Provident Trust Co. v. Lukens Steel Co.

58 A.2d 23, 359 Pa. 1
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJanuary 19, 1948
DocketAppeal, 12
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 58 A.2d 23 (Provident Trust Co. v. Lukens Steel Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Provident Trust Co. v. Lukens Steel Co., 58 A.2d 23, 359 Pa. 1 (Pa. 1948).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Linn,

This is a suit to determine the ownership of 10,000 shares of the common stock of Lukens Steel Company issued in the name of A. F. Huston, Trustee.

*3 In 1917 Lukens Iron and Steel Company (hereafter called Iron Company) was a Pennsylvania corporation with 5,000 shares of common stock, having a hook value of about $2,000 per share. All the stock was owned by 16 shareholders, most of them members of a family named Huston. As there was no ready market for the stock, appellants’ brief states that bankers “were consulted with a view to making the capitalization more liquid.”

The bankers, on December 7, 1916, made a written proposal to the Iron Company, which, with the addition of a suggested modification, became the contract ultimately performed. The proposal involved the formation of a new corporation with a capital of 60,000 shares, first preferred, par 100; 60,000 shares, second preferred, par 100, and 200,000 shares, common, par 50. At the suggestion of one of the shareholders of the Iron Company the common capital was increased to 210,000 shares. A new corporation, the Lukens Steel Company, was formed and the property of the Iron Company was transferred to it for its shares of stock pursuant to the agreement.

The 10,000 shares, the subject of this suit, constituted the increase over the 200,000 shares of common stock originally proposed by the bankers. It was the subject of the following provision in the bankers’ revised proposal to the Iron Company dated December 8,1916, “The remaining $500,000 par value of Common Stock shall remain in the treasury of the New Corporation, or shall be returned to the treasury of the New Corporation so that it shall be available for purchase by the officers and employees of the New Corporation, from time to time, upon such terms as may be approved by the Board of Directors of the New Corporation.” The bankers, on January 22, 1917, agreed with the new company, the defendant: “We further agree to cause to be transferred to the Treasurer of your Company or such persons as you may designate 10,000 shares of the Common Stock so issued, to be held as Treasury Stock and to be sold *4 to employees of your Company upon such terms as your Board of Directors may from time to time determine.”

On January 29, 1917, defendant’s board “RESOLVED that the 10,000 shares of Common Stock standing upon the books of the Company in the name of A. F. Huston, Trustee, be held as Treasury Stock to be sold and issued to employees from time to time upon such terms as the Board of Directors may determine.”

On June 27, 1917, the board adopted the following resolution: “WHEREAS the proposition of [the bankers], dated January 22d, 1917, provided as follows: ‘We further agree to cause to be transferred to the Treasurer of your Company or such person as you may designate, ten thousand shares of the Common Stock so issued, to be held as Treasury Stock and to be sold to employees of your Company upon such terms as your Board of Directors may from time to time determine,’ has been consummated and the ten thousand shares of Common Stock have been endorsed in blank and are now in the hands of the Secretary. Now, therefore, be it RESOLVED : that the ten thousand shares of Common Stock turned back to the Company by certain stockholders, be issued in the name of A. F. Huston, Trustee, to be held as Treasury Stock and to be sold to employees of the Company upon such terms as the Board of Directors may from time to time determine.”

A certificate dated August 15,1917, for 10,000 shares of common stock was issued in the name of A. F. Huston, Trustee, who endorsed it in blank and delivered it to defendant’s Secretary and Treasurer at or about the time of issue; the certificate has remained in the possession of the company ever since. None of the 10,000 shares has been sold.

On January 18, 1946, the Provident Trust Company of Philadelphia, plaintiff, and the executor and trustee of the estate of A. F. Huston, deceased (in whose name as trustee the certificate had been issued), demanded that defendant return the stock to the parties or the *5 representatives of deceased parties, who were shareholders in the Iron Company in 1917 when the transaction was consummated. On failure to comply with the demand this bill was filed asking that defendant be restrained from parting with the stock; that it be ordered to deliver the certificate of stock to the plaintiff; “That new certificates for such shares of the capital stock of the defendant corporation, as may be distributable to the several persons for whom the plaintiff’s decedent was acting, should be issued in place and stead of the certificate registered in the name of the plaintiff’s decedent as Trustee, . . .” or, in the alternative, that defendant be required to pay the value of the shares “as of the date of the demand for delivery.”

Personal representatives of three other deceased shareholders intervened as parties plaintiff. The chancellor filed an adjudication and recommended a decree dismissing the bill. He held that the Iron Company’s shareholders made “an irrevocable gift” of the stock and added that if the gift were considered as conditional the plaintiffs had lost the right to assert breach of condition. His view may be summarized by the following quotation from his adjudication: “We feel that the designation of these 10,000 shares of stock as 'Treasury Stock’ established definitely the status and indicated clearly an irrevocable gift to the new company. The stock belongs not to the old stockholders but to the present stockholders and, in our opinion, may be held as Treasury Stock, may be sold to employees or on the open market or may be retired according to the appropriate action of the present Board of Directors. In case this should not be so, there is still the question of a conditional gift and laches and the further question of stock issued without consideration, both of which must be decided in favor of the defendant.”

A number of exceptions to the adjudication were sustained by the court in banc whose view can perhaps be most briefly stated by the following quotation from *6 its opinion: “To summarize, we conclude and hold that the stock, the subject of this Bill in Equity, was issued and delivered for a valuable consideration; that the owners thereof, by their agreement dated December 17,1916, created a trust thereof for the uses and purposes in said agreement set forth; that said stock was held by A. P. Huston, Trustee, for the purpose of carrying out and complying with the terms of said trust, to wit, of transferring said stock to employees of the company who bought it; that said trust has not been terminated but is still in force; albeit the trustee has died and no substituted trustee has been appointed and the terms of the trust have not been complied with; that consequently plaintiffs are not entitled, at this time at least, to receive any of said stock contributed by them to said trustee regardless of any question of laches or estoppel; wherefore their bill must be dismissed.”

We all agree that the bill must be dismissed but are not in accord with the conclusion of the court in banc that the trust exists.

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Bluebook (online)
58 A.2d 23, 359 Pa. 1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/provident-trust-co-v-lukens-steel-co-pa-1948.