MEMORANDUM OPINION
INTRODUCTION
Plaintiffs in this case are minority shareholders of a close corporation who sued the officers, directors, and controlling shareholders of the corporation in state court for alleged violations of state corporate laws establishing fiduciary duties directors, officers, and majority shareholders of close corporations owe minority shareholders and the corporation. Defendants removed to federal court. Now before the Court are plaintiffs’ Motion to Remand and defendants’ Motions to Dismiss. Central to the disposition of these motions is the question whether certain state law claims brought by minority shareholders of a close corporation against corporate directors and controlling shareholders are preempted by the federal Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974 (ERISA), 88 Stat. 829, as *451 amended, 29 U.S.C. § 1001 et seq. (1976 ed. and Supp. V). For the reasons elaborated here, the Court concludes that (i) defendant Artabane’s Motion to Dismiss Count V must be granted; (ii) the remaining defendants’ Motions to Dismiss Counts I-IV must be denied; (iii) plaintiffs’ Motion to Remand must be granted as to Counts IIV; and (iv) Counts I-IV must be remanded to the state court from which the case originated pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1441(c).
FACTS
Plaintiffs are minority shareholders of American Systems Corporation (“ASC”), a close corporation organized and existing under the laws of the Commonwealth of Virginia. 1 Defendant H. Thomas Curran (“Curran”) is the Chairman of ASC’s Board of Directors, as well as its Secretary, Treasurer, and a controlling shareholder. Defendant Forrest G. Ramsеy, Jr. (“Ramsey”) is President, a Director, and the second controlling shareholder of ASC. Curran and Ramsey are the sole members of ASC’s Board of Directors. ASC is a nominal defendant in this action in connection with derivative claims asserted on its behalf. Defendant Joseph A. Artabane is a party to this litigation in his representative capacity as Trustee of the ASC Employee Stock Ownership Trust (“ASC ESOT”), which is an employee benefit plan covered by ERISA. See 29 U.S.C. § 1002.
The essential facts, as set forth in the complaint, are as follows. 2 Plaintiffs allege that Curran and Ramsey devised a plan to divert ASC corporate assets to their personal benefit through the creation of ASC ESOT. Specifically, in May 1990, Cur-ran and Ramsey caused ASC to obtain a loan for sixteen million dollars from Sоvran Bank to fund an employee stock ownership plan. The loan was secured by ASC assets and guarantees. Using the Sovran loan proceeds, ASC established ASC ESOT on May 23, 1990. As supplementary funding, ASC, at Curran’s and Ramsey’s direction, loaned ASC ESOT an additional two million dollars. On May 25, 1990, ASC ESOT used the eighteen million dollars from the Sov-ran Bank loan and the ASC loan to purchase ASC stock from Curran, Ramsey, and other insider shareholders, but not from plaintiffs. The stock purchase price, set by appraisal, was $144.75 per share. At the time of the appraisal, Curran and Ramsey allegedly knew or should have known that ASC was experiencing a multimillion dollar cost overrun as a result of a contract with the United States Air Force. They allegedly withheld this information from the appraiser, thereby allegedly causing the appraiser to over-value the stock. At no previous time had shares of ASC stock sold for more than $65.00 per share. According to plaintiffs, Curran and Ramsey personally selected the shareholders who would be permitted to sell ASC stock to ASC ESOT. In addition, plaintiffs claim that certain favored ASC employees were issued stock options that enabled them to purchase ASC stock for substantially less than the price at which they later sold the stock to ASC ESOT. Plaintiffs maintain that these stock option transactions significantly and unlawfully diluted plaintiffs’ equity interests in ASC.
The result of Curran’s and Ramsey’s scheme, according to plaintiffs, was an unfair distribution of ASC’s corporate assets. Specifically, the scheme resulted in the unfair distribution of corрorate assets to fewer than all the shareholders of ASC, thereby substantially diminishing the value of plaintiffs’ outstanding shares. ASC’s financial statements distributed in November 1991 show that the book value of plaintiffs’ stock following the stock sale to ASC ESOT was a negative number. In addition, *452 plaintiffs claim that it would have been in ASC’s best interests for ASC ESOT to purchase newly-issued stock instead of outstanding shares belonging to insider shareholders. In that way, the loan proceeds used to fund ASC ESOT would have become available to ASC to offset its financial burdens, burdens plaintiffs claim threaten ASC’s existence.
Defendant Artabane was selected to administer ASC ESOT at the direction of an Administrative Committee composed of Mark J. Schuler, William E. Roberts, and Charles E. Sampson, each of whom is an ASC shareholder and officer and each of whose employment is controlled by Curran and Ramsey. The Administrative Committee acted under Curran’s and Ramsey’s direction, as officers and directors of ASC. Plaintiffs allege that Curran and Ramsey induced Schuler, Roberts, and Sampson to approve the creation and subsequent activities of ASC ESOT by enabling them to benefit personally through the sale of virtually all of their own ASC stock to ASC ESOT. Plaintiffs’ allege that Artabane breached his fiduciary duty as trustee by failing to solicit a lower purchase price for the stock from plaintiffs.
