78 A.D. 607 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1903
The first question is whether William J. Lane is entitled under the will to any interest in the shares of stock in Lane Brothers Company owned by the testator. This requires construction of the 14th and 15th clauses of the will which read as follows: “ 14th. If I should die before the consummation of the agreement made by myself and brother William J. Lane for the disposal of our firm’s business, said agreement taking effect May 1st, 1894, and to be consummated May 1st, 1899,1 direct my executors to adhere to the spirit if not possible or advisable to follow the exact letter of the agreement, that injustice may be done to no one. 15th. I further direct that on the consummation of the agreement named, the one-half of my share therein mentioned, that is to say, the half of my one-sixth share, go to my brother, William J. Lane, his heirs or assigns. This has been my intention if I lived, and I desire it carried out in case of my death previous to the consummation of said agreement.”
The testator, John G. Lane, and his brother, William J. Lane, equal partners, agreed to divide their business into six equal parts or shares to be held as follows: William J. Lane, two shares in trust for his minor son Silas; George Lane (a son of William) two shares; John M. Janes, one share; John G. Lane “1 share to be given to whomsoever he will.” The agreement, dated March 21, 1894, was to be fulfilled within an extreme period of five years from May 1, 1894. The firm was to continue meanwhile, and to draw out $20,000 a year for five years if not detrimental to the business, but if the total of $100,000 (i. e., $20,000 a year for five years) could
During the life of the testator it was found that the business of the said firm of Lane Brothers justified the withdrawal of the $100,000' reserved by Lane Brothers before the expiration of the five years’’ limit, and, therefore, in May, 1898, articles of association were entered into between John G. Lane, William J. Lane, George Lane and John M; Janes, whereby was formed the joint stock association of Lane Brothers Company, and John G. and William J. Lane deeded and transferred all the property of their firm to that company. The capital stock consisted of 600 shares of $100 each, divided as follows: William J. Lane, 200 shares; George Lane, 199 shares; John M. Janes, 100 shares; and John G. Lane, the testator, 101 shares. It is seen that William J. Lane took the stock in his own right, and not as trustee for Silas, as contemplated by the agreement. John G. Lane, the testator, died in May, 1899, possessed of the said 101 shares of stock, and leaving, independent of the stock, an estate of more than $200,000.
In Langdon v. Astor’s Executors (16 N. Y. 9, 25), Denio, Ch. J., said: “ There is no principle in the law which forbids the making of testamentary gifts dependent upon the happening or not happening of any event in the future, whether in the testator’s lifetime
The learned Special Term adjudged that William J. Lane was not entitled to any interest in the said shares, and I think that this part of the judgment should be affirmed. The provision made by the 14th and loth clauses is conditional upon the death of the testator before the consummation of the agreement for the disposal of the business of the firm, and also upon such consummation, and I think that such conditions are precedent. As the consummation was brought to pass in the lifetime of the testator, the conditional bequest to William J. Lane is ineffective. It is contended by the learned counsel for William J. Lane that the intent is to make an absolute bequest to his client of one-half of the share of the testator in the said business. It is urged that this intent is manifest if the words of the bequest are read with the language, “ This has been my intention if I lived, and I desire it carried out in case of my death previous to the consummation of said agreement.” The will, aside from the 14th and 15th clauses, is a complete disposition of the entire estate, as it contained a sufficient and effective residuary clause (Morton v. Woodbury, 153 N. Y. 243), and, therefore, the construction of the learned counsel is not the alternative of partial
I think that there is no force in the suggestion that the testator himself made the condition impossible. He did not. At the time he made the will he was under an agreement which, by its terms, became operative through the prosperity of the firm. He could not foresee the tenure of his life, he could not forecast the future of his trade. He, therefore, did not express a condition which was preposterous or one that he knew that lie could render impossible.
