Davis Ex Rel. Woodside Props., LLC v. MKR Dev., LLC ( 2018 )


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  • PRESENT: All the Justices
    DOROTHY C. DAVIS, DERIVATIVELY ON
    BEHALF OF WOODSIDE PROPERTIES, LLC
    OPINION BY
    v. Record No. 171020                               JUSTICE STEPHEN R. McCULLOUGH
    May 31, 2018
    MKR DEVELOPMENT, LLC, ET AL.
    FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE CITY OF HOPEWELL
    James F. D’Alton, Jr., Judge 1
    The circuit court dismissed without prejudice this derivative action on the ground that the
    plaintiff had failed to first make a demand for the limited liability company to take action. The
    plaintiff appeals from this ruling, arguing that the law does not require such a demand when
    doing so would be futile. The applicable statute, Code § 13.1-1042, and related provisions
    present us with a conundrum because competing canons of statutory construction point in
    opposite directions. We resolve this conundrum by concluding that the 2011 amendments to
    Code § 13.1-1042 did not abolish the futility exception to the demand requirement as established
    in case law preceding enactment of the statute. Consequently, we reverse and remand the case
    for further proceedings.
    BACKGROUND
    According to the allegations in the amended complaint, Melvin Davis Sr., the husband of
    Dorothy and the father of Kaye, Melvin Jr. and Rex, founded and owned Melvin L. Davis Oil
    Company. He sold the company stock to his three children. Melvin and Dorothy also owned
    real estate that the oil company leased. Melvin and Dorothy formed Woodside Properties as a
    limited liability company to take ownership of this real estate. Melvin and Dorothy intended to
    1
    Judge Nathan C. Lee authored a memorandum opinion ruling against Davis. Judge
    James F. D’Alton, Jr. entered the final order in the case.
    establish a vehicle through which they would receive income from Davis Oil’s rental of these
    properties. The operating agreement for Woodside Properties appoints MKR Development, LLC
    as the manager of Woodside Properties. Under MKR’s operating agreement, Rex, Melvin Jr.,
    and Kaye are its managers.
    Dorothy, who presently owns 72 percent of Woodside Properties, alleges that as of
    December 31, 2011, Woodside Properties should have received $1,374,147 in rent under the
    lease. Instead, she alleges, the bank account established for Woodside Properties had a balance
    of $35,000. She also asserts that funds that should have gone to Woodside Properties were used
    for improper purposes. When she asked Melvin Jr. and Rex for payment of funds due, they
    refused. 2 They also refused to provide an accounting.
    On May 13, 2014, Dorothy filed a complaint, which she later amended, against MKR
    Development, LLC and her two sons, Melvin Jr. and Rex, as well as Woodside Properties, LLC.
    She alleges inter alia that MKR and her sons, as managers, had breached their fiduciary duties
    towards Woodside Properties, were wasting corporate assets, and unjustly enriching themselves.
    She asked for MKR to be removed as manager of Woodside Properties, and for a decree
    imposing a constructive trust and requiring an accounting.
    Significantly, the amended complaint states that
    Mrs. Davis did not make demand on MKR, Mel, and/or Rex to
    bring this action on behalf of Woodside Properties because such
    demand would have been a futile, wasteful, and useless act as they
    were the parties who authorized and ratified the alleged wrongful
    conduct complained of herein and were the direct beneficiaries
    thereof, and are incapable of making an independent and
    disinterested decision to institute and vigorously prosecute this
    action.
    2
    In a separate proceeding, Kaye was dissociated from MKR.
    2
    In response, the defendants filed a plea in bar and demurrer, alleging, among other things,
    that the complaint was barred because Dorothy had not made a “proper demand as required by”
    Code § 13.1-1042. The court agreed, granted the plea in bar, and dismissed the complaint on
    that basis. 3 Dorothy appeals from this decision.
    ANALYSIS
    The question before us is one of statutory construction, which we review de novo.
    Perreault v. Free Lance-Star, 
    276 Va. 375
    , 384, 
    666 S.E.2d 352
    , 357 (2008).
    The derivative form of action permits an individual shareholder to bring “suit to enforce a
    corporate cause of action against officers, directors, and third parties.” Ross v. Bernhard, 
    396 U.S. 531
    , 534 (1970). Devised as a suit in equity, the purpose of the derivative action is to place
    in the hands of the individual shareholder a means to protect the interests of the corporation from
    the misfeasance and malfeasance of “faithless directors and managers.” Cohen v. Beneficial
    Indus. Loan Corp., 
    337 U.S. 541
    , 548 (1949). See also Simmons v. Miller, 
    261 Va. 561
    , 573,
    
