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This is the result of a request for a full text case using a specified citation: https://api.case.law/v1/cases/?cite=309 F.2d 912&full_case=true&body_format=html
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"id": 196896,
"url": "https://api.case.law/v1/cases/196896/",
"name": "Harry J. STADIN, Appellant, v. UNION ELECTRIC COMPANY et al., Appellees",
"name_abbreviation": "Stadin v. Union Electric Co.",
"decision_date": "1962-11-15",
"docket_number": "No. 17104",
"first_page": "912",
"last_page": "922",
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"cite": "309 F.2d 912"
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"data": "<section data-firstpage=\"912\" data-lastpage=\"922\" class=\"casebody\"><section class=\"head-matter\"><p id=\"b964-9\" data-pgmap=\"964\" class=\"court\">United States Court of Appeals Eighth Circuit.</p>\n <p id=\"b964-8\" data-pgmap=\"964\" class=\"docketnumber\">No. 17104.</p>\n <h4 id=\"b964-6\" data-pgmap=\"964\" class=\"parties\">Harry J. STADIN, Appellant, v. UNION ELECTRIC COMPANY et al., Appellees.</h4>\n <p id=\"b964-10\" data-pgmap=\"964\" class=\"decisiondate\">Nov. 15, 1962.</p>\n <p id=\"b964-11\" data-pgmap=\"964\" class=\"otherdate\">Rehearing Denied Dec. 26, 1962.</p>\n <p id=\"b966-3\" data-pgmap=\"966\" class=\"attorneys\">J. Raymond Dyer, St. Louis, Mo., for appellant.</p>\n <p id=\"b966-4\" data-pgmap=\"966\" class=\"attorneys\">Alan C. Kohn, St. Louis, Mo., for ap­pellees Union Electric, Missouri Power &amp; Light Co. and Missouri Edison Co.; John A. Woodbridge, Coburn, Croft &amp; Cook, Thomas L. Croft, Peter W. Herzog, Jr., St. Louis, Mo., on the brief.</p>\n <p id=\"b966-5\" data-pgmap=\"966\">Before SANBORN and BLACKMUN, Circuit Judges, and REGISTER, District Judge.</p>\n </section>\n <article data-type=\"majority\" class=\"opinion\">\n <p id=\"b966-6\" data-pgmap=\"966\" class=\"author\">BLACKMUN, Circuit Judge.</p>\n <p id=\"b966-7\" data-pgmap=\"966\">This is an appeal arising out of the dis­trict court’s denials of Harry J. Stadin’s motions to intervene as a party plaintiff in two civil antitrust cases in which Un­ion Electric Company is an original plain­tiff.<a class=\"footnotemark\" href=\"#footnote_1\" id=\"ref_1\">1</a>\n </p>\n <p id=\"b966-8\" data-pgmap=\"966\">Union is a utility engaged in the busi­ness of generating and furnishing elec­tricity. The defendants Westinghouse Electric Corporation, General Electric Company and Sangamo Electric Company are electrical equipment manufacturers. Stadin, the applicant for intervention, is a minority shareholder of Union.</p>\n <p id=\"b966-9\" data-pgmap=\"966\">The progenitors of these cases are judgments of conviction entered in Feb­ruary 1961 against these defendants and others in federal criminal antitrust pro­ceedings in the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Penn­sylvania. The offenses there charged, and to which the defendants pleaded ei­ther guilty or nolo contendere, had to do with conspiracy and price rigging in the sale of electrical equipment.</p>\n <p id=\"b966-13\" data-pgmap=\"966\">On December 26, 1961, Union insti­tuted the first of the two present actions. It is brought under § 4 of the Clayton Act, 15 U.S.C. § 15, for a claimed viola­tion of § 1 of the Sherman Act, 15 U.S.C. § 1, and is against Westinghouse and General Electric. By it Union seeks threefold damages allegedly resulting from overcharges in the sales of turbine-­generators to Union by the respective de­fendants. On January 31, 1962, Union and Missouri Power &amp; Light Company and Missouri Edison Company, which also are utilities engaged in the business of generating and furnishing electricity, instituted the second action. This is brought under the same sections of the Clayton and Sherman Acts and is against Westinghouse, General Electric and San­gamo for threefold damages allegedly re­sulting from overcharges in sales by the respective defendants to the plaintiffs and their predecessors of watt-hour and rate-­of-demand meters.</p>\n <p id=\"b966-14\" data-pgmap=\"966(88) 967(16)\">Stadin’s motions to intervene followed in February and March. His motion in the second case is directed only to Union’s count in that action. Stadin rests each motion on the grounds that Union’s rep­resentation of his interest is or may be inadequate and that he is or may be bound by a judgment in the action, with­in the meaning of Rule 24(a) (2),<a class=\"footnotemark\" href=\"#footnote_2\" id=\"ref_2\">2</a> F.R.­Cv.P., having to do with intervention of right, and that his claims and Union’s have questions of law and fact in corn­mon, within the meaning of Rule 24(b) (2) <a class=\"footnotemark\" href=\"#footnote_3\" id=\"ref_3\">3</a> having to do with permissive inter­vention.</p>\n <p id=\"b967-4\" data-pgmap=\"967\">As required by Rule 24(c), each of these motions is accompanied by a plead­ing. This is called an “Intervenor’s Com­plaint”. Each complaint incorporates by reference Union’s own allegations. Each also contains certain allegations in com­mon with Stadin’s other complaint and additional allegations directed to the par­ticular main action. The allegations are as follows:</p>\n <p id=\"b967-5\" data-pgmap=\"967\">a. Stadin owns 43 of Union’s 11,402,-­622 common shares outstanding. There are also outstanding 533,595 voting pre­ferred shares of Union.