RECOMMENDED FOR FULL-TEXT PUBLICATION
Pursuant to Sixth Circuit Rule 206
File Name: 12a0258p.06
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT
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Plaintiff/Counterclaim Defendant-Appellee, -
PETROLEUM ENHANCER, LLC,
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No. 11-1167
v.
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Defendant, -
LESTER R. WOODWARD,
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Intervenor/Counterclaim/Third-Party -
POLAR MOLECULAR CORPORATION,
Plaintiff, -
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POLAR MOLECULAR HOLDING CORPORATION, -
Intervenor/Counterclaim/Third-Party -
Plaintiff-Appellant, -
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AFFILIATED INVESTMENTS, LLC, RICHARD
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SOCIA, CARL HILL, BRUCE BECKER, and A.
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RICHARD NELSON,
Third-Party Defendants-Appellees. N
Appeal from the United States District Court
for the Eastern District of Michigan at Bay City.
Nos. 1:07-cv-12425; 1:09-cv-10247—Thomas L. Ludington, District Judge.
Argued: May 30, 2012
Decided and Filed: August 10, 2012
Before: MARTIN, GILMAN, and WHITE, Circuit Judges.
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COUNSEL
ARGUED: Russell C. Babcock, THE MASTROMARCO FIRM, Saginaw, Michigan,
for Appellant. John B. Alfs, CLARK HILL PLC, Birmingham, Michigan, for Appellee.
ON BRIEF: Russell C. Babcock, THE MASTROMARCO FIRM, Saginaw, Michigan,
for Appellant. John B. Alfs, CLARK HILL PLC, Birmingham, Michigan, for Appellee.
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1
No. 11-1167 Petroleum Enhancer v. Woodward Page 2
OPINION
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RONALD LEE GILMAN, Circuit Judge. Polar Molecular Holding Corporation
(Polar Holding) was, at all times relevant to this lawsuit, a publicly held Delaware
corporation and the sole shareholder of Polar Molecular Corporation (PMC), a company
engaged in the petroleum-additive business. In 2006, PMC was in default on a loan for
which it had pledged valuable intellectual property as collateral, and Polar Holding was
in the midst of an internal dispute between two members of its board of directors
regarding the business strategy of PMC. This dispute eventually caused one of those
directors, Richard Socia, to form a competing company called Petroleum Enhancer
(Petroleum) for the sole purpose of acquiring PMC’s promissory note and collateral from
the holder of PMC’s loan. Petroleum was incorporated in March 2007, Socia resigned
from Polar Holding’s board the following month, and Petroleum acquired PMC’s
promissory note shortly thereafter.
In June 2007, Petroleum brought suit in federal district court against Lester
Woodward, an escrow agent in possession of PMC’s collateral, alleging that PMC was
in default on the payment of its promissory note. Polar Holding and PMC intervened in
the lawsuit and filed counterclaims against Petroleum and a third-party complaint against
a number of additional parties, including Socia. Both Polar Holding and PMC alleged
claims of breach of fiduciary duty, civil conspiracy, and tortious interference. After
PMC filed for bankruptcy, its claims became the property of the bankruptcy trustee.
Polar Holding’s claims were later dismissed on summary judgment, and it has appealed.
For the reasons set forth below, we AFFIRM the dismissal of Polar Holding’s tortious-
interference claim as addressed by the district court, but REVERSE the dismissal of its
breach-of-fiduciary-duty claim against Socia and its civil-conspiracy claim against the
individual third-party defendants, and REMAND the case for further proceedings on the
latter two claims, as well as on Polar Holding’s tortious-interference claim not addressed
below.
No. 11-1167 Petroleum Enhancer v. Woodward Page 3
I. BACKGROUND
A. Factual background
The disagreement concerning the business strategy of PMC was between Mark
Nelson, Polar Holding’s President, Chief Executive Officer (CEO), and Chairman of the
Board, on the one hand, and Socia, on the other. This disagreement eventually created
animosity between the two, which came to a head during a January 26, 2007 board
meeting of Polar Holding. Both Nelson and Socia were present at the meeting, as were
Polar Holding’s three other directors, two of whom were Walter Fay and Robert
MacKenzie.
The meeting, which had been called by Socia, opened with Socia attempting to
remove Nelson from his positions as President, CEO, and Chairman. But Socia’s motion
for removal did not pass, and Nelson then responded in kind. He moved for Socia’s
removal as Polar Holding’s secretary and demanded his resignation from the board of
directors. These motions passed by a vote of three to two, with the board resolving to
“remove Richard Socia as the company’s Secretary” and to “demand Richard Socia’s
resignation” from his position on the board. Fay was contemporaneously appointed as
Polar Holding’s new secretary.
