The U. S. Supreme Court is currently reviewing the latest 9th Circuit decision. Read More...

May 5, 2010
Stern Loses Again at the Ninth U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals

Ninth Circuit Reject en banc hearing

Less than two months after it rejected all claims made by Howard K. Stern on behalf of the late Anna Nicole Smith’s estate against E. Pierce Marshall, the Ninth U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals denied a motion by Smith’s attorneys to rehear the case en banc.

On March 19, 2010 the 9th Circuit upheld the Marshall family’s argument that the case has been fully adjudicated in the Texas Probate Court, which ruled in favor of E. Pierce Marshall and against Smith on every issue. The 9th Circuit ruling states in part: “The district court should have afforded preclusive effect to the Texas probate court’s factual findings and relevant legal conclusions. The determinations adverse to Vickie Lynn Marshall in the Texas probate court prevent her from establishing the elements of her counterclaim, such as J. Howard Marshall II’s intent to give her a substantial inter vivos gift, the tortious nature of Pierce Marshall’s conduct regarding the estate planning
documents, and the reasonableness and amount of her expectancy. We reverse the judgment of the district court and remand with instructions that judgment be entered in favor of the Estate of Pierce Marshall.”

“Today’s denial of a new hearing once again vindicated the efforts of the late E. Pierce Marshall to uphold his father’s estate plan,” said Marshall family spokesman David Margulies. The Ninth Circuit opinion supports the 2001 5 month jury trial in Texas Probate Court, which established that Anna Nicole Smith was never entitled to any assets from the Marshall family beyond the $7 million in cash and gifts she received from J. Howard Marshall, II. The jury also unequivocally rejected Smith’s claim that E. Pierce Marshall and others interfered with her receiving any additional gifts while her husband was alive or at his death.

March 19, 2010
A Statement from the Marshall Family

For Immediate Release

Contact:
David Margulies
(214) 368-0909
(214) 914-1275

Statement From The Family of E. Pierce Marshall

DALLAS (March 19, 2010) The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit today vindicated the efforts of the late E. Pierce Marshall to uphold his father’s estate plan.

The Ninth Circuit opinion supports the 2001 five month jury trial in Texas Probate Court, which established that Anna Nicole Smith was never entitled to any assets from the Marshall family beyond the $7 million in cash and gifts she received from J. Howard Marshall, II . The jury also unequivocally rejected Smith’s claim that E. Pierce Marshall and others interfered with her receiving any additional gifts while her husband was alive or at his death.

“The lies that were told about told about E. Pierce Marshall have finally been put to rest,” said a statement issued by the Marshall family. “Pierce Marshall was never intimidated by Anna Nicole and her bevy of contingency fee lawyers’ use of her celebrity and the legal system to try to loot J. Howard ‘s estate. We are proud to have supported his efforts and continue that fight. Our only wish would be that Pierce were here to see his vindication.”

“Many people have asked over the many years if the fight to uphold my father’s last wishes was worth it,” Pierce Marshall said in a statement issued in 2004. “I know Anna and her lawyers were counting on our family giving up and paying them an absurd sum to go away. That was never going to happen. We never wavered from our belief that, in the end, justice based on the rule of law would prevail.

“We are deeply appreciative that the Ninth Circuit took the time to closely examine the important legal issues raised by this case and agreed with our analysis of the law and facts regarding those issues,” said G. Eric Brunstad, Jr. who represented the Marshall family.

“Anna Nicole Smith and her attorneys never presented a single witness on document that upheld her absurd claims,” said David Margulies, a spokesperson for the Marshall family.
“Texas jurors in the Probate Case listened carefully to all the evidence Smith and her lawyers presented and ruled in favor of E. Pierce Marshall on every point.”

The 9th Circuit upheld the Marshall family’s argument that the case has been fully adjudicated in the Texas Probate Court, which ruled in favor of E. Pierce Marshall and against Smith on every issue. The 9th Circuit ruling states in part: “The district court should have afforded preclusive effect to the Texas probate court’s factual findings and relevant legal conclusions. The determinations adverse to Vickie Lynn Marshall
in the Texas probate court prevent her from establishing the elements of her counterclaim, such as J. Howard Marshall II’s intent to give her a substantial inter vivos gift, the tortuous nature of Pierce Marshall’s conduct regarding the estate planning
documents, and the reasonableness and amount of her expectancy. We reverse the judgment of the district court and remand with instructions that judgment be entered in favor of the Estate of Pierce Marshall.”





