UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA
In re Federal National Mortgage
Association Securities, Derivative, and MDL No. 1668
"ERISA" Litigation
Federal Housing Finance Agency as
Conservator for the Federal National Civil Case No. 07-1221 (RJL)
Mortgage Association v. Raines, et al.
Middleton
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MEMORANDUM OPINION
(JulyZ2, 2010) [# 14, 15, 18,58,61]
This case is a desperate attempt to overcome the Court's earlier decision, which
has since been affirmed by our Circuit Court, to dismiss a consolidated shareholder
derivative action against various former and then-current officials of the Federal National
Mortgage Association ("Fannie Mae") on the ground that the shareholder plaintiffs lacked
standing to bring a derivative suit because they failed to make the requisite demand on
Fannie Mae's board of directors pursuantto Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 23.1. While
the Court's decision in the consolidated action was on appeal, plaintiff Arthur Middleton
brought his own derivative suit raising essentially the same allegations. Fannie Mae, as
the nominal defendant, joined by Franklin D. Raines and J. Timothy Howard (together,
"the individual defendants"), moved to dismiss Middleton's complaint for failure to make
a demand on Fannie Mae's board. Since these motions were filed, the Court has replaced
Middleton as the derivative shareholder plaintiff with the Federal Housing Finance
Agency ("FHF A"), the statutory conservator of Fannie Mae. FHFA initially adopted
Middleton's response to the motions to dismiss but has since moved to voluntarily
dismiss the case without prejudice. Not surprisingly, the individual defendants opposed
FHFA's Motion for Approval of Voluntary Dismissal and have moved to dismiss the case
with prejudice for failure to prosecute.
Having considered the parties' arguments, the Court finds that the individual
defendants would suffer prejudice if the Court were to grant FHFA's motion now that the
individual defendants have justifiably relied on Fannie Mae's fully briefed Motion to
Dismiss, which, if granted, would completely dispose of the claims against them.
Accordingly, FHF A's Motion for Approval of Voluntary Dismissal without Prejudice is
DENIED. At the same time, the individual defendants' Motion to Dismiss with Prejudice
for Failure to Prosecute is also DENIED because they have failed to show that FHFA's
conduct is sufficiently egregious to warrant such a harsh remedy. Finally, regarding
Fannie Mae's pending Motion to Dismiss, the Court concludes that plaintiff Middleton
failed to make the demand required by Rule 23.1, and as a result, he lacks standing to
bring this suit. The Court further concludes that Middleton's reliance on an earlier
demand made by a shareholder plaintiff in a related case does not suffice to confer
standing on Middleton. Hence, Fannie Mae's Motion to Dismiss, which was joined by
the individual defendants, is GRANTED.
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BACKGROUND]
The facts of this case arise from allegations that Fannie Mae engaged in improper
accounting practices. These allegations are exhaustively explained in my previous
opinions. See, e.g., In re Fannie Mae Derivative Litig., 503 F. Supp. 2d 9, 11-14 (D.D.C.
2007). Beginning in September 2004, ten plaintiffs commenced shareholder derivative
actions against former and then-current officers and directors of Fannie Mae. Id. at 13 &
n.3. Various parties promptly moved to consolidate these actions. One of the shareholder
plaintiffs was James Kellmer. Although he did not oppose consolidation, he did oppose
filing a consolidated complaint, and he sought to have his counsel appointed as one of the
co-lead counsel. (PI. Kellmer's Formal Position [Civ. No. 05-37, Okt. # 7] at 10, 5,4).
He argued that it was necessary to distinguish his derivative suit, the only one in which a
shareholder made a demand on Fannie Mae's board of directors, from the other derivative
] The following recitation of facts includes information obtained from pleadings
and court orders in a different, but related, case. The Court, of course, may take judicial
notice of public records like docket sheets and other court documents. See, e.g.,
Mangiajico v. Blumenthal, 471 F.3d 391,398 (2d Cir. 2006) (noting that "docket sheets
are public records of which the court could take judicial notice"). Even though only
motions to dismiss are presently before the Court, the Court's use of information from the
related case is not improper because the complaint incorporates and relies upon the
demand made in that case to establish Middleton's standing to bring suit in this case. See
id. (holding that a district court's reliance on a docket sheet from a different case was not
erroneous because (I) docket sheets are public records of which the court can take
judicial notice, and (2) the complaint incorporated pleadings that were referenced on the
docket sheet).
