Young v. Columbia Gas & Electric Corp.

129 F.2d 216, 1942 U.S. App. LEXIS 4704
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedJune 30, 1942
DocketNo. 7760
StatusPublished

This text of 129 F.2d 216 (Young v. Columbia Gas & Electric Corp.) 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
Young v. Columbia Gas & Electric Corp., 129 F.2d 216, 1942 U.S. App. LEXIS 4704 (3d Cir. 1942).

Opinion

MARIS, Circuit Judge.

Columbia Gas & Electric Corporation is a registered public utility holding company. It owns many subsidiaries which sell natural gas and electric energy. Columbia Oil & Gasoline Corporation, another of its subsidiaries, is engaged in gasoline extraction and cil production. It in turn owns all the capital stock of five oil and gasoline subsidiaries.1 In 1930 Columbia Oil purchased one-half of the outstanding capital stock and the entire issue of the first mortgage bonds of Panhandle Eastern Pipe Line Company and paid for the securities with money borrowed for the purpose from Columbia Gas. Columbia Gas now holds $21,000,000 of Columbia Oil debentures which it received for this and other advances. Panhandle owns and operates a pipe line for the transportation of natural gas.

In 1935 the United States instituted a suit in equity in the District Court for the District of Delaware, charging Columbia Oil and Columbia Gas with violation of the anti-trust laws i.i connection with the purchase of the interest in Panhandle. In 1936 a consent decree was entered providing that the Panhandle voting stock held by Columbia Oil should be placed in the name of a trustee, that Columbia Gas be enjoined from exercising any control over Panhandle, that a then existing voting trust for Columbia Oil common stock be terminated and the stock distributed to certificate holders and that the preferred stock of Columbia Oil held by Columbia Gas be replaced by a new issue which, so long as it was owned by Columbia Gas should be entitled to elect not more than a minority of the Board of Directors of Columbia Oil. In compliance with the consent decree Columbia Gas received 400,-000 non-cumulative participating preferred shares of Columbia Oil which were restricted in their voting rights to the election of not more than a minority of directors. In December, 1938, the United States filed a supplementary complaint and sought to reopen the consent decree in the anti-trust suit, and to obtain a decree that Columbia Gas divest itself of its preferred stock interest in Columbia Oil or that Columbia Oil divest itself of its stock interest in Panhandle. The corporations decided not to litigate but to settle the matter by agreement. Negotiations ensued between Columbia Gas, Columbia Oil and the Department of Justice, resulting in a plan adopted and filed in the district court jointly by Columbia Gas and Columbia Oil on June 20, 1939.

Columbia Oil has outstanding $21,000,000 of debentures all held by Columbia Gas, carrying 5% interest until February, 1940 when the interest increased to 6%. Its capital stock consists of 400,000 shares of non-cumulative participating preferred stock, all held by Columbia Gas, and 2,336,-826 shares of common stock of $1 par value, held by the public. Columbia Oil assets consist of all the stock and indebtedness of the five oil and gasoline subsidiaries and its stock holdings in Panhandle.

The plan provides in substance that:

(a) Columbia Oil transfer to Columbia Gas the stock and obligations of the five subsidiaries of Columbia Oil in exchange for 400,000 shares of preferred stock of Columbia Oil held by Columbia Gas;

(b) Columbia Oil sell for not less than $10,000,000 its Panhandle Class A preferred stock, using the proceeds to reduce the $21,000,000 of Columbia Oil debentures held by Columbia Gas;

IS

(c) Columbia Gas reduce the interest on the balance of the Columbia Oil debentures held by it to 3% a year.

(d) Columbia Gas give Panhandle an option to buy the stock and debt of certain properties connected with the Panhandle Pipe line at cost;

(e) Philip G. Gossler, chairman of the Board of Columbia Gas, sell his Columbia Oil common within five years and in thei meantime be enjoined from voting it;

(f) All officers and directors of Columbia Oil resign and be replaced by persons [219]*219not objectionable to the Department of Justice; and

(g) Columbia Gas save Columbia Oil harmless from any liability in an action pending in the Court of Common Pleas at Columhus, Ohio, entitled John Davies v. Columbia Gas & Electric Corporation et al.

On July 18, 1939 the plaintiff, who is the owner of 100 out of a total of 12,304,282 outstanding shares of common stock of Columbia Gas, filed a bill in equity in the District Court for the District of Delaware, seeking to enjoin the carrying out of the plan. The cause was referred to a special master who found the plan was fair and equitable and recommended that the bill be dismissed. The district court confirmed the master’s report and dismissed the bill. 37 F.Supp. 22. The plaintiff has taken this appeal.

Our duty upon this appeal is to determine whether there is sufficient evidence to sustain the special master’s findings of fact and whether those fact findings justify his conclusions that the plan was adopted by an adequate number of financially disinterested directors and that the plan was fair. It is not within our province to determine whether the plan provides the maximum return to Columbia Gas which shrewd and aggressive bargaining might have achieved for it. Nor are we presently concerned with the effect of the plan upon the public interest.2

The plaintiff attacks the plan as unfair to Columbia Gas upon several grounds. He first asserts that the five subsidiaries are worth less than the Columbia Oil preferred stock. The special master did not find this to be the fact, however. As a result of his study of the Wylie and Biddison appraisals, made prior to the divestiture plan now before us and for a purpose unrelated thereto, and of the testimony of expert witnesses for the defendant the special master concluded that the market value of the subsidiaries was $10,000,000, their value to Columbia Gas as part of its system was $14,000,000 and the market value of the Columbia Oil preferred stock on June 2, 1939 was $9,482,000. He chose to accept the testimony of the defendant's experts because in his opinion their ability, methods of valuation and study of the problems were superior to those of the witnesses called by the plaintiff.3 The plaintiff says that the special master overestimated the projected earnings of the five subsidiaries and improperly assigned value to certain drilling contracts with Columbia Gas and that consequently he placed too high a valuation upon the five subsidiaries. He points to the actual earnings of the subsidiaries in 1938 and 1939 and to the downward trend of those earnings. Neither the directors nor the special master could have had notice of the 1939 earnings at the time they passed upon the plan. Nor is there any reason why the method of valuation advocated by the plaintiff, which was based solely on the capitalization of actual earnings of the subsidiaries, is a more accurate measure of value than that adopted by the special master which was based upon studies and appraisals made by engineers, geologists and investment experts.

The plaintiff next argues that the special master’s valuation of the Columbia [220]*220Oil preferred stock is too low and attributes this in part to the fact that he assigned 20% of the equity in Columbia Oil to the common stock. The plaintiff asserts that except for the plan the preferred stock is entitled to all the earnings of Columbia Oil and to all its assets upon liquidation and that the common stock therefore has but a nuisance value.

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Related

United States v. Columbia Gas & Electric Corp.
36 F. Supp. 488 (D. Delaware, 1941)
Young v. Columbia Gas & Electric Corp.
37 F. Supp. 22 (D. Delaware, 1941)

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Bluebook (online)
129 F.2d 216, 1942 U.S. App. LEXIS 4704, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/young-v-columbia-gas-electric-corp-ca3-1942.