Mekhaya v. Eastland Food Corp. ( 2022 )


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  • Edward Mekhaya v. Eastland Food Corporation, et al., No. 266, September Term, 2022.
    Opinion by Harrell, J.
    CORPORATIONS AND BUSINESS ORGANIZATIONS – CAPITAL AND STOCK
    – DIVIDENDS AND DIVISION OF PROFITS – WHAT IS A DIVIDEND
    CORPORATIONS AND BUSINESS ORGANIZATIONS – DERIVATIVE
    ACTIONS; SUING OR DEFENDING ON BEHALF OF CORPORATION –
    DERIVATIVE ACTIONS BY SHAREHOLDERS AGAINST DIRECTORS,
    OFFICERS, OR AGENTS – PERSONS ENTITLED TO SUE OR DEFEND;
    STANDING – DERIVATIVE OR DIRECT ACTION
    The Circuit Court for Howard County erred in dismissing, with prejudice, Appellant’s
    initial complaint advancing claims for shareholder oppression, breach of fiduciary duty,
    and unjust enrichment, against his former employer (“Eastland”) and its board of directors.
    In his claim for shareholder oppression, Appellant alleged that, as a minority shareholder
    in Eastland, he received, before his firing as an employee and removal from the board, and
    expected to continue to share (as a shareholder) in Eastland’s profits by receiving a “de
    facto” dividend, which Eastland had been paying as part of Appellant’s salary prior to
    terminating his employment. He asserted that such expectation was reasonable, despite the
    fact that Eastland, a closely-held corporation, never declared officially a dividend.
    Appellant alleged that, by depriving him of the de facto dividend portion of his salary upon
    terminating his employment, Eastland and its board of directors defeated substantially his
    reasonable expectation as a shareholder. Those allegations were sufficient to state a claim
    for shareholder oppression, and the court erred in finding otherwise. Moreover, because
    the purported deprivation of Appellant’s de facto dividend could constitute a breach of a
    fiduciary duty owed directly to Appellant, if proven, and resulted in a direct harm that was
    separate from any harm suffered by Eastland, Appellant’s claims for breach of fiduciary
    duty and unjust enrichment were direct, and not derivative. The court erred in dismissing
    those claims as derivative. The court erred also in relying on the “business judgment rule,”
    which is inapplicable to direct claims.
    Circuit Court for Howard County
    Case No. C-13-CV-21-000666
    REPORTED
    IN THE APPELLATE COURT*
    OF MARYLAND
    No. 266
    September Term, 2022
    EDWARD MEKHAYA
    v.
    EASTLAND FOOD CORPORATION, ET AL.
    Berger,
    Albright,
    Harrell, Glenn T., Jr.
    (Senior Judge, Specially Assigned),
    JJ.
    Pursuant to the Maryland Uniform Electronic Legal Materials
    Act (§§ 10-1601 et seq. of the State Government Article) this
    document is authentic.                                                    Opinion by Harrell, J.
    2022-12-27 09:28-05:00
    Filed: December 22, 2022
    Gregory Hilton, Clerk
    *At the November 8, 2022 general election, the voters of Maryland ratified a constitutional
    amendment changing the name of the Court of Special Appeals of Maryland to the
    Appellate Court of Maryland. The name change took effect on December 14, 2022.
    “Close don’t count in baseball. Close only counts in
    horseshoes and hand grenades.”
    Frank Robinson, TIME Magazine, 31 July
    1973.
    To understand how this phrase might be useful in appreciating the outcome of this
    case, one should recall how scoring occurs in the game of horseshoes. The rules of
    horseshoes provide that: (1) three points are awarded if a horseshoe lands encircling the
    stake (commonly called a “ringer”); (2) one point is scored for a shoe that, although not a
    ringer, touches or leans against the stake (commonly called a “leaner”); and (3) one point
    is scored for a shoe that lands within six inches of the stake. Thus, getting close to an
    objective may prove important to staying in the game.
    Edward Mekhaya, Appellant, filed in the Circuit Court for Howard County a civil
    complaint against Eastland Food Corporation (“Eastland”) and several of its directors
    (“Appellees”) alleging counts of shareholder oppression, breach of fiduciary duties, and
    unjust enrichment. Appellees responded with a motion to dismiss. The court dismissed
    Mekhaya’s complaint, with prejudice. Mekhaya filed a motion to alter or amend that
    judgment, which the court denied.
    In this timely appeal, Mekhaya presents six questions.        For clarity, we have
    rephrased and consolidated them to:
    1. Did the circuit court err in dismissing his complaint with prejudice and
    without leave to amend?
    2. Did the circuit court err in denying his motion to alter or amend the
    court’s judgment?
    For reasons to be explained, we hold that the circuit court erred in dismissing
    Mekhaya’s complaint. Accordingly, we reverse and remand for further proceedings
    consistent with this opinion. We do not need to address the second question.
    BACKGROUND
    Eastland is a Maryland corporation that imports and distributes food and other
    products from international and domestic suppliers. In 2000, Mekhaya was hired by
    Eastland. Eventually, he rose to become Eastland’s Vice President of Operations. In
    December 2008, Mekhaya received an ownership interest in Eastland in the form of 28%
    of its stock. The remaining shares were owned by Mekhaya’s brother, Oscar Mekhaya
    (“Oscar”), who owns also 28% of the shares; Mekhaya’s mother, Vipa Mekhaya (“Vipa”),
    who owns 35% of the shares; and, Oscar’s children, who own the remaining 9%. Until
    October 2018, Mekhaya was one of four members of Eastland’s board of directors. The
    remaining members were Oscar, Vipa, and a third individual, Tisnai Thaitham
    (“Thaitham”).
    Eastland was led and managed formerly by Mekhaya’s father, Pricha
    Mekhayarajjananonth (“Pricha”). In September 2017, Pricha was removed as President
    and a director, and, over Mekhaya’s objection, Oscar was elected President of Eastland. In
    October 2018, Mekhaya was not re-elected to Eastland’s board of directors. A few days
    later, his employment with Eastland was terminated. At the time of his termination,
    Mekhaya’s annual compensation totaled approximately $400,000.00.
    2
    The Complaint
    In 2021, Mekhaya initiated the present lawsuit against Eastland, Oscar, Vipa, and
    Thaitham. In his complaint, he alleged that, during the years that he was employed by
    Eastland, he “initiated and led many efforts to establish or improve business processes and
    procedures” and that he “selected and implemented software and technology in support of
    such efforts.” Despite those efforts, Mekhaya claimed, Appellees engaged in a scheme to
    “take control” of Eastland and “oust” Mekhaya.