Three days later, on January 29, 2007, Polar Holding’s board of directors held
another meeting. Socia and MacKenzie—the two directors who had voted against
Nelson’s motions at the previous meeting—did not attend. Their names appear in the
minutes as absent directors. At this meeting, the board voted to appoint Sharon Minnock
“to fill a vacancy on the Board of Directors.” The board next passed a motion
demanding MacKenzie’s resignation from the board and calling “for the removal of both
Richard Socia and Robert MacKenzie from any and all roles with Polar Molecular
Holding Corporation, including roles as officer and Board committee members.”
Needless to say, Socia did not take kindly to what had transpired at these
meetings. On January 31, 2007, he wrote Nelson a letter that begins as follows:
No. 11-1167 Petroleum Enhancer v. Woodward Page 4
I think it is time to set the record straight. I am a Director, of Polar
Molecular Holding Company, who serves at the pleasure of the
shareholders, not you. I want you to produce the written authority—not
your interpretation—that gives you and/or your puppets the authority to
remove me. I want you to know I have no intention of resigning from
this Board.
The letter concludes in similar fashion: “I am going to continue to protect the
shareholders.”
Socia reaffirmed these sentiments in a March 5, 2007 letter to Minnock, in which
he referred to himself as a director, questioned the legality of Minnock’s appointment
to the board, and stated flatly that he “refused to resign” from his position. He also
provided an explanation for this refusal: “I refused to resign my post as Director for one
reason, Mark [Nelson] duped me and I know I am a representative of shareholders[;] not
just specific shareholder interests, but all shareholders. I will continue to work to save
the products and opportunities that exist at Polar.”
After the board refused to oust Nelson and purported to replace Socia instead,
Socia came up with an idea. He knew that PMC had entered into a financing agreement
with Affiliated Investments, LLC (Affiliated) in October 2001. Under the terms of that
agreement, PMC had received a $600,000 loan from Affiliated, which PMC promised
to repay in full by January 2005. But PMC had defaulted on its repayment obligations
and remained in default in early 2007. Despite PMC’s default, Affiliated had not yet
sought repayment of the loan. Nor had it taken legal action to recover the patents and
other intellectual property that PMC had pledged as collateral. Affiliated’s president,
Bruce Becker, stated that he had not done so because he “had no knowledge of [the
petroleum-additive] industry or what to do with the patents.”
But Socia suffered from no such lack of expertise, and he suggested to Becker
a way in which the two could exercise Affiliated’s right to foreclose on the defaulted
loan. Socia, Becker, and Carl Hill, the latter being a Polar Holding consultant, would
form a new company for the purpose of purchasing the promissory note from Affiliated
and then immediately bring a foreclosure action against Polar Holding to secure the
No. 11-1167 Petroleum Enhancer v. Woodward Page 5
collateral. According to Socia’s deposition testimony, he intended for the foreclosure
to put pressure on Nelson to make certain business decisions with respect to PMC that
Socia thought would make PMC more profitable. A March 16, 2007 email sent by Hill
to Socia and Karen Dobleske (Becker’s business manager at Affiliated) provides a
glimpse into how the plan unfolded:
Dick [Socia] came up with a thought that I think might make a lot of
sense. Since [PMC] owes Affiliated the patents that are new and not
included in the escrow arrangement[,] . . . maybe Affiliated ought to ask
for those patents to be put into the escrow account now . . . before we
make our move through foreclosure. Nelson would have a hard time
arguing about the request[,] . . . especially since Affiliated just sent him
dough to help with patent registration.
(Ellipses in original.)
Socia, Becker, and Hill incorporated Petroleum on March 22, 2007, with its
principal place of business in Essexville, Michigan. On April 18, 2007, Socia submitted
his resignation as a director of Polar Holding, effective immediately. He cited as the
“last straw” a conversation that he had had with Fay three days earlier regarding product-
liability insurance. Eight days after Socia’s resignation, Affiliated assigned all of its
rights, title, and interest in PMC’s promissory note and collateral to Petroleum in
exchange for $2 million.
Prior to these events, PMC had been seeking to shore up its financial standing.
Its principal means of doing so was through a financing agreement with a company
called IBK Capital Corporation (IBK). IBK’s president, William White, signed an
engagement letter in December 2006 stating that IBK would “endeavor to obtain for
[PMC] . . . a private placement of up to $10.0 million of convertible preferred shares or
some other acceptable financing arrangement.” The letter provided that the agreement
would “continue for six months,” but also stated that the agreement could “be terminated
or extended” by either IBK or PMC at any time “upon notice in writing.” Nelson
returned the letter to IBK with his signature after discussing the matter at an executive-
committee meeting later that same month. Socia was not a member of the executive
committee and thus did not attend the meeting.
No. 11-1167 Petroleum Enhancer v. Woodward Page 6
On January 2, 2007, IBK received Polar Holding’s Form 10-K (an annual filing
required by the Securities Exchange Act of 1934) for the fiscal year ending on December
31, 2004. Prior to receiving this form, IBK had not conducted any research into the
financial background of Polar Holding or PMC, nor had it reviewed any financial-
reporting information submitted by either company.
