,
9 Wheat (22 U.S.) 957,
The
Smith
opinion directs this court to look to the “face of the pleadings”, adding that the “bill and the answer normally determine whether the management is antagonistic to the shareholder.”
Mount Vernon filed its cross-claim about two months after plaintiffs’ filed their complaint, and after having first filed a motion to dismiss. At best, the cross-claim suggests that Mount Vernon may have altered its antagonistic opposition to plaintiffs’ claims against defendant Russell. But that late change in Mount Vernon’s strategic position has no effect on the facts in existence at the commencement of this suit. Those facts, which show that the Board refused to heed the warnings of state and federal regulators, its resistance to stockholders’ remedial attempts, and Mount Vernon’s initial hostility to the suit, establish a “real collision between the stockholder and his corporation.”
Smith
v.
Sperling, supra,
Even were the court to give weight to the mere presence of Mount Vernon’s cross-claim, that alone would not suffice to compel Mount Vernon’s realignment as a plaintiff. The cross-claim addresses only one part of plaintiffs’ numerous allegations, and suggest nothing that would otherwise contradict continuing antagonism as to all other matters in dispute. But “it is the points of substantial antagonism, not agreement, on which the realignment question must turn.” American Motorists Insurance Company v. Trane Company, supra, at 151. Even taking all the pleadings purely on their face, the court finds substantial antagonism.
On reargument of these motions, new counsel for Mount Vernon presented the court with yet another position on Mount Vernon’s behalf. Counsel argued that the court should find Mount Vernon antagonistic to the plaintiffs despite the cross-claim. In other words, Mount Vernon argued the identical position as the plaintiff while simultaneously maintaining that it was antagonistic with the plaintiff. This awkward and self-contradictory position occupied by both Mount Vernon and the plaintiffs is not surprising in a record characterized by hidden machinations, secret cabals, and unholy alliances. The court fully realizes new counsel’s precarious position, taking up Mount Vernon’s case after so much has already transpired. But Mount Vernon’s transient litigation posture merely underscores the wisdom of limiting the present inquiry to facts in existence at the *1075 commencement of the suit. If litigants could oust jurisdiction through mere changes in strategy, not only would the court’s jurisdiction be merely contingent, but litigants could be tempted to pose or dissemble in order to hoodwink the court into surrendering jurisdiction.
The defendants also argue that the corporation should be aligned as a plaintiff because plaintiffs never demanded that the corporation take up the litigation, and that until Mount Vernon has had a chance to decide whether to take up the litigation, any assertions of antagonism to plaintiffs’ position are premature. Defendants cite cases in which courts realigned corporations as plaintiffs in part because the stockholder plaintiff had not made such a demand upon the corporation.
See, e.g., Lewis v. Odell,
The mere failure to have made demand, standing alone, is not sufficient to support realignment of Mount Vernon as a plaintiff. In light of numerous “points of substantial antagonism” between plaintiff and the corporation (at least as to facts existing at the outset of this litigation), for this court to realign because of the mere absence of demand would defeat
Smith v. Sperling’s
admonishment that the determination of the corporation’s proper alignment should be a “practical”, not a “mechanical” process.
In summary, the court finds that, based upon facts in existence at the commencement of this suit, the corporation is antagonistic to the plaintiffs. Therefore, the corporation must be aligned as a defendant, and defendants’ motion to dismiss for want of complete diversity must be denied.
B. The Demand Requirement
The second ground upon which defendants move for dismissal is their contention that plaintiffs have failed to satisfy the pleading requirements of Rule 23.1 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure. That rule requires, in pertinent part, that in a derivative action “[t]he complaint shall also allege with particularity the efforts, if any, made by the plaintiff to obtain the action he desires from the directors or comparable authority ... and the reasons his failure to obtain the action or for not making the effort.” The requirement that stockholders first address their grievance to corporate authority serves numerous practical purposes, such as forcing shareholders to exhaust their intercorporate remedies; permitting the corporation to pursue alternative remedies; permitting the termination of meritless actions designed to vex or harass the corporation; permitting the corporation, with superior knowledge and financial resources, to assume control of the suit; and avoiding unnecessary judicial involvement in the internal affairs of the organization.
