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Page 488
36 F.Supp. 488
UNITED STATES
v.
COLUMBIA GAS & ELECTRIC CORPORATION et al.
No. 1099.
District Court, D. Delaware.
January 18, 1941.
Page 489
In Equity. Action by the United
States of America against Columbia Gas &
Electric Corporation, and others. On report
of Special Master recommending approval of a
plan of divestiture filed by defendant
corporations and on separate exceptions to
the report filed by the United States, by
the City of Detroit, and by the
Missouri-Kansas Pipe Line Company, and for a
modification of the consent decree entered
in the cause January 29, 1936.
Order in accordance with opinion.
See also 27 F.Supp. 116; 32
F.Supp. 474.
Thurman Arnold, Asst. Atty. Gen.,
Thomas J. Lynch, Sp. Asst. to Atty. Gen.,
and Stewart Lynch, U. S. Atty., of
Wilmington, Del., for the United States.
Douglas M. Moffat (of Cravath,
deGersdorff, Swaine & Wood), of New York
City, and Clarence A. Southerland (of
Southerland, Berl, Potter & Leahy), of
Page 490
Wilmington, Del., for Columbia Gas &
Electric Corporation.
William H. Button and James B.
Alley, (of Auchincloss, Alley & Duncan),
both of New York City, and Daniel O.
Hastings, (of Hastings, Stockly & Layton),
of Wilmington, Del., for Columbia Oil &
Gasoline Corporation.
Robert J. Bulkley, of Cleveland,
Ohio, Russell Hardy, of Washington, D. C.,
and Arthur G. Logan (of Logan & Duffy), of
Wilmington, Del., for Missouri-Kansas Pipe
Line Co.
Paul E. Krause, Corp. Counsel,
and James H. Lee, Asst. Corp. Counsel, both
of Detroit, Mich., for City of Detroit.
NIELDS, District Judge.
Hearing on report of special
master recommending approval of a plan of
divestiture filed by the defendant
corporations and on separate exceptions to
the report filed by the United States, by
the City of Detroit, and by Missouri-Kansas
Pipe Line Company (herein referred to as
"Mokan"); and further, for a modification of
the consent decree entered in this cause
January 29, 1936.
October 30, 1935, the United
States filed its amended and supplemental
petition, superseding its original petition,
charging Columbia Gas & Electric Corporation
(herein referred to as "Columbia Gas"),
Columbia Oil & Gasoline Corporation (herein
referred to as "Columbia Oil"), and certain
individuals with dominating and controlling
the management and operation of Panhandle
Eastern Pipe Line Company (herein referred
to as "Panhandle Eastern") with the purpose
and effect of preventing competition, actual
and potential, between Panhandle Eastern and
Columbia Gas and of monopolizing and
attempting to monopolize interstate trade
and commerce in natural gas in certain
sections of the United States, in violation
of the anti-trust laws.
The several defendants filed
answers to the petition specifically denying
the charges therein.
Columbia Gas is a holding company
owning the stock of more than fifty
operating public utility subsidiaries
engaged in the production, transmission and
distribution of natural gas. Their field of
operations extended from Muncie, Indiana,
through the States of Ohio, Kentucky, West
Virginia and Pennsylvania, and to other
points on the eastern seaboard. Together,
they constituted the "Columbia System".
Their operations were concentrated in the
State of Ohio where the petition alleges
they enjoyed a virtual monopoly in natural,
mixed and artificial gas. In 1930 Columbia
Oil was organized by Columbia Gas to hold
the oil and gasoline producing properties of
the Columbia System segregated from its
public service properties. In 1928 Mokan was
organized for the purpose of producing and
distributing natural gas in the States of
Kansas and Ohio and intervening states. By
1930 Mokan had acquired substantial gas
producing acreage in the Panhandle district
of Texas and in Kansas. In December, 1929,
Mokan organized Panhandle Eastern for the
purpose of building and operating a natural
gas pipe line from the sources of supply in
Texas and Kansas to Indianapolis, with
possible extensions to points in Michigan
and Ohio.
Consent Decree.
