Carter v. Crehore

12 Haw. 309, 1900 Haw. LEXIS 48
CourtHawaii Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 27, 1900
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 12 Haw. 309 (Carter v. Crehore) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Hawaii Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Carter v. Crehore, 12 Haw. 309, 1900 Haw. LEXIS 48 (haw 1900).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT BY

FREAR, J.

This is a bill in equity brought by the trustees under the will of the late H. A. P. Carter for instructions as to the disposition to be made of a stock dividend as between life tenants and remaindermen.

The facts are uncontested and as shown by the bill, answer and evidence are as follows: The testator by his will, which was probated December 30, 1891, after making certain specific bequests, devised and bequeathed the residue of his estate to the plaintiffs as trastees to hold one-sixth thereof in trust for each of the defendants and the plaintiff Geo. R. Carter, the income thereof to be paid to him or her for life and after bis or her death the said one-sixth to go to his or her heirs. A part of this property consisted of 875 shares of stock in C. Brewer & Company, Limited, a Hawaiian corporation, with a capital stock of $600,-000 divided into 6,000 shares of the par value of $100 each. On December 31, 1892, a year after the will was probated, the balance of the profit and loss account was $22,234.37, and during the next six years, ending December 31, 1898, the net earnings of the company amounted to $1,582,699.49, making a total of $1,604,933.86 profits, of which, during the same period, $600,-000 (100% ) were paid out in cash dividends, $1,766.93 written off as bad debts, $350,000 carried to revenue account, and $400,-000 paid as a stock dividend as hereinafter set forth, leaving $253,166.93 as the balance of profit and loss account. On October 10., 1898, the corporation adopted the following resolution: “That the capital stock be increased to one million dollars ($1,000,000) on December 31, 1898, and that a stock dividend of $400,000 be made pro rata to the Shareholders as of December 26, 1898. That no fractional shares be issued. That any fractional shares existing on December 26,1898, be sold forthwith at public auction for the benefit of owners and that all old eertifi[311]*311cafes of stock be called, in: for the purpose of issuing a new and uniform certificate for old stock.” The trustees as holders of 875 shares of the old stock were entitled to 583 shares of the new-stock issued as a dividend. In 1896 the shares sold at $250 each; in 1897 at $350;, in 1898 at from $500 to $550; and in January, 1899, after the increase in the capital stock, at from $335 to $350.

The question is whether the new stock issued as a dividend should be regarded as a part of the corpus of the estate to be held by the trustees for the remaindermen, the life beneficiaries to receive only the income thereof during their lives, or whether the new stock itself or any part thereof should be regarded as income to ,be delivered to the life beneficiaries under the will.

The Circuit Judge from whom the case comes on appeal held that all the new stock should go to the life tenants.

There is no lack of authorities upon this question-but it is doubtful if there is any question in regard to which the authorities are in greater conflict.

Questions of this kind usually arise under wills or trust deeds which give property to trustees in trust to pay the income thereof to one for life -and at his death to turn over the principal or corpus to another. The question is therefore primarily a -question of the construction of the will or trust deed with a view to ascertaining the intention of the testator or grantor. That intention will be given effect if not in contravention of rules of law. Of course the creator of the trust cannot interfere with the internal management of the corporation as to when or in 'what form dividends shall be declared. But he may direct to whom they shall go when once they have been declared, whether they are ordinary or extraordinary, cash or stock, and whether they have- been earned by the corporation before or after the creation of the trust. All the authorities agree upon this.

But usually the creator of the trust does not contemplate extraordinary dividends, whether cash or stock, or have in mind the particular period during which the profits out of which they are paid were earned, and therefore he makes no special provision [312]*312in regard to them. He usually, as in the present case, directs merely that the income, dividends, proceeds or profits, as the case may be, shall be paid to one for life with remainder over to another. "What then shall be done with dividends in regard to which he had no special thought one way or the other? In other words what is to be considered as income from the stock within the meaning of the instrument creating the trust and within the general intention of the creator of the trust?

Of course if a so-called dividend is made of the whole or a part of the capital of a corporation, whether in cash or other property, or if a stock dividend is made to represent merely the increase in value of the property of the corporation through natural causes and apart from accumulated earnings, it is considered a part of the corpus of the trust to be kept for the remainderman, only the income thereof to go meanwhile to the life tenant, for, although called a dividend, it is in fact not a dividend proper (which can be paid only from earnings) but a distribution of capital or a change in the evidence of the ownership of capital, and courts everywhere agree that they should look through the form to the substance in cases of this kind. A dividend of this kind not only is not income to the shareholder, it is not even paid out of what is income to the corporation, and the creator of the trust can not be supposed to have intended that it should be considered income or. dividend merely because the corporation or its directors have called it by that name.

So, on the other hand, if a dividend is paid from earnings and is an ‘ordinary cash dividend, there is no doubt as to whom it should go. For, the creator of the trust, having such dividends principally in mind, must be presumed, in the absence -of any indication to the contrary, to intend that they should follow the usual familiar course and go to the one entitled at the time they are declared. Accordingly, such dividends are held not apportionable. If declared during the life tenancy they go wholly to the life tenant even though earned by the corporation wholly or in part before the creation of the trust. If declared after the termination of the life tenancy they go to the remainderman [313]*313though earned during the life tenancy. The authorities agree upon this also. This naturally follows from the distinction between a corporation and its shareholders. Earnings of a corporation are not income to the shareholders until a dividend is declared. Those earnings are variable and cannot be assumed to have been earned at the same rate daily through any given period of time, nor is it feasible to investigate the affairs of a corporation whenever an ordinary dividend is paid in order to ascertain when the profits out of which it is paid were earned, for the purpose of apportioning it between successive owners of the stock.

But with regard to unusual dividends, there is great diversity of opinion. There are at least four different views as to the general rule that should be followed.

First, the early English rule, established in 1799 in Brander v. Brander, 4 Ves. 800, adopted a few years later by the House of Lords in Irving v. Houston, 4 Paton, Sc. App. 521, and followed in many subsequent cases.

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Bluebook (online)
12 Haw. 309, 1900 Haw. LEXIS 48, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carter-v-crehore-haw-1900.