    According to Mekhaya, that scheme commenced in September 2017, with the
    removal of Pricha as director and the election of Oscar as president of Eastland. Mekhaya
    objected to those decisions, in part, because Oscar “lacked management experience[,]”
    “was not good with employees[,]” and “would get upset and very emotional when
    employees would tell him what he does not want to hear, resulting in high employee
    turnover rate.” In August 2018, a majority of Eastland’s board of directors agreed to
    increase Eastland’s credit line, an action that Mekhaya objected to because “Eastland’s
    management was growing inventory at an alarming rate.” Eastland held a stockholder
    meeting in October 2018, during which it was suggested “that the meeting agenda include
    a proposed ‘dividend study’ to consider ‘advantages of moving to shareholders getting
    dividends with respect to ownership in lieu of their salaries being paid as if they were
    dividends.’” Mekhaya alleged that, after he was removed from the board of directors and
    his employment was terminated, Eastland’s remaining board of directors chose not to
    consider further that study.
    3
    Mekhaya alleged further that, although the company was “quite profitable” in the
    years following his departure from the company,1 “Eastland has not and will not agree to
    declare and pay a dividend to its stockholders.” Mekhaya asserted that Eastland had chosen
    instead to pay “excessively high salary and other compensation” to Oscar and Vipa, which
    resulted in “reduced profits for … Eastland.” Mekhaya asserted also that Oscar and Vipa
    had “diverted funds of … Eastland” for their “personal use and gain.”
    Mekhaya pleaded three causes of action. The first named all four defendants and
    was titled “Count I – Oppression of Minority Stockholder.” The second cause of action
    named Oscar, Vipa, and Thaitham as defendants and was titled “Count II – Breach of
    Fiduciary Duties.” The third called-out Oscar and Vipa and was titled “Count III – Unjust
    Enrichment.”
    In his claim for oppression of a minority stockholder, Mekhaya alleged that
    Appellees’ “illegal, fraudulent and oppressive conduct substantially defeat[ed] the
    reasonable expectations held by Plaintiff as a minority stockholder” and were “acts to
    ‘squeeze out’ Plaintiff.” He asserted that he “had a reasonable expectation that, after
    becoming a stockholder in … Eastland, he would not be summarily removed from
    employment and management of … Eastland.” Mekhaya claimed those “reasonable
    expectations were central to [his] decision to spearhead the growth and development of
    [Eastland’s] business operations.” Mekhaya maintained also that “Eastland has not and
    1
    Eastland’s revenue “increased to about $116M for the period ending March 31,
    2021” and that “[n]et income substantially increased to about $2M for the period ending
    March 31, 2021.”
    4
    will not agree to pay a dividend to its stockholders” despite being “quite profitable[.]” He
    contended that Eastland was “paying excessively high salary and other compensation” to
    Oscar and Vipa, “resulting in reduced profits for … Eastland[,]” and that Oscar and Vipa
    had “diverted funds” for their “personal use and gain.” By terminating his employment,
    removing him from the board of directors, refusing to pay dividends, paying excessively
    high salaries, and diverting Eastland’s funds, the defendants had “frustrated the reasonable
    expectations of Plaintiff, thereby engaging in oppressive conduct.” He sought from the
    court the following relief under this count: appoint a receiver to continue operation of the
    company for the benefit of the stockholders until the oppressive conduct ceased; retain
    jurisdiction of the case for the protection of the minority stockholders; issue an injunction
    to prohibit continuing acts of oppression; and award compensatory damages.
    As for the breach of fiduciary duties count, Mekhaya claimed that Oscar, Vipa, and
    Thaitham owed him a fiduciary duty to act in good faith and in a manner consistent with
    his and Eastland’s best interests. He asserted that the three defendants breached that duty
    by authorizing Eastland to pay excessive salaries to Oscar and Vipa and by diverting
    Eastland’s funds for their personal use and gain. Mekhaya claimed that the defendants’
    actions had resulted in reduced profits and other damages. He asked the court to award
    compensatory damages.
    In his claim for unjust enrichment, Mekhaya claimed that Oscar and Vipa were
    enriched unjustly, at his expense, when they received excessive salaries and when they
    diverted company funds for their personal use and gain. Mekhaya alleged that it would be
    inequitable to allow Oscar and Vipa to retain those benefits, which they received through
    5
    their “wrongful course of conduct and actions[.]”         He asked the court to award
    compensatory damages.
    The Motion to Dismiss
    Eastland, Oscar, Vipa, and Thaitham filed a joint motion to dismiss, claiming that
    Mekhaya failed to state any claims for which relief could be granted. They argued that
    Mekhaya failed to state a claim for minority oppression because he did not establish any
    “oppressive” conduct by Appellees and because he failed to rebut the general presumption
    that business decisions by a board of directors are reasonable and made in good faith (the
    “business judgment rule”). Appellees asserted that their decision to remove Mekhaya as
    an employee and member of the board, and their decision not to declare dividends, could
    not be “oppressive” because Mekhaya did not establish the existence of any shareholder or
    employment agreement conferring those rights to him. As to Mekhaya’s claims for breach
    of fiduciary duty and unjust enrichment, Appellees argued that those claims failed because
    Mekhaya did not show that he suffered a harm that was separate and distinct from any harm
    suffered by Eastland.
    At the hearing on the motion to dismiss, Mekhaya’s counsel responded to the
    arguments raised by the motion to dismiss.           Regarding his client’s “reasonable
    expectations” as an employee and a shareholder, counsel asserted that the complaint made
    clear that “the parties were being paid salaries as though they were dividends[,]” in large
    measure. Counsel insisted that there was “an understanding amongst the parties” that
    Eastland would not declare a dividend, but would instead “pay the dividends out via the
    salary[.]” Counsel maintained that, when Mekhaya was terminated as an employee and
    6
    stopped receiving a salary, he was, in essence, deprived of a dividend that he should have
    received as a shareholder. Counsel claimed that the deprivation of that “dividend” vis-à-
    vis the loss of his salary supported also the claims for breach of fiduciary duty and unjust
    enrichment, as that deprivation was a harm separate and distinct from any harm suffered
    by Eastland.
