Du Pont v. Peyton

136 A. 149
CourtCourt of Chancery of Delaware
DecidedJanuary 14, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 136 A. 149 (Du Pont v. Peyton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Chancery of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Du Pont v. Peyton, 136 A. 149 (Del. Ct. App. 1927).

Opinion

Bill for construction of will and instructions to trustee. Eugene Du Pont died January 28, 1902, leaving two sons and three daughters. By his will he divided two-thirds of his residuary estate into five equal parts, one of which he gave absolutely to one son, another of which he gave absolutely to another son, and the other three-fifths he gave to trustees, in trust to hold and allot one of said fifths to each of his three daughters. The one-fifth thus allotted to each daughter was to be held by the trustees upon trust to collect and receive the income from the real estate "and the interest and income from the personal property," and after deducting expenses of administering the trust estate to "pay the said net income thereof to my said three daughters, respectively, for and during their respective lives" with remainders over.

The three daughters are living, two of them being married and having issue and the other never having been married.

At the time of his death Mr. Du Pont owned 4,000 shares, being one-fifth of the whole capital stock of E. I. Du Pont de Nemours Company, a corporation of Delaware, organized in 1899. This stock was appraised, as appears by the appraisement filed in the office of the register of wills as worth $1,400,000.

In 1902 a proposal was made by T. Colemen Du Pont. Pierre S. Du Pont and Alfred I. Du Pont to purchase all the property of the 1899 corporation for $12,000,000, the appraised value thereof, payable in purchase-money notes of a new corporation to be organized. Such new corporation, called E. I. Du Pont de Nemours Company, was formed in 1902 under the laws of Delaware with an authorized capital stock of $20,000,000. The new corporation made the purchase upon the terms offered. Before the sale to it was made, however, the 4,000 shares of stock held by the executor in the selling corporation were revalued at $2,400,000. The sale was made by the old corporation to the new for $12,000,000 in purchase-money notes of the new corporation and $12,000,000 par value of its common capital stock. The executors as holders of 4,000 shares in the old corporation (one-fifth of its total) received therefor one-fifth of the purchase-money notes and in addition 6,000 shares of stock in the new 1902 Delaware corporation.

The executors passed their first and final account on March 31, 1903, and valued the 6,000 shares then held by them at nothing.

On the same day they transferred to themselves as trustees for the three daughters three-fifths of two-thirds of the purchase-money notes received by them and three-fifths of two-thirds of the 6;000, or 2,400, shares of the common stock of the 1902 Delaware corporation. As trustees, they took over the 2,400 shares from themselves as executors at the valuation of nothing. These shares were thus taken over along with other securities by permission of the Court of Chancery. The trustees then carried the shares in their accounts, 800 shares being allotted to each of the three trusts for the three daughters respectively.

On May 19, 1903, a New Jersey corporation was organized known as E. I. Du Pont de Nemours Powder Company. The Delaware company of 1902 sold all of its property, including stock in about-35 other companies, to the New Jersey corporation of 1903 for $30,200,000 of the preferred and common stock of that company.

In 1912 the E. I. Du Pont de Nemours Company (Delaware 1902) was decreed by the United States federal court to be dissolved. At the time of dissolution the trustees still held the 2,400 shares of its stock in trust for Mr. Du Pont's three daughters and had purchased with trust funds 273 additional shares, making the total held in the trust at the time of said dissolution 2,673 shares. Under the terms of the decree of dissolution there was paid to the trustees on account of the 2,673 shares in the Delaware (1902) dissolving company, in addition to other securities not involved in this suit the following:

3,855 shares of the common stock of E. I. Du Pont de Nemours Powder Company (New Jersey 1903).

855 plus, shares of common stock of Hercules Powder Company.

Of these shares, 2400/2673 were received on account of the 2,400 shares of the Delaware (1902) company acquired by the trustees in the manner above set out.

In addition to said 3,855 shares of the New Jersey company of 1903, the trustees acquired 15 other shares of that company which *Page 151 came to them through the ownership of 12 shares of stock of Delaware Securities Company acquired by them from Eugene Du Pont's estate. These 12 shares of Delaware Securities Company were appraised by the executor as worth nothing. The Delaware Securities Company was dissolved and the trustees received in lieu of the 12 shares held by them the 15 shares of common stock of the New Jersey (1903) corporation just referred to. In the year 1910 the trustees acquired by purchase 3 additional shares of the New Jersey company (1903). The total shares of common stock acquired by the trustees as aforesaid amounted to 3,873. The following tables show by way of recapitulation and in condensed form the source of these shares:

Dates When              Shares of E. I. Du Pont de          Cost to
Acquired.                  Nemours  Co. (1902)            Estate.
_____, 1902                2,400 appraised at                  $ 0.00
Nov. 1, 1906                   24 at $100                    2,400.00
Dec. 6, 1907                   36 at 100                     3,600.00
June 18, 1908                147 at 100                     14,700.00
Sept. 16, 1910                 63 at 200                    12,600.00
Oct. 15, 1910                   3 at 200                       600.00
                           ______                          ____________
                            2,673                          $33,900.00
                           ______                          ____________
Dec. 4, 1912            Above 2,673 shares of E. I.
(dissolution)               Du Pont de Nemours  Co.
                            (1902) surrendered for:
                        1,065 shares of E. I. Du Pont
                            de Nemours Powder Co.
                            Preferred stock
                        3,855 shares of E. I. Du Pont
                            de Nemours Powder Co.
                            Common stock (1903)
                        (also Hercules and Atlas se-
                            curities)
Dates When             Shares of E. I. Du Pont de             Cost to
Acquired.                 Nemours Powder Co. (1903)         Estate.
Dec. 4, 1912            Above 3,855 and other securi-        $33,900.00
Mar. 31, 1903                    15 ties appraised at              0.00
Apr. 9, 1906                      3                               55.32
                              ______                        ____________
                              3,873                          $33,955.32
                              ______                        ____________

At a meeting of the board of directors of the Du Pont Company (New Jersey 1903) held on August 19, 1915, "a plan for the financial reorganization of the company" was approved and recommended to the stockholders. The salient features of the plan were: (1) The incorporation of a new company to be known as E. I.

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