The initial review of Polar Holding’s Form 10-K by IBK’s staff noted several
“red flags,” including that the form was two years old, disclosed extensive litigation
involving Polar Holding or PMC, and revealed that there had been a change in the
accounting firm that audited Polar Holding’s finances. White then reviewed the
information himself and was not comforted. Based on these concerns, IBK decided to
terminate its efforts to seek a financing arrangement for PMC. White notified Nelson
of IBK’s decision in a letter dated January 22, 2007.
In his deposition testimony, Nelson stated that White later implied—during a
conversation that “[c]ould have been” in 2008—that Socia had contacted White prior to
IBK’s termination of the engagement letter. Later, in a handwritten amendment to his
deposition, Nelson clarified when this conversation allegedly took place: “Based on a
telephone discussion I had with IBK [a]t about 1:45 PM on June 5th, 2008 I believed
Dick Socia had spoken with IBK.”
White, however, denied that any conversation between the two took place in
2008. And Socia stated that he has never communicated with anyone at IBK, including
White. White further testified that his standard business practice is to make a record of
such conversations, and that no record of this kind exists regarding Socia. He also said
that IBK’s decision to terminate its efforts to seek financing for PMC was based solely
on the “red flags” raised in IBK’s independent review of Polar Holding’s Form 10-K,
not on any conversation with Socia or anyone else affiliated with Polar Holding or PMC.
Without financing, PMC was unable to repay its loan to Affiliated. Petroleum
advised Woodward (the escrow agent in possession of the collateral) in May 2007 that
it was now the holder of PMC’s promissory note and collateral, and that PMC was in
No. 11-1167 Petroleum Enhancer v. Woodward Page 7
default on its obligations under the loan agreement. Woodward, however, refused to
deliver the collateral to Petroleum for reasons not stated in the record.
B. Procedural background
In June 2007, Petroleum filed a complaint against Woodward in the United States
District Court for the Eastern District of Michigan. The complaint requested that
Woodward be ordered to release possession of the collateral that he was holding in
escrow and to deliver it to Petroleum. On September 14, 2007, the district court did just
that. Approximately two weeks later, Petroleum proposed procedures for the sale of the
collateral in accordance with Article 9 of the Uniform Commercial Code. The sale was
eventually scheduled for January 14, 2008. Any proceeds greater than the amount of the
unpaid debt would be returned to PMC.
Polar Holding and PMC then moved to intervene in the lawsuit. The district
court granted their unopposed motion on November 7, 2007. Shortly thereafter, Polar
Holding and PMC filed counterclaims against Petroleum and a third-party complaint
against (among others) Affiliated, Becker, Hill, and Socia. Polar Holding and PMC
alleged claims under Michigan law for breach of fiduciary duty, civil conspiracy, and
tortious interference. The gist of their allegations is that Petroleum was formed by
fiduciaries of Polar Holding for the sole purpose of acquiring PMC’s promissory note
and collateral, and that the named individuals meddled in Polar Holding’s relationship
with IBK and caused IBK to terminate its efforts to seek financing for PMC.
In January 2008, PMC filed a Chapter 11 bankruptcy petition in the United States
Bankruptcy Court for the District of Colorado. The petition automatically stayed the
sale of the collateral, but the petition was later dismissed when PMC’s counsel withdrew
because of an ethical conflict. PMC then filed a second Chapter 11 bankruptcy petition
in the same court in August 2008, which again caused the sale of the collateral to be
stayed. Two months later, PMC commenced an adversary proceeding in the bankruptcy
court against Petroleum. The adversary proceeding was transferred to the United States
District Court for the Eastern District of Michigan in January 2009, where the
proceeding was consolidated with the present case.
No. 11-1167 Petroleum Enhancer v. Woodward Page 8
PMC’s Chapter 11 bankruptcy case was converted to a Chapter 7 liquidation
shortly thereafter, and the bankruptcy court appointed a trustee to act as the
representative of PMC’s estate. As a consequence of these developments, all of PMC’s
assets—including its legal claims against Petroleum and the third-party defendants—are
controlled by the trustee. The bankruptcy court lifted the automatic stay in July 2009
and authorized Petroleum to proceed with the foreclosure sale. When the sale took place
in September 2009, Petroleum was the only bidder, with a bid of $1.85 million.
Because PMC no longer had the independent ability to pursue its claims in the
district court, and because PMC’s counterclaims and third-party complaint had been
filed jointly with Polar Holding, the district court directed Polar Holding in January 2010
“to file a supplemental complaint as to its counterclaims and third-party complaint.”
Petroleum Enhancer, LLC v. Woodward, No. 07-12425-BC, 2010 WL 100892, at *6
(E.D. Mich. Jan. 5, 2010) (unpublished opinion). The court also determined that Polar
Holding’s claims, to be set forth in its supplemental complaint, “must be based on a
breach of a primary duty to [Polar Holding], with a resultant injury to [Polar Holding]
that is not derived from a breach of duty with a resultant injury to [PMC] that could be
recovered by the trustee if he or she decides to pursue the cause of action.” Id.