    At the conclusion of the hearing, Mekhaya’s counsel sought, in the alternative that,
    if the circuit court believed that the complaint was somehow deficient, it should grant leave
    to amend because “there are and could be additional facts that … could be alleged[.]” The
    court asked counsel to elaborate. Counsel responded that Mekhaya’s salary increased
    significantly in 2008, when he became a shareholder, and that his salary remained high
    until 2018, when he was terminated.        Counsel maintained further that a reasonable
    inference could be drawn that the increase in Mekhaya’s salary was the result of an
    undeclared dividend. As to the other claims, counsel stated that he could “add additional
    facts” to show how Mekhaya was injured personally.
    The circuit court granted Appellees’ motion to dismiss, finding as follows:
    In terms of Count One, the oppression count, … I think [Mekhaya’s]
    pleadings … fail to show or plead how [his] expectations were substantially
    defeated. The concept of this salary as dividends – or dividends as salary,
    excuse me, is a new concept today. There is no – there seems to be no
    confirmed basis that it was ever reviewed as a dividends or that the salary
    was viewed as dividends in this matter. And I think that when you look at
    [the case law], it is necessary to look at … the overall relationship, [and]
    there’s no expectations set up that there would be dividends and that these
    would be continued to be paid. There was an employee of the company who
    had been terminated and so on. And so, I think in the general nature of the
    pleadings, they’re not sufficient at this time.
    7
    In terms of Counts Two and Three, this was not brought as a derivative
    suit. … I think the – again, [Mekhaya’s] assertion that dividends would have
    been paid is a misnomer here. That he was receiving a salary before. He
    was fired as an at-will employee and so was no longer receiving a salary.
    And in the pleading, itself, it indicates that – really makes assertions that part
    of that harm was to the corporation, and I’ve heard nothing today that the
    harm was distinct from that of the corporation. … And again, there is a
    presumption, based on [the business judgment rule], that the Defendants in
    their capacities acted … in the best interest of the company and that they
    acted accordingly. And based on what is in the pleadings, they are not
    sufficient. And I have heard nothing today, even with what [Mekhaya]
    through Counsel has added that would or could be had with amendment.
    And for those reasons I am going to dismiss all three counts and that
    is with prejudice. That’s the ruling of the court.
    The Motion to Alter or Amend
    Ten days after judgment was entered, Mekhaya filed a motion to alter or amend the
    judgment. He attached to that motion an amended complaint, which he claimed cured any
    defect in his initial complaint. In the amended complaint, Mekhaya claimed that, in 1999,
    he had a conversation with his father, Pricha, during which Pricha asked Mekhaya to join
    Eastland “to help with problems” at the company. According to Mekhaya, Pricha told him
    that he would become an employee of Eastland, participate in the management of Eastland,
    and become eventually an owner and be paid as an owner. Pricha told Mekhaya that the
    compensation structure of the owners included the “sharing of profits” and that each owner
    would receive “a percentage of profits paid as a bonus after the end of each fiscal year
    instead of declared dividends.” Mekhaya alleged that he joined Eastland based on that
    conversation and with the expectation of “continuous employment, participation in the
    management of … Eastland, and receipt of the profits of … Eastland as an eventual
    owner[.]” Mekhaya included a table outlining his yearly salary from 2006 to 2018, which
    8
    he claimed show, based on the increases in his yearly income, how he had shared in the
    profits of Eastland as a shareholder.      Additional facts were claimed showing that
    “Eastland’s stockholders’ long-standing practice of … paying the profits of … Eastland as
    a bonus to its stockholders instead of as a declared dividend” prevailed. He insisted that,
    as a shareholder, he had a right to receive those “dividends,” regardless of his employment
    status.
    The circuit court denied Mekhaya’s motion to alter or amend. This timely appeal
    followed.
    DISCUSSION
    I.
    Mekhaya argues that the circuit court erred in dismissing his complaint, with
    prejudice. He asserts that he pled adequately claims for stockholder oppression, breach of
    fiduciary duty, and unjust enrichment.2 He asserts that his claim for stockholder oppression
    should not have been dismissed because he alleged facts showing that Appellees’
    “oppressive conduct” infringed upon his “reasonable expectations” as a shareholder by
    excluding him from Eastland’s profits, by removing him from Eastland’s management and
    board of directors, and by diverting profits of Eastland from him to Oscar and Vipa in the
    In the “Statement of Facts” section of his brief, Mekhaya relied almost exclusively
    2
    on the facts as set forth in his amended complaint. For the purposes of reviewing the circuit
    court’s dismissal of Mekhaya’s original complaint, we are concerned only with the facts as
    alleged in the original complaint and reasonable inferences that could be drawn from those
    allegations. See Converge Servs. Grp., LLC v. Curran, 
    383 Md. 462
    , 475 (2004).
    9
    form of high salaries.3 He argues also that, even if his initial complaint was somehow
    deficient, the court should have granted him leave to amend the complaint.
    Unsurprisingly, Appellees retort that the circuit court did not err in dismissing
    Mekhaya’s complaint, with prejudice. Appellees contend that he failed to state a claim for
    shareholder oppression because he did not demonstrate arguably that he was entitled to any
    benefit as a shareholder, nor did he establish that his expectations as a shareholder were
    reasonable objectively. Appellees contend that Mekhaya failed to state a claim for breach
    of fiduciary duty and unjust enrichment because he did not allege adequately that he
    suffered a harm distinct from any harm suffered by Eastland. Appellees continue that
    Mekhaya failed to advance a prima facie rebuttal of the application of the business
    judgment rule. Finally, Appellees claim that the court did not err in denying Mekhaya
    leave to amend because he failed to identify any additional facts that would have cured the
    aforementioned deficiencies.
    Standard of Review
    “When reviewing the grant of a motion to dismiss, the appropriate standard of
    review is whether the trial court was legally correct.” D.L. v. Sheppard Pratt Health Sys.,
    Inc., 
    465 Md. 339
    , 350 (2019) (quotation marks and citations omitted). In making that
    determination, we “assume the truth of factual allegations made in the complaint and draw
    all reasonable inferences from those allegations in favor of the plaintiff.” Ceccone v.
    3
    Mekhaya argues also that the circuit court erred in finding that the lack of a written
    shareholder agreement precluded his recovery for shareholder oppression. We need not
    address that claim, as it appears from our review of the court’s oral ruling that it made no
    such finding.
    10
    Carroll Home Servs., LLC, 
    454 Md. 680
    , 691 (2017). “We also interpret Maryland case
    law to review whether the [trial] courts’ conclusions were correct as a matter of law.”
    Cochran v. Griffith Energy Servs., Inc., 
    426 Md. 134
    , 139 (2012).
