A grоup of policyholders, represented by Mary M. Rieff, appeal the dismissal of their lawsuit against two insurance companies and numerous individual defendants who were or are directors of Allied Mutual Insurance Company (Mutual). The defen *282 dants also include Allied Group, Incorporated (Group). Mutual is a nominal defendant and Nationwide Mutual Insurance Company (Nationwide) is an intervenor defendant. A motion to dismiss the lawsuit was filed by the defendants. The district court sustained the motion to dismiss holding that the policyholders lacked standing to proceed with the lawsuit and the suit was barred by a statute of limitations. We reverse the dismissal of the policyholders’ suit in part and remand for further proceedings.
I. Background Facts and Proceedings This appeal is from a case with many issues, parties, attorneys, claims, counts, and legal theories. Initially, the suit was brought on behalf of a mutual insurance company by its policyholder under the theory of a shareholder’s derivative suit, As we stated in Weltzin v. Nail:
A derivative lawsuit is unique in that the shareholders allege the company’s directors have directly harmed it by their acts and omissions such that the company has suffered a loss. The shareholders indirectly assert their rights through the rights of the company.
Weltzin v. Nail,
Allied Mutual Insurance Company incorporated Allied Group, Inc. in 1974. Mutual primarily operated as a private citizen insurer for home and automobile. Group engaged in the casualty and life insurance business. Until 1985, Group was a totally dependent subsidiary of Mutual. Group had no employees of its own, and Mutual provided for all of Group’s services. Many of the directors of Mutual were also the directors of Group. Prior to 1985, Mutual owned 100% of Group’s stock. In 1985, the directors, who are most of the defendants in this proceeding, offered 21% of Group’s stock publicly. Rather than Mutual receiving the benefits of this sale, the proceeds totaling $16.4 million went to Group’s subsidiaries. This transaction began the process that would ultimately result in a role reversal between Mutual and Group.
A pool had always existed between Mutual and Group and its subsidiaries containing the assets, profits, and premiums of their business. Initially, Mutual controlled the pool and Group received 15%. The defendant directors began to slowly increase Group’s share in 1985, first to 38%, in 1987 to 41%, in 1990 to 53%, in 1992 to 60%, and in 1993 to 64%. Thus, in 1985 Mutual received 85% of the benefits from the joint pool, but by 1993 Mutual’s share had decreased to 36%. Finally, in January of 1993, Mutual gave up all control of the pool to a subsidiary of Group for no consideration.
By 1989, all Mutual employees had been reclassified as Group employees, in turn making Mutual completely dependent on Group for its workforce. Eventually, in February of 1993, Mutual sold off all of Group’s remaining common stock, giving up any possibility of sharing in Group’s growth and success. As a result of the sell-off of Mutual’s control to Group, the policyholders allege that the directors have allowed themselves several generous grants since 1985 worth many millions of dollars.
*283 From 1985 to 1993, Mutual slowly restructured itself, which the policyholders allege benefited the individual directors, Group, and its shareholders, and was to Mutual’s detriment. In all, the policyholders conclude the defendants exchanged assets wоrth more than $900 million at the time of the original petition for consideration of only $126 million. Further, because Mutual was essentially subsumed under Group, the policyholders argue, what in fact occurred was a demutualization.
Demutualization occurs when a private mutual company converts to a publicly held stock company. In order for a mutual company to do this by statutory procedure, it must follow strict guidelines ensuring fairness to its policyholders. See Iowa Code ch. 515G (1997) (describing mutual insurance company conversions). Mutual’s policyholders argue these procedures were not followed, and they suffered harm as a result.
In December 1997, Rieff filed a derivative suit against the individual directors/officers of Mutual and Group and Group individually. She later amended her petition in June 1998 to include class claims and a class of injured policyholders. The amended petition asserts eight counts against all named defendаnts. The petition alleges five derivative claims and three class action claims, the main one being de facto demutualization. The petition requests relief for Mutual and its policyholders. A summary of the amended petition is included below:
Count I Breach of Fiduciary Duty (Derivative Claim);
Count II Waste of Corporate Assets (Derivative Claim);
Count III Improper Transfer of Control (Derivative Claim);
Count IV Intentional Interference with Business Advantage and Contracts (Derivative Claim);
Count V Equitable Relief (Derivative Claim);
Count VI De Facto Conversion (Class Action Claim);
Count VII Breach of Fiduciary Duty (Class Action Claim); and
Count VIII Intentional Interference with Advantageous Business and Contractual Relationships (Class Action Claim).