January 29, 1936, pursuant to a
stipulation entered into between the
Government and the defendants, a consent
decree was entered by this court in this
cause. The general object of the consent
decree was to prevent Columbia Gas from
exercising dominion or control, direct or
indirect, over the affairs of Panhandle
Eastern. To this end elaborate injunctive
provisions were inserted in the decree. The
decree provided, among other things, that
voting stock of Panhandle Eastern then held
or afterwards acquired by Columbia Oil was
to be placed in the custody of a trustee
named in the decree, who was to vote the
stock for the election of the number of
directors of Panhandle Eastern which the
stock was entitled to elect (six out of a
total of nine), such directors to include
the trustee and the remainder to be selected
by him from among persons recommended by
Columbia Oil "in conference and with the
advice of the trustee", but excluding any
past or present officer, director, agent, or
employee of Columbia Gas; and the trustee
was empowered "to remove and replace such
directors with others of his own choosing
upon his own motion, if in his judgment such
action is necessary in the interest of
Panhandle Eastern or for the effectuation of
the purposes of this decree". The decree
named Gano Dunn as such trustee.
The decree enjoined the
defendants from exercising dominion or
control over Panhandle Eastern or
interfering with its independence of action
in the sale of gas,
Page 491
and from owning securities of Panhandle
Eastern, subject, however, to the following:
The defendants were permitted to own stock
of Columbia Gas and Columbia Oil and to be
directors and officers thereof; Columbia Gas
was permitted to own obligations (without
voting rights) of Panhandle Eastern; and
Columbia Oil was permitted to own or acquire
voting stock or obligations of Panhandle
Eastern subject to the trusteeship created
by the decree.
The decree further contained
provisions applicable to financing the
proposed extension of the Panhandle Eastern
pipe line to the City of Detroit, Michigan.
The decree further provided for a
termination, with the approval of the Court,
of the trust created thereunder, when:
(1) Columbia Gas has divested
itself of all control, direct or indirect,
of Panhandle Eastern by (a) No longer owning
voting stock of Columbia Oil, or (b) By
Columbia Oil divesting itself of ownership
of all stock of Panhandle Eastern, or
(2) "Under the circumstances then
existing, the continuation of said trust is
no longer essential or necessary in carrying
out the purposes of this decree."
In addition, the decree provided
for a termination of its injunctive
provisions, with the approval of the Court,
when Columbia Gas no longer owned voting
stock of Columbia Oil.
The consent decree was entered
pursuant to a stipulation between the
parties as above recited. That stipulation
required performance by Columbia Gas and
Columbia Oil of five or more essential
requirements. It is unnecessary to discuss
these requirements or to recite the steps
taken under the consent decree and
stipulation. The working arrangement
provided by the consent decree has been
carried out from the entry thereof. After
the entry of the consent decree the stock of
Panhandle Eastern owned by Columbia Oil was
promptly lodged with Gano Dunn as trustee
and has continued to be held and voted by
him. The trustee has performed his duties as
required by the consent decree.
Supplemental Complaint.
January 12, 1939, the United
States filed a supplemental complaint in
this cause stating, among other things: "The
course of events since the entry of said
decree on January 29, 1936, has made it
increasingly clear (1) that the only
effective way to restore and maintain a
position of free and independent action for
Panhandle Eastern is to require Columbia Gas
to divest itself of all stock of any class
having existing or potential voting rights
in Columbia Oil, or to require Columbia Oil
to divest itself of ownership of all stock
of Panhandle Eastern, as contemplated by the
last paragraph of section III of said
decree, and (2) that to accomplish the
purpose of said decree, it is necessary to
supplement said decree by a further order
requiring the formulation and submission to
this Court for approval of a suitable plan
or plans to accomplish such divestiture."
