Laura Seidl v. American Century Companies Inc

799 F.3d 983, 2015 U.S. App. LEXIS 14689, 2015 WL 4978972
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedAugust 21, 2015
Docket14-2796
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 799 F.3d 983 (Laura Seidl v. American Century Companies Inc) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Laura Seidl v. American Century Companies Inc, 799 F.3d 983, 2015 U.S. App. LEXIS 14689, 2015 WL 4978972 (8th Cir. 2015).

Opinion

COLLOTON, Circuit Judge.

Laura Seidl, a shareholder of a mutual fund offered by American Century Companies, Inc., sought through the device of a shareholder’s derivative action to enforce alleged rights of the company. The company refused her demand to bring an action, and Seidl brought suit against several corporate entities and individual defendants. The district court 1 granted summary judgment for the defendants, concluding that Seidl could not bring suit where the company had declined to do so in a valid exercise of business judgment. Seidl appeals, and we affirm.

I.

This appeal arises out of a shareholder derivative action governed by Maryland law. A derivative action is “an extraordinary equitable device to enable shareholders to enforce a corporate right that the corporation failed to assert on its own behalf.” Werbowsky v. Collomb, 362 Md. 581, 766 A.2d 123, 133 (2001). Because the business affairs of a corporation are managed by the board of directors, “any exercise of the corporate power to institute litigation ... rests with the directors.” Id. The board is required to exercise its broad managerial authority with good faith, in the best interests of the corporation, and with the care of an ordinary and prudent person in similar circumstances. These obligations run to the corporation, and not to the shareholders. Where the board violates its obligations to the corporation, shareholders may file a derivative action on behalf of the corporation. Id.

Because the right at issue in a derivative action belongs to the corporation, a shareholder must make a good faith effort to compel the corporation to sue before she may pursue the corporation’s claims in a derivative suit. Id. at 133-34. This precondition to suit is known as the demand requirement, and it mandates that the complaining shareholder make a demand upon the board to commence the action on the corporation’s behalf. Id. at 135. Before deciding whether to accept or reject the shareholder’s demand, a board ordinarily will appoint a special litigation committee, composed of disinterested directors, to investigate the merits of the shareholder’s proposed claims and advise the board. Id. at 144. If a shareholder makes a demand and the board refuses it, then the shareholder may seek judicial review of that decision and the reasons underlying it. Id.

American Century Mutual Funds, Inc. is a “series” mutual fund, incorporated in Maryland, that offers a variety of portfolios of securities for investment. One of these is the Ultra Fund. American Century Mutual Funds’s board of directors oversees all eighteen of its funds, including the Ultra Fund. American Century Mutual Funds is controlled by an investment man *988 agement company, American Century Companies, Inc., through its subsidiary, American Century Investment Management, Inc.

This derivative suit arises out of the Ultra Fund’s investment in PartyGaming Pic. PartyGaming is a Gibraltar company that facilitated internet gambling by operating websites through which players could gamble on poker games.

In June 2005, PartyGaming made an initial public offering of its stock, which was listed on the London Stock Exchange. In its prospectus, PartyGaming noted that “[t]he legality of customers engaging in online gaming is ... uncertain in a number of countries,” including the United States. In the first quarter of 2005, approximately eighty-seven percent of Party-Gaming’s revenue came from United States customers, and PartyGaming acknowledged in its prospectus that “any action by US authorities that has the effect of prohibiting or restricting PartyGaming from offering online gaming in the US ... could result in investors losing all or a very substantial part of their investment.”

The Ultra Fund did not participate in PartyGaming’s initial public offering. Instead, from July 2005 through January 2006, the Ultra Fund purchased nearly thirty-five million shares in PartyGaming on the open market, totaling over $81 million in investor funds.

In July 2006, in the wake of increased United States government enforcement against illegal internet gambling, the stock price for publicly traded online gambling companies, including PartyGaming, dropped significantly. The Ultra Fund responded by divesting itself of all of its shares in PartyGaming, selling the last of its shares by July 31. The Ultra Fund lost approximately $16 million as a result of its failed investment in PartyGaming.

In April 2009, PartyGaming entered into a non-prosecution agreement with the United States Department of Justice, in which it agreed to forfeit $105 million in criminal proceeds. PartyGaming agreed that its gambling business violated several criminal statutes, including 18 U.S.C. § 1955. That statute establishes criminal liability for whoever “conducts, finances, manages, supervises, directs, or owns all or part of an illegal gambling business.”

Seidl became a shareholder in the Ultra Fund before the Fund invested in Party-Gaming in 2005. In October 2008, she filed suit in the Southern District of New York against American Century Mutual Funds, American Century Investment Management, American Century Companies, and several individual defendants, asserting, inter alia, state law claims for waste, negligence, and breach of fiduciary duty on behalf of herself and other investors in the Ultra Fund. Seidl v. Am. Century Cos., Inc., 713 F.Supp.2d 249, 254 (S.D.N.Y.2010). The district court dismissed the action, ruling that Seidl’s claims must be brought through a derivative action on behalf of the corporation, but that Seidl had not made the required presuit demand- that the corporate board file suit. Id. at 255-62. The Second Circuit affirmed the dismissal. Seidl v. Am. Century Cos., Inc., 427 Fed.Appx. 35 (2d Cir.2011).

In June 2010, Seidl sent a letter to the Board of American Century Mutual Funds demanding that it pursue the claims contained in the complaint she had filed in the Southern District of New York. The following month, Seidl filed suit in the Western District of Missouri, naming American Century Mutual Funds as a nominal defendant, and alleging derivative claims for negligence, waste, and breach of fiduciary duty against American Century Companies, American Century Investment Man *989 agement, and several individuals: the nine people who served as boardmembers at the time of the PartyGaming transactions, two other officers of American Century Mutual Funds, and the three co-portfolio managers of the Ultra Fund who allegedly were responsible for the decision to invest in PartyGaming. We refer to these individual and entity defendants collectively as “American Century.”

In response to Seidl’s demand, the Board formed a special litigation committee, composed of James Olson and John Whitten. Olson and Whitten were members of the Board when the demand was made, but were not members when the investments in PartyGaming were made or sold.

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799 F.3d 983, 2015 U.S. App. LEXIS 14689, 2015 WL 4978972, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/laura-seidl-v-american-century-companies-inc-ca8-2015.