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suits, where the shareholders declined to make such a demand on the theory that doing so
would have been futile. (ld. at 4).
In February 2005, the Court granted the motions to consolidate and appointed
Pirelli Armstrong Tire Corporation Retiree Medical Benefits Trust and Wayne County
Employees' Retirement System as co-lead plaintiffs. (Feb. 14,2005 Mem. Op. and Order
[Civ. No. 05-37, Dkt. #25J at 3-4). The Court explicitly addressed Kellmer's argument
that "demand made" and "demand futile" cases should not be consolidated into one action
but decided nevertheless "that this distinction is insufficient to necessitate separate
actions at this point in the litigation." (ld. at 4-5). As a result, the Court entered Pretrial
Order No.1, which consolidated the shareholder derivative actions "for all purposes
through final judgment." (Pretrial Order No.1 [Civ. No.05-37, Dkt. #26J at 4). The
Court also directed that the dockets for the individual cases be closed, (id.), and that the
co-lead plaintiffs file a consolidated complaint that would "supersede all existing
complaints filed in this action," (id. at 7).
Pursuant to the Court's Order, the co-lead plaintiffs filed an initial consolidated
complaint in September 2005, which they later amended in September 2006. The
Amended Complaint asserts two types of claims: (l) "breach of fiduciary duties and
gross mismanagement arising out of the company's misapplication ofFAS 91 and 133
(,accounting-related claims')"; and (2) "claims for corporate waste and unjust enrichment
relating to the Board's approval of certain executives' compensation
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('compensation-related claims')." In re Fannie Mae Derivative Litig., 503 F. Supp. 2d at
13-14. The co-lead plaintiffs abandoned Kellmer's demand-made theory and instead
proceeded on a theory that it would have been futile to make a successful demand on
Fannie Mae's board. The defendants moved to dismiss the consolidated complaint
claiming, among other things, that the co-lead plaintiffs failed to allege sufficient facts to
establish futility.
Ultimately, on May 31, 2007, I dismissed the consolidated derivative complaint
because the plaintiffs failed "to make the requisite Rule 23.1 demand upon the Board of
Directors of Fannie Mae prior to filing this derivative suit." Id. at 14. Among the cases
that I dismissed as part of the consolidated action was Kellmer's. The co-lead plaintiffs
promptly appealed.
While that appeal was pending, plaintiff Arthur Middleton brought this case,
raising essentially the same claims as in the consolidated derivative action. (See Compl.
[Civ. No. 07-1221, Dkt. #1]). Middleton makes no allegation in his Complaint that he
personally made a demand on Fannie Mae's board pursuant to Rule 23.1 or that making
such a demand would have been futile. The only reference to a demand made on Fannie
Mae's board is a shareholder demand dated September 24,2004. (ld. ~~ 13, 51). That
demand-the only one made by any of the derivative plaintiffs-was made by plaintiff
Kellmer, whose claims were dismissed in the consolidated action. A few months later, in
October 2007, Fannie Mae, as the nominal defendant, moved to dismiss Middleton's
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Complaint on the ground that he lacked standing to bring the derivative action because he
failed to satisfy the requirements for making a demand under Rule 23.1. Fannie Mae also
argued that Middleton could not "piggyback" on a demand already made by another
shareholder. The individual defendants joined Fannie Mae's Motion to Dismiss.
Subsequent developments in the case arising from FHFA's appointment as Fannie
Mae's conservator have now raised questions about whether this Court should still decide
the Motion to Dismiss. On September 8, 2008, months after our Circuit Court upheld my
decision to dismiss the consolidated derivative action, Fannie Mae, with FHFA's
authorization, moved to stay all cases related to the Fannie Mae multi-district litigation.
(Mot. for Stay of All Proceedings [Civ. No. 07-1221, Dkt. #36]). I approved the stay for
45 days. (Order Granting Stay of All Proceedings [Civ. No. 07-1221, Dkt. #41]). On
January 22,2009, I granted FHFA's Motion to Intervene as Conservator for Fannie Mae.
(Minute Order entered in Civ. No. 07-1221 on Jan. 22, 2009). Several months later, on
June 25, I granted FHFA's motion to substitute itself for Middleton and ordered FHFA to
notify the Court of its position on the defendants' pending Motion to Dismiss. (Mem.