Not long after the district court’s order, Polar Holding filed its supplemental
complaint, and discovery was taken. In August 2010, the Petroleum parties filed a
motion for summary judgment with respect to all of Polar Holding’s claims. The district
court granted the motion in its entirety in January 2011. Polar Holding has timely
appealed, but its appeal is limited to the dismissal of its claims against Socia and the
other individual third-party defendants; the dismissal of its claims against Petroleum and
Affiliated is not being challenged.
II. ANALYSIS
A. Standard of review
We review de novo a district court’s grant of summary judgment. Huckaby v.
Priest, 636 F.3d 211, 216 (6th Cir. 2011). Summary judgment is proper where “there
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is no genuine dispute as to any material fact and the movant is entitled to judgment as
a matter of law.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(a). In considering a motion for summary judgment,
the district court must construe the evidence and draw all reasonable inferences in favor
of the nonmoving party. Matsushita Elec. Indus. Co. v. Zenith Radio Corp., 475 U.S.
574, 587 (1986). The central issue is “whether the evidence presents a sufficient
disagreement to require submission to a jury or whether it is so one-sided that one party
must prevail as a matter of law.” Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, Inc., 477 U.S. 242, 251-52
(1986).
Because jurisdiction in the present case is based on diversity of citizenship, we
must “apply state law in accordance with the controlling decisions of the state supreme
court.” JPMorgan Chase Bank, N.A. v. Winget, 510 F.3d 577, 582 (6th Cir. 2007). We
will therefore apply Michigan substantive law to each of Polar Holding’s claims. “If we
confront an issue that has not yet been resolved by the Michigan courts, we must attempt
to predict what the Michigan Supreme Court would do if confronted with the same
question.” Mazur v.Young, 507 F.3d 1013, 1016 (6th Cir. 2007) (brackets and internal
quotation marks omitted). “In such circumstances, we consider decisions of the
Michigan Court of Appeals as well as relevant Michigan Supreme Court dicta,
restatements of law, law-review commentaries, and the rules adopted by other
jurisdictions.” Id. at 1016-17.
B. Breach of fiduciary duty
Polar Holding’s first claim is that Socia breached his fiduciary duty to the
company by inducing Affiliated to foreclose on PMC’s loan and by creating a competing
company for the sole purpose of acquiring PMC’s promissory note and collateral from
Affiliated. Although Polar Holding alleged in the district court that all the Petroleum
parties (corporate as well as individual) breached their fiduciary duties to Polar Holding,
its appellate briefs argue the issue in detail only with respect to Socia. The breach-of-
fiduciary-duty claim as to the other parties has therefore been waived. See Langley v.
DaimlerChrysler Corp., 502 F.3d 475, 483 (6th Cir. 2007) (declining to address an issue
on appeal because the appellant had not made “some effort at developed argumentation”
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and “failed to discuss or cite to the district court’s analysis in any detail” regarding the
issue in question (internal quotation marks omitted)).
Under Michigan law, “a fiduciary relationship arises from the reposing of faith,
confidence, and trust and the reliance of one on the judgment and advice of another.”
Teadt v. Lutheran Church Mo. Synod, 603 N.W.2d 816, 823 (Mich. Ct. App. 1999).
When such a relationship exists, the fiduciary—that is, the one who is entrusted to advise
the other—“has a duty to act for the benefit of the principal regarding matters within the
scope of the relationship.” Prentis Family Found. v. Barbara Ann Karmanos Cancer
Inst., 698 N.W.2d 900, 906 (Mich. Ct. App. 2005) (per curiam). A fiduciary must
“‘subordinat[e] one’s personal interests to that of the other person.’” Wallad v. Access
BIDCO, Inc., 600 N.W.2d 664, 666 (Mich. Ct. App. 1999) (per curiam) (emphasis
omitted) (quoting Black’s Law Dictionary (6th ed.)). “Whether a duty exists is a
question of law for the court to decide.” Prentis, 698 N.W.2d at 906.
“It is beyond dispute that in Michigan, directors and officers of corporations are
fiduciaries who owe a strict duty of good faith to the corporation which they serve.”
Prod. Finishing Corp. v. Shields, 405 N.W.2d 171, 174 (Mich. Ct. App. 1987); see also
M.C.L. § 450.1541a(1) (codifying the common-law rule). But “[j]ust where the
fiduciary obligation of corporate officers and directors ends and the personal right of
independent action begins in ordinary business dealings may be difficult to determine,
and no hard and fast rule of demarcation can be laid down.” 3 William Meade Fletcher
et al., Fletcher Cyclopedia of the Law of Corporations § 860 (perm. ed., rev. vol. 2010).
“When a corporate officer ceases to act as such, either because of his or her resignation
or removal from office, or because of the insolvency of the corporation, the fiduciary
relationship ceases.” Id.