    “Under Maryland Rule 2-322(b)(2), a defendant may seek dismissal of a complaint
    if the complaint ‘fail[s] to state a claim upon which relief can be granted.’” Cain v. Midland
    Funding, LLC, 
    475 Md. 4
    , 33 (2021). “In determining whether a plaintiff has alleged
    claims upon which relief can be granted, there is a big difference between that which is
    necessary to prove the elements and that which is necessary to merely allege them.” Aleti
    v. Metro. Baltimore, LLC, 
    479 Md. 696
    , 717 (2022). “A motion to dismiss may only be
    granted where the allegations presented do not state a cause of action.” Cain, 475 Md. at
    33-34. “Indeed, our decision does not pass on the merits of the claim, but instead, we
    merely determine[] the plaintiff’s right to bring the action.” Aleti, 479 Md. at 717-18
    (quotation marks and citation omitted).
    “If the court orders dismissal, an amended complaint may be filed only if the court
    expressly grants leave to amend.” Md. Rule 2-322(c). ‘“The determination to allow
    amendments to pleadings or to grant leave to amend pleadings is within the sound
    discretion of the trial judge.”’ A.C. v. Maryland Comm’n on C.R., 
    232 Md. App. 558
    , 579
    (2017) (quoting Schmerling v. Injured Workers’ Ins. Fund, 
    368 Md. 434
    , 443-44 (2002)).
    “[I]t is well-established that leave to amend complaints should be granted freely to serve
    the ends of justice[.]” RRC Ne., LLC v. BAA Maryland, Inc., 
    413 Md. 638
    , 673 (2010).
    Nevertheless, “an amendment should not be allowed if it would result in prejudice to the
    11
    opposing party or undue delay, such as where amendment would be futile because the claim
    is flawed irreparably.” 
    Id. at 673-74
    .
    The Shareholder Oppression Count
    Section 3-413 of the Corporations and Associations (“CA”) Article of the Maryland
    Code states, in pertinent part, that certain shareholders may petition a court to dissolve a
    corporation on the grounds that “[t]he acts of the directors or those in control of the
    corporation are illegal, oppressive, or fraudulent.” CA § 3-413(b)(2). An “oppressive act”
    is “a term commonly used to describe adverse treatment of minority shareholders in a
    closely-held corporation by those who wield power within the company.” Bontempo v.
    Lare, 
    444 Md. 344
    , 365 (2015). The term has been defined also as “conduct that
    substantially defeats the reasonable expectations of a stockholder.”          Edenbaum v.
    Schwarcz-Osztreicherne, 
    165 Md. App. 233
    , 256 (2005) (quotation marks and citation
    omitted). The “reasonable expectations” doctrine is favored when dealing with closely-
    held corporations. Id. at 256-57.
    Typically, a closely-held corporation has a small number of stockholders, no active
    market for the trade of such stock, and substantial majority stockholder participation in the
    direction and management of the company. Id. at 257. “Furthermore, it is generally
    understood that, in addition to supplying capital and labor to a contemplated enterprise and
    expecting a fair return, parties comprising the ownership of a [closely-held] corporation
    expect to be actively involved in its management and operation.” Id. (quotation marks and
    citation omitted). A shareholder in a closely-held corporation considers generally himself
    or herself “as a co-owner of the business and wants the privileges and powers that go with
    12
    ownership.” Id. (quotation marks and citation omitted). Such privileges may include
    employment, a share of corporate earnings, and a role in the management of the company.
    Id. at 258.
    “But the very nature of a closely held corporation makes it possible for a majority
    shareholder to ‘freeze out’ a minority shareholder, that is, deprive a minority shareholder
    of her interest in the business or a fair return on her [or his] investment.” Id. at 257-58
    (quotation marks and citation omitted). Because the market for stock in a closely-held
    corporation is limited, a minority shareholder will have likely few, if any, recourses when
    faced with oppressive tactics by a majority shareholder. Id. at 258. As such, “courts have
    looked at a majority shareholder’s alleged oppressive conduct[] in terms of the reasonable
    expectations held by minority shareholders in committing their capital to the particular
    enterprise.” Id. at 258 (quotation marks and citation omitted). A majority is said to have
    engaged in oppressive tactics when it “seeks to defeat those expectations and there exists
    no effective means of salvaging the investment.” Id. (quotation marks and citation
    omitted).
    That said, “oppression should be deemed to arise only when the majority conduct
    substantially defeats expectations that, objectively viewed, were both reasonable under the
    circumstances and were central to the [shareholder’s] decision to join the venture.” Id.
    (quotation marks and citation omitted). That is, the majority shareholders’ conduct “should
    not be deemed oppressive simply because the [minority shareholder’s] subjective hopes
    and desires in joining the venture are not fulfilled.” Id. (quotation marks and citation
    omitted).
    13
    If the majority shareholder’s conduct is found to be oppressive, the court may order
    dissolution; however, that is not the only remedy. Bontempo, 444 Md. at 370. A court
    may order various equitable remedies in lieu of dissolution. Edenbaum, 165 Md. App. at
    260-61. Those equitable remedies include, but are not limited to: entering an order
    requiring dissolution at a future date if the stockholders fail to resolve their differences
    prior to that date; appointing a receiver to continue the operation of the company until the
    differences are resolved; appointing a special fiscal agent to report to the court regarding
    the company’s operation; retaining jurisdiction of the case; ordering an accounting of
    company funds; issuing an injunction to prohibit certain conduct; and, entering an order
    requiring the corporation to purchase the minority shareholder’s stock or sell additional
    stock to the minority shareholder. Id. A court may order “affirmative relief by the required
    declaration of a dividend or a reduction and distribution of capital[,]” or the court may
    award “damages to minority stockholders as compensation for any injury suffered by them
    as the result of ‘oppressive’ conduct by the majority in control of the corporation.” Id. at
    261.
    Here, the corporation at issue – Eastland – was, for all intents and purposes, a
    closely-held corporation. Mekhaya owned 28% of the shares, his brother, Oscar, owned
    28% of the shares, and his mother, Vipa, owned 35% of the shares, with the remaining 9%
    vested in Oscar’s children.    Prior to 2018, the three main shareholders, along with
    Thaitham, composed the entire board of directors and controlled the operation of the
    company. In 2018, Mekhaya was fired as an employee and removed from the board, but
    14
    retained his 28% interest. From that point forward, Oscar, Vipa, and Thaitham were the
    only board members.
    To allege properly a cause of action for shareholder oppression, Mekhaya was
    obligated to allege that Eastland’s majority shareholders, namely, Oscar and Vipa, engaged
    in conduct that defeated substantially his objectively reasonable expectations as a minority
    shareholder. In addition, the relief requested by Mekhaya needed to come within the circuit
    court’s equitable powers. As explained below, we are convinced that he met those
    threshold requirements in his complaint.
