Dansie v. City of Herriman

2006 UT 23, 134 P.3d 1139, 550 Utah Adv. Rep. 3, 2006 Utah LEXIS 51, 2006 WL 996528
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedApril 18, 2006
Docket20050024
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 2006 UT 23 (Dansie v. City of Herriman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dansie v. City of Herriman, 2006 UT 23, 134 P.3d 1139, 550 Utah Adv. Rep. 3, 2006 Utah LEXIS 51, 2006 WL 996528 (Utah 2006).

Opinion

NEHRING, Justice:

INTRODUCTION

¶ 1 The City of Herriman was added to the roster of Utah cities in 1999. Soon thereafter, Herriman decided that it would provide water to its residents through a municipal water system. At the time, Herriman owned no water, no wells, nor any delivery infrastructure, but the Herriman Pipeline and Development Co. (“Company”) did. The City, set about to acquire, the Company’s assets. It succeeded, much to the distress of a number of the Company’s shareholders, who sued the City and certain directors of the Company. Defendants filed a succession of summary judgment motions that resulted in the dismissal of Plaintiffs’ claims. This appeal followed.

¶ 2 We affirm the district court on each of the four issues before us for review. First, we conclude that the district court correctly ruled that Plaintiffs’ ownership of shares in the Company entitled them to use Company water but gave them no ownership interest in Company assets. Next, we affirm the district court’s dismissal of several of Plaintiffs’ individual claims because they were derivative claims that must be properly advanced in the name of the Company. Third, we sustain the district court’s dismissal of the derivative claims that Plaintiffs did assert on behalf of the Company because Plaintiffs failed to make the requisite demand on the Company to remedy the alleged objectionable conduct. Finally, we turn back Plaintiffs’ claim for relief under the Utah Control Shares Acquisition Act, Utah Code Ann. §§ 61-6-1 to -12 (2000), because such a claim was not preserved below. We now explain how we reached these conclusions.

ANALYSIS

I. PLAINTIFFS HAVE NO VESTED PROPERTY RIGHTS IN COMPANY ASSETS

¶ 3 Plaintiffs maintain that under the terms of the Company’s articles of incorporation, shareholders, like themselves, own an interest in Company assets. If they are right, they likely suffered injury when Company assets were transferred to the City. The district court ruled that Plaintiffs did not own Company assets. We conclude that the district court was correct. Our reasoning centers on interpretations of relevant statutes and the Company’s articles of incorporation.

¶4 Under the Utah Revised Nonprofit Corporation Act, effective as of 2001, “[a] member does not have a vested property right resulting from any provision in the articles of incorporation or the bylaws.” Utah Code Ann. § 16-6a-611 (2001). The Company is a nonprofit corporation. Were this statutory provision to apply to the Company, our analytical task would be at an end; however, it does not apply. The most recent iteration of the Company’s articles of incorporation was put into place in 1986. This matters because the 2001 Act includes an expansive savings clause. It states that “the repeal of any statute by this act does not affect ... any ratification, right, remedy, privilege, obligation, or liability acquired, accrued, or incurred under the [prior nonprofit corporation] statute before its repeal.” Id. § 16-6a-1704(l)(a)(ii). The statute that the 2001 Act repealed permitted a corporation’s *1143 stock to “evidencie] ... interests in water or other property rights.” Id. § 16-6^42 (1999) (repealed 2001). Thus, the savings clause in the 2001 Act would recognise and preserve property rights that shareholders of the Company may have acquired under provisions of its articles of incorporation.

¶ 5 Plaintiffs claim that Article 5 of the Company’s articles of incorporation conferred upon them ownership rights to Company assets. The relevant text states that the Company’s stock “shall evidence the interests of the stockholders in corporate assets, including water rights, pipelines, water control facilities, and other property. The owner of each share of stock shall be entitled to participate on an equal basis in the use of water, pipelines, and other corporate assets.”

¶ 6 We assay this language for meaning using the same approach that we apply to the interpretation of contracts generally. We conclude that the unambiguous meaning of Article 5 may be extracted from the plain language of its text. That meaning does not conform to Plaintiffs’ preferred interpretation. The meaning of the word “interests” is key to our interpretive effort. To confer the rights claimed by Plaintiffs, the word “interests” must be read to grant shareholders something akin to fee simple ownership. This is certainly not the sole, inevitable connotation of the word. Indeed, as used in Article 5, “interests” tells us little more than that whatever a shareholder’s “interests” might be, the stock certificate is proof that he has them. If the articles of incorporation said nothing more about the relationship between Company shareholders and Company assets, there could be little question that Article 5’s use of “interests” would be ambiguous. The obvious question, “just what ‘interests’ are evidenced by shares of Company stock?” would remain unanswered.

¶ 7 Black’s Law Dictionary has defined “interest” as “[t]he most general term that can be employed to denote a right, claim, title, or legal share in something.” Black’s Law Dictionary 812 (6th ed.1990). As the “most general” term in the property lexicon, “interest,” standing alone, means both everything and nothing. It is a word that leans heavily on other words for support.

¶ 8 That support appears in the second sentence of Article 5. Its text provides that the interest possessed by the members is the right “to participate on an equal basis in the use of water, pipelines, and other corporate assets.” Shareholders are promised equal participation, not in the ownership, but rather in the use of Company assets. This is the interest that stock ownership evidences. It is not the interest that Plaintiffs insist that their shares guaranteed, but it is an interest that survived intact the transfer of Company assets to the City. Thus, the plain language of the Articles defeats Plaintiffs’ claim to asset ownership.

II. THE DISTRICT COURT PROPERLY DISMISSED PLAINTIFFS’ CLAIMS BECAUSE THE CLAIMS WERE DERIVATIVE AND NOT INDIVIDUAL

¶ 9 A shareholder must bring an action to enforce a right of the corporation as a derivative action. Utah R. Civ. P. 23.1. The district court dismissed eight of Plaintiffs’ claims because it found them to be corporate and not individual claims. These included claims for the following: (1) breach of fiduciary duty by the directors for selling Company assets, (2) breach of fiduciary duty by certain directors for providing insufficient notice of a meeting, (3) breach of fiduciary duty by the directors for allowing the purchase of stock in violation of Company bylaws, (4) self-dealing by certain directors, (5) tortious interference with economic relations, (6) declaratory relief, (7) unjust enrichment, and (8) injunctive relief to bar the transfer agreement and the City’s stock purchases. Plaintiffs challenge these rulings.

¶ 10 Not every grievance held by a shareholder arising from actions by a corporation, its officers, or its directors must be brought through a derivative action.

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Bluebook (online)
2006 UT 23, 134 P.3d 1139, 550 Utah Adv. Rep. 3, 2006 Utah LEXIS 51, 2006 WL 996528, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dansie-v-city-of-herriman-utah-2006.