In the present case, Socia clearly had a fiduciary duty to Polar Holding when he
was elected as a director by the shareholders in July 2003. The key question on appeal
is whether that duty had been legally extinguished by the end of January 2007, when the
board voted to demand his resignation as a director and after which Socia helped hatch
the plan to foreclose on the PMC loan and form a competing company.
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In granting summary judgment for the Petroleum parties, the district court
answered this question in the affirmative. The court acknowledged that Socia
technically remained on the board of directors until his resignation in April 2007. But
it concluded that he “was effectively terminated as a director at the January 26, 2007
board meeting and thus owed no fiduciary duty to [Polar Holding]” after that date.
Petroleum Enhancer, LLC v. Woodward, No. 07-12425-BC, 2011 WL 124451, at *10
(E.D. Mich. Jan. 14, 2011) (unpublished opinion). The court reasoned that a fiduciary
relationship ceased to exist, as did its accompanying duty, because Socia was excluded
from participating in all business decisions as of January 26, 2007. It therefore did not
consider whether the duty had actually been breached.
Polar Holding argues on appeal that the district court’s reasoning is flawed. Its
argument is premised on two fundamental rules of Michigan law: (1) that a director
owes a strict fiduciary duty to his company, see Shields, 405 N.W.2d at 174, and (2) that
a company’s board of directors has no authority to remove a fellow director, see M.C.L.
§ 450.1511(1) (providing that a company’s shareholders have the power to elect and
remove directors). From these premises, Polar Holding contends that Socia’s fiduciary
duty existed until he either resigned from the board or was removed by the shareholders.
Because Socia did not resign until April 18, 2007 and was not removed by the
shareholders before then, Polar Holding argues that his duty continued until that date.
Polar Holding refers to several additional pieces of evidence in support of its
argument, including the fact that Socia was still listed as a director in the board minutes
for the January 29, 2007 meeting and that he twice referred to himself as a director in
subsequent correspondence. Based on this correspondence, Polar Holding points out
that Socia steadfastly refused to resign from his position prior to April 18, 2007. And
Polar Holding explains Socia’s absence from the “meetings and business decisions”
mentioned in the district court’s opinion by claiming that these were meetings and
decisions of the executive committee, on which Socia did not sit, rather than meetings
of the board.
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The Petroleum parties respond to Polar Holding’s arguments by echoing the
reasoning of the district court. Their core point is that the board voted on
January 26, 2007 to “remove Richard Socia as the company’s Secretary” and resolved
“to demand Richard Socia’s resignation” from his position on the board. Three days
later, the board met again and appointed Minnick “to fill a vacancy on the Board of
Directors.” These actions, the Petroleum parties argue, effectively stripped Socia of his
directorial authority and, in so doing, relieved him of his fiduciary obligations. Under
this view, what matters is that Socia stopped functioning as a director subsequent to the
January 26, 2007 meeting; that he did not formally resign until April 18, 2007 is of no
consequence. As Socia put it, he may have remained a director “from a technical
standpoint” following the meetings, but he was not one “from a realistic standpoint.”
The Petroleum parties attempt to bolster their argument by citing the case of Voss
Engineering, Inc. v. Voss Industries, Inc., 481 N.E.2d 63 (Ill. App. Ct. 1985), which
involved a father who brought suit against his son, a former director, officer, and
employee in the father’s corporation. After a family dispute (the son refused to see his
mother in the hospital), the father informed the son that he no longer had any position
with the company. In addition, the father told the son that he would have one month to
make amends with his mother and that “there would not be any problems” provided that
he did so. Id. at 65. But the son did not reconcile with his mother, and he never returned
to the company. He never again performed directorial duties, attended corporate
meetings, or acted on behalf of the corporation in any capacity. On the other hand, the
son did not submit his formal resignation as a director until seven months after he had
been conditionally terminated, by which point he had already established a competing
business organization.
When the case reached the Appellate Court of Illinois, the sole issue was whether
the son owed a fiduciary duty to the company during the period between his conditional
termination and his formal resignation. The trial court had determined that he owed no
such duty, and the appellate court reviewed this determination under the manifest-
weight-of-the-evidence standard.
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In affirming the trial court’s decision, the Appellate Court of Illinois found that
“the evidence and the applicable law support not only [the son’s] subjective belief that
his directorship was terminated but also the objective fact that he had been removed as
a director on the effective date of his conditional termination.” Id. at 66. The court
noted that, during the relevant time period, “there was no statutory provision governing
the removal of corporate directors.” Id. And “where the law is silent as to the tenure of
office, the subject of removal, and the mode of proceeding to remove, reference must be
had to the nature of a particular set of facts to determine what course justice requires the
removing power to pursue.” Id. at 66-67.
The court then determined on the “particular set of facts” before it that the son
had been effectively removed as a director of his father’s company. As the company’s
“majority shareholder and electing authority,” the father had the ability to elect the
members of the board of directors. Id. at 67. The court reasoned that
[i]ncidental to his power to elect, [the father], unencumbered by statute,
had the power to remove. His actions in regard to [his son] were
consistent with the exercise of this power. The submission of [the son’s]
formal resignation some seven months later does not, by its mere form,
negate the substance of the removal.