    Mekhaya’s primary claim was that, as a shareholder, he expected to share in
    company profits via “de facto” dividends, which he had been receiving as part of his salary
    prior to being fired and removed from Eastland’s board of directors. While conceding that
    Eastland and its board of directors never declared expressly that a dividend was to be paid,
    Mekhaya claimed that the shareholders understood that a portion of the company’s profits
    would be distributed to them as part of their yearly salaries. He asserted that, by firing him
    and refusing to pay the de facto dividend following the termination of his employment, the
    majority shareholders engaged in conduct that defeated his expectations as a shareholder.
    Mekhaya claimed that the majority shareholders continued that oppressive conduct by
    providing excessive salaries and other benefits to themselves from company profits,
    without conferring a similar benefit upon him. He asked the circuit court to award him
    various forms of relief, including appointing a receiver to continue operation of the
    company for the benefit of the stockholders until the oppressive conduct ceased, retaining
    15
    jurisdiction of the case for his protection, issuing an injunction to prohibit continuing acts
    of oppression, and awarding compensatory damages.
    The circuit court, in dismissing Mekhaya’s oppression claim, found that there was
    “no confirmed basis that [the claimed dividend] was ever reviewed as a dividend[] or that
    the salary was viewed as dividend[] in this matter.” The court found also that there were
    “no expectations set up that there would be dividends and that these would be continued to
    be paid.”
    The question we ask ourselves, therefore, is whether the de facto dividend claimed
    by Mekhaya, or the majority shareholders’ refusal to expressly declare a dividend, could
    be an objectively reasonable expectation by him, according to the circumstances set out in
    the complaint. If so, we ask then whether the majority shareholders’ actions defeated
    substantially that expectation and whether Mekhaya’s requested relief was within the
    circuit court’s powers to grant.
    There is a dearth of Maryland law that touches on the de facto dividend claim.
    Nevertheless, there is persuasive authority from other jurisdictions in support of Mekhaya’s
    assertions. We reiterate that the sole issue before this Court is whether Mekhaya’s
    complaint established a cause of action. We are not concerned yet with whether his
    allegations can be proven.
    The Maryland statutes governing dividends do not recognize expressly a “de facto”
    dividend. In reading those statutes, however, we cannot discern that the statutes foreclose
    such a dividend. CA § 2-309(b) states that, “[i]f authorized by its board of directors, a
    corporation may make distributions to its stockholders, subject to any restriction in its
    16
    charter and the limitations in § 2-311 of this subtitle.” CA § 2-311 precludes distributions
    under circumstances not relevant here. CA § 2-301(a)(1)(i) defines “distribution,” in
    pertinent part, as “[a] direct or indirect transfer of money or other property of the
    corporation in respect of any of its shares[.]” The statute states further that “[a] distribution
    may be in the form of … [a] declaration or payment of a dividend[.]” CA § 2-301(b)(1).
    Nothing in that language indicates that a company would be precluded from paying a
    dividend in the manner alleged by Mekhaya, i.e., by including it as part of a shareholder’s
    salary as a corporate employee or director. Again, whether such a dividend was declared
    actually and paid is not as yet at issue here.
    Outside of Maryland, the concept of a “constructive” or “disguised” dividend being
    paid as part of a shareholder’s salary, and without being declared expressly, is well-
    recognized. For instance, the Internal Revenue Service (“IRS”) permits generally a tax
    deduction for “all the ordinary and necessary expenses paid or incurred during the taxable
    year in carrying on any trade or business[.]” 
    26 U.S.C. § 162
    (a). According to the Code
    of Federal Regulations, that deduction may apply to “salaries or other compensation for
    personal services actually rendered.” 
    26 C.F.R. § 1.162-7
    (a). The test of deductibility is
    whether the salaries or other compensation “are reasonable and are in fact payments purely
    for services.” 
    Id.
     As such, companies are incentivized to characterize any payment to a
    shareholder as salary so that the payment may qualify for a tax deduction. That incentive
    can lead corporations, particularly closely-held corporations, to “disguise” a dividend
    payment as salary:
    17
    Any amount paid in the form of compensation, but not in fact as the purchase
    price of services, is not deductible. An ostensible salary paid by a
    corporation may be a distribution of a dividend on stock. This is likely to
    occur in the case of a corporation having few shareholders, practically all of
    whom draw salaries. If in such a case the salaries are in excess of those
    ordinarily paid for similar services and the excessive payments correspond
    or bear a close relationship to the stockholdings of the officers or employees,
    it would seem likely that the salaries are not paid wholly for services
    rendered, but that the excessive payments are a distribution of earnings upon
    the stock.
    
    26 C.F.R. § 1.162-7
    (b)(1).
    The federal regulations go on to state that a shareholder’s salary may be treated as
    a dividend by the IRS, and thus not tax deductible by the company, depending on the
    circumstances and regardless of how it is characterized by the company:
    The income tax liability of the recipient in respect of an amount ostensibly
    paid to him as compensation, but not allowed to be deducted as such by the
    payor, will depend upon the circumstances of each case. Thus, in the case of
    excessive payments by corporations, if such payments correspond or bear a
    close relationship to stockholdings, and are found to be a distribution of
    earnings or profits, the excessive payments will be treated as a dividend.
    
    26 C.F.R. § 1.162-8
    .
    Various courts have looked similarly to the circumstances of the payment, and not
    necessarily its characterization by the company, in determining whether a “salary” paid to
    a shareholder was instead a disguised dividend. In In re White, 
    429 B.R. 201
     (2010), the
    United States Bankruptcy Court in the Southern District of Texas concluded that year-end
    “bonuses,” which the company had paid to shareholders to avoid tax liabilities, were
    actually dividends, even though the company never declared a dividend. 
    Id. at 207-10
    . In
    reaching that conclusion, the court noted that the bonuses were paid in accordance with
    each shareholders’ proportionate share of ownership and that the amount of the bonuses
    18
    was determined based on the company’s earnings. 
    Id. at 209
    . The court quoted, with favor,
    the following language from an opinion of the United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth
    Circuit regarding how to recognize a disguised dividend:
    “Substantial bonuses declared at the end of the year when the earnings of a
    business are known usually indicate the existence of disguised dividends.