Order [Civ. No. 07-1221, Dkt. #51] at 6-7). FHFA did so on July 27,2009, announcing
"for the present" that it would "adopt[]" the pleadings filed in opposition by Middleton.
(Status Report on the Mots. to Dismiss in Middleton and Kellmer's Shareholder
Derivative Compls. [Civ. No. 07-1221, Dkt. #56] at 2). FHFA soon altered course.
Claiming that it needed more time to decide whether prosecuting Middleton's derivative
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action would advance the statutory purpose of the conservatorship to preserve and protect
Fannie Mae's assets, FHFA moved on September 25 to dismiss the case without prejudice
under Federal Rules 23.1 (c) and 41(a).2 Alternatively, FHFA requested a 180-day stay.
In response, the individual defendants moved to dismiss with prejudice under Rule 41 (b)
on the ground that FHFA has failed to prosecute the lawsuit diligently.
DISCUSSION
I. Individual Defendants' Motion For Involuntary Dismissal With Prejudice
Because the individual defendants' motion for involuntary dismissal could dispose
of the case on the merits without actually requiring the Court to address the merits of the
case, it makes sense to resolve this motion first. Rule 41 (b) provides for involuntary
dismissal if the plaintiff "fails to prosecute" its case. Fed. R. Civ. P. 41(b). Typically,
dismissal is without prejUdice. Under Local Civil Rule 83.23, "[a]n order dismissing a
claim for failure to prosecute shall specify that the dismissal is without prejudice, unless
the Court determines that the delay in prosecution of the claim has resulted in prejudice to
an opposing party." LCvR 83.23 (emphasis added). Thus, whether the Court should
dismiss the case with prejudice depends on whether the defendants can show that FHF A
"has not manifested reasonable diligence in pursuing the cause," Bomate v. Ford Motor
2This case is one of four shareholder derivative actions still pending before this
Court as part of the Fannie Mae multi-district litigation. The other cases were originally
captioned as Kellmer v. Raines (Civ. No. 07-1173), Arthur v. Mudd (Civ. No. 07-2130),
and Agnes v. Raines (Civ. No. 08-1093). FHFA seeks to dismiss each of these cases
without prejudice.
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Co., 761 F.2d 713, 714 (D.C. Cir. 1985), and that the resulting delay has caused them
prejudice.
The individual defendants have not shown to the Court's satisfaction that FHFA
has failed to exercise sufficient diligence in prosecuting Middleton's derivative claims.
FHF A did not formally replace the original derivative plaintiff until as late as June 2009,
and since then, its conduct has not been so "dilatory or contumacious" as to justifY the
stiff penalty of dismissal with prejudice. See Bristol Petroleum Corp. v. Harris, 901 F.2d
165, 167 (D.C. Cir. 1990). For instance, FHFA has responded to all of the Court's orders
in a timely and reasonable fashion. It certainly has not disobeyed any Court order.
Furthermore, FHFA's Motion for Approval of Voluntary Dismissal comes less than a
mere three months after FHF A officially replaced the original plaintiff and well before
the eve of trial.
The real issue, therefore, is not whether FHF A's conduct until now has been
egregiously dilatory (it has not) but whether FHFA's decision to dismiss its claims with
the option of bringing them again in the future is itself so dilatory as to warrant dismissal
with prejudice. The individual defendants contend that in moving for voluntary dismissal
FHF A has stubbornly refused to announce whether or not it intends to proceed with
Middleton's derivative action and that this intentional delay justifies involuntary dismissal
with prejudice. It goes without saying that a decision to move for voluntary dismissal
cannot-by itself-be a basis for granting involuntary dismissal. Were that so, then
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voluntary dismissal under Rule 41(a)(2) would be a nullity. The question then is whether
FHF A's motion to dismiss without prejudice is an unwarranted deferral of a decision that
this Court has required FHFA to make. If so, then the Court may properly deem FHFA's
motion as an obstinate refusal to prosecute and thereby dismiss the case with prejudice.
Although I directed FHFA to submit a status report stating its position on the
defendants' pending Motion to Dismiss, I never gave FHF A the choice to proceed with
Middleton's derivative claims or face the prospect of involuntary dismissal with
prejudice. It would "upset[] notions of fundamental fairness" for this Court, "in response
to [FHFA's] request for dismissal without prejudice," to dismiss the case with prejudice,
"while failing to give [FHF A] notice of its inclination to impose this extreme remedy."
