Dux Captial Mgt v. Yageo ( 2007 )


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  •                   FOR PUBLICATION
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT
    JERRY DAVIS,                             
    Plaintiff-Appellee,
    DUX CAPITAL MANAGEMENT
    CORPORATION,
    Plaintiff-Appellee,
    v.                           No. 04-16911
    YAGEO CORPORATION; YAGEO                      D.C. No.
    CV-03-00539-
    HOLDING (BERMUDA) LIMITED; YAN
    SHENG CHAN; AN-EHR CHEN; CHENG-                 WHA
    LING LEE,
    Defendants-Appellants,
    EQUITY PLUS SECURITIES, LIMITED;
    REX Y.C. YANG; WEN-CHIN YEH,
    Defendants-Appellants.      
    DUX CAPITAL MANAGEMENT                   
    CORPORATION; JERRY DAVIS,
    Plaintiffs-Appellants,
    v.
    No. 04-16973
    YAGEO CORPORATION; YAGEO
    HOLDING (BERMUDA) LIMITED; YAN                D.C. No.
    CV-03-00539-
    SHENG CHAN; AN-EHR CHEN; EQUITY
    PLUS SECURITIES, LIMITED; CHENG-                WHA
    LING LEE; REX Y.C. YANG; WEN-
    CHIN YEH; REXTRON INTERNATIONAL
    LIMITED,
    Defendants-Appellees.     
    2327
    2328          DUX CAPITAL MGMT v. YAGEO CORP.
    DUX CAPITAL MANAGEMENT                   
    CORPORATION; JERRY DAVIS,
    Plaintiffs-Appellants,
    v.
    No. 04-17272
    YAGEO CORPORATION; YAGEO
    HOLDING (BERMUDA) LIMITED; YAN                D.C. No.
    CV-03-00539-
    SHENG CHAN; AN-EHR CHEN; EQUITY
    PLUS SECURITIES, LIMITED; CHENG-                WHA
    LING LEE; REX Y.C. YANG; WEN-
    CHIN YEH; REXTRON INTERNATIONAL
    LIMITED,
    Defendants-Appellees.     
    DUX CAPITAL MANAGEMENT                   
    CORPORATION,
    Plaintiff-Appellant,
    and
    JERRY DAVIS,
    Plaintiff,
    v.                           No. 05-16497
    D.C. No.
    E. LYNN SCHOENMANN,
    Defendant-Appellee,         CV-05-01364-
    WHA
    GEORGE Q. CHEN,
    Appellee,         OPINION
    YAGEO CORPORATION; YAGEO
    HOLDING (BERMUDA) LIMITED; PIERRE
    T.M. CHEN; REXTRON INTERNATIONAL
    LIMITED; AN-EHR CHEN; YAN SHENG
    CHAN; CHENG-LING LEE,
    Intervenors.    
    DUX CAPITAL MGMT v. YAGEO CORP.                  2329
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Northern District of California
    William H. Alsup, District Judge, Presiding
    Argued and Submitted
    September 12, 2006—San Francisco, California
    Filed March 2, 2007
    Before: Betty B. Fletcher and Marsha S. Berzon,
    Circuit Judges, and David G. Trager,* Senior District Judge.
    Opinion by Judge B. Fletcher
    *The Honorable David G. Trager, Senior United States District Judge
    for the Eastern District of New York, sitting by designation.
    2332        DUX CAPITAL MGMT v. YAGEO CORP.
    COUNSEL
    Robin Meadow (argued), Alison M. Turner, Eric R. Cioffi,
    Cynthia E. Tobisman, Greines, Martin, Stein & Richland
    LLP, Los Angeles, California, and William McGrane, Mau-
    DUX CAPITAL MGMT v. YAGEO CORP.             2333
    reen A. Harrington, McGrane, Greenfield, Hannon & Har-
    rington, San Francisco, California, for defendants-
    appellants-cross-appellees-intervenors Yageo Corp., Yageo
    Holding (Bermuda) Ltd., An-Ehr Chen, Yan Sheng Chan,
    Cheng-Ling Lee, and Pierre Chen.
    Rodney R. Patula (argued), Eric G. S. Marcks, Daniel T. Bal-
    mat, and Penn A. Butler, Squire, Sanders & Dempsey LLP,
    San Francisco, California, for plaintiffs-appellees-cross-
    appellants and plaintiffs-appellants Dux Capital Management
    Corp. and Jerry Davis.
    Merle C. Meyers (argued), Kathy L. Quon, Goldberg, Stin-
    nett, Meyers & Davis, San Francisco, California, for
    defendant-appellee E. Lynn Schoenmann.
    K. John Shaffer, Stutman, Treister & Glatt, PC, Los Angeles,
    California, for cross-appellee-intervenor Rextron International
    Ltd.
    Iain A. Macdonald, MacDonald & Associates, San Francisco,
    California, for appellee George Chen.
    Jon R. Vaught, Vaught & Bourtris LLP, Oakland, California,
    for cross-appellees Equity Plus Securities, Ltd., Rex Y.C.
    Yang, and Wen-Chin Yeh.
    OPINION
    B. FLETCHER, Circuit Judge:
    These consolidated cases arise out of a corporate dispute
    between majority and minority shareholders over the minority
    shareholder’s right to elect two of the five directors to the
    Long Life Noodle Company, Inc.’s board of directors. Plain-
    tiffs Dux Capital Management Corp. and its agent, Jerry
    2334           DUX CAPITAL MGMT v. YAGEO CORP.
    Davis, alleged that: Defendants, Yageo Corp. and certain of
    its subsidiaries and employees who controlled the Long Life
    Noodle Company’s board of directors, placed the corporation
    into bankruptcy without considering other alternatives that
    may have yielded greater value for the corporation and its
    shareholders. Defendants petitioned for bankruptcy in order to
    prevent plaintiffs, who were minority shareholders, from par-
    ticipating in the governance of the corporation. In bankruptcy,
    the equity of the minority shareholders was wiped out and the
    assets of the corporation were sold to one of defendant Yageo
    Corp.’s subsidiaries, Equity Plus Securities, Ltd., a secured
    creditor of LLNC.
    In a jury trial, the jury found defendants Yageo Corp.,
    Yageo Corp. subsidiaries Yageo Holding (Bermuda) Ltd. and
    Rextron International Ltd., and Yageo Corp. employees An-
    Ehr Chen, Yan Sheng Chan, and Cheng-Ling Lee1 liable for
    breach of fiduciary duty. On appeal, defendants argue that
    plaintiffs lack standing to sue as assignees of the corporate
    claim and that their breach of fiduciary duty claims are pre-
    empted by federal bankruptcy law and barred by res judicata.
    The district court held that plaintiffs have standing and that
    their claims are neither preempted nor barred by res judicata.
    Plaintiffs cross-appeal the district court’s damages calcula-
    tions and its determination that they did not have standing to
    assert the claims of minority shareholders. Plaintiffs filed a
    separate appeal of the district court’s refusal to entertain their
    Fed. R. Civ. P. 60(b) motion for post-judgment relief. In a
    related case, plaintiffs appeal from the district court’s order
    affirming the bankruptcy court decision in an adversary pro-
    ceeding against debtor George Chen (a founder of Long Life
    Noodle Company) and the Trustee of Chen’s bankruptcy
    estate, E. Lynn Schoenmann. We affirm the district court on
    all issues.
    1
    We refer to them collectively as the “Yageo defendants.”
    DUX CAPITAL MGMT v. YAGEO CORP.             2335
    I.   FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
    A.   Yageo’s Investment in LLNC
    Long Life Noodle Company, Inc. (“LLNC”), was formed
    in 1996 by George Chen and George “Geordy” Murphy. In
    1998, George Chen approached Pierre Chen, director and gen-
    eral manager/president of defendant Yageo Corp. (“Yageo”)
    in Taiwan, about investing in LLNC. Pierre Chen directed
    An-Ehr Chen, his assistant, to investigate this investment
    opportunity. An-Ehr Chen recommended that Yageo invest
    through Rextron International Ltd. (“Rextron”), a wholly-
    owned subsidiary of another subsidiary, Yageo Holding (Ber-
    muda) Ltd. (“Yageo Holding”), and Equity Plus Securities
    Ltd. (“Equity Plus”), another Yageo affiliate. Yageo Holding
    and Rextron were merely holding companies, and their invest-
    ments were determined by Pierre Chen as general manager of
    Yageo.
    In late 1998, Rextron invested approximately $1.2 million
    in LLNC in return for all of the preferred stock and some of
    the common stock and thereby became the majority share-
    holder. Murphy and George Chen owned the balance of the
    common stock as minority shareholders. After Rextron’s ini-
    tial investment, LLNC borrowed approximately one million
    dollars from Equity Plus. These loans were secured by all of
    LLNC’s assets. The loans were negotiated by attorney Gayle
    Chan, whom LLNC hired to handle these transactions. She
    was Rextron’s corporate counsel and she did not inform
    LLNC of this conflict of interest.
    Under LLNC’s Articles of Incorporation, Rextron could
    elect three of the five directors of the board. Rextron elected
    defendants An-Ehr Chen, Cheng-Ling Lee, and Yan Sheng
    Chan to the board, all of whom were Yageo employees. An-
    Ehr Chen was the assistant to the president of Yageo and a
    director of Rextron, Lee succeeded Pierre Chen as general
    manager/president of Yageo in 2000, and Chan was the vice-
    2336             DUX CAPITAL MGMT v. YAGEO CORP.
    president of Yageo. Murphy and George Chen at that point
    controlled two of the five seats on the board.
    In February 2001, George Chen resigned as an officer and
    director of LLNC. Murphy resigned in March 2001. Their
    seats remained vacant after their resignations; this left control
    of the LLNC board of directors to Rextron. The LLNC By-
    Laws provided that board actions had to be unanimous, and
    unanimity could be achieved since only Rextron-controlled
    directors remained on the board.
    B.    Chen-Dux Settlement
    Around the same time period, George Chen was involved
    in separate litigation with Dux Capital Management Corp.