Prior to initiating litigation, plaintiffs demanded that ASC seek independent counsel (i) to evaluate whether the Board of Directors had faithfully discharged its duties to the corporation in the establishment of ASC ESOT and (ii) to take appropriate corporate action. ASC rejected plaintiffs’ demand and scheduled a shareholders’ meeting on December 2, 1991, to consider a resolution to ratify the 1990 creation of ASC ESOT, despite the fact than no such ratification had been sought at the November 1990 shareholders’ meeting. Plaintiffs thereafter filed this lawsuit.
Plaintiffs’ complaint, initially filed in the Circuit Court of Fairfax County, Virginia, and thereafter removed to this Court, contains five counts. Count I alleges breaches of state common law fiduciary duties owed to plaintiffs as minority shareholders by Curran and Ramsey as controlling shareholders. Count II, a derivative claim, alleges a similar breach of Curran’s and Ramsey’s state law fiduciary duties owed to ASC. In Count III, also a derivative count, plaintiffs assert that Curran and Ramsey engaged in self-dealing in violation of state law. Count IV is a state law fraud claim. Count V is captioned “Illegal ESOP Transactions.” The precise nature of these counts — whether they are state law claims, federal law claims, or mixed state and federal law claims — is disputed by the parties. Plaintiffs claim that the complaint raises purely state law claims intended to present the Virginia state courts with an opportunity to decide whether or not Virginia recognizes an “equal opportunity” doctrine for minority shareholders. Plaintiffs aver that while other states have adopted an “equal opportunity” doctrine, no reported Virginia opinion addresses the question. Defendants, on the other hand, argue that the complaint raises federal causes of action, or, in the alternative, raises state law causes of action that are so completely preempted by federal law as to require resolution in a federal forum.
Now before the Court are plaintiffs’ Motion to Remand and Motions to Dismiss filed by Curran, Ramsey, ASC, and Arta-bane.
ANALYSIS
I. Removal Jurisdiction
The threshold issue is whether this Court has removal jurisdiction. If not, the inquiry ends, for the removal would have been illegitimate and a remand to state court would be required. On the other hand, if removal jurisdiction exists, the Court must then proceed to consider the other grounds of defendants’ threshold attack.
Defendants removed this case under 28 U.S.C. § 1441, subsection (a) of which provides, in pertinent part:
Except as otherwise expressly provided by Act of Congress, any civil action brought in a State court of which the district courts of the United States have original jurisdiction, may be removed by the defendant or defendants, to the district court of the United States for the *453 district and division embracing the, place where such action is pending.
Thus, removal jurisdiction exists if this Court would have had original jurisdiction. That district courts have original jurisdiction of all civil actions arising under the Constitution, laws, or treaties of the United States is axiomatic.
3
See
28 U.S.C. § 1331. And whether a civil action arises under the laws of the United States and hence whether federal jurisdiction exists “is generally determined by the ‘well-pleaded complaint’ rule.”
Childers v. Chesapeake & Potomac Tel. Co.,
It is equally settled that under the well-pleaded complaint rule, a case may not be removed to federal court merely because a federal defense exists, even the defense of preemption.
See Taylor,
*454
Defendants assert two bases for removal under 28 U.S.C. § 1441(b) and (c). First, they maintain that paragraph 80 of Count V of plaintiffs’ complaint expressly states a federal cause of action under ERISA.
5
Second, they argue that removal of all counts is proper under the “complete preemption” doctrine. For the moment, the Court need not address the “complete preemption” doctrine because the plain and unambiguous language of paragraph 80 of Count V clearly sets forth, in part, an ERISA cause of action against defendant Artabane as trustee of ASC ESOT. With one exception not applicable here,
6
federal courts have original and exclusive jurisdiction of ERISA claims.
See
29 U.S.C. § 1132(e)(1);
Central States, Southeast and Southwest Areas Health and Welfare Fund v. Old Sec. Life Ins. Co.,
II. Artabane’s Motion to Dismiss Count V
Defendant Artabane, trustee of ASC ESOT, moves to dismiss the ERISA component of Count V on the ground that plaintiffs have no standing to sue him under ERISA. The Court agrees. 29 U.S.C. § 1132(a) limits those parties who may bring civil actions under ERISA to the Secretary of Labor and to participants, beneficiaries, and fiduciaries of ERISA plans. Plaintiffs, as minority shareholders or derivatively on behalf of ASC, do not fit into any of these categories. Consequently, they have no standing to sue under ERISA.