</p>\n <p id=\"b967-6\" data-pgmap=\"967\">b. In February 1961 Stadin submitted to Union’s directors, for their action and for action by Union’s shareholders at their annual meeting the following April, a proposed resolution <a class=\"footnotemark\" href=\"#footnote_4\" id=\"ref_4\">4</a> that Union “take appropriate steps” against its electrical equipment suppliers who had been con­victed in the federal criminal actions in Pennsylvania.</p>\n <p id=\"b967-7\" data-pgmap=\"967\">c. Union’s directors refused to include this proposal among the proxy material sent to Union’s shareholders for the an­nual meeting. The reason they assigned for this refusal was that the proposal was not a proper subject for action by the shareholders under Missouri law.</p>\n <p id=\"b967-8\" data-pgmap=\"967\">d. Stadin himself then submitted the proposed resolution at the April meeting. Members of Union’s board of directors spoke out against it and they and manage­ment’s proxy agents voted against it. The resolution was defeated by a share vote of 10,325,766 to 1,825.</p>\n <p id=\"b967-16\" data-pgmap=\"967\">e. Four days later Stadin advised Union’s president that unless Union un­dertook to pursue its legal rights against the price-fixers Stadin himself would seek legal remedy, on behalf of the company and of those who voted with him, in a shareholder’s derivative suit or suits.</p>\n <p id=\"b967-17\" data-pgmap=\"967\">f. Although Union, since December 1961, has filed Clayton Act suits against various defendants for damages sustained through price-fixing of electrical equip­ment in eight different categories, includ­ing the two involved in the main actions here, it has not yet brought suit for dam­ages resulting from purchases of equip­ment in eleven other categories with re­spect to which the defendants were simi­larly indicted and convicted in the Penn­sylvania federal court on pleas of guilty or nolo contendere.</p>\n <p id=\"b967-18\" data-pgmap=\"967(142) 968(36)\">It is then alleged that Union’s di­rectors, by opposing Stadin’s resolution, voted against the bringing of suits against the defendants; that the later institution of suits for certain categories of equipment did not constitute a retrac­tion of their refusal to bring suit for the other equipment categories; that the di­rectors have condoned the sale to Union of this other equipment at rigged prices; that this was not in good faith and was a breach of trust; and that John A. Wood-­bridge, “Union’s principal attorney in the main action”, inadequately represents Stadin because he is one of the directors who “voted against bringing the main action”, is “not on friendly terms with” Stadin, stands charged by Stadin with having made illegal profits in the pur­chase and sale of Union’s stock rights in 1959, and has characterized that charge as malicious. Each complaint asserts on information and belief that Union sus­tained damages “running into the mil­lions of dollars” because of the fixing of prices of electrical equipment not covered by the main actions.</p>\n <p id=\"b968-4\" data-pgmap=\"968\">The complaints conclude with prayers for judgment in favor of Union and against the defendants in amounts equal to threefold the damages sustained by Union in the sales to it of equipment in the categories other than those which Union’s pending actions concern.</p>\n <p id=\"b968-5\" data-pgmap=\"968\">Union opposed Stadin’s intervention by memorandum and three supporting affidavits. The latter are executed, re­spectively, by Union’s executive vice-­president; by Woodbridge, who is its vice-president and general counsel; and by one of Union’s independent attorneys. These affidavits contain, among other things, statements that Union has 64,400 common shareholders and 7,000 prefer­red shareholders; that Union has been investigating purchases made by it from the suppliers against whom antitrust suits were instituted by the United States; that the indictments of the de­fendants related to twenty categories of equipment; that purchases in the cate­gories not yet sued upon “involve literal­ly thousands of items * * * and pur­chases from many corporations besides those named as defendants”; and that after the investigation has been com­pleted Union’s management, with advice of counsel, will decide whether suit should be brought as to the remaining categories. Woodbridge’s affidavit also states that Stadin’s proposed resolution had been submitted initially to the Se­curities and Exchange Commission which advised that “it would not take any ac­tion if the management should omit the proposal from the proxy statement”; that he is not on unfriendly terms with Stadin; and that their relationship is so remote that he cannot be described as either friendly or unfriendly.