    (“Dux”) and Jerry Davis, Dux’s agent.2 In September 1998,
    Dux lent Chen $150,000, for which Chen executed a promis-
    sory note to Dux secured by Chen’s stock in LLNC. Chen
    defaulted on the loan, and Dux demanded repayment. In
    March 2000, Chen sued Dux in California state court for
    declaratory relief, alleging that he never received the
    $150,000. Dux cross-claimed. On April 25, 2001, Chen and
    Dux entered into a settlement agreement. Pursuant to the set-
    tlement agreement, Chen was to transfer 200,000 shares of
    common stock in LLNC and voting proxies for all of his
    411,538 shares (including the 200,000 transferred) to Dux.
    These shares were to be held in escrow for Dux “pending the
    expiration of the right of first refusal described in the Long
    Life Noodle Company Shareholder Agreement.”3 Settlement
    Agreement and Mutual General Release (“Settlement Agree-
    ment”) ¶ 1. Dux had the right to vote the 200,000 shares
    pending expiration or exercise of the right of first refusal.
    Moreover, Paragraph 12.18 of the Settlement Agreement
    expressly provided, “A finding by the court that this Agree-
    2
    Jerry Davis holds an unlimited power of attorney from Dux for all mat-
    ters related to Dux’s interest in LLNC.
    3
    LLNC and other shareholders had the right of first refusal.
    DUX CAPITAL MGMT v. YAGEO CORP.            2337
    ment is in good faith under [California] Code of Civil Proce-
    dure Section 877.6 is a condition to the validity and
    enforceability of this Agreement.” Id. ¶ 12.18. The California
    superior court made this good faith determination on July 25,
    2001 and approved the settlement agreement. Chen trans-
    ferred 200,000 of his shares and voting proxies for all his
    shares to Dux.
    C.   LLNC Directors’ Decision to File Bankruptcy
    On April 26, 2001, the day after Chen and Dux reached
    their settlement agreement, Dux and Davis demanded a meet-
    ing of the shareholders to elect directors to the two vacant
    seats on the board. Dux’s counsel, Lorne Polger, sent a formal
    demand letter on April 30, 2001. After receiving plaintiffs’
    demand, Rextron and its representatives, particularly An-Ehr
    Chen and Gayle Chan, discussed ways to prevent plaintiffs
    from voting directors to the board and participating in the
    management of the corporation. Defendants began to consider
    bankruptcy at the end of April or beginning of May 2001.
    The LLNC By-Laws provided that shareholders were to
    elect directors at the annual meeting on May 1. No meeting
    was held on May 1, 2001. From May 1 to May 3, the directors
    and Rextron attorneys continued to discuss options for pre-
    venting the minority shareholders from electing their two
    directors. On May 3, 2001, the board of directors (consisting
    of three directors elected by Rextron) unanimously voted to
    petition for bankruptcy. The By-Laws required any action
    taken by the board to be unanimous.
    On May 4, Polger faxed another letter to LLNC and Rex-
    tron attorneys demanding a meeting and an inspection of
    LLNC’s books and records. Rextron counsel Gayle Chan
    denied this request on May 7, 2001, and even though she
    knew of the board’s resolution to pursue bankruptcy, she
    stated that she would try to arrange for an inspection on May
    15. Also on May 7, 2001, An-Ehr Chen, on behalf of Rextron,
    2338           DUX CAPITAL MGMT v. YAGEO CORP.
    requested that LLNC’s board convert 700,000 of Rextron’s
    preferred shares to common. The LLNC board granted this
    request by unanimous written consent. On May 9, 2001,
    LLNC filed its petition for bankruptcy.
    D.   Proceedings in Bankruptcy Court
    On July 9, 2001, Dux moved for appointment of a Chapter
    11 trustee for cause “on the grounds of dishonesty, gross mis-
    management and breach of fiduciary duty.” Dux Capital’s
    Mot. to Appoint Chapter 11 Trustee at 1. Among other things,
    Dux alleged that Rextron “orchestrated and carried out a sys-
    tematic plan to control the Debtor [LLNC] in order to ensure
    that its interests were protected to the detriment of the Debt-
    or’s legitimate creditors, including Dux,” id., that Rextron
    refused to hold the annual shareholder meeting in order to
    prevent Dux from filling the two vacant seats on the board of
    directors, and that Rextron, through its control of LLNC,
    breached its fiduciary duty to creditors and the estate and
    committed fraud by failing to give full and honest disclosure
    of its financial condition.
    On August 29, 2001, LLNC filed its Chapter 11 plan of
    reorganization. In October 2001, Dux filed an objection to
    confirmation of the plan. Dux asserted that Rextron had
    breached its fiduciary duty by not holding a shareholder meet-
    ing according to the By-Laws. At a hearing on October 11,
    2001, the bankruptcy court appointed a Trustee to address
    whether any amendments to the plan were necessary in order
    for the plan to be considered fair. The Trustee, David Brad-
    low, recommended adoption of the plan with some modifica-
    tions. The bankruptcy court confirmed the plan with minor
    modifications. The court’s order provided, “All claims,
    defenses, causes of action, and objections to claims are
    reserved for the benefit of the estate and may be asserted by
    the Disbursing Agent.”4 Order Confirming Debtor’s Chapter
    4
    The Disbursing Agent was David Bradlow, the former Trustee.
    DUX CAPITAL MGMT v. YAGEO CORP.               2339
    11 Plan of Reorganization Dated August 29, 2001
    (“Confirmation Order”) ¶ 10 (emphasis added). Rextron and
    Equity Plus objected to the Trustee’s report and recommenda-
    tion, but the bankruptcy court overruled their objections.
    Under the plan, Equity Plus acquired the assets of LLNC.
    As a primary unsecured creditor, Rextron received cash for its
    loans. The equity of the minority shareholders was eliminated.
    However, the bankruptcy court approved an assignment to
    Dux and Davis of all pre-petition claims for relief LLNC
    owned against the majority shareholder, its directors, and
    affiliates. The Disbursing Agent negotiated this assignment
    with Dux and Davis in exchange for their waiver of all their
    general unsecured claims against the estate except for admin-
    istrative expenses. Rextron and Equity Plus objected to this
    assignment. The bankruptcy court overruled these objections
    and stated in its order:
    The Disbursing Agent is authorized to transfer and
    assign to Davis/Dux certain of Debtor’s claims that
    existed on May 9, 2001 (i.e., immediately prior to
    the Chapter 11 filing), as described in and according
    to the terms of the Letter Agreement. The Disbursing
    Agent makes no representation that the Debtor had
    any valid claims, rights or causes of action on May
    9, 2001, and nothing contained in this Order shall be
    deemed to constitute a finding as to the existence of
    any such[ ] cla[i]ms, rights or causes of action.
    Order Authorizing Compromise of Controversy and Assign-
    ment of Claims (“Order Authorizing Compromise”) ¶ 6.
    E.   Proceedings in the District Court
    In early 2002, Geordy Murphy, Davis, and Dux filed suit
    against the Yageo defendants in California state court. They
    alleged, among other things, breach of fiduciary duty, RICO
    violations, fraud, conspiracy to commit fraud, violation of the
    2340          DUX CAPITAL MGMT v. YAGEO CORP.
    state unfair competition law, breach of contract, and malicious
    prosecution. Plaintiffs sued on the assigned corporate claim
    (“LLNC claim”) in place of the corporation, alleging that the
    directors had breached their duty to the corporation and its
    shareholders by causing loss in value of all the corporation’s
    stock. Plaintiffs sued on their own claims as minority share-
    holder (“Minority Shareholder claim”) in a direct action
    against the majority shareholder, Rextron, for breaching its
    fiduciary duty to them by preventing them from electing their
    two directors to the board and causing loss in share value.
    Dux and Davis also filed a separate complaint containing
    similar allegations in California superior court. Both cases
    were removed to the federal district court in 2003 under 
    28 U.S.C. § 1441
    (b) and (c). They were consolidated on May 1,
    2003.
    In January 2004, defendants moved for summary judgment
    on the ground that all of Dux’s claims were barred by res judi-
    cata. They argued that the bankruptcy court already ruled on
    Dux’s claims in its order confirming the LLNC reorganization
    plan and that any issues not ruled on should have been
    asserted in the bankruptcy court. On March 12, 2004, the dis-
    trict court granted in part and denied in part defendants’ sum-
    mary judgment motion. The district court held that res
    judicata barred Dux’s post-petition claims — claims that col-
    laterally attacked the decisions and orders of the bankruptcy
    court. Dux and Davis do not appeal that portion of the district
    court’s order.
    However, the district court denied defendants’ motion for
    summary judgment as to plaintiffs’ pre-petition claims —
    claims arising out of events occurring prior to the filing of the
    bankruptcy petition. The district court held, “the bankruptcy
    court did not adjudicate plaintiffs’ pre-petition claims against
    non-debtor defendants to the extent plaintiffs did not seek to
    recover from the debtor. Pre-petition claims against a non-
    debtor [are] normally nondischargeable.” Order Granting in
    DUX CAPITAL MGMT v. YAGEO CORP.                     2341
    Part Defendants’ Mot. for Summary Judgment (“Summary
    Judgment Order”) at 17. That is, pre-bankruptcy claims
    against the Yageo defendants — who were not the debtor —
    were not disposed of in the bankruptcy court. Moreover, the
    district court noted that the bankruptcy court preserved these
    pre-bankruptcy claims against the non-debtor defendants by
    assigning them to plaintiffs Dux and Davis.5
    The case proceeded to a jury trial. At the end of plaintiffs’
    case, defendants moved for judgment under Fed. R. Civ. P.
    50(a). The district court granted this motion with respect to all
    claims except the LLNC and Minority Shareholder claims. In
    the midst of trial, defendants raised a standing issue, arguing
    that Dux did not have standing to sue on the Minority Share-
    holder claim because the Chen-Dux settlement was not final-
    ized (and therefore Dux did not own the 200,000 LLNC
    shares) until July 25, 2001, after the bankruptcy petition was
    filed. The district court reserved this issue until after trial,
    directing the jury to assume that plaintiffs had standing.
