MEMORANDUM AND ORDER
AUBREY E. ROBINSON, Jr., District Judge.
This is a suit by Isidore Shulman, allegedly a member of two joint ventures, Westwood Joint Venture Number 1 and Westwood Joint Venture Number 2, against Laszlo N. Tauber, the principal trustee of both joint ventures, and against Milton Ritzenberg, a former member of the ventures. It is alleged that Defendant Ritzenberg lent a large sum of money to Defendant Tauber, who entered into the loan agreement on behalf of the ventures. It is further alleged that the loan agreement exacted a usurious rate of interest in violation of the District of Columbia usury laws1 and that the loan was illegal and wholly void under the District of Columbia Loan Shark Law,2 since Defendant Tauber was engaged in the business of loaning money at interest rates greater than six per cent and had failed to obtain a license to do so. [205]*205Counts I and III of the third amended complaint are denominated derivative actions, in which plaintiff sues to enforce the rights of the ventures under Rule 23.1 of the amended Federal Rules of Civil Procedure.3 Count I alleges a cause of action against Defendant Ritzenberg, while Count III is an action against Defendant-Trustee Tauber, alleging a breach of his fiduciary duty. Counts II and IV of the third amended complaint are denominated class actions under Rule 23 of the amended Federal Rules of Civil Procedure,4 alleging that the members of the ventures except Defendant Tauber and the two non-resident trustees constitute a class under the Rule. Count II alleges a cause of action against Defendant Ritzenberg, while Count IV is against Defendant-Trustee Tauber. Defendants have moved for an order pursuant to Rule 23(c) (1)5 declaring that Counts II and IV are not properly maintainable as class actions. They have also moved to dismiss Counts I and III of the complaint, on the ground that a derivative suit is not properly maintainable under Rule 23.1. Defendants’ motion as to Counts II and IV is granted. Defendants’ motion to dismiss Counts I and III is denied without prejudice.
I
Amended Rule 23 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure attempts to create a logical, almost mechanical approach to determine whether a suit is properly maintainable as a class action.6 The Court must first determine whether all the “prerequisites to a class action” of Rule 23(a) have been satisfied.7 If the Court finds that all of the requirements of Rule 23(a) have been met, it next inquires whether any one of the requisites of Rule 23(b) has been satisfied.8 If it concludes that any one or more of such requirements have been met, the Court may then issue an order, perhaps conditioned upon the right to make a later showing to the contrary, that a class action is maintainable.9 It may then send notice to all potential members of the class to advise them of the action and of their right to “opt out” if they do not wish to be bound by the judgment of the Cburt.10
[206]*206Defendants have argued that plaintiff does not meet the Rule 23(a) (4) prerequisite of fairly and adequately protecting the interests of the class and that the Court must therefore find that a class action is not maintainable.11 In support of this position, they argue, inter alia, that one member of a large class cannot adequately represent over fifty people, that plaintiff’s financial interest is too small compared with the total sum involved in this litigation, and that the failure of other members to intervene in the action indicates plaintiff’s failure to fairly and adequately protect the class which he purports to represent. We reject these arguments, for these purely quantitative factors are no longer relevant to a determination of fair and adequate representation under the amended rule.12 Even one member of a class can provide the kind of representation for all that is contemplated by the class suit.13 And to assert that the minute financial interest of the party before the court is a factor to be considered ignores the very spirit of the Rule 23 class action, which is to provide a means of vindicating small claims.14 Similarly, “whether other members of the class have sought to intervene is not determinative of the question whether the plaintiffs are qualified to act in behalf of the absent members of the class.”15 Under the amended rule, every member of the class receives notice of the suit and an opportunity to “opt out.”16 Thus, the lack of interest of potential class members prior to the time such notice is given should not compel a determination that this is not a proper class action.17 None of these quantitative factors is relevant; it is the quality of representation that is crucial in determining adequacy and fairness of representation.18
Turning to the qualitative considerations, this Court is of the view that only two factors need be met in order for it to determine that the representative party will fairly and ade[207]*207quately protect the interests of the class he seeks to represent: (1) the representative party must be interested enough to be a forceful advocate and his chosen attorney must be qualified, experienced and generally able to conduct the litigation, and (2) the representative party must have interests which are compatible with and not antagonistic to those whom he would represent.19 Insofar as the first requirement is concerned, there has been and could be no effective argument that plaintiff and his counsel do not possess the means, skill and necessary vigor with which to prosecute this action.20 “In point of fact, irrefutable evidence of his competence and fervor is reflected in the papers and arguments thus far submitted by plaintiff’s attorney.”21 It is the second factor on which this Court’s decision must turn.
