Pennsylvania Co. v. Wilmington Trust Co.

186 A.2d 751, 40 Del. Ch. 567, 1962 Del. Ch. LEXIS 115
CourtCourt of Chancery of Delaware
DecidedDecember 12, 1962
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 186 A.2d 751 (Pennsylvania Co. v. Wilmington Trust Co.) 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
Pennsylvania Co. v. Wilmington Trust Co., 186 A.2d 751, 40 Del. Ch. 567, 1962 Del. Ch. LEXIS 115 (Del. Ct. App. 1962).

Opinion

Seitz, Chancellor:

One George McNear died testate in 1947, and under the terms of his will he created trusts for the benefit of his wife, their children, his three sisters and brother, and their children (“beneficiaries”). The Wilmington Trust Company (“Trust Company”), Central Hanover Bank and Trust Company (which declined to serve), and Guy A. Gladson (“Gladson”) were named as trustees. The testator provided that the Trust Company was authorized to take [570]*570any action upon receipt of consent in writing from the co-trustees. He also authorized a private sale of assets. While the trust estate was subsequently divided into a series of separate trusts, for convenience they will hereafter be referred to as a single unit.

The estate’s principal asset consisted of 82% of the outstanding shares of common stock of the Toledo, Peoria & Western Railroad (“TP & W”). Before naming the Trust Company as trustee in his will, Mr. McNear asked and received assurances from it that it would be both able and willing to retain the stock as part of the trust estate.

On March 10, 1952, the Trust Company and Gladson began serving as trustees. Before qualifying as trustee the Trust Company was asked again by the beneficiaries if it would feel free to retain the TP & W stock, and the same assurances were given to them.

In the period from March 1947 to May 1954, the TP & W under the executive management of J. Russel Coulter (“Coulter”) made considerable progress. The Trust Company performed its duties during this period, i.e., prior to the transaction involved in this action, through J. Sellers Bancroft (“Bancroft”), one of its vice-presidents. Bancroft served as a director of the TP & W. He was seceretary for a time and later its vice-president.

There subsequently took place a series of events concerning the sale of the TP & W stock which, because of their importance in resolving the ultimate issues presented in this controversy, are discussed hereafter in some detail. The outcome of these events was that on April 15, 1955, agents of the Trust Company signed papers by which they accepted offers of the Pennsylvania Company (“Pennsylvania” or “plaintiff”), a wholly owned subsidiary by the Pennsylvania Railroad Company, and the Atcheson, Topeka & Santa Fe Railroad Company (“Santa Fe”) to purchase 23,400 shares, or 26%, each of the total number of shares outstanding of the TP & W stock at $100 per share, subject to certain conditions and the understanding “that all necessary details to implement this [agreement] will be worked out by our respective Counsel”. Before an implementing agreement was executed, the trustees received an offer from one Ben Heineman [571]*571(“Heineman”) in behalf of the Minneapolis & St. Louis Railway Company (“M & St. L”) to purchase all the stock held by the trustees for a price of $133.33 per share. Reference to “Heineman” herein will be deemed to indicate actions taken in behalf of the M & St. L. The co-trustees after some delay adopted the position, on the advice of counsel, that they had no binding commitment to the Pennsylvania and the Santa Fe and so advised them. The trustees also advised them that they intended to sell all the stock to Heineman unless they increased their offer and fixed a deadline for acceptance. Pennsylvania made no further offer, contending that it had a binding agreement with the trustees. Santa Fe offered to pay $135 per share for all of the stock. The trustees accepted the Santa Fe offer and the sale was consummated.

Thereafter, Pennsylvania instituted this action against the trustees seeking specific performance of its alleged binding agreement of. April 15, 1955, or, in the alternative, monetary damages. The Trust Company filed a third-party complaint against the trust beneficiaries seeking in effect to be exonerated from liability on this original claim. Coulter, who became successor trustee to Gladson after the events herein involved, filed a cross-claim against the Trust Company, and the third-party defendants, the beneficiaries, filed a counterclaim against the Trust Company seeking to surcharge the Trust Company for the amount of any claim which might be established by the original plaintiff, Pennsylvania. Subsequently, cross-motions for summary judgment by the plaintiff and the Trust Company were denied, and this decision was affirmed on appeal. See Wilmington Trust Company v. Pennsylvania Company, 39 Del.Ch. 453, 166A.2d 726, aff’d, supra p. 1, 172 A.2d 63. Thereafter, and before trial, the Trust Company and Coulter as co-trustees settled with Pennsylvania by paying $500,000 from the assets of the trust. The court approved stipulation concerning that settlement provided in part that it was without prejudice to the pending cross-claim and counterclaim.

Thereafter the cross-claim of the co-trustee and the counterclaim of the beneficiaries came on for trial. This is the decision on the request of the beneficiaries of the McNear testamentary trusts and of [572]*572Coulter, the present individual co-trustee, that the other co-trustee, the Trust Company, be surcharged for the full amount of the settlement sum paid from the trust assets to Pennsylvania. Reference herein to the contentions of the benefieciaries will be understood to embrace those made by Coulter.

I pause to note that it appears to have been tacitly agreed by the parties that Gladson, co-trustee with the Trust Company at the time of the transaction herein involved, was in no condition at the date of the trial (1962) to testify meaningfully concerning the facts.

The facts are these: On April 15, 1955, the Trust Company for itself and its co-trustee entered into written agreements with the Santa Fe and the Pennsylvania to “sell” the latter 26% each of the outstanding common stock of the TP & W from the trust estate. The trust would thus retain 30% of the outstanding stock. Parenthetically, as noted before, the question later raised by Pennsylvania in this action was whether these agreements became binding before being implemented by the execution of a final written agreement. It is important to note that even if the April 15 agreements were intended to be binding before the execution of this implementing agreement, it is nevertheless tacitly conceded that such agreements were not binding between the parties thereto prior to approval by the respective boards of the purchasing railroads, as stipulated in the agreements themselves, and prior to receipt of the written consent of the individual co-trustee, as specifically required under the will of George P. McNear. Admittedly, both these requirements were ultimately satisfied, but the question here posed is whether the Trust Company was guilty of a breach of trust either before April 15 or thereafter, first in negotiating the written agreements with the Santa Fe and the Pennsylvania and then in not withdrawing therefrom prior to the time when there could have been no claim that the April 15 agreements were legally binding, viz., prior to April 27 when the Pennsylvania board voted its approval of these agreements. The substance of the beneficiaries’ claim is that the Trust Company allowed the trust estate to become “bound” by the April 15 agreements at a time when it could have dealt with Heineman at a higher price.

[573]*573The shares of stock held by the trust had assumed a unique value by April 1955, and that fact was unmistakably clear both to the trustees and to each of the prospective buyers.

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Pennsylvania Company v. Wilmington Trust Company
186 A.2d 751 (Court of Chancery of Delaware, 1962)

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Bluebook (online)
186 A.2d 751, 40 Del. Ch. 567, 1962 Del. Ch. LEXIS 115, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pennsylvania-co-v-wilmington-trust-co-delch-1962.