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Dillard, Chief Judge.A group of shareholders, operating as Southeastern Hospitality Management, Inc. (“Southeastern”), purchased a tract of commercial property in Albany, Georgia, that included a distressed hotel. Approximately one year later, Southeastern sold the property to South Georgia Partners, LLC (“SGP”). Thereafter, 2602 Deerfield, LLC (“Deerfield”), a Southeastern shareholder, and Deerfield’s owners, Rajendra Patel and Savan Patel, filed suit against, among others, Southeastern shareholders Milan Patel, Umang Patel, and SGP. Specifically, the plaintiffs alleged that Milan and Umang failed to disclose to the other Southeastern shareholders the existence of a valuable lease on the property or their interest in SGP, resulting in Southeastern selling the property to SGP for less than it was worth.[1] The plaintiffs asserted numerous causes of action, including claims for breach of fiduciary duty, breach of the duty of loyalty, and fraud. Thereafter, the defendants filed a motion for summary judgment, arguing that the plaintiffs should have brought their claims in a derivative action on behalf of Southeastern, rather than as a direct action. But the trial court denied in part this motion, and the defendants appealed. For the reasons set forth infra, we reverse.Viewed in the light most favorable to the plaintiffs (i.e., the nonmoving parties),[2] the record shows that Rajendra was a friend and business associate of Milan’s father. In 2010, Rajendra, and his son, Savan—both residents of New Jersey—decided to purchase a note, secured by a 4.6-acre tract of commercial property in Albany, Georgia, containing a then-closed hotel. Savan and Rajendra decided to buy the note with Milan and Umang, business partners who first became friends in college. The note was initially purchased for just over $880,000 by a different entity owned by Savan and Rajendra, but it was later transferred to Southeastern, an “open” Georgia corporation. With regard to the note, Savan and Rajendra were responsible for providing 50 percent of the capital, which they did through Deerfield, a corporation in which they were shareholders. Likewise, Milan and Umang were responsible for providing the other 50 percent of the capital. Milan and Umang each contributed a portion of the capital themselves, and they raised the rest of the money from their family and close friends. Ultimately, Southeastern was owned by the following shareholders: Deerfield; Milan; Umang; Umang’s father-in-law, Rajesh Desai; Umang’s grandfather, Vallabhbhai Patel;[3] Milan’s father-in-law, Sudhir Patel; and Milan and Umang’s friends, Sunil Nair, Chirag Patel, and Rahul Patel. Milan and Umang unilaterally made themselves officers of Southeastern, which followed no corporate formalities and had no operating agreement. And, because they lived in Georgia, Milan and Umang handled the corporation’s day-to-day operations.The Southeastern shareholders’ plan was to “maximize” the property’s value, either by opening and operating the closed hotel or finding other commercial tenants. To that end, Southeastern obtained a deed in lieu of foreclosure on the property, and it briefly reopened the hotel in May 2011. Meanwhile, Savan, Rajendra, and Milan sought tenants and other business opportunities for the property. But in the spring of 2011, Milan and Umang told Savan and Rajendra that they had not been able to locate any tenants and they recommended that Southeastern sell the property.In August 2011, Milan, acting on behalf of Southeastern, signed a purchase and sale agreement to transfer the property to SGP for $1,600,000. Umang represented to Savan and Rajendra that SGP was comprised of “a group of doctors from Columbus, Georgia.” But in fact, Umang organized SGP. And initially, Umang owned 100 percent of SGP; but he later transferred two-thirds of his interest to Milan.Shortly after Southeastern committed to the purchase and sale agreement with SGP, Milan signed a 30-year lease on behalf of the corporation to develop an Olive Garden restaurant on the property. At the closing, with Milan and Umang acting on behalf of both Southeastern and SGP, Southeastern assigned its interest in the Olive Garden lease to SGP. And ultimately, on February 14, 2012, the day after Umang transferred part of his interest in SGP to Milan, SGP purchased the property for $1,550,000. According to evidence adduced by the plaintiffs, however, at the time of the 2012 sale, the property was actually worth $3,500,000.[4]Thereafter, Umang and Milan transferred their entire interests in SGP to their wives and other family members—including a five percent interest to each of their fathers-in-law, Rajesh and Sudhir. Despite the transfer, Milan and Umang continued to manage SGP, handling the day-to-day operations. Then, in 2014, Milan and Umang subdivided the property and created Dawson Road Partners, LLC (“DRP”) to hold the then-vacant land, while SGP continued to hold the portion of the property containing the Olive Garden restaurant. The same people who own SGP, including Rajesh and Sudhir, also own DRP. And as with SGP, Milan and Umang manage DRP.In September 2015, the plaintiffs—Deerfield, Rajendra, and Savan—filed suit against Milan, Umang, SGP, and DRP, asserting numerous claims, including claims for breach of fiduciary duty, breach of the duty of loyalty, fraud, conspiracy, fraudulent transfer, state RICO violations, punitive damages, and attorney fees. Specifically, the plaintiffs allege that Milan and Umang, inter alia, failed to inform them of and made affirmative misrepresentations regarding the Olive Garden lease and their interest in SGP prior to the sale of the property. Initially, Southeastern was also a plaintiff, but it subsequently dismissed its claims against the defendants.