Fed. Sec. L. Rep. P 97,250
CA 79-3697 Thomas F. REISER, and Inns-By-The-Sea, a
California Corporation, Plaintiffs-Appellants,
v.
DEL MONTE PROPERTIES COMPANY, a California Corporation, et
al., Defendants-Appellees.
No. 77-2418.
United States Court of Appeals,
Ninth Circuit.
Oct. 4, 1979.
R. Stewart Baird, Jr., Bronson, Bronson & McKinnon, San Francisco, Cal., for plaintiffs-appellants.
Thomas J. Mellon, Jr., Chickering & Gregory, San Francisco, Cal., for defendants-appellees.
Appeal from the United States District Court for the Northern District of California.
Before TUTTLE, ELY and WRIGHT, Circuit Judges.
TUTTLE,* Senior Circuit Judge:
Plaintiffs, Thomas Reiser and Inns-By-The-Sea,1 appeal from an order of the District Court for the Northern District of California dismissing their claim for attorneys' fees arising out of their action against Del Monte Properties Company and certain officers and directors of Del Monte. We reverse and remand for further proceedings.
In 1976, the defendants drew up a proposal involving a merger of Del Monte with a subsidiary company and reincorporation of the expanded company in Delaware. Reiser, an outside director of Del Monte, first learned of the plan when a special meeting of the board of directors was called to consider the proposal. Reiser objected to the plan as an attempt by management to reduce shareholder power and minority influences. At the directors' meeting, a special shareholders' meeting was called for the purpose of acting on the proposal. A proxy statement was approved in order to solicit proxies for the special meeting, which was to be held in eighteen days.
The plaintiffs then brought this action to enjoin the meeting of shareholders and to invalidate the proxies obtained through the statement. They alleged that the proxy statement was false and misleading in violation of section 14(a) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, 15 U.S.C. § 78n(a), and that the proposed merger violated section 5 of the Securities Act of 1933, 15 U.S.C. § 77e. After the suit was filed, but before trial the directors postponed the shareholders' meeting, withdrew the original proxy statement, and issued a new proxy statement for a modified plan. The new statement acknowledged that the issues raised in this suit were one of several reasons for the modifications in the statement.
The plaintiffs made two motions for attorneys' fees, first at the hearing at which the defendants announced their postponement of the shareholders' meeting, and again in a hearing on the 1933 Act claim. The court postponed consideration of the claims for attorneys' fees until the 1933 Act claim was resolved. When this claim was dismissed, Del Monte made a motion to dismiss the case as moot, since the challenged meeting had been postponed and the offending proxy statement withdrawn. The plaintiffs then refiled their request for attorneys' fees, contending that they had conferred a substantial benefit on the shareholders of Del Monte by causing the directors to correct a false proxy statement. The district court held, as a matter of law, that the plaintiffs were not entitled to present a claim for attorneys' fees because they had not brought the action as a class action or a derivative suit, a procedure which the district court held was required by the Supreme Court's holding in Mills v. Electric Auto-Lite Co.,
Although the American rule prohibits an award of attorneys' fees in the absence of a statute or contract providing for an award, Fleischmann Distilling Corp. v. Maier Brewing Co.,
The Supreme Court later expanded the common fund exception to include cases in which a suit has the effect of establishing a fund, even though the plaintiff did not actually bring suit on behalf of a class. In Sprague v. Ticonic National Bank,
In Mills v. Electric Auto-Lite Co.,
The Court again applied the common benefit exception in Hall v. Cole,
In recent years some courts, using the common benefit exception as a springboard, have created another exception by awarding attorneys' fees under a "private attorney general" theory. See, e. g., Hoitt v. Vitek,
The question to be decided in this case is whether an award of attorneys' fees is permissible under the existing exceptions approved in Alyeska or falls outside the scope of those exceptions and is thus foreclosed by Alyeska. We conclude that an award under the facts presented is within the permissible scope of the "common benefit" exception and is not precluded as a matter of law.
The Alyeska Court, in approving the common benefit cases, cited both Mills and Hall, see
This interpretation misconstrues the purpose and requirements of the exception as applied in Mills and Hall. Although Mills involved a suit brought derivatively and representatively, that fact was not essential to the Court's holding and was not discussed as a basis for the decision. The Court focused on the beneficial effect of the suit and the equitable reasons for shifting the expenses of litigation to the shareholders.3 The crucial factor in Mills was that the suit had resulted in correction of a "deceit practiced on the stockholders as a group," thereby rendering an important service to the shareholders.
Imposition of a class action requirement would be inconsistent with the equitable foundations of the exception. In both the common fund and common benefit cases, the Court has refused to place form over substance, focusing instead on the actual effect of a plaintiff's suit. The Court recognized this principle in Sprague v. Ticonic National Bank, when it stated:
That the party in a situation like the present neither purported to sue for a class nor formally established by litigation a fund available to the class, does not seem to be a differentiating factor so far as it affects the source of the recognized power of equity to grant reimbursements of the kind for which the petitioner in this case appealed to the chancellor's discretion. . . . (T)he formalities of the litigation . . . hardly touch the power of equity in doing justice as between a party and the beneficiaries of his litigation.
Since a class action or derivative suit is not a necessary prerequisite to an award of attorneys' fees under the holding in Mills, and since the instant case comes within the scope of the common benefit exception, Alyeska does not, as a matter of law, preclude an award of attorneys' fees. In Alyeska the Court recognized the common fund and common benefit cases as "assertions of inherent power in the courts to allow attorneys' fees in particular situations,"
Since it held that the plaintiffs had no right to present a claim for attorneys' fees, the district court did not reach the question of whether a claim for attorneys' fees can be presented when the underlying case has become moot. This question has been resolved by our holding in Schmidt v. Zazzara,
We hold only that the plaintiff is not precluded as a matter of law from presenting a claim for attorneys' fees, and express no opinion concerning the propriety of an award in this case, a matter within the discretion of the trial judge. Kelly v. Guinn,
Notes
Honorable Elbert P. Tuttle, Senior U.S. Circuit Judge, Fifth Circuit, sitting by designation
Plaintiff Reiser is president of Inns-By-The-Sea and a member of the board of directors of Del Monte, elected by cumulative vote of nine percent of the voting shares. Inns-By-The-Sea, a California corporation, owns 150 shares of Del Monte common stock
Other exceptions allow an award of attorneys' fees when the losing party has acted in bad faith, F. D. Rich Co. v. Industrial Lumber Co.,
The Mills Court quoted the Sprague holding that " 'the absence of an avowed class suit . . . hardly touch(es) the power of equity in doing justice as between a party and the beneficiaries of his litigation.' " Mills v. Electric Auto-Lite Co.,
It is not necessary to an award of attorneys' fees that a suit be litigated on the merits. Kopet v. Esquire Realty Co.,
