Saturday, May 21, 2016

J Howard Marshall, Anna Nicole Smith, and Koch Industries: The Estate Planning Nightmare

Image result for howard marshall and anna nicole smith
A while back a reporter that talked about a woman who owned the rest of Koch Industries. Right now Charles Koch and David Koch own 84% between them of Koch Industries. I always thought the rest of the ownership was owned by Koch Industries employees (board of directors/employees). However, it looks like Elaine Marshall owns around 15% of Koch Industries which puts her net worth at close to $13 billion as Koch Industries generates roughly $115 billion in revenue (according to Forbes).

Elaine Marshall was married to E. Pierce Marshall who was the son of J.Howard Marshall II (the one married to Anna Nicole Smith). J.Howard Marshall had been a shareholder for 20 years of Koch Industries. According to J. Howard Marshall’s autobiography “Done in Oil” Marshall and Fred Koch (father of Charles and David Koch) had an interest in Great Northern Oil Company which was created in 1954. Fred had founded Wood River Oil and Refining Company in 1940 which was a mid-continent oil company. In 1959 Fred Koch purchased a 35% interest in Great Northern for $5 million. According to Marshall, Fred Koch didn’t have the cash and called up First Chicago bank and Koch asked for a note in order to pay it. Koch must have had a great financial reputation to pull that off in the 1950’s.

Marshall had a 12% interest in Great Northern.  In 1959 Wood River changed its name to Rock Island (which later became Koch Industries after Charles Koch took over). Fred Koch passed away in 1966. Charles Koch had worked at Great Northern in his 20’s and knew the refinery business very well. In 1969 Koch Industries purchased a controlling interest in Great Northern Oil Company. Charles was going to purchase a 40% interest in Great Northern Oil Company but they are asking too much for it. Charles then got the idea to pool his interest along with the interest of Marshall into the holding company of Koch Financial. Charles Koch promised J. Howard Marshall a 30% interest in Koch Financial for Koch Industries. They then purchased Union Oil’s Great Northern Oil Company.

In 1974 Marshall II gave his two sons 4% of Koch Industries stock J.Howard Marshall for estate planning purposes.  He gave his sons the Koch Industries stock claiming they "are the crown jewels, take care of them". By 1980 there was a board room coup for control at Koch Industries. Bill Koch and Fredrick  (brothers of Charles and David Koch) wanted to take the company public. At the time Bill and Fredrick had a 48% ownership in the company and needed more than 50% for control. Freddie and Bill tried to purchase a 4% interest from Pierce Marshall to gain more than a 50% interest. Bill and Fredrick then approached J. Howard Marshall III to purchase his shares.

J. Howard Marshall II sided with Charles and David Koch while Marshall III was aligned with Bill and Freddy Koch. To fight off a corporate takeover by Bill Koch Charles Koch flew to California to convince J. Howard Marshall II to purchase Marshall III’s interest. Marshall II bought his son’s share for $8 million- $208/share (the shares had been gifted to Marshall III over the years). This was a large premium for Koch Industries stock considering the highest previous transaction was $80 per share. Charles Koch had urged the buyout of remaining shareholders. The buyout then lead to a lawsuit from Bill, Fred, and the other shareholders who were bought out.

In 1982 to reduce the cost of probate Marshall put all of his interests in Marshall Associates (a family partnership that held Koch Industries of which he owned 862,535 shares of Koch Industries stock). Marshall liked to use leverage though as he used 505,885 shares of Koch Industries stock as collateral. At the time Koch Industries had 5,850,908 total shares outstanding (Marshall had about a 15% interest in Koch Industries. Marshall was using the dividend income from Koch Industries stock to pay off debt and mostly to finance his lifestyle of giving generously to the ladies in his life. In 1994 Marshall earned about $8 million in dividends from his 15% interest in Koch Industries stock (1995 was a little bit less at only $7 million). This would say that Koch Industries was only paying out a little more than $53 million total in dividends in the mid 1990's when looking at ownership interests which was probably a small payout ratio as Charles Koch directed roughly 90% of the earnings back into the company for expansion.

Marshall had met Lady Walker in 1982 who worked at a strip club. J Howard Marshall would shower Lady Walker with gifts and purchased $1 million of jewels from Harry Winston and Nieman Marcus. He ended up spending $2 million a year on Lady Walker (he would spend $2 million a year on Anna Nicole Smith 10 years later). He tried to pay Lady Walker $1 million a year to handle his public relations (he tried to write this off as a business expense and the IRS said no). To impress her with his wealth J Howard Marshall showed Lady Walker a prospectus of Koch Industries with the front page reading "For Lady/The Crown Jewels". Since Marshall had purchased all these gifts for Lady Walker they are subject to what is known as gift tax (tax Form 709 has to be filed every year with this if the gift is over a certain amount). Marshall had given Lady Walker $12-$14 million in gifts without paying any gift tax on it (Marshall fired his accountant for not being aggressive enough with the IRS).  Failure to file gift tax would cost millions in penalties and fees. Marshall tried to disregard the tax code at all cost (even though he was a Yale trained lawyer).

Marshall had cut out his son Marshall III as a potential beneficiary. The stock was held in a revocable living trust (basically this type of trust avoids probate costs and also is not made public). In 1989, Marshall's first wife Eleanor decided she wanted to increase her charitable giving so she set up a charitable remainder trust. Typically this works by giving a human beneficiary income with the remainder of what is left over going to a charity.

