Garcia ex rel. Nominal Royal Administrative Services, Inc. v. Deyesso

30 Mass. L. Rptr. 527
CourtMassachusetts Superior Court
DecidedDecember 4, 2012
DocketNo. SUCV201203509BLS1
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 30 Mass. L. Rptr. 527 (Garcia ex rel. Nominal Royal Administrative Services, Inc. v. Deyesso) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Superior Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Garcia ex rel. Nominal Royal Administrative Services, Inc. v. Deyesso, 30 Mass. L. Rptr. 527 (Mass. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

Billings, Thomas P., J.

For the reasons that follow, Defendants’ Motion to Dismiss Unauthorized Derivative Claim and C. 93A Claim Is ALLOWED IN PART and DENIED IN PART, as specified in the Order below.

ALLEGATIONS OF THE COMPLAINT

According to the Complaint, Royal Administrative Services, Inc. (“RAS, Inc.”) is a Florida corporation, while Royal Administrative Services, LLC (“RAS, LLC”) is a Massachusetts limited liability corporation. The plaintiffs are minority shareholders and members, respectively, in each entity, while defendants Deyesso and McCabe together hold a majority interest (38.25% apiece). Deyesso and McCabe also own several outside business ventures in which the plaintiffs have no interest.

RAS, Inc. “markets, administers, and arranges reinsurance for” extended warranty programs for automobiles (“VSCs”). It receives the up-front premiums collected from the vehicle owner, then remits these less a service fee to the third-party insurer that writes the policy. The insurer then re-insures the risk through Aria (SAC), Inc., a Bermuda segregated account company. When funds are no longer encumbered by the VSC, they are divided among segregated accounts belonging to the six principals, the individual parties to this action. Some of the earnings of RAS, Inc. are attributed to RAS, LLC “to leverage certain tax efficiencies”; RAS, LLC has no income other than this, no employees, and no payroll.

The plaintiffs allege Deyesso and McCabe have employed various means — Including outright transfers to personal and outside business accounts, payment of personal and outside business expenses with RAS, Inc. funds, no-show jobs, low-interest loans, and fee rebates paid by Aria directly to them — to divert assets of RAS, Inc. to their personal use, to family members and friends, and to outside business interests belonging to them, and have funded these activities in part by lowering the minority’s salaries. The majority have also raided Aria segregated accounts belonging personally to the minority plaintiffs, and have engineered low-interest loans from RAS, LLC to themselves and/or their outside business interests.1 Finally, the majority have withheld information from the plaintiffs to which, as shareholders and members, they were entitled.

The Complaint (at ¶¶52-54) asserts that the plaintiffs have not made demand on RAS, Inc. to prosecute the claims they assert on its behalf because “such a demand would be futile”; the majority shareholders are the wrongdoers and also dominate and control the Board of Directors; they deny all liability; and “such an action would not be prosecuted in good faith.” There are no corresponding allegations as to RAS, LLC, except that the Complaint does allege that the parties’ percentage ownership of the LLC matches their ownership of RAS, Inc. Counsel represented at oral argument that the LLC’s Manager is defendant McCabe, a fact I have confirmed on the Secretary of State’s on-line database.2

Count I, for conversion, and Count II, for intentional interference with contractual relations, both pertain to the transfers and “loans” from the minority shareholders’ personal Aria accounts.

Count III, for breach of fiduciary duty, pertains to the salary reductions, transfers of RAS, Inc. funds to the majority’s outside business entities, and withholding of information.

Count IV, for breach of the duties of good faith, loyalty, and care, complain of waste of the assets of RAS, Inc. through the means described above.

Count V, for violation of Chapter 93A, asserts that “Defendants’ conversion, breaches of fiduciary duties, and/or tortious interference as set forth above constitute unfair and deceptive acts or practices in trade or commerce that violated” section 11 of that Chapter.

DISCUSSION

The defendants move for partial dismissal on two grounds: that some of the plaintiffs’ claims need to be asserted derivatively, and they have failed to meet the demand requirement for a derivative action; and that the sort of intra-enterprise wrongdoing alleged here [528]*528did not qualify as “trade or commerce” under Chapter 93A.

A. Demand and the Derivative Action

1. RAS, Inc.

“(M)atters relating to the internal affairs of a corporation” are governed by the law of the jurisdiction of incorporation. Harrison v. NetCentric Corp., 433 Mass. 465, 470-71 (2001). Compliance with the requirement of pre-suit demand — a venerable accoutrement of derivative actions, here and elsewhere3 — is such a matter. G.L.c. 156D, §7.47; Kamen v. Kemper Financial Services, Inc., 500 U.S. 90, 108-09 (1991); Johnston v. Box, 453 Mass. 569, 575 (2009).

Florida law therefore governs the demand issue in this case. That state’s Business Corporation Act, at Fla. Stat. §607.07401(2), has the following to say on the subject:

A complaint in a proceeding brought in the right of a corporation must be verified and allege with particularity the demand made to obtain action by the board of directors and that the demand was refused or ignored by the board of directors for a period of at least 90 days from the first demand unless, prior to the expiration of the 90 days, the person was notified in writing that the corporation rejected the demand, or unless irreparable injury to the corporation would result by waiting for the expiration of the 90-day period. If the corporation commences an investigation of the charges made in the demand or complaint, the court may stay any proceeding until the investigation is completed.

This provision, which was inserted by statutory revisions in 1990 and 2003,4 appears to have been derived from the American Bar Association’s Model Business Corporation Act, but truncated somewhat: where the Model Act expresses itself both directly as to the substantive requirement5 and (in section 7.44) in terms of pleading requirements, Florida’s adaptation does not expressly require that demand be made; only it be pleaded with particularity in a verified complaint.6

The ABA’s Model Act, the American Law Institute’s Principles of Corporate Governance (sec. 7.03) that preceded it, and the various states’ adoptions and/or adaptations of them are widely viewed as imposing a “universal demand” requirement; that is, as abrogating the former rule that demand may be excused if the plaintiff pleads facts demonstrating that it would be futile, and requiring instead that the plaintiff make and plead demand in any derivative case. See, e.g., Kamen at 94; Halebian v. Berv, 457 Mass. 620, 625 (2010); Johnston, 453 Mass. at 578 n. 15.

Those reported cases which have surveyed the field have likewise placed Florida’s statute, since the 1990 revision, in the universal demand column.7 At least one federal court, when faced with a derivative action involving a Florida business corporation, has ruled that section 607.07401(2) no longer makes room for the demand excused case, while noting the absence of Florida appellate precedent on the question. D’Addario v. Geller, 2005 WL 1667913 (E.D.Va.

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Bluebook (online)
30 Mass. L. Rptr. 527, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/garcia-ex-rel-nominal-royal-administrative-services-inc-v-deyesso-masssuperct-2012.