See also Firestone Tire & Rubber Co. v. Bruch,
III. Discretionary Remand of Counts IIV Under 28 U.S.C. § 1441(e)
Once a cause of action has been removed, 28 U.S.C. § 1441(e) provides for discretionary remand of all or part of the case under certain circumstances:
Whenever a separate and independent claim or cause of action within the jurisdiction conferred by section 1331 of this title, is joined with one or more otherwise nonremovable claims or causes of action, the entire case may be removеd and the district court may determine all issues therein, or, in its discretion, may remand all matters in which state law predominates.
28 U.S.C. § 1441(c). Thus, under § 1441(c), before exercising its discretion to remand, a court must determine whether or not state law issues predominate in any or all removed claims. 9 On this point, the complete preemption doctrine is significant to the determination whether state law issues predominate in Counts I-IV. Manifestly, state law issues cannot predominate where state law is displaced by federal law under the complete preemption doctrine, that is, where state law claims are effectively federalized. In this event, remand under § 1441(c) would be impermissible. Here, therefore, it is important - to determine whether some or all of Counts I-IV are completely preempted by ERISA.
As noted, complete preemption occurs where Congress so completely preempts a particular body of law that a state law claim invoking that area of law is, in sum and substance, converted into a federal claim. for purposes of the “well-pleaded complaint” rule.
See Taylor,
Given that complete preemption does not obtain here, the next question is whether, as defendants contend, the applicability of general ERISA preemption precludes a finding that state law issues predominate in Counts I-IV. The touchstone of the preemption analysis is congressional intent.
See Allis-Chalmers Corp. v. Lueck,
The expansiveness of § 1144(a) notwithstanding, ERISA preemption plainly has limits. As the Supreme Court has clearly stated, “[s]ome state actions may affect employee benefit plans in too tenuous, remote, or peripheral a manner to warrant a finding that the law ‘relates to’ the plan.”
Shaw,
These guiding principles applied here point persuasively to the conclusion that Counts I-IY of plaintiffs’ complaint are not preempted by ERISA. First, law governing corporations is quintessentially the province of traditional state authority.
See, e.g., Burks v. Lasker,
The state common law of fiduciary duty that the Trust seeks to invoke in this case centers upon the relation between corporate director and shareholder. The director’s duty arises from this status as directоr; the law imposes the duty upon him in that capacity only. Similarly, the shareholder’s rights against the corporate director arise solely form his status as shareholder. That in a case such as ours the director happens also to be a plan fiduciary and the shareholder a benefit plan has nothing to do with the duty owed by the director to the shareholder. The state law and ERISA duties are parallel but independent: as director, the individual owes a duty, defined by state law, to the corporation’s shareholders, including the plan; as fiduciary, the individual owes a duty, defined by ERISA, to the plan and its beneficiaries. Thus, the state law does not affect relations between the ERISA fiduciary and the plan or plan benefi *459 ciaries as such; it affects them in their seрarate capacities as corporate director and shareholder.
The state corporate laws of fiduciary responsibility invoked by plaintiffs (assuming
arguendo
the viability of an equal opportunity claim in Virginia) regulate relations between plaintiffs, as minority shareholders; ASC, as the corporation; and Ramsey and Curran, as controlling shareholders, officers, and directors. The relations between these parties, acting in these capacities, function irrespective of ASC ESOT, its management, or its administration.
See, e.g., Ingersoll-Rand,
498 U.S. at -,
Defendants urge that permitting рlaintiffs to enforce independent state law
*460
duties would disrupt the uniformity intended by Congress when it made pension plans the province of the federal courts. It is undisputed that the purpose of ERISA preemption is “to ensure that plans and plan sponsors would be subject to a uniform body of benefit law; the goal was to minimize the administrative and financial burden of complying with conflicting directives among States or between States and the Federal Government. Otherwise, the inefficiencies created could work to the detriment of plan beneficiaries.”
Ingersoll-Rand,
498 U.S. at -,
Absent both complete preemption and general ERISA preemption under § 1144(a), it is pellucidly clear that state law issues predominate in Counts I-IV of plaintiffs’ complaint. The Court therefore elects to exercise its discretion under § 1441(c) to remand thоse counts to the Circuit Court of Fairfax County, Virginia. 16
IV. The State Law Component of Count V
Preemption principles elaborated here compel the conclusion that the state law claims of Count V are preempted by ERISA. A state law claim brought against defendant Artabane in his capacity as trustee of ASC ESOT unquestionably relates to an employee benefit plan under ERISA. So, too, does the relief sought in Count V: disestablishment of ASC ESOT. Neither the claim, nor the relief, can be said to be too tenuously, remotely, or peripherally connected to ASC ESOT, as an ERISA plan, to withstand ERISA preemption. Thus, as a matter of law, plaintiffs cannot sustain their state law claims in Count V. Accordingly, these claims must be dismissed with prejudice.
