Armentrout v. Armentrout

63 Ohio Law. Abs. 186
CourtAllen County Probate Court
DecidedJuly 1, 1951
DocketNo. 24076
StatusPublished

This text of 63 Ohio Law. Abs. 186 (Armentrout v. Armentrout) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Allen County Probate Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Armentrout v. Armentrout, 63 Ohio Law. Abs. 186 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1951).

Opinion

OPINION

By QUATMAN, J.

This is an action for declaratory judgment in which Emma A. (Herbst) Armentrout, life tenant of a life estate established under the terms of the last will and testament of Charles F. Herbst deceased, petitions this court to determine the disposition to be made of 1219 shares of stock of The City Loan and Savings Company, declared and paid by said company as stock dividends. Paul O. Boesel, attorney, was appointed by the court as guardian ad litem to represent the interest of certain minor defendants, remainderman under the aforesaid trust. Thereafter the matter was argued before the court and the case continued pending submission of certain exhibits and agreed upon facts relating to the finan[188]*188cial structure and stock records of The City Loan and Savings Company. Thereafter this cause again came on to be heard and after oral argument the motion of Plaintiff to submit briefs was allowed. Counsel for Plaintiff has filed two very excellent briefs indicating many hours of research on the subject for which the court is most thankful.

The court finds that Charles F. Herbst died testate on February 6, 1947, his will having been admitted to Probate in this court on February 14, 1947. Item 9 of the will, a residuary clause, creates an ordinary life estate for the benefit of Emma A. (Herbst) Armentrout with the remainder to the defendants. At the time of his death, Charles F. Herbst, was the owner of 1300 shares of the stock of the City Loan and Savings Company, Lima, Ohio, and the same passes under item 9th of the will as part of the corpus of the life estate. After testator’s death the City Loan and Savings Company, at regular semi-annual directors’ meetings, called in December and June, authorized the payment of stock dividends which realized an increase of 1219 shares, leaving an aggregate of 2519 shares in the hands of the administratrix. From the company’s earnings and distribution sheet submitted by stipulation there is some evidence to indicate that not all dividends, both cash and stock, were paid from current earnings, i. e., the six months period immediately preceding the declarations, however, it is not seriously contended by the guardian ad litem and it also appears to the court that the distribution was intended by the directors to be made from current income, and not from some surplus earnings account that had been accumulating over a long period of time.

The court is now called upon to decide the issue as to whether or not a stock dividend declared at a regular directors’ meeting to be paid from current earnings becomes the property of a life tenant or belongs to the corpus. There being-no statutory authority in this state the court must decide the question from primarily an interpretation of testator’s intention as expressed in the will and secondarily case precedent.

It is fundamental that the intention of the testator is the pole star that guides the court in interpreting the provisions of a will. The court must look to the four corners of the instrument in order to draw out that intent. The court has searched the will in vain for testator’s intent as to the instant question and in truth must conclude that it is just not there. Item 9th of the will in question is the only part of that instrument from which an intent on the part [189]*189of decedent as to the mater in issue might be drawn. The pertinent part of that item reads: “All the rest, residue and remainder of my estate be the same real personal or mixed, and wheresoever situate, —, —, —, I give devise and bequeath to my wife, Emma Almeda Herbst for and during the period of her natural life. At the death of my said wife, —, all property devised or bequeathed by this item of my Last Will and Testament, shall be divided equally among my three children, —.”

It is obvious that this wording creates an ordinary life estate pure and simple, and this conclusion is not disputed. Neither this item nor any other item of the will refers to disposition of stock dividends and we must, therefore, conclude that the testator intended that they pass according to the law as applied in this situation. The fact that testator failed to retain all previous stock dividends paid during his life time is not impressive for several reasons. There is no defined pattern in the transfers indicating that Charles F. Herbst was establishing an estate for his heirs similar to that established by the will; a sizable portion of the transfers was presumably made for the valuable consideration; the fact that testator did receive stock dividends on numerous occasions would indicate that he was fully aware of this policy of the City Loan and Savings Company. This latter point has a strong influence on the decision in Fifth-Third Union Trust Company v. Davis, 1936, Ohio Supp. 251, Id., 55 Oh Ap 377, 10 N. E. 2d 4.

Having failed to find any intention on the part of the testator expressed in the will as to the disposition of stock dividends we must therefore turn to the law. The texts, digests and reports are replete with learned writings and opinions as to whether or not stock dividends should go to the corpus or be distributed as income. The issue has been argued in courts throughout the land and it is no tribute that the authoriies are extremely divided. This court shall of necessity confine itself to the holdings of its own jurisdictions although counsel for Plaintiff has very ably and properly reviewed the foreign decisions in his briefs.

The first reported Ohio case involving a similar issue as the instant case is that of Wilberding, Administrator, v. Miller, 1914, 90 Oh St 28, 106 N. E. 665, L. R. A. 1916A, 722. The stock dividends in that case were paid during a reorganization and out of the assets of the liquidating corporation. The dividends were held to go to corpus. Thereafter the issue was tried in Ohio Savings Bank & Trust Co. v. Clark, 1916, 7 Oh Ap 6, and the court held: “Dividends remaining in the hands of [190]*190the executors, paid to them on stock owned by the testator, pass to his widow (life tenant) whether paid in cash or stock, provided that the actual value of the stock at the time of testator’s death be not depleted by stock dividends.” (see Syllabus 4)

In 1923 the court in Lehmann, Trustee v. Endowment Fund Association of the University of Cincinnati, 19 Oh Ap 339, had both of the above mentioned cases before it. In the Lehmann case, supra, the stock dividend was issued against surplus transferred to capital. There is nothing in the report to indicate if the surplus amount represented accumulated or current earnings other than the statement on page 341 of 19 Oh Ap.: “It is a further fact that the surplus, against which was issued the stock in question, was used in the prosecution and enlargement of the company’s business.”

This apparently was asserted to show good faith on the part of the directors.

It was argued in the Lehmann case, supra, as here, that the Wilberding case, supra, was not controlling in that it involved a distribution of assets on dissolution of the corporation and in answer to this, Hamilton, J., 19 Oh Ap on pages 344-345 of the report states: “But the well-considered and lengthy opinion of Judge Johnson leads to the conclusion that the Supreme Court was adopting a rule for Ohio for such cases as that under consideration. We, therefore, feel bound to hold, under this decision, that the stock in question is a part of the corpus of the estate, and not the property of the life tenant.”

The case was certified to the Supreme Court as being in conflict with Lamb v.

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Related

Eisner, Internal Revenue Collector v. MacOmber
252 U.S. 189 (Supreme Court, 1919)
Eisner v. MacOmber
252 U.S. 189 (Supreme Court, 1920)
Fifth-Third Union Trust Co. v. Davis
10 N.E.2d 4 (Ohio Court of Appeals, 1936)
Lamb v. Lehmann
143 N.E. 276 (Ohio Supreme Court, 1924)

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Bluebook (online)
63 Ohio Law. Abs. 186, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/armentrout-v-armentrout-ohprobctallen-1951.