Plaintiff Roney, who owns 2,500 shares of stock in North State Financial Corporation, a North Carolina enterprise, brought this action upon behalf of the corporation and the other shareholders, alleging that the corporation was damaged by the mismanagement and neglect of the defendants in acquiring First Colony Savings and Loan Association’s stock. The individual defendants were directors of North State Financial Corporation when the stock was acquired and the corporate defendants—Trident Financial Services, a private consulting firm, and defendant Peat, Marwick, Mitchell & Co., an accounting firm —advised the directors about the acquisition. In substance, the complaint alleges that the defendant directors did not exercise reasonable care in acquiring the First Colony Savings and Loan *83 Association stock at $17 per share and that the corporate defendants did not properly advise the directors in regard thereto. As to the defendant directors, the complaint alleges more specifically that in acquiring the stock at the price agreed to they failed to properly supervise management, failed to inform themselves of First Colony’s situation, activities, and worth, and failed to follow proper business practices and procedures. The complaint does not allege either that the directors acted fraudulently, or in bad faith for their own interest, or that plaintiffs had demanded that the directors take steps to recover the damage allegedly sustained; instead, the complaint merely states that a demand for the directors to act would have been futile because the directors controlled the corporation and committed some of the acts plaintiffs complained of. Plaintiffs took a voluntary dismissal as to one director, R. E. Davenport, Jr., and pursuant to the motions of the remaining defendants under the provisions of Rule 12(b)(6) of the N.C. Rules of Civil Procedure the complaint was dismissed as to all the defendants.
While the order of dismissal is based on several grounds only one requires discussion —plaintiffs’ failure to demand action by the corporation’s governing board. It is fundamental everywhere that ordinarily the business affairs of a corporation are controlled by its board of directors, and that in the absence of circumstances indicating that the directors cannot or will not pursue the company’s rights against others no shareholder can properly take on that task. Under our law a shareholder who brings a derivative action to enforce an alleged corporate right, as plaintiff Roney did here, must —
allege with particularity the efforts, if any, made ... to obtain the action he desires from the directors . . . and the reasons for his failure to obtain the action or for not making the effort.
G.S. 55-55(b). This provision has been construed to mean that in the absence of circumstances indicating that such a step would be futile, a demand that the directors act is a prerequisite to a shareholder suing upon behalf of the corporation.
Swenson v. Thibaut,
Affirmed.
