Brock Estate

218 A.2d 281, 420 Pa. 454, 1966 Pa. LEXIS 785
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMarch 22, 1966
DocketAppeal, 51
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 218 A.2d 281 (Brock Estate) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brock Estate, 218 A.2d 281, 420 Pa. 454, 1966 Pa. LEXIS 785 (Pa. 1966).

Opinions

Opinion bt

Mr. Justice Jones,

Alice G. Brock (decedent) died September 14, 1939. Under the presently pertinent portion of her will, the decedent devised and bequeathed her residuary estate, in trust, and directed, inter alia: (1) that certain fixed sums, totalling $18,700, annually be paid from the trust income to seven specifically designated friends and relatives (primary, beneficiaries) ; (2) that any annual trust income in excess of $18,700 be paid annually to two of such designated friends (secondary beneficiaries) ; (3) that any income released from the' trust, by reason of the death or deaths of any and finally all, of the primary or secondary beneficiaries, be paid forever in equal shares to Bryn Mawr College (Bryn Mawr), and the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts (the Academy).

The present factual status of the trust is that four of the seven primary beneficiaries have died; the annual income exceeds $18,700; the first $7700 of the annual income is being paid to the three surviving primary beneficiaries, the next $11,000 in annual income is being paid in equal shares to Bryn Mawr and the Academy and the income in excess of $18,700 is being paid to the one surviving secondary beneficiary who is the appellant on this appeal.

On September 3, 1964, the trustees1 purchased seven shares of the capital stock of Philadelphia Fund, Inc. (Fund), a mutual fund and regulated investment company.2 On September 30, 1964, the trustees re[457]*457ceived from the Fund a distribution of $1.05. The authorizing resolution of the Fund described this distribution as-“a quarterly distribution of 7$ per share out of ordinary net income and 8$ per share payable from realized capital gains,” and provided for the payment of such distribution “in cash or additional shares of stock, at the option of the receiving stockholders.”

The trustees elected to receive payment in cash and received 49$ designated “ordinary net income” and 56$ designated “realized capital gains”. The trustees then filed an account in the Orphans’ Court of Delaware County wherein the entire distribution of $1.05 was allotted to income. Bryn Mawr filed objections to the account on the ground that the amount of distribution from “realized capital gains” (56$) should be dis: tributed to principal3 rather than income. The court sustained Bryn Mawr’s objection and directed the allocation of the 56$ distributed from “realized capital gains” to principal.4 From that decree a life tenant has appealed.

[458]*458The issue, narrow in scope, presents, primarily, a problem of statutory construction: is a distribution. made by a mutual fund or regulated investment com-' pany the source of which distribution is “realized capital gains” allocable to income or to principal under the Pennsylvania Principal and Income Act of 1947?5 More specifically, does such “capital distribution” fall within the provisions of §(5) (1)6 or of §(5) (3)7 of the Act?

[459]*459Any realistic approach to this problem must consider necessarily (a) the nature of a mutual fund or regulated investment company including its manner of doing business and its method of distribution of income and capital gains; (b) the view taken on this subject in other jurisdictions and by legal scholars; (c) the view taken by the courts in our own jurisdiction ; (d) an analysis of the language of § § 5 (1) and 5 (3) of the Principal and Income Act.

The Philadelphia Fund, Inc., a Delaware corporation, is an “open-end investment company (commonly called a mutual fund) and is registered as such under the Investment Company Act of 1940”.8 The business of such fund or company is to buy, hold,9 and sell corporate stocks and other securities. Sources of the distributions made by such funds or companies are twofold: “. . . (1) the interest and dividends which they receive from the securities in their portfolio, which is sometimes referred to as ‘cash income’; and (2) the gains or profits which they receive when they make an advantageous sale or exchange of capital assets, which are known as ‘capital gains.’ After deducting its operating expenses, the company passes along to its shareholders the net income from both of these sources, in the form of dividends. For federal tax purposes,- a distinction is made by the investment company as to the source from which these dividends are derived. Dividends derived from the company’s ordinary income [460]*460are usually designated as ‘cash dividends’ and are ordinarily fully taxable to the shareholder. Dividends which represent capital gains are always termed ‘capital gains dividends’. Most investment companies provide the shareholder with the option either, to receive capital gains dividends in cash or in additional shares which represent cash values. Should the shareholder make no election, the company automatically issues additional shares for the capital gains dividend.

“The shares of investment companies, whether organized as corporations or as Massachusetts trusts, have a market value which fluctuates from time to time, as do the prices of other securities. The prices of the shares of the larger investment companies are qiioted daily by the financial press. The capital gains dividends which the shareholder receives bear no relation to the quoted price of the investment company’s stock, but represent solely the individual’s proportionate interest in the net profit which the company derives from changes in its portfolio of investments. In this connection, however, it should be observed that in the event an investment company sustains a capital, loss from the sale or exchange of a security which it holds, the shareholder is never required personally to sustain any part of it, except insofar as such a loss may affect the market value of his shares.”10

The stipulated reference to the Fund as an “open-end” investment company connotes that, unlike a “closed-end” company which has a relatively stablecapitalizatión, the Fund has no fixed capital, may issue new Shares of stock ia its discretion and may, and on demand will, redeem any or all of its outstanding shares of stock. In respect to. the instant controversy, the difference between “open-end” and “closed-end” companies is without significance.

[461]*461If an investment company or a mutual fund submits to federal regulation under the provisions of the Investment Company Act11 it acquires the status of a regulated investment company to which are extended certain tax advantages (26 U.S.C. §854).12 By way of illustration: (a) if the company distributes a minimum of ninety (90%) per .cent of its investment income (i.e., interest, dividends, etc.), to its shareholders the company pays no tax on such income; (b) -if-the company distributes its net “capital gains” to its shareholders, it avoids paying a tax thereon but each, shareholder reports his share of such gains in his own return, paying a tax thereon at the rate applicable to. him which may

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Brock Estate
218 A.2d 281 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1966)

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Bluebook (online)
218 A.2d 281, 420 Pa. 454, 1966 Pa. LEXIS 785, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brock-estate-pa-1966.