Paskowitz v. Wohlstadter

822 A.2d 1272, 151 Md. App. 1, 2003 Md. App. LEXIS 54
CourtCourt of Special Appeals of Maryland
DecidedMay 5, 2003
Docket841, Sept. Term, 2002
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 822 A.2d 1272 (Paskowitz v. Wohlstadter) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Special Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Paskowitz v. Wohlstadter, 822 A.2d 1272, 151 Md. App. 1, 2003 Md. App. LEXIS 54 (Md. Ct. App. 2003).

Opinion

DEBORAH S. EYLER, J.

In the Circuit Court for Montgomery County, Laurence Paskowitz, the appellant, filed a multi-count amended complaint against IGEN, a Delaware corporation with its principal place of business in Gaithersburg, Maryland, an appellee, and certain past and present officers and directors of IGEN (“the individual appellees”). 1 Ultimately, the court dismissed all of Paskowitz’s claims.

*4 In this appeal, Paskowitz challenges the court’s dismissal of Count V of the amended complaint. He contends the circuit court was legally incorrect in ruling that the claim in Count V was derivative, not direct, and that he did not have standing to pursue a direct claim. 2 For the following reasons, we shall affirm the judgment of the circuit court.

FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

IGEN is a biological technology company that was founded in 1982 and became publicly traded in 1994. It manufactures sophisticated biological detection systems using technology it patented under the name “ORIGEN.”

In 1995, IGEN entered into a joint venture agreement with Meso Scale Technologies, LLC (“MST”), and formed a joint venture entity named “Meso Scale Diagnostics, LLC” (“the Joint Venture”). Paskowitz claims that the Joint Venture constituted a waste of corporate assets and self-dealing on the part of certain of the individual appellees who, together with some of their family members, used it to position themselves to profit financially at the expense of IGEN and its shareholders.

*5 Paskowitz did not own IGEN stock when the Joint Venture was formed. He became a shareholder in IGEN two years later, in May 1997, upon purchasing 600 shares of stock. He alleges that he inadvertently sold those shares, in March 2000, and that a month later, when he realized what had happened, he repurchased another 600 shares of IGEN stock, in two lots.

Members of the IGEN board of directors hold staggered three-year terms. Every year, at its annual meeting, IGEN holds an election for those director positions with expiring terms. Proxy statements are issued to the shareholders in advance in connection with the elections.

At the IGEN annual meetings in 1997, 1998, and 1999, certain of the individual appellees were candidates for election to the board. IGEN circulated proxy statements to shareholders pertaining to those elections in September 1997, July 1998, and July 1999, respectively. The proxy statements related information about the Joint Venture. Paskowitz alleges that certain representations about the Joint Venture in the proxy statements were materially misleading partial disclosures.

On August 3, 2000, a creditor of IGEN made a demand on IGEN’s board of directors, asserting that the Joint Venture amounted to corporate waste and self-dealing by certain of the individual appellees. The board responded by establishing a committee of independent directors to investigate the demand and recommend whatever measures it deemed appropriate. The independent committee and its mission were publicly disclosed.

In November 2000, before the independent committee concluded its investigation, another of IGEN’s creditors, Brown Simpson Partners I, Ltd. (“Brown Simpson”), purchased 100 shares of IGEN stock and filed, in the Circuit Court for Montgomery County, a shareholder’s derivative action naming the individual appellees and IGEN as defendants. Brown Simpson alleged, inter alia, that the Joint Venture constituted corporate waste and self-dealing on the part of the individual appellees.

*6 On March 13, 2001, soon after Brown Simpson filed its suit, Paskowitz filed his original complaint in this case, also in the Circuit Court for Montgomery County and also naming the individual appellees and IGEN as defendants. Paskowitz’s complaint stated four counts, each alleging what Paskowitz labeled a “derivative” claim, and copied almost word for word the Brown Simpson complaint. Because of their common subject matter, the two cases were specially assigned to the same judge and thereafter were handled in a consolidated fashion.

On August 14, 2001, Paskowitz filed an amended complaint, restating his “derivative” claims and adding what he designated as two “direct” claims against the individual appellees, in Counts V and VI, both personally and as a putative class representative.

In Count V, entitled “Breach of Duty of Candor v. the Individual Defendant Directors,” Paskowitz alleged that, in the course of and for the purpose of soliciting shareholder votes in the elections for directorships held at IGEN’s annual meetings in 1997, 1998, and 1999, the individual appellees made materially false and misleading disclosures about the Joint Venture in its proxy statements; and by doing so, breached their fiduciary duty of candor to the shareholders. Paskowitz further alleged that by virtue of the breach, he “ha[d] been damaged” and that “IGEN would continue to be irreparably injured and damaged.” He asserted that the individual appellees should be removed and replaced as directors and “[a] new election of directors should be held because, among other reasons, the [individual appellees] were elected pursuant to the [1997, 1998, and 1999 proxy statements].”

In Count VI, Paskowitz alleged that the material partial disclosures about the Joint Venture contained in the proxy statements had caused a dilution in the value of his IGEN stock.

By the time Paskowitz filed his amended complaint, motions to dismiss or for summary judgment by the individual appel- *7 lees and IGEN in his case and the Brown Simpson case already had been filed and were pending. On September 19, 2001, the individual appellees responded to Counts V and VI of the amended complaint by filing additional motions to dismiss or for summary judgment directed to those counts, on four grounds: 1) the claims in Counts V and VI were derivative, not direct, and for reasons argued in the pending motions on the derivative claims, failed to state causes of action for which relief could be granted; 2) the alleged misdisclosures were not material; 3) the claim for equitable relief was moot because the terms of the directors elected in 1997, 1998, and 1999 had expired; and 4) Paskowitz had not suffered any damages. Paskowitz filed an opposition to the individual appellees’ motion.

In the meantime, the independent committee completed its investigation and issued a report concluding that the Joint Venture was for the most part beneficial to the corporation but recommending some changes to it. Soon thereafter, Brown Simpson added William Shaffer as a plaintiff. Shaffer had purchased stock in IGEN in 1995, before the Joint Venture was formed.

A central issue in the pending motions concerned two requirements, under Delaware law, that a plaintiff must meet to proceed with a derivative claim. First, the plaintiff must satisfy the “Continuous Ownership Rule.” Under that rule, the plaintiff must have been a shareholder at the time of the corporate action that is the subject of his complaint. Del.Code Ann., Corporations, tit. 8 § 327 (2000).

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Bluebook (online)
822 A.2d 1272, 151 Md. App. 1, 2003 Md. App. LEXIS 54, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/paskowitz-v-wohlstadter-mdctspecapp-2003.