    F.     Jury Instructions and Verdict
    The parties dispute whether the jury determined that plain-
    tiffs Dux and Davis suffered any damages prior to May 9,
    2001, the date LLNC filed for bankruptcy. One of the jury
    instructions provided:
    If you find that plaintiffs have proven any liability
    by any defendant, then you would have to decide
    whether plaintiffs have proven by the preponderance
    of the evidence any damages. To do so, plaintiffs
    5
    The district court also held that because Geordy Murphy was never
    assigned the rights of LLNC, he could not assert any claims on behalf of
    LLNC as an assignee. Summary Judgment Order at 17 (“His claims are
    limited to personal claims against moving defendants or claims as a share-
    holder against directors of LLNC.”). Geordy Murphy is not a party to
    these appeals.
    2342          DUX CAPITAL MGMT v. YAGEO CORP.
    would have to prove the value of the shares held by
    the common stockholders as of the date of the deci-
    sion to commence bankruptcy proceedings. The
    measure of damages would be the value of those
    shares as of that date less the expected value of those
    shares in bankruptcy proceedings expected as of the
    date of the board’s vote.
    Jury Instruction XXXVIII (emphasis added). The jury was
    also instructed, “[i]n this case, plaintiffs challenge [the direc-
    tors’] decision to commence bankruptcy as having not been in
    the best interests of the corporation,” Jury Instruction XIX
    (emphasis added), and “[l]iability in this case depends, in the
    first instance, upon whether the board’s decision to com-
    mence bankruptcy proceedings was improper,” Jury Instruc-
    tion XXIX (emphasis added).
    With respect to the LLNC claim, the jury determined after
    a first round of deliberations that the three Rextron-controlled
    directors (An-Ehr Chen, Cheng-Ling Lee, and Yan Sheng
    Chan) had breached their fiduciary duties owed to the corpo-
    ration and common shareholders in connection with the vote
    to commence bankruptcy proceedings. The jury initially
    delivered an inconsistent verdict with respect to the harm
    caused by defendants’ breach of fiduciary duty. In response
    to Question One of the Special Verdict Form — “Have plain-
    tiffs proven by a preponderance of the evidence that the com-
    mon stock of Long Life Noodle Company, Inc., had any value
    as of the company’s petition to commence bankruptcy pro-
    ceedings on May 9, 2001?” — the jury answered, “No.” How-
    ever, in response to Question Six — “If you have determined
    that any defendant has liability, what damages, if any, have
    plaintiffs proven by preponderance of the evidence?”— the
    jury answered, “$400,000.” After discussing this inconsis-
    tency with the parties, the district court gave the following
    curative instructions to the jury:
    DUX CAPITAL MGMT v. YAGEO CORP.                      2343
    [O]ur intent was . . . to ask you to tell us what
    value, if any, the stock had immediately before the
    bankruptcy proceedings commenced. . . .
    And I want you to understand [question] number
    1 to mean that it is have plaintiffs proven by a pre-
    ponderance of the evidence that the common stock
    of Long Life Noodle Company, Inc. had any value
    as of immediately before the company’s petition to
    commence bankruptcy proceedings on May 9, 2001.
    Before giving these curative instructions, the district court re-
    read Jury Instruction XXXVIII twice.
    After receiving the curative instructions, the jury returned
    with a consistent verdict. With respect to the Minority Share-
    holder claim, the jury determined that Rextron breached its
    fiduciary duty as a majority shareholder to the minority share-
    holders. The jury found $400,000 in damages.6 The jury also
    determined that the total dollar value of the 200,000 shares
    transferred from George Chen to Dux in their settlement
    agreement as of May 9, 2001, was $2 per share and $400,000
    total.7
    G.    District Court Ruling on Standing and June 30,
    2004 Judgment
    On June 30, 2004, the district court returned to the standing
    issue it had set aside during trial. It held that Dux and Davis
    did not have standing to assert the Minority Shareholder
    6
    The jury also awarded punitive damages against An-Ehr Chen and
    Rextron. Those damages were vacated by the district court and are not at
    issue on appeal.
    7
    Plaintiffs’ evidence of the value of the common shares consisted of the
    terms of the Chen-Dux Settlement Agreement, which assigned a value of
    $2 per share to the common shares, “which the parties [Chen and Dux]
    acknowledge and agree is their good faith estimate of the current fair mar-
    ket value of the Shares.” Settlement Agreement ¶ 1.
    2344          DUX CAPITAL MGMT v. YAGEO CORP.
    claim, because they did not have any legal rights to the shares
    prior to the bankruptcy petition that was filed on May 9, 2001.
    See Dux Capital Mgmt. Corp. v. Chen, Nos. C03-00539WHA,
    C03-00540WHA, 
    2004 WL 2472247
    , at *3-5 (N.D. Cal. June
    30, 2004). Accordingly, the district court set aside the jury’s
    verdict against Rextron based on its breach of fiduciary duty
    to the minority shareholder.
    Defendants also argued in its post-trial brief on standing
    that plaintiffs failed to prove an assigned claim for breach of
    fiduciary duty to the corporation because no damages to the
    corporation had accrued as of the time immediately prior to
    the bankruptcy filing. 
    Id. at *6
    . The district court noted that
    although “this issue is outside the scope of the standing issue
    reserved by the Court,” it would address it because
    “[d]efendants may have believed there was some latitude . . .
    due to the Court’s request for precise information on what the
    trial record showed was the number of common shares out-
    standing as of May 9, 2001.” 
    Id.
     The district court held that
    plaintiffs had standing to sue on the assigned LLNC claim
    because a breach of fiduciary duty claim accrued when the
    directors decided to file for bankruptcy on May 3, 2001. 
    Id. at *6-7
    . With respect to the LLNC claim, then, the district
    court entered judgment for plaintiffs Dux and Davis against
    defendants An-Ehr Chen, Yan Sheng Chan, Cheng-Ling Lee,
    Yageo, and Yageo Holding. The district court held that these
    defendants were jointly and severally liable to Dux and Davis
    as assignees of the corporate claim in the amount of
    $2,692,306 ($2 per share as found by the jury x 1,346,153
    common shares). 
    Id. at *7
    .
    H.   Defendants’ Fed. R. Civ. P. 50(b) Motion
    Defendants sought judgment as a matter of law (“JMOL”)
    on five renewed motions. See Dux Capital Mgmt. Corp. v.
    Chen, Nos. C03-00539WHA, C03-00540WHA, 
    2004 WL 1936309
    , at *7 (N.D. Cal. Aug. 31, 2004). Two are relevant
    here: First, defendants contended that the LLNC claims were
    DUX CAPITAL MGMT v. YAGEO CORP.                2345
    not valid because these claims did not accrue prior to the
    bankruptcy petition filing on May 9, 2001. Defendants raised
    this issue for the first time in their post-verdict brief concern-
    ing standing. See 
    id. at *16
    . The district court affirmed its ear-
    lier ruling that damages occurred at the time the decision to
    commence bankruptcy was made and accordingly denied
    defendants’ motion for JMOL on the assigned claims. 
    Id. at *16-18
    . Second, defendants contended that all of plaintiffs’
    claims were preempted by federal bankruptcy laws and barred
    by res judicata. Defendants failed to raise the preemption
    issue before the jury verdict, and the district court had already
    held in its summary judgment order that res judicata did not
    bar plaintiffs’ pre-petition claims. The district court denied
    defendants’ motion regarding preemption and res judicata,
    holding that the pre-petition claims were not preempted
    because the bankruptcy court properly reserved them for liti-
    gation in another forum and that its earlier res judicata ruling
    was law of the case. 
    Id. at *18-19
    .
    The district court granted defendants’ request to exclude
    Rextron’s eventual common shares (the 700,000 shares con-
    verted from preferred to common) from the damages calcula-
    tion. Defendants argued that damages on the assigned LLNC
    claim must exclude Rextron’s shares because there were only
    646,153 shares of common stock as of the directors’ resolu-
    tion to petition for bankruptcy on May 3, 2001. The parties
    had proffered 1,346,153 shares of common stock in their post-
    trial briefs on standing. See 
    id. at *18
    . The district court
    amended the judgment entered on June 30, 2004 to hold
    defendants An-Ehr Chen, Yan Sheng Chan, Cheng-Ling Lee,
    Yageo, and Yageo Holding jointly and severally liable in the
    sum of $1,292,306 ($2 per share x 646,153 shares). 
    Id. at *19
    .
    I.   Plaintiffs’ Post-Judgment Fed. R. Civ. P. 60(b)
    Motion
    After the district court entered its Amended Judgment on
    August 31, 2004, plaintiffs moved to vacate the judgment and
    2346          DUX CAPITAL MGMT v. YAGEO CORP.
    the district court’s ruling on Dux’s standing as a minority
    shareholder, “subject to Plaintiffs’ filing and service herein of
    a ratification, pursuant to Fed. R. Civ. P. 17(a), by Mr. George
    Chen of the commencement and maintenance of this civil
    action upon the claims of the minority shareholder, and
    amending the Amended Judgment entered herein on August
    31, 2004 to reinstate the jury’s verdict for Dux on those
    claims for relief.” Notice of Mot. and Mot. by Pls. for Relief
    from Judgment at 1. The district court denied this motion.
    Plaintiffs appealed. Defendants moved to dismiss the appeal
    for lack of jurisdiction. Plaintiffs opposed the motion and
    moved for limited remand to the district court to rule on the
    merits of their Fed. R. Civ. P. 60(b) motion. The Appellate
    Commissioner denied both motions on January 5, 2005.
