Alsop v. DeKoven

107 Ill. App. 190, 1903 Ill. App. LEXIS 422
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedMarch 17, 1903
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 107 Ill. App. 190 (Alsop v. DeKoven) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Alsop v. DeKoven, 107 Ill. App. 190, 1903 Ill. App. LEXIS 422 (Ill. Ct. App. 1903).

Opinion

Mb. Justice Freeman

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is a suit brought by the trustees of the estate of John DeKoven, deceased, who ask the aid of the court in construing certain provisions of his will, wherein the “ rest and residue ” of his estate is given to them in trust “ to hold, invest, rent, manage and care for the same, and to pay the net income thereof ” to the testator’s wife “ during her life, so long as she remains unmarried, and upon her death or remarriage” to divide such rest and residue between the appellants herein, if living at the expiration of the wife’s life tenancy. There is no controversy as to the facts, and such of them as may be deemed necessary to an understanding of the questions of law involved a re set out in the foregoing statement.

The testator died April 30, 1898. He left as part of his estate, shares of stock in a number of corporations, which have since his death declared, in one case an extraordinary cash dividend, -in others stock dividends, and in others stock dividends and rights to subscribe at par for new issues of stock. The question has arisen whether any or all of these dividends and rights are to be considered 61 net income ” within the meaning of the provision of the will above referred to, payable to the testator’s wife as the life tenant, or whether they constitute a part of the capital or body of the estate, which by the will is, upon the expiration of the life tenancy, to be divided Between the appellants as remaindermen.

The dividends and rights arrange themselves in three classes. To the first of these belongs the extraordinary cash dividend of twenty per cent declared July 1, 1898, upon 300 shares of the capital stock of the Pullman Palace Car Company. This dividend of twenty dollars per share was paid in cash, amounting to $6,000, and it is to be determined whether this is páyable under the will to the life tenant as net income, or to the remaindermen as a part of the corpus of the estate. The money out of which it was paid appears to have been earned, for the most part at least, during the lifetime of the deceased, and to have been retained by the company as surplus assets. It had never been added to the capital of the corporation, but had remained in the company’s treasury as undistributed earnings. It had not become the property of the testator dur¿ ing his lifetime. While it remained in the company’s treasury it was subject to such uses as the directors might see fit to make of it for corporate purposes. Its ownership was in the corporation. This is well settled, and is conceded by counsel. In Gibbons v. Mahon, 136 U. S. 519-557, the court, by Mr. Justice Gray, says: “ The distinction between the title of a corporation and the interest of its members or stockholders in the property of the corporation is familiar and well settled. The ownership of that property is in the corporation, and not in the holders of shares of its stock. The interest of each stockholder consists in the right to a proportionate part of the profits whenever dividends are declared by the corporation, during itS'Oxistence under its charter, and to a like proportion of the property remaining upon the termination or dissolution of the corporation after payment of its debts. (Citing a number of authorities.) Money earned by a corporation remains the property of the corporation, and does not become the property of the stockholders, unless and until it is distributed among them by the corporation. The corporation may treat it and deal with it either as profits of its business, or as an addition to its capital.” To the same effect is Minot v. Paine, 99 Mass. 101, where it is said (p. 106): “ The net earnings of a railroad corporation remain the property of the company as fully as its other property till the directors declare a dividend. A shareholder has no title to them prior to the dividend being declared.” Hyatt v. Allen. 56 N. Y. 553; Greeff v. Equitable Life Assurance Society, 160 N. Y. 19-32. Applying the principle in the present case, no part of the earnings of the Pullman Palace Car Company out of which the extraordinary cash dividend under consideration was paid had become a part of the testator’s estate at the time of his death, no matter when they had been earned by the company. If the dividend had been paid to the testator in his lifetime, it would have been received by him as income from his stock investment. It did not become anything else when received by the trustees of his estate in the form of an extra dividend, after his decease. It was still income, like Other dividends, and as such it is payable to the life tenant under the provisions of the will.

This conclusion is in accord with what we regard as the greater weight of authority, and with what is said in Waterman v. Alden, 42 Ill. App. 294-319. Reference is there made to the earlier English cases in which it was held that extraordinary dividends and bonuses belonged to the remainderman as accretions to the capital, and it is said that “ in later cases the English courts refused to follow that rule,and cash dividends, whether ordinary or extraordinary, and bonuses declared out of the profits, were held to belong to the income tenant.” (See cases there cited.) The conclusion of the court in that case is thus stated: “ The profits were income, in the absence of an affirmative binding act on the part of the bank changing their character, and it was immaterial whether they were earned by the biink in the lifetime of the testator or after his death.” These views appear to have been concurred in by the Supreme Court in Waterman v. Alden, 144 Ill. 90. See, also, Davis v. Jackson, 152 Mass. 58. It is not seriously disputed by counsel for appellants that the life tenant is entitled to this extraordinary cash dividend as income of the estate.

Mo good reason appears for depriving the life tenant of this cash dividend declared and paid on stock which became a part of the trust estate, in view of the fact that the testator gave to her all the net income of his estate without reference to when such income was paid or received.

The second of the questions presented relates to another class of so-called dividends paid by the issue of certificates of stock and known as “ stock dividends.” These were declared by four of the corporations in which the trust estate was the holder of capital stock. The Pullman Palace Car Company, in 1898, increased its capital stock fifty per cent and issued new stock to that amount representing earnings of the company added to its capital. This new issue of stock was distributed to its stockholders of record in the ratio of one share for each two shares before outstanding. The trustees of the testator holding 300 shares of stock in said company received 150 shares of the new issue, of a par value of $100 a share fully paid. In like manner the Pullman Loan and Savings Bank in December, 1898, increased its capital stock from $100,000 to $200,000, paying for the same out of its surplus and undivided profits, and declaring a stock dividend of 100 per cent, of which the estate holding fifty shares of the original issue became entitled to and received fifty additional shares of the par value of $100 each. In March, 1900, the Chicago Telephone Company, another of the corporations in which the estate was a shareholder, holding 3.55 shares of its stock, declared a stock dividend, so called, of which the estate received seventy-one shares of th¿ par value of $100 each.

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Bluebook (online)
107 Ill. App. 190, 1903 Ill. App. LEXIS 422, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/alsop-v-dekoven-illappct-1903.