Cleveland Trust Co. v. Hickox

167 N.E. 592, 32 Ohio App. 69, 1929 Ohio App. LEXIS 483
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 27, 1929
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 167 N.E. 592 (Cleveland Trust Co. v. Hickox) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cleveland Trust Co. v. Hickox, 167 N.E. 592, 32 Ohio App. 69, 1929 Ohio App. LEXIS 483 (Ohio Ct. App. 1929).

Opinion

*70 Sullivan, J.

This cause is here on appeal from the court of common pleas of Cuyahoga county, wherein a decree was entered in favor of George W. Nichols, guardian of Charles Hickox, Martha Ann Hickox, and Patricia Calhoun Hickox, minors, and the issue, involving the sum of $36,000 in cash, is whether that sum of money is income or corpus, and the Cleveland Trust Company, as trustee under the will of Charles G. Hickox, deceased, under Section 10857, General Code, prays for a construction as to the character of this fund, and Alice C. Hickox, beneficiary under the will of her husband, Charles G. Hickox, deceased, contends that the $36,000 received and held by the trustee is income, while the guardian for the minors above named contends that it is principal, and therefore belongs to the corpus of the estate.

In determining the construction of clauses in a will, the purpose of the analysis is to reach the intent of the maker. The same can be said with respect to a contract, where it becomes necessary to interpret one of its provisions. What is the intent of the parties as gathered from the language, giving to the provision the meaning derived from the use of the language employed? The same principle of construction applies to a legislative act — to discover its application the purpose of the Legislature is an element which cannot be ignored. Obviously the same reasoning applies in determining the issue at bar.

What did the corporation do under the authority of the statute? What is the language of the corporate act, giving to the words their ordinary meaning? Is the language impregnated with uncertainty *71 or ambiguity, or does the language itself carry its own interpretation? What was the intent of the board of directors and the stockholders? Was it to declare a dividend? If such was not the purpose of the corporation, is the ultimate result, from the nature of the case, equivalent to the declaration of a dividend? In other words, did the corporation actually do in law what it intended by its corporate expression not to do? If it did, then it is because the naked facts surrounding the transaction compel the conclusion of law that the inevitable finality of the action of the corporation was the declaration of a dividend. It is a well-established proposition of law that no shift or device on the part of a corporation or other entity can escape the application of a law, where, notwithstanding the language, the consequence of the intrinsic acts is the applicability of the law the avoidance of which has been sought by the exercise of the device! These interrogatories and observations naturally and logically arise wherever it becomes of vital importance to reach the purpose and the intent of parties to the transaction. In the case at bar the Cleveland Stone Company, as appears from the record, when under the law it could and did declare a dividend for its stockholders, used language that established beyond peradventure the declaration of a dividend, and it is presumed that, when the resolutions of the corporation hereinafter quoted were passed and adopted by both the directors and the stockholders, had a dividend been intended, language would have been used such as used in previous actions of the corporation where dividends were declared. It is not logical to conclude that there would have been a departure, or *72 that language such as we read in the resolutions would have been employed if the corporation or its stockholders had in mind the declaring of a dividend. There is nothing in the record that furnishes a motive for departing from the ordinary rule of the corporation in the declaration of a dividend, and certainly there is nothing in the language that does not irrevocably lead to the conclusion that a dividend was not intended, and there is nothing in the language from which the conclusion could be drawn that a dividend was actually declared. On the other hand, however, it is conclusive, as will appear from the language, that not only the purpose and intention of the corporation was not to declare a dividend, but to create a basis, founded upon actual consideration, for the cancellation and the surrendering of the old stock in the Cleveland Stone Company, issued at par value, in exchange for new stock of no par value, plus $100 in money, upon the reorganization of the company, and effective only upon the old stock passing out of legal existence, and this observation has an important bearing upon the question whether the $36,000 ■ was income or corpus, because the fact stands out strikingly that, when all of the stock of the Cleveland Stone Company was surrendered under the specific terms of the resolution, in a strong sense the old organization, with par value stock, as a legal entity founded upon that character of stock, passed out of existence, and under the authorities there was a partial or a total liquidation. The distribution of that for which the old stock was exchanged is not distribution of income, but corpus, and it must be noted as bearing upon the question of liquidation that, preceding the reorganization of the *73 company under the terms of the resolution, the stock itself had a market value of $166 per share, and that, therefore, the value of the trust, as represented by 360 shares, was $59,760. Subsequent to the reorganization, and adherence to the provisions of the resolution as to the exchange of stock, the value of the new stock upon reduction of the capital had a market value of only $55 per share, thus making the value of the corpus $19,800, and this sum is less than one-third its value preceding distribution and about one-half of its value when the trust began to operate.

Recurring to our discussion as to whether the corporation declared a dividend intentionally or unintentionally, we think it is profitable to examine the resolution of the directors, dated June 11, 1926. It is as follows:

“Resolution of Directors, June 11, 1926:
“Resolved: That contingent on the reorganization of this Company under Sections 8728-1 to 8728-12 of the General Code of Ohio, so as to permit the issuance of shares of stock without par value, the Board of Directors of this Company hereby authorize an exchange with all present stockholders of one share of no par stock, and $100.00 in money at the time the said reorganization becomes effective upon the surrender to the Guardian Trust Company of each of the outstanding shares of stock now held by each stockholder.”

The superstructure of this resolution, instead of a dividend, is an exchange of property. A dividend is payable as of a day certain. The transaction which finds birth in the resolution of the directors is of no avail unless it is effectuated by the surrender to the Guardian Trust Company of each and every *74 share of the outstanding shares of stock then and there held by each stockholder.

It is claimed that later on the scheme of exchange was abandoned, because by the act of the president of the corporation a notice was sent out to the stockholders, calling a meeting for June 29, 1926, for the purpose of reorganizing the company, and it is claimed that in the same envelope there was a letter signed by the president abandoning the position that the certificate of reorganization was to provide for the cash payment.

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Bluebook (online)
167 N.E. 592, 32 Ohio App. 69, 1929 Ohio App. LEXIS 483, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cleveland-trust-co-v-hickox-ohioctapp-1929.