172 N.Y. 137 | NY | 1902
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *139
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *141
The object of this action was to have it determined that, as between the plaintiff, the beneficiary of a trust created by the testator's will, and those entitled in remainder to the trust fund, the shares of stock received by the trustee, in payment of a dividend of fifty per cent, which had been declared by the Pullman Palace Car Company upon its capital stock, were to be regarded, and treated, as income of the trust estate. The question whether the life tenant of property, or the remainderman, should have the dividend, which a corporation has declared and has made payable in certificates of its stock, has been a vexed one. The decisions of the courts in this country and in England have not been harmonious and in this state, it may be said, it had received no authoritative treatment by this court, until the decision of the recent case of McLouth v. Hunt,
(
In approaching the consideration of such a question, the language in which the gift is made to the beneficiary of a trust, or the life tenant of the estate, must be regarded, in order to determine, preliminarily, the comprehensiveness of the testator's intention, with respect to the enjoyment by the object of his bounty of the yield of the intermediate estate. Then the transaction, through which the property of the corporation is being distributed in the extraordinary form of a stock dividend, is to be looked into; in order that its true nature may appear and that a determination may be reached, whether capital, or an accumulation of profits on the capital, is being divided among the stockholders. While the corporate action may not be, necessarily, conclusive upon the court, with respect to the question, if it is based upon facts, and is not purely arbitrary, it will, and should, be controlling. In the first place, then, we have, in this will, a provision made by a parent for his child; which gives to the latter the "rents, issues and profits" of his equal share of the residuary estate, during his life. Upon the remarriage, or the death, of the testator's widow, that share is to be proportionately increased by the distribution of the one-fourth share, which had been held in trust for the widow. Further, the testator directed that the entire income of the securities of the trust fund was to be applied and that no part should be diverted to the formation of a sinking fund to replace any loss of the principal by depreciation in value of the securities. These provisions, certainly, evidence a comprehensive intention of the testator that whatever was in the nature of profits upon, or income of, the trust fund should be fully enjoyed by the beneficiary. In the next place, we have the trustee receiving from the Pullman Company, upon the shares of its stock held in trust, a dividend of fifty per cent, paid out of "accumulated net surplus at the credit of income account," in certificates of new stock of the corporation. The fact of the source of the dividend *144
appeared from the company's statement; which showed an accumulation of net surplus from year to year, for thirty-one years. A cash dividend of twenty per cent had been declared a short while previously; which the trustee had paid over to the plaintiff. Had this dividend of fifty per cent been declared and paid in cash, would there have been much doubt about the plaintiff's right to receive it? (Matter of Kernochan,
The declaration of a dividend by a corporation in active operation is the appropriation of a portion of the assets, which *145 represented the net earnings of the corporation, for the use of the stockholders and, pro tanto, the assets are diminished. The stock no longer represents them. The capital is unchanged; but the value in the market of the shares may be affected by the diminution in the amount of the corporate assets. That the value of the shares of stock has been lessened by a dividend is a fact of no relevancy in determining the question of whether the dividend is to be regarded as income to the life tenant, or as capital for the remainderman. That question will be determined by the origin of the dividend. In this case, a fund had been created by an accumulation of the net earnings of the corporation and it remained a part of the general assets, until, in the judgment of the directors, the time came when it was proper and prudent to distribute it among the stockholders. That which the directors of the corporation distribute among its stockholders, without intrenching upon capital, must be comprehended within the term "profits" and we should assume that the testator intended that what might be paid in that way should belong to the beneficiary.
There is no question of diminishing the capital; nor of increasing the capital for any corporate purpose, or need. It was, simply, a mode of distributing the profits earned by the employment of the capital.
Enough has been said, in connection with the authority ofMcLouth v. Hunt, to render the conclusion necessary that the judgment of the Appellate Division should be affirmed; with costs to the plaintiff and to the defendant trustee, to be paid out of the principal of the fund.
PARKER, Ch. J., O'BRIEN, BARTLETT, MARTIN, VANN and CULLEN, JJ., concur.
Judgment accordingly. *146