In order for a party to fairly and adequately protect the interests of a class, he may not hold interests which conflict with those of the class whom he would represent.22 While a court should not find such conflict and dismiss the class action merely because every member of the class might not be enthusiastic about the maintenance of the lawsuit,23 “necessarily a different situation is presented where absent class members inform the court of their displeasure with plaintiff’s representation.” 24 The instant case presents such a situation.
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MEMORANDUM AND ORDER
AUBREY E. ROBINSON, Jr., District Judge.
This is a suit by Isidore Shulman, allegedly a member of two joint ventures, Westwood Joint Venture Number 1 and Westwood Joint Venture Number 2, against Laszlo N. Tauber, the principal trustee of both joint ventures, and against Milton Ritzenberg, a former member of the ventures. It is alleged that Defendant Ritzenberg lent a large sum of money to Defendant Tauber, who entered into the loan agreement on behalf of the ventures. It is further alleged that the loan agreement exacted a usurious rate of interest in violation of the District of Columbia usury laws1 and that the loan was illegal and wholly void under the District of Columbia Loan Shark Law,2 since Defendant Tauber was engaged in the business of loaning money at interest rates greater than six per cent and had failed to obtain a license to do so. [205]*205Counts I and III of the third amended complaint are denominated derivative actions, in which plaintiff sues to enforce the rights of the ventures under Rule 23.1 of the amended Federal Rules of Civil Procedure.3 Count I alleges a cause of action against Defendant Ritzenberg, while Count III is an action against Defendant-Trustee Tauber, alleging a breach of his fiduciary duty. Counts II and IV of the third amended complaint are denominated class actions under Rule 23 of the amended Federal Rules of Civil Procedure,4 alleging that the members of the ventures except Defendant Tauber and the two non-resident trustees constitute a class under the Rule. Count II alleges a cause of action against Defendant Ritzenberg, while Count IV is against Defendant-Trustee Tauber. Defendants have moved for an order pursuant to Rule 23(c) (1)5 declaring that Counts II and IV are not properly maintainable as class actions. They have also moved to dismiss Counts I and III of the complaint, on the ground that a derivative suit is not properly maintainable under Rule 23.1. Defendants’ motion as to Counts II and IV is granted. Defendants’ motion to dismiss Counts I and III is denied without prejudice.
I
Amended Rule 23 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure attempts to create a logical, almost mechanical approach to determine whether a suit is properly maintainable as a class action.6 The Court must first determine whether all the “prerequisites to a class action” of Rule 23(a) have been satisfied.7 If the Court finds that all of the requirements of Rule 23(a) have been met, it next inquires whether any one of the requisites of Rule 23(b) has been satisfied.8 If it concludes that any one or more of such requirements have been met, the Court may then issue an order, perhaps conditioned upon the right to make a later showing to the contrary, that a class action is maintainable.9 It may then send notice to all potential members of the class to advise them of the action and of their right to “opt out” if they do not wish to be bound by the judgment of the Cburt.10
[206]*206Defendants have argued that plaintiff does not meet the Rule 23(a) (4) prerequisite of fairly and adequately protecting the interests of the class and that the Court must therefore find that a class action is not maintainable.11 In support of this position, they argue, inter alia, that one member of a large class cannot adequately represent over fifty people, that plaintiff’s financial interest is too small compared with the total sum involved in this litigation, and that the failure of other members to intervene in the action indicates plaintiff’s failure to fairly and adequately protect the class which he purports to represent. We reject these arguments, for these purely quantitative factors are no longer relevant to a determination of fair and adequate representation under the amended rule.12 Even one member of a class can provide the kind of representation for all that is contemplated by the class suit.13 And to assert that the minute financial interest of the party before the court is a factor to be considered ignores the very spirit of the Rule 23 class action, which is to provide a means of vindicating small claims.14 Similarly, “whether other members of the class have sought to intervene is not determinative of the question whether the plaintiffs are qualified to act in behalf of the absent members of the class.”15 Under the amended rule, every member of the class receives notice of the suit and an opportunity to “opt out.”16 Thus, the lack of interest of potential class members prior to the time such notice is given should not compel a determination that this is not a proper class action.17 None of these quantitative factors is relevant; it is the quality of representation that is crucial in determining adequacy and fairness of representation.18
Turning to the qualitative considerations, this Court is of the view that only two factors need be met in order for it to determine that the representative party will fairly and ade[207]*207quately protect the interests of the class he seeks to represent: (1) the representative party must be interested enough to be a forceful advocate and his chosen attorney must be qualified, experienced and generally able to conduct the litigation, and (2) the representative party must have interests which are compatible with and not antagonistic to those whom he would represent.19 Insofar as the first requirement is concerned, there has been and could be no effective argument that plaintiff and his counsel do not possess the means, skill and necessary vigor with which to prosecute this action.20 “In point of fact, irrefutable evidence of his competence and fervor is reflected in the papers and arguments thus far submitted by plaintiff’s attorney.”21 It is the second factor on which this Court’s decision must turn.
