This is a suit by a minority stockholder of Fidelity Capital Fund, Inc., a Massachusetts corporation, on behalf of himself and other interested stockholders for the benefit of the corporation. The defendants, in addition to the corporation, are individuals, now or formex-ly directors, and several corporations sought to be charged with conduct in violation of the Investment Company Act of 1940, 15 U.S.C. §§ 80a-l et seq., hereinafter *817 the act. 1 The conduct said to be in violation of the act is described in the opinion of the district court, 222 F.Supp. 80S, and may be summarized fоr present purposes as the charging of improper and excessive fees. The district court dismissed the action solely because of plaintiff’s failure to allege a prior demand upon the other stockholders, and did not reach the questions defendants аttempted to raise on the merits by a motion for summary judgment. Defendants draw our attention to this motion as an alternative basis for sustaining the dismissal, but we are disinclined to pass upon such a motion not considered below, absent a clear showing of its inescapable сorrectness. This is a complicated action. The eventual record may well raise issues in a somewhat different form, and we do not wish at this juncture to attempt comprehensive rulings. For now, we think it sufficient to say that at least some basis for recovery was well pleaded, and that .with regard to defendants’ claim of acquiescence or waiver there appears to be at least an issue of fact.
The district court correctly decided that the plaintiff had complied with the procedural requirements of F.R.Civ. P. 23(b), by stating, inter alia, the reasons he made no prior demands upon the directors and upon the stockholders. As a matter of substance it is conceded that his reason as to the former, namely, that a majority of the directors were, allegedly, involved in the claimed malfeasance and misfeasance, is adequate.. With respect to the stockholders, plaintiff asserts, inter alia,
“Fund has more than 48,000 stockholders scattered all over the United States whose identity is subject to frequent changes. A demand upon the stockholders to take action would cast аn unconscionable financial burden on the plaintiff in that the plaintiff would have to solicit proxies from all of the stockholders residing in every State of the Union and foreign countries. It would involve the conduct of a proxy fight, a proxy fight which would entail prohibitive expеnses and would cause undue loss of time with the danger that the claims alleged might be barred by the Statute of Limitations.”
While defendants contend that this is an inadequate excuse for not making a demand upon the stockholders under what might be termed the federal rule if it, rather than some special rule of some-particular state, obtains, we disagree.. We disagree also with their contention that, if there is a difference, the state rule is the one to be applied.
The explanation of our disagreement requires an analysis of the reasons for-requiring an a priori demand. In Hal-prin v. Babbitt, 1 Cir., 1962,
The district court stated that the law of the state of incorporation normally determines a stockholder’s rights, and that this is so with respect to any derivative action “even if the claim which the-corporation has against the alleged wrongdoer is based on a federal statute.” For this it cited United Copper Securities Co. v. Amalgamated Copper Co., 1917,
~ , ,, . Solomont did not involve the present —, , - • '. j , —tr—r——— question, but decided solely that a maToritv of disinterested stockholders could" vote that an "g ctroñ-againsV the directors,even though" valid; should not be^ursTed. . The" distTkt court concluded timt thLTmeant that Massachusetts would not excuse a demand on the majority stоck- , ,, , holders, unless, following the directors analogy, they were not disinterested. We do not believe this follows. The fact that a majority of informed disinterested stockholders might decide, for reasons discussed in Solomont, that a suit should not be prosecuted, does not mean that they must be fully instructed in every instance before the suit is instituted. As we pointed out in Halprin v. Babbitt, supra, the minority does not have to obtain the express authorization of the majority before suit is commenced. The demand upon the majority, in other words, does not have this broad purpоse. Neither of the more limited purposes we outlined in Halprin copld be accomplish-ed in any real sense unless the demand evoked a full and fair consideration of the issues, in depth, by the other stock-holders. 2 If their number is small, as in Halprin, and the minority could reasоn-ably be expected to put its case before them, it should be obliged to do so. How,, ,, „ ,, ever, on the allegations of the present \ . , , , ,, , , ?omPlamt not only would such a burden k.ieno™’but n? d™dosn™ tbat ^T be t0 ^ W,°Ul? be IlkeIyJ° Persuade a maj0flty to ,take ?vfthe/Í on>.conversely, pernit an “forlfd decls\on ^ the majority that the action be not instituted.2 3