</p>\n <p id=\"b968-6\" data-pgmap=\"968\">Stadin thereafter also filed an affi­davit. In it he states that he is an at­torney; that at the 1961 meeting two shareholders expressed opposition to his resolution because bringing suit would be wasting money; that Union’s president then said that suits would cut into re­search and developmental programs of suppliers and would be detrimental to the industry of which Union was a mem­ber; that the shareholders were not ad­vised that the resolution was not a prop­er one for shareholder action under Mis­souri law; that he was not on friendly terms with Woodbridge; that “My feel­ing about him, not his about me, is what counts”; that he is not satisfied with Woodbridge; that Woodbridge repre­sents his own interests and the interests of management and does not represent the interests of Union’s shareholders; that in his opinion it would be more ef­ficient and more effective if Union filed its suits by defendants rather than by items of equipment; that intervention would result in no confusion, complexity or delay but denial of intervention would; and that if intervention is granted he would allocate his claims among the ex­isting suits so that there would be no duplication of claims being sued upon.</p>\n <p id=\"b968-8\" data-pgmap=\"968\">Stadin also testified at the hearing on the motions to intervene. His testimony there was simply that the recitals in his complaint and affidavit were true. No cross-examination was undertaken and there was no further testimony.</p>\n <p id=\"b968-9\" data-pgmap=\"968\">A second affidavit from Woodbridge was then filed. This incorporated those parts of the transcript of the 1961 share­holders’ meeting which included the com­ments of the two shareholders and the responsive remarks of Union’s president. Stadin then filed another affidavit assert­ing that the statements made at the meet­ing were not under oath and were hear­say.</p>\n <p id=\"b968-10\" data-pgmap=\"968\">It is in this state of the record that the appeal comes to us.</p>\n <p id=\"b968-11\" data-pgmap=\"968(43) 969(79)\">Stadin’s argument here, as we read his briefs, is that the conditions for his in­tervention as a matter of right under Rule 24(a) (2) have been met and the de­nial of intervention is reversible error; that the conditions for his permissive intervention under Rule 24(b) (2) have .also been met and the denial of interven­tion is an abuse of discretion; that the recent case of Rogers v. American Can Co., 3 Cir., 1962, 305 F.2d 297, is au­thority for the right of a minority share­holder, in the face of a contrary vote by the majority, to institute a shareholder’s derivative suit for threefold damages under the Clayton Act; and that the Rogers case governs the present appeal.</p>\n <p id=\"b969-5\" data-pgmap=\"969\">\n One point must preliminarily be made. In Kozak v. Wells, 8 Cir., 1960, 278 F.2d 104, 109, this court said that, for purposes of judging the satisfaction of the conditions for intervention of right.</p>\n <blockquote id=\"b969-6\" data-pgmap=\"969\">“[W]e look to the pleadings, that is, to the motion for leave to intervene and to the proposed complaint or de­fense in intervention, and, absent sham and frivolity, we accept the al­legations in those pleadings as true. * * * Whether the allegations are eventually proved is beside the point for we are now concerned only with the question of right to intervene and not with ultimate results on the merits.”</blockquote>\n <p id=\"b969-8\" data-pgmap=\"969\">We cited, in support of this, Otis Eleva­tor Co. v. Standard Constr. Co., D.Minn., 1950, 10 F.R.D. 404, 406; Kaufman v. Wolfson, S.D.N.Y., 1956, 137 F.Supp. 479, 481; Clark v. Sandusky, 7 Cir., 1953, 205 F.2d 915, 918; and Dalva v. Bailey, S.D.N.Y., 1957, 158 F.Supp. 204, 207.</p>\n <p id=\"b969-9\" data-pgmap=\"969\">Our quoted language, however, does not mean that, for the purposes describ­ed, all statements in pleadings of this kind are to be accepted as true irrespec­tive of their nature or content. The sit­uation is somewhat akin to that present­ed on a motion for summary judgment or on a motion to dismiss, namely, that only matters well pleaded (as the Otis and Clark opinions specifically state) are entitled to the preferential status of as­sumed truth. Conclusory statements are not. See 4 Moore’s Federal Practice § 24.14; Pacific States Box &amp; Basket Co. v. White, 1935, 296 U.S. 176, 185, 56 S.­Ct. 159, 80 L.Ed. 138; Straus v. Fox­worth, 1913, 231 U.S. 162, 168, 34 S.Ct. 42, 58 L.Ed. 168; Dyer v. Gallagher, 6 Cir., 1953, 203 F.2d 477, 479. Further, our language does not imply that the district court and this court may not consider allegations in pleadings and af­fidavits of the opponents to interven­tion to the extent that they, too, are well pleaded and supply uncontroverted and material facts. When so limited, this is not trial by affidavit. Stadin in effect ac­knowledges this by indulging in the fil­ing of his own responsive affidavit.</p>\n <p id=\"b969-11\" data-pgmap=\"969\">We make the following observations:</p>\n <p id=\"b969-12\" data-pgmap=\"969\">a. What Stadin seeks is the institu­tion of litigation in the eleven remaining categories of equipment. He would ac­complish this by the addition, through intervention, of new causes of action in the two pending suits.