KELLY, Circuit Judge.
Objector-Appellant Dale Hefner appeals from the district court's denial of his motion for settlement-related discovery, approval of the settlement agreement, and order regarding attorneys' fees.
This case concerns the settlement agreement and attorneys' fees related to two separate shareholder derivative suits on behalf of SandRidge Energy Inc. ("SandRidge") against its directors. The first of those actions was filed in federal district court in January 2013. The federal derivative suit alleged self-dealing, usurpation of corporate opportunities, and misappropriation by Tom Ward, SandRidge's founding CEO, and entities affiliated with him.
The second derivative suit was filed in Oklahoma state court in January 2013 by Mr. Hefner. 5 Aplt. App. 1310-58. The director-defendants moved the state court to stay the action pending a resolution in the federal case, or in the alternative to dismiss the suit entirely. Mr. Hefner objected, and the state court stayed the action but denied the motion to dismiss. 6 Aplt. App. 1417-18. After further briefing and a renewed motion to dismiss, the state court again denied the motion.
On October 9, 2015, the federal district court granted its preliminary approval of a partial settlement in the federal suit. 4 Aplt. App. 1017-19. On October 30, 2015, Mr. Hefner filed notice of his intent to appear at the settlement hearing, object to the settlement, and request additional settlement-related discovery.
In response, Mr. Hefner (1) filed a contingent motion for attorneys' fees and reimbursement of expenses, (2) objected to the settlement, and (3) requested additional settlement-related discovery. In his request for attorneys' fees, Mr. Hefner contended that without his "successful litigation in the State Action, the Settlement would not have occurred — and certainly not on the same terms." 5 Aplt. App. 1266. He also argued that after the federal case initially was dismissed, he "helped turn the tide in [the federal] litigation, beating a motion to dismiss [in state court] on demand futility grounds" and then cooperated with the federal litigation by agreeing to temporarily stay his state-court action.
Regarding the proposed settlement, Mr. Hefner argued that the federal court lacked subject-matter jurisdiction; that the settlement was for the benefit of the attorneys and insurance companies, but not of SandRidge itself since the funds would first be used to pay attorneys, then to pay for separate litigation (which the insurance companies would otherwise pay for), and would only then — if there was anything left — accrue to SandRidge; that the request for $13 million in attorneys' fees was too large, representing over 34% of the total settlement fund; and that the proposed agreement would unfairly settle unique claims brought by Mr. Hefner in the state-court action. 6 Aplt. App. 1572-90. In sum, Mr. Hefner contended that the benefit to SandRidge did not outweigh the value of continuing litigation and that the settlement should be rejected.
The district court denied Mr. Hefner's motion for additional discovery and, after a hearing on the other matters, entered a final order and judgment approving the proposed partial settlement and denying Mr. Hefner's request for attorneys' fees. 8 Aplt. App. 2062-68.
Mr. Hefner appealed to this court, challenging the federal court's jurisdiction to approve the settlement and arguing that the district court abused its discretion by
Thereafter, on May 16, 2016, SandRidge filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy. We abated the appeal pending the bankruptcy proceedings. On November 14, 2016, SandRidge gave notice of the bankruptcy court's approval of the company's plan of reorganization and filed a contemporaneous motion to dismiss the appeal as moot.
We ordered appellate briefing resumed, reserving the motion to dismiss for the merits panel. On April 24, 2017, Mr. Hefner reported that the bankruptcy court denied his motion for clarification "so long as the issue ... remains pending before the Tenth Circuit Court of Appeals unless specifically requested to do so." See Aplt. Status Report Regarding Bankruptcy Ct. Inquiry (Aug. 24, 2017).
Mr. Hefner contends that the district court erred in exercising subject-matter jurisdiction over the federal derivative litigation because the underlying parties had not proven diversity of citizenship. Aplt. Br. at 10-14. According to Mr. Hefner, "Plaintiffs had to establish ... that not only are the entities members' citizenship diverse from that of Plaintiffs, but that their members' members, such as trustees, limited partners, and beneficiaries, are also diverse." Aplt. Br. at 13.
The initial disclosure statements did not say what states these entities are citizens of, nor did they declare who the members' members are or of what states those members are citizens. Aplt. App. 145-50. Accordingly, we requested Plaintiffs to provide this additional information. It shows the citizenship of each of the defendant parties.
