Peyton v. William C. Peyton Corp.

194 A. 106, 22 Del. Ch. 187, 1937 Del. Ch. LEXIS 47
CourtCourt of Chancery of Delaware
DecidedAugust 4, 1937
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 194 A. 106 (Peyton v. William C. Peyton Corp.) 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
Peyton v. William C. Peyton Corp., 194 A. 106, 22 Del. Ch. 187, 1937 Del. Ch. LEXIS 47 (Del. Ct. App. 1937).

Opinion

The Chancellor:

These cases arise out of the same circumstances of fact. The starting point for the fact sequences consists of the existence of a corporation known as The Standard Stoker Company which William C. Peyton, the father of the complainant, had organized in his lifetime to carry on a business that became under the guidance of himself and his associates eminently successful and, I gather, highly profitable, and concerning the future of [192]*192which after his death he was, as is quite evident from his will, very much concerned.

Control of the Stoker Company was vested in PeytonduPont Securities Company through a one-hundred per cent stock ownership. The Securities Company had an issue of 293,832 shares of stock outstanding. Of these, Mr. Peyton owned 12,363, Mrs. Peyton 16,523, and another company called Peyton-duPont, Inc., 145,161 shares. These three holdings constituted a majority of the outstanding stock of the Securities Company, and so long as they acted in harmony controlled, through the Securities Company, the management of the Stoker Company. The PeytonduPont Company has 47,600 shares outstanding, of which 20,000 shares were owned by Mr. Peyton at the time of his death and 13,868 shares were owned by Mrs. Peyton.

Thus Mr. and Mrs. Peyton through their holdings of stock in Peyton-duPont, Inc., and in the Securities Company, absolutely controlled the Stoker Company.

It was evidently the desire of Mr. Peyton to make some kind of arrangement with respect to the control and management of the Stoker Company after his death, whereby the associates who had helped him build it to its success should be assured of continuing after his death in the position of managing its business and of shaping its policies. If, after his demise, his widow should alienate the shares which she held in the two other companies above referred to, it was of course manifest to him that persons opposed to his old associates might dismiss them from any further participation in the management of the business which he and they had developed. Apparently also, from the provisions of his will, he was desirous of going so far in his appreciation of his old associates as to make it possible for them, if they cared to do so, to become the owners of all the interest in the Stoker Company which, through the shares he owned in the other two companies, was his. But he de[193]*193sired that his widow, so long as she lived, should receive the earnings from the Stoker Company which would flow to his estate, and at the same time he entertained the view and belief that the members of his immediate family were so circumstanced that they were in no need of financial assistance from his estate.

After consultation with his wife, he devised a testamentary scheme which, if his wife approved and co-aperated therewith, would accomplish his purpose of making certain the continuance of his associates in the control of the Stoker Company’s business, and at the same time would leave undisturbed his wife’s relative position as an owner therein; a scheme that would give her the income from the Stoker Company business which his estate would receive and after the death of his wife would place the ultimate destination of his Stoker Company holdings (indirectly held) in the uncontrolled discretion of the trustees he would name, who were the associates before referred to.

The scheme devised consisted of a will of his own supplemented by an agreement to be entered into by his wife. Accordingly he caused the draft of a will to be prepared to which was appended an agreement to be signed by his wife.

The draft and agreement were carried to Mrs. Peyton in her home by Mr. Chambers, an associate of Col. Coulson who was Mr. Peyton’s attorney. Mrs. Peyton examined the papers for about twenty-minutes, stated in response to a question to that effect from Mr. Chambers that she understood them and that they conformed to what her husband had already explained to her. Thereupon, on October 26, 1934, Mrs. Peyton duly signed and sealed the agreement, and three days thereafter, Mr. Peyton duly executed the will to which the agreement was attached.

The will, in the parts thereof pertinent to this controversy, and the agreement of Mrs. Peyton are as follows:

[194]*194“First: I direct payment of my debts, funeral expenses and expenses of administration, and also payment from my residuary estate of all transfer and inheritance taxes upon the legacies and devises herein.
“Second: I give and bequeath to my wife, Anne duPont Peyton, all my personal effects of whatsoever kind and wheresoever located, including all furniture, household effects, utensils and supplies, glass, china, plate, plated ware and other household furnishings, watches, jewelry, clothing, books and any other works of art or ornament, automobiles, and garage equipment and supplies.
“Third: All the residue of my estate of every kind I give, devise and bequeath to my Trustees, hereinafter appointed, in trust, during the life of my wife, Anne duPont Peyton, to be held, invested and reinvested by my said Trustees, and they shall receive the income thereof, and shall pay over said net income to my wife, Anne duPont Peyton, or upon her order, during her life, payments to be made annually, semi-annually or quarterly, as said Trustees may determine.
“Upon the death of my said wife, Anne duPont Peyton, my said Trustees shall transfer and pay over the entire principal of said trust to themselves, as individuals, to have and to hold unto them as joint tenants and not severally nor as tenants in common, with the right of survivorship expressly vested in said joint tenants. Acceptance by said Trustees, as individuals, of the remainder after the trust herein provided, shall be deemed an agreement among them to hold such remainder without severance of the joint tenancy to the end that it may be administered as a unit by them and their survivors only.
“Fourth: It is my intention to prepare and cause to be delivered after my death, to my wife, Anne duPont, a letter which shall outline in such detail as may be feasible, certain dispositions of the income of the said trust property during the life of my said wife, which I recommend to my said wife, as dispositions of said income which would meet with my approval, under the circumstances existing at the time said letter is written. It is not my intention, however, that the absolute freedom of disposition by my said wife of the income accruing to her under the trust herein created, shall be in any wise limited or restrained by the terms of said letter. It is likewise my intention to prepare and cause to be delivered to my said Trustees a letter which shall outline in such detail as may be feasible, certain dispositions of the principal and income of said property after the death of my wife, when my said Trustees take said property in their own right as joint tenants, as dispositions of income and [195]*195principal which would meet with my approval, under the circumstances existing at the time said letter is written. Again, however, it is not my intention that the absolute estate and ownership and freedom of disposition by said joint tenants of the principal or income pf said property shall be in any wise legally limited or restrained by the terms of said letter.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
194 A. 106, 22 Del. Ch. 187, 1937 Del. Ch. LEXIS 47, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/peyton-v-william-c-peyton-corp-delch-1937.