Du Pont v. Du Pont

256 F. 129, 167 C.C.A. 345, 1919 U.S. App. LEXIS 1345
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedMarch 6, 1919
DocketNo. 2382
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 256 F. 129 (Du Pont v. Du Pont) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Du Pont v. Du Pont, 256 F. 129, 167 C.C.A. 345, 1919 U.S. App. LEXIS 1345 (3d Cir. 1919).

Opinion

BUFFINGTON, Circuit Judge.

In the court below, Philip F. Du Pont, a citizen of Pennsylvania, filed a bill against the E. I. Du Pont de Nemours Powder Company, a corporate citizen of New Jersey, hereafter called the Powder Company, and 2 corporations and 13 individuals, corporate citizens of Delaware. Proofs were taken, and after final hearing the court entered a decree 'dismissing the bill. Thereupon the plaintiff took this appeal.

The hill was filed by Philip F. Du Pont, as a stockholder of the Powder Company, for and on behalf of himself and such stockholders as might intervene, and its purpose was to enforce a right of action alleged, to be in the Powder Company, against the 13 individuals named, and which right of action the Powder Company woirld not maintain, because it was under the domination of said defendants, or some of them. It will thus be seen that the real plaintiff in the cause is the Powder Company, and the real defendants are the other defendants, who, as is alleged, are liable to the Powder Company on the cause of action which Philip F. Du Pont here seeks to enforce. We shall therefore treat the case as, in reality, one brought by the Powder Company against these other defendants.

[1 ] Such being the real status of the case, our first inquiry naturally is: What is the alleged cause of action of the Powder Company against these individuals? In that regard the individuals may be grouped in two classes: One composed of six men, to wit, Raskob, who was treasurer of the Powder Company and a director, Carpenter, a director, and four Du Ponts, viz. Alexis, Irénée, Lammot, and Pierre, all of whom were directors as well as administrative officers of said company. These six men, hereinafter called the syndicate, bought the stock of the Powder Company, hereinafter called the Coleman stock. The second class is the Du Pont Securities Company, hereinafter called the Security Company, a Delaware corporation formed by the syndicate for the purpose of financing the purchase and thereafter holding the Coleman stock after its purchase by the syndicate. The third group is composed of Harry' F. Brown, William Coyne, Harry G. Hoskell, John P. Laffey, and the two Du Ponts, Eugene and Henry F., all of whom were directors of said company, and who, as well as the syndicate memhers, acquired from the syndicate shares of stock in the Security Company above referred to.

Turning first to the right of action of the Powder Company against the members of the syndicate, we note that in February, 1915, John J. Raskob was the treasurer of the Powder Company, and as such treasurer, and generally under the directions and contract of the board [131]*131of directors and its finance committee, had charge and control of the deposits of the Powder Company. Raskob was also a director of the company. At that time Coleman Du Pont owned 13,899 shares of preferred and 63,214 shares of its common stock, about one-fifth of the total issue. On February 13, 1915, he wrote the following letter to Pierre S. Du Pont, one of the defendants:

“Dear Pierre: I sot a little too gay last week, and have been on the ‘blink’ for live or six days, but am getting along all right now.
“The more I have thought of (he slock question, the more T believe, with what little information A have, that the common stock should reach 200 and may reach 300. If this is true, the men who are now at the helm and actually doing things should make the profit as between to-day’s figure and that figure; it will be by far the best thing that can happen to the company. So clear I am that this is the right time to get them interested that I am willing, figuring as surely as I can that this stock will go much higher, to let go for the benefit of the men who are working, which, of course, moans the benefit of the company, 20,000, 30,000, or even 40.000 shares at to-day’s market which I assume is about 200. As to the details of working this out I am entirely willing to leave this to you and Lew.
“If much time is desired, the price should be higher. If the arrangement for cash payment is made through hanks, there should be no increased price. In. order to get time when we purchased the company originally, what we gave to be allowed time amounted to, I believe, over 100 per cent, increased price, this because the element of chance must necessarily come in.
“Of course, I am only using my best judgment in this matter, but I am willing and strongly urge that the heads of departments and younger members of the family become most Interested in the common stock.”

This letter was shown to Raskob by Pierre Du Pont on February 17th, and what follows is thus stated in his testimony by Raskob;

“Mr. I)u Pont handed me this letter, and said to read the letter over, and he would like to talk with me about it. I did read the letter over, and later in the day had a conference with him. We talked over (lie matter of the purchase of certain shares of common stock, from Mr. Coleman Du Pont. Later on Mr. Iréiiéo Du Pont, Mr. Lamniot Du Pont, Mr. Carpenter, Mr. Pierre Du Pont, and I had a conference. I think Mr. Felix Du Pont was not at that conference, but was at a later one. The result of those several conferences was a decision that six of us would endeavor to purchase a substantial block of Mr. Coleman Du Pout's stock, and we directed that a telegram be sent lo him through Mr. L. L. Dunham, liis secretary, to ascertain whether Mr. Coleman Du Pont would be willing to poo! the voting of the balance of his stock, in case we bought a portion of It. The reply that Mr. Dunham gave us was that Mr. Du Pont was unwilling to commit himself to pooling the vote, as I recall it. That resulted in our inquiring as to whether he would be willing to sell bis total holdings, to which he replied he would. These negotiations were, of course, conducted through Mr. Dunham. We then sent a telegram to Mr. Coleman Du Pont, making him an offer for his entire iireierred stock holding at $80 per share.”

On receipt of Coleman’s offer to sell, Raskoh, on behalf of the syndicate, on February 19, 1915, went to New York to see Morgan & Co., and ascertain whether they would furnish the money, over and above the amount they could get Coleman Du Pont to take notes for, which would be necessary to buy the Coleman stock. Morgan & Co. having agreed to do so, Raskob told Pierre Du Pont that night what he had done in New York, and the next day the syndicate met in Wilmington and determined to buy all of Coleman’s stock, in pursuance of which telegraph and phone messages were exchanged that day [132]*132between Coleman Du Pont and Pierre Du Pont, whereby the former agreed to sell and Pierre to buy all of Coleman’s preferred stock at $85 and all his common stock at $200; $8,000,000 to be paid to Coleman'in cash, and $5,831,865 in seven-year notes.

The purchase having been arranged with Coleman, Raskob and Pierre Du Pont went to New York on February 23d, saw Morgan & Co., who, for an agreed commission of. $160,000, undertook to furnish the $8,000,000 cash required to pay Coleman. Papers were thereafter drawn in fulfillment of this arrangement, and on March 2d Ras-kob and Pierre Du Pont again went to New 'York and closed the $8,000,000 loan arrangement made with Morgan & Co., and delivered to the Bankers’ Trust Company — which Morgan & Co..had designated to do the financing, trusteeship, etc., of the matter — the stipulated security, and received in return the $8,000,000 Morgan & Co. had agreed to furnish.

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Bluebook (online)
256 F. 129, 167 C.C.A. 345, 1919 U.S. App. LEXIS 1345, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/du-pont-v-du-pont-ca3-1919.