See generally Lewis v. Graves,
Rule 23.1’s demand requirement applies to stockholder’s derivative actions brought in federal courts where jurisdiction is based on diversity of citizenship.
See Meltzer v. Atlantic Research Corp.,
Mount Vernon is organized under the laws of the Commonwealth of Virginia. Under Virginia’s laws, demand must be made upon the directors before a stockholder’s derivative suit may be maintained.
See, e.g., Mount v. Radford Trust Co.,
Under Virginia law, demand is excused only “upon allegation and proof of such facts as show that it is reasonably certain that a demand for corporate action would have been useless.”
Liggett v. Roanoke Water Co.,
The core of plaintiffs’ contention that demand should be excused is the allegation that the board members are either so self-interested or otherwise tainted, and their exposure to liability so great, that no demand upon the board could be expected to prod them to correct the alleged wrongs.
Virginia’s courts have never really specified the details which would persuade them that the demand requirement should be excused in a particular case; however, the court is not unduly hampered by the absence of Virginia case authority. Some of the other Federal Circuit Courts of Appeals, have evolved a “hard-boiled” approach to Rule 23.1’s requirements. Block, Prussin & Wachtel, Dismissal of Derivative Actions Under the Business Judgment Rule, 38 Bus. Lawyer 401, 411 (1983) [hereinafter “Block”]. The court finds that even under this hard-boiled approach, demand would be excused; that is, even if Virginia's courts adopted the stiffest demand requirements applied in any jurisdiction, demand would be excused in this case.
The hard-boiled rule is also the majority rule, though it is applied with varying degrees of vigor in the different circuits. The rule holds that absent specific allegations of self-dealing or bias on the part of a majority of the board, mere director approval and acquiescence in the alleged misdeeds are insufficient to render demand futile.
See Lewis v. Graves, supra; Lewis v. Curtis, supra
at 785;
Grossman v. Johnson,
Six of the members of the present board (Eversoll, Klein, Shaner, Reed, Robertson and Herndon) are named as defendants in the present action. But under the majority rule, merely naming directors as defendants is not sufficient to excuse demand.
See Lewis v. Graves, supra,
at 249;
Lewis v. Curtis, supra,
at 785;
Heit v. Baird,
While these allegations alone should raise serious doubts about the ability of a majority board to give disinterested attention to a shareholder demand for remedies against the wrongdoers (i.e., themselves), other allegations confirm those doubts. These directors are alleged to have historically resisted shareholder initiatives, and, indeed, are alleged to have failed to hold annual shareholder meetings which could have served as some check on the alleged improprieties. There is little reason to suspect that the shareholder demand would receive any different treatment than previous shareholder initiatives.
See Pioche Mines Consolidated, Inc. v. Dolman,
Finally, the six directors are alleged to have voted excessive salaries to defendants Russell and Eversoll, and to have voted themselves excess directors’ fees. See Complaint ¶¶ 47 — 48. In other words, at least six of the nine members of the present board are alleged to have a direct pecuniary interest in this lawsuit.
The question whether the six directors’ alleged self-interest on a narrow part of plaintiffs’ complaint is alone sufficient to excuse demand could be a close one. But on careful consideration, and re-consideration, the court concludes that the cumulative weight of plaintiffs’ allegations of these six directors’ nonfeasance, combined with the incremental weight of their alleged self-interested malfeasance, establish that a majority of the board would not be objective about a shareholder demand that they bring the present suit against themselves. Therefore, the court finds that plaintiffs have carried their burden of demonstrating why directors could not be depended upon to do their duty.
In re Kauffman Mutual Fund Actions,
Because the court holds that plaintiffs have met their burden under the strictest standard, the court necessarily must find that plaintiffs have satisfied less stringent tests. For example, in
Meltzer v. Atlantic Research Corp.