    544 S.E.2d 666
    , 674 (2001) (“A derivative action is an equitable proceeding in which a
    shareholder asserts, on behalf of the corporation, a claim that belongs to the corporation rather
    than the shareholder.”).
    To prevent abuse of this remedy, however, equity courts required the shareholder to
    “allege and prove that a request or demand has been made upon the board of directors, or other
    body managing the corporation that they institute proceedings on the part of the corporation
    against the wrong-doers, and their refusal to do so after reasonable request, or demand.” Mount
    3
    The circuit court dismissed the amended complaint without prejudice. Dorothy
    challenges this ruling, notwithstanding the fact that the dismissal was without prejudice, out of a
    concern that opposing counsel would argue on refiling that the statute of limitations bars the
    refiled action.
    3
    v. Radford Trust Co., 
    93 Va. 427
    , 431, 
    25 S.E. 244
    , 245 (1896). In the alternative, the
    stockholder could
    allege such a state of facts as will show that the defendants whom
    he charges with the wrong doing constitute a majority of the board
    of directors, or managing body at the time of the suit, or that they,
    or a majority of them, are under the control of the defendant
    wrong-doers, so that the court may infer that they would refuse to
    bring such suit; or he must allege such facts in his pleading as will
    show that it is reasonably certain that a suit by the corporation
    would be impossible, and that a demand to sue would be useless.
    
    Id.
     See also Virginia Passenger & Power Co. v. Fisher, 
    104 Va. 121
    , 126-27, 
    51 S.E. 198
    , 200
    (1905). This became known as the “futility exception.”
    Effectively codifying this case law, Code § 13.1-1042 previously provided that a plaintiff
    could bring a derivative action “if members or managers with authority to do so have refused to
    bring the action or if an effort to cause those members or managers to bring the action is not
    likely to succeed.” 1991 Va. Acts ch. 168 (enacting Virginia Limited Liability Company Act,
    Code § 13.1-1000 through -1069). In 2011, however, the General Assembly amended the
    statute, in pertinent part, as follows:
    A. A member may bring an action in the right of a limited liability
    company to recover a judgment in its favor to the same extent that
    a shareholder may bring an action for a derivative suit under the
    Stock Corporation Act, Chapter 9 (§ 13.1-601 et seq.) of this title.
    Such action may be brought if members or managers with
    authority to do so have refused to bring the action or if an effort to
    cause those members or managers to bring the action is not likely
    to succeed. The derivative action may not be maintained if it
    appears that the plaintiff does not shall not commence or maintain
    a derivative proceeding unless the member fairly and adequately
    represent represents the interests of the members and the limited
    liability company in enforcing the right of the limited liability
    company and is a proper plaintiff pursuant to § 13.1-1043.
    B. No member may commence a derivative proceeding until:
    1. A written demand has been made on the limited liability
    company to take suitable action; and
    4
    2. Ninety days have expired from the date delivery of the demand
    was made unless (i) the member has been notified before the
    expiration of 90 days that the demand has been rejected by the
    limited liability company or (ii) irreparable injury to the limited
    liability company would result by waiting until the end of the
    90-day period.
    C. If the limited liability company commences a review and evaluation
    of the allegations made in the demand or complaint, the court may
    stay any derivative proceeding for such period as the court deems
    appropriate.
    2011 Acts ch. 379 (newly enacted text in italics, deleted text stricken).
    MKR argues that this amendment abolished the futility exception. As it presently reads,
    MKR notes, Code § 13.1-1042(B) requires a member to make a demand and wait 90 days prior
    to commencing a derivative suit. A longstanding canon of construction supports this view: “[a]s
    a general rule, a presumption exists that a substantive change in law was intended by an
    amendment to an existing statute.” Virginia-American Water Co. v. Prince William Cty. Serv.
    Auth., 
    246 Va. 509
    , 517, 
    436 S.E.2d 618
    , 622-23 (1993). There are two significant obstacles,
    however, to what might otherwise be a straightforward interpretation of Code § 13.1-1042.
    The first of these is that Code § 13.1-1044 sets forth pleading requirements for derivative
    suits. It states that “[i]n derivative action, the complaint shall set forth with particularity the
    effort of the plaintiff to secure commencement of the action by a member or manager with the
    authority to do so or the reasons for not making the effort.” (Emphasis added.) As Dorothy
    points out, if Code § 13.1-1042 categorically requires a demand, this language in Code § 13.1-
    1044 would be superfluous. We ordinarily resist a construction of a statute that would render
    part of a statute superfluous. “Every part of a statute is presumed to have some effect and no part
    will be considered meaningless unless absolutely necessary.” City of Richmond v. Virginia Elec.
    & Power Co., 
    292 Va. 70
    , 75, 
    787 S.E.2d 161
    , 164 (2016) (quoting Lynchburg Div. of Soc.
    5
    Servs. v. Cook, 
    276 Va. 465
    , 483, 
    666 S.E.2d 361
    , 370 (2008)). See also Dilliard v. Tomlinson,
    