    J.   Dux’s Adversary Proceeding Against George Chen
    After Dux filed its appeal to this court seeking review of
    the district court’s denial of its request to entertain Dux’s Rule
    60(b) motion, Dux sought George Chen’s ratification of the
    Minority Shareholder claim under Fed. R. Civ. P. 17(a). Dux
    sought ratification as a way around the district court’s stand-
    ing ruling: if it did not have standing, it would obtain the
    claim from the person who did. On July 25, 2003, however,
    Chen had filed his own bankruptcy petition, which was con-
    verted into a Chapter 11 proceeding on August 8, 2003. The
    Trustee, E. Lynn Schoenmann, was appointed on August 28,
    2003. Dux commenced an Adversary Proceeding in bank-
    ruptcy court on November 2, 2004. In its amended complaint
    filed on November 17, 2004, Dux argued that it had been
    deprived of the “mutually intended benefit of its bargain”
    gained from entering into the Chen-Dux settlement because
    the 200,000 shares transferred therein had become worthless
    as a result of the bankruptcy. Dux sought specific perfor-
    mance of Paragraph 12.2 of the Settlement Agreement, which
    provided that the parties were to “take all actions as may be
    reasonably required to effectuate this Agreement,” and it
    DUX CAPITAL MGMT v. YAGEO CORP.              2347
    argued that Chen was obligated to ratify its direct action
    against the Yageo defendants.
    Chen moved to dismiss on the ground that he had no
    authority to ratify because a Trustee had already been
    appointed to his bankruptcy estate. The Trustee moved for
    summary judgment on the ground that the Settlement Agree-
    ment created no obligation to ratify the suit or otherwise
    transfer Chen’s claims against the Yageo defendants to Dux.
    Dux moved for partial summary judgment on liability for
    breach of the agreement and requested declaratory relief and
    specific performance.
    The bankruptcy court granted Chen’s and the Trustee’s
    motions and denied Dux’s motion. Dux appealed to the dis-
    trict court. The district court held that Fed. R. Civ. P. 17(a)
    is not a substantive rule creating any right to ratification and
    the settlement agreement does not otherwise obligate the
    Trustee to transfer the Minority Shareholder claim to Dux.
    The district court also clarified that even if Dux obtained
    judgment against the Trustee, Chen could not be personally
    bound to that judgment because the claim was an asset of the
    estate that was no longer owned or controlled by Chen.
    II.   JURISDICTION AND STANDARD OF REVIEW
    We have jurisdiction over the appeal and cross-appeal of
    the district court civil judgment under 
    28 U.S.C. § 1291
     and
    jurisdiction over the appeal arising from the Chen bankruptcy
    under 
    28 U.S.C. § 158
    (d).
    We review questions of preemption, standing, availability
    of damages, and the denial of summary judgment on res judi-
    cata grounds de novo. See, e.g., Greany v. W. Farm Bureau
    Life Ins. Co., 
    973 F.2d 812
    , 816 (9th Cir. 1992); Mortensen
    v. County of Sacramento, 
    368 F.3d 1082
    , 1086 (9th Cir.
    2004); Hemmings v. Tidyman’s Inc., 
    285 F.3d 1174
    , 1197 (9th
    Cir. 2002); Akootchook v. United States, 
    271 F.3d 1160
    , 1164
    2348          DUX CAPITAL MGMT v. YAGEO CORP.
    (9th Cir. 2001). A motion for judgment as a matter of law is
    reviewed de novo. See, e.g., City Solutions Inc. v. Clear
    Channel Commc’n, Inc., 
    365 F.3d 835
    , 839 (9th Cir. 2004).
    In reviewing a judgment as a matter of law, the evidence must
    be viewed in the light most favorable to the nonmoving party,
    and all reasonable inferences must be drawn in favor of that
    party. See Reeves v. Sanderson Plumbing Prods., Inc., 
    530 U.S. 133
    , 149-50 (2000).
    This court reviews de novo questions of jurisdiction con-
    cerning Fed. R. Civ. P. 60(b) motions. Carriger v. Lewis, 
    971 F.2d 329
    , 332 (9th Cir. 1992) (en banc). The interpretation of
    language in a contract is a question of law reviewed de novo.
    See United States v. 1.377 Acres of Land, 
    352 F.3d 1259
    ,
    1264 (9th Cir. 2003).
    III.   DISCUSSION
    A.     Standing
    1.    Plaintiffs Have Standing to Litigate the Assigned
    LLNC Claim
    [1] In order for plaintiffs to have standing, they must show
    that they suffered an injury in fact, there was a causal connec-
    tion between the injury and the conduct complained of, and
    the injury is likely to be redressed by a favorable decision.
    Lujan v. Defenders of Wildlife, 
    504 U.S. 555
    , 560-61 (1992).
    [2] Defendants argue that Dux and Davis lack standing to
    raise the LLNC claims because they were assigned only
    claims that accrued as of immediately prior to the bankruptcy
    filing, and no such claims accrued as of that date because
    plaintiffs suffered damages only when the bankruptcy petition
    was filed. Plaintiffs argue that the jury found damages as of
    the LLNC board of directors’ decision to file bankruptcy on
    May 3, 2001, and therefore the LLNC claim accrued on that
    date. Thus, the question is whether the jury found actual dam-
    DUX CAPITAL MGMT v. YAGEO CORP.               2349
    ages before May 9, 2001. Under California law, a cause of
    action accrues with “the infliction of appreciable and actual
    harm, however uncertain in amount.” Davies v. Krasna, 
    535 P.2d 1161
    , 1169 (Cal. 1975).
    Plaintiffs had standing to assert the LLNC claim because
    they suffered harm before May 9, 2001. Several of the origi-
    nal jury instructions clearly asked the jury whether the defen-
    dants breached their fiduciary duty as a result of the LLNC
    board’s decision to file bankruptcy on May 3, 2001, and the
    jury’s original verdict found several defendants had breached
    their duty on this basis. We agree with the district court’s
    analysis:
    Defendants’ argument fails to consider the main fac-
    tual issue for the jury: whether the directors on the
    board breached their fiduciary duty by choosing the
    bankruptcy alternative rather than some other course
    of action expected to provide the company and its
    shareholders with more value. The directors decided
    to file for bankruptcy on May 3, 2001. It is at this
    point in time that a breach of fiduciary duty claim
    may have accrued. If plaintiffs’ damages were rea-
    sonably certain and not speculative at the time of
    wrongdoing, then the cause of action accrued.
    Dux Capital Mgmt. Corp., 
    2004 WL 2472247
    , at * 6 (cita-
    tions omitted).
    Believing that the jury may have interpreted Question One
    on the special verdict form to ask what the value of the stock
    was “once the bankruptcy proceeding started” — that is, after
    the bankruptcy petition was filed — the district court re-
    instructed the jury. In giving its curative instruction, the dis-
    trict court first re-read Jury Instruction XXXVIII, which
    stated in part, “plaintiffs would have to prove the value of the
    shares held by the common stockholders as of the date of the
    decision to commence bankruptcy proceedings.” Jury Instruc-
    2350          DUX CAPITAL MGMT v. YAGEO CORP.
    tion XXXVIII (emphasis added). The district court explained
    to the jury that if it construed Question One to mean “upon
    filing and commencing the bankruptcy petition, did the stock
    have value at that point,” “then that was not our intent.” The
    court further explained:
    Rather, what our intent was was to ask you to tell
    us what value, if any, the stock had immediately
    before the bankruptcy proceedings commenced. . . .
    have plaintiffs proven by a preponderance of the evi-
    dence that the common stock of Long Life Noodle
    Company, Inc. had any value as of immediately
    before the company’s petition to commence bank-
    ruptcy proceedings on May 9, 2001.
    . . . it is a before and after comparison. If you were
    to find that there were any value immediately before
    and that that got wiped out in the bankruptcy and
    that there was another alternative that would have
    preserved more value to the shareholders, then that
    is what we are trying to get at . . . .
    (Emphasis added).
    [3] Seizing upon this curative instruction, defendants argue
    on appeal (as they argued below) that the district court told
    the jury to ignore May 3, the date of the decision to file, and
    instead instructed it to compare the loss caused by the actual
    filing of the petition on May 9. See Dux Capital Mgmt. Corp.,
    
    2004 WL 1936309
    , at *16-17. But the district court did not
    tell the jury to ignore May 3. The jury determined that LLNC
    common stock had a value of $2 per share prior to defen-
    dants’ decision to commence bankruptcy proceedings on May
    3, 2001, and that this stock had no expected value after the
    defendants’ decision. See 
    id. at *16-18
    . This is clear in light
    of the district court’s concern that the jury had originally
    interpreted Question One to mean the value of the shares after
    the bankruptcy petition and its addressing this by reminding
    DUX CAPITAL MGMT v. YAGEO CORP.                      2351
    the jury of Jury Instruction XXXVIII8 while giving its cura-
    tive instruction. See 
    id. at *17-18
    . Hence, plaintiffs had stand-
    ing to assert the LLNC claim because it accrued before May
    9, 2001.
    2.   Plaintiffs Lack Standing to Litigate the Minority
    Shareholder Claim
    The standing issue as to the Minority Shareholder claim is
    whether the Chen-Dux Settlement Agreement gave Dux any
    legal right to the LLNC shares and endowed it with standing
    as of May 9, 2001. Dux bases its standing to sue as a minority
    shareholder for breach of fiduciary duty by the majority
    shareholder, Rextron, on the 200,000 common shares of
    LLNC transferred pursuant to its settlement with Chen.
    Because the Settlement Agreement does not assign Chen’s
    accrued legal claims as a shareholder to Dux, Dux only would
    have standing to sue for loss in share value caused by Rex-
    tron’s breach of fiduciary duty if it actually owned those
    shares at the time the injury occurred. Neither party disputes
    that the Chen-Dux Settlement Agreement was executed on
    April 25, 2001, that it contained a good-faith determination
    provision, and that a California court did not make this good-
    faith determination until July 25, 2001. The district court held
    that the settlement agreement could not be construed to pro-
    vide Dux any legal right to the LLNC shares prior to May 9,
    2001. Dux Capital Mgmt. Corp., 
    2004 WL 2472247
    , at *3.