Nationwide intervened as a defendant in 1998 following its purchase agreement with and for Allied and its subsidiaries. The policyholders sought to enjoin this sale from going through pending their litigation. In July 1998, a hearing was held on the policyholders’ motion for temporary and permanent injunction against the sale of all Allied companies to Nationwide. This motion was denied. The directors/officers, together with Group, also filed a motion to dismiss the policyholders’ amended petition. They argued policyholders have no standing to bring a derivative suit, the statute of limitations bars the basis for the claims, and the policyholders have otherwise failed to state a cognizable claim for which relief can be granted.
The district court agreed with each argument made by the defendants. It granted the motion to dismiss in its entirety. The district court’s opinion has caused quite a stir among those in the insurance and legal communities. Six amicus curiae briefs have been filed since the policyholders took their appeal to our court. The issue generating the most dispute is whether a policyholder has standing to bring a derivative suit on behalf of her mutual company. This right is unequivocally recognized for shareholders by state statute. Iowa Code § 490.740. A similar right for policyholders may also be found
*284
in past precedent.
Rowen v. LeMars Mut. Ins. Co.,
The other issues on appeal question the timeliness of the action, as well as the effect of the amended petition. We are also asked to determine if de facto demu-tualization is a valid cause of action when being used to describe the restructuring of a mutual insurance company to the benefit of a stock company without compensation to its policyholders. Defendants further allege that the class claims fail to provide the policyholders with a right of recovery. Finally, defendant Group maintains that the policyholders’ petition fails to state a claim against Group in several respects.
II. Standard and Scope of Review
“A motion to dismiss tests the legal sufficiency of a plaintiffs petition.”
Schaffer v. Frank Moyer Constr., Inc.,
We review the policyholders’ “petition in its most favorable light, resolving all doubts and ambiguities in [their] favor.”
Schreiner v. Scoville,
III. Issues on Appeal
A motion to dismiss should not be liberally granted. We will affirm a dismissal only if the policyholders “faked to state a claim upon which any relief could be granted under any state of supporting facts that could be established.”
Schreiner,
A. Policyholder Derivative Claims
Ordinarily, a “motion to dismiss for lack of standing place[s] the burden on plaintiffs to show (1) a specific, personal, and legal interest in the litigation, and (2) injury.”
City of Dubuque v. Iowa Trust,
1. Rowen Jurisprudence
The policyholders argue that policyholder standing to bring a derivative suit has been established by our prior jurisprudence, notwithstanding statutory authority. It is true that we have entertained several policyholder derivative suits in our court, however, standing to bring these suits was never at issue.
See Rowen II,
We are not in the habit of addressing issues neither party has presented. The fact that we allowed the
Rowen
cases to proceed does not automatically establish a right in policyholders to bring derivative suits. However, if our court felt we lacked jurisdiction because of standing, we could have raised that on our own motion, even if it was not an issue before us.
Troester v. Sisters of Mercy Health Corp.,
Rather than be concerned about standing in
Rowen I,
we discussed at length the necessity for derivative suits. Our court concluded that when the corporatiоn is a public franchise, its policyholders own it and are permitted to seek redress for wrongs done to it on behalf of the company.
Rowen I,
[Corporations do not have the same autonomy as other parties. A corporate charter is a public franchise. The stockholders, in this case policyholders, own that franchise. One who wrongs the corporation injures the public franchise held by the policyholders.
... Although the right to seek derivative relief is subject to abuse, it is essential as a means to permit correction of intracorporate wrongs.
Id.
This language strongly suggests that our court assumed policyholders had standing to bring derivative suits against their company. Further, we recognized that the derivative action was an indispensable way for policyholders to hold their corporation’s officers and directors accountable. We continued to entertain these suits and never challenged by our own motion the right of the policyholders to bring these claims.
See, e.g., Rowen v. LeMars Mut. Ins. Co.,
2. Statutory Authority vs. Past Jurisprudence
Not every legal right is rooted in legislative enactment. Claims can be as freely brought under precedential authority as those founded on statute.
