223 A.D. 615 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1928
This is an accounting proceeding involving the construction of a trust instrument and, as construed, its validity. The narrow question presented is whether the due allocation wholly to principal of two true stock dividends by a trustee under a trust, providing income for a life beneficiary with remainders, constitutes an unlawful accumulation under the provisions of section 16 of the Personal Property Law of the State of New York. The learned referee to whom the issues were referred held that such allocation infringed the statute named. We hold to the contrary.
The facts out of which the questions arise briefly follow: In July, 1917, Mr. John D. Rockefeller transferred to the Equitable Trust Company, as trustee, 12,000 shares of the capital stock of the Standard Oil Company (Indiana) to constitute the corpus of the trust. The par value of the shares was thereafter reduced from $100 to $25, and the trustee exchanged the 12,000 shares of old capital stock for 48,000 shares of new capital stock. In 1920 this Standard Oil corporation paid a stock dividend of 150 per cent, making the total number of shares then held by the trustee 120,000. In 1922 the same corporation paid a stock dividend of 100 per cent or 120,000 shares. The trustee then held 240,000 shares. The net income of the trust under the trust deed is payable to the defendant, respondent, Mrs. Prentice, after deducting an annuity to her husband, E. Parmalee Prentice. A power of
The query which has given rise to so much litigation, namely,
In Bourne v. Bourne (209 App. Div. 419; affd., 240 N. Y. 172) this court, through Mr. Justice Merrell, said: “ The intention of the testator should of course govern in determining the manner of distributing income or apportioning stock dividends, whenever such intention can be ascertained (Matter of Osborne, 209 N. Y. 450; Matter of Megrue, 224 id. 284), but I find nothing in the testator’s will which indicates any intention that the life beneficiaries should receive any income or profits, except in the usual and ordinary way and in accordance with the accepted definitions of such terms. These extraordinary dividends, therefore, fall within the rules stated in the Osborne and Heye Cases (supra).”
The referee, in addition, has also found as a fact that the intent of the settlor was as above expressed. Findings Nos. 25 and 26 are as follows:
“ 25. It was the intention of said John D. Rockefeller in the creation of said trust, as expressed in said trust agreement, that the power should be vested in said The Equitable Trust Company of New York, as Trustee, with the consent of said Committee, to determine whether a stock dividend of the character of the two stock dividends referred to in the complaint herein constituted
“ 26. It was the intention of said John D. Rockefeller, expressed in the provision of Section I of said trust agreement dated July 3, 1917, quoted in Finding numbered 17, to give the Committee constituted under said trust agreement the authority to veto any allocation of any part of any stock dividend of the character of the two stock dividends referred to in the complaint herein received by said The Equitable Trust Company of New York, as Trustee, to income of the trust fund held by said The Equitable Trust Company of New York, as Trustee, under said trust agreement, and to give to said The Equitable Trust Company of New York, as Trustee, the power, with the consent of said Committee, to allocate all of any stock dividend of the character of the two stock dividends referred to in the complaint herein received by said The Equitable Trust Company of New York, as Trustee, to principal of said trust fund.”
Subject to any inhibitions against unlawful accumulations, it is axiomatic that a settlor has a right to give his property in such manner as he pleases. He may give the life beneficiary the income of such sum as he may designate, excluding entirely any stock dividend; or he may treat any stock dividend entirely as income or as principal, giving the life beneficiary only the income during her life, as in the case at bar. In United States Trust Co. v. Heye (224 N. Y. 242), Judge Crane, speaking for the court, said:
“Asa testator may dispose of his corporate holdings as he pleases, the first thing to be ascertained in cases of this kind is the intention as expressed in the will.”
The allocations of these stock dividends wholly to principal being thus clearly in accordance with the intention of the settlor, we are next brought to inquire whether there is any unlawful accumulation involved in the carrying out of this intention so clearly expressed in the trust instrument by the creator of the trust. Section 16 of the Personal Property Law (as amd. by Laws of 1915, chap. 670; since amd. by Laws of 1927, chaps. 384, 681) provides in effect that there may be accumulations for the benefit of infants during their minorities, and then “ All other directions for the accumulation of the income of personal property, not authorized by statute, are void.” This section of the Personal Property Law must be read in connection with section 10 of the same law before its amendment in 1922 (Laws of 1922, chap. 452), which provides:
(t The term ‘ income of personal property/ as used in this article,*620 means the income or profits arising from personal property, and includes the interest of money and the produce of stock.” We have reached the conclusion that section 16 does not contain any prohibition which applies to the trust here created. In the first place, it cannot be said that these stock dividends have been received as “ income or profits arising from personal property,” nor can they be said to be “ the produce of stock.”
It is well settled that the distribution of these additional units by means of a stock dividend does not constitute a distribution of income. (Towne v. Eisner, 245 U. S. 418; Eisner v. Macomber, 252 id. 189; People ex rel. Clark v. Gilchrist, 243 N. Y. 173.) On the contrary, the stock dividends in question constitute merely a subdivision of the capital stock of the corporation into a greater number of units.
In the second place, it cannot be said that the aforesaid provision of the trust instrument was a mere device for avoiding the prohibition of the statute against the accumulation of personal property. No contention is raised that either the trustee or committee is able to dominate or control the corporation whose stock is involved herein. There was, therefore, no attempt or power shown to violate the act by an accumulation of income through the withholding of dividends from income, which ordinarily would be declared and paid in cash. It is, moreover, not the public policy of the State to regard stock dividends upon stock held in trust as accumulations of income. This is shown by the amendment of the Personal Property Law in 1922 (Laws of 1922, chap. 452, since amd. by Laws of 1926, chap. 843) by the addition of section 17-a expressly providing that the addition of stock dividends to the principal of a trust pursuant to the provisions of the will, deed or other instrument creating the trust, shall not be an accumulation of income within the meaning of the act. The purpose of the enactment was not to declare a change in the existing law, but rather to clear up any doubt existing as to the policy of the State upon the question involved, owing to certain dicta contained in Matter of Osborne (209 N. Y. 450, 475) as to the possible effect of the statute against accumulations upon a true stock dividend. Prior to the Osborne case and to the amendment of 1922, it had time and again been held that an addition to the corpus of a trust through a stock dividend was not violative of the law against accumulations. (Chester v. Buffalo Car Mfg. Co., 70 App. Div. 443; Matter of Rogers, 161 N. Y. 108.)
It follows that the judgment appealed from should be reversed and a judgment entered that the trustee file an amended account allocating to principal all the shares of stock received on account
Dowling, P. J., Merrell, Martin and O’Malley, JJ., concur.
Judgment reversed and judgment ordered that the trustee file an amended account allocating to principal all the shares of stock received on account of both stock dividends referred to in the complaint, with costs to all parties appearing payable out of the fund. Settle order on notice.