Clayton v. James B. Clow & Sons

212 F. Supp. 482, 1962 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 4505
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Illinois
DecidedDecember 10, 1962
DocketCiv. A. 55 C 944
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 212 F. Supp. 482 (Clayton v. James B. Clow & Sons) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Clayton v. James B. Clow & Sons, 212 F. Supp. 482, 1962 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 4505 (N.D. Ill. 1962).

Opinion

ROBSON, District Judge.

Plaintiffs, by Complaint filed June 27, 1955, 1 seek restitution of 91,200 shares of common stock of James B. Clow & Sons, a corporation, 2 as a part of the testamentary trust of the late Charles R. Clow, Sr. 3 These 91,200 4 shares were the result of numerous stock splits, 5 from the 2,850 shares which had been transferred to the Company by Charles, Sr.’s widow, Hattie 6 (trustee under the testamentary trust), in these four transactions :

1,250 shares at $25 on January 15, 1935 500 shares at $30 on December 24, 1935 600 shares at $50 on April 28, 1938 500 shares at $50 on July 1, 1938

These shares were derived from the 437% shares 7 which had originally constituted the testamentary trust corpus. The 1,250 shares involved in the first transaction were used by the Company to effect a merger; the 1,600 shares involved in the last three transactions were later transferred to William E. Clow, Sr., 8 brother of Charles, Sr. and an officer and director of the Company.

The very narrow, and principal, issue in this enormously complicated controversy is whether William, Sr., procured the transfers from Mrs. Pryor of the 2,850 shares of common stock in the Company at inadequate prices, in breach of his fiduciary relations, either express or implied.

The physical proportions of this record and the problems involved are clearly demonstrated by an outline of its statistics. There are some 3,023 pages of transcript of the trial testimony; plaintiffs’ exhibits number 2,993 (No. 2992 alone has 230 pages); defendants have 241 exhibits. The total number of pages of these exhibits runs about 6,000. There are additionally some 2,663 pages of depositions; 189 pages of excerpts from William, Sr.’s diary, along with a thick volume, unpaged, of summaries therefrom; about ten court envelopes of pleadings, interrogatories, requests for admissions, rulings, and miscellany. The proposed findings of fact and conclusions of law and objections thereto aggregate 334 pages, and the briefs after trial total 856 pages.

The testamentary trust had been created by the will, executed February 17, 1908, of Charles, Sr. who died on May 7, 1910. The will provided, in part, as follows:

(e) “ * * * [Mrs. Pryor] is hereby given the right at any time to sell, assign, transfer and dispose of the whole or any part of said capital stock upon consent thereto given in writing by William E. Clow, *486 Harry B. Clow and James C. Clow, or in ease of the death of any of them, then upon the like consent in writing of the survivor or survivors of them and the heirs, devisees, executors and administrators of the deceased.”
(d) “ * * * [The proceeds] shall be invested and reinvested from time to time in such securities or in such loans as m-y said Trustee shall elect with the consent in writing of said William E. Clow, Harry B. Clow and James C. Clow, or any two of them. * * *”

In addition to seeking recovery of the shares of stock, plaintiffs seek a monetary recovery of $2,755,071.90, which sum constitutes dividends through December 31, 1959, plus five per cent interest thereon, and the amount of a 1936 dividend note, and interest, which Mrs. Pryor sold at discount to William, Sr. They point out that the defendant Delaware corporation has 294,624 treasury shares and 417,120 authorized unissued shares so it has “ample” shares to provide for the return of 92,112 shares “wrongfully acquired” of the trust corpus. If William, Sr.’s successor-defendants restore the stock for which they are allegedly liable, to the trust corpus, liability of the Company would be accordingly reduced. As to defendant Johnson, plaintiffs suggest that the exact extent of his liability abide determination of recovery from William, Sr.’s successor-defendants and the Company.

Plaintiffs assert the right to recover on behalf of the trust estate of Charles, Sr. any shares or dividends which belong to the trust estate whether or not such trust property is distributable to them or to other persons as the beneficial owners thereof, because the trustee has failed to sue therefor. 9

Charles, Sr. left an only child, Charles R. Clow, Jr., 10 who first married Linda, by whom he had a child, Charles III. Charles, Jr. procured a California divorce, and remarried to Ella, before the expiration of a year from the divorce. The marriage to Ella was annulled and Charles, Jr. later married the present plaintiff, Joanna Gwin Clow [Clayton], by whom he had a daughter, Joanna Gwin Clow, also a plaintiff. 11 Charles, Jr. died in a plane accident in service on March 1, 1943.

Mrs. Pryor, subsequent to Charles, Sr.’s death, married three times: first to Mr. Lawrence Peters, then Mr. Charles O. Pfeil, and later, Mr. Lawrence Pryor, who survived her. Mrs. Pryor was living at the time of the institution of this suit, but she declined to bring it or join in the suit. 12

*487 Defendants are the Company, the executor of the estate of Mrs. Pryor (the testamentary trustee of Charles, Sr.), Earle F. Johnson, 13 and numerous others, 14 as transferees of this Clow common stock and trustees of trusts or executors of estates to which the stock has been traced.

When Charles, Sr.’s will was executed the corporate by-laws restricted stock sales to nonshareholders by requiring that such stock be first offered to existing shareholders under the same terms. The only common stockholders at that time were his three brothers: William, Sr., Harry B. and James C., and James M. Johnson, who owned ten shares.

Charles, Sr. at the time of his death owed the Company $14,930.

The principal business of the Company since 1910 has been the manufacture of cast iron pressure pipes and fittings. It had pipe plants at Birmingham, Alabama, Coshocton, Ohio, and Newcomers-town, Ohio. Its stock has never been listed or traded on any exchange or over the counter. There had been only seven transfers of the stock up to the time of the transactions here involved. 15

The ancestor, James B. Clow, in his will of January 5, 1904, bequeathed all his property equally to his four sons, William, Sr., Harry B., James C. and-Charles, Sr., except the stock in the Clow Company, which he gave equally to the three sons, excepting William, Sr., but' he went on to explain the reason he was-excluded 16 was because he already possessed a large block of the stock.

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Bluebook (online)
212 F. Supp. 482, 1962 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 4505, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clayton-v-james-b-clow-sons-ilnd-1962.