<a class=\"footnotemark\" href=\"#footnote_5\" id=\"ref_5\">5</a> This is in con­trast with the more common situation where intervention is sought on existing counts.</p>\n <p id=\"b969-13\" data-pgmap=\"969\">b. Stadin makes no attempt to inter­vene in the turbine-generator and meters categories as such. As to these he makes no request for additional relief and does not even reiterate the prayers which Un­ion embodies in its complaints. Consid­ering these two categories alone and iso­latedly, Stadin thus makes no claim of in­adequate representation or of possible binding effect of judgments and could be regarded as being satisfied with Union’s representation there.</p>\n <p id=\"b969-14\" data-pgmap=\"969\">c. Stadin’s claim of possible binding effect of judgments to be rendered in the turbine-generator and meters issues then comes down to nothing more than an ar­gument that adverse judgments in these categories will have, by reason of their precedential status, a serious and unto­ward effect in the others.</p>\n <p id=\"b969-15\" data-pgmap=\"969(25) 970(46)\">d. Stadin’s claim of inadequate rep­resentation comes down to assertions that Union, by not having instituted liti­gation in the remaining categories, is not even representing itself and thus is not representing Stadin at all; that absence of representation does not constitute ad­equate representation; that Woodbridge does not and cannot adequately repre­sent Stadin; and that separation of suits by defendants rather than by equipment categories is more effective.</p>\n <p id=\"b970-4\" data-pgmap=\"970\">With these observations the insuffi­cient character of Stadin’s posture for intervention in these actions becomes ap­parent.</p>\n <p id=\"b970-5\" data-pgmap=\"970\">\n 1. Intervention of right — the effect of the judgment. That an appli­cant for intervention of right under Rule 24(a) (2) “is or may be bound by a judg­ment in the action” is an obvious pre­requisite. This is apparent from the very language of the Rule. We have heretofore so held. Kozak v. Wells, su­pra, pp. 108-109 of 278 F.2d; Penning­ton v. Missouri Pac. R. R., 8 Cir., 1956, 239 F.2d 332, 334.</p>\n <p id=\"b970-6\" data-pgmap=\"970\">\n Stadin’s complaints in interven­tion reflect that the thirteen categories, that is, turbine-generators, meters, and the eleven not sued, concern different kinds of equipment. The complaints as­sert, either directly or through their in­corporation of the allegations of the main complaints, that each defendant pleaded guilty or nolo contendere, as the case may be, as to the respective cate­gories. All this is a demonstration on the face of Stadin’s pleadings alone that the issues are several in number and are varied as to factual background. This casts doubt on any claim that a judgment in one category will possibly operate with binding effect in another. But in his brief Stadin asserts, “If defendants suc­cessfully defended in the main cases ap­pellant would have great difficulty in in­dependently establishing their liability on his claims”. This, as we have noted, is Stadin’s basic argument on the effect-­of-the-judgment feature.</p>\n <p id=\"b970-7\" data-pgmap=\"970\">We had occasion in Kozak v. Wells, su­pra, to consider the significance of the language in Rule 24(a) (2). We there concluded, pp. 110-111 of 278 F.2d, that we preferred to give the word “bound” a utilitarian and realistic interpretation and not a narrow one, that the words “may be” in the Rule indicate the judg­ment need not always operate as res judi­cata, that the Rule generally was to be given a liberal interpretation, and that “perhaps each case is to be decided and explained largely on its own facts”. Cf. International Mortgage &amp; Investment Corp. v. Von Clemm, 2 Cir., 1962, 301 F.­2d 857, 861-862.</p>\n <p id=\"b970-9\" data-pgmap=\"970\">Liberality, however, does not equate with rights of indiscriminate interven­tion. The applicant must still meet the requirement that he “is or may be bound” by the judgments. The consequences of adverse judgments in the main actions are not nearly so evident here as they were in Kozak v. Wells, with the pres­ence of factors (legal effectiveness of at­tacks against a state court order and judgment; existence and propriety of the defendants’ acts) which we there spe­cifically pointed out. Here there is only “great difficulty”. The Supreme Court, in a case decided since Kozak v. Wells, has stated:</p>\n <blockquote id=\"b970-10\" data-pgmap=\"970\">“Second, appellants argue that even should they not be legally pre­cluded from bringing a private ac­tion, nevertheless the very existence of the outstanding decree would as a matter of comity either preclude further relief or operate to limit the relief some future equity court might decree. * * * [Tjhere is considerable weight to the argument that the court would feel constrained as a matter of comity at least to. build on the foundations of the pres­ent decree. * * * However, it is abundantly clear that this effect is not at all the equivalent of being le­gally bound, which is what must be made out before a party may inter­vene as of right.” Sam Fox Pub­lishing Co. v. United States, 1961, 366 U.S. 683, 694, 81 S.Ct. 1309, 1315, 6 L.Ed.2d 604.