Id. This substance-over-form reasoning, the Petroleum parties submit, should apply with
equal force in the present case.
In our view, however, Voss does not bear the weight that the Petroleum parties
place upon it. The question in Voss was whether, in the absence of a statutory provision
governing the removal of corporate directors, the father had exercised his removal
power. This is quite different from the question here. A Michigan statute provides that
shareholders—not the board of directors—may remove directors by majority vote. See
M.C.L. § 450.1511(1). And Michigan’s caselaw has long so held. See, e.g., Stott v. Stott
Realty Co., 224 N.W. 623, 624 (Mich. 1929) (“The director, being selected by the
stockholders, may only be removed by them.”).
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Under Michigan law, therefore, Polar Holding’s directors did not have the
authority to remove Socia as a director simply through board action. In fact, the
directors (who also owned shares of Polar Holding’s stock) did not have the majority
control necessary to remove Socia even in their capacity as shareholders. Polar
Holding’s Form 10-K for the 2004 fiscal year indicates that “stockholders holding
approximately 42% of the Company’s outstanding common stock as of October 31,
2005, entered into a voting agreement dated June 3, 2003, whereby they have agreed to
vote all of their outstanding shares in accordance with instructions provided by Mark
Nelson.” Elsewhere, the Form 10-K reveals that this group of shareholders included
Nelson and all but one Polar Holding director (the lone exception being former director
Wayne Wright, who owned less than one percent of the company’s outstanding shares),
and that the voting agreement consisted of 37.6 percent of the Polar Holding’s common
stock.
Whatever the reason for the discrepancy between these two figures, the record
indicates that the board of directors as a whole, including Nelson, controlled less than
half of Polar Holding’s voting shares. This stands in stark contrast to Voss, where the
father was the company’s “majority shareholder and electing authority,” and therefore
also its removing authority. Only within this context did the Voss court turn to
circumstantial evidence and policy considerations to ascertain whether the father had in
fact exercised his authority to remove his son as a director. There is no occasion to take
into account such considerations here.
And even if there were occasion to consider circumstantial evidence and policy
implications here, Voss would still be inapposite. The son in Voss subjectively believed
that he had been removed as a director, and he severed all ties with the company after
his conditional termination. Socia apparently believed just the opposite. He obviously
still considered himself a member of the board when he wrote his March 5, 2007 letter
to Minnock, in which he reaffirmed his refusal to resign. Given these distinctions, and
given that there is no indication that a majority of the shareholders (the only group with
the power to remove Socia from the board) wanted him out of that position, there is
No. 11-1167 Petroleum Enhancer v. Woodward Page 15
simply no basis to deviate from Michigan’s settled rule that a director cannot be removed
by the other directors.
Nor is there a sound policy reason for doing so. To the contrary, Michigan law
respects the basic principle that “the directors of a corporation owe fiduciary duties to
stockholders,” not to fellow directors. Wallad v. Access BIDCO, Inc., 600 N.W.2d 664,
666 (Mich. Ct. App. 1999) (per curiam) (emphasis added). This principle is particularly
important when the company is publicly held, as Polar Holding was here. At the same
time, the general rule—that directors owe a fiduciary duty to their corporation until they
resign, their term ends, or they are officially removed from their position—does not
place an onerous burden on directors who prefer to be unencumbered by fiduciary
obligations. The message to such directors is simple: resign. Because Socia repeatedly
refused to do that here, his fiduciary duty to Polar Holding continued until he did so on
April 18, 2007.
This is not to say that Socia in fact breached his fiduciary duty to Polar Holding,
or even that the evidence is sufficient to require submitting the issue to a jury. The
district court has not yet considered the question. But we do say that the district court
erred in holding as a matter of law that Socia had no such duty after the January 26, 2007
board meeting. The district court’s grant of summary judgment on Polar Holding’s
breach-of-fiduciary-duty claim is therefore reversed as to Socia, but affirmed as to the
other Petroleum parties.
C. Civil conspiracy
Polar Holding’s second claim is that the individual Petroleum
parties—specifically including Becker, Hill, and Socia—committed the tort of civil
conspiracy. This tort consists of “(1) a concerted action (2) by a combination of two or
more persons (3) to accomplish an unlawful purpose (4) or a lawful purpose by unlawful
means.” Mays v. Three Rivers Rubber Corp., 352 N.W.2d 339, 341 (Mich. Ct. App.
1984).
No. 11-1167 Petroleum Enhancer v. Woodward Page 16
As these elements indicate, “a claim for civil conspiracy may not exist in the air;
rather, it is necessary to prove a separate, actionable, tort.” Early Detection Ctr., P.C.
v. N.Y. Life Ins. Co., 403 N.W.2d 830, 836 (Mich. Ct. App. 1986). Here, there are only
two possible independent torts upon which the conspiracy claim could be predicated:
breach of fiduciary duty and tortious interference. Polar Holding relies on the former
in its briefs to this court, alleging that Becker and Hill were among those aware of
Socia’s fiduciary obligations to Polar Holding and took actions that led to the breach of
the same.