    On cross-appeal, Dux and Davis argue that the issue is not
    whether they had standing to sue as minority shareholder, but
    8
    This key instruction asked the jury to determine “the difference
    between the expected value of the shares with Long Life pursuing the
    bankruptcy option versus the expected value of the shares with Long Life
    pursuing alternative options, all measured as of the time before the bank-
    ruptcy petition itself. Damages, therefore, could be calculated by subtract-
    ing the expected value of the shares at the time of the decision to file for
    bankruptcy from the expected value of the shares had the directors opted
    for an alternative to bankruptcy.” Dux Capital Mgmt. Corp., 
    2004 WL 1936309
    , at *16.
    2352             DUX CAPITAL MGMT v. YAGEO CORP.
    whether they were the real-party-in-interest at the time of
    judgment. Plaintiffs do not attempt to establish that they had
    standing or legal right to the shares as of May 9, 2001. Defen-
    dants argue that whether Dux had standing or was the real-
    party-in-interest are separate issues and that Dux does not
    have standing.
    [4] We hold that Dux does not have standing to sue on the
    Minority Shareholder claim. Whether or not Dux was the real-
    party-in-interest, it lacks standing. In order to have standing,
    Dux must show injury in fact. See Lujan, 
    504 U.S. at 560
    . If
    Dux did not own the shares at the time that the injury (breach
    of fiduciary duty) was inflicted and damage to the value of the
    stocks was sustained, then it did not suffer any injury in fact.9
    Paragraph 12.18 of the Chen-Dux Settlement Agreement
    clearly provides that the court’s good faith determination is “a
    condition to the validity and enforceability of this Agree-
    ment,” and the California superior court did not make this
    finding until July 25, 2001. Thus, as the district court cor-
    rectly held, on May 9, 2001, “George Chen retained all his
    legal rights as a minority shareholder of Long Life and was
    under no duty yet to transfer the shares or the right to vote to
    Dux. (Thus, the cause of action accrued to George Chen.
    There was no assignment of the cause of action.).” Dux Capi-
    tal Mgmt. Corp., 
    2004 WL 2472247
    , at *3.10
    9
    Under California law, shareholder status is based on record ownership
    of shares. 
    Cal. Corp. Code § 185
     (shareholder is “one who is a holder of
    record of shares”); see also 
    id.
     § 701(d) (shareholders of record are per-
    sons entitled to vote, attend meetings, receive dividends). Dux cannot be
    considered a shareholder of record vested with the right to pursue a direct
    shareholder action unless it received Chen’s shares or recorded them by
    the time of the injury. Moreover, California law provides that there is no
    division between who owns the shares and has legal title to them and who
    has the right to recover for damages to them. See id. §§ 185, 701(d).
    10
    Similarly, the Chen-Dux Settlement Agreement provides no support
    for Dux’s position that Chen (or his bankruptcy Trustee) must ratify Dux’s
    claim pursuant to Fed. R. Civ. P. 17(a). Dux relies on Paragraph 12.2, the
    further assurances provision, which states, “Each party to this Agreement
    DUX CAPITAL MGMT v. YAGEO CORP.                        2353
    Moreover, we agree with the district court’s analysis com-
    paring the Chen-Dux agreement to the buy-sell agreement in
    Stephenson v. Drever, 
    947 P.2d 1301
     (Cal. 1997). See Dux
    Capital Mgmt. Corp., 
    2004 WL 2472247
    , at *3-4. In Stephen-
    son, the plaintiff was an employee and minority shareholder
    in a closely held corporation. 947 P.2d at 1302. The buy-sell
    agreement between the plaintiff and the corporation provided
    that the corporation “ ‘shall have the right and obligation to
    repurchase’ ” all of the plaintiff’s shares in the event of termi-
    nation of employment. Id. After the plaintiff was terminated,
    there was a disagreement as to the fair market value of the
    shares, and the plaintiff did not deliver the shares back to the
    corporation. Id. at 1305. The plaintiff sued directors and offi-
    cers of the corporation for breach of fiduciary duty that they
    owed as majority shareholders to him, the minority share-
    holder. Id. at 1302-03. Defendants argued that the plaintiff
    ceased having shareholder rights upon termination of his
    shall execute all instruments and documents and take all actions as may
    be reasonably required to effectuate this Agreement.” Settlement Agree-
    ment ¶ 12.2 (emphasis added). Dux argues that it cannot realize the “bene-
    fit of the bargain” because it lost the value of the shares in bankruptcy. But
    the further assurances provision provides only that further actions must be
    taken to effectuate “this agreement,” and so the question is whether or not
    “this agreement” included the transfer or assignment of the minority share-
    holder claims to Dux. As the district court noted, “Dux was primarily con-
    cerned about protecting its interest in the shares themselves,” and at the
    time the agreement was made, no one contemplated any minority share-
    holder claims. Order Affirming Bankruptcy Court Decision at 7.
    Moreover, as the Trustee persuasively argues, the terms of the settle-
    ment agreement involved transfer of shares, without any warranty as to
    value. See Settlement Agreement ¶ 1. It is true that at the time of the
    agreement, the shares were assigned the fair market value of $2. However,
    “[b]y making the superior court’s approval an explicit condition of the set-
    tlement agreement, Dux knowingly accepted the risk that the value of the
    stock would decrease in the interim, even independent of a bankruptcy fil-
    ing.” Order Affirming Bankruptcy Court Decision at 7. Conversely, Chen
    accepted the risk that the value of the stock would increase and the settle-
    ment would be approved, or that it would decrease and he would have to
    keep the stock if the settlement were not approved.
    2354             DUX CAPITAL MGMT v. YAGEO CORP.
    employment and thus lacked standing to sue. Id. The Stephen-
    son court held that unless something in the agreement indi-
    cated to the contrary, plaintiff retained legal title to the shares
    “with all the rights appurtenant.” Id. at 1305.11
    [5] Likewise, nothing in the Chen-Dux Settlement Agree-
    ment indicates that Dux had any right to the shares prior to the
    good faith determination by the California superior court. Fur-
    thermore, the agreement had a provision for making Dux’s
    voting rights valid “during the pendency of any writ of man-
    date which may be filed by any party to the Action to overturn
    the Court’s determination of good faith.” Settlement Agree-
    ment ¶ 12.18. But, as the district court held, “No similar vot-
    ing right was created pending the initial application for good-
    faith determination. . . . The fact that the settlement agreement
    expressly provided rights in one situation and not another
    tends to negate any inference that the parties intended for Dux
    to obtain voting rights or any other rights prior to the superior
    11
    On appeal, Dux has apparently given up on the argument that it had
    legal title to the 200,000 LLNC shares as of May 9, 2001. Instead, it
    argues that it would be unfair to deprive it of standing since it ultimately
    suffered the loss in value of those shares. Although Dux does not quite put
    it in these terms now, this is similar to the “beneficial owner” theory it
    argued (and lost) below. See Dux Capital Mgmt. Corp., 
    2004 WL 2472247
    , at *5 (holding that beneficial owners may not bring direct
    actions and that Dux’s suit on the minority shareholder claim was a direct
    action because it alleged that the defendants’ failure to hold an annual
    meeting prevented it from electing directors to the board). What Stephen-
    son illustrates, however, is that the record shareholder also possesses all
    the legal rights appurtenant to that status, unless the parties have agreed
    otherwise. Stephenson, 947 P.2d at 1305. Under the California Corpora-
    tions Code, shareholders have a wide range of rights to participate in cor-
    porate governance. Id. at 1306-08. As in Stephenson, Dux’s theory that
    Chen’s shareholder rights were cut off before legal title was delivered
    “would have the effect of stripping [Chen] of all these statutory sharehold-
    er’s rights even though he remains the legal owner of record of shares . . . .
    A shareholder without a shareholder’s rights is at best an anomaly, and at
    worst a shadowy figure in corporate limbo who would be voiceless in the
    conduct of the business of which he is part owner and largely defenseless
    against neglect or overreaching by management.” Id. at 1307.
    DUX CAPITAL MGMT v. YAGEO CORP.               2355
    court’s initial determination of good faith.” Dux Capital
    Mgmt. Corp., 
    2004 WL 2472247
    , at *4. Thus, Dux could not
    have standing to sue as a minority shareholder unless Chen
    assigned that cause of action to it. There is nothing in the
    Chen-Dux Settlement Agreement providing for such an
    assignment. “As in Stephenson, the record owner George
    Chen retained all legal rights and thus would have standing.
    Dux obtained no legal rights prior to May 9, 2001.” 
    Id.
    Siegel v. Anderson Homes, Inc., 
    118 Cal. App. 4th 994
    (2004), which held that the cause of action for building dam-
    age accrues to the owner who suffers a compensable eco-
    nomic injury, even though the damage to the building
    occurred prior to the time the plaintiff owned the building,
    does not provide support for Dux’s position. In general, “a
    cause of action accrues at the moment the party who owns it
    is entitled to bring and prosecute an action thereon.” 
    Id. at 1003
     (internal citations and quotation marks omitted). But
    when the property damage is not discovered until later, “a
    cause of action for construction defects does not accrue until
    the property owner discovers the resulting damages.” 
    Id. at 1009
    . In Siegel, the defect was latent, so the original owner
    was not aware of the defect to the building when he sold it to
    the plaintiff. Since plaintiffs and not the original owner dis-
    covered the damage, the cause of action accrued to plaintiffs.
    In other words, when the original owner sold the house to
    plaintiffs, the price of the house presumably did not reflect the
    latent defect, and plaintiffs paid more for it than they would
    have had they known about the defect. They got the short end
    of the stick.
    Here, in contrast, George Chen — the original owner of the
    200,000 shares of LLNC stock — was aware of the loss of
    value to the stock caused by the decision to file bankruptcy.
    The cause of action accrued to him. Although Dux and Chen
    reached their settlement (on April 25, 2001) before damage to
    the stock value occurred, an express condition of the settle-
    ment was that it would not be final until a court made the
    2356             DUX CAPITAL MGMT v. YAGEO CORP.
    good faith determination. It was clear to both parties that that
    determination would take some time,12 and thus Dux bore the
    risk that the stock value would decrease during that time,
    while Chen bore the risk that the stock value would increase
    during that time.