</blockquote>\n <p id=\"b970-11\" data-pgmap=\"970\">The presence or possibility of difficulty, even great difficulty, is not enough.</p>\n <p id=\"b970-12\" data-pgmap=\"970(11) 971(91)\">\n 2. Intervention of right — ade­quacy of representation. That repre­sentation of the intervention applicant’s interest “by existing parties is or may be inadequate” is another obvious prerequi­site for intervention of right under Rule 24(a) (2). This also is apparent from the very language of the Rule. Again, we have heretofore so held. Kozak v. Wells, supra, pp. 108-109 of 278 F.2d; Pennington v. Missouri Pac. R. R., su­pra, p. 334 of 239 F.2d. If the repre­sentation “may be” inadequate, that it­self is enough. Ford Motor Co. v. Bisanz Bros., 8 Cir., 1957, 249 F.2d 22, 28.</p>\n <p id=\"b971-5\" data-pgmap=\"971\">\n The representation, the adequacy of which is to be determined here, is that of Union viz-a-viz the interest of Stadin as a shareholder of Union. Two leading commentators on federal practice have said that inadequacy of representation is or may be shown by proof of collusion between the representative and an op­posing party, by the representative hav­ing or representing an interest adverse to the intervener, or by the failure of the representative in the fulfillment of his duty. 4 Moore’s Federal Practice § 24.-­08, pp. 38-39; 2 Barron &amp; Holtzoff, Fed­eral Practice and Procedure (Wright Re­vision), § 597, pp. 381-82. See also Farmland Irrigation Co. v. Dopplmaier, 9 Cir., 1955, 220 F.2d 247, 248-249; Bisanz Bros. Inc. v. Chicago-Milwaukee-­St. Paul &amp; P. R. R., D.Minn., 1957, 20 F.R.D. 353, 354, vacated on other grounds, Ford Motor Co. v. Bisanz Bros., supra, 249 F.2d 22; S. C. Johnson &amp; Son v. Boe, E.D.Pa., 1960, 187 F.Supp. 517, 519; Kind v. Markham, supra, S.D.­N.Y., 1945, 7 F.R.D. 265, 266.</p>\n <p id=\"b971-6\" data-pgmap=\"971\">\n The allegations in Stadin’s plead­ings embrace no charge of collusion; they speak of management’s voting against the Stadin resolution and they charge that this bespeaks condonation and bad faith. These latter characteri­zations are only the pleader’s conclu­sions. Billings Utility Co. v. Advisory Committee, Board of Governors, 8 Cir., 1943, 135 F.2d 108, 112; Marranzano v. Riggs Nat’l Bank, 1950, 87 U.S.App.D.C. 195, 184 F.2d 349, 351.</p>\n <p id=\"b971-7\" data-pgmap=\"971\">Neither do we find anything of sub­stance in Stadin’s pleadings as to Un­ion’s having an adverse interest to that of Stadin. The claimed adversity cen­ters in Woodbridge and in the allegations that he “is not on friendly terms with” Stadin; that he “voted against bringing the main action”; that he stands charg­ed by Stadin before the S.E.C.; and that he called that charge malicious. These, however, do not equate with Union’s hav­ing an interest adverse to Stadin. Fur­thermore, we fail to see the relevancy on this issue of the allegations as to the short swing profits, the charge of malice, and the lack of friendliness to Stadin. The allegation that Woodbridge voted against the main actions is an obvious over-interpretation of his vote against the Stadin resolution and, in any event, is largely disproved by Woodbridge’s having signed the complaint as one of the attorneys for Union in each main action. Woodbridge is only one of sev­eral counsel for Union. It is unrealistic and too much to demand that each law­yer for a corporation be on affirmative­ly friendly terms with each shareholder. We cannot escape the conclusion that Stadin’s complaint as to inadequacy of representation lies largely in the area of asserted disagreement between lawyers as to how litigation should be conducted. Mere difference of opinion among attor­neys is not of itself inadequate repre­sentation within the meaning of the Rule. If it were, intervention of right would become almost automatic.</p>\n <p id=\"b971-8\" data-pgmap=\"971\">Finally, we see no failure of Union as yet in the fulfillment of its duty. There is nothing along this line charged here with respect to the main claims. Non­feasance, if it exists, is asserted as to the categories not sued upon. What we say below with respect to Union’s refusal to act is equally pertinent here. Union must be given a reasonable opportunity to act before nonfeasance or neglect of duty within the concept of inadequate representation appears from the plead­ings.