No. 13026

279 F.2d 46
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedJune 20, 1960
Docket13060-13062
StatusPublished

This text of 279 F.2d 46 (No. 13026) 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
No. 13026, 279 F.2d 46 (3d Cir. 1960).

Opinion

279 F.2d 46

Alice S. HIGGINS, Plaintiff, on Behalf of Herself and Other Stockholders of Shenango Pottery Company, Similarly Situated, and Hilda Barkby, Administratrix of the Estate of Harry Barkby, Deceased, Intervenor,
v.
SHENANGO POTTERY COMPANY, Now Shenango China, Inc., a Corporation; James M. Smith, Jr., George B. Zahniser, Charles W. Read, Daniel H. Treloar, Jr., Zeno J. Pfau, John B. McCarty and Alvah M. Shumaker, Individually and James M. Smith, Jr., George B. Zahniser, Charles W. Read, Daniel H. Treloar, Jr., Zeno J. Pfau, John B. McCarty and Alvah M. Shumaker, Trading as Castle Engineering Company, a Partnership, Lynne Anderson Warren and Peoples First National Bank and Trust Co., Executors of Estate of James M. Smith, Jr., Deceased, Defendants.
Alice S. Higgins, Etc. and Hilda Barkby, Etc., Appellants in No. 13,026 and No. 13,027
Shenango Pottery Company, Now Shenango China, Inc., a Corporation, Appellant in No. 13,060.
Lynne Anderson Warren and Peoples First National Bank and Trust Co., Executors of Estate of James M. Smith, Jr., Deceased, Appellants in No. 13,061 George B. Zahniser, Appellant in No. 13,062.

No. 13026.

No. 13027.

No. 13060-13062.

United States Court of Appeals Third Circuit.

Argued March 25, 1960.

Decided May 10, 1960.

Rehearing Denied June 20, 1960.

Thomas L. Wentling, Pittsburgh, Pa. (Lynne A. Warren, Upper Nyack, N. Y., James M. Arensberg, Richard B. Tucker, Jr., Patterson, Crawford, Arensberg & Dunn, Pittsburgh, Pa., on the brief), for appellants, at No. 13061.

W. Walter Braham, New Castle, Pa. (Alvah M. Shumaker, New Castle, Pa., on the brief), for appellant at No. 13062 and appellees at Nos. 13026 and 13027.

Harold R. Schmidt, Pittsburgh, Pa. (John L. Laubach, Jr., Rose, Houston, Cooper & Schmidt, Pittsburgh, Pa., Morris Berman, Hancock, Dorr, Ryan & Shove, Syracuse, N. Y., on the brief), for appellants at Nos. 13026 and 13027, and for appellees at Nos. 13060, 13061, 13062.

John V. Bowser, Pittsburgh, Pa., for appellant at No. 13060.

Before McLAUGHLIN, KALODNER and HASTIE, Circuit Judges.

McLAUGHLIN, Circuit Judge.

The facts in this case are set forth at length in Higgins, et al. v. Shenango, Pottery Co., et al., 3 Cir., 1958, 256 F.2d 504, but for clarity a résumé is appropriate.

This is a derivative action brought by a stockholder of Shenango Pottery Co., a Pennsylvania corporation, (Shenango) engaged in the manufacture of chinaware. Several of the defendants were officers and directors of Shenango: James M. Smith, Jr., now deceased, son of the founder and Chairman of the Board, James M. Smith, Sr., was a director and president; George B. Zahniser, a nephew of Smith, Sr., was a director and vice-president; Charles W. Read, since dismissed as a defendant by stipulation, was a director and vice-president. The remaining individual defendants were in no way connected with Shenango: Daniel H. Treloar, Jr. was in the life insurance business; Zeno J. Pfau was an automobile dealer; Alvah M. Shumaker was an attorney; and John B. McCarty was a bar manager. The principal plaintiff, Alice S. Higgins, daughter of Smith, Sr. and sister of Smith, Jr., is a minority stockholder of Shenango.

On January 31, 1944 the Pittsburgh Ordnance District of the War Department offered Shenango the opportunity to participate in a non-magnetic land mine program. The principal parts of the mine, the bell and base, were to be ceramic, larger and heavier than ordinary dinnerware and involved an operation foreign to the manufacture of dinnerware, that of threading the parts to fit with other pieces. On February 5, 1944 Smith, Jr., Zahniser and James K. Love, the latter another director of Shenango but not a party here, traveled to the Onondago Pottery Company in Syracuse, New York to investigate the land mine program already in operation at that firm. Based on this investigation they recommended to the remaining three directors, Smith, Sr., Jonathan Higgins, husband of the principal plaintiff and Charles W. Read, that Shenango refrain from entering the land mine program.1 The considerations prompting this recommendation ostensibly were a complicated assembly operation, rigid government tests and a requirement of additional space and labor. As a result the Board decided it was not feasible for Shenango to bid for a mine contract.

Several days subsequent to the decision, Smith, Jr., Treloar and Pfau investigated the possibility of undertaking the manufacture of mines and, as a result, begain formation of a corporation, Castle Engineering Company (Castle). Castle submitted a bid which was not acceptable to Pittsburgh Ordnance because Castle was not as yet a corporate entity. It was then decided, allegedly at the instigation of Pittsburgh Ordnance, that Shenango's name be inserted in place of Castle and upon award of the contract to Shenango, to have it sublet to Castle. Smith, Jr. immediately telephoned Shenango from Pittsburgh and had the proposal put before the other five members of the Board who were present at Shenango. The Board approved. On this point, the district court found, as a conclusion of law, that the business judgment of the five board members was influenced by the knowledge that Smith, Jr. and two other directors and officers of Shenango, Zahniser and Read who had previously joined with Smith, Jr., Treloar and Pfau, were interested in Castle. The contract was awarded to Shenango which in turn sublet it to Castle, with the exception of the part calling for the manufacture of the ceramic base and bell. These parts Shenango was to supply at two dollars for every pair accepted and paid for by the government. At this stage it would be well to outline the full import of that arrangement.

The government inspection of the land mines consisted of a waterproof test and a drop test. Five mines were submerged in water for twenty-four hours, at the end of which time they were disassembled. If any trace of water was found, ten more were put through the same test and if water was found in any one of the ten the entire lot was rejected. After that five mines were dropped from a prescribed height on to concrete. If there was a failure of any of the parts of more than one mine, ten others were tested. If three or more of the fifteen showed failure the entire lot was rejected. Castle contracted to have the inspection on the basis of a lot consisting of ten thousand mines. Thus if either test was failed the entire ten thousand mines would have been rejected and Shenango would not receive payment for any of the ten thousand pairs of bases and bells, which were the most expensive part of the mine. It should be further noted that although the contract was sublet, Shenango remained liable thereon.

Castle was reorganized into a limited partnership; Smith, Jr., and Treloar becoming the general partners and Zahniser, Pfau and Read, later joined by Shumaker and McCarty, being the limited partners. It had a stated paid-in capital of $50,000 of which only $32,200 was actually paid in by the end of the fiscal year, July 31, 1944. The question of the validity of the limited partnership was raised.

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Higgins v. Shenango Pottery Co.
279 F.2d 46 (Third Circuit, 1960)

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Bluebook (online)
279 F.2d 46, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/no-13026-ca3-1960.