Henderson v. Plymouth Oil Co.

13 F.2d 932, 1926 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1241
CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedJune 22, 1926
Docket1426
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 13 F.2d 932 (Henderson v. Plymouth Oil Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Henderson v. Plymouth Oil Co., 13 F.2d 932, 1926 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1241 (W.D. Pa. 1926).

Opinion

THOMSON, District Judge.

This ease is of much importance, by reason of the amount involved, and calls for a careful consideration of the evidence, and a discriminating application of certain legal and equitable principles o‘f the facts as the court finds them to be.

The bill is filed by William M. Henderson, a citizen of Pennsylvania, against the Plymouth Oil Company, a corporation of the state of Delaware, to compel the company to transfer to him, on its hooks, 50,000 shares of the common stock, of which plaintiff claims to be the owner by assignment for value from Jerome Gr. Earquhar, together with all dividends declared and remaining unpaid thereon; the certificates for the stock having been indorsed and delivered to the plaintiff at the time of the assignment, on June 26, 1925.

The plaintiff, averring that he formally tendered the certificates to the company on December 9, 1925, requesting the transfer to him of the stock upon the books, which the company refused, filed this bill for a remedy in the form of a mandatory injunction to compel such transfer. The plaintiff further seeks a judgment against the company for the amount of dividends declared and payable on said stock, which amounted at the time of the trial to $187,500. The bill further avers that this tender was made after December 9, *933 1925, at which time a certain restraining order, issued by the Chancery Court of Delaware, for New Castle county, prohibiting the company from making transfer on its books or paying any dividends on its stock, was dissolved.

The Plymouth Oil Company, by way of answer, asserts that Farquhar is the record owner and holder of the stock in question, and has given the company notice that he is the true and legal owner of the same, with all dividends declared and unpaid thereon; that the company and its officers had been notified by Farquhar that the transfer set forth in the bill had been effected by duress and fraud, and that no legal assignment resulted from such transfer, and that he would hold the company responsible should it permit a transfer of the stock to the plaintiff. The answer further' averrred that the company was a mere stakeholder as between the parties, and stood ready to register as owner the claimant whom the court should find entitled thereto, holding the dividends in its treasury ready for payment to such party. The answer also prayed that Farquhar be permitted to intervene as a party defendant.

The court, on petition, permitted Farquhar to intervene as a defendant, and the latter answered the bill, charging that the plaintiff, in concert with others named, in pursuance of a conspiracy, wrongfully obtained the certificates in question by threatening the defendant with axrest and imprisonment upon certain criminal charges, of which he was innocent, and that solely by reason of such coercion, and without other consideration, the defendant Farquhar assigned to plaintiff the certificates described in the bill.

Plaintiff, in reply, denied any coercion, duress, fraud, or deceit in the transaction; averred that, while certain informations were made against Farquhar, they were well founded in fact and in law, the defendant having committed the offenses therein charged against him. The plaintiff further replied that the transfer in question was the free and voluntary act of Farquhar, and was for a good and valuable consideration, the plaintiff and others having been induced to purchase their stock through the false and fraudulent representations of Farquhar that the authorized capital stock of the corporation was 350,000 shares of common stock, whereas in truth the outstanding capital stock of the corporation .was 1,050,000 shares; that subsequently the said Farquhar, admitting the falsity of the said representations, promised and agreed to obtain and deliver to the plaintiff and others associated with him enough stock so that two shares should be given to the plaintiff and those associated with him for each share then held by him; that in pursuance of this arrangement and agreement the certificates for the 50,000 shares described in the bill were delivered to the plaintiff, who holds the same for himself and others, the same being delivered for a good and valuable consideration, without duress or fraud, and because of Farquhar’s false and fraudulent representations to the plaintiff and others as aforesaid.

Thus the issues of law and fact are joined between the parties. In relation to the organization and holdings of the Plymouth Oil Company, the following facts may be stated:

One Frank T. Piekrell and associates were the owners of certain contracts for oil and gas purposes, embracing 12 sections, aggregating 10,240 acres, in Pecos and Upton counties, Tex., upon which they had drilled one producing oil well. When the first well was completed, they commenced the drilling of two other wells called for in their contracts ; but, besides these, they were required to drill at least four additional wells. After expending a very considerable sum of money, Piekrell and his associates, finding themselves unable to proceed with the drilling operations necessary to perfect their leases, interested certain Pittsburgh parties in the enterprise, designated hereafter as promoters, consisting of L. M. Benedum and associates; one Edward C. Steams being their representative. Piekrell, on ■ the one hand, and Steams, representing the promoters, on the other, agreed upon terms which were embodied in a contract known as the Piekrell contract, dated October 5,1923. Under this contract, Piekrell and associates agreed to sell, and Stearns to buy, a three-fourths interest in the aforesaid 12 sections. The three-fourths interest, which Steams acquired, and the one-fourth interest retained by Piekrell, were to be secured through a corporation to be formed, known as the Big Lake Oil Company. To this corporation Stearns was to transfer all of his rights under the contract, in consideration of three-fourths of its capital stock; one-fourth being held by Piekrell. It was agreed that Steams should pay for this three-fourths interest $200,000, in cash and notes, and an additional sum sufficient to repay the Piekrell interests the amount theretofore expended in the drilling of the two uncompleted wells, convey one-fourth of the capital stock of the Big Lake Oil Company, complete the two wells then *934 drilled, and drill within the stipulated time, at his own expense and not that of the company, four additional wells. It appears that the estimated sum necessary to make such refund and to drill the four additional wells was $250,000. Steams thus obligated himself to pay or expend in cash the sum of $450,000.

To effectuate this purpose, two corporations, the Big Lake Oil Company and the Plymouth Oil Company, were formed in October, 1923, under the laws of the state of Delaware. The former had an authorized capital stoek of 400,000 shares, of the par value of $10 per share, and the latter a capital stoek of 1,200,000 shares, of the par value of $5 per share. The stock of the Plymouth Oil Company consisted of 1,050,000 shares of common stoek, and 150,000 shares of preferred. The preferred stoek carried a preferred dividend of 7 per cent., and was convertible into common stock, with the right of redemption by the company at any time after January 1, 1926.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
13 F.2d 932, 1926 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1241, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/henderson-v-plymouth-oil-co-pawd-1926.