After referring to the
restrictions found in Section II and the
trust established with Gano Dunn in Section
III of the consent decree, the supplemental
complaint concludes by asking for relief in
the alternative through an order of the
Court as follows:
"Directing Columbia Gas to divest
itself of all control, direct or indirect,
legal or practical, of Panhandle Eastern,
either by disposing of all interest which it
may have in any stock of any class having
present or potential voting rights in
Columbia Oil, or by causing Columbia Oil to
divest itself of ownership of all stock of
Panhandle Eastern; and, to that end:
"(a) Directing Columbia Oil to
proceed straightway to formulate and submit
to this Court for approval, through the
trustee for sale constituted in accordance
with subsection 5 of this section III, a
plan for the sale or other disposition by it
of all interest which it may have in any
stock of Panhandle Eastern;
"(b) Directing Columbia Gas to
proceed straightway to formulate and submit
to this Court for approval, as an
alternative to any plan submitted by
Columbia Oil pursuant to paragraph (a) of
this subsection 4, a plan for the sale or
other disposition by it of all interest
which it may have in any securities having
present or potential voting rights in
Columbia Oil."
Defendants Columbia Gas and
Columbia Oil filed answers in opposition to
the supplemental complaint.
May 15, 1939, the United States
filed two motions: (1) For leave to abandon
its supplemental complaint filed January 12,
1939, and (2) to vacate the consent decree
entered January 29, 1936, and restore the
original anti-trust action to the trial
calendar upon an amended and supplemental
Page 492
complaint tendered with its motions.
Action on these motions was not pressed.
June 20, 1939, defendants filed
the voluntary plan of divestiture which is
now before the Court, looking to a
modification of the consent decree. This
plan is substantially the first of the
alternatives sought by the Government in its
supplemental complaint of January 12, 1939.
July 10, 1939, the plan of
divestiture was referred to a special master
to "make report to this Court of his
findings of fact, conclusions of law and
recommendations concerning the said motion
and said proposed plan". The order of
reference provided that permission be
granted to Mokan, then the holder of all of
the stock of Panhandle Eastern not owned by
Columbia Oil, and to the City of Detroit,
Michigan, and to the City of Toledo, Ohio,
to appear at the hearing as amici curiae but
not as intervenors. Mokan and the City of
Detroit appeared, cross-examined witnesses,
and filed briefs.
July 29, 1939, the special master
filed his report with the recommendation:
"The undersigned respectfully recommends, if
your Honor should conclude that enlargement
of the provisions of the plan dealing with
retention of jurisdiction is unnecessary,
then that your Honor approve the amended
plan and upon approval of the Securities &
Exchange Commission to the extent required
by law and upon the taking of appropriate
corporate action by the stockholders of Oil
necessary under Section 6 of the Plan as
amended, that the motion of Columbia Gas &
Electric Corporation and Columbia Oil &
Gasoline Corporation referred to in the
order of reference dated July 10, 1939 be
granted, that the consent decree herein
dated January 29, 1936 be modified as
provided in that motion and in accordance
with the terms of the proposed plan."
The Court finds that the
provisions of the plan respecting the
retention of jurisdiction are adequate and
an enlargement of those provisions is
unnecessary. The plan by its terms is made
subject to the approval of the Securities &
Exchange Commission and to such corporate
action by stockholders of Columbia Oil as
may be necessary and appropriate.
Plan of Divestiture.
Columbia Oil was organized in
1930 as a subsidiary of Columbia Gas to hold
oil and gasoline properties of the Columbia
System. The business of Columbia Oil and of
Columbia Gas was intimately associated. This
relation contributed to close operating and
personal ties between the two companies.
Columbia Oil has the following
securities outstanding: 400,000 shares of
participating preferred stock, owned
entirely by Columbia Gas, and entitled to
elect a minority of directors of Columbia
Oil; $21,000,000 principal amount of
twenty-year debentures due in 1956, carrying
6% interest and owned entirely by Columbia
Gas; 2,336,826 shares of common stock. The
participating preferred stock and debentures
were issued to Columbia Gas and their
retention was permitted by the consent
decree.
The plan provides:
(1) Columbia Gas will surrender
to Columbia Oil the 400,000 shares of
participating preferred stock of Columbia
Oil, being all of the issue of that stock,
in exchange for all oil and gasoline
properties of Columbia Oil.
(2) Columbia Oil will pay
$10,000,000 to Columbia Gas on its debenture
indebtedness aggregating $21,000,000. The
$10,000,000 is to be raised by Columbia Oil
through persons having no connection with
Columbia Gas.
(3) Columbia Gas will reduce from
6% to 3% the interest rate on the
$11,000,000 of debentures remaining
outstanding.
