Carson v. Allegany Window Glass Co.

189 F. 791, 1911 U.S. App. LEXIS 5313
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Delaware
DecidedMay 15, 1911
DocketNo. 291
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 189 F. 791 (Carson v. Allegany Window Glass Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Carson v. Allegany Window Glass Co., 189 F. 791, 1911 U.S. App. LEXIS 5313 (circtdel 1911).

Opinion

. BRADFORD, District Judge.

The Allegany Window Glass Company, one of the defendants, hereinafter referred to as the glass company, is a corporation of Delaware engaged in the manufacture of window glass, and having its principal place of business at Port Allegany, McKean County, Pennsylvania. Robert W. Hilton, the other defendant, who is a director and the president of 'the glass company, is a citizen of Pennsylvania. Catherine E. Carson, the complainant, is a citizen of New York, and a stockholder of .the glass company. The allegations of the bill are to the general effect that the defendant Hilton is, and during the period when the various acts complained of occurred was, the president and a director of the glass company and the owner and holder of over sixty per cent of its capital stock, the complainant being one of the minority stockholders; that during that period Hilton was president of the Ormsby Gas Company, hereinafter referred to as the Ormsby company, engaged in producing and supplying natural gas, and by virtue of ownership of capital stock controlled that company, his interest in the Ormsby company being greater 'than his interest in the glass company; that natural gas was used by the [793]*793glass company for the manufacture of glass from the time it commenced operations in 1901; that the glass company had obtained its initial supply of natural gas at certain rates specified in the bill, and such supply prior to 1904 liad become inadequate for the full operation of its plant; that in 1904 the Manufacturers Gas and luel Company, hereinafter referred to as the manufacturers company, offered to enter into a contract with the glass company to supply to it all the natural gas it would require for a period of three years, delivered at the plant of the glass company, at certain rates specified in the bill; that such offer was fair and favorable to the glass company and was submitted to its board of directors, but Hilton, having in view his larger interest in the Ormsby company and possessing by virtue of his ownership of a majority of the capital stock of the glass company a controlling influence with its board of directors, opposed the acceptance of the offer which by reason of such opposition and influence was rejected; that the supply of natural gas available to the glass company was immediately prior to the rejection of the above offer restricted to the manufacturers company, the Ormsby company and the Citizens Gas Company, hereinafter referred to as the citizens company, then inadequately supplying the glass company under a contract shortly thereafter to expire; that Hilton induced the rejection of the offer of the manufacturers company knowing that such rejection was against the interests of the glass company, and in order to promote his personal advantage by compelling the latter company to resort to the Ormsby company for its supply of natural gas upon such terms as the last named company should dictate; that following the rejection by the glass company of the offer of the manufacturers company, Hilton, in violation of his fiduciary relations to the glass company and without action on its part or consultation with its board of directors, negotiated for it the purchase from the Ormsby company of certain gas and oil leaseholds represented by him to be productive of natui-al gas, at an exorbitant price fixed by himself with the Ormsby company, and subject to a certain agreement on the part of the glass company to drill wells, the consideration coming to the Ormsby company being a comparatively small cash payment by the glass company and the payment by it to the Ormsby company for each 1,000 feet of natural gas at a certain rate specified in the bill, the cost of production and transportation of such gas to be borne by the glass company; that the effect of the above contract of purchase was for an indefinite period to transfer to the Ormsby company largely for the use of Idilton the entire surplus and profits which the glass company and its stockholders would have derived and enjoyed from the operation of its plant; that before any formal action was taken by the directors or stockholders of the glass company touching such contract of purchase, Hilton unlawfully and fraudulently took of its funds $2,100 “to pay to himself” on account of the consideration coming to the Ormsby company under such contract of purchase, and the further sum of $900 “to replace in the treasury of the company money taken from it by him without right or authority” to purchase in his own name “stock in a corporation manufacturing a certain patent-glass machine”; that the complainant in March, 1906, protested to [794]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
189 F. 791, 1911 U.S. App. LEXIS 5313, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carson-v-allegany-window-glass-co-circtdel-1911.