[5]Discovery ensued, during which evidence was adduced that Sudhir and Rajesh, Milan and Umang’s fathers-in-law, were satisfied with their investments in Southeastern, had no concerns regarding Milan and Umang’s management of the company, and would not sue Milan and Umang over the investment. Likewise, Sunil Nair, one of the other nonparty shareholders, was also satisfied with his investment in Southeastern. Sunil later partnered with Milan and Umang in another business venture and testified in a deposition that he believed they were honest.One of the other nonparty shareholders, Rahul—who also had other business deals with Milan—testified at his deposition that he received no updates about the property development and knew nothing about the Olive Garden lease. Nevertheless, he trusted Milan and was pleased with the return on his investment in Southeastern. And while he did not believe that Milan and Umang lied to him or caused him any damage, Rahul did not have a clear understanding of the lawsuit. Indeed, at the time of his deposition in October 2016, Rahul had not consulted with a lawyer or made a decision regarding whether to join the suit as a plaintiff.Chirag, the final nonparty shareholder, was still involved in a different business deal with Umang at the time of his December 2016 deposition Chirag testified that, initially, he trusted Umang and Milan and expressed no dissatisfaction with the return on his investment in Southeastern because “[he] had no clue about anything.” He later learned of the Olive Garden lease and asked Umang about it. Suffice it to say, Chirag was not happy that Umang had failed to disclose the lease earlier, but he figured, “I got what I got for it and I’m happy with it and I moved on with it.” But when Chirag learned of the lawsuit, he was shocked, upset, and became concerned that he lost money on the venture because the property should have been sold at a higher price. In that regard, Chirag explained that “if there was money left on the table and I didn’t receive it, I need to get that money.” Morever, if the plaintiffs were going to recover damages, Chirag did not want to be left out. And when asked if Umang had ever communicated anything to him that he believed to be false, Chirag replied that he was told the property was priced at $1,600,000, and that Umang failed to disclose his own investment in SGP.At time of his deposition, Chirag had not spoken to an attorney, but he said, “I’m still weighing my options on what I want to do at this moment. . . . [W]hen I do make the decision, I will seek my own counsel and figure out things on my own, whatever I need to do.” In addition to the deposition testimony detailed supra, Sunil, Rahul, and Chirag also filed affidavits, in which they averred that they had “not ruled out the possibility of filing a lawsuit” against Milan and Umang. In contrast to Rajesh and Sudhir, the other nonparty shareholders were not given an opportunity to purchase any interest in SGP.Based on the foregoing evidence, the defendants filed a motion for summary judgment, arguing, inter alia, that the plaintiffs were asserting impermissible direct claims. The defendants also asserted that Savan and Rajendra had no standing to bring any claims because they were not Southeastern shareholders.Following a hearing, the trial granted summary judgment to the defendants as to the claims by Savan and Rajendra, finding that they had no standing to assert direct claims, and dismissed them. But the court denied the defendants’ motion for summary judgment as to Deerfield, finding that its claims could be brought in a direct action. Following the denial, in part, of the motion for summary judgment, the defendants obtained a certificate of immediate review. Shortly thereafter, this Court granted interlocutory review. This appeal follows.The standards for summary adjudication are well settled. Summary judgment is proper “if the pleadings, depositions, answers to interrogatories, and admissions on file, together with the affidavits, if any, show that there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and that the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law[.]“[6] A summary judgment ruling enjoys “no presumption of correctness on appeal, and an appellate court must satisfy itself de novo that the requirements of OCGA § 9-11-56 (c) have been met.”[7] Importantly, it is not the role of this Court to “sort through the evidence, resolve conflicts, and make findings of fact based on the evidence it finds credible.”[8] Rather, in our de novo review of a trial court’s denial of a motion for summary judgment, we must “determine whether there is a genuine issue of material fact and whether the undisputed facts, viewed in the light most favorable to the nonmoving party, warrant judgment as a matter of law.”[9]Here, in several related claims of error, the defendants assert that the trial court applied incorrect legal standards and thus erred in concluding that Deerfield’s direct claims could proceed. We agree.As this Court has previously explained, “[a] derivative suit is brought on behalf of a corporation for harm done to it and any damages recovered are paid to the corporation.”[10] And the determination of whether a claim is derivative or direct is made by “looking to what the pleader alleged.”[11] Importantly, it is “the nature of the wrong alleged and not the pleader’s designation or stated intention that controls the court’s decision.”[12] Nonetheless, the general rule is that “allegations of misappropriation of corporate assets and breach of fiduciary duty can only be pursued in a shareholder derivative suit brought on behalf of the corporation, because the injury is to the corporation and its shareholders collectively.”