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November 14, 2009

A Story To Tell

Ironton native reflects on Ashland Oil career
By Benita Heath | The Tribune

Published Saturday, November 14, 2009

In 1918 Ironton was no different from the rest of the United States. As the papers of the day attest, every particle of news about the war in Europe was inhaled with one question on everybody's mind. Will we down the Kaiser?

At the home of Carl and Hilda Gleichauf at 1014 S. Fourth St., news from the front was just as eagerly sought. However, the couple did have one other thing on its radar screen the upcoming birth of their first child.

That August the county was gearing up for the summer fair, this time with an added attraction.

Miss Stibbs, the only female trainer and harness driver in the country, was bringing Orphan Boy, one of her prized Standardbreds, to race. The purse: $300.

Down at the South Side Theatre, Theda Bara was starring in the silent film, "Two Orphans." Rudolph Wurlitzer at Railroad and Center streets was selling victrolas for $98 while the Underselling Store had men's work shirts for 98 cents.

Oh and one more thing was happening in Ironton that summer. On Aug. 19, 1918, the Gleichaufs welcomed home a baby girl, whom they named Veronica, who would go on to be big sister to four more Gleichaufs.

As she talked about the Ironton she knew in the early part of the 20th Century, Veronica Gleichauf Thistle, now 91, recalls more than the upscale butcher shop at Spruce and Third streets or Lohrman's Bakery.

"My dad always said Ironton was one mile wide and ten miles long," she joked.

Thistle remembers an Ironton of prosperity built on the success of the small businessmen.

"There weren't any empty storefronts," she said. "We didn't have a Wal-Mart."

But Thistle's recollections go beyond what was happening inside the border of her hometown.

She had a front-row seat to one of the significant eras in the oil industry. That ticket came from her years as secretary to one its major players, J. Howard Marshall, the billionaire oilman who would end his days as tabloid fodder when he married blonde bombshell, Anna Nicole Smith.

"It was an education to work for him," Thistle said. "He was a dynamic man. When he wanted something PDQ, it meant yesterday."

Thistle started working for Marshall in 1946, when he was president of the then Ashland Oil and Refining Co., brought in by Ashland's founder, Paul G. Blazer.

Fresh out of business college, Thistle started in the sales department at Ashland in 1942, quickly getting promoted to Marshall's assistant.

"Sometimes he would come in the door dictating. He was very sharp, a keen mind," she said. "He was too smart for Mr. Blazer."

In 1950 Thistle left Ashland Oil to marry West Virginia native, James Thistle, another Ashland executive.

"The most wonderful red-head in the world," she said.

For her wedding present, Marshall and his wife, Eleanor, gave Thistle a silver tray with the inscription, "To Veronica, the best assistant and secretary I ever had."

Marshall left Ashland in the early 1950s, but the two kept in touch from time to time.

"It was a joy to work for him," Thistle said.

And like so many Thistle was shocked at Marshall's choice for his third bride.

"Oh my Lord," she said when asked about Anna Nicole. "I was so glad his children got most of the money. They were the ones who deserved it, not that bleached blonde."

Today, Thistle lives in an apartment at Morning Pointe Ridge not far from the Bellefonte home she shared with her husband, who died in 2001. It's an apartment filled with family photos and mementoes of an almost 10-decade life a life she shared for 51 years with Jim.

"He was a wonderful man," she said. "I couldn't have had a happier marriage."

http://www.irontontribune.com/news/2009/nov/14/story-tell/

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The U. S. Supreme Court is currently reviewing the latest 9th Circuit decision. Read More...

May 5, 2010
Stern Loses Again at the Ninth U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals

Ninth Circuit Reject en banc hearing

Less than two months after it rejected all claims made by Howard K. Stern on behalf of the late Anna Nicole Smith’s estate against E. Pierce Marshall, the Ninth U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals denied a motion by Smith’s attorneys to rehear the case en banc.

