ANDREW P. GORDON, District Judge.
In my previous order, I provided the background facts in this breach-of-contract-case, so I do not repeat them here. Defendants move to dismiss all four of Plaintiff ACE American Insurance Company's claims against them: (1) fraudulent conveyance, (2) breach of fiduciary duty (3) fraudulent concealment, and (4) declaratory judgment of alter-ego liability.
Defendants argue that ACE's fraudulent conveyance and breach of fiduciary duty claims fail because only creditors can bring those claims and, in Defendants' view, ACE is not a creditor. Defendants similarly argue they did not have any duty to disclose their internal workings to ACE, so ACE's third claim—fraudulent concealment—must also fail. Finally, defendants argue that if ACE's other three claims fail, its declaratory judgment claim must fail as well because a declaratory judgement claim cannot survive as an independent cause of action.
I grant defendants' motion in part and deny it in part. I grant it as to ACE's fraudulent concealment claim. ACE has not set forth facts to establish that defendants owed it a special duty to disclose their internal workings; and without a duty to disclose, there can be no fraudulent concealment. I deny defendants' motion, however, as to ACE's other three claims. In terms of fraudulent conveyance, I have already ruled that ACE is a creditor; as a result, it can bring a fraudulent conveyance claim. Being a creditor of an allegedly insolvent LLC also means ACE can maintain its breach of fiduciary duty claim. The claim is not a derivative action but rather a direct action, so defendants' arguments that ACE has not properly pleaded a derivative claim are of no consequence. ACE's final claim, for declaratory judgment, likewise survives. Defendants' only argument against that claim is that it could not survive as an independent action. But because I find that two other of ACE's claims survive, the declaratory judgment claim survives as well.
A complaint must provide "[a] short and plain statement of the claim showing that the pleader is entitled to relief."
In Iqbal, the Supreme Court clarified the two-step approach district courts are to apply when considering a motion to dismiss. First, the court must accept as true all well-pleaded factual allegations in the complaint; however, legal conclusions are not entitled to the assumption of truth.
Defendants raise only one argument in support of dismissing ACE's fraudulent conveyance claim: only creditors can bring claims for fraudulent conveyance and, according to defendants, ACE is not a creditor.
Defendants argue that ACE's breach of fiduciary duty claim must be dismissed for three independent reasons: "(1) [ACE]'s claim is derivative in nature, and thus the Complaint fails to satisfy the requirements of Fed. R. Civ. P. 23.1; (2) ACE does not have standing to pursue such a derivative claim; and (3) ACE is not a creditor and thus no fiduciary duty is owed by Defendants."
I mentioned above that I have determined that ACE is a creditor; as a result, defendants' third reason carries no weight. As for their first two reasons, each is premised on the argument that ACE's claim is a derivative action. But I find that it is instead a direct action. "The `proper analysis' for distinguishing between direct and derivative claims requires a court to examine `the nature of the wrong and to whom the relief should go.'"
Here, ACE suffered the alleged harm and it would receive the benefit of recovery. This case is, in many ways, just a collection action. ACE is not suing on behalf of a corporation or any other entity. It is simply trying to collect the money it was awarded in the arbitration proceedings. And because the limited liability companies it wants to collect from have become increasingly insolvent, ACE is now targeting Mr. Hallier, who, according to ACE, is responsible for "looting [the companies] instead of paying longtime vendors such as ACE."
ACE cannot, however, maintain its fraudulent concealment claim. To prove this cause of action in Nevada, ACE would have to show that defendants had "a duty to disclose" a certain material fact to ACE.
"A duty to disclose may arise when a fiduciary relationship exists between the parties or where the parties enjoy a `special relationship,' that is, where a party reasonably imparts special confidence in the defendant and the defendant would reasonably know of this confidence."
Defendants' sole argument against ACE's declaratory judgment claim is that it cannot survive as an independent cause of action. If ACE's other three claims fail, they argue, its declaratory judgment claim must fail too. As support for this proposition, they cite Petit v. Fannie Mae, a case in which this court held that "a `claim' for declaratory relief is not a substantive cause of action at all; it is merely a prayer for a remedy."
IT IS HEREBY ORDERED that Defendants' Motion to Dismiss (