Rоbert B. Sparks, a former minority shareholder of Alexico Corporation (Alexico), alleges CBIZ Accounting, Tax & Advisory of Kansas Ciiy, Inc., and its director, Kevin Winters, (collectively referred to as CBIZ), committed malpractice while handling Alexico’s accounts. Sparks filed a derivative action pursuant to K.S.A. 60-223a. CBIZ filed a motion for partial summary judgment, alleging Sрarks lacked standing to pursue his derivative claim because he was not a stockholder when the lawsuit was commenced. Sparks filed a motion to pursue his case as a direct action under the close corporatiоn exception recognized and applied in Richards v. Bryan,
CBIZ contends: (1) the close corporation excеption recognized in Richards applies only when an existing minority shareholder files suit against a majority shareholder for breach of a fiduciary duty, and (2) the plaintiff did not directly engage CBIZ to perform professional accounting services and K.S.A. 1-402 precludes liability. For those reasons, CBIZ insists the district court erred in denying the defendants’ motion for summary judgment and granting Sparks’ mоtion to maintain a direct action against them.
We reverse and remand with directions that summary judgment be entered in favor of the defendants. Sparks admits his claim of professional negligence against CBIZ is derivative; that is, his injury, if any, is mediated through Alexico; therefore, Sparks is precluded from bringing an individual damage claim for the defendants’ breach of duty owed to the corporation. See Richards,
We have carefully considered all of Sparks’ arguments and the рublished and unpublished cases he presents to support those arguments and are not persuaded the close сorporation exception should be extended in Kansas to permit litigation against a third party for professional negligence in the performance of a duty owed to the corporation.
There is in our view a second compelling reason why Sparks cannot proceed against CBIZ. Even if we are in error and the close corporation exception werе held to be applicable to litigation against a third party, K.S.A. 1-402 provides:
“No person, proprietorship, pаrtnership or registered firm authorized to practice as a certified public accountant ... , or any emplоyee, agent, partner, officer, shareholder or member thereof, shall be liable to any person or entity for civil damages resulting from acts, omissions, decisions or other conduct amounting to negligence in the rendition of prоfessional accounting services unless:
(a) The plaintiff directly engaged such person, proprietorship or registered firm to perform the prоfessional accounting services; or
(b) (1) the defendant knew at the time of tire engagement or the defendant and thе client mutually agreed after the time of tire engagement drat tire professional accounting services rendеred the client would be made available to fire plaintiff, who was identified in writing to the defendant; and (2) the defendant knew that the plaintiff intended to rely upon the professional accounting services rendered the client in conneсtion with specified transactions described in writing.” (Emphasis added.)
Sparks malees no claim that subsection (b) of the statute is applicable. That leaves us with the unambiguous and clear language of subsection (a) and Sparks’ acknowlеdgment there was no direct engagement and his damages, if any, are mitigated through the corporation.
To avoid аpplication of K.S.A. 1-402, Sparks suggests that if CBIZ had a direct duty to a shareholder, “there would be no need for a derivative lawsuit and no need for the close corporation exception.” This is circuitous reasoning that does not provide a legal rationale for avoidance of the clear and unambiguous prohibition against a shareholder maintaining a direct cause of action against CBIZ for breach of a professional duty owed to the corporation. Sparks did not direcdy engage CBIZ, Alexico did.
Accordingly, the judgment of the district is reversed, and the case remanded with directions to enter judgment in favor of the defendants.
Reversed and remanded with directions.