The court could have delved further into the various considerations raised in the parties’ pleadings, such as the wrongdoer control of the corporation; the non-defendant directors’ lack of qualifications for their office; and the numerous other indicia of futility which characterizes the record before the court. The non-defendant directors, since they did not own stock at the time of their appointment, do not appear to meet the requirement of Va.Code § 6.1-195.41; it does appear that the inside directors own or control a majority of the stock; and the existence of the special litigation committee has been so protean, changing form, content and purpose on regular intervals, as to underscore its captivity to the very persons it would have to consider suing were stockholder demand required. But the court, while noting that any further examination would merely corroborate its ruling, does not need to go so far. In the final analysis, such additional considerations are unnecessary in order for this court to reach a final decision.
The narrowness of the court’s ultimate decision is deceptive; the parties have strewn quite a few red herrings in the court’s path. The parties’ efforts to divert the court’s attention to a variety of extraneous considerations was almost successful. The parties’ various contentions about the board members’ qualifications, and the existence of a “special litigation committee” were quite distracting from the real business before the court. And the real business is to examine plaintiffs’ complaint and determine whether it alleges with sufficient particularity Rule 23.1’s pleading requirements. The court concludes that it does.
The court takes solace from the knowledge that others have observed that “the question of when demand is required is particularly hard to answer...” Block,
supra,
at 410, and that, because of the difficulty of such analyses, “the decision as to whether a plaintiff’s allegations of futility are sufficient to excuse demand depends on the particular facts of each case and lies within the discretion of the district court.”
See Lewis v. Graves,
Because the court finds that Rule 23.1’s demand requirements are excused, the defendants’ motion to dismiss under Rule 12(c) is denied.
C. Plaintiffs’ Individual Claims
Defendants also argue that Count II of plaintiffs’ complaint should be dismissed for failure to state a claim upon which relief could be granted. In Count II, plaintiff seeks recovery of attorneys’ fees expended in efforts to compel stockholders’ meeting and inspection of Mount Vernon’s books, and also a constructive dividend for excessive salaries.
Defendants argue that none of these remedies plaintiffs’ seek are available under Virginia law, at least as asserted by plaintiffs. While Virginia law authorizes actions to compel stockholders’ inspection of corporate books, see Va.Code § 13.1 — 47, it does not authorize payment of attorneys’ fees for successful actions to compel. And while Va.Code § 13.1-25 provides for the convening of annual stockholders’ meetings, that section makes no provision for attorneys fees if such meetings are not held.
In opposition to the defendants’ motion to dismiss, plaintiff refers this court to cases which support the proposition that plaintiff would be entitled to attorneys’ fees if Count II were brought derivatively, on behalf of the corporation.
See, e.g., Wometco Enterprises, Inc.,
*1079
Under Virginia law, if a plaintiff is unable to show any basis for the maintenance of a count in his complaint, that count must be dismissed. See,
e.g., Keepe v. Shell Oil Co.,
Nor do plaintiffs persuade the court that they are entitled to pursue a cause of action for a constructive dividend on their own behalf. While plaintiffs might pursue such a cause on Mount Vernon’s behalf under Va.Code § 13.1-44(a), they have no such right in themselves. Again, this court will not create a cause of action that Virginia’s courts would not recognize.
Because plaintiffs have failed to demonstrate any basis for Count II of the complaint, defendants’ motion to dismiss that count must be granted. See Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(b)(6). Accordingly, Count II of plaintiffs’ complaint is dismissed.
Notes
. A corporation is an indispensible party in a derivative action brought by one of its shareholders.
City of Davenport v. Dows,
18 Wall. (85 U.S.) 626,
. Both parties attempt to draw comfort from this court’s prior decision in
Clark Enterprises, Inc. v. Holywell Corp.,
The court’s holding in this case is based solely on plaintiffs’ complaint. The court recognizes that it could, in the exercise of its sound discretion, consider other material.
See, e.g., Brooks v. American Export,
