Fed. Sec. L. Rep. P 92,718,
Quentin YOUNG, individually, and on behalf of those
similarly situated, Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
COLGATE-PALMOLIVE COMPANY, a foreign corporation, and Keith
Crane, Reuben Mark, Vernon R. Alden, Albert V. Casey, Frank
Pace, Jr., Thomas R. Wilcox, Howard W. Blauvelt, John P.
Kеndall, and Howard B. Wentz, Jr., respectively as Directors
of Colgate-Palmolive Company, Defendants-Appellees.
No. 85-1442.
United States Court of Appeals,
Seventh Circuit.
Argued Oct. 22, 1985.
Decided May 2, 1986.
Marshall Patner, Orlikoff, Flamm & Patner, Chicago, Ill., Frederic Brace, Brace & O'Donnell, Chicago, Ill, Robert A. Holstein, Holstein, Mack & Associates, Chicago, Ill. for plaintiff-appellant.
George A. Katz, William C. Sterling, Jr., Warren R. Stern, Wachtell, Lipton, Rosen & Katz, New York City, Bernard J. Nussbaum, Jay I. Bratt Sonnenschein, Carlin, Nath & Rosenthal, Chicago, Ill., for defendants-appellees.
Before CUMMINGS, Chief Judge, COFFEY, Circuit Judge, and FAIRCHILD, Senior Circuit Judge.
FAIRCHILD, Senior Circuit Judge.
Plaintiff shareholder filed this derivative action against the Colgate-Palmolive Company as the nominal defendant, and against the members of Colgate's board of directors. The complaint alleges that the directors breached their fiduciary duty to the corporation by adopting a "poison pill," or anti-takeover plan. On behalf of Colgate, plaintiff seeks a declaratory judgment that the plan and its adoption are invalid and unlawful; a temporary and permanent injunction against the plan's applicatiоn; costs; and attorneys' fees. The corporation has been properly served and Chicago counsel for the directors accepted service for them as a professional courtesy as if each had been served out of state and without waiving any jurisdictional objections.
Jurisdiction is properly based on diversity of citizenship, 28 U.S.C. Sec. 1332. Plaintiff is an Illinois resident; Colgate is a Delaware corporation that is qualified to do business in Illinois, with its principal place of business in New York; the directors are variously residents of Connecticut, New York, Massachusetts, Texas and Vermont. For the purpose of subject matter jurisdiction, Colgate is properly treated as a defendant. The actual controversy or real collision of interests is between the shareholdеrs, in the right of the corporation, and the directors, in control of the corporation. "The cause of action, to be sure, is that of the corporation. But the corporation has become through its managers hostile and antagonistic to the enforcement of the claim.... [This is] resolved by the pleadings and the nature of the dispute." Smith v. Sperling,
The directors moved to dismiss, arguing that they were not subject to personal jurisdiction in Illinois and that the suit could not proceed in their absence. The district court agreed that in personam jurisdiction was lacking, and as plaintiff appeared to take the position before the district court that the directors were indispensable, dismissed the suit without prejudice.
Rather than amending his complaint to allege a cause of action against the corporation alone, or filing in an appropriate forum, plaintiff appeals. For the reasons set forth below, we will AFFIRM.
* A federal district court has personal jurisdiction over a party in a diversity suit only if a court of the state in which it sits would have suсh jurisdiction. Snyder v. Smith,
Plaintiff first argues that the defendants are subject to the jurisdiction of the district court based on their transaction of business within Illinois under Sec. 2-209(a)(1). He points to the contacts of thе directors with the corporation, which is present in Illinois by virtue of doing business here, and unspecified directors' mailings to shareholders in Illinois, in arguing that an allegation of injury to the corporation in Illinois is jurisdictionally adequate.
However, as cases from this circuit and Illinois made plain, Sec. 2-209(a)(1) will not support jurisdiction in this case. First, the individual board members cannot be said to have transacted businеss within Illinois merely because the corporation is qualified to do business here. Mergenthaler Linotype Co. v. Leonard Storch Enterprises, Inc.,
Nor do mailings to shareholders support the exercise of individual jurisdiction. They simply are not the type of purposeful contacts recognized as the transaction of business under Sec. 2-209(a)(1). Cf. Snyder v. Smith,
Appellant also seems to argue that jurisdiction over the directors may be exercised pursuant to Sec. 2-209(a)(2), the commission of a tortious act within the state.2 This position is also without merit because plaintiff has failed to make a prima facie case that the directors have committed a tort in Illinois.
"[T]he place of a wrong is where the last event takes place which is necessary to render the actor liable." Green v. Advance Ross Electronics Corp.,
Thus, the situs of the tort alleged here is New York, where the plan was adopted. That shareholders may have been injured by some effect on their interest in the сorporation does not mean that the tort was committed wherever they reside. Green,
In light of his inability to assert jurisdiction under the Illinois long-arm statute, plaintiff proposes a non-statutory "impact theory" of jurisdiction.4 In sum, his position appears to be that jurisdiction may be predicated on the basis of the impact on the corporation in Illinois of the directors' out of state acts; directors should expect to affect the corporation wherever it is found, and therefore may be sued wherever the impact of their conduct is felt.
