On February 3, 2022, the First Department issued a decision in Newman v. Newman, 2022 NY Slip Op. 00731, upholding both direct and derivative claims by a plaintiff where the claims sought relief for different injuries, explaining:
The motion court correctly determined that plaintiff’s individual claims for breach of fiduciary duty, unjust enrichment, and constructive trust were not duplicative of the derivative claims asserted on behalf of nominal defendant Port Parties Ltd. and therefore, that plaintiff’s individual claims could proceed based on the allegations that he, individually, was exposed to personal criminal and civil liability as a result of defendants’ conduct. The alleged harm to plaintiff — namely, potential personal civil and criminal liability as a result of defendants’ alleged misappropriations from the corporation — is an individual harm sufficiently separate and distinct from the harm suffered by the corporation on account of defendants’ failure to pay certain state and federal taxes. Likewise, the benefit the corporation seeks to recover on its claim to compensate it for the alleged failure to pay certain taxes would not necessarily be the same benefit sought by plaintiff, who seeks the resolution of the potential civil and criminal liability for the conduct alleged. Indeed, federal courts consider the penalty imposed upon individuals for willful failure to pay withholding taxes to be neither derivative of nor secondary to the corporate employer’s liability for the same tax.
Additionally, the amended complaint pleads facts sufficient to support an independent breach of fiduciary duty owed to plaintiff, separate from that owed to the corporation. Given the allegations that the nominal defendant corporation was a closely-held family business co-owned by plaintiff and his father, who is also a defendant, a separate fiduciary duty arises from their status as family members. Because plaintiff alleges an independent duty, his breach of fiduciary duty claim is not inextricably embedded in the derivative claims. In such circumstances, the alleged harm to plaintiff differs from that of the arm’s length shareholder whose stock value would be affected by the individual defendants’ conduct. Here, because the amended complaint specifically alleges that plaintiff could face personal liability arising from defendants’ actions, the alleged harm is sufficiently separate and distinct to constitute an individual harm to plaintiff, with distinct benefits to plaintiff and the corporation if each were to prevail.
(Internal quotations and citations omitted).