Deibler v. The Chas. H. Elliott Co.

81 A.2d 557, 368 Pa. 267, 1951 Pa. LEXIS 472
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJune 27, 1951
DocketAppeal, No. 142
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 81 A.2d 557 (Deibler v. The Chas. H. Elliott Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Deibler v. The Chas. H. Elliott Co., 81 A.2d 557, 368 Pa. 267, 1951 Pa. LEXIS 472 (Pa. 1951).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Jones,

TMs appeal is from a decree in equity ordering the defendant, Harry Y. Elliott, to deliver to the plaintiff, Mark T. Deibler, 828 shares of stock in the defendant company (a Delaware corporation) registered in the name of Harry Y. Elliott with attached executed power of attorney authorizing the sale, assignment and transfer of the certificates for such shares, and permanently enjoining Elliott, the pledgee of the stock, from voting the shares at any meeting of the stockholders of the company. The appeal is joint by the defendants indicated who claim that the purpose of the pledge has not yet been served and that Harry Y. Elliott is entitled to possession of the stock for the remainder of his lifetime and the right to vote it.

The question involved was raised in the court be: low on preliminary objections by the plaintiff, under Equity Rule 55, to the defendants’ answer to the bill of complaint, including new matter. The objections do not seem to fit any of the seven specifications in Equity Rule 48 adopted by reference in Rule 55. All of the material fa,cts appear by the pleadings; none is in dispute. The matter was apparently submitted for the court’s final disposition'off-bill and- answer. Át [269]*269least the learned court below evidently so apprehended, as indicated by its entry of the definitive decree for the plaintiff on the merits merely upon preliminary objections. In any event, the controversy involves no more than a question of law which requires for its solution the proper interpretation of a written agreement whose provisions need be recited with considerable detail.

In 1938, Elliott, then sixty years old, was president of the defendant company for which he had actively worked all of his adult life; he was the owner of 1937 shares of the common stock of the company which was in excess of 80% of its total outstanding stock. Desiring to increase the interest of two employees, namely, Deibler, the plaintiff, and W. Alfred Streamer, in the company by enabling them to purchase a controlling interest in the stock of the company at a low figure and upon convenient terms, Elliott entered into a written agreement with Deibler and Streamer to that end on March 25, 1938.

Thereby, Elliott agreed to sell 828 shares of his stock to Deibler at $5 per share for a total of $4140 to be paid in installments of specified amounts at the end of each three-month period thereafter until paid in full. Deibler completed payment in full for his stock in January 1943. Elliott likewise agreed by the writing to sell to Streamer 552 shares of his stock at the same price ($5) per share for a total of $2760 to be paid for similarly in installments. Deibler and Streamer, on their part, severally agreed to pay Elliott the sums respectively owing for the stock which had a then actual value of $92.38 per share and is now worth $120 per share. The agreement further provided that the shares so sold by Elliott to Deibler and Streamer would be transferred to them and would then “immediately be delivered by Deibler and Streamer to Elliott, together with powers of attorney in blank [270]*270for the transfer of said shares to be held by Elliott as collateral security for the performance by Deibler and Streamer of the terms of this agreement.” From the time of the execution of the agreement in 1938 until 1950, Elliott voted the pledged stock without question or complaint from either Deibler or Streamer; and all of the shares so sold to them have at all times been, and still are, registered in the name of Harry Y. Elliott.

On February 28, 1950, Deibler filed his bill of complaint in the instant suit praying (1) that The Chas. H. Elliott Co. and Harry V. Elliott, individually and as president, and W. Alfred Streamer, secretary of the corporation, be directed to cancel the 828 shares of stock in the company registered in the name of Harry V. Elliott and re-register such shares in the name of Deibler and turn them over to him, (2). that an injunction issue enjoining and restraining Elliott from voting such shares, and (3) for other and further relief. The final decree now under review resulted. Neither Streamer’s stock nor Elliott’s right to vote it is in any way involved in this proceeding.

One of the most important terms of the agreement is that Elliott was to be continued in the employ of the corporation for life at a salary of $135 per week. As the agreement provided, — “To secure the performance on their part of this agreement Deibler and Streamer hereby irrevocably vest in Elliott for the term of his life the right to vote said 1380 shares of stock at all meetings of the Corporation in such manner and for such purposes as Elliott may desire [Emphasis supplied]. Deibler and Streamer shall be entitled to receive all dividends on the shares purchased by them . ... At the death of Elliott his personal representative shall, subject to the payment of any balance of the purchase price which may then be due, deliver to Deibler and Streamer the number of shares purchased by them respectively.” Incidentally, an average yearly [271]*271dividend of approximately $5.50 per share was paid on the stock from 1942 to 1949 for a total of $36,822 in dividends to Deibler on his 828 shares.

The agreement covered the possibility that Deibler or Streamer or both might fail to pay in full for their stock purchases. For such a contingency the agreement provided that Elliott “shall have the option either (a) to return to the party in default all payments theretofore made by him,” whereupon the shares of the defaulting party were to revert to and become the absolute property of Elliott, “or (b) Elliott may consider the party in default as having completed the purchase of such number of shares as the payments theretofore made by such party in default would purchase at $5. per share, and thereupon such number of shares shall he held hy Elliott under the terms of this agreement, and the remainder of the shares originally purchased by such party shall revert to and become the absolute property of Elliott . . . .” (Emphasis supplied).

Should either Deibler or Streamer die before making payment in full for his stock, the agreement provided that, in such event, the survivor would be entitled to take over the stock of the decedent upon the same terms and should pay to the deceased’s estate the amount theretofore paid by him on account of his shares. If thereafter the survivor should predecease Elliott, the latter was to “have the right ... to pay to [the deceased survivor’s] estate the full amount theretofore paid on account of the purchase price of said shares . . .” whereupon Elliott would become the absolute owner of all of the shares sold to Deibler and Streamer. It is not entirely clear from the 1938 agreement what disposition was to be made of the stock in the event Deibler or Streamer (or either of them) died after making payment in full for their shares but before Elliott died. However, no such circumstance is [272]*272involved in the present controversy. Deibler, Streamer and Elliott, all are living. Moreover, the subsequent agreement, to which reference will hereafter be made, provides for the company’s acquisition of Deibler’s and Streamer’s shares, respectively, upon the death of either of them. The opinion for the court en banc makes the statement that “After full payment of said stock by Deibler and Streamer under all three agreements, Elliott had no right to re-acquire the same.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
81 A.2d 557, 368 Pa. 267, 1951 Pa. LEXIS 472, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/deibler-v-the-chas-h-elliott-co-pa-1951.