[13] Although a plaintiff may bring a direct action for injuries done to it in its individual capacity by corporate fiduciaries, “our Supreme Court has held that to have standing to sue individually, rather than derivatively on behalf of the corporation, the plaintiff must allege more than an injury resulting from a wrong to the corporation.”[14] Thus, to set out an individual action, the plaintiff must “allege either an injury which is separate and distinct from that suffered by other shareholders, or a wrong involving a contractual right of a shareholder which exists independently of any right of the corporation.”[15] But even if a shareholder fails to allege a special injury, it may nevertheless bring a direct action if the corporation is closely held and “the circumstances show that the reasons for the general rule requiring a derivative suit do not apply.”[16] The reasons for ordinarily requiring derivative actions are:(1) to prevent multiple suits by shareholders; (2) to protect corporate creditors by ensuring that the recovery goes to the corporation; (3) to protect the interest of all the shareholders by ensuring that the recovery goes to the corporation, rather than allowing recovery by one or a few shareholders to the prejudice of others; and (4) to adequately compensate injured shareholders by increasing their share values.[17]In its order denying summary judgment, the trial court found that the allegedly fraudulent misstatements or omissions of material fact were made only to Deerfield’s shareholders, Rajendra and Savan, and not to any of the other shareholders of Southeastern, such that it could not say as a matter of law that there was no special injury to Deerfield. Furthermore, even if Deerfield had not alleged a special injury, the trial court found that the defendants had not shown the reasons for a derivative action were applicable here. Specifically, the nonparty shareholders are either related to Milan and Umang or have close relationships with them and suggested, in their depositions, that they would not pursue a lawsuit against the defendants. With regard to the third reason for a derivative action, the court noted that the plaintiffs are only seeking “Deerfield’s 50 [percent] share of the damages” and the other nonparty shareholders are “free to bring their own direct claims if they so choose.”[18]As an initial matter, we disagree with the trial court that any of the claims alleged a special injury to Deerfield separate and distinct from that suffered by the other nonparty shareholders. Contrary to Deerfield’s argument, there was evidence that Milan and Umang failed to disclose the Olive Garden lease to some of the nonparty shareholders and their interest in SGP to at least one nonparty shareholder. But even if the defendants’ wrongful acts were directed only toward Deerfield and its shareholders, any injury suffered by Deerfield as a result of Milan and Umang’s sale of Southeastern’s property to SGP at an undervalued price is the same as the injury suffered by the nonparty shareholders and Southeastern itself.[19] Notably, although Sudhir and Rajesh own shares of SGP and DRP, the other nonparty shareholders, including Rahul, Sunil Nair, and Chirag, do not. Thus, because Deerfield has not alleged a special injury that was not suffered by these nonparty shareholders, it is required to bring its claims in a derivative action unless it can show that the reasons for the general rule requiring a derivative suit do not apply.[20]Here, the trial court found that a direct action was permitted because the nonparty shareholders could bring their own direct actions, but this reasoning cannot support a direct action because, as explained supra, one of the reasons for requiring a derivative suit is to prevent multiple lawsuits.[21] And during his deposition, one of the nonparty shareholders said that, with regard to the lawsuit, he intended to possibly seek his own counsel. Moreover, in their affidavits,[22] Rahul, Sunil Nair, and Chirag averred that they had not ruled out the possibility of filing suit. Thus, even assuming that most of the nonparty shareholders would not sue Umang and Milan due to their relationships with them, there is a risk that any one of them could file another action asserting the same claims at issue in this case.[23]Finally, there are numerous Southeastern shareholders who are not parties to this litigation, but who could be prejudiced if damages are awarded solely to Deerfield, rather than to Southeastern. And if the possibility of prejudice to other interested parties, such as creditors or other shareholders exists, “a direct recovery should not be allowed.”[24] And while the trial court found that all of the nonparty shareholders have close, personal relationships with Milan or Umang, there is no evidence that, if Deerfield’s claims are successful, all of the nonparty shareholders have consented to the resulting damages being paid only to Deerfield, rather than to Southeastern for the benefit of all its shareholders—including those who, like Deerfield, have no interest in SGP and DRP.[25] Indeed, one of the nonparty shareholders testified that he did not wish to be left out of any recovery of damages if the property had been sold for less than its value.In sum, the trial court erred in finding that Deerfield’s claims could be brought directly because Deerfield (1) has not alleged a special injury not suffered by the other nonparty shareholders and Southeastern, and (2) cannot show that none of the reasons for requiring a derivative suit apply.[26] For all these reasons, the trial court’s order denying summary judgment is reversed.Judgment reversed. Doyle, P. J., and Mercier, J., concur

 
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