    [6] For these reasons, whether or not Dux was the real-
    party-in-interest, it does not have standing, and it cannot cure
    its standing problem through an invocation of Fed. R. Civ. P.
    17(a). Plaintiffs do not cite any case law for their assertion
    that the time that a lawsuit is filed is relevant to the standing
    inquiry. Being the owner of the shares at the time of the
    injury, Chen legally suffered the shares’ loss in value. It just
    turned out that this loss had no economic effect on him
    because he had already agreed to transfer the shares to Dux
    shortly thereafter for a set price pursuant to their executed set-
    tlement agreement. “Rule 17(a) does not give them standing;
    ‘real party in interest’ is very different from standing.” Kent
    v. N. Cal. Reg’l Office of the Am. Friends Serv. Comm., 
    497 F.2d 1325
    , 1329 (9th Cir. 1974) (holding that the trustees of
    a trust fund in which taxpayers’ money was kept were the
    real-parties-in-interest with respect to the trust fund, but they
    did not have standing to sue the government to enjoin collec-
    tion of the taxes in the trust fund, because only the taxpayers
    themselves had standing); see also 6 Wright & Miller, Federal
    Practice and Procedure § 1542.
    B.    Plaintiffs’ Breach of Fiduciary Duty Claims Are
    Not Preempted by the Bankruptcy Code
    Defendants argue that plaintiffs’ breach of fiduciary duty
    claims are preempted by federal bankruptcy law because they
    are claims that LLNC directors improperly used the bank-
    12
    Paragraph 12.18 of the Settlement Agreement provided, “The Parties
    to this Agreement agree and understand that an application for good faith
    settlement will be filed in the Action . . . and is expected to be heard on
    May 7, 2001.”
    DUX CAPITAL MGMT v. YAGEO CORP.               2357
    ruptcy process and such claims must be litigated in bank-
    ruptcy court. Defendants first raised the preemption argument
    in a Fed. R. Civ. P. 50(b) motion. Although the parties dispute
    whether this preemption defense is waived due to failure to
    timely raise it, we hold in any case it would fail on the merits.
    [7] Plaintiffs’ breach of fiduciary duty claims are not pre-
    empted by federal bankruptcy law because these claims con-
    cern conduct that occurred prior to bankruptcy. The cases
    upon which defendants rely hold only that state law causes of
    action for abuse of process and malicious prosecution involv-
    ing conduct that occurred during bankruptcy are preempted.
    E.g., MSR Exploration, Ltd. v. Meridian Oil, Inc., 
    74 F.3d 910
    (9th Cir. 1996) (holding that state malicious prosecution
    actions for events taking place within bankruptcy court pro-
    ceedings are preempted); Gonzales v. Parks, 
    830 F.2d 1033
    (9th Cir. 1987) (holding that state courts lack jurisdiction over
    claim that filing of a bankruptcy petition is an abuse of pro-
    cess); see also Miles v. Okun (In re Miles), 
    430 F.3d 1083
    ,
    1091 (9th Cir. 2005) (holding that 
    11 U.S.C. § 303
    (i) provides
    the exclusive basis for awarding damages based on involun-
    tary bankruptcy petition filing).
    MSR Exploration and Gonzales involved claims between
    creditors and debtors that were litigated in bankruptcy court,
    involved the bankruptcy process, or otherwise required con-
    sideration of what relief was available under federal law. For
    example, in MSR Exploration, a creditor filed a claim against
    the debtor in bankruptcy court, and the bankruptcy court sus-
    tained the debtor’s (MSR Exploration’s) objection to the cred-
    itor’s claim. Instead of pursuing sanctions or another remedy
    in bankruptcy court, the debtor waited until after the reorgani-
    zation plan was confirmed and filed a state law malicious
    prosecution claim against the creditor in district court. MSR
    Exploration, 
    74 F.3d at 912
    . We held, “Whether creditors
    should be deterred, and when, is a matter unique to the flow
    of the bankruptcy process itself—a matter solely within the
    hands of the federal courts.” 
    Id. at 916
    . Disputes between
    2358          DUX CAPITAL MGMT v. YAGEO CORP.
    creditors and debtors are a central part of the management of
    the bankruptcy process, and allowing state law to resolve such
    disputes would undermine the uniformity of federal bank-
    ruptcy law. 
    Id. at 914
     (noting that Congress intended to
    “create a whole system under federal control which is
    designed to bring together and adjust all of the rights and
    duties of creditors and embarrassed debtors alike.”) (empha-
    sis added); see also In re Miles, 430 F.3d at 1089-90; Gon-
    zales, 
    830 F.2d at 1035-36
    .
    Similarly, in Gonzales, a debtor filed a bankruptcy petition
    in an attempt to delay a creditor foreclosure sale. The creditor
    subsequently filed an abuse of process claim in state court,
    and the state court entered a judgment against the debtor.
    Gonzales, 
    830 F.2d at 1033-34
    . The debtor filed an adversary
    proceeding in bankruptcy court seeking relief from the state
    court judgment. 
    Id. at 1034
    . We held that “[f]ilings of bank-
    ruptcy petitions are a matter of exclusive federal jurisdiction”
    because “[s]tate courts are not authorized to determine
    whether a person’s claim for relief under a federal law, in a
    federal court, and within that court’s exclusive jurisdiction, is
    an appropriate one.” 
    Id. at 1035
     (emphasis added).
    [8] By contrast, Dux and Davis did not allege that LLNC’s
    bankruptcy petition was filed in bad faith, and their claim
    does not require the adjudication of rights and duties of credi-
    tors and debtors under the Bankruptcy Code. The complaint
    alleged that the directors and majority shareholder engaged in
    self-dealing to the detriment of the corporation through their
    decision to pursue bankruptcy and sought damages for breach
    of fiduciary duty under California state law. Unlike in MSR
    Exploration and In re Miles, the complaint was not “self-
    consciously and entirely one which seeks damages for a claim
    filed and pursued in the bankruptcy court,” MSR Exploration,
    
    74 F.3d at 912
    ; see In re Miles, 430 F.3d at 1092-93 (noting
    that “[t]he complaints state on their faces that Appellants seek
    damages for the filing and prosecution of the involuntary
    bankruptcy petitions against their relatives. . . . Because
    DUX CAPITAL MGMT v. YAGEO CORP.               2359
    Appellants’ complaints allege state law tort causes of action
    for damages entirely predicated upon the filing and prosecu-
    tion of involuntary bankruptcy petitions, they necessarily
    ‘arise under’ title 11.”). Simply put, state corporate gover-
    nance law, not federal bankruptcy law, governs the duties of
    a corporate fiduciary. See FDIC v. Barton, 
    1998 WL 169696
    ,
    at *4 (E.D. La. April 8, 1998) (holding that federal bank-
    ruptcy law does not preempt the FDIC’s claim against defen-
    dants under Louisiana state law for breach of fiduciary duty
    in connection with defendants’ bankruptcy filing).
    Finally, as the district court correctly noted, the bankruptcy
    court explicitly assigned to plaintiffs all pre-bankruptcy
    claims of LLNC against its directors and the Yageo defen-
    dants, over defendants’ objections. Defendants argue that the
    bankruptcy court could not assign claims over which it had
    exclusive jurisdiction. Even if this were true, plaintiffs’
    breach of fiduciary duty claims are not based on “activities
    that might be undertaken in the management of the bank-
    ruptcy process.” MSR Exploration, 
    74 F.3d at 914
    . Since the
    bankruptcy court limited the assignment to claims that “ex-
    isted on May 9, 2001 (i.e., immediately prior to the Chapter
    11 filing),” the assignment was valid.
    C.   Res Judicata Does Not Bar Plaintiffs’ Breach of
    Fiduciary Duty Claims
    [9] “The doctrine of res judicata bars a party from bringing
    a claim if a court of competent jurisdiction has rendered final
    judgment on the merits of the claim in a previous action
    involving the same parties or their privies.” Robertson v.
    Isomedix, Inc. (In re Int’l Nutronics, Inc.), 
    28 F.3d 965
    , 969
    (9th Cir. 1994) (citation omitted). Since the bankruptcy court
    issued a final judgment on the merits, and that action involved
    the same parties or their privies, the issue here is whether the
    LLNC claim was or could have been litigated by the Trustee
    (who became the owner of any claims of LLNC against its
    directors after the bankruptcy petition was filed) in the bank-
    2360          DUX CAPITAL MGMT v. YAGEO CORP.
    ruptcy court and whether the two causes of action were the
    same.
    The order of confirmation explicitly reserved all claims and
    causes of action for the benefit of the estate to the Disbursing
    Agent (former Trustee). After confirmation, the bankruptcy
    court authorized the Disbursing Agent “to transfer and assign
    to Davis/Dux certain of Debtor’s claims that existed on May
    9, 2001 (i.e., immediately prior to the Chapter 11 filing), as
    described in and according to the terms of the Letter Agree-
    ment.” Order Authorizing Compromise ¶ 6. This assignment
    was part of a settlement agreement that the Disbursing Agent
    reached with Dux and Davis in connection with their claims
    against the estate of LLNC. In return, Dux and Davis waived
    their general unsecured claims against the LLNC estate except
    for seeking payment of administrative expenses. The bank-
    ruptcy court authorized the assignment over Rextron and
    Equity Plus’s objections.
    Defendants argue that (1) the Trustee could have litigated
    the breach of fiduciary duty claim of LLNC against its direc-
    tors during the bankruptcy proceeding, (2) Dux/Davis actually
    litigated the claim and lost, (3) the assignment of claims to
    Dux/Davis was too general to prevent preclusion, and (4) the
    trustee was required to assert the claims before the order of
    confirmation. Plaintiffs respond that (1) defendants should
    have appealed the bankruptcy court’s assignment of claims to
    Dux/Davis, and their failure to do so bars their claim, (2) the
    LLNC claim does not pertain to the confirmation plan and
    therefore was not the same claim, and (3) the bankruptcy
    court did not resolve the LLNC claim because it expressly
    reserved it and assigned it to plaintiffs.
