Lead Opinion
delivered the opinion of the Court.
Petitioner, Dora Surowitz, a stockholder in Hilton Hotels Corporation, brought this action in a United States District Court on behalf of herself and other stockholders charging that the officers and directors of the corporation had defrauded it of several million dollars by illegal devices and schemes designed to cheat the corporation and enrich the individual defendants. The acts charged, if true, would constitute frauds of the grossest kind against the corporation, and would be in violation of the Securities Act of 1933,
So far as the language of the complaint and of Mrs. Surowitz’s verification was concerned, both were in strict compliance with the provisions of Rule 23 (b) which states that a shareholder’s complaint in a secondary action must contain certain averments and be verified by the plaintiff.
The Court of Appeals affirmed the District Court’s dismissal, saying in part:
“We can only conclude, as did the court below, that plaintiff’s verification of the complaint was false because she swore to the verity of alleged facts of which she was wholly ignorant.”342 F. 2d, at 606 .
The Court of Appeals reached its conclusion that the case must be dismissed under Rule 23 (b) and Rule 41 (b) despite the fact that the charges made against the defendants were viewed as very serious and grave charges of fraud and that “many of the material allegations of the complaint are obviously true and cannot be refuted.”
At the time the District Court dismissed and the Court of Appeals approved, there were pending before those courts not merely the complaint, the verified statements by counsel and by Mrs. Surowitz, and the deposition of Mrs. Surowitz, but, as noted above, two affidavits, one signed by Mrs. Surowitz’s attorney in this case, Mr.
Mrs. Surowitz, the plaintiff and petitioner here, is a Polish immigrant with a very limited English vocabulary and practically no formal education. For many years she has worked as a seamstress in New York where by reason of frugality she saved enough money to buy some thousands of dollars worth of stocks. She was of course not' able to select stocks for herself with any degree of assurance of their value. Under these circumstances she had to receive advice and counsel and quite naturally she went to her son-in-law, Irving Bril-, liant. Mr. Brilliant had graduated from the Harvard Law School, possessed a master’s degree in economics from Columbia University, was a professional investment advisor, and in addition to his degrees and his financial acumen, he wore a Phi Beta Kappa key. In 1957, six years before this litigation began, he bought some stock for his mother-in-law in the Hilton Hotels Corporation, paying a little more than $2,000 of her own money for it. He evidently had confidence in that corporation because by 1960 he had purchased for his wife, his deceased mother’s estate, a trust fund created for his children, and Mrs. Surowitz some 2,350 shares of the corporation’s common stock, at a cost of about $45,000 in addition to one of the corporation’s $10,000 debentures.
About December 1962, Mrs. Surowitz received through the mails a notice from the Hilton Hotels Corporation announcing its plan to purchase a large amount of its own stock. Because she wanted it explained to her, she took the notice to Mr. Brilliant. Apparently disturbed
We assume it may be possible that there can be circumstances under which a district court could stop all proceedings in a derivative cause of action, relieve the defendants from filing an answer to charges of fraud, and conduct a pre-trial investigation to determine whether the plaintiff had falsely sworn either that the facts alleged in the complaint were true or that he had information which led him to believe they were true. And conceivably such a pre-trial investigation might possibly reveal facts surrounding the verification of the complaint which could justify dismissal of the complaint with prejudice. However, here we need not consider the question of whether, if ever, Federal Rule 23 (b) might call for such summary action. Certainly it cannot justify the court’s summary dismissal in this case. Rule 23 (b) was not written in order to bar derivative suits. Unquestionably it was originally adopted and has served since in part as a means to discourage “strike suits” by people who might be interested in getting quick dollars by making charges without regard to their truth so as to coerce corporate managers to settle worthless claims in order to get rid of them. On the other hand, however, derivative suits have played a rather important role in protecting shareholders of corporations from the designing schemes and wiles of insiders who are willing to betray their company’s interests in order to enrich themselves. And it is not easy to conceive of anyone more in need of protection against such schemes than little investors like Mrs. Surowitz.
When the record of this case is reviewed in the light of the purpose of Rule 23 (b)’s verification requirement, there emerges the plain, inescapable fact that this is not a strike suit or anything akin to it. Mrs. Surowitz was
“Those affidavits reveal that substantial and diligent investigation by Brilliant, Rockier and others preceded the filing of this complaint. . . . Neither affidavit, however, does anything, if anything could be done, to offset plaintiff’s positive disavowal of any relevant knowledge or information other than the fact of her stock ownership.” '342 F. 2d, at 607 .
In fact the opinion of the Court of Appeals indicates in several places that a woman like Mrs. Surowitz, who is uneducated generally and illiterate in economic matters, could never under any circumstances be a plaintiff in a derivative suit brought in the federal courts to protect her stock interests.
Reversed and remanded.
Notes
48 Stat. 74, as amended, 15 U. S. C. § 77a et seq. (1964 ed.).
48 Stat. 881, as amended, 15 U. S. C. § 78a et seq. (1964 ed.).
Del. Code Ann. Tit. 8, §101 et seq. (1953 ed.).
“(b) Secondary Action by Shareholders. In an action brought to enforce a secondary right on the part of one or more shareholders in an association, incorporated or unincorporated, because the asso
Consider, for example, these three excerpts taken from separate paragraphs in the Court of Appeals’ opinion:
“We have considered all arguments advanced by the plaintiff. We have considered the record in the light of plaintiff’s limited grasp of the English language and the intricacies of corporate finance. We have considered the peculiar position of a plaintiff in a suit such as this as, principally, the instrument through which the judicial machinery is set in motion. It is not unreasonable to
“But if the verification provision of the Rule is to have any real meaning, it requires that a plaintiff must have knowledge of his own position and relationship to the suit, of the official identity of the parties against whom the suit is brought and general knowledge of the wrongful acts which he alleges as a foundation for his complaint.
“We think the court below correctly held that a pleading governed by Rule 23 (b) is sham when it clearly appears that the ostensible verification is a mere formality without knowledgeable or informative comprehension in the party plaintiff whose verification gives it the breath of life. That breath is not instilled by the reading of words to that plaintiff which she obviously did not understand.”
Concurrence Opinion
concurring.
Rule 23 (b) directs that in a derivative suit “the complaint shall be verified by oath” but nothing dictates that the verification be that of the plaintiff shareholder. See Bose v. 39 Broadway, Inc.,