As discussed above, the district court held that Socia did not have a fiduciary
duty to Polar Holding during the relevant period. But the court did not dismiss the civil-
conspiracy claim on this ground. Instead, the court determined that Polar Holding
lacked standing to bring the claim because the company could not show that it had
suffered an injury that was distinct from that suffered by PMC, a showing that the court
had previously held was necessary to avoid making the claim a “derivative” action of the
kind generally barred by M.C.L. § 450.1493a (providing that, before bringing a
derivative action on behalf of a corporation, a shareholder must demand in writing that
the corporation enforce its rights or demonstrate that such a request would be futile). See
Petroleum Enhancer, LLC v. Woodward, No. 07-12425-BC, 2011 WL 124451, at *7
(E.D. Mich. Jan. 14, 2011) (unpublished opinion) (reiterating the court’s earlier
conclusion that Polar Holding’s claim “must be based on a breach of primary duty to
[Polar Holding], with a resultant injury to [Polar Holding] that is not derived from a
breach of duty with resultant injury to PMC that could be recovered by the trustee if he
or she decides to pursue a cause of action” (internal quotation marks omitted)).
The district court considered and rejected Polar Holding’s argument that it had
been injured by “losing an opportunity to obtain the collateral at [the] foreclosure sale.”
Id. (internal quotation marks omitted). And the court also rejected Polar Holding’s
argument “that it has standing to bring a claim for this lost opportunity because Socia
was a board member of [Polar Holding] though not of PMC.” Id.
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The district court’s analysis focused on whether Polar Holding had suffered an
injury that was not also suffered by PMC. This analysis is grounded in the notion that
an “injury arising solely out of harm to a subsidiary corporation is generally insufficient
to confer standing on a parent corporation.” See 9 William Meade Fletcher et al.,
Fletcher Cyclopedia of the Law of Corporations § 4227 (perm. ed., rev. vol. 2010); see
also Gaff v. FDIC, 814 F.2d 311, 315 (6th Cir.), vacated in part on other grounds on
reh’g, 828 F.2d 1145 (6th Cir. 1987) (applying Michigan law and recognizing the
“general precept of corporate law that a shareholder of a corporation does not have a
personal or individual right of action for damages based solely on an injury to the
corporation”); Mich. Nat’l Bank v. Mudgett, 444 N.W.2d 534, 536 (Mich. Ct. App. 1989)
(per curiam) (“In general, a suit to enforce corporate rights or to redress or prevent injury
to the corporation, whether arising out of contract or tort, must be brought in the name
of the corporation and not that of a stockholder, officer or employee.”).
But the district court’s analysis misses a crucial point. As other jurisdictions
have recognized, “an exception to this rule exists where the defendant owes the plaintiff
[parent] shareholder a fiduciary duty, and the plaintiff seeks to recover for a breach of
that duty.” Qantel Corp. v. Niemuller, 771 F. Supp. 1361, 1367 (S.D.N.Y. 1991)
(applying New York law); see also Walton v. Morgan Stanley & Co., 623 F.2d 796, 798
(2d Cir. 1980) (“Delaware law, which governs in this diversity suit, makes a breach of
fiduciary duty actionable irrespective of injury.” (footnote omitted)); Waddell & Reed
Fin., Inc. v. Torchmark Corp., 223 F.R.D. 566, 629 (D. Kan. 2004) (“A limited
exception exists where the alleged wrongdoer owed a fiduciary duty directly to the
parent corporation and the parent seeks to recover for breach of that duty which resulted
in the diminution in value of the parent’s shares of the subsidiary.”). “In such a case, the
plaintiff parent shareholder has standing to recover . . . , despite the fact that the
subsidiary corporation may itself have a claim against the defendant for the direct injury
to it.” Qantel, 771 F. Supp. at 1367; see also Miller v. U.S. Foodservice, Inc., 361 F.
Supp. 2d 470, 476 (D. Md. 2005) (holding that, under Delaware law, a director of both
the parent corporation and the subsidiary owed separate fiduciary duties to each
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company, so the parent had standing to sue the director for breaches that directly caused
it harm).
These cases, we acknowledge, do not involve the application of Michigan law.
As far as we can tell, no Michigan court has yet confronted this precise issue. But
Michigan courts have confronted the analogous situation in which an individual
shareholder seeks to bring an action based on the “breach of a duty that [was] owed to
the individual personally.” See Belle Isle Grill Corp. v. City of Detroit, 666 N.W.2d 271,
278-79 (Mich. Ct. App. 2003) (per curiam). And in that context, “[t]he general
rule”—that a suit “to redress or prevent injury to the corporation . . . must be brought in
the name of the corporation and not that of a stockholder”—“is inapplicable.” See
Mudgett, 444 N.W.2d at 536. We see no reason why this exception should not apply
when the shareholder is a corporation.