</p>\n <p id=\"b971-9\" data-pgmap=\"971(13) 972(175)\">On the factor of unfriendliness of counsel our attention is called, with em­phasis, to United States v. C. M. Lane Lifeboat Co., E.D.N.Y., 1938, 25 F.Supp. 410. This was an action by the govern­ment to recover, from its supplier and the latter’s performance bond surety, damages which the government had been compelled to pay for infringement of a patent embodied in the goods supplied. An officer of the supplier sought to inter­vene. He alleged that he and another officer, as a condition precedent to the surety’s issuance of the bond, executed an indemnity agreement in favor of the surety. The petition to intervene dis­closed that the supplier and the surety retained the same attorney and alleged that the intervener and that attorney were not on friendly terms. The court observed that any judgment rendered against the surety would enable it to pro­ceed against the intervener indemnitor and that the judgment, though not di­rectly binding the intervener, would do so indirectly. This is the heart and the significance of the case. The court did go on to observe, p. 411 of 25 F.Supp.,</p>\n <blockquote id=\"Ay3\" data-pgmap=\"972\">“Then too, there is something to be said as to the adequacy of the repre­sentation of his interest. He says that he is not on friendly terms with the attorney who in effect is repre­senting his interest.”</blockquote>\n <p id=\"b972-4\" data-pgmap=\"972\">This, it seems to us, is no more than an embellishment upon the basic holding that it was the contingent liability of the intervener which warranted interven­tion.</p>\n <p id=\"b972-5\" data-pgmap=\"972\">We recognize that the Lifeboat case has been said to be authority for inter­vention based upon unfriendliness of counsel of record. See, for example, 2 Barron &amp; Holtzoff, Federal Practice and Procedure (Wright Revision), § 597, p. 381, and Farmland Irrigation Co. v. Dop­plmaier, supra, p. 249 of 220 F.2d. These are mere references, however, and we suspect they overstate the authority of the Lifeboat case.</p>\n <p id=\"b972-6\" data-pgmap=\"972\">\n We therefore conclude that there is not enough here to demonstrate either the possible binding effect of judgments in the main actions or the possible in­adequacy of representation and that Stadin is not entitled to intervention of right.</p>\n <p id=\"b972-8\" data-pgmap=\"972\">\n 3. Permissive intervention. Hav­ing reached this conclusion as to inter­vention of right we need not tarry long with the district court’s denial of per­missive intervention under Rule 24(b) (2). It has been indicated that an or­der denying permissive intervention is not appealable unless there is abuse of discretion. Brotherhood of Railroad Trainmen v. Baltimore &amp; O. R. R., 1947, 331 U.S. 519, 524-525, 67 S.Ct. 1387, 91 L.Ed. 1646. This court has commented upon this approach in Pennington v. Missouri Pac. R. R., supra, p. 335 of 239 F.2d, and particularly in Ford Motor Co. v. Bisanz Bros., supra, pp. 26-27 of 249 F.2d. In any event, the Rule it­self directs that in the exercise of its dis­cretion the court “shall consider whether the intervention will unduly delay or prejudice the adjudication of the rights of the original parties.”</p>\n <p id=\"b972-9\" data-pgmap=\"972\">It seems unquestionably clear to us from the pleadings of the intervener that his desired incorporation in the main ac­tions of the several additional equipment categories will bring into these lawsuits added complexity; the inevitable prob­lems attendant upon additional witness­es, interrogatories and depositions; ex­panded pretrial activity; greater length of trial; and elements of confusion. These in themselves suggest delay and the clouding of the issues involved in the original causes of action. More than one trial court has observed that “Addi­tional parties always take additional time” and that “they are the source of additional questions, objections, briefs, arguments, motions and the like which tend to make the proceeding a Donny­brook Fair.” Crosby Steam Gauge &amp; Valve Co. v. Manning, Maxwell &amp; Moore, D.Mass., 1943, 51 F.Supp. 972, 973; First Congressional Church, etc. v. Evangeli­cal and Reformed Church, S.D.N.Y., 1958, 21 F.R.D. 325, 327-328; Wilson v. Illinois Central R. R. Co., N.D.Ill., 1957, 21 F.R.D. 588, 589.</p>\n <p id=\"b973-4\" data-pgmap=\"973\">\n We cannot hold that the district court’s denial of permissive interven­tion here was an abuse of the discretion possessed by the court under Rule 24 (b) (2). Compare Sutphen Estates v. United States, 1951, 342 U.S. 19, 23, 72 S.Ct. 14, 96 L.Ed. 19.</p>\n <p id=\"b973-5\" data-pgmap=\"973\">4. The derivative action aspects. Stadin in his briefs has characterized his motions to intervene as class motions filed, under Rule 23(b), F.R.Cv.P., to enforce shareholders’ secondary rights. We need not pass upon the narrow pro­cedural question whether a derivative ac­tion may properly be instituted through the device of intervention. We assume for present purposes that it may. But, having made that assumption, we fail to find upon this record that Stadin has met the conditions required for a federal de­rivative suit.</p>\n <p id=\"b973-6\" data-pgmap=\"973\">\n These conditions are several in number but Rule 23(b) itself clearly em­braces four which are applicable to the situation here: (a) that the corporation possess rights which it may properly as­sert and enforce; (b) that the plaintiff shareholder make a demand upon the cor­poration to enforce those rights; (c) that the corporation refuses so to do; and (d) that the plaintiff’s complaints set forth with particularity his efforts to secure corporate action and the rea­sons for his failure so to obtain such ac­tion or for not making such effort. See Quirke v. St. Louis-San Francisco Ry., 8 Cir., 1960, 277 F.2d 705, 707-708, cert. den. 363 U.S. 845, 80 S.Ct. 1615, 4 L.Ed.