(4) In the event of default upon
such remaining debentures, Columbia Gas will
not be permitted to acquire ownership or
control or be a purchaser in judgment sale
of securities of Panhandle Eastern owned by
Columbia Oil.
The result of these changes will
be: (a) Columbia Gas will own no stock in
Columbia Oil and accordingly will possess no
voting rights therein; (b) Columbia Oil will
hold as its only asset stock of Panhandle
Eastern, and all operating relationship with
Columbia Gas will terminate; (c) the
indebtedness of Columbia Oil to Columbia Gas
will be reduced almost one-half; (d)
interest payments on the remaining
indebtedness will be halved. Thus the
influence of Columbia Gas over Columbia Oil
will be minimized or removed.
(5) Columbia Gas will grant an
option to Panhandle Eastern, for one year
from the entry of a final decree approving
the plan, to purchase at the actual
investment of Columbia Gas therein the
so-called Detroit Extension of the Panhandle
Eastern
Page 493
pipe line connecting its Eastern terminus
with the City of Detroit if Panhandle
Eastern buys a gas pipe line of Ohio Fuel
Gas Company in Indiana for $355,191. This
Detroit Extension is owned by Michigan Gas
Transmission Corporation and Indiana Gas
Distribution Corporation, wholly owned
subsidiaries of Columbia Gas. If, during the
year, Columbia Gas receives from sources not
connected with it a satisfactory offer to
purchase such properties, Panhandle Eastern
will have ninety days within which to meet
such terms. However, if Panhandle Eastern
fails to meet such offer, Columbia Gas shall
be free to accept the earlier offer. If no
such sale has been made within the one-year
period, a trustee shall be appointed to make
sale to any purchaser not connected with
Columbia Gas for a price not less than the
actual investment of Columbia Gas therein,
unless Columbia Gas consents to a lesser
price. Thus, Columbia Gas parts with the
physical link connecting Panhandle Eastern
with Detroit.
(6) The following securities of
Panhandle Eastern were issued to Columbia
Oil pursuant to plans of reorganization and
settlement with the Receivers of Mokan:
100,000 shares (the entire issue) of Class A
Preferred stock (not entitled to vote for
directors); 10,000 shares (the entire issue)
of Class B Preferred stock (entitled to
elect two directors); and 404,326 shares of
common stock of a total of 808,652 shares
outstanding.
Columbia Oil has a board of seven
directors. The voting rights of the stock it
beneficially owns in Panhandle Eastern
elects six of the nine directors of
Panhandle Eastern. Those directors are
elected by the trustee pursuant to the terms
of the consent decree. The plan provides
that the trusteeship created by the consent
decree with respect to voting securities of
Panhandle Eastern owned by Columbia Oil
shall terminate. Thereupon, all officers and
directors of Columbia Oil and the six
directors of Panhandle Eastern elected by
the stock of Columbia Oil shall resign; and
the directors of Columbia Oil shall own no
stock or securities of Columbia Gas. The
directors of Columbia Oil shall not include
anyone who has ever been an officer,
director or employee of Columbia Gas or of
any of its subsidiaries. For a period of
five years such directors shall not include
any person "who shall be objectionable to
the Department of Justice." Directors of
Panhandle Eastern elected by Columbia Oil
shall also be directors of Columbia Oil
elected under the plan. Jurisdiction of this
cause shall be retained by this Court "for
the further purpose of requiring the
resignation of any officer or director of
Columbia Oil, or any successor thereto,
whenever such step may be necessary to
effectuate the purposes of the decree".
Further, to effectuate said purposes
Columbia Oil will take appropriate corporate
action to "stagger" its board of directors
into three classes elected for terms of one,
two, and three years, respectively, with the
maximum number permissible by law elected
for the longest term.
The foregoing provisions of the
plan will create a new slate of directors
for Columbia Oil and a new slate of officers
to be elected by such new directors. It will
also provide a new slate of directors of
Panhandle Eastern representing Columbia Oil.