Andes v. Versant Corp., 788 F.2d 1033, 1037 (4th Cir. 1986). Having never warned
FHFA that a refusal to pursue Middleton's claims in this litigation could result in
dismissal on the merits, the Court will not grant the individual defendants' Motion for
Dismissal with Prejudice under Rule 41 (b).
II. FHFA's Motion For Voluntary Dismissal Without Prejudice
Whether the Court should grant the individual defendants' motion for involuntary
dismissal is, however, a separate question from whether the Court should grant FHFA's
motion for voluntary dismissal. Denying the former does not mean that the Court should
grant the latter. Under the Federal Rules, a derivative action may be "voluntarily
dismissed ... only with the court's approval." Fed. R. Civ. P. 23.l(c). Voluntary
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dismissal by court order is without prejudice unless the court states otherwise. Fed. R.
Civ. P. 41(a)(2). Before granting a motion for voluntary dismissal, the Court must satisfy
itself of the following: (l) that the motion is sought in good faith, and (2) that the
defendants will not suffer "legal prejudice" if the case is dismissed. In re Vitamins
Antitrust Litig., 198 F.R.D. 296, 304 (D.D.C. 2000). "Legal prejudice" is determined by
considering four factors: (l) the defendants' effort and expense in preparation for trial;
(2) excessive delay or lack of diligence on the plaintiffs' part in prosecuting the action;
(3) the adequacy of the plaintiffs' explanation for voluntary dismissal; and (4) the stage of
the litigation at the time the motion to dismiss is made. Id. at 304. Voluntary dismissal is
generally "granted in the federal courts unless the defendant would suffer prejudice other
than the prospect of a second lawsuit or some tactical disadvantage." Conafay v. Wyeth
Labs., 793 F.2d 350,353 (D.C. Cir. 1986).
Notwithstanding that courts typically grant voluntary dismissal, FHF A has not
convinced this Court that its motion is justified at this juncture. Even though the Court
has no reason to believe that FHF A is acting in bad faith, it has plenty of reason to believe
that the individual defendants will suffer legal prejudice if the Court grants FHFA's
Motion for Approval of Voluntary Dismissal without first resolving the defendants'
dispositive Motion to Dismiss, which had been pending for nearly two years before
FHFA filed its motion. To be sure, the defendants' efforts preparing for trial do not
support a finding of legal prejudice because the trial preparations made in this case (if
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any) can likely be used in other cases that are part of the Fannie Mae multi-district
litigation. Furthermore, the Court has already determined that FHF A is far from
delinquent in prosecuting the claims that it inherited from Middleton. Notwithstanding
that the first two of the four factors for determining legal prejudice weigh in favor of
FHF A's motion, I find nonetheless that FHF A's explanation for seeking voluntary
dismissal, coupled with the fact that the defendants had already filed a dispositive motion
in this case, is enough to tip the balance against FHF A.
Before addressing the merits of FHF A's explanation for requesting voluntary
dismissal, however, the Court will first address FHFA's claim that it is entitled to prevail
on its motion because the Housing and Economic Recovery Act of 2008 ("HERA"), 12
U.S.C. §§ 4501 et seq., precludes judicial review ofFHFA's chosen course of action.
FHFA contends that, as Fannie Mae's conservator, it is vested with the sole authority
under HERA to protect and preserve the assets of Fannie Mae and that its decision to seek
voluntary dismissal is the best means for accomplishing that end. Furthermore, according
to FHF A, its decision is not judicially reviewable by virtue of a provision in HERA that
specifically provides: "[N]o court may take any action to restrain or affect the exercise of
powers or functions of the Agency as a conservator." 12 U.S.C. § 4617(f).
FHF A construes this provision much too broadly. A careful reading reveals that
the Court is barred only from interfering with the powers or functions of FHF A "as a
conservator." That means that the Court cannot affect FHF A's power and authority to
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manage Fannie Mae or to act on its behalf. It does not mean, however, that the Court is
barred from treating FHFA the same as any other litigant when FHFA invokes the Court's
authority. Nothing in the language of Section 4617([) purports to suspend the operation
of the Federal Rules as applied to FHFA. Nor does any language in that provision entitle
FHF A to different treatment as a litigant than Fannie Mae or its shareholders would have
received had FHFA not been appointed Fannie Mae's conservator. Thus, in the absence
of a convincing basis for casting aside the usual standards governing motions for
voluntary dismissal under Rule 41(a)(2), I will not simply rubber stamp FHFA's motion.