The facts of this case drive home the point. Polar Holding’s civil-conspiracy
claim is predicated upon the breach of a fiduciary duty that was owed directly to Polar
Holding, not to PMC. As Polar Holding points out, Socia did not owe a fiduciary duty
to PMC at the time of the alleged breach because he was not a director or officer of that
company. PMC therefore cannot bring a claim based on an alleged breach of fiduciary
duty by Socia. So Polar Holding’s claims based on such breach—including its civil-
conspiracy claim—are not derivative in nature. See M.C.L. § 450.1491a(a) (defining a
“derivative proceeding” as “a civil suit in the right of a domestic corporation” (emphasis
added)).
We conclude that Polar Holding has standing to bring the civil-conspiracy claim,
just as it has standing to bring the breach-of-fiduciary-duty claim. The district court’s
grant of summary judgment in favor of the individual Petroleum parties on the civil-
conspiracy claim is accordingly reversed. On remand, the district court should proceed
to address this claim on the merits.
No. 11-1167 Petroleum Enhancer v. Woodward Page 19
D. Tortious interference
Polar Holding’s final claim is that the Petroleum parties tortiously interfered with
PMC’s potential financing agreement with IBK. Tortious interference with a business
relationship consists of “the existence of a valid business relationship or expectancy,
knowledge of the relationship or expectancy on the part of the defendant, an intentional
interference by the defendant inducing or causing a breach of termination of the
relationship or expectancy, and resultant damage to the plaintiff.” Mino v. Clio Sch.
Dist., 661 N.W.2d 586, 597 (Mich. Ct. App. 2003) (internal quotation marks omitted).
The district court found that there was insufficient evidence that any of the
Petroleum parties intentionally interfered with IBK’s pontential financing of PMC. In
arguing otherwise, Polar Holding points to a handwritten amendment to Nelson’s
deposition that reads: “Based on a telephone discussion I had with IBK [a]t about 1:45
PM on June 5th, 2008[,] I believed Dick Socia had spoken with IBK.” Polar Holding
also refers to two emails that were allegedly written and sent by Nelson to White (IBK’s
president) in June 2008. These emails were not produced during discovery, but were
attached to an affidavit in support of Polar Holding’s opposition to the Petroleum
parties’ motion for summary judgment. In the first email, Nelson wrote: “Polar
understands that IBK (or any investment broker) would not have been able to proceed
with the previous financing for Polar when Polar Board member Dick Socia and insider
consultant Carl Hill made direct contact with IBK in January 07 and undermined Polar’s
financing with IBK.” And the second email includes the following: “I’ve asked you to
provide a letter detailing the disruptive contacts that were made to you (and any written
materials they may have provided) by dissident directors of Polar that caused you to pull
out of the $10 million preferred stock offering deal contracted with Polar in January of
last year.”
Setting aside the unorthodox way in which these emails came to light, they are
at best only weak circumstantial evidence of tortious interference. See Sperle v. Mich.
Dep’t of Corr., 297 F.3d 483, 495 (6th Cir. 2002) (noting that hearsay evidence is
insufficient to defeat a motion for summary judgment). They are also unsupported,
No. 11-1167 Petroleum Enhancer v. Woodward Page 20
conclusory, and entirely after-the-fact. Moreover, they are contradicted by Hill, Socia,
and White, each of whom testified that White had never discussed with either Hill or
Socia the potential financing agreement between IBK and PMC.
To survive summary judgment, Polar Holding “must do more than show that
there is some metaphysical doubt as to the material facts. It must present significant
probative evidence in support of its complaint to defeat the motion for summary
judgment.” Harris v. J.B. Robinson Jewelers, 627 F.3d 235, 246 (6th Cir. 2010)
(internal quotation marks omitted). Here, Polar Holding has not presented any
“significant probative evidence” of tortious interference. This claim consequently
cannot survive summary judgment.
Polar Holding also contends that it asserted a separate tortious-interference claim
against Socia that the district court failed to address. In that claim, Polar Holding alleges
that, in approaching Becker and asking him to foreclose on PMC’s loan, Socia tortiously
interfered with Polar Holding’s relationship with PMC—specifically, PMC’s ability to
continue making payments on debts owed by Polar Holding. Because Polar Holding is
correct that this tortious-interference claim was raised below but not considered, we will
remand this claim as well.
III. CONCLUSION
For all the reasons set forth above, we AFFIRM the dismissal of Polar Holding’s
tortious-interference claim with respect to the IBK financing issue, but REVERSE the
dismissal of its breach-of-fiduciary-duty claim against Socia and its civil-conspiracy
claim against the individual third-party defendants, and REMAND the case for further
proceedings on the latter two claims, as well as on Polar Holding’s tortious-interference
claim not addressed below.