 J. Howard Marshall retained the right to income of the living trust. In October 1991 J. Howard Marshall (who was in his 80’s at the time) met a 24 year old blond haired single divorced mother named Vickie Lynn Smith (Anna Nichole Smith). Anna Nicole Smith who was only 24 (she was a dancer at Gigi's strip club in Houston). What is interesting is because of J Howard Marshall's age he would often go to the strip club during the day and he met Anna Nicole Smith when was working the day shift. Anna Nicole talked about her job so Marshall gave her an envelope with $1,000 cash and told her she didn't need to work. Marshall would then give Anna Nicole Smith $4,000 a month for "consulting fees". Over time he increased these checks to $5,500 per month.  Of course Marshall was contemplating marriage and on Christmas Eve of 1993 a Neiman Marcus employee showed up to the home of Anna Nicole Smith to review jewelry. Over time Marshall purchased a ranch, a home, places in New York, Los Angeles, a Mercedes Benz, and jewelry for Anna Nicole Smith. Not only would these gifts be subject to gift tax but generation skipping tax (GST) due to the age difference (generally if there is more than a 37.5 year age difference in the parties and they are not related then they are subject to generational skipping tax). J Howard Marshall had a creative idea to try to adopt Anna Nicole Smith but his lawyer said that the state of Texas might frown upon that. Marshall and Anna Nicole Smith married on June 27, 1994 (son Pierce Marshall didn't know about the meeting until the day after). At the time of the marriage Marshall was estimated to be worth $500 million. What is interesting is Marshall knew that Anna Nicole had limited intelligence and called her "unteachable". Marshall created a pre-nuptial agreement giving Anna Nicole Smith $100,000 per month for each month married and $5 million if they had a child together (the agreement was 58 pages and Marshall believed that legal documents should be no more than 1 to 2 page). To his credit Marshall never planned on giving Anna Nicole Smith Koch Industries stock. I am sure Charles and David Koch were happy about this. Could you really see a former Playmate being a shareholder of Koch Industries and at board of directors meetings? Although, Marshall didn't want to give Anna Nicole Smith the "crown jewels" he did want to make sure she was financially secure which explains why he would give her monthly payments of $5,500.

Even Charles Koch noticed that Marshall showed strange tendencies during this time period. According to Koch in a 1997 deposition Marshall "tended to get drunk a lot, passed out at one of the shareholder meetings". Charles went on to say that when Marshall got drunk he tended to be pretty foolish.

Marshall however passed on August 4, 1995 at the age of 90. From 1994 to 1995 Koch shares appreciated from $664 million to $780 million. J. Howard Marshall in 1994 transferred $6 million of gifts (including ranch, several houses, cars, jewelry, and a substantial amount of cash) to Anna Nichole Smith. While Marshall and Anna Nicole Smith were dating he would pay her a $4,000-$5,500 per month consulting fee. Because they were not married this amount would be subject to gift tax (if you are married you can give an infinite amount under the marital deduction). When Marshall and Anna Nicole Smith were getting close son Pierce Marshall attempted to shift ownership of Koch Industries around from. This 1999 New York Times article speculated that Anna Nicole Smith (who was only 31 who was a high school drop out) "could become one of the richest women in America". At the time the Marshall family owned 8% of the voting stock for Koch Industries and 16% of the non voting stock. Anna Nichole Smith had issues handling money as in 1996 she filed for bankruptcy (she listed the inheritance from Marshall-who died in the year prior as an asset). Smith had claimed that Marshall promised her half of his $1.6 billion estate. In 1999, a California court awarded Anna Nicole Smith $400 million but then in 2002 a federal court reversed that award. Daniel Fisher of Forbes wrote a good article and timeline of the court cases here. In 2014, a court rule that one of Anna Nicole's children Dannielynn would not inherit the $49 million of the Marshall estate. In essence Koch Industries will not transfer to any new beneficiaries.

The whole J Howard Marshall estate is a very good case study for estate planning. The Marshall family is still one of 9 shareholders of Koch Industries stock. Elaine Marshall and her family still owns about 15% of Koch Industries stock. Bloomberg uncovered Marshall as a billionaire. Bloomberg pegged Marshall's net worth at $13 billion however according to this article a spokesperson said the valuation is inflated. They actually do have a point since Koch Industries is privately owned the valuation is the same as valuing a public company such as Google or Microsoft. Elaine Marshall is 73 years old (younger than Charles Koch). She has two sons one named Preston Marshall (grandsons of J Howard Marshall) who is an oil executive for MarOpCo in Houston. It is said that Preston Marshall is the largest shareholder of Koch Industries outside of Charles and David Koch. Why isn't he on the billionaire list? The other son is E. Pierce Marshall Jr. who works as a Vice President for MarOpCo with his brother and also runs a family office called Elevage Capital Management in Dallas. J. Howard Marshall would be proud as E. Pierce Marshall Jr graduated from Yale Law School in 1995 and received a business degree from Tulane (where he sits on the board)

What is quite interesting is that J. Howard Marshall and Anna Nicole Smith were only married for 14 months and the battle for his estate extended for a mere 20 years. 

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