    [10] Res judicata does not bar plaintiffs’ LLNC claim for
    several reasons. First, the LLNC claim is a claim for breach
    of fiduciary duty that does not “pertain[ ] to the [reorganiza-
    tion] plan.” Trulis v. Barton, 
    107 F.3d 685
    , 691 (9th Cir.
    1995) (holding that “[o]nce a bankruptcy plan is confirmed,
    DUX CAPITAL MGMT v. YAGEO CORP.                2361
    it is binding on all parties and all questions that could have
    been raised pertaining to the plan are entitled to res judicata
    effect.”); see also Heritage Hotel Ltd. P’ship I v. Valley Bank
    of Nev. (In re Heritage Hotel Ltd. P’ship I), 
    160 B.R. 374
    ,
    377 (9th Cir. B.A.P. 1993), aff’d, 
    59 F.2d 175
     (9th Cir. 1995)
    (unpublished table decision); Kelley v. S. Bay Bank (In re Kel-
    ley), 
    199 B.R. 698
    , 702 (9th Cir. B.A.P. 1996) (“a chapter 11
    bankruptcy case ‘comprise[s] all matters pertaining to the
    debtor-creditor relationship that [the debtor] or any creditors
    might . . . raise[ ] to advance their interests in the proceed-
    ing’ ”) (citation omitted and alteration in original).
    [11] Second, plaintiffs’ claim for breach of fiduciary duty
    on the part of the Rextron-controlled directors was not
    decided by the bankruptcy court. While Dux/Davis did argue
    that the reorganization plan should not be confirmed because
    it was not filed in good faith, the breach of fiduciary duty
    claim with respect to the directors and the majority share-
    holder was not raised in, much less decided by, the bank-
    ruptcy court. The breach of fiduciary duty claim that Dux
    raised in its motion to appoint a Chapter 11 Trustee was based
    on debtor LLNC’s fiduciary duty to creditors and sharehold-
    ers in bankruptcy. This is clearly a different duty than that of
    the board of directors and Rextron to the corporation itself
    and the minority shareholders prior to bankruptcy. Moreover,
    Dux’s objection to the reorganization plan as being in bad
    faith in violation of 
    11 U.S.C. § 1129
    (a)(3) was not the same
    as a breach of fiduciary duty claim under California corporate
    law.
    The Trustee recommended confirmation of the plan in part
    because the parties could resolve their intra-corporate disputes
    afterwards:
    there are a number of factual and legal issues that
    simply will not be resolved before the continued
    confirmation hearing set for November 26, 2001
    . . . . Equity Plus has indicated that it may withdraw
    2362          DUX CAPITAL MGMT v. YAGEO CORP.
    its “offer” if a sale . . . is not approved at [that time].
    As a result, the Trustee believes that the Court
    should proceed to sell the assets and business to
    Equity Plus under the general terms set forth in the
    Plan . . . . The parties (Davis/Dux, Rextron and
    Equity Plus) will retain whatever rights they may
    have against one another and can litigate their dis-
    putes after consummation of the sale.
    Trustee’s Report and Recommendation Pursuant to Bank-
    ruptcy Code § 1106 and Court Order at 3-4. Similarly, the
    bankruptcy court questioned whether the entire bankruptcy
    proceeding was “on the up and up” and reserved the pre-
    petition claims for later resolution. Thus, plaintiffs’ claims
    were not, as defendants argue, “thoroughly aired and rejected”
    by the Trustee and the bankruptcy court. They were explicitly
    reserved.
    [12] Third, the bankruptcy court’s authorization of the
    assignment of the LLNC claim to plaintiffs was valid. The
    confirmation order did not extinguish plaintiffs’ LLNC claim.
    LLNC’s plan of reorganization provided, “The Disbursing
    Agent shall have the right to pursue any and all Retained
    Claims and other pre-petition obligations or claims in favor of
    the Debtor . . . . No such claims shall be waived or relin-
    quished under the Plan or by virtue of its Confirmation. The
    Disbursing Agent hereby reserves all Claims, defenses, pow-
    ers and interests of the Debtor and/or Trustee, existing as of
    Confirmation.” Debtor’s Chapter 11 Plan of Reorganization
    Dated August 29, 2001 (“Plan of Reorganization”) at 8. The
    plan defined “Retained Claims” as “all claims that Debtor had
    as of the Filing Date.” Id. at 3. The plan’s definition of
    “claim” included the LLNC claim. See id. at 1. The effect of
    the confirmation was to discharge the debtor — LLNC —
    from all claims, not the directors or Rextron, the majority
    shareholder. See id. at 12 (“Confirmation of the Plan will dis-
    charge Debtor from all liability for Claims arising prior to
    Confirmation . . . .”).
    DUX CAPITAL MGMT v. YAGEO CORP.               2363
    In confirming the plan, the bankruptcy court provided that
    all claims “are reserved for the benefit of the estate and may
    be asserted by the Disbursing Agent.” Confirmation Order
    ¶ 10. Pursuant to a settlement between the bankruptcy estate
    of LLNC and plaintiffs, the Disbursing Agent assigned those
    claims to plaintiffs. See Letter Agreement Dated March 15,
    2002 (“Letter Agreement”) at 1-2. The bankruptcy court
    approved this assignment. Order Authorizing Compromise at
    2; cf. Trulis, 107 F.3d at 689-91 (holding that res judicata
    barred plaintiffs’ claim where plaintiffs did not appeal bank-
    ruptcy court’s order confirming reorganization plan that
    included explicit provision barring such action). The court,
    therefore, was ratifying the Trustee/Disbursing Agent’s
    choice explicitly to reserve the claim for plaintiffs rather than
    to raise the fiduciary duty claim during the during the bank-
    ruptcy proceeding. Moreover, as the district court held, “there
    is no evidence to indicate that the bankruptcy court dis-
    charged the potential liabilities of these non-debtor defendants
    to non-debtor plaintiffs.” Summary Judgment Order at 17. In
    fact, it was precisely because the bankruptcy court believed
    that these claims were too complicated to be litigated in the
    bankruptcy proceeding that it reserved them for dispute in
    another forum.
    [13] Finally, the Trustee’s assignment of all pre-petition
    claims to Dux/Davis was not so general as to render it invalid.
    To support their argument that the Trustee’s assignment was
    too general, defendants rely on In re Kelley, which suggests
    that a blanket reservation is insufficient to prevent application
    of res judicata to a specific action, see 
    199 B.R. at 704
    . How-
    ever, the Bankruptcy Appellate Panel subsequently limited
    that language. See Akary Corp. v. Sims (In re Associated Vin-
    tage Group, Inc.), 
    283 B.R. 549
    , 563-64 (9th Cir. B.A.P.
    2002) (“While we did find the purported reservation in the
    Kelley plan to be . . . vague in the context of all the facts of
    that case, and observed that another court had once found a
    general reservation to [sic] rights to be insufficient, our com-
    ment was pure dictum . . . and cannot be construed as a gen-
    2364            DUX CAPITAL MGMT v. YAGEO CORP.
    eral statement of law. . . . We agree with the other courts that
    regard it as impractical and unnecessary to expect that a dis-
    closure statement and plan must list each and every possible
    defendant and each and every possible theory.”) (citations
    omitted). Together, the Letter Agreement, the bankruptcy
    court order, and the Trustee’s recommendation show that the
    claims intended to be assigned were the corporate governance
    claims.13
    D.    District Court’s Damages Calculations Were Not
    Erroneous
    As of May 3, 2001, there were 646,153 shares of common
    and 1,507,695 shares of Series A preferred convertible stock
    issued and outstanding. On May 7, 2001, An-Ehr Chen
    requested that the LLNC board of directors convert 700,000
    of Rextron’s shares of preferred stock to common. On May 8,
    2001, the board granted that request. The jury was asked to
    determine whether plaintiffs proved that the common stock of
    LLNC had any value as of the company’s petition to com-
    mence bankruptcy proceedings. The jury was also asked to
    determine the value (both total and per share) of the shares
    transferred pursuant to the Chen-Dux Settlement Agreement.
    Those transferred shares were common. The jury found that
    the common stock was worth $2 per share.
    In its June 30, 2004 Judgment, the district court calculated
    damages as $2,692,306, which included Rextron’s 700,000
    shares that had been converted to common on May 8, 2001.
    This figure did not include the preferred shares because the
    jury never was asked to determine a loss in value for the pre-
    13
    The Letter Agreement provided that Davis/Dux would receive assign-
    ment of all pre-petition claims, excluding claims arising under the Code,
    against “[t]he attorneys for LLNC, including Gayle Chan, Michael Lee,
    . . . George Chen, An Erh Chen [sic], Pierre Chen, Equity Plus, Yageo,
    Rextron and/or their affiliates; and [t]he LLNC directors and officers.”
    Letter Agreement at 1-2.
    DUX CAPITAL MGMT v. YAGEO CORP.                     2365
    ferred shares due to the bankruptcy filing. In its Amended
    Judgment, the district court removed the 700,000 shares from
    its earlier calculation because they had not been converted to
    common until May 8, 2001, after the May 3 board resolution
    to petition for bankruptcy. Thus plaintiffs’ damages award
    was revised downward to $1,292,306 ($2 per share x 646,153
    common shares). See Dux Capital Mgmt. Corp., 
    2004 WL 19396309
    , at *19.
    Plaintiffs cross-appeal this damages calculation and make
    two arguments. First, they argue that there was sufficient evi-
    dence to show the preferred shares had a minimum value of
    $2 per share, since they were at least as valuable as the com-
    mon shares. They argue that the district court should have
    included this “minimum value” of the preferred stock in its
    damages calculation and that the parties agreed to use the
    value of all LLNC stock to measure damages on the assigned
    LLNC claim. Second, they argue that the 700,000 converted
    shares should not have been excluded from the damages cal-
    culation because while the LLNC claim accrued on May 3,
    2001, the amount of damages was not tied to that date.
