Koppers Products Co. v. Readio

197 A. 441, 60 R.I. 207, 1938 R.I. LEXIS 124
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedMarch 4, 1938
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 197 A. 441 (Koppers Products Co. v. Readio) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Koppers Products Co. v. Readio, 197 A. 441, 60 R.I. 207, 1938 R.I. LEXIS 124 (R.I. 1938).

Opinion

*209 Baker, J,

This is a bill in equity in which the complainants are seeking to have the respondent permanently enjoined from violating an alleged agreement not to enter into competition with them in a certain locality. The case was heard in the superior court on bill, answer, replications and proof, and the trial justice entered a decree granting relief to the complainants. From the entry of this decree the respondent has appealed to this court.

The complainants contend that the evidence in the case fully supports the finding of the trial justice that an agreement of the nature stated was made by the parties. On the .other hand, the respondent maintains that he entered into no such agreement with the complainants. The chief question in the case, therefore, is factual. The case was heard at some length and it is not necessary or possible to set out fully all the facts appearing in evidence. ' The following are those which a^e the more important.

- Koppers Products Co., which heretofore operated under other corporate names', is a large organization and is the ■ principal complainant. We will disregard these other names and hereinafter refer to it as Koppers. It now owns and controls the other complainant corporation. In 1920, the ' respondent and one Gill, both engineers, desired to organize a corporation to deal in tar products of various kinds: With the financial assistance of Bodell & Company, investment bankers of Providence, the' Tar Products Corporation, a Rhode Island corporation, and now a complainant herein, was formed. This corporation built a refining plant in East Providence and shortly thereafter began to operate. The respondent and Gill respectively were in charge of the- producing and selling ends of the business, and one Wood, who formerly had been employed by Bodell & Company, attended to the fiscal matters of the corporation.

*210 Originally the respondent and Gill together held 45% of the common stock and Bodell & Company 55% of Tar Products. After Wood entered the corporation there was an adjustment with the result that each of the three men had 121/2% of the common stock, and the remainder was held by Bodell & Company and its clients. For such a corporation to operate successfully it is necessary that there bo available reasonably near the location of its refinery a sufficient supply of raw materials. Such materials are largely certain by-products of gas producing companies, such as coal and coke oven tar, holder and drip oils. When this new corporation was organized, it had a contract with the Providence Gas Company whereby the latter agreed to sell it the above-mentioned by-products. Tar Products entered into similar contracts with other nearby gas companies. Its business prospered from the start.

In the fall of 1926, Koppers, which had its headquarters in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, planned to set up a new byproducts coke plant in New Haven, Connecticut. Information of this fact reached the men who were operating Tar Products. They apparently felt that the amount of new tar in this locality, from this new plant, might injuriously affect their company if they could not themselves obtain this raw material. Accordingly, through Bodell & Company an attempt was made to communicate with Koppers to ascertain whether the tar in question could be bought; or if not, then whether Tar Products could be sold to the larger organization. Correspondence followed and on December 1, 1926, one Forker, a vice-president of Koppers, came to Providence, talked with Bodell and looked the situation over.

Discussions concerning the proposed sale of Tar Products continued during January 1927. One Hunt, as assistant treasurer of Koppers, fixed the book value of the common stock of Tar Products at $78.52 per share, after examining its books. At Forker’s request, Bodell, on February 1, 1927, obtained the approval of the officers and directors of the *211 last-named corporation to its sale. From about February 10 to April 13, 1927 negotiations continued, chiefly in regard to the price to be paid. At about the latter date it was agreed that Koppers should pay $110 per share for the common stock of the other corporation, provided that a new contract, for an extended period, with the Providence Gas Company for its raw materials was first obtained by Tar Products.

The working out of the details of the sale continued during May and June of 1927, there being numerous meetings during these months by representatives of both corporations. The agreement of sale, which was finally put in writing, was between Koppers and Bodell & Company, the latter apparently controlling a majority of the stock of Tar Products. By this agreement Bodell & Company was to obtain all or substantially all of the stock of the Tar Products and deliver it to Koppers for the price agreed upon. This subsequently was done. The agreement was drafted June 21, 1927 and was actually executed about a week later. A final meeting of the board of directors of Tar Products was held July 7, 1927. The respondent received approximately $27,000 for his shares of the common stock of the last-named corporation when the sale was consummated, and also $5000 for his share in a trucking concern which was sold by himself and Gill to Wood in connection with the sale of the corporation.

Thereafter Gill stayed on with Koppers and was its New England manager at the time of the trial. The respondent was employed by Koppers in New Jersey and Pennsylvania from about August 1, 1927 to March 31, 1928, at which time he voluntarily left its service. He then engaged in various business ventures, none of them connected with tar production, until the spring of 1935. In that summer he had some communications with Wood concerning the latter’s recollection as to whether there was any verbal arrangement with the complainants concerning respondent’s competing *212 with them in New England. Prior to that time he had written a letter to Forker asking for a position with Koppers and stating that he was planning to reenter the tar industry. Also in that summer one Olsen acquired an option on land suitable for a tar refinery near the plant being operated by Koppers in East Providence. Under the name of Tar Refining Corporation, apparently only a trade name, the respondent obtained from the town of East Providence a permit to erect a plant on that land. About this time the respondent also approached several gas companies in the vicinity of Providence in connection with the possible purchase from them of raw materials and by-products for refining purposes. The situation then came to the attention of the complainants and the present suit was instituted.

The agreement not to enter into competition with the complainants, upon which this bill is based, was allegedly made orally between Forker acting for and on behalf of Koppers and Gill and the respondent, at conferences, relating to the sale of Tar Products, held at the office of Bodell & Company on the 4th and 5th of May, 1927, and reaffirmed at the director's meeting of Tar Products held on July 7, 1927. The respondent denies that any such agreement was made by him.

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Bluebook (online)
197 A. 441, 60 R.I. 207, 1938 R.I. LEXIS 124, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/koppers-products-co-v-readio-ri-1938.