    15 Va. (1 Munf.) 183
    , 205 (1810) (“[A] statute is to be so construed, that no clause, sentence or
    word shall be void, superfluous, or insignificant.”).
    In addition, Code § 13.1-1001.1(A) provides that “the principles of law and equity
    supplement this chapter” except where they are “displaced by particular provisions of this
    chapter.” The text of Code § 13.1-1042 as it presently exists does not expressly disclaim the
    futility exception. It is silent on the subject. Moreover, since derivative actions generally, and
    the futility exception specifically, developed on the equity side of the court, Cohen, 
    337 U.S. at 548
    , they constitute “principle[s] of . . . equity” under Code § 13.1-1001.1(A). Although
    derivative actions developed in connection with traditional corporations rather than limited
    liability companies, such a derivative action is closely analogous to a derivative action involving
    an LLC. By referring to “principles of law and equity [which] supplement this chapter,” Code §
    13.1-1001.1(A) embraces within its scope the futility exception, which has long been part of our
    law. See, e.g., Mount, 93 Va. at 431, 25 S.E. at 245.
    The General Assembly’s 2011 enactment was not a futile gesture. The amendment
    reorganized and streamlined the statute. It created subsections A, B, and C, added a specific
    timeline in subsection B, and expressly provided the court with the power to stay an action in
    subsection C. With respect to the futility exception, the 2011 amendment had the effect of
    replacing an express textual provision in Code § 13.1-1042 with an incorporation by reference of
    a rule drawn from case law. 4
    4
    We do not suggest that any time a statute is repealed, the repeal will invariably revive
    default principles developed through case law prior to the adoption of the statute. Rather, our
    holding is derived from the language of Code § 13.1-1044, which presupposes the continued
    existence of the futility exception, as well as the textual provision found in Code § 13.1-1001.1(A),
    6
    The combined force of the textual provisions of Code § 13.1-1001.1(A) and Code §
    13.1-1044 lead us to conclude that the General Assembly did not abrogate the futility exception
    when it amended Code § 13.1-1042 in 2011. Therefore, the circuit court erred in dismissing
    Dorothy’s complaint. 5
    Finally, we are aware of the summary that accompanied the 2011 bill, which can be
    found on the online Legislative Information System. 6 It indicates that the bill may have been
    intended to abolish the futility exception. Pursuant to Code § 1-247, however, the General
    Assembly has set forth the following canon of construction:
    Any legislative summary associated with a bill, joint resolution or
    resolution, including any summary appearing on the face of such
    legislation, shall not constitute a part of the legislation considered,
    agreed to, or enacted, and shall not be used to indicate or infer
    legislative intent.
    which expressly provides that “the principles of law and equity supplement this chapter” except
    where they are “displaced by particular provisions of this chapter.”
    5
    Although the parties discuss the “common law” of derivative actions, they do not
    suggest that the futility exception was part of the common law of England. See Ross, 396 U.S. at
    534 (noting that “[t]he common law refused . . . to permit stockholders to call corporate
    managers to account in actions at law” and the possibility of abuse this created following the
    advent of modern corporations led courts early in the 19th century to provide relief through an
    action in equity). It can make a difference whether a legal principle originated in the common
    law of England at the time the Commonwealth of Virginia established its sovereignty or whether
    the legal principle originated thereafter. The repeal of a statute abrogating the common law of
    England will have the effect, absent manifest contrary legislative intent, of reviving common law
    rules. See Mosley v. Brown, 
    76 Va. 419
    , 424 (1882) (the effect of the repeal of the statute was
    “to completely restore the common law remedy” unless the inference of intent to restore is
    repelled by the language of the repealing statute); Ins. Co. v. Barley’s Administrator, 
    57 Va. (16 Gratt.) 363
    , 384 (1863) (“When a statute changing the common law is repealed, the common law
    is restored to its former state.”). This view is consistent with Code § 1-200. No such rule applies
    with respect to case law developments not rooted in the common law of England.
    6
    2011 Acts ch. 379 (summary as passed), http://leg1.state.va.us/cgi-
    bin/legp504.exe?ses=111&typ=bil&val=ch379 (last visited April 27, 2018).
    7
    Given this unambiguous legislative command, we cannot consider the bill summary in our
    construction of the statute. 7
    CONCLUSION
    We will reverse the judgment below and remand with instructions to reinstate the
    plaintiff’s complaint.
    Reversed and remanded.
    7
    In light of our conclusion that the 2011 amendments to Code § 13.1-1042 did not
    abrogate the futility exception, we need not address the plaintiff’s remaining arguments.
    8
    

Document Info

Docket Number: Record 171020

Judges: STEPHEN McCULLOUGH

Filed Date: 5/31/2018

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 10/19/2024