    [14] The district court did not err in excluding the preferred
    shares from its damages calculation. Plaintiffs’ theory of dam-
    ages on the assigned LLNC claim throughout trial and after
    trial did not include damage to the preferred shares. Before
    trial, they sought relief for diminution in value of the com-
    pany as a going concern and loss of goodwill. See Joint Final
    Pretrial Order at 7. During trial, plaintiffs urged the jury to
    find that the common shares were worth at least $2 per share,
    but they never urged the jury to make any finding with regard
    to the preferred shares. During the discussions about the spe-
    cial verdict form and the jury instructions, plaintiffs did not
    request the inclusion of any instruction or question to the jury
    regarding the value of the preferred shares. After trial, plain-
    tiffs clearly recognized that LLNC had both outstanding com-
    mon and outstanding preferred shares,14 but they nonetheless
    14
    See Pls.’ Post-Trial Br. Re: Issues of Standing and Damages at 8 (not-
    ing that at the time of the bankruptcy filing, there were 807,695 preferred
    shares and 1,346,153 common shares issued).
    2366          DUX CAPITAL MGMT v. YAGEO CORP.
    asked the district court to calculate damages based only on the
    outstanding common shares. See Pls.’ Post-Trial Br. at 9
    (arguing that “[t]he findings by the jury of the share value of
    $2.00 results in the following damages in addition to punitive
    damages assessed by the jury: To Dux as an individual plain-
    tiff: $2.00/share x 200,000 shares: $400,000; To Dux and
    Davis jointly as assignees of the claims of LLNC: $2.00/share
    x 1,346,153 shares: $2,692,306.”). Plaintiffs cannot complain
    on appeal about a damages calculation they never asked the
    district court to make.
    Moreover, no evidence concerning the value of the pre-
    ferred shares was presented at trial. See Dux Capital Mgmt.
    Corp., 
    2004 WL 2472247
    , at *7 (noting that “[a]t trial, the
    only evidence proffered was for the value of common shares.
    Hence, plaintiffs only proved, as found by the jury, the value
    of the common stock at $2 per share.”). The jury did not
    determine the value of the preferred shares; it determined only
    that plaintiffs proved that the common stock of LLNC had
    value as of the bankruptcy petition, and that the (common)
    shares transferred between Chen and Dux were worth $2 per
    share.
    Pointing to LLNC’s Articles of Incorporation, plaintiffs
    argue that the preferred shares must have been worth at least
    as much as the common shares, since the preferred shares
    “enjoyed significant procedural and financial benefits over the
    common shares.” The Articles of Incorporation provided that
    the holders of the preferred shares enjoyed certain rights supe-
    rior to that of the common shares, including the right to
    receive greater dividends and the right to elect three of the
    five directors to the board. Even so, the fact remains that
    plaintiffs presented no evidence at trial to establish the value
    of the preferred shares, and they did not ask the jury to deter-
    mine the value of the preferred shares. It is no surprise, then,
    that the jury determined only the value of the common shares.
    The jury did not make any finding on the “minimum value”
    — or any value — of the preferred shares. Damages are
    DUX CAPITAL MGMT v. YAGEO CORP.                      2367
    recoverable to the extent they are reasonably certain, but they
    still must be proved. See, e.g., Toscano v. Greene Music, 
    124 Cal. App. 4th 685
    , 695 (2004); Mendoyoma Inc. v. County of
    Mendocino, 
    8 Cal. App. 3d 873
    , 880-81 (1970).
    As assignees of the corporate LLNC claim, plaintiffs would
    have been entitled to the loss in value for all the corporation’s
    shares, preferred and common, if they had timely made a
    request in the district court to include the preferred shares in
    the damages calculation.15 At this point, however, we cannot
    grant plaintiffs’ request to instruct the district court to enter
    judgment for $4,307,700 on this claim. The district court did
    not err in excluding the value of the preferred shares in its
    damages calculation.16
    Plaintiffs also argue that the district court erred by amend-
    ing its judgment to exclude Rextron’s 700,000 converted
    shares in the damages calculation. Defendants respond that
    while the amount of damages may increase after the injury is
    15
    Although corporate injury is usually demonstrated through means
    other than stock value, the plaintiffs’ evidence at trial solely focused on
    this measure.
    16
    Plaintiffs point out that they raised the argument about preferred
    shares having at least equivalent value to the common shares in the district
    court. However, this argument was raised subsequent to the post-trial brief
    on damages, and it was too late at that point to change the damage theory.
    Moreover, even then, their argument to the district court did not request
    an award of damages based on the preferred stocks’ value, but instead was
    an effort to refute the defendants’ argument that the plaintiffs should
    receive no recovery when they had not proved damage to the entire body
    of LLNC’s stock. The district court’s holding that the plaintiffs did not
    oppose reducing the award, as opposed to vacating it entirely, accords
    with this reading. See Dux Capital Mgmt. Corp., 
    2004 WL 1936309
    , at
    *18. Tellingly, plaintiffs point to no instance when they asked the district
    court to increase the damage award on the assigned corporate claim. Yet,
    if damage to the preferred stock was part of their theory of the case, the
    award calculation on this claim was always inadequate — even before the
    district court amended the judgment to exclude the 700,000 common
    shares held by Rextron.
    2368          DUX CAPITAL MGMT v. YAGEO CORP.
    sustained, there must be further injury to the corporation as a
    whole, not just to some shares.
    The district court did not err in amending the judgment to
    exclude the 700,000 converted shares from its damages calcu-
    lation. The injury for which the jury determined that plaintiffs
    should be compensated was the loss of value in the shares and
    injury to the corporation caused by the board of directors’
    decision to pursue bankruptcy on May 3, 2001. Therefore, the
    damaging action was complete before those shares came into
    existence, and those shares cannot be the basis for assessing
    that already-complete action. The question was whether the
    directors violated their “duty to weigh the various alternative
    courses of action for the corporation and to select the one best
    calculated to return the most value for the shareholders as a
    whole.” Jury Instruction XIX. Those 700,000 Rextron shares
    were not converted to common until after the board’s decision
    to petition for bankruptcy on May 3, 2001. Morever, the jury
    determined that the common shares had a value of $2 per
    share prior to this board decision and no value afterwards. If
    the jury found that the common shares had zero value on May
    3, then the Rextron shares that were converted into common
    shares on May 8 had zero value, and plaintiffs’ damages
    could not be increased even if it were proper to increase dam-
    ages for shares converted to common only after May 3, 2001.
    E.   Plaintiffs’ Fed. R. Civ. P. 60(b) Motion
    [15] Once an appeal is filed, the district court no longer has
    jurisdiction to consider motions to vacate judgment. Gould v.
    Mut. Life Ins. Co. of N.Y., 
    790 F.2d 769
    , 772 (9th Cir. 1986).
    However, a district court may entertain and decide a Rule
    60(b) motion after notice of appeal is filed if the movant fol-
    lows a certain procedure, which is to “ask the district court
    whether it wishes to entertain the motion, or to grant it, and
    then move this court, if appropriate, for remand of the case.”
    
    Id.
     (internal quotation marks and citations omitted); see also
    Defenders of Wildlife v. Bernal, 
    204 F.3d 920
    , 930 (9th Cir.
    DUX CAPITAL MGMT v. YAGEO CORP.                     2369
    2000) (holding that a district court order declining to entertain
    or grant a Rule 60(b) motion is not a final determination on
    the merits); Scott v. Younger, 
    739 F.2d 1464
    , 1466 (9th Cir.
    1984) (holding that the district court’s denial of a request to
    entertain a Rule 60(b) motion is interlocutory and not appeal-
    able and that if the court is inclined to grant the motion, the
    movant first should request limited remand from the appellate
    court); Crateo, Inc. v. Intermark, Inc. (In re Crateo, Inc.), 
    536 F.2d 862
    , 869 (9th Cir. 1976) (declining to order a remand
    after the district court declined to entertain the Rule 60(b)
    motion).
    Here, an amended judgment was filed on August 31, 2004.
    Notice of appeal was filed on September 20, 2004. Plaintiffs
    filed their motion asking the district court to entertain and
    grant their Rule 60(b) motion on October 1, 2004. On October
    4, 2004, the district court denied plaintiffs’ request to enter-
    tain their motion. The same day, plaintiffs filed their cross-
    appeal. On November 3, 2004, plaintiffs appealed the district
    court’s refusal to entertain their motion. On November 23,
    2004, defendants moved to dismiss this appeal for lack of
    jurisdiction and urged that if the court construed plaintiffs’
    appeal as a motion for limited remand, it should be denied.
    Plaintiffs then recast their appeal as a motion for limited
    remand, which asked us to require the district court to decide
    the Rule 60(b) motion on the merits. The Appellate Commis-
    sioner denied plaintiffs’ motion for limited remand without
    prejudice to the jurisdictional issues on January 5, 2005.
    [16] Plaintiffs have followed the procedures outlined in
    Gould. They filed their Rule 60(b) motion after their notice of
    appeal. They asked the district court whether it wished to
    entertain or grant their motion, and the district court declined
    to entertain it. They moved for limited remand, and we denied
    it on January 5, 2005. Yet, plaintiffs ask for remand again.17
    17
    Plaintiffs erroneously urge that we review the district court’s refusal
    to entertain their motion under an abuse of discretion standard. The abuse
    2370             DUX CAPITAL MGMT v. YAGEO CORP.
    We decline this second request for remand. In any case, the
    issue is moot, since we hold that plaintiffs cannot cure their
    standing defect through the use of Fed. R. Civ. P. 17(a).
    IV.    CONCLUSION
    For the foregoing reasons, the district court is AFFIRMED.
    of discretion standard is applicable when the district court actually ruled
    on the merits of a Rule 60(b) motion, Barber v. Hawaii, 
    42 F.3d 1185
    ,
    1198 (9th Cir. 1994); here, the district court did not rule on the merits of
    plaintiffs’ Rule 60(b) motion.
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 04-16911, 04-16973, 04-17272, 05-16497

Judges: Berzon, David, Fletcher, Marsha, Trager

Filed Date: 3/1/2007

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 10/19/2024

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