See Benjamin v. Lindner Aviation, Inc.,
It should be noted that our court recognized the general right to bring a derivative suit well before clear legislative authority existed providing this right to shareholders.
Id.
We reaffirmed this right one year before our decision in
Rowen I. Holi-Rest, Inc. v. Treloar,
[W]e have long recognized the right аnd obligation of the courts to vindicate wrongs done to corporations by others, whether they be officers, directors or strangers.... We have also permitted derivative actions. The derivative action is a unique judicial device by which those who hold the public franchise may seek redress in behalf of the corporation for wrongs done to it. Although the right to seek derivative relief is subject to abuse, it is essential as a means to permit correction of intracorporate wrongs.
Rowen I,
The defendants assert that our past jurisprudence is not controlling in this area. They argue that even if earlier supreme court decisions did at one time establish policyholder standing, the enactment of section 490.740 in 1989 overruled this line of decisions. Oppositely, the policyholders allege that the predecessor to section 490.740 was essentially identical to it, also naming only shareholders. See Iowa Code § 496A.43 (1975). They argue that the ■Rowen courts firmly established the right of this action to policyholders even with the language of section 490.740’s predecessor available to it.
The defendants cite two statutory provisions to contest the policyholders’ argument. See Iowa Code §§ 490.740, 490.1701 (1997). Section 490.740 acknowledges the right to bring a derivative suit. Section 490.1701 limits the application of all provisions within chapter 490, including section 490.740. The dispute surrounding these provisions are twofold: (1) Section 490.740 uses the term “shareholder” in reference to derivative suits, and (2) Section 490.1701(2) forbids chapter 490’s applicability to mutual companies.
The relevant provisions are provided below.
490.740. Procedure in derivative proceedings
1. A person shall not commence a proceeding in the right of a domestic or foreign corporation unless that person was a shareholder of the corporation when the transaction complained of occurred or unless that person became a shareholder through transfer by operation of law from one who was a shareholder at that time.
Id. § 490.740(1) (emphasis added).
490.1701. Application to existing corporations
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2. Unless otherwise provided, this chapter does not apply to ... a corporation organized on the mutual plan under chapter 491....
Id. § 490.1701(2) (emphasis added).
Chapter 491 deals with “corporations for pecuniary profit.” Mutual has been organized under this chapter. Chapter 491 does not have a comparable derivative suit section. As such, chapter 491 neither approves nor disapproves of dеrivative suits. We agree with the defendants that section 490.740 cannot on its terms provide policyholders with the derivative right they are seeking. However, section 490.740 does not purport to be the exclusive provider of derivative remedy for every corporate context. Accordingly, if there is some other authority for policyholders to bring a derivative suit, no statute in the Iowa Code would prohibit it.
We feel our past cases, especially our Rowen jurisprudence, provide that authority. We do not agree that because the Roiven cases were decided before section 490.740 was enacted, section 490.740 overruled Rowen when it became effective. How can section 490.740 overrule Rowen, which deals with a mutual company derivative suit, when by its own language, chapter 490 does not apply to mutual companies? See id. § 490.1701(2). Quite simply, it cannot. Roiven assumed that policyholders have standing and nothing in section 490.740 overrules that right.
3. National Treatment of Policyholder Standing
Policyholder standing to sue derivatively is a right much recognized by other jurisdictions.
See generally
Theodore Alleg-aert, Comment,
Derivative Actions by Policyholders on Behalf of Mutual Insurance Cоmpanies,
63 U. Chi. L.Rev. 1063, 1070-71 (1996) [hereinafter Allegaert] (“[Tjhere is ample precedent for allowing policyholder derivative actions to proceed.... Virtually all judicial opinions in insurance derivative actions ... have merely assumed ... standing.”). The United States Supreme Court has also recognized that the derivative suit is available to policyholders because of their similarity to shareholders.
Koster v. (American) Lumbermens Mut. Cas. Co.,
Courts around the nation have either explicitly provided this right or assumed it was available to policyholders.
Koster v. (American) Lumbermens Mut. Cas. Co.,
Finally, we have found no court that has expressly said this right is unavailable to
*288
policyholders absent controlling statutory direction. Rather, courts have been sensitive to the necessity of such suits “to dеal fairly and competently with those seeking relief for wrongs done.”