    Moreover, this Court has previously determined that, especially in the
    context of closely held corporations, it is in the tax interest of all parties to
    characterize the amounts distributed to shareholders/officers as
    compensation rather than dividends. Because the [d]istribution of profits
    through compensation payments to shareholder/officers avoids the double
    tax on corporate profits which are distributed to shareholders as dividends,
    the concern arises where corporations distribute their profits through the
    payment of unreasonably large salaries and bonuses to those controlling
    shareholder/officers. Therefore, it is necessary to carefully scrutinize the
    payments to ensure that they are not disguised dividends.”
    
    Id. at 209-10
     (quoting Brewer Quality Homes, Inc. v. C.I.R., 
    122 Fed. Appx. 88
    , 94-95 (5th
    Cir. 2004)) (internal quotation marks omitted).
    In Haffner’s Service Stations, Inc. v. C.I.R., 
    326 F.3d 1
     (1st Cir. 2003), the United
    States Court of Appeals for the First Circuit engaged in a similar analysis in evaluating
    whether “bonuses” paid by a company to its shareholders constituted salary for tax
    purposes. Id. at 1-2. There, the company claimed the bonuses as a deduction, but the IRS
    disallowed the deduction. Id. The company appealed. The First Circuit reviewed the
    nature of the bonuses to determine whether they should be considered “salary” or
    “dividends” for tax purposes. Id. at 3-8. The Court engaged in that analysis even though
    the company had “never paid a dividend.” Id. at 2.
    Outside of the tax context, but within the realm of individual claims by minority
    shareholders against majority shareholders, courts have applied a similar analysis to
    19
    determine whether the minority shareholder should be entitled to a dividend despite the
    fact that the company never declared officially a dividend. In Alaska Plastics, Inc. v.
    Coppock, 
    621 P.2d 270
     (Alaska 1980), the Supreme Court of Alaska considered various
    remedies available to a shareholder who had been the victim of shareholder oppression and
    who claimed that the majority shareholders had “enjoyed benefits from the corporation
    which should have been shared equally with her.” Id. at 277. In analyzing the merits of
    that claim, the Court noted that certain evidence had been adduced showing that, while the
    majority shareholders had not received dividends per se, they had received certain
    “director’s fees.” Id. The Court explained that, “[r]egardless of how the corporation labels
    these expenditures, if they were not made for the reasonable value of services rendered to
    the corporation, some portion of these payments might be characterized as constructive
    dividends.” Id. The Court reasoned that “[s]uch transactions should be examined to
    determine whether they are in fact a distribution of dividends, and if so the excluded
    shareholder must participate equally in the payments received by other shareholders.” Id.
    In Yates v. Holt-Smith, 
    768 N.W.2d 213
     (Wis. Ct. App. 2009), the Court of Appeals
    of Wisconsin considered the merits of a breach of fiduciary duty claim filed by a
    shareholder against the president of a company, who was also a shareholder. 
    Id.
     at 217-
    18. The claim was based, in part, on a year-end, lump sum payment that had been given
    to the president but not the aggrieved shareholder. 
    Id.
     The shareholder claimed that the
    payment should have been categorized as a “constructive dividend,” while the president
    claimed that the payment was “in fact a bonus because [the company’s] board of directors
    did not declare a dividend [that year], or ever, for that matter.” 
    Id. at 218
    . The Court
    20
    agreed with the shareholder, noting that “[t]he fact that a distribution is not called a
    ‘dividend’ by a corporation’s board of directors is not dispositive as to whether the
    distribution is a dividend within the meaning of the law.” 
    Id.
     The Court, after considering
    the circumstances surrounding the payment, concluded that the payment was a constructive
    dividend that should have been paid also to the suing shareholder. 
    Id.
    The United States Bankruptcy Court engaged in a similar analysis in In re Toy King
    Distribs., Inc., 
    256 B.R. 1
     (Bankr. M.D. Fla. 2000), a case in which a company made
    dividend payments to certain shareholders, which violated a confirmed bankruptcy plan.
    Id. at 163. The Court found that the payments violated the plan even though the company
    categorized the payments as “guaranty fee payments.” Id. In reaching that view, the Court
    noted that “[w]hether a payment constitutes a dividend is a question of fact to be
    determined by the Court and no one factor is determinative.” Id. (quotation marks and
    citations omitted). The Court noted further that “[i]t has been universally recognized that
    the mere fact that the distributions are not called dividends by the board of directors of the
    corporation does not detract from such distributions being dividends within the meaning of
    the law.” Id. (quotation marks and citation omitted).
    In Erdman v. Yolles, 
    233 N.W.2d 667
     (Mich. Ct. App. 1975), a case somewhat
    similar to the present one, the Court of Appeals of Michigan considered a claim filed by a
    minority shareholder, who retained a 25% interest in a company after the company
    terminated his employment. 
    Id. at 668
    . The minority shareholder filed suit against the
    three remaining shareholders, each of whom owned 25% of the company, after they granted
    themselves pay increases and bonuses following the termination of the minority
    21
    shareholder’s employment. 
    Id.
     Those payments, which were not paid to the minority
    shareholder, were paid out of company profits. 
    Id.
     The trial court ruled in favor of the
    minority shareholder and found that he was entitled to his share of the profits, despite the
    fact that “[n]o dividends were specifically declared or other distributions to the
    shareholders effected except through the medium of salaries.”         
    Id.
       The remaining
    shareholders appealed to the Court of Appeals of Michigan, which affirmed. 
    Id.
     at 669-
    70. In so doing, the Court noted that “[t]he entire course of conduct between these parties
    supports the trial judge’s finding that profits of the corporation were distributed through
    salary increases and that, in this case, plaintiff was improperly denied his 1/4 share.” 
    Id. at 669
    . The Court explained that “[t]he distribution of profits in this manner … constituted
    a dividend, whether denominated such or not.” 
    Id.
    With respect to the remedies available to a minority shareholder who claims
    oppression, some courts have made clear that the minority shareholder’s “reasonable
    expectations” should be construed liberally, particularly where the failure of the claim
    would render the shares worthless. In Manere v. Collins, 
    241 A.3d 133
     (Conn. App. Ct.
    2020), the Appellate Court of Connecticut reversed a trial court’s verdict denying a
    minority shareholder’s oppression claim, which he filed after being fired for misconduct
    and was based, in part, on the termination of his employment. Id. at 161-62. Although the
    Court agreed that the shareholder could not establish oppression based on the termination
    of his employment (because it was unreasonable for the shareholder to expect to maintain
    his employment following the misconduct), the Court held that the trial court had erred in
    failing to assess the shareholder’s other reasonable expectations beyond employment. Id.