Because FHFA is subject to the same rules as any other plaintiff seeking voluntary
dismissal, the Court must and will scrutinize the merits ofFHFA's request as it would any
other. FHF A claims that dismissal without prejudice "is necessary to allow for the
Conservator to thoroughly and effectively evaluate whether continued prosecution of the
claims would further the statutory purpose of the conservatorship to preserve and protect
these assets." (FHF A's Mem. in Support of Mot. for Approval of Voluntary Dismissal
without Prejudice [Civ. No. 07-1221, Dkt. #58] at 2). In light of Congress's decision to
extend the statute of limitations as long as three years for tort claims and six years for
contract claims from the date of the conservator's appointment, see 12 U.S.C. §
4617 (b)( 12), FHF A's explanation for withdrawing Middleton's derivative claims is not
wholly unreasonable. Indeed, by extending the limitations period, Congress seems to
have contemplated that FHF A might need more time to decide whether and how to pursue
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any claims it inherited as Fannie Mae's newly-appointed conservator. That alone,
however, is not particularly compelling.
As the regulatory body that oversees Fannie Mae, FHFA and its predecessor the
Office of Federal Housing Enterprise Oversight are already quite familiar with the facts
underlying Middleton's derivative claims. Moreover, even though FHFA did not
substitute itself for Middleton until three months before it moved for voluntary dismissal,
it intervened as Fannie Mae's conservator a full five months earlier. Thus, FHFA was a
party in the case for eight months before it moved to dismiss without prejudice. Given
that FHF A had at least eight months to contemplate how this case should proceed, the
Court is not particularly persuaded by FHFA's request for more time.
In addition to FHFA's less-than-compelling explanation for seeking non-suit, its
decision to move for voluntary dismissal nearly two years after the defendants had filed
their dispositive Motion to Dismiss also weighs against granting dismissal without
prejudice. One factor that courts have recognized as a potential basis for denying a
motion for voluntary dismissal under Rule 41 (a )(2) is the existence of an already-pending
motion for summary judgment. See, e.g., Pace v. S. Express Co., 409 F.2d 331,334 (7th
Cir. 1969); Conafay, 793 F.2d at 352. I see little reason not to extend that rule to a
defendant's fully briefed motion to dismiss, so long as that motion is already pending and
would actually dispose of the case on the merits. Indeed, defendants have a reasonable
expectation that when they file a motion that could resolve the case against
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them-whether it be for dismissal or for summary judgment-the courts will address it.
As such, allowing plaintiffs to move successfully for voluntary dismissal after the
defendants' motion had become ripe would deprive the defendants of their reasonable
expectation in a resolution of their pending motion. Thus, to grant FHFA's Motion for
Approval of Voluntary Dismissal, which FHF A had filed nearly two years after the
defendants' pending Motion to Dismiss, would be prejudicial to the individual
defendants. Voluntary dismissal in favor ofFHFA under Rule 41(a)(2) is, therefore, not
appropriate at this time.
III. Defendants' Motion To Dismiss
Having disposed of the parties' dueling motions for dismissal under Rule 41, I tum
to Fannie Mae's long-pending Motion to Dismiss for lack of standing, which has been
joined by the individual defendants. 3 The defendants make the rather straightforward
argument that Middleton has no standing to prosecute this derivative action because he
failed to make a demand on Fannie Mae's board of directors or even to allege that doing
so would have been futile. Under Rule 23.1, a shareholder plaintiff must "state with
particularity: (A) any effort by the plaintiff to obtain the desired action from the directors
3 Even though FHFA, as Fannie Mae's conservator, has taken Middleton's place as
the shareholder derivative plaintiff, the Court will treat Middleton's pleadings as adopted
by FHFA. Now that the Court has rejected FHFA's Motion for Approval of Voluntary
Dismissal, the Court relies on FHF A's earlier representation that it would adopt
Middleton's pleadings. (See Status Report on the Mots. to Dismiss in Middleton and
Kellmer's Shareholder Derivative Compls. [Civ. No. 07-1221, Dkt. #56] at 2).
