'James Howard Marshall II' (
January 24 1905 –
August 4 1995) was a wealthy
magnate,
American oil business executive, and
university professor.
Early Years
Born
January 24,
1905 in
Germantown, Pennsylvania, J. Howard Marshall II attended
George School, a private Quaker high school in
Newtown, Pennsylvania, and then studied liberal arts at
Haverford College, also a Quaker institution, graduating in
1926. While there he edited the school
newspaper and played
soccer and
tennis. He went on to
Yale Law School, graduating in
1931 Magna cum laude. At Yale, he studied with the
law and economics pioneer Walton Hale Hamilton, who would strongly influence his future work. Upon graduation he served from
1931 and
1933 as an Assistant
Dean at
Yale Law School, although his teaching schedule during these years has not been definitively documented. At the same time, he was producing
scholarship as a member of the influential
legal realist school of thought, working with future
Supreme Court Justice
William O. Douglas on an article entitled ''A Factual Study of Bankruptcy Administration and Some Suggestions''.
[1] However, his most influential work, done with
Norman Meyers, were two articles entitled ''Legal Planning of Petroleum Production''.
[2].These pioneering studies offered an alternative to the then-current practices of
controlled production among the
oil industry, which were leading to boom/bust cycles, and gained the interest of the government, especially since the legal minds behind the
new deal were staunch
legal realists. In
1933 he left
Yale to become the Assistant
Solicitor at the
Department of Interior under
Harold L. Ickes.
In 1935, he left
government service to become the special
counsel to the president of
Standard Oil of
California (now
Chevron) in
San Francisco. Another two years later he joined the firm now known as
Pillsbury Winthrop Shaw Pittman, which was the company's outside counsel. He was called back to
Washington during the
war as Solicitor of the Petroleum Administration for War, helping develop
America's
energy policy during the war, and later as a member of the Committee on Reparations. In 1944 he became President of Ashland Oil and Refining Co. (now
Marathon Oil), and began his long career as an oilman. Later positions included Executive Vice President at Signal Oil and Gas, President of Union Texas Petroleum and Vice President of Allied Signal until his semi-retirement in 1970. Marshall remained active in the energy industry through many personal endeavors with Great Northern Oil Company, Koch Industries and culminating in 1984, when he founded Marshall Petroleum.
Koch Industries
Marshall turned his investment in Great Northern Oil Co. with
Fred Koch during the 1950s into a 16% stake in
Koch Industries, now the nation's largest privately held company. When his eldest son
J. Howard Marshall III sided with Fred Koch's sons
Bill and Fredrick and other collateral family members in a failed attempt to take over Koch Industries from
Charles and
David Koch, he stripped the eldest son of his inheritance. Conversely, during the same dispute, the late
E. Pierce Marshall sided with his father, Charles Koch and David Koch.
Marriages
He married Eleanor Pierce in
1931 and divorced in
1961. His second marriage, to Bettye Bohannon, lasted from
1961 until her death in
1991. In
1994, at the age of 89, he married 26-year-old celebrity
Anna Nicole Smith. Their marriage lasted fourteen months until his death.
Death and ensuing lawsuits
Following Marshall's death, Anna Nicole Smith (who died on
February 8,
2007) became involved in a court battle with her former stepson,
E. Pierce Marshall (who died on
June 20,
2006). J. Howard's will and trust did not include Anna Nicole or J. Howard's other son,
James Howard Marshall III. Much of the estate has been tied up in state and federal courts as Anna Nicole and J. Howard III sought to overturn the will and trust. In 2001, they both lost their cases during a six-month Texas state court jury trial, upholding Marshall's will and trust. Smith then declared bankruptcy in California and was awarded $474 million as a sanction for alleged misconduct. In 2002, the bankruptcy judgment was vacated and her award was reduced to $88 million in a
Federal District Court in California. In December 2004, a three-judge panel of the
9th Circuit Court of Appeals vacated the District Court decision and affirmed the Texas Probate jury finding that no misconduct had taken place, Smith was not one of J. Howard Marshall's heirs and that the federal courts lacked jurisdiction over state probate matters. However, on
1 May,
2006, the
Supreme Court in ''
Marshall v. Marshall'' reversed the ninth circuit's decision on jurisdictional grounds, allowing Smith another opportunity to pursue her claims in federal court. The case has been remanded to the 9th Circuit for adjudication of the remaining appellate issues not previously reached.
Footnotes
1. 32 Columbia L. Rev. 59 (1932)
2. 41 Yale L. J. 33 (1931-1932); 42 Yale L. J. 702 (1932-1933)
External links
★
J. Howard Marshall II, ''Done in Oil: An Autobiography of J. Howard Marshall II'' (College Station : Texas A & M University Press, 1994).
★ Otto J. Scott, ''The Exception: The History of Ashland Oil'', McGraw Hill, 1968
★
Ashland Oil history
★
factweb.net Profile of J. Howard Marshall, II
★
''Wall Street Journal'' article
★
''New York Times'' article
★