As a pointless or, alternatively, impossibly burdensome act it should be excused. Gottesman v. General Motors Corp., 1959, 2 Cir.,
We need not pursue the inquiry of whether the Massachusetts law is otherwise~becaüse^fTf Is71írsKoüId~Str~ in our opinion, be applied. In this suit based upon the"Investment Company Act the question is not what state law normally determines a shareholder’s rights,^ nor is it whether the act impliedly granted a shareholder a direct personal action, (but cf. Borak v. J. I. Case Co., 7 Cir., 1963,
Our views find support in the Supreme Court’s recent opinion in J. I. Case Co. v. Borak,
•y-. — w- - '“[W]e believe that the overriding federal law applicable here would, where the facts required, control the apрropriateness of redress despite the provisions of state corporation law, * * * [I] f the law of the-State happened to attach no responsibility to the use of misleading proxy statements, the whole purpose of the section might be frustrated. Furthermorе, the hurdles .that the' victim might face (such as- separate^ suits, * * * bringing in all parties necessary for complete relief, etc.) might well prove insuperable to' effective relief.”
*820 We believe a rule under which a demand upon the majority stockholders is a condition thаt cannot be excused in a case such as this is the type of hurdle that the Investment Company Act, also, forbids. 5
Judgment will be entered vacating the judgment of the District Court and remanding the action for further proceedings not inconsistent herewith.
Notes
. The complaint also charged common law violations, but the dismissal of those causes is not complained of.
. For present purposes we are assuming, but not deciding, that under both state and federal law a fully informed majority, unbiased and unled in any way by the directors, might decide over the wishes of, the minority thаt a claim involving a violation of the act should not be pursued
.
But cf. Rogers v. American Can Co., 3 Cir. 1962,
. Nowhere has this been better stated than in the opinion of the district court in Pomerantz v. Clark, D.Mass., 1951,
. Our attention has not been called to Rule 20(a) which the SEC has propounded requiring the company, when soliciting proxies, to include stockholder statements not exceeding one hundred words, and consequently no argument has been based upon it. We do not think that any valid argument could be. Assuming that plaintiff were to uhrase his demand in the form of a vote to bring suit which had to be put to the stockholders so as to receive the benefit of this rule, any contention.that plaintiff could make full disclosure in a 100 word statement (the substantive portion of the present complaint, which is not unduly prolix, fills 13 pages)1 and receive thoughtful and adеquate consideration, would be unrealistic. For discussion of the scope of this rule see Loss, Securities Regulation (2d ed. 1961) 1025, 900. That type of demand in our opinion would be meaningless. For a demand of sufficient proportions, assuming that plaintiff were required to make such, hе would be on his own.
. We find nothing to the contrary in the cases cited by the court. United Copper Securities v. Amalgamated Copper Co., supra, held that the fact that the cause of action was based upon an alleged violation of the Sherman Act did not obviаte, or reduce, the necessity of a demand by the minority stockholders. This is a quite different situation. As the SEC points out in its amicus brief filed herein in opposition to the “Massachusetts rule,” there is a “great difference between the policy underlying the federal antitrust laws and that undеrlying the Investment " Company Act. On the one hand, the policy of the antitrust laws is the preservation and protection of competition in our economy in its broadest scope. Those laws are thus geared to the protection of competing businesses, as businеsses, whether in the corporate form or not. On the other hand, the policy of the Investment Company Act is to provide a comprehensive network of restrictions upon the organization, operation and management of investment companies to the end that individual investors might be protected.” Price v. Gurney, supra, merely involved a question of the statutory jurisdiction of the bankruptcy court.