Harhen,
Usually the wrongdoing officers also possess the control which enables them to suppress any effort by the corporate entity to remedy such wrongs. Equity therefore traditionally entertains the derivative or secondary action....
The cause of action which such plaintiff brings before the court is not his own but the corporation’s. It is the real party in interest and he is allowed to act in protection of its interest somewhat as a “next friend”'might do for an individual, because it is disabled from protecting itself.
Koster,
We find that policyholders have standing to hold third parties accountable to their corporation by derivative suit. Nothing in chapter 490 prohibits this power or overrules several years of precedent indicating this as an authorized policyholder action. Moreover, we are persuaded that a suit in equity gives our court more leeway to address issues that would not ordinarily be available to policyholders otherwise.
See Koster,
B. Alleged Procedural Defects of Pleading
Initially, we address two possible procedural defects: (1) The policyholders did not originally plead the class claims and now seek to amend their petition more than five years after any alleged act of misconduct occurred; and (2) The majority of the alleged acts of misconduct to support the derivative and class claims occurred mоre than five years prior to the filing of the original 1997 petition.
1. The Amended Class Claims
The original petition filed on December 31, 1997 only asserted derivative claims. Mary Rieff was also not a named plaintiff in a class capacity. In June of 1998, the petition was amended to include Rieff, asserting on behalf of a class of policyholders an additional three counts brought as class claims. To properly amend a petition, the amendment must relate back to the original petition. Generally, relation back determinations are governed by Iowa Rule of Civil Procedure 69(e).
See Porter v. Good Eavespouting,
The relation back rule is founded on notice.
Estate of Kuhns v. Marco,
We have stated: “The notice required under the relation back doctrine relates to notice that is sufficient to permit a defendant to prepare a defense to an action on the merits.” Id. at 495. The creation of a class in the present case added additional plaintiffs, but the core acts of misconduсt remained the same. In this regard, we will find relation back as long as “the underlying claims remain unchanged.” Id. at 496. In the present case, three new claims were added along with additional plaintiffs. “Amendments that add claims along with new plaintiffs would require an additional analysis consistent with the purpose of rule 69(e) as well as the language of the rule.” Id. We need to determine then if the notice purpose and the language of Rule 69(e) are met before we can conclude the amendment relates back.
Notice is not a problem here because the defendants already knew what conduct they needed to defend against. Whether it was against Mutual as a whole or its policyholders does not change the notice determination. Moreover, no responsive pleading had been filed prior to this amended petition. As such, our rule states: “A party may amend a pleading once as a mаtter of course at any time before a responsive pleading is served.... ” Iowa R. Civ. P. 69(d). Rule 69(e) further notes:
Whenever the claim or defense asserted in the amended pleading arose out of the conduct, transaction, or occurrence set forth or attempted to be set forth in the original pleading, the amendment relates back to the date of the original pleading.
Iowa R. Civ. P. 69(e). Clearly the class claims arise out of the same conduct and transactions enunciated in the derivative claims. As such, the amended petition relates back to the original petition for purposes of this appeal even though a new class of plaintiffs and class claims were added.
2. Statute of Limitations
Generally, the defense of statute of limitations is affirmatively asserted by a responsive pleading.
Davis v. State,
We think that the applicable statute of limitations is five years.
See
Iowa Code § 614.1(4). Actions “founded on unwritten contracts, those brought for injuries to property, or for relief on the ground of fraud in cases heretofore solely cognizable in a court of chancery, ... [must be brought] within five years.”
Id.
The policyholders make a half-hearted effort to suggest that their claims are founded on written contract and deserve a ten-year statute of limitations.
See id.
§ 614.1(5). However, they point to no viable written contract in their petition to support their contention. For instance, the policyholders are not alleging Mutual was actually unable to fulfill the requirements of their policies. ‘Where the liabili
*290
ty cannot be shown by a writing, it is reasonable to say as a matter of law that an action on such liability is founded on an unwritten rather than a written contract.”
