duPont v. duPont

136 A. 149, 15 Del. Ch. 255, 1927 Del. Ch. LEXIS 17
CourtCourt of Chancery of Delaware
DecidedJanuary 14, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 136 A. 149 (duPont v. duPont) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Chancery of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
duPont v. duPont, 136 A. 149, 15 Del. Ch. 255, 1927 Del. Ch. LEXIS 17 (Del. Ct. App. 1927).

Opinion

The Chancellor.

There are four dividends with which we are concerned in this case. They are:

(1) The 200 per cent, dividend paid on October 1, 1915, in common stock of the du Pont Company (1915) of Delaware to the common stockholders of the du Pont Company (1903) of New Jersey. This dividend amounts to 7,746 shares of the Delaware company.

(2) The 50 per cent, dividend of 3,873 shares of its own common stock paid to the Delaware du Pont Company’s common stockholders on December 29, 1922.

(3) The 40 per cent, dividend of 4,647.6 shares of its own common stock paid to the Delaware du Pont Company’s common stockholders on August 10, 1925. And

(4) The 100 per cent, dividend of 939 shares of its own common stock paid by the Hercules Powder Company to its common stockholders on November 15, 1922.

Do the dividends become a part of the corpus of the trust, or do they constitute income which goes to the life beneficiaries? This is the question which the bill presents.

Courts both in England and America have been called upon in a great many cases to consider the correct principle to apply in controversies between life tenants and remaindermen over what constitutes income and what does not. It is impossible to reconcile the various rules laid down in various jurisdictions. They appear to be in hopeless conflict in certain very material respects. There is no occasion for me to review and discuss the numerous cases that may be found in the books with the view of deciding what should be the general determining principles for guidance in this State. Our Supreme Court in the case of Bryan, et al., v. Aikin, et al., 10 Del. Ch. 446, 86 A. 674, 46 L. R. A. (N. S.) 477, has done [268]*268this in a learned and discriminating opinion written by the present Chief Justice. The general principles which underlie consideration of such questions as the pending bill presents are to be found in that opinion. Before addressing myself to an examination of the question which the particular facts of the instant case present, it is appropriate to notice the language used in Bryan, et al., v. Aikin, et al., as expressive of the general principles which must be regarded in answering the sort of question we are here concerned with. While some of the language thus employed might be said not to have been necessary for a decision of the particular case which was before the court, yet it is not to be dismissed as obiter for two reasons. The first reason is that in so far as it discloses the logic which induced the court to lay down the rule for this jurisdiction which it did, such language is entitled to acceptance as controlling in later cases where the deciding tribunal is seeking the correct ratio decidendi for its own conclusions. And in the second place, the court in the case of Bryan, et al., v. Aikin, et al., seems to have designedly intended to lay down general principles which hereafter are to be regarded as settled in Delaware, regardless of whether the facts of the particular case then before it required either an acceptance or rejection of those principles; for the court said.that, if possible, the rule adopted by it should be such as not only to govern the case before it, but should be such as would “also furnish a guide for trustees in the execution of other trusts of like character.”

I feel bound, therefore, to accept as final not only the rule which the precise facts of Bryan v. Aikin necessitated, but also the rule in its broad scope which that case announced as,well as the fundamental principles of reason which underlay the court's general conclusions.

There were two propositions which the court referred to in Bryan v. Aikin as not likely to be disputed. These were:

“(1) That the intention of the testator must be carried, out so far as can be under the law. (2) That it was the intention of the testator in the present case that the capital or principal of the property left in trust should be kept unimpaired for the remaindermen, and that all dividends declared thereon out of the profits or net earnings should go to the life tenant.”

[269]*269These primary propositions are applicable to the instant case. While the will of Eugene du Pont did not in terms give dividends to the life tenants, yet it did give net income to them. And there can be no doubt, as indeed none has been suggested, that the word “income” embraces dividends when applied to corporate stocks. The will therefore must be regarded as giving dividends to the life tenants.

But these dividends, before it is certain that they are the property of the life tenants, must, as indicated in the second general proposition above quoted, be out of the profits or net earnings of the corporation.

Whether in a given case a specified dividend is attributable to profits or net earnings as its source is oftentimes a perplexing question. The various rules adopted by the courts in answering this question seem not to conflict with each other upon the proposition that the dividend must come out of profits or net earnings. Their conflict, and it is pronounced, arises rather out of the question of what weight the law will allow to given facts as decisive of the question whether the dividend is to be attributed to capital or to earnings. The Chief Justice in his review of the authorities in Bryan v. Aikin clearly shows such to be the case.

The result in Delaware, since Bryan v. Aikin, is that the so-called “American rule” is accepted as the law here without the apportionment feature based on the date of the inception of the life estate which prevails in those states where the so-called Pennsylvania rule has been followed. The “American rule” is the rule in Delaware and, quoting from Bryan v. Aikin is as follows:

“All net earnings, howsoever they may have been treated or used by the corporation during their accumulation, and regardless of the period during which they have accumulated, if declared as dividends out of net profits during the Ufe tenancy, are given to the life tenant, whether such dividends are made in cash or capital, provided that the principal of the trust is not diminished thereby.”

Seeking as it does to arrive at an adjustment of the respective rights of life tenants and remaindermen in accordance with equitable principles, the rule ought in many cases at least to contain the apportionment feature of the Pennsylvania decisions which hold that an allotment should be made to the corpus of that portion [270]*270of the dividend, whether in cash or capital stock, which represents earnings accumulated before the inception of the life estate, and to income that portion of the dividend which represents earnings since the inception of the life estate. The only reason why the Pennslyvania apportionment feature has not been accepted generally is because of practical difficulties in its application. These difficulties are so insuperable that some courts, including our own Supreme Court, have deemed it best to reject the Pennsylvania rule.

But it is to be observed that those courts which have rejected the Pennsylvania rule that apportions earnings with respect to the inception of the life estate because of its practical difficulties, have in no wise receded from the principle that dividends to which the life tenant is entitled must in fact have their source in earnings.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Yonner v. Adams
167 A.2d 717 (Superior Court of Delaware, 1961)
Steel v. Steel
125 A.2d 261 (Court of Chancery of Delaware, 1956)
Saunders v. Saunders
71 A.2d 258 (Supreme Court of Delaware, 1950)
McGonigal v. Ward Baking Co.
67 A.2d 61 (Superior Court of Delaware, 1949)
Cox v. Sellers
28 A.2d 679 (Court of Chancery of Delaware, 1942)
Wilmington Trust Co. v. Bronxville Trust Co.
5 A.2d 248 (Court of Chancery of Delaware, 1939)
In Re Trust Under Will of Clarke
284 N.W. 876 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1939)
Clarke v. Bennett
284 N.W. 876 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1939)
du Pont v. du Pont
164 A. 238 (Court of Chancery of Delaware, 1933)
Ortiz v. Fidelity-Philadelphia Trust Co.
159 A. 376 (Supreme Court of Delaware, 1931)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
136 A. 149, 15 Del. Ch. 255, 1927 Del. Ch. LEXIS 17, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dupont-v-dupont-delch-1927.