    22
    In remanding the case so that the trial court could assess the shareholder’s other reasonable
    expectations, the Court cautioned that, even though the shareholder was guilty of
    misconduct, he nevertheless could not “be marginalized to the extent that he would be
    precluded from realizing what reasonable expectation he still maintains as a minority
    member.” Id. at 161. The Court explained that, “so long as the [shareholder] retains an
    investment in [the company], his reasonable expectations include being entitled to certain
    minimum rights[.]” Id. at 162-63. The Court reasoned that “[a]n infringement of these
    rights and a bar to any remedy [would] leave[] the plaintiff with a worthless asset.” Id. at
    163.
    The Superior Court of Pennsylvania reached a similar conclusion in Ford v. Ford,
    
    878 A.2d 894
     (Pa. Super. Ct. 2005). There, the Court upheld a lower court’s finding of
    shareholder oppression, where the trial court found that the majority had “presumptively
    defeated the minority’s reasonable expectations” by “grant[ing] no benefits whatsoever to
    the minority shareholders[.]”     
    Id. at 903-04
    .    The Court explained that “[m]inority
    shareholders have a reasonable expectation to derive some benefit from their ownership
    interest in a corporation, particularly when a corporation is profitable.” 
    Id. at 904
    . The
    Court explained further that “[w]hen minority shareholders receive no benefit from their
    interest in a corporation, while the majority shareholder benefits substantially, the conduct
    of the majority shareholder may be found to be inherently oppressive.” 
    Id.
     The Court
    concluded that, although certain expectations by a minority shareholder may be
    unreasonable based on the circumstances, the shareholder nevertheless has “a reasonable
    23
    expectation to receive some benefit from their minority shares[.]” 
    Id.
     (emphasis in
    original).
    In Bonavita v. Corbo, 
    692 A.2d 119
     (N.J. Super. Ct. Ch. Div. 1996), the Superior
    Court of New Jersey held that a majority shareholder engaged in shareholder oppression
    where the majority shareholder’s operation of the company resulted in substantial benefits
    for the majority shareholder, but no discernible benefit for the minority shareholder. 
    Id. at 124-27
    . In reaching that holding, the Court concluded that the company’s refusal to pay a
    dividend constituted shareholder oppression. 
    Id.
     The Court reasoned that, absent such a
    dividend, the minority shareholder would be left with “a block of stock which has
    absolutely no value.” 
    Id. at 126
    .
    With these principles in mind, we are persuaded that the circuit court erred in finding
    that Mekhaya failed to state a claim for shareholder oppression. The court based its
    decision upon a finding that there was “no confirmed basis” that the alleged de facto
    dividend “was ever reviewed as [] dividends or that [Mekhaya’s] salary was viewed as
    dividends in this matter.” As the case law discussed earlier makes clear, however, the
    question is not whether Mekhaya’s expectation in receiving a de facto dividend as part of
    his salary was ever “confirmed” or expressly declared as a dividend by Eastland. The
    question, rather, is whether Mekhaya’s complaint, on its face, alleged facts sufficient to
    establish that his expectations as a shareholder were reasonable (when viewed through an
    objective lens) and that Appellees defeated substantially one or more of those expectations.
    Mekhaya’s complaint advanced such a showing. As noted earlier, Mekhaya’s
    flagship allegation was that, as a shareholder, he expected to share in company profits by
    24
    receiving a de facto dividend as part of his salary. That expectation was reasonable, despite
    the fact that Eastland never declared officially a dividend.          Thus, when Appellees
    terminated Mekhaya’s employment and stopped paying his salary, thereby depriving him
    of the de facto dividend portion, arguably Appellees defeated substantially Mekhaya’s
    asserted reasonable expectation as a shareholder. Those allegations are sufficient to state
    a claim for shareholder oppression. Again, whether Mekhaya can prove those facts is
    immaterial to the stage of these proceedings as they reach us here.
    In addition, Mekhaya alleged that, following the termination of his employment,
    Eastland’s board of directors continued to refuse to declare expressly a dividend, despite
    the fact that Eastland was “quite profitable.” According to Mekhaya, instead of declaring
    a dividend, Eastland’s board chose to pay “excessively high salaries” to Oscar and Vipa.
    Those actions, if proven, could be considered shareholder oppression, particularly if the
    majority’s actions left Mekhaya with a “worthless asset.”
    To the extent that the circuit court may have believed that it lacked an appropriate
    remedy under the circumstances as pleaded, we disagree. In his prayer for relief, Mekhaya
    asked the court to appoint a receiver to continue operation of the company for the benefit
    of the stockholders until the oppressive conduct ceased, retain jurisdiction of the case for
    the protection of the minority stockholders, and issue an injunction to prohibit continuing
    acts of oppression. All of those remedies have been recognized by this Court as being
    within the court’s powers. Edenbaum, 165 Md. App. at 260-61. Mekhaya asked also for
    compensatory damages, which, depending on the circumstances, could be awarded. Id.
    That is, if Mekhaya can prove that Eastland had been paying a “constructive” or “de facto”
    25
    dividend to its shareholders, employees or directors, that he reasonably expected to receive
    that benefit, and that Appellees defeated substantially that expectation, the court has the
    power to order “affirmative relief by the required declaration of a dividend or a reduction
    and distribution of capital” and award “damages to minority stockholders as compensation
    for any injury suffered by them as the result of ‘oppressive’ conduct by the majority in
    control of the corporation.” Id. at 261.
    The Breach of Fiduciary Duty
    We hold also that the circuit court erred in dismissing Mekhaya’s claim for breach
    of fiduciary duty. The court provided, in this regard, two reasons for its decision: first, the
    court found that Mekhaya failed to allege a direct harm that was separate and distinct from
    a harm suffered by the company; and second, the court found that Mekhaya failed to allege
    facts that could overcome the presumption afforded by the business judgment rule. Both
    reasons for dismissal were erroneous.
    To establish a claim for breach of fiduciary duty, “a plaintiff must show: (i) the
    existence of a fiduciary relationship; (ii) breach of the duty owed by the fiduciary to the
    beneficiary; and (iii) harm to the beneficiary.” Plank v. Cherneski, 
    469 Md. 548
    , 599
    (2020) (quotation marks and citations omitted). Shenker v. Laureate Educ., Inc., 
    411 Md. 317
    , 346 (2009). Directors and officers of a corporation have generally a fiduciary duty to
    the corporation and its shareholders. 