Motherly v. Hanson,
When the original petition was filed on December 31, 1997, only two acts of misconduct had occurred within five years. In January of 1993, Mutual’s directors surrendered Mutual’s remaining control of the asset pool to Group and its subsidiaries for no consideration. In February of 1993, Mutual’s directors sold off its remaining shares in Group. All other incidents of improper conduct occurred more than five years before December 31, 1993, the earliest one occurring in 1985. Barring any special exception, only the 1993 incidents may be used by this court to determine if the petition could support any right of recovery. Thе policyholders posit two reasons why the statute of limitations is not a barrier to any alleged act of misconduct: (1) fraud and (2) the discovery rule.
a. Fraud
The policyholders maintain fraud kept them from discovering the effect of the defendants’ alleged misconduct. There is evidence that the events were noted in proxy statements made to Group’s shareholders. However, no similar disclosure was made to Mutual’s policyholders. The pleading indicates that two audits of these activities were conducted by the insurance commissioner’s office of Iowa. No corporate-structure-changing events were detected by either audit. The second audit, conducted in December of 1994 incorrectly concluded that the pooling agreement remained prorated. In reality, any share to the pool Mutual once owned had already been surrendered to Group and its subsidiaries. By the time of thе 1994 audit, Mutual no longer maintained any control of the pool.
Mutual received a draft of the commissioner’s report for its approval. Neither it nor its directors corrected this error on the report. Mutual allowed the commissioner to errantly conclude that it still had a share of the pool. The import of this nonaction, the policyholders claim, is that the report portrays Mutual as part of the profit sharing arrangement to current and prospective policyholders, ie., the report does not indicate that Group’s shareholders are receiving the benefits from Mutual’s business. It also does not recognize that Mutual no longer has control of its own operations and is subservient to Group and its shareholders, as opposed to maintaining the autonomy and control over Group it once had. The alleged true effect of these transactions was not discovered until Seрtember of 1997 by an independent insurance expert.
We recognize that fraudulent concealment can toll the applicable statute of limitations. In this regard, to toll the statute of limitations,
the plaintiff carries the burden of either (1) proving “that the defendant affirmatively concealed the facts on which the plaintiff would predicate [the] cause of action,” or (2) proving “a confidential or fiduciary relationship exists between the person concealing the cause of action and the aggrieved party” combined with proof that defendant breached the duty of disclosure.
McClendon v. Beck,
However, whether a fiduciary relationship exists between the policyholders of Mutual and the directors of Group and Group itself is a difficult question for resolution by a motion to dismiss. “Because the circumstances giving rise to a fiduciary duty are so diverse, any such relationship must be evaluated on the facts and circumstances of each individual case.”
Kurth v. Van Horn,
Clearly, Mutual’s directors owe a fiduciary duty to its policyholders.
See Rowen II,
b. The Discovery Rule
Regardless of their ability to prove fraud, the policyholders assert that the statute of limitations for these alleged acts of misconduct did not begin to run until they were discovered by the policyholders. “In civil cases, under the discovery rule, thе statute of limitations begins to run when the injured party has actual or imputed knowledge of the facts that would support a cause of action.”
State v. Wilson,
The policyholders maintain that they were given no notice or disclosure of the transactions that eventually turned formerly independent Mutual into an entity totally dependent on a stock company. They suggest it was not reasonable for them to be put on notice by proxy statements provided to Group’s shareholders. And due diligence on their part could not have discovered the effect of the transactions because even the Iowa Insurance Commissioner could not uncover what had transpired. The policyholders assert they were given no cаuse to prompt further investigation until 1997 when an independent insurance expert noted the evolution.
With these facts of inability for discovery pled, coupled with allegations of fraud, the policyholders have sufficiently placed the onset of the statute of limitations in dispute. When such is the case, a dismissal of the petition based on statute of limitations grounds is not appropriate.
Pride,
*292 c. Miscellaneous Defenses to the Class Claims
The defendants argue that the claim alleging de facto demutualization should be dismissed because it is not a viable basis for recovery in Iowa. They further suggest that the class claims are really derivative claims in sheep’s clothing. More specifically, the defendants allege Count VIII fails to state a claim for intentional contractual interference and should be dismissed on this ground as well as derivative grounds. Finally, defendant Group alleges that Counts III, V, and VI of the amended petition fail to state a claim against Group and should be dismissed as to Group. Without passing judgment on the merits of the policyholders’ claims, we will determine whether they could provide any right of recovery.
At the outset, we should note that Iowa is a notice pleading state. Iowa R. Civ. P. 69(a).