All directors elected by Columbia Oil,
however, shall have no interest in Columbia
Gas or have been an officer, director, or
employee of Columbia Gas or any of its
subsidiaries. Moreover, such directors must
not be objectionable to the Department of
Justice. The power continues to reside in
this Court to require the resignation of any
officer or director of Columbia Oil with the
consequent disqualification to serve as a
director of Panhandle Eastern representing
Columbia Oil "whenever such step may be
necessary to effectuate the purposes of the
decree".
Amendment of Consent Decree.
To meet the changed conditions
resulting from the carrying out of the plan
of divestiture, the plan provides for the
amendment of the consent decree in the
following particulars:
(1) To terminate the Trusteeship
of Gano Dunn.
(2) To substitute the following
injunctions in lieu of the injunctive
provisions contained in Sections II and IV
of the consent decree:
(a) Injunctions prohibiting
Columbia Gas and the individual defendants
from acquiring, owning or voting any
securities of Panhandle Eastern, and any
securities of Michigan Gas Transmission
Corporation if and when Columbia Gas shall
have sold its investment therein as
contemplated in the plan;
Page 494
(b) Injunctions prohibiting
Columbia Gas from acquiring, owning or
voting any securities of Columbia Oil,
except that it may continue to own the
$11,000,000 of debentures of Columbia Oil
and may acquire up to $2,000,000 of
additional debentures under existing
commitments; also from controlling Columbia
Oil or Panhandle Eastern, or Michigan Gas
Transmission Corporation if and when its
investment therein is disposed of; and
(c) Injunctions prohibiting the
individual defendants from acquiring, owning
or voting securities of Columbia Oil in
addition to those now owned by them,
participating in the management of Columbia
Oil or of Panhandle Eastern, or
participating in the management of Michigan
Gas Transmission Corporation if and when the
investment of Columbia Gas therein is
disposed of as contemplated by the plan.
The plan further provides that
the consent decree shall be amended to
provide for the sale within five years by
Philip G. Gossler of all stock owned by him
in Columbia Oil and an injunction against
his voting such stock in the interval until
it is disposed of.
The Government objects to
approval of the plan unless certain blocks
of common stock of Columbia Oil "be disposed
of by the present holders thereof to other
persons having no direct or indirect
interest in or connection with Columbia Gas
& Electric Corporation on or before the
entry of any final order approving the
amended plan". These blocks of common stock
are:
| Holders |
Shares |
The United
Corporation and its subsidiary,
New York United Corporation |
84,769 |
| Philip G. Gossler
|
65,872 |
| Mrs. Katherine Clay
|
30,358 |
| E. W. Edwards |
25,009 |
| Present officers and
directors of Columbia Gas |
8,697 |
Since the Master's report
arrangements satisfactory to the Government
have been made which eliminate the necessity
for any provision relating to United's
stock. The United Corporation has agreed to
be made a party to this proceeding and that
the decree herein prohibit it from voting
the stock of Columbia Oil which it owns
without the prior approval of this Court
except that it may vote such stock for the
purpose of a quorum and for the proposed
plan.
Gossler was president of Columbia
Gas from 1926 until the filing of the
Government's petition in October, 1935. He
was the chief executive officer of Columbia
Gas during the entire period complained of
in the petition. He remained president of
that company until he assumed his present
office of chairman of the board. He was one
of the three voting trustees of common stock
of Panhandle Eastern from the time of the
creation of such voting trust until
September 19, 1935. In 1930 and 1931, when
the conspiracy of which the Government
complains in its petition had its origin, he
was also a director of Panhandle Eastern and
a director and president of Columbia Oil.
The petition alleges that he was "a central
figure, if not the prime mover, in the
creation and execution of the conspiracy
complained of." He is the largest individual
holder of common stock of Columbia Oil,
excluding the United Corporation. He is also
a substantial holder of common stock of
Columbia Gas.
The plan provides that Gossler
shall "within five years after the entry of
the order approving the plan, sell all stock
now owned by him in Columbia Oil, or any
successor thereto, and, in the intervening
period so long as he shall own any stock in
Columbia Oil, or any successor thereto,
shall be enjoined from voting any shares of
such stock or suggesting how any shares of
such stock owned by any of his relatives
should be voted."
