That'll be René Cozette I think, but it's too late at night for me to find more.
Or perhaps not: this roughly translated piece tells a bit about it:
He then turned to the opposed piston two-stroke and made his prototype in 1927, it was an engine of 1100 cc, four-cylinder and eight pistons driving two crankshafts He made extensive use of light alloys, and of course, his supercharger. . This modified engine was mounted on a frame itself designed by Rene Cozette, which included two transverse leaf spring suspensions. Very streamlined and very fast, the car, driven by the Romanian prince Ghyka Canta-cuzéne , won numerous records at Montlhery. In 1929, René Cozette, himself an excellent driver, took to the track to try to establish new records. As a result, presumably, of a failure of a steering control, the car left the track at nearly 200 km / h, causing the death of his driver. The death of René Cozette, aged only thirty-four years, equal to the greatest engineers, was a great loss.