“Since the advent of notice pleading under Iowa Rule of Civil Procedure 69(a), it is a rare case which will not survive a [motion to dismiss]. As a result, disposition of unmeritorious claims in advance of trial must now ordinarily be accomplished by other pretrial procedures which permit narrowing of the issues and piercing of the bare allegations contained in the petition.”
Haupt v. Miller,
Further, we do not require a petition to allege a specific legal theory. Iowa R. Civ. P. 69(b). A “pleading ‘is sufficient if it apprises of the incident out of which the claim arose and the mere general nature of action.’ ”
Haugland v. Schmidt,
1. De Facto Demutualization
Because of the shift of power and control from Mutual to Group, the policyholders argue a de facto conversion or demutualization of Mutual into a stock company occurred. The policyholders and defendants both presented two very different definitions of a demutualization in oral argument. The defendants argued that when a demutualization occurs, the mutual company ceases to exist as an insurance company necessitating the distribution of surplus to its displaced policyholders. The company loses its insurance license and no longer functions as an insurance company. This very limited definition is important because here, Mutual still exists and honors its policies. Under this definition, Mutual could not have demutualized.
Conversely, the policyholders defined a demutualization as a conversion of an enterprise from mutual to stock ownership. All business and control becomes founded in stock, but the company itself persists *293 and distributes policies. This broader definition is important because it recognizes that the company can continue to serve mutual functions, but is now controlled by stock ownership. Here, the policyholders plead that Mutuаl continues to operate as a mutual company but no longer has any right to control or profits. It has effectively been made subservient to the Group stock company. Under this definition, Mutual may have demutualized.
The Iowa Legislature has described the effect of a demutualization.
The successor stock company is a continuation of the mutual insurer and the conversion does not annul or modify any of the mutual insurer’s existing suits, contracts, or liabilities except as provided in the approved conversion plan. All rights, franchises, and interests of the mutual insurer in and to property, assets, and other interests shall be transferred to and shall vest in the successor stock company and the successor stock company shall assume all obligations and liabilities of the mutual insurer.
Iowa Code § 515G.9. This definition is particularly important because it assumes the mutual company lives on — what changes is that the interest in property and assets of the mutual company are now vested in stock ownership. Mutual’s policyholders assert that this is not unlike what happened here when Mutual gave all of its employees and its share of the profit pool to Group. Most of the consideration made from these transfers was provided to Group, not Mutual. Our review of the pleadings and supporting arguments leads us to conclude that the policyholders have pled sufficient facts to create a question as to whether Mutual did demutualize. 1 Dismissal for the opposite conclusion was inappropriate.
2. The Validity of Counts VI-VII as Class Claims
The defendants allege the class claims should be dismissed because they are really derivative in nature. Because we have analogized policyholders to shareholders for purposes of bringing a derivative suit, we feel it is also appropriate to apply the factors for determining the validity of a shareholder’s class claims to these policyholders’ сlass claims. We first recognize,
“[a]s a matter of general corporate law, shareholders have no claim for injuries to their corporations by third parties unless within the context of a derivative action.
There is, however, a well-recognized exception to the general rule: a shareholder has an individual cause of action if the harm to the corporation also damaged the shareholder in his capacity as an individual rather than as a shareholder.”
Engstrand v. West Des Moines State Bank,
in order to bring an individual cause of action for direct injuries a' shareholder must show that the third-party owed him a special duty or that he suffered an *294 injury separate and distinct from that suffered by the other sharеholders.
Id. (citation omitted). To distinguish these claims from their derivative claims, the policyholders must plead sufficient facts to show either that the defendants owed them a special duty or that every policyholder involved in the class suffered a special injury.
The defendants argue that the class claims do not fall under either Engst-rand criterion. We are not convinced. If a mutual company would like to demutualize, it must follow statutory steps to that end. See Iowa Code ch. 515G. Some of those steps include providing notice and a vote in this decision to its policyholders. Id. §§ 515G.4, .6. Additionally, the policyholders will then receive some form of payout from this approved conversion, e.g., through stock offers or dividends. Id. § 515G.3. These steps are not discretionary, but required. With an affirmative responsibility to disclose its intentions and seek approval from policyholders, as well as compensate them upon conversion, this creates a special duty not ordinarily cognizable between a mutual corporation and its policyholders.
We have recognized that when a special duty is present, the shareholders suffer a harm not suffered by the corporation itself and have an individual action against the corporation.