In order for a party to fairly and adequately protect the interests of a class, he may not hold interests which conflict with those of the class whom he would represent.22 While a court should not find such conflict and dismiss the class action merely because every member of the class might not be enthusiastic about the maintenance of the lawsuit,23 “necessarily a different situation is presented where absent class members inform the court of their displeasure with plaintiff’s representation.” 24 The instant case presents such a situation. Forty-seven of the approximately fifty-three members of the ventures have filed affidavits indicating that they are familiar with the lawsuit brought by plaintiff against defendants to recover the principal and interest of certain loans made by Defendant Rit2¡enberg to the ventures; that they do not consider plaintiff’s interest in this action to be common with their own; that they do not believe plaintiff’s conduct is consistent with the best interests of the joint ventures of which .they are members; that they do not believe that plaintiff’s representation will fairly and adequately protect their interests; and that they wish to be excluded from the purported class. In effect, the affidavits appear to have been filed for two distinct purposes: (1) To show that plaintiff does not fairly and adequately protect the interests of the class he purports to represent and therefore does not meet the prerequisite of Rule 23(a) (4) for the maintenance of a class action;25 and (2) assuming that the suit is at least conditionally maintainable as a class action, to indicate that affiants wish , to “opt out” of the action as provided by Rule 23(c) (2) and thus avoid the res judicata effect of the judgment.26
Plaintiff argues that the affidavits are ineffective for either purpose because they were not solicited by the court controlled notice required by Rule [208]*20823(c) (2),27 because they contain “boiler-plate” recitations fashioned by defendants with signatures solicited by defendants through the mails, and because there is no way for the Court to know how the affidavits were solicited or with what inducements. While we agree with plaintiff, for the reasons stated, that the affidavits may be ineffective for the second purpose of allowing affiants to “opt out” of the class action, we do not agree in the circumstances of this case that the affidavits are ineffective for purposes of the Court’s threshold determinations of whether a class exists, whether the prerequisites of Rule 23(a) have been satisfied, and thus whether a class action is maintainable.28 Although Rule 23(c) (2) controls procedures for notifying potential class members of their right to “opt out,” 29 the rule is silent on what procedures, if any, may be employed to solicit the views of potential class members on whether or not a self-proclaimed representative plaintiff can fairly and adequately protect the interests of the class. Given this omission, this Court is of the view that, as in any other type of litigation, affidavits subscribed and sworn to, which relate information of direct consequence to the issue before the Court, may be accepted at face value and considered by the Court in deciding that issue.30 The forty-seven affidavits submitted in this case have direct bearing on the issue of whether plaintiff has met the threshold considerations involved in the definition of a class under Rule 23(a). No reason has been advanced for the Court to inquire beyond the face of the affidavits and none is perceived which would be appropriate to the facts of the instant ease.
Considering the affidavits of forty-seven of the joint venture members along with the other pleadings and memoranda, the Court concludes that plaintiff’s interests are antagonistic at least to the interests of the forty-seven affiants and in conflict with this vast majority of his fellow joint venture members. Thus, we hold that plaintiff cannot fairly and adequately protect them as members of the class he would represent, the essential prerequisite of Rule 23(a) (4).31 Six members of the class which plaintiff purports to represent did not file affidavits. Viewing that group as the only appropriate subclass which plaintiff can now claim to represent,32 this class of six persons is [209]*209not so numerous as to make joinder of all members impracticable.33 Thus, plaintiff does not meet the essential prerequisite of Rule 23(a) (1).34 Moreover, having treated the affidavits as an aid in defining the class, this Court seriously doubts, without expressly deciding the issue, whether a class exists at all in the instant case.35 In any event, since plaintiff has failed to meet at least two of the four essential prerequisites of Rule 23(a), the Court holds that a class action may not be maintained.36
II
Rule 23.1 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure provides for derivative suits to be brought by shareholders of corporations and by members of unincorporated associations, treating such associations as legal entities for the purpose of such suits.37 In the instant case, plaintiff brings suit as a member of two groups which he has referred to as joint ventures.” However, the true legal status of these “ventures” is not clear from the pleadings, the memoranda relating to this motion, or any other papers on file in this case. If it cannot be shown that these “joint ventures” are either corporations (which neither party would claim) or associations within the meaning of Rule 23.1, this Court has serious doubts whether the suit may be maintained as a derivative action. It is primarily for this reason that the Court denies defendants’ motion without prejudice to its subsequent renewal. Assuming for the moment, however, that the joint ventures are associations within the meaning of the rule, we turn to the merits of defendants’ arguments.