CONCLUSION
In sum, the Court holds that Count V of plaintiffs’ complaint states, in part, a cаuse of action arising under ERISA. Consequently, removal of the entire ease to federal court was proper under 28 U.S.C. § 1441. The ERISA element of Count V should be dismissed with prejudice because these plaintiffs lack standing to sue under ERISA. See 29 U.S.C. § 1132. The state law component of Count V is preempted by ERISA pursuant to 29 U.S.C. § 1144(a) and should therefore be dismissed with prejudice. Counts I-IV, however, are not preempted by ERISA. Moreover, within those counts, state law issues predominate. Accordingly, Counts I-IV are remanded to the Circuit Court of Fairfax County, Virginia, pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1441(c). 17
An appropriate Order will issue.
Notes
. Plaintiff Moreton received her ASC shares as part of her divorce settlement with defendant Ramsey in 1984. The other plaintiffs acquired their shares from Moreton. Plaintiffs assert that Ramsey's lingering antagonism about the divorce substantially motivated defendants' actions at issue here.
. For purposes of defendants’ motions to dismiss, the allegations stated in plaintiffs' complaint, and the reasonable inferences that may be drawn from them, are taken as true and viewed in the light most favorable to plaintiffs.
See, e.g., Conley v. Gibson,
. Removal jurisdiction for cases involving diversity of citizenship is not relevant here.
. In certain circumstances not present, here, a state law claim may be removed if a well-pleaded complaint establishes that the plaintiffs right to relief under state law compels a resolution of a substantial, disputed question of federal law.
See Franchise Tax Bd.,
.Paragraph 80 of Count V reads:
80. The failure of the ESOP Administrative Committee and Defendant Artabane, as Trustee, to seek a lower price from Complainants and to otherwise fully conduct an independent investigation of all circumstances surrounding the establishment of the ESOP was a breach of the fiduciary duties established under applicable state and federal law, including but not limited to duties under the Employee Retirement Income Security Act, 29 U.S.C. §§ 1001 et seq. (emphasis added).
. State courts have concurrent jurisdiction over cases brought by plan participants or beneficiaries to' recover benefits due under the plan’s terms, to enforce rights under a plan, or to clarify rights to future benefits under a plan. See 29 U.S.C. § 1132(e)(1).
. Because the Court finds jurisdiction over all counts on the basis of the federal question presented in Count V, it need not, at this stage of the analysis, reach defendants’ second ground for removal jurisdiction, namely that Counts I-IV are removable under the complete preemption doctrine.
. In their supplemental brief, plaintiffs suggest, without evident conviction, that they might have ERISA standing under the narrow set of cases granting suсh standing to parties not enumerated in 29 U.S.C. § 1132(a).
See Fentron Indus., Inc. v. Nat'l Shopmen Pension Fund,
. In their reply brief, defendants argue that remand under § 1441(c) is inapplicable here. They assert that § 1441(c) does not pertain to this case because plaintiffs’ claims are not "separate and independent" claims or causes of action. This argument is unpersuasive in light of the fact that defendants elected to remove this case under both § 1441(b) and § 1441(c). Having relied on § 1441(c) for removal, they cannot now disavow its grant of remand power. More importantly, because Counts I-IV are not removable for reasons elaborated elsewhere in this opinion, plaintiffs have joined "one or more . otherwise nonremovable claims or causes of action” to the ERISA claim in Count V, which is clearly "a separate and independent claim or cause of action" arising under federal law, within the express requirements of § 1441(c). See 28 U.S.C. § 1441(c).
. Of course, the absence of a federal remedy does not preclude a valid preemption defense.
See, e.g., Lee v. E.I. DuPont de Nemours and Co.,
. ERISA itself limits the scope of ERISA preemption in ways not implicated in this case. For example, § 1144(a) does not apply to state laws regulating insurance, bаnking, or securities, 29 U.S.C. § 1144(b)(2)(A), nor does it apply to state criminal laws of general application. 29 U.S.C. § 1144(b)(4).
.
See Sommers Drug Stores Co. Employee Profit Sharing Trust v. Corrigan Enters., Inc.,
.
See Pilot Life Ins. Co.,
.
See Sommers Drug Stores,
. Similarly, in
Smith v. Crowder Jr., Co.,
. Alternatively, the Court could dismiss Counts I-IV without prejudice under
United Mine Workers,
. Given the Court's rulings, it need not, and does not, reach the shareholder ratification issue raised in the parties’ pleadings, nor does it *461 address ASC's request to be made a party-defendant. Resolution of these, and other matters, is left to the state court.
