112 Misc. 308 | N.Y. Sur. Ct. | 1920
Pursuant to the decision made in this matter on March 1, 1920 (110 Misc. Rep. 628), objections to the account of the executors and trustees have been filed by the alien property custodian representing Frau Von Burtenbach, one of the life beneficiaries. The questions raised by these objections are now before the court for decision.
The objections are to the retention by the trustees of accumulated profits which were paid to them upon the distribution of the surplus earnings of the F. & M. Schaefer Brewing Company. Under the decision of the Appellate Division in Matter of Schaefer, 178 App. Div. 117; affd., 222 N. Y. 533, it was held that $415 per share paid to the trustees for this stock by the brewing company was part capital and part income, and pursuant thereto $85 per share was decreed to be paid to Albert Schaefer, one of the life beneficiaries, as income.. Scott, J., in the prevailing opinion of the court (at p. 121), in holding that these profits belonged to the beneficiary, said: “ Otherwise, as pointed out by Cullen, J., in Matter of Rogers (22 App. Div. 428), the accumulated profits will go to the unlawful increase of the corpus of the estate and the enrichment of the remaindermen at the expense of the life beneficiary.” This decision was upon an appeal taken by Albert Schaefer from a decree of this court which held that the proceeds of the sale were all capital. No appeal was taken on behalf of Frau Von Burtenbach, although the interests of the two life beneficiaries were exactly similar. No action has as yet been taken to
The case of Central Trust Co. v. Falck, supra, because of the special circumstances was distinguished from the established rule. The facts there were not at all similar to the facts here. In that case the trustees had been acting for nearly fifty years before the action was begun to declare the will invalid because it violated the statute against perpetuities. The accumulations were acquiesced in by Flora Rogers, the beneficiary, for thirty years. Meanwhile a large number of Surrogates’ Court decrees and one judgment of the Supreme Court had been entered, and the prevailing opinion held that it was not fit at so late a day to direct a different disposition of the funds. The action there was in equity, and the long period of acquiescence constituted laches. In the case at bar, however, but a short time has elapsed. Where jurisdiction does not exist it cannot be conferred by consent. Matter of Mondschain, 186 App. Div. 528; Oakley v. Aspinwall, 3 N. Y. 547, 552.
The word “void,” characterizing accumulations in section 16 of the Personal Property Law, must be con
Furthermore, it is argued by counsel for the trustees that Frau Von Burtenbach was made a party to the original appeal in the Appellate Division, that she appeared by her attorney, that she could have appealed in her own behalf and reaped the same benefit. But her attorney himself was a director of the Schaefer Company and knew intimately that the distribution was in part profits. After the reversal of the Appellate Division no steps were taken to have her share of the income paid. The decree of the surrogate was resettled on March 8, 1918, but the provisions with regard to the Von Burtenbach trust were left in the original form. To sustain this contention would defeat the purposes of the Trading with the Enemy Act. It would allow collusion between an enemy alien and a party from whom moneys might be due. Kohn v. KoJm, 264 Fed. Repr. 253. “A condition of war requires an immediate, even drastic action to prevent the use of enemy property against the government. To secure such action, the power to determine in the first instance whether property is or is not enemy property must necessarily vest in some person, and by this act that person is the president.” Biesantz v. Supreme Council, Royal Arcanum, 106 Misc. Rep. 545. Under the provisions of “ Trading with the Enemy Act ” (§§ 7, 9), and the president’s executive order
Finally, the decision of the Appellate Division was the first declaration that part of the distribution was income. The rights of the parties were fixed, therefore, when that court made its new findings, which the Surrogate’s Court, under the special circumstances here, was concluded by. Matter of Housman, 224 N. Y. 525; Code Civ. Pro. §§ 1317, 2754, 2763.
After the reversal of the Appellate Division, when the decree was resettled on March 8, 1918, the United States was at war with Germany, and the alien property custodian was the trustee in the United States of the property of the absent Frau Von Burtenbach. Her direct interest in the litigation was terminated. His status had been recognized by the trustees of the estate, and the sum of $4,059.67, income from the trust, had been previously paid to him on December 8,1917. No notice of the resettlement of the decree was given to him, and consequently no opportunity to object was afforded. The objectant asks herein to amend this
The statement of Mr. Justice Scott in his opinion in Central Trust Co. v. Falck that the beneficiary may enhance the corpus of the trust by voluntary contributions to it cannot apply here in view of the superior rights of the alien property custodian to receive such voluntary contribution in the hands of the trustees as the property of an alien enemy.
The report of the referee as to other issues is confirmed. The objections of the alien property custodian are sustained, and a decree may be entered directing the trustees to make payment of the accumulated income at the rate of eighty-five dollars per share to him as custodian for Bose K. Schertel Von Burtenbach.
Decreed accordingly.