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or comparable authority and, if necessary, from the shareholders or members; and (B) the
reasons for not obtaining the action or not making the effort." Fed. R. Civ. P. 23.1(b)(3).
It is apparent from a review of the pleadings, and Middleton himself does not
dispute, that he neither made a demand on Fannie Mae's board nor alleged in his
Complaint that making such a demand would have been hopeless. Instead, he claims that
the demand made by Kellmer in August 2004 was sufficient to give him standing to bring
the same derivative claims. He relies on Mullins v. De Soto Sec. Co., an old federal case
out of Louisiana, for the proposition that "the necessity of demand" by additional
shareholder plaintiffs "is an unnecessary requirement to impose" on them "in the face of
the full demand by the original plaintiff and the unqualified refusal of this demand for
redress by the officers of the corporation." 3 F.R.D. 432, 435 (W.D. La. 1944). In short,
Middleton contends that a prior demand by one shareholder plaintiff can establish
standing for another shareholder plaintiff to bring the same claims. In other words, Rule
23.1 does not require that the requisite demand be made by the plaintiff who ultimately
brings the litigation on behalf of the corporation. The courts "have made clear," says
Middleton, "that 'the identity of the specific representative shareholder plaintiff is not a
paramount concern' because 'the corporation is always the real party in interest' in
derivative suits." (PI. Opp'n to Mot. to Dismiss [Civ. No. 07-1221, Dkt. #22] at 3
(quoting In re MAXXAM, Inc.!Federated Derivative S'holder Litig., 698 A.2d 949,956
(Del. Ch. 1996)). I disagree.
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When the co-lead plaintiffs in the consolidated action abandoned Kellmer's (and
by inference Middleton's) demand-made theory and that case was dismissed as a result,
the corporation as the real party in interest lost the benefit of whatever demand Kellmer
made. By failing to assert Kellmer's demand, even though they had the opportunity to do
so, the co-lead plaintiffs in the consolidated action waived any argument that a demand
had been made on Fannie Mae's board, and the Court rendered judgment against Kellmer
and all other shareholder plaintiffs on that basis. In effect, therefore, the Court already
adjudicated Kellmer's demand-made claims. Unfortunately for Middleton, he cannot
revive them now.
Furthermore, the Court is unpersuaded by Middleton's argument that Kellmer's
demand was sufficient to put Fannie Mae's board on ongoing notice that the shareholders
wanted the board to take action. The board no longer had any reason to act on Kellmer's
demand because the claims for which his demand was made had been dismissed by the
time that Middleton filed his action. If Middleton wanted to bring his own claims, then
he should have made his own demand on Fannie Mae's board. 4
4 Middleton's much belated attempt to make a demand on Fannie Mae's board
after Fannie Mae had already filed its Motion to Dismiss for lack of standing is utterly
without merit. "Rule 23.1 specifically calls upon the complaint to show that demand was
made or was properly excused; there is no provision for thereafter remedying an omission
in the same suit, especially after the defendants have moved to dismiss because of the
absence ofa demand." Grossman v. Johnson, 674 F.2d 115, 125 (Ist Cir. 1982).
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In sum, the facts of this case are entirely different from Mullins where the court
allowed certain shareholder plaintiffs to intervene in an ongoing derivative case even
though they themselves had not made a formal demand on the company's board. The
Mullins court found that the demand made by the original plaintiff in the action was
sufficient to confer standing on the intervenor shareholder plaintiffs. Unlike Middleton's
case, however, the claims of the original plaintiff and the demand upon which the
plaintiff asserted standing to bring those claims had not yet been adjudicated. The
intervenors were thus relying on a demand that was still very much alive. That is not so
in Middleton's case. Kellmer's demand is dead, and Middleton's craven attempt to
resuscitate it has no basis in law. Therefore, Middleton cannot rely on Kellmer's demand
as a basis for establishing his right to bring on behalf of the corporation the same claims
that the Court dismissed in the consolidated action. Accordingly, this case must be
dismissed.
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CONCLUSION
For all of the foregoing reasons, the individual defendants' Motion to Dismiss with
Prejudice for Failure to Prosecute and FHFA's Motion for Approval of Voluntary
Dismissal without Prejudice are both DENIED. Fannie Mae's Motion to Dismiss for lack
of standing, joined by the individual defendants, is GRANTED. An appropriate Order
consistent with this ruling is attached.
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