Since 1980 Herbert Hadesman has sold gift wear and related items from space in Chicago’s Merchandise Mart. Hadesman and Werner Frank are the principal shareholders in Hadesman & Frank, Inc., a corporation formed to conduct the trade. Today Hadesman and Frank are enemies. In this suit xmder the diversity jurisdiction Frank accuses Hadesman of making off with the corporation’s business, effectively transferring it to a new firm, Hadesman & Associates, Inc., from which Frank has been excluded.
The district judge immediately detected a jurisdictional problem: Frank’s only claim against Hadesman & Frank, Inc., was to collect a debt of $50,000, plus accumulated interest. Yet 28 U.S.C. § 1332(a) provides jurisdiction only when the amount in controversy
exceeds
$50,000, “exclusive of interest and costs”. All remaining claims alleged wrongdoing by Hadesman, his wife, or Steven Miner, the corporation’s lawyer (and a member of its board). After receiving submissions from the parties, the district judge concluded that Frank lacks standing to pursue these claims and dismissed the suit. “Standing” is a misnomer, because Frank has alleged injury in fact. His investment in Hadesman & Frank, Inc., has declined in value. Frank’s problem is not standing (in the sense that the complaint does not allege a “case or controversy” justiciable under Article III) but the identity of the real party in interest. “Every action shall be prosecuted in the name of the real party in interest.” Fed.R.Civ.P. 17(a). Does the claim belong to Frank personally, or to Hadesman & Frank, Inc.? That is a question of state law,
Brocklesby Transport v. Eastern States Escort Services,
Treating the corporation as the owner of the claim has both procedural and jurisdictional consequences. The procedural consequence is that Frank must notify the firm’s board (or establish an exception to that requirement) and demand that the firm bring the suit in its own name; only after a refusal may Frank institute derivative litigation in the right of the corporation. 805 ILCS 5/7.80(b);
Valiquet v. First Federal Savings & Loan Association,
Illinois follows the widespread rule that an action for harm to the corporation must be brought in the corporate name. When investors have been injured in common, they must continue to act through their collective — the corporation.
Cashman v. Coopers & Lybrand,
Frank replies that although he and Hades-man may have suffered equally, in their capacity as shareholders in Hadesman
&
Frank, Inc., Hadesman reaped an offsetting gain through his new venture. Hadesman was a net winner, Frank a net loser. According to Frank, the disproportionate harm he suffered entitles him to litigate individually. So put, the argument is similar to one advanced in
Mann,
which spurned it: “We reject [any] test of shareholder standing of whether the shareholder alleges unique harm.”
Frank was a supplier to Hadesman & Frank, Inc.: a supplier of capital, of consulting services, and of information about good sources of gift wear for the firm to showcase and sell. But none of these involves any contract (or equivalent personal right) that Hadesman & Frank, Inc., dishonored. According to the complaint, Hadesman appropriated the corporation’s custom. To see this, consider one of the assets Hadesman supposedly stole: the firm’s customer list. A customer list is property of the firm, and an employee (even a chairman of the board) who puts that information to personal use has violated a duty to the corporation. That does not imply a violation of any duty to an investor. If Frank had used the same list for personal benefit, that act would have been an identical wrong, and again a wrong committed against the corporation. Frank wants us to treat these events as if he owned the customer list and had merely lent it to the corporation. If that is the right understanding, then Hadesman walked off with Frank’s property — and it is also true that Frank could have set up a competing business, using the list, without complaint from Hades-man or the corporation. But Frank does not contend that he was free to make personal use of the customer list while Hadesman was not; instead Frank depicts the list, the leasehold in the Merchandise Mart, and the entire custom and goodwill of the business as corporate assets. On that understanding, the wrong was done to the corporation, and the suit is derivative.
Much of Frank’s argument amounts to a plea that we establish a special rule for close corporations, permitting wronged investors direct access to the courts without the complex, time-consuming, and often unnecessary formalities of derivative litigation. Suppose Frank is half owner of Hadesman & Frank, Inc. Then demand on the board will be futile (the directors will deadlock); a new suit will be filed; Hadesman & Frank, Inc., will recover damages (we indulge the assumption that the facts are as the complaint depicts them); and half of the award will be returned to Hadesman. Would it not be simpler to allow Frank to sue in his own name, and to collect his half-interest in the harm done to the firm?
Simpler, yes, but whether simpler is better depends on the function of the requirements that litigation be brought by the firm itself, and that a dissatisfied investor make demand on the board. For public corporations, these requirements permit the firm’s managers to treat litigation like any other business prospect, and to decide whether its potential returns justify the costs. Limits on direct litigation instantiate the business judgment rule for corporate management, and they prevent the corporation’s endeavors from being hijacked by investors whose ends may be personal (perhaps they seek an award of fees) or ideological, and therefore may be antagonistic to the profit goal of most shareholders. See
Kamen v. Kemper Financial Services, Inc.,
But there is a catch — two catches, actually, and the second is dispositive. The ALI’s proposal has a series of provisos, designed to induce the court to consider the aspects of the direct-versus-derivative choice relevant even for close corporations. Sometimes shareholders bring direct actions in order to deny other investors, particularly creditors, a share of the recovery. If the firm is insolvent, the recovery belongs to the creditors; and when the firm has debt but the equity interest retains value, it is much easier to award the recovery to the corporation and allow the funds to be distributed according to contracts and bankruptcy priorities than it is to attempt to value one party’s claim as a stand-alone matter. See
Mid-State Fertilizer Co. v. Exchange National Bank of Chicago,
Catch No. 2 avoids any need for us to pursue this matter. Someone who wants a state to change its law must ask the state, but Frank filed this suit in federal court. Federal courts acting under the diversity jurisdiction are not the right forums for departures from established rules. None of the Illinois cases we have found establishes, or even hints at, any discretionary power to treat a derivative injury as if it were direct. Less than three years ago, in
Weissman,
we applied the standard direct-derivative distinction to a suit filed by a 50 percent shareholder in an Illinois close corporation. No state ease decided since then suggests that Illinois is ready to implement the approach of § 7.01(d). The American Law Institute recognizes that § 7.01(d) is not the majority position (see Reporter’s Note 4 to that section); the ALI simply commended the idea to the states. We have predicted that Delaware would not follow § 7.01(d).
Bagdon v. Bridgestone/Firestone, Inc.,
AFFIRMED.