The second question is whether the said shares of stock should be sold. One executor insists' upon a sale and the other opposes it. I shall examine this question, first, with reference to the will; and, second, in view of the articles of association of Lane Brothers Company. First, as to the will. The testator does not absolutely authorize, much less direct, a sale of the personalty. The 16th clause
In Mellen v. Mellen (139 N. Y. 210) the principle applied was that where by a will the money was directed to be laid out in the purchase of land for beneficiaries, or land is directed to be sold and the proceeds distributed, it is competent for the parties beneficially interested, if of full age and the gift is immediate and not in trust, to take the money in one case and the land in the other; and Andrews, Ch. J., says that the doctrine is founded on the presumption that such power is given by the testator for the benefit and convenience of the devisees and legatees, and, unless made so in terms, was not intended to prevent the beneficiaries from taking his bounty except in the precise form in which the property would exist after the conversion. I think that the reason for the rule is applicable in the case at bar, and may be applied (Cook v. Lowry, 95 N. Y. 103, 111), the essential fact being that the sole beneficiary, who is free to take, elects to take in specie, and so declares against a conversion, neither directed nor required under the terms of the will. ( Craig v. Leslie, 3 Wheat. 563; Reed's Estate, 82 Penn. St. 428; Wood's Administrator v. Wood's Devisees, 1 Metc. [Ky.] 512; Hester v. Hester, 3 Ired. Eq. 9.) We are not without authority of statute. Shares of stock are personal property within the broad meaning of that term. ( Weaver v. Barden, 49 N. Y. 286; Matter of Jones, 172 id. 575 ; Morawetz Corp. [2d ed.] § 225, and authorities cited.) Section 2744 of the Code of Civil Procedure provides: “ In either of the following cases, the decree may direct the delivery of an unsold chattel or the assignment of an uncollected demand, or any other personal property to a party or parties entitled to payment or distribution, in lieu of the money value of the property: 1. Where all the parties interested, who have appeared, manifest their consent thereto by a writing filed in the surrogate’s office. 2. Where it appears that a sale thereof, for the purpose of payment or distribution, would cause a loss to the parties entitled thereto. The value must be ascertained, if the consent does not fix it, by an appraisement under oath, made by one or more persons appointed by the surrogate for the purpose.”
Again, if it be necessary in such a case as this the court should be astute to find the intent of the testator that the legatee should take
Second.. Are the executors bound to sell the stock pursuant to and in accord with article 9 of the association artielés, or, to put the converse, is the residuary legatee prohibited from keeping the stock ? Article 9 reads as follows : “No member of the association, nor his executors, administrators or other legal representatives, shall sell or transfer any of the capital stock of the association held by him or them, without first offering the same for sale to the association, or, if it decline the option, to a member thereof at a price not exceeding the appraised value of such stock at the time of such offer, determined and recorded as aforesaid.” Lane Brothers Company is a joint stock association, organized under the laws of the State of New York. Such an association is well defined in Bindley on Partnership (Ewell, 2d Am. ed., § 6) as “ consisting of many persons having transferable shares in a common fund,” and the same writer says (Chap. 5) that the principal difference between a copartnership and a joint stock association is that there is in the latter, as a rule, no delect/as personarum, and a transfer of the shares or the death of a member does not dissolve it. In People ex rel. Winchester v. Coleman (133 N. Y. 279) Finch, J., says that People ex rel. Platt v. Wemple (117 id. 136) shows very forcibly how almost the full measure of corporate attributes has, by legislative enactment, been bestowed upon joint stock associations “ until the difference, if there be one, is obscure, elusive and difficult to see and describe,” and proceeds to point out that the essential difference lies in the fact that a corporation drowns the individual rights, while the association leaves the individual rights unimpaired in that the common-law liability for debts remains unchanged and unimpaired.
As the executors declared that all of the debts and all of the legacies (save, of course, as to this disputed claim of William J. Lane) have been paid, and the shares remain unadministered, their “ administrative title ” to the personalty is at end, and, therefore, the personalty which falls within the residue must be handed over to the residuary legatee. But this act is not a salé or a transfer by the executors to the residuary legatee in the sense that one
There is a discrimination to be made between the case at bar and Scruggs v. Cotterill (67 App. Div. 583). In the latter case the agreement provided for a sale from one party to another if either offered the stock for sale, and in case of the death of either party sucli a sale was provided for. The distinction is that a sale was required by the terms of the agreement, and that “ the devolution of property by -will * * * is subject to the just obligations of the testator.” In New England Trust Co. v. Abbott (162 Mass. 148) the decision turned upon a contract which the court construed to mean that whenever a stockholder desired to sell, he must sell to the association, and upon his death his executors should sell in the same fashion.
As to the dividends, the rule is (to ascertain the amount of a general residue) that all the income of the estate not otherwise disposed of must be added to the residue. In Matter of Accounting of Benson (96 N. Y. 499, 511) the court say : “ Ordinarily this is not important as to the interest upon the residue, as both principal and interest go to the same parties. But whenever it is important to
Goodrich, P. J., Bartlett, Woodward and Hirschberg, JJ., concurred.
Judgment modified in accordance with opinion of Jenks, J., and as modified affirmed, without costs.
Sic.
Laws of 1849, chap. 258; Laws of 1851, chap. 455; Laws of 1853, chap. 153; Laws of 1854, chap. 245; Laws of 1867, chap. 289. — [Rep.