On March 19, 2010 the 9th Circuit upheld the Marshall family’s argument that the case has been fully adjudicated in the Texas Probate Court, which ruled in favor of E. Pierce Marshall and against Smith on every issue. The 9th Circuit ruling states in part: “The district court should have afforded preclusive effect to the Texas probate court’s factual findings and relevant legal conclusions. The determinations adverse to Vickie Lynn Marshall in the Texas probate court prevent her from establishing the elements of her counterclaim, such as J. Howard Marshall II’s intent to give her a substantial inter vivos gift, the tortious nature of Pierce Marshall’s conduct regarding the estate planning
documents, and the reasonableness and amount of her expectancy. We reverse the judgment of the district court and remand with instructions that judgment be entered in favor of the Estate of Pierce Marshall.”

“Today’s denial of a new hearing once again vindicated the efforts of the late E. Pierce Marshall to uphold his father’s estate plan,” said Marshall family spokesman David Margulies. The Ninth Circuit opinion supports the 2001 5 month jury trial in Texas Probate Court, which established that Anna Nicole Smith was never entitled to any assets from the Marshall family beyond the $7 million in cash and gifts she received from J. Howard Marshall, II. The jury also unequivocally rejected Smith’s claim that E. Pierce Marshall and others interfered with her receiving any additional gifts while her husband was alive or at his death.

March 19, 2010
A Statement from the Marshall Family

For Immediate Release

Contact:
David Margulies
(214) 368-0909
(214) 914-1275

Statement From The Family of E. Pierce Marshall

DALLAS (March 19, 2010) The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit today vindicated the efforts of the late E. Pierce Marshall to uphold his father’s estate plan.

The Ninth Circuit opinion supports the 2001 five month jury trial in Texas Probate Court, which established that Anna Nicole Smith was never entitled to any assets from the Marshall family beyond the $7 million in cash and gifts she received from J. Howard Marshall, II . The jury also unequivocally rejected Smith’s claim that E. Pierce Marshall and others interfered with her receiving any additional gifts while her husband was alive or at his death.

“The lies that were told about told about E. Pierce Marshall have finally been put to rest,” said a statement issued by the Marshall family. “Pierce Marshall was never intimidated by Anna Nicole and her bevy of contingency fee lawyers’ use of her celebrity and the legal system to try to loot J. Howard ‘s estate. We are proud to have supported his efforts and continue that fight. Our only wish would be that Pierce were here to see his vindication.”

“Many people have asked over the many years if the fight to uphold my father’s last wishes was worth it,” Pierce Marshall said in a statement issued in 2004. “I know Anna and her lawyers were counting on our family giving up and paying them an absurd sum to go away. That was never going to happen. We never wavered from our belief that, in the end, justice based on the rule of law would prevail.

“We are deeply appreciative that the Ninth Circuit took the time to closely examine the important legal issues raised by this case and agreed with our analysis of the law and facts regarding those issues,” said G. Eric Brunstad, Jr. who represented the Marshall family.

“Anna Nicole Smith and her attorneys never presented a single witness on document that upheld her absurd claims,” said David Margulies, a spokesperson for the Marshall family.
“Texas jurors in the Probate Case listened carefully to all the evidence Smith and her lawyers presented and ruled in favor of E. Pierce Marshall on every point.”

The 9th Circuit upheld the Marshall family’s argument that the case has been fully adjudicated in the Texas Probate Court, which ruled in favor of E. Pierce Marshall and against Smith on every issue. The 9th Circuit ruling states in part: “The district court should have afforded preclusive effect to the Texas probate court’s factual findings and relevant legal conclusions. The determinations adverse to Vickie Lynn Marshall
in the Texas probate court prevent her from establishing the elements of her counterclaim, such as J. Howard Marshall II’s intent to give her a substantial inter vivos gift, the tortuous nature of Pierce Marshall’s conduct regarding the estate planning
documents, and the reasonableness and amount of her expectancy. We reverse the judgment of the district court and remand with instructions that judgment be entered in favor of the Estate of Pierce Marshall.”





Site Search

Copyright 2008   |   http://factweb.net
E. Pierce MarshallJ. Howard Marshall