76 Mass. 402 | Mass. | 1858
The only question arising on this appeal is the one stated in the reason filed by the appellant; and the decision of it turns on the right of the trustees to the allowance of a credit in their account rendered to the judge of probate of certain dividends received from the Mercantile Wharf Corporation, which they have paid over to certain cestuis que trust for life under the will of George Hallet deceased. The position of the appellants is this : that the sums thus credited cannot properly be regarded as income or profits on said stock, to which alone, by the terms of the will, the cestuis que trust are entitled: but that they are in their nature an extraordinary bonus or unusual addition to the ordinary dividends, or profits of said stock, arising from the sale of part of the corporate property, and ought to be deemed substituted capital, and added to the principal fund, for the benefit of those who will be entitled thereto on the death of the cestuis que trust for life.
But we do not see that, on the facts stated by the parties, this rule is at all applicable to the present case. There is nothing from which it appears that the dividends which the trustees have paid over to the cestuis que trust for life, and for which they claim credit in their account, are of a nature which in any degree impairs the value of the principal fund, or should cause them to be regarded as paid out of the capital stock of the corporation. The main purpose for which the corporation was established, from which these moneys were received, was to purchase a large quantity of real estate lying in that part of the city where wharf property and stores would, in the course of time, be much needed; and by filling up flats, making streets, erecting stores and carrying forward other improvements, to increase the value of the estate thus purchased and enlarged and improved, and thereby to obtain large gains and profits on the original investment or capital stock. It is in the nature of a trading corporation. Property invested in its capital stock is to be regarded in the same light as shares in an insurance, manufacturing or banking corporation. In the absence of any facts showing that the dividends in question were a part of the capital of the corporation, or that the payment of them essentially impaired or diminished the value of the shares, they are to be taken as part of the revenue or profits to which the cestuis que trust for life are entitled.
Under this clause we are inclined to think the trustees would have been well authorized in making payments of these dividends, which were not declared as dividends of capital, to the cestuis que trust for life, even if it had been made to appear that they did encroach on the value of the principal fund.
Decree affirmed.