­2d 1728, and 13 Fletcher, Private Cor­porations (1961 Revision) §§ 5970, 6008. A fifth condition, which Stadin in his brief concedes still to be “the sine qua non of the stockholder’s derivative right to sue”, is that management be guilty of conduct equivalent to bad faith or breach of trust. United Copper Sec. Co. v. Amalgamated Copper Co., 1917, 244 U.S. 261, 263-264, 37 S.Ct. 509, 61 L.­Ed. 1119; Ashwander v. Tennessee Val­ley Authority, 1936, 297 U.S. 288, 319, 343, 56 S.Ct. 466, 80 L.Ed. 688; Hawes v. Oakland, 1881, 104 U.S. 450, 460-461, 26 L.Ed. 827; Heinz v. National Bank of Commerce, 8 Cir., 1916, 237 F. 942, 948-­949. Otherwise management possesses a wide discretion in determining a cor­poration’s business policies and the methods of executing them. This discre­tion extends to litigation and to a deci­sion to sue or not to sue. Merrill v. Da­vis, 1950, 359 Mo. 1191, 225 S.W.2d 763, 768. See Swanson v. Traer, 7 Cir., 1957, 249 F.2d 854, 858-859. It extends even to the settling of an antitrust claim. Post v. Buck’s Stove &amp; Range Co., 8 Cir., 1912, 200 F. 918, 920. See Sam Fox Pub­lishing Co. v. United States, supra, p. 689 of 366 U.S., p. 1313 of 81 S.Ct.</p>\n <p id=\"b973-8\" data-pgmap=\"973\">\n The demand Stadin made was that a resolution be adopted that Union take “appropriate steps in pursuit of all its legal rights” against the convicted suppliers so as to achieve reimburse­ment for the price differentials. This was followed by a statement that if Un­ion did not undertake to pursue those rights Stadin himself would seek a legal remedy. An outright demand to take “appropriate steps” is not necessarily equivalent to a demand that Union insti­tute suit for the remaining categories. The term “appropriate steps” is broad and, although it is channeled here to Clayton Act threefold damages, it may well embrace steps which are short of actual suit. It may include investiga­tion, the determination whether rights of action exist at all, negotiations, settle­ment and, under appropriate circum­stances, even a decision not to sue. Fur­thermore, Union’s refusal to comply with any demand to sue is not apparent. The shareholders did reject the resolution and to that extent refused to comply with the proposal from Stadin. But litigation was subsequently instituted as to eight categories. And we cannot conclude that the absence of litigation as to the remaining categories up to the time of the filing of the motions to intervene con­stitutes a positive and unwarranted re­fusal.</p>\n <p id=\"b973-9\" data-pgmap=\"973(30) 974(89)\">Finally, we find nothing in the plead­ings which qualifies as a breach of trust or the like as required by United Cop­per and other cases cited above. Stad­in’s claims are (a) that the directors’ opposition to his resolution was a vote against suing the defendants and (b) that the directors have condoned the sale of equipment in the other categories at rigged prices. We are not convinced that the directors’ opposition to the resolution was a vote against suit. Time is neces­sary for the investigation, development and preparation of litigation. Suits in eight categories of equipment have al­ready been instituted. The remaining categories are under investigation. This is not condonement or breach of trust.</p>\n <p id=\"b974-4\" data-pgmap=\"974\">Stadin presses upon us, however, the recent case of Rogers v. American Can Co., supra, 3 Cir., 1962, 305 F.2d 297, where, despite a vote against the suit by a majority of a corporation’s sharehold­ers, it was held that a minority share­holder could maintain a Clayton Act treble damage action against the direc­tors and the corporation’s supplier. There, however, the plaintiff’s charge was that his corporation was a captive through the conspiratorial activities of its controlling directors and a substan­tial shareholder and chief supplier. Un­der these circumstances, the court said, p. 317 of 305 F.2d:</p>\n <blockquote id=\"b974-5\" data-pgmap=\"974\">“The business judgment character of the stockholders’ determination, generally effective to definitively terminate intracorporate controver­sies, must yield to the right of a minority stockholder to expose his charges of violations of positive law * ■» *»</blockquote>\n <p id=\"b974-6\" data-pgmap=\"974\">Except in an extreme and unusual situa­tion of that kind, we do not interpret Rogers as denying the authority of Unit­ed Copper and Its companion cases and, indeed, the language we have quoted so indicates. Neither do we regard the case as indicative of a new and nation­wide public policy, as Stadin argues.