It is true that this proposal
will neutralize the voting power of
Gossler's stock. It does not, however,
remove the substantial financial interest he
may continue to have for at least five years
from the entry of a final decree in Columbia
Oil while at the same time remaining
chairman of the board and a substantial
stockholder of Columbia Gas. The record does
not justify a finding that undue hardship
would be suffered by Gossler in requiring
him to dispose of his stock on or before the
entry of a final decree approving the plan.
If hardship were entailed, such result must
be held an incident of this litigation and a
contribution by one of the principal
defendants to the accomplishment of the
object sought in this proceeding. Final
approval of the plan and amendment of the
consent decree will be conditioned upon the
prior disposal by Gossler to another person
or persons having no direct or indirect
interest in or connection with Columbia Gas
of
Page 495
any and all common stock of Columbia Oil
which he may own.
Similar considerations apply to
the stock held by officers and directors of
Columbia Gas. They should not be interested
in voting securities of Columbia Oil.
A different situation, however,
exists with respect to the stock of Edwards
and of Mrs. Clay, daughter of Gossler.
Neither of those persons is a defendant in
this cause. The court has no jurisdiction or
control over them. Edwards has not been a
director of Columbia Gas since 1938.
Possibly some agreement may be reached by
the parties with respect to the treatment of
these two blocks of stock before the time
arrives for the entry of a final decree.
Mokan raises the same objections
urged by the Government with respect to the
stock of the individual stockholders above
mentioned. It adds to that list Charles A.
Munroe and William P. Philips, voting
trustees of the dissolved voting trust of
Columbia Oil, and four brokerage firms.
Since the dissolution of the voting trust,
the voting trustees have not voted stock
held by them and have advised the court they
will not vote such stock. There is no
evidence of any connection between Columbia
Gas and any of the four brokerage firms
except that a member of one firm is a
director of Columbia Gas and another member
(now deceased) was formerly a director of
Columbia Gas. The owners thereof have the
right to direct how their shares shall be
voted. The Court has no jurisdiction over
them. No order will be made respecting this
stock.
The plan of divestiture provides
that for a period of five years from the
date of the entry of an order approving the
plan, the directors of Columbia Oil shall be
persons "not objectionable to the Department
of Justice". Mokan asserts that such an
amendment is illegal under the laws of
Delaware because stockholders of a Delaware
corporation may choose as their directors
whomsoever they please. Mokan further
asserts that the adoption of such an
amendment would not bind the dissenting
minority.
The charter of Columbia Oil may
be amended by its stockholders to provide
the qualifications of a candidate for
director. Under Delaware law it would be
possible by charter amendment to impose as a
qualification of eligibility for a period of
five years the requirement that a candidate
be not objectionable to the Department of
Justice. An amendment to that effect would
bind both the majority voting for it and any
dissenting minority.
Triplex Shoe Co. v. Rice & Hutchins, 17
Del.Ch. 356, 152 A. 342, 72 A.L.R. 932;
Maddock v. Vorclone Corp., 17 Del.Ch. 39,
147 A. 255;
Morris v. American Pub. Utilities Co., 14
Del.Ch. 136, 122 A. 696.
Irrespective of Delaware law,
this court in a Federal anti-trust case has
the right to impose such a requirement as to
the qualification of directors. Columbia Oil
is before the Court as a party. For the
purpose of enforcing the anti-trust laws an
injunction binding Columbia Oil can also
bind its stockholders.
The other objections raised by
Mokan to the plan of divestiture have been
fully considered by the Court and have been
found untenable.
In addition, the City of Detroit
objects to the approval of the plan and
urges that the plan of divestiture should
follow substantially the second of the
alternatives sought by the Government in its
supplemental pleading, i. e., by causing
Columbia Oil to divest itself of ownership
of all stock of Panhandle Eastern. The
question before the Court, however, is not
the relative merits of two plans of
divestiture. The question is simply whether
the plan before the Court is adequate to
meet the requirements for relief under the
antitrust laws. The Government has taken the
position that the plan submitted, with
certain modifications which this Court has
approved, will be effectual to accomplish
the relief sought. The City of Detroit has
harkened back to a plan of divestiture not
developed at the hearings or considered by
the special master and not before the Court.
An order in accordance with this
opinion may be submitted.
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