175 A. 414 | Pa. | 1934
Decedent died May 18, 1932, leaving a will dated July 21, 1926, duly proved. At the date of the will, he owned 209 shares of Ohio Fuel Corporation, a corporation of the State of Delaware. The 7th paragraph of the will provides "I will and bequeath to A. W. Clemens. . . . Also my Ohio Fuel Corporation stock." The question is whether that legacy was adeemed.
The legacy was specific: Crawford's Est.,
In return for his 209 shares of Ohio Fuel Corporation, testator was entitled to receive 32.67715 shares of preferred and 73.15 shares of common stock of Columbia Gas Electric Corporation. He paid $31.96 for the fraction of the preferred and received a certificate for 33 shares, at the same time taking a certificate for 73 shares of common and $13.05 for the fraction. In April, 1929, the new corporation issued 2 1/2 shares in exchange for one of common stock, making testator's holding of common stock 182.5 shares. In 1930, a 25% stock dividend increased his holding to 228 shares. Later, a portion of the corporate property — said to consist of its oil and gasoline properties — was transferred to a fourth corporation, known as Columbia Oil and Gasoline Corporation, organized for the purpose, which issued to the third corporation its shares, common and preferred; the common stock was deposited under a voting trust agreement and certificates of interest were issued to the third corporation's shareholders, testator receiving such a certificate for 45 shares. During the same period, by exercising purchase rights, he obtained additional shares. The legatee's executors claim the 33 shares of preferred and the 228 shares of common stock of Columbia Gas and Electric Corporation, and the voting trust certificate for the 45 shares of Columbia Oil and Gasoline Corporation, but make no claim for the shares of stock purchased in the exercise of rights. They contend that the shares of both corporations so claimed by them are equivalent to what testator described as "my Ohio Fuel Corporation stock." The learned court below was of opinion that they were neither the same nor substantially the same property as that given, and held that *52 there was an ademption. The question now is: Does the thing given exist? — are the shares in the third and fourth corporations substantially the same thing as the Fuel Corporation stock, though in different forms and with different names? — or is the property claimed a different thing?
In Blackstone v. Blackstone, 3 Watts 335, it appeared that, after a will was made, bank stock, the subject of a bequest, was sold or exchanged for a bond of the purchasers, with the declared intention of keeping the bond for the legatees in place of the bank stock, but the legacy was held adeemed. GIBSON, C. J., stated the rule to be (at p. 337): "It is certainly now held for clear law that a legacy properly specific, and not merely specific in its nature by being charged on a specific fund, is adeemed, or, to speak more properly, extinguished, by any change of its state or form, effected, not by fraud or operation of law, but by the act of the testator, whatever be its purpose, which makes the corpus of the legacy, at his death, a different thing from what is indicated by the terms of the description."
In Slater v. Slater, [1907] 1 Ch. 665, COZENS-HARDY, M. R. put the matter as follows (at page 672): "I feel bound myself to adopt the view taken not in one case only, but in many, that you have to ask yourself, Where is the thing which is given? If you cannot find it at the testator's death, it is no use trying to trace it unless you can trace it in this sense, that you find something which has been changed in name and form only, but which is substantially the same thing." In that case the bequest was of "the interest arising from money invested [inter alia] in Lambeth Water Works Company." Between the dates of his will and his death, the Lambeth Water Works Company was acquired by Metropolitan Water Board, pursuant to an act of Parliament, under the provisions of which Metropolitan Water Board stock was issued to testator for the Lambeth Water Works Company investment. It was held that the transaction in substance was *53 a sale of the Lambeth Water Works Company to the Metropolitan Water Board, and that the Metropolitan stock received in compensation was not the same thing as the investment bequeathed.
In Hoke v. Herman,
The learned auditing judge said: "The 209 shares held when the will was made have disappeared, and by reason of a merger of companies, of divers allotments, stock dividends, the exercise of 'rights' by additional purchases, etc., the testator had in its place 282 shares of common and 63 shares of preferred stock in the Columbia Gas Electric Company, and 56 shares in the Columbia Oil and Gas Company. All of these are not claimed by the A. W. Clemens Estate but only such as trace a direct line of descent back to the original 209 shares of Ohio Fuel Corporation. The interest represented at his death was in a different number of shares, of different classes of new values, in two different companies. There was certainly a complete change in form."
Referring for a moment to the fact that appellants do not claim all of the shares found, it may be noted that, while the legacy of "my Ohio Fuel Corporation stocky" is specific, the form of expression is generic and (the will speaking as of the date of death) would carry all the *54
stock of Ohio Fuel Corporation which testator possessed at his death (whether more or less than he possessed at the date of the will): Fidelity Trust Co.'s App.,
Appellants seek to meet the auditing judge's statement of the result of testator's participation in the change of his investment in one corporation for shares in two others, by suggesting that in the consolidation or merger of corporations no sale takes place. Though true in some instances and not in others (Buist's Est.,
The change produced in the testator's Ohio Fuel Corporation stock is wholly unlike that resulting from the conversion of a state bank into a national bank (Maynard v. Bank, 7 Phila. 6), or from the change in par value of shares (Fidelity Trust Co.'s App., supra); nor are appellants aided by Black's Est.,
Decree affirmed, costs to be paid by appellant.