</p>\n <p id=\"b974-7\" data-pgmap=\"974\">We find no comparable situation charged in the pleadings before us. There is no allegation that Union is in any way a captive or that its directors or management have engaged in conspira­torial activities with any of the convict­ed defendants. The remark of Union’s president at the 1961 meeting to the gen­eral effect that treble damage suits could possibly weaken the whole group of sup­pliers so that it would affect adversely the industry’s research hardly qualifies as a conspiratorial element. He named it as a worrisome fact and nothing more. The same is true as to the response of the president to the statements of the two shareholders. His remarks are only ac­knowledgments of the shareholders' comments and a statement of apprecia­tion for them. They do not constitute, as Stadin would have us interpret them, expressions of interest “to protect the price-fixers, and through them the ‘in­dustry’, not Union’s stockholders and consumers”. What is charged here does not take these cases out of the general rule and into any area to which the Rogers case is conceivably applicable.</p>\n <p id=\"b974-9\" data-pgmap=\"974\">These Clayton Act cases which are arising out of the 1961 Philadelphia convictions will prove complicated enough in themselves. They will become much more complicated if shareholders are allowed to intervene upon showings of no more substance than is contained in Stadin’s complaints here. As Mr. Jus­tice Jackson said, dissenting in another context in State of New Jersey v. State of New York, 1953, 345 U.S. 369, 375, 73 S.Ct. 689, 692, 97 L.Ed. 1081, “it is gen­erally bad policy to encumber any case with unnecessary intervenors.”</p>\n <p id=\"b974-10\" data-pgmap=\"974\">Stadin, of course, presumably wants only that Union have adequate protec­tion and representation and that it re­cover that which, if anything, is due from the suppliers and which may be obtained with a return, net, to the com­pany. If this is fairly assured, inter­vention seems not to be warranted. On this record and at this time, we think there is fair assurance.</p>\n <p id=\"b974-11\" data-pgmap=\"974\">The district court’s denials of the mo­tions to intervene were not improper. So far as its order pertains to interven­tion under Rule 24(a) (2), it is affirmed. So far as it concerns intervention under Rule 24(b) (2), the appeal therefrom is dismissed.</p>\n <aside data-label=\"1\" class=\"footnote\" id=\"footnote_1\">\n <a href=\"#ref_1\">1</a><p id=\"b966-10\" data-pgmap=\"966\">. Tlie district court initially denied Stadin leave to intervene in the first of these cases by an order expressing the opinion re­quired by 28 U.S.C. § 1292(b) as a condi­tion of this court’s discretionary allowance of an appeal from an, order not otherwise appealable under that section. We denied Stadin permission to take that appeal but did so without prejudice to any rights he may otherwise have.</p>\n <p id=\"b966-11\" data-pgmap=\"966\">Thereafter the district court entered an order denying Stadin leave to intervene in the second case. By that same order, how­ever, the court consolidated both cases for purposes of appeal and found that Stadin’s claim was a shareholders’ class claim for damages in addition to those Sought by union in the main actions and that the sit­uation was thus one of multiple claims. It then made the express determination pre­scribed by Rule 54(b), F.R.Cv.P., as to no just reason for delay and entered judg­ment against Stadin. The appeal there­fore is from the final decision in each case denying' Stadin leave to intervene.</p>\n </aside>\n <aside data-label=\"2\" class=\"footnote\" id=\"footnote_2\">\n <a href=\"#ref_2\">2</a><p id=\"b966-16\" data-pgmap=\"966\">. Rule 24. “(a) Intervention of Right. Upon timely application anyone shall be permitted to intervene in an action: * * * (2) when the representation of the applicant’s interest by existing parties is or may be inadequate and the applicant is or may be bound by a judgment in the action * *</p>\n </aside>\n <aside data-label=\"3\" class=\"footnote\" id=\"footnote_3\">\n <a href=\"#ref_3\">3</a><p id=\"b967-9\" data-pgmap=\"967\">. Rule 24. “(b) Permissive Intervention. Upon timely application anyone may be permitted to intervene in an action: * * * (2) when an applicant’s claim or defense and the main action have a question of law or fact in common. * * * In. exercising its discretion the court shall consider whether the inter­vention will unduly delay or prejudice the adjudication of the rights of the original parties.”</p>\n </aside>\n <aside data-label=\"4\" class=\"footnote\" id=\"footnote_4\">\n <a href=\"#ref_4\">4</a><p id=\"b967-15\" data-pgmap=\"967\">. ‘‘Resolved, that the Company take ap­propriate steps in pursuit of all its legal rights, including its right to triple dam­ages under the Clayton Act, against any of those of its electrical equipment sup­pliers who were recently convicted of anti­trust law violations by U. S. District Judge J. Cullen Ganey, in Philadelphia, so as to achieve for the Company reimburse­ment of the difference between the illegal price it paid such suppliers for elec­trical equipment sold to it, and the fair market value of such equipment at the time it was bought.”</p>\n </aside>\n <aside data-label=\"5\" class=\"footnote\" id=\"footnote_5\">\n <a href=\"#ref_5\">5</a><p id=\"b969-16\" data-pgmap=\"969\">. See as to this, under Rule 24(b), Kind v. Markham, S.D.N.Y., 1945, 7 F.R.D. 265, 266; Owen v. Paramount Productions, S.­D.Cal., 1941, 41 F.Supp. 557, 561.</p>\n </aside>\n </article>\n </section>\n ",
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