    Id. at 336
    ; see also CA § 2-405.1. In addition,
    “Maryland common law recognizes that minority shareholders are entitled to protection
    against fraudulent or illegal action of the majority.” Mona v. Mona Elec. Grp., Inc., 
    176 Md. App. 672
    , 697 (2007).         “Especially in closely held corporations, the majority
    26
    shareholder owes a fiduciary duty to the minority shareholder (or shareholders) not to
    exercise [their] control to the disadvantage of minority stockholders.” 
    Id.
     (quotation marks
    and citation omitted).
    Because directors/majority shareholders owe fiduciary duties to both the company
    and its shareholders, an action for a breach of those duties may be brought directly or
    derivatively, depending on “the nature of the wrong alleged and the relief, if any, that could
    result if the plaintiff were to prevail.” Shenker, 
    411 Md. at 346
     (quotation marks and
    citation omitted). Where the breach relates to a fiduciary duty owed to the company, a
    derivative action is the appropriate course. A derivative action “permits an individual
    shareholder or group of shareholders to bring suit to enforce a corporate cause of action
    against officers, directors, and third parties where those in control of the company refuse
    to assert a claim belonging to it.” 
    Id. at 342
    . “In a derivative action, any recovery belongs
    to the corporation, not the plaintiff shareholder.” 
    Id. at 344
    . Moreover, in a derivative
    action, because courts avoid generally interfering with the management of a company, “the
    business judgment rule protects a disinterested director from liability to the corporation
    and its stockholders by insulating the business decisions made by the director from judicial
    review, absent a showing of fraud, self-dealing, unconscionable conduct, or bad faith.” 
    Id.
    On the other hand, “a shareholder may bring a direct action, either individually or
    as a representative of a class, against alleged corporate wrongdoers when the shareholder
    suffers the harm directly or a duty is owed directly to the shareholder, though such harm
    also may be a violation of a duty owing to the corporation.” 
    Id. at 345
    . For instance,
    “[w]here the rights attendant to stock ownership are adversely affected, shareholders
    27
    generally are entitled to sue directly, and any monetary relief granted goes to the
    shareholder.” 
    Id.
     To maintain such an action, the shareholder “must demonstrate that the
    duty breached was owed to the stockholder and that he or she can prevail without showing
    an injury to the corporation.” Tooley v. Donaldson, Lufkin & Jenrette, Inc., 
    845 A.2d 1031
    ,
    1039 (Del. 2004); accord Oliveira v. Sugerman, 
    451 Md. 208
    , 230-31 n.15 (2017) (citing
    Tooley with approval). Importantly, if the shareholder makes such a showing, “the
    business judgment rule does not apply.” Shenker, 
    411 Md. at 345
    .
    The question here, then, is whether Mekhaya alleged a breach of a duty owed
    directly to him and, if so, whether he, and not Eastland, suffered harm from that breach. If
    such a basis was made in his complaint, then Mekhaya’s direct claim should survive a
    motion to dismiss, the business judgment rule being inapplicable. If, however, the harm
    alleged was suffered by Eastland, such that any recovery would go to Eastland and not
    Mekhaya, then his claim was derivative and was dismissed properly because a derivative
    claim must be brought in the name of the company. 
    Id. at 343
    .
    Examining the allegations contained in Mekhaya’s complaint, we are persuaded that
    he alleged properly a direct claim. As noted earlier, Mekhaya alleged that, as a shareholder,
    he was owed a de facto dividend and that Eastland’s board of directors had a fiduciary duty
    to continue to pay that dividend. See Burnett v. Spencer, 
    230 Md. App. 24
    , 37 (2016) (“The
    declaration of a dividend creates a debtor-creditor relationship between a corporation and
    its shareholders.”); see also In re Classic Coach Interiors, Inc., 
    290 B.R. 631
    , 636 (2002)
    (“[A] declared but unpaid dividend … is an asset of the shareholders to whom it is owed.”).
    Mekhaya alleged that the board breached that duty by refusing to pay that dividend out of
    28
    Eastland’s ample profits, instead using those profits to pay excessive salaries to Oscar and
    Vipa. He alleged also that Oscar and Vipa used those same profits for personal use. All
    of those claims were based on a fiduciary duty owed directly to Mekhaya, and any recovery
    (in the form of an unpaid dividend) would go directly to him.
    To be sure, it remains to be seen whether Mekhaya’s claims regarding the de facto
    dividend can be proven. If they cannot, that is, if Mekhaya can prove that Oscar and Vipa
    used Eastland’s profits improperly, but cannot prove that those profits should have gone to
    him via a dividend, then his breach of fiduciary duty claim would be derivative and would
    need to be brought in Eastland’s name and in accordance with the appropriate procedures
    for derivative claims. At this point in the proceedings, however, Mekhaya’s complaint
    asserting a direct claim is sufficient to survive the motion to dismiss.
    Unjust Enrichment
    For much of the same reasons, we hold that the circuit court erred in dismissing
    Mekhaya’s claim for unjust enrichment. To succeed with a claim for unjust enrichment, a
    plaintiff needs to allege and then prove: (1) that a benefit was conferred upon the defendant;
    (2) that the defendant knew about or appreciated the benefit; and (3) that it would be
    inequitable to allow the defendant to retain the benefit. Mona, 176 Md. App. at 712-13.
    In Mekhaya’s case, the “benefit” would be the unpaid dividend. If he can show that he was
    owed the dividend, that Appellees knew about or appreciated the de facto dividend
    structure, and that it would be inequitable to allow Appellees to retain the dividend, then
    his direct claim for unjust enrichment passes muster for purposes of the motion to dismiss.
    Id. at 724-25. If, on the other hand, he can only show that Oscar and Vipa received a
    29
    benefit from Eastland’s profits, that is, if Mekhaya cannot show that that benefit should
    have gone to him via a dividend, then his claim would be derivative and would need to be
    brought in Eastland’s name and in accordance with the appropriate procedures for
    derivative claims. In any event, as with his claim for breach of fiduciary duty, whether
    Mekhaya can prove his claim is immaterial at this point. His complaint sets forth the
    necessary elements of an unjust enrichment claim, and that claim should have survived the
    motion to dismiss.
    Returning to the somewhat attenuated horseshoes metaphor opening this opinion,
    although Mekhaya’s complaint may not be a “ringer” or even a “leaner,” we conclude that
    it was close enough to survive the motion to dismiss.
    JUDGMENT OF THE CIRCUIT COURT
    FOR HOWARD COUNTY REVERSED;
    CASE REMANDED FOR FURTHER
    PROCEEDINGS CONSISTENT WITH
    THIS OPINION; COSTS TO BE PAID BY
    APPELLEES.
    30