215 Mass. 112 | Mass. | 1913
This is a suit in equity by ancillary executors for instructions as to their duties. The testator was domiciled in the State of California. His will was admitted to probate in that State. Thereafter a copy of it was filed as a foreign will in the Probate Court for Suffolk county in this Commonwealth, and letters ancillary issued to the plaintiffs who thus are executors by appointment of each State court. Proceedings have been brought against them in the California courts, seeking their removal on the ground that they have failed to account in that State for personal property, for which the plaintiffs feel themselves to be accountable in Massachusetts. Under these circumstances the executors rightly may ask the direction of this court. Stevens v. Warren, 101 Mass. 564.
The testator during his lifetime leased a safe deposit box .in an institution in Boston, for a term unexpired at his death. The bonds, checks and certificates of stock hereafter referred to were in this box, to which the plaintiffs were refused access until they had been appointed executors in this Commonwealth. It is enough for the needs of this decision to say that at the time of his death the testator owned real estate in Minnenesota and Rhode Island, and the following classes of personal property:
(a) Miscellaneous chattels.
(b) Coupon bonds of certain foreign corporations.
(c) Registered bonds of certain foreign corporations.
• (d) Certificates for shares of stock in a corporation organized under the laws of Massachusetts.
- (e) Certificates for shares in the Western Real Estate Trust.
(f) A deposit in the State Street Trust Company, also one in
the Merchants National Bank, both doing business in Boston.
(g) Certificates for shares of stock in various corporations not organized under the laws of Massachusetts.
(h) Two uncashed checks payable to the order of the.testator, drawn on banks in Boston.
(i) Claims for rent under leases of the real estate in Minnesota and Rhode Island, paid voluntarily to the plaintiffs in the county of Suffolk.
(j) A claim for money lent which was paid by the debtor to the plaintiffs in the county of Suffolk.
No serious question is or could be made that this language includes the property described under classes (a), (b), (f) and (h). Pinney v. McGregory, 102 Mass. 186. It also is plain that the registered bonds, being class (c), were property found within the Commonwealth. Bonds, being specialties, have a situs where found. Callahan v. Woodbridge, 171 Mass. 595. Selliger v. Kentucky, 213 U. S. 200, 204. In re Morgan, 150 N. Y. 35. Class (d), being certificates for shares of stock in a domestic corporation, the domicil of the corporation being within the Commonwealth, were found here by the ancillary executors and should be accounted for in our courts. Greves v. Shaw, 173 Mass. 205. Class (e), the shares in the Western Real Estate Trust, come within the same rule. The trustees are resident in this Commonwealth, and their home business office is here, where only can the certificates be transferred upon surrender and new certificates issued. The certificate holder is at least the owner of an undivided equitable interest in the property held by the trustees. There is on principle in this respect no distinction between such certificate and a certificate for shares of stock in a domestic corporation. This is virtually decided by Kinney v. Treasurer & Receiver General, 207 Mass. 368, 371. Peabody v. Treasurer & Receiver General, post, 129.
Class (g), being certificates for shares of stock in corporations not organized under the laws of this Commonwealth, presents the most difficult question. A certificate for shares of stock in a corporation, although evidence of title, does not constitute the title. It is not the stock. “ Shares in a corporation are not chattels personal susceptible of possession, actual or constructive. ... A share in a corporation is a right to participate in the profits, or in a final distribution of the corporate property pro rata. ” Field v. Pierce, 102 Mass. 253,261. Failure on the part of a corporation
Classes (i) and (j), being debts due to the estate of the testator from non-residents, which have been paid in this Commonwealth to the plaintiffs in their capacity as ancillary executors, constitute property which has come to their hands in this Commonwealth and therefore is found here and must be accounted for by them here. New England Mutual Life Ins. Co. v. Woodworth, 111 U. S. 138, 144.
The plaintiffs are instructed that all of the personal property described in the schedule is “estate” of the testator “found” within the Commonwealth, and must be administered in accordance with the provisions of R. L. c. 143, except the certificates of stock in foreign corporations, which under the circumstances here disclosed follow the situs of the domicil of the testator and must be accounted for under the laws of that jurisdiction.
So ordered.