Shareholder Derivative Action Attorney

When corporate directors and officers breach their duties, the harm often falls on the corporation itself — and, by extension, on every shareholder who has invested in it. New York law provides a powerful remedy: the shareholder derivative action. Through this mechanism, shareholders may step into the shoes of the corporation and pursue claims that its leadership has refused or failed to bring. Our New York City shareholder derivative action attorneys represent investors, minority shareholders, and LLC members throughout the five boroughs in complex litigation against directors, officers, and controlling stakeholders who have abused their positions of trust.

What Is a Shareholder Derivative Action?

A derivative action is a lawsuit brought by a shareholder on behalf of the corporation, rather than in the shareholder's individual capacity. The claim belongs to the corporation, but because the very people who control the corporation — its board of directors — are often the alleged wrongdoers, they cannot be expected to sue themselves. New York law therefore permits qualifying shareholders to enforce the corporation's rights when management will not.

Any recovery in a derivative action generally flows to the corporation itself, not directly to the shareholder plaintiff. Shareholders benefit indirectly through the restoration of corporate value, improved governance, and the removal or discipline of faithless fiduciaries. Courts may also award attorneys' fees from the recovery when the litigation confers a substantial benefit on the corporation.

The Legal Framework: New York Business Corporation Law § 626

Derivative actions involving New York corporations are governed primarily by Section 626 of the New York Business Corporation Law (BCL). This statute establishes strict prerequisites that a shareholder must satisfy before a court will allow the case to proceed:

  • Contemporaneous ownership. The plaintiff must have been a shareholder at the time of the transaction complained of, or must have received shares by operation of law (such as inheritance) from someone who was. A shareholder who purchased stock after the misconduct occurred generally cannot sue over it.
  • Continuous ownership. The plaintiff must remain a shareholder throughout the litigation. Selling all of one's shares mid-case typically destroys standing.
  • Pleading demand or demand futility. The complaint must set forth, with particularity, either the efforts the plaintiff made to demand that the board initiate the action, or the reasons why such a demand would have been futile.

The Demand Requirement and Demand Futility

The demand requirement is often the single most contested issue in New York derivative litigation. Before suing, a shareholder is ordinarily expected to demand that the board of directors take corrective action. If the board refuses in good faith after a reasonable investigation, courts will often defer to that decision under the business judgment rule.

However, New York courts excuse the demand requirement where a demand would be futile. Under the standard articulated by the New York Court of Appeals in Marx v. Akers, demand is excused where the complaint alleges with particularity that:

  1. A majority of the directors are interested in the challenged transaction — either through direct self-interest or a loss of independence because they are controlled by an interested director;
  2. The directors failed to inform themselves about the transaction to a degree reasonably appropriate under the circumstances; or
  3. The challenged transaction was so egregious on its face that it could not have been the product of sound business judgment.

Because these allegations must be pleaded with particularity — not in conclusory terms — a thorough pre-suit investigation is essential. Our attorneys use books-and-records demands under BCL § 624, public filings, and other investigative tools to build a factual record before the complaint is ever filed.

Common Claims Asserted in Derivative Actions

Derivative litigation in New York frequently involves the following categories of misconduct:

  • Breach of fiduciary duty. Directors and officers owe the corporation duties of care and loyalty. Self-dealing, conflicts of interest, and grossly negligent oversight can all give rise to derivative claims.
  • Self-dealing and usurpation of corporate opportunities. Insiders who divert business opportunities, contracts, or assets to themselves or affiliated entities may be compelled to disgorge their gains.
  • Corporate waste. Transactions in which the corporation receives no meaningful consideration — such as excessive executive compensation untethered to performance — may constitute actionable waste.
  • Unjust enrichment and constructive fraud. Fiduciaries who profit at the corporation's expense may be required to hold those profits in constructive trust for the company.
  • Mismanagement and failure of oversight. A board's sustained failure to implement or monitor internal controls can support derivative claims when that failure causes harm to the corporation.

Derivative Claims in Closely Held Companies and LLCs

Derivative litigation is not limited to publicly traded companies. In New York City's economy of family businesses, real estate ventures, and professional entities, derivative claims are a critical tool for minority owners of closely held corporations. The New York Court of Appeals has also confirmed, in Tzolis v. Wolff, that members of New York limited liability companies may bring derivative actions on behalf of the LLC, even though the Limited Liability Company Law does not expressly provide for them. Limited partners enjoy similar rights under New York's partnership statutes.

In closely held entities, derivative claims often arise alongside minority shareholder oppression disputes, deadlock, freeze-outs, and dissolution proceedings. We evaluate every matter holistically to determine whether derivative claims, direct claims, or both best serve our client's objectives.

Key Procedural Considerations Under New York Law

Security for Expenses

Under BCL § 627, a corporation may require a derivative plaintiff to post security for the corporation's litigation expenses unless the plaintiff holds at least five percent of any class of shares or shares with a fair value exceeding $50,000. Structuring the plaintiff group properly at the outset — sometimes by joining multiple shareholders — can avoid this obstacle.

Special Litigation Committees

Boards facing derivative claims frequently appoint a special litigation committee of purportedly independent directors to investigate and, often, to recommend dismissal. New York courts will scrutinize whether the committee members were genuinely disinterested and independent and whether their investigation was conducted in good faith. Challenging a flawed committee process is often decisive to the survival of the case.

Court Approval of Settlements

Because a derivative action is prosecuted on behalf of the corporation and affects all shareholders, BCL § 626(d) requires court approval of any settlement, compromise, or discontinuance, with notice to affected shareholders as the court directs. This safeguard prevents collusive settlements that benefit the named plaintiff at the expense of the company.

How Our New York City Attorneys Can Help

Derivative litigation demands both procedural precision and substantive command of fiduciary duty law. Our approach includes:

  • Pre-suit investigation, including statutory books-and-records demands to obtain corporate documents before filing;
  • Strategic demand analysis, determining whether to make a demand on the board or plead demand futility;
  • Aggressive motion practice and discovery, including challenges to special litigation committee findings;
  • Negotiation of governance reforms and monetary recoveries that deliver lasting value to the corporation; and
  • Trial-ready advocacy in the Commercial Division of the New York Supreme Court and federal courts sitting in New York City.

We also defend directors, officers, and companies against derivative claims, giving us insight into how both sides of these disputes are litigated.

Speak With a Shareholder Derivative Action Attorney Today

If you believe that directors, officers, or controlling shareholders have harmed a company in which you hold an interest, time matters. Statutes of limitations, share ownership requirements, and evidence preservation issues can all affect your rights. Contact our New York City office today to schedule a confidential consultation with an experienced shareholder derivative action attorney and learn how New York law can help you protect your investment and hold corporate fiduciaries accountable.

You can contact us by phone at 212-233-1233 or by email at [email protected].

Attorney Albert Goodwin

About the Author

Albert Goodwin Esq. is a licensed New York attorney with over 18 years of courtroom experience. His extensive knowledge and expertise make him well-qualified to write authoritative articles on a wide range of legal topics. He can be reached at 212-233-1233 or [email protected].

Albert Goodwin gave interviews to and appeared on the following media outlets:

ProPublica Forbes ABC CNBC CBS NBC News Discovery Wall Street Journal NPR

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