Cooke Trust Co. v. Waialua Agricultural Co.

35 Haw. 747, 1940 Haw. LEXIS 3
CourtHawaii Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 27, 1940
DocketNo. 2389.
StatusPublished

This text of 35 Haw. 747 (Cooke Trust Co. v. Waialua Agricultural Co.) 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
Cooke Trust Co. v. Waialua Agricultural Co., 35 Haw. 747, 1940 Haw. LEXIS 3 (haw 1940).

Opinion

OPINION OP THE COURT BY

KEMP, J.

Joe A. Vivichaves, a resident of Honolulu, died testate on January 19, 1920. His will, which was duly admitted to probate in the circuit court of the first circuit of the Territory, contained the following bequest: “I give and *748 bequeathe unto the said MISS JANE DOUGLAS, for the term of her natural life, all the dividends and profits of all my shares of and in the Capitol stock of WAIALUA AGRICULTURAL COMPANY, LIMITED, a corporation, Upon the death of the said MISS. JANE DOUGLAS, or in case she die before me, I give and bequeath all my shares in the Capitol stock of the said WAIALUA AGRICULTURAL COMPANY, LIMITED, a corporation unto the following nephews and niece of mine * * * and to their administrators, executors and assigns forever.” The “Miss Jane Douglas” mentioned in the will of the testator was also known as Jane K. Brede and as Jane Douglas Vivichaves Brede. For convenience she will be hereinafter referred to as “Mrs. Brede,” and the Waialua Agricultural Company, Limited, will be referred to as “Waialua.”

The testator at the time of his death owned and possessed 200 shares of the capital stock of the Waialua Agricultural Company, Limited, and upon the settlement and distribution of his estate his legal representative caused to be issued to Mrs. Brede by Waialua, in conformity with the second paragraph of the will of the testator, certificate number 14,523 for 200 shares of the capital stock of the company. The certificate is dated December 18, 1920, and is in the name of “Jane Douglas Vivichaves Brede for life remainder according to the Will of Joe A. Vivichaves, Deceased.”

On December 20, 1935, Waialua duly paid a 50% stock dividend and in accordance therewith issued to Mrs. Brede certificate number H 23151 for 100 shares of its capital stock in the name of “Jane Douglas Vivichaves Brede for life remainder according to the Will of Joe A. Vivichaves, Deceased.”

Mrs. Brede died on November 6, 1936, and Cooke Trust Company, Limited, hereinafter referred to as the *749 “executor,” was duly appointed the executor of her will. Shortly after its appointment, the executor made a demand upon Waialua for the transfer to it as such executor of said 100 shares of its capital stock issued in payment of said stock dividend. The demand was refused. Accordingly, the Cooke Trust Company, Limited, as executor under the will and of the estate of Jane K. Brede, deceased, brought its bill in equity against Waialua and the remaindermen mentioned in the second paragraph of the will of Joe A. Yivichaves, deceased, to compel the company to comply with said demand.

The case was tided below on facts stipulated by the parties. The stipulation includes a statement of the financial structure of Waialua as of January 19, 1920, the date of the death of Joe Yivichaves, and such additional data in respect to its assets, net earnings and total profits for the period ending December 20, 1935, the date of the payment of the stock dividend, together with the amount by which the capital stock was increased, and the selling-price of the stock of the company immediately after the payment of the stock dividend, from which the court might determine (a) the extent to which said stock dividend included income accrued to Waialua since the date of the death of the testator, and (b) the proportionate interests of the life tenant and remaindermen, respectively, upon apportionment. The conclusion of the trial judge, however, that the stock dividend was distributable to the remaindermen to the exclusion of the life tenant eliminated the consideration by him of the question of apportionment.

The circuit judge held that the remaindermen named in the second paragraph of the will of Joe Yivichaves, deceased, were entitled to all of said 100 shares issued in payment of said stock dividend, basing his decision primarily on what he termed “the realities,” as discussed in Gibbons v. Mahon, 136 U. S. 549, and Eisner v. Macomber, *750 252 U. S. 189. From tlie decree in favor of tlie remainder-men the executor appealed.

The executor advances the following propositions: 1. That the intention of the testator is controlling and that his intention as expressed in the words “all the dividends and profits of all my shares” can only he given effect by awarding the whole of the stock dividend to the life tenant. 2. In the event that the interpretation of the will contended for by it is not adopted, the life tenant was, under the Hawaiian rule relating to the allocation of stock dividends between life tenant and remainderman, entitled in her own right to 43.47 shares out of the 100 shares received as a stock dividend. Other propositions argued by the executor are advanced in support of one or the other of the two foregoing propositions.

The remaindermen agree that the intention of the testator is controlling but argue that the language of the will of Vivichaves does not enlarge the meaning of “dividends”; that the remaindermen are specific legatees and as such are entitled to stock dividends; that the term “dividends and profits,” as used in the will, does not include stock dividends and that acceptance by the life tenant of the stock dividend in the form indicated above was a practical construction by her of the Avill as to the testator’s intention. The question of waiver has not been raised.

The circuit judge having declined to folloAV the law as established by Carter v. Crehore, 12 Haw. 309, and followed in Evans v. Garvie, 23 Haw. 651, and Estate of Weber, 34 Haw. 137, did not decide the issues necessary to be decided in order to apply the law of those cases.

Since the entry of the decree here appealed, this court has twice rejected the theory of the cases followed by the circuit judge and followed its own former decisions. (Estate of Allen, ante, p. 501; Robinson v. McWayne, *751 ante, p. 689.) Cogent reasons are given in the recent decisions of this court for refusing to sanction the decision of the circuit judge holding that we should abandon the rule of apportionment of stock dividends between life tenants and remaindermen, generally referred to as the Pennsylvania rule, first adopted in this jurisdiction more than forty years ago in the case of Carter v. Crehore, supra, and adopt the rule which treats all stock dividends as corpus, generally referred to as the Massachusetts rule, exemplified in the two cases cited by the circuit judge in this case. It clearly follows that the decree here appealed must be reversed unless it appears that for other reasons the correct result was reached.

The executor’s first proposition is that the testator, Vivicliaves, by the use of the phrase “all the dividends and profits of all my shares,” has expressed an intention to give to Mrs.

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Related

Gibbons v. Mahon
136 U.S. 549 (Supreme Court, 1890)
Eisner v. MacOmber
252 U.S. 189 (Supreme Court, 1920)
In Re the Trust Estate of Weber
34 Haw. 137 (Hawaii Supreme Court, 1937)
MacKellar v. Stebbins
221 N.W. 275 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1928)
Smith v. . Smith
135 S.E. 855 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1926)
Smith v. . Creech
119 S.E. 3 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1923)
Humphrey v. . Lang
86 S.E. 526 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1915)
Carter v. Crehore
12 Haw. 309 (Hawaii Supreme Court, 1900)
Evans v. Garvie
23 Haw. 651 (Hawaii Supreme Court, 1917)
Guilford v. Gardner
162 N.W. 261 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1917)
Soehnlein v. Soehnlein
131 N.W. 739 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 1911)
Miller v. Payne
136 N.W. 811 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 1912)
Estate of Merrill v. Merrill
213 N.W. 641 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 1927)

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Bluebook (online)
35 Haw. 747, 1940 Haw. LEXIS 3, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cooke-trust-co-v-waialua-agricultural-co-haw-1940.