Appellant's approach finds no support under Illinois law. Green rejects precisely the theory that out-of-state conduct which has bad consequences in Illinois is jurisdictionally sufficient.
Moreover, appellant's impact theory does not satisfy the requirements of due process. As the Supreme Court has recently emphasized, "the constitutional touchstone remains whether the defendant purposefully established 'minimum contacts' in the forum state." Burger King Corp. v. Rudzewicz, --- U.S. ----,
Although it has been argued that forseeability of causing injury in another state should be sufficient to establish such contacts there ... the Court has consistently held that this kind of forseeability is not a "sufficient benchmark" for exercising personal jurisdiction. World-Wide Volkswagen Corp. v. Woodson, 444 U.S. at 295, 100 S.Ct. at 566 [
Burger King,
Nor is the unilateral activity of another party or third person sufficient. Id.; Helicopteros Nacionales de Colombia, S.A. v. Hall,
Within this framework, it is clear that mere adverse effects on a corporation which is present within a state are not enough. An impact analysis would impermissibly shift the focus of the jurisdictional inquiry from the purposeful activities of the defendant within the forum to the random or fortuitous presence or residence of the plaintiff, thus failing to provide the "fair warning" that is constitutionally mandated. Due process does not allow the direсtors of a national corporation to be sued by its shareholders anywhere the corporation happens to be present. Shaffer,
II
We also reject appellant's argument that a derivative action may proсeed in the absence of any defendant director if only injunctive and declaratory relief are sought.5
Plaintiff has insisted that he seeks to pursue this suit solely as a derivative action.6 As such, it must be dismissed. In Edwards v. Bay State Gas Co. of Delaware,
the subjects of the complaint are not wrongs committеd by the corporation, but frauds or breaches of duty perpetrated against it by its officers; yet none [have been joined], and the anomaly seems to be presented of a suit in which there is no substantial defendant.... If the complainants really desire to hold the corporation to any liability which pertains solely to it, they should confine their complaint to the matters out of which such liability arises. They cannot make it a substantial plaintiff, and also the actual and only defendant in one and the same suit. A bill exposing such a solecism would be not merely multifarious, it would be paradoxical.
See also 13 FLETCHER CYCLOPEDIA CORPORATION Sec. 5996, at 272 (1984 rev. ed.) ("[I]f an action is brought by a stockholder on behalf of himself and the other stockholders, [corporate officers] must be made parties defendant, so that they may have an opportunity to defend, and so that redress or relief may be given against them."); Castner v. First National Bank of Anchorage,
The cases concerning shareholder actions for dividends upon which appellant relies, in fact, support dismissal of this suit. Kroese v. General Castings Corp.,
Nor does the holding in Duman v. Crown Zellerbach Corp.,
The nature of the remedy sought does not cure the lack of a substantial defendant. To be effective, an injunction would have to run against the directors in their individual capacities to рrevent them from adopting the challenged or a similar plan in the future, yet they would not be subject to the court's jurisdiction. That a decree would bind the corporation's agents is no help, because the directors are not acting as agents in their management of the corporation, but as fiduciaries, and it is their fiduciary decisions that form the basis of the complaint.
Finally, although apрellant claims that no other forum is available, the district court correctly concluded that New York and Delaware courts would have personal jurisdiction over the directors. See N.Y.CIV.PRAC.LAW Sec. 302(a)(2) (McKinney 1985); Kossoff v. Samsung Co. Ltd.,
Plaintiff has insisted that his is a derivative action, and we have dealt with it as such. Neither the district court nor we have reached the question whether plaintiff could bring a direct action against the corporation on the basis of the facts alleged.
Accordingly, the order of the district court is AFFIRMED.
Notes
The Illinois long-arm statute provides in relevant part:
Sec. 2-209. Act submitting to jurisdiction--Process.
(a) Any person, whether or not a citizen or resident of this State, who in person or through an agent does any of the acts hereinafter enumerated, thereby submits such persons, and, if an individual, his or her personal representative, to the jurisdiction of the courts of this State as to any cause of action arising from the doing of any of such acts:
(1) The transaction of any business within this state;
(2) The commission of a tortious act within this state;
* * *
Ill.Rev.Stat., chapter 110.
Defendants contend that plaintiff may not now rely on Sec. 2-209(a)(2) because he failed to so argue below. While the tortious act provision was not mentioned in his Memorandum in Opposition to the Motion to Dismiss nor during the hearing on the motion, plaintiff heavily relied (as he does before this court) on Lawson v. Baltimore Paint and Chemical Co.,
Appellant's reliance on Lawson v. Baltimore Paint & Chemical Corp.,
That plaintiff's theory is non-statutory is not entirely clear. However, we will treat his position as non-statutory, because if it is premised on Sec. 2-209(a)(1) or (a)(2), we have already discussed our rejeсtion of jurisdiction on those bases
Plaintiff's Memorandum in Opposition to the Motion to Dismiss and colloquy between counsel and the court during the hearing on the motion strongly suggest that plaintiff waived the argument that the directors are not indispensable. However, as the defendants have not argued waiver, we will discuss the merits
In a letter to this court after oral argument, counsel for appellant reiterated this position