Sandridge argues that Mr. Hefner no longer has standing to bring a claim because the claim has been mooted by subsequent events. We agree that Mr. Hefner's claims have been mooted except his claim for attorneys' fees.
As part of its approval of SandRidge's plan of reorganization, the bankruptcy court expressly approved the release by debtor SandRidge of any and all claims and suits, including any derivative actions it had against former or current company directors and officers.
In ascertaining whether a case has become moot, the court considers whether subsequent events have deprived the plaintiff of standing. "Article III mootness is `the doctrine of standing set in a time frame: The requisite personal interest that must exist at the commencement of the litigation (standing) must continue throughout its existence (mootness).'"
According to SandRidge, the appeal is moot not only because Mr. Hefner himself no longer has standing to pursue a derivative action or objection but because no one else has standing to pursue such a claim either. Thus, "[i]f Mr. Hefner were somehow to prevail on this appeal, the settlement would be unwound and the case would be remanded, but after remand there would be no derivative plaintiffs with standing to litigate the suit and all of the claims against the prepetition directors and officers have been released and discharged in the bankruptcy." Reply in Supp. of Mot. to Dismiss at 2. It would therefore be impossible for the district court to grant the relief that Mr. Hefner requests.
Mr. Hefner responds that his lack of standing to pursue a derivative action does not mean that he lacks standing to object to the settlement. Opp. to Mot. to Dismiss at 8-10. This is ordinarily true. It is the derivative plaintiff who is subject to the continuous ownership requirement, while the objector "need only own stock in the corporation at the time of the settlement hearing."
Nonetheless, ripeness on its own is not enough to establish justiciability. The question still remains as to what relief the court could offer. To be justiciable, the suit must remain "live" throughout the course of litigation such that there is a "legally cognizable interest in the outcome."
This latter point is where Mr. Hefner's claims fail. If Mr. Hefner were to succeed in showing that the district court abused its discretion in approving the settlement, this court could reverse the settlement judgment and remand for further action. On remand, the district court would then have to dismiss the derivative suit entirely because none of the plaintiffs have standing to pursue it — all their shares have been cancelled, and all their claims have become property of reorganized SandRidge. Thus, the relief initially requested — a settlement that is more favorable to pre-petition SandRidge — is
This leaves Mr. Hefner's request for attorneys' fees. Plaintiffs include this request with the others on appeal as moot, but this claim is unlike the others. Mr. Hefner's argument is that his attorneys conferred a substantial benefit to SandRidge as part of the settlement process and that they should be paid for that benefit. This is a backward-looking claim for monetary compensation that does not depend on Mr. Hefner's future ability to pursue a derivative claim on behalf of SandRidge.
Mr. Hefner next argues that the district court incorrectly denied his request for his counsel's attorneys' fees. The district court concluded that Mr. Hefner conferred "no substantial benefit to SandRidge or its shareholders," "that no action taken either by Hefner or by his counsel aided or advanced the prosecution of the Plaintiffs' claims against the Settling Defendants or contributed to the negotiation of the Settlement," "and that no objections to the Settlement lodged by Hefner or his counsel benefitted SandRidge or its shareholders or assisted the Court either in assessing the fairness, adequacy and reasonableness of the Settlement."
Under the clearly erroneous standard, a district court's factual findings will be upheld unless "on the entire evidence [we are] left with the definite and firm conviction that a mistake has been committed."
Mr. Hefner's argument is that the $13 million the district court awarded from the common fund to Plaintiffs' attorneys unjustly "compensat[es] Plaintiffs for value generated by Hefner and his counsel's efforts." Aplt. Br. at 49. Moreover, Mr. Hefner argues that the district court erred by confining its analysis to the benefit Mr. Hefner may have contributed in the federal-court action rather than to the company more generally.
In this last point, Mr. Hefner is correct that objectors and other parties who contribute to the "collective good" of the corporation can still be compensated from the common fund for any benefit they confer to the other shareholders.
Mr. Hefner also contends that the district court abused its discretion by not seriously considering Mr. Hefner's objections given the record evidence. A district court abuses its discretion when its decision is "arbitrary, capricious or whimsical, or manifestly unreasonable."
We AFFIRM the district court's judgment insofar as attorneys' fees and DISMISS the balance of the appeal as moot. All pending motions are denied.