[W]hen there exists a special duty to the shareholder, outside of duties to the corporation, breach of that duty individually harms the shareholder and suit may be brought in that capacity. To this end, plaintiffs argue the interference with contract was specifically directed at them, not the corporation. Because of this, they claim to possess their own action.
We agree.
Ezzone,
Given the above discussion then, at the very least, Count VI, the de facto conversion claim, cannot be derivative because there was a special duty and no corporate injury. Clearly, Mutual itself could not sue its directors for improperly demutual-izing when it suffered no injury. This is true because the directors are not required to compensate the mutual company under the conversion plan. As such, it was error to dismiss Count VI.
As for Count VII, the plaintiff alleges that the individual defendants owed the plaintiff and the members of the class of policyholders fiduciary duties by reason of their positions as directors of Mutual. The alleged duties include duties of care, fidelity, loyalty, and diligence in the management and administration of the company’s affairs. These duties were allegedly breached by the defendant-directors and Group by their transfer gradually and ultimately, en toto, of the surplus оf Mutual to Group. This resulted in the elimination of any possibility that the policyholders could benefit from the surplus by receiving reduced premiums or a declared dividend. The plaintiff asserts this scenario as a special injury to her and the policyholders as a class, which is separate from the effect on Mutual as a corporation. The loss of the surplus of Mutual by its transfer to Group obviously injured Mutual by diminishing its assets. However, policy claims presumably would still be honored. *295 But the policyholders assert that they were separately injured as a class by this transfer because it destroyed the only fund and basis from which they could benefit from profitable business years through the declaration of dividends or reduced premiums.
Although this claim is somewhat entwined with Count VI and the derivative claim, we believe that enough separateness is shown to stand alone and survive a motion to dismiss. We also recognize that a breach of fiduciаry duty is generally recognized as a derivative claim.
See Weltzin,
Finally, Count VIII is brought as a claim of intentional interference with advantageous business and contractual relationships. At this point, we must recognize that shareholders and policyholders are not entirely synonymous with each other. There are many similarities, and for purposes of a derivative suit, they share enough qualities to provide standing to policyholders. However, there is one fundamental difference between shareholders and policyholders: Shareholders have an absolute stake in the corporation’s future business and contracts because these areas affect the value of their investment and the amount of profit they will share. On the other hand, policyholders are more like creditors of a corporation in that then-interest is ensuring the corporation has enough assets to satisfy the terms of their policies. See generally Allegaert, 63 U. Chi. L.Rev. at 1067-74.
If the directors of a mutual corporation interfere with its ability to conduct business and enter into contracts, this injures the corporation directly, and only indirectly, the policyholders. This is akin to a corporate waste claim, which is a classic derivative injury.
Whalen v. Connelly,
3. Issues Raised by Group
Defendant Group maintains that Counts III, V, and VI fail to give Group notice that these claims are made against Group and should therefore be dismissed. We find no merit to this contention. Each claim specifically references all defendants generally. This is enough to put Group on notice that each claim is being asserted against it.
See, e.g., Kleman v. Charles City Police Dep’t,
IV. Conclusion
Today we hold that policyholders have standing to assert derivative claims against their mutual company. We also find that dismissal of the amended petition on the basis of the statute of limitations is not founded at this time. We agree that a five-year statute of limitations is applicable here, but hold that the policyholders have pled sufficient facts to question when the statute began to run. We determine that the amended petition relates back to the original petition. We аlso hold that the theory of de facto conversion and breach of fiduciary duty may be asserted by this class of policyholders. Thus, in regard to Counts I-VII, the policyholders have alleged sufficient facts to survive dismissal at this stage.
The remaining class claim asserted by the policyholders was improperly pled. Intentional interference with business and contracts is a derivative claim under these facts. We affirm the district court’s dismissal of this class claim.
Accordingly, the dismissal of Counts I-VII is reversed. The dismissal of Count VIII is affirmed.
AFFIRMED IN PART, REVERSED IN PART, AND REMANDED.
Notes
. We do not create a new cause of action. We hold that if the policyholders can prove an improper conversion occurred that is contrary to Iowa law, they may assert their injury under the recognized tort of conversion. The "de facto” label is in place at this point because the policyholders as yet have been unable to show Mutual did demutualize, which, if such can be shown, may entitle them to some relief.