The Court is not persuaded by defendants’ arguments that a derivative suit is barred because plaintiff made insufficient effort to obtain redress from the trustees before instituting this lawsuit,38 or because the trus[210]*210tees made a valid business judgment, or because a majority of the venture members ratified the claimed -wrongful conduct of trustee Tauber and affirmed the trustees’ judgment not to sue. These arguments must be analyzed in light of a realistic view of how Westwood Joint Venture Number 1 and Westwood Joint Venture Number 2 were controlled and managed. It is undisputed that the three trustees owned a combined 53% of the ventures’ property; that the other two trustees gave powers of attorney to trustee Tauber to make decisions on behalf of the ventures; and that when plaintiff sought to obtain relief by writing to counsel for the ventures, counsel replied that he had discussed the matter with trustee Tauber (not with all three trustees) and that no action would be brought. These facts clearly indicate that trustee Tauber, the very party accused of wrongdoing in this lawsuit, had virtual control over the affairs and property of the joint ventures. Thus, after having received a negative response to his request from counsel for the ventures, any additional effort on the part of plaintiff to obtain redress from the ventures would have been a futile and useless gesture. As a result, any further demand on the trustees was excused.39 Similarly, the necessity for any demand on the members (if required) was also excused as a futile act.40 Moreover, the letter from counsel for the ventures indicated that it was trustee Tauber who made the decision not to bring suit on behalf of the ventures. Since Tauber was personally involved in the alleged wrongdoing, his refusal to sue cannot be viewed as a sound and impartial business judgment by the trustees, precluding plaintiff from maintaining this suit.41 Equally defective is defendants’ argument that the affidavits filed by members of the ventures constitute a valid ratification of the loan entered into, by Tauber and an affirmation of his decision not to sue. While it is true that only the act of the lender, not the borrower, may be illegal under the Loan Shark Law,42 members of the venture cannot ratify the acts of third parties who violate positive law to the injury of the venture.43 In addition, to hold that a valid ratification was possible in this case would merely compel plaintiff to shift his legal theory from breach of fiduciary duty to fraud (which is even now implicit in his complaint), which can be ratified, if at all, only by unanimous vote of the members.44
Because of our holding in Part I of this memorandum, the Court has greater difficulty with defendants’ argument that a derivative suit may not be maintained because plaintiff does not fairly and adequately represent the interests of the venture members similarly situated in enforcing the rights of the ventures.45 In support of this position, [211]*211defendants point to the affidavits on file as evidence that plaintiff’s interests are antagonistic to and in conflict with the interests of other members of the ventures.46 Plaintiff responds that he need not fairly and adequately represent the interests of all members of the ventures, but only those similarly situated — that is, those who are dissatisfied, as he is, with the failure of the trustees and a majority of venture members to enforce a right of the ventures which is properly assertable by them. To require more, he argues, would be to frustrate the traditional purpose of a derivative action, which is to remedy a wrong to the association in cases where the association itself, because it is controlled by the alleged wrongdoers or for some other reason, refuses to take appropriate action for its own protection.47 The Court agrees with plaintiff, for we do not believe the draftsmen of the 1966 amendments intended to change the very nature of the derivative suit. Although no court apparently has yet defined the term, it seems clear that fair and adequate representation of those similarly situated means something different in Rule 23.1 from fair and adequate protection of interests of the class in Rule 23. Indeed, as one commentator noted, it appears that the Advisory Committee implicitly recognized the necessity for such a distinction:
The amended rule provides: “The derivative action may not be maintained if it appears that the plaintiff does not fairly and adequately represent the interests of the shareholder or members similarly situated in enforcing the right of the corporation or association.” Apparently recognizing that it was frequently minority interests which were being represented, the Advisory Committee adopted the above in lieu of the parallel provision in the preliminary draft: “The derivative action may be maintained only if the court is satisfied that the plaintiff will adequately represent the interest of the corporation or association.”48
It is the very essence of a derivative suit that the opposition of a majority cannot prevent or annul the maintenance of that suit, else very few such suits would ever be brought and minority members would have no effective remedy.49 In light of this underlying policy of the derivative action and there apparently being no attempt on the part of the draftsmen of the 1966 amendments to frustrate this policy, this Court concludes that plaintiff can “fairly and adequately represent the interests of” the minority of venture members “similarly situated” in enforcing the right of the ventures against Tauber and Ritzenberg. Thus, he may properly maintain a derivative suit.
Accordingly, it is by the Court this 16th day of April, 1969,
Ordered that Defendants’ Motion for an Order Pursuant to Rule 23(c) (1) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure be and is hereby granted, and the causes of [212]*212action set forth in Counts II and IV of the third amended complaint are hereby dismissed as class actions, and it is
Further ordered that Defendants’ Motion to Dismiss Derivative Actions (Counts I and III of the third amended complaint) be and is hereby denied, without prejudice.