In Re Bessemer Trust Company

371 A.2d 316, 147 N.J. Super. 331
CourtNew Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division
DecidedDecember 10, 1976
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 371 A.2d 316 (In Re Bessemer Trust Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Bessemer Trust Company, 371 A.2d 316, 147 N.J. Super. 331 (N.J. Ct. App. 1976).

Opinion

147 N.J. Super. 331 (1976)
371 A.2d 316

IN RE BESSEMER TRUST COMPANY'S INTERIM ACCOUNTINGS AND INITIAL APPLICATION FOR CORPUS COMMISSIONS FOR PHIPPS FAMILY TRUSTS.[1]

Superior Court of New Jersey, Chancery Division.

Decided December 10, 1976.

*338 Mr. Dickinson R. Debevoise, attorney for plaintiff Bessemer Trust Company (Messrs. Riker, Danzig, Scherer & Debevoise, attorneys).

Mr. Kevin J. Coakley, attorney for exceptants (Messrs. McElroy, Connell, Foley & Geiser, attorneys; and Mr. Paul J. Foley, District of Columbia Bar, of counsel).

DWYER, J.S.C.

Three individuals who are income beneficiaries during their respective lives and hold testamentary powers to appoint corpus under one or more of the five trusts for which interim accountings have been filed object to the payment of any corpus commissions. The specific grounds of exception are treated hereafter.

After gradually increasing the percentage of income taken as income commissions from 1% on September 30, 1955 to the full statutory rate of 6% on January 1, 1973, in 1972 the board of directors of Bessemer Trust Company (BTC), a New Jersey corporation, commenced to take corpus commissions at the rate of 1/10 of 1%, or $1,100, under N.J.S.A. 3A:10-2 as supplemented by L. 1972, c. 147, and in 1974 decided to collect the maximum allowable corpus commissions on the trusts which it was administering for the descendants of, and the spouses of the descendants of, *339 Henry Phipps who organized BTC in 1907 as a trust company to administer family trusts. Until the 1960s BTC did not accept trust accounts from persons who were not descendants of, or married to descendants of, Henry Phipps.

Pursuant to the decision in 1974 to charge corpus commissions BTC commenced to obtain approval by settlement agreement, or judicial action, of interim accounts which made allowance for payment of corpus commissions in approximately 550 trusts. The aggregate amount of corpus commissions sought is estimated to be between $10,000,000 and $12,000,000.

The main factor leading to this decision was increased cost related to changes in the roles to be played in the affairs of the Phipps family by BTC and Bessemer Securities Corporation (BSC), a Delaware corporation. The latter is a "personal holding company" within the meaning of Internal Revenue Code, 26 U.S.C.A. § 542, and is exempt from the Investment Company Act of 1940, 15 U.S.C.A. § 80a-1 et seq., and the Investment Advisers Act, 15 U.S.C.A. § 80b-1 et seq. It has 500,000 shares of common stock. BTC separately or with certain cotrustees administers trusts holding over 480,000 of said shares.

Until approximately the 1960s BSC staff rendered, without charge, personal services to members of the Phipps family, such as planning family budgets, paying bills, purchasing both ordinary and exotic items, tax assistance, suggestions as to investments in tax shelters, etc. BSC staff, without charge, also rendered assistance to the board of directors of BTC in making recommendations for investments in trusts which had corpus assets other than BSC common stock to invest, in respect to which the said board then made decisions, and rendered tax advice in preparing returns. Without detailing the dates and the intervening steps by which a system of charges for these services was implemented, it is sufficient to state that BTC by 1972 was paying for computer services, tax assistance and investment *340 advice. Family members began paying for personal services in 1957.

BSC, and its corporate predecessors, is and has been one of the largest investment companies in the United States, with activities currently divided into three areas: (1) management of a diversified portfolio of bonds and common stocks; (2) venture capital with special emphasis on opportunities in technologically related industries, and (3) real estate, with total assets now aggregating between $400,000,000 and $500,000,000 depending on when and how they are valued. The basic capital was part of the proceeds of $75,000,000 received by Henry Phipps when he and his partners, Andrew Carnegie and Henry Fisk, sold their steel business to J.P. Morgan to form the United States Steel Corporation in about 1900. Henry Phipps organized BSC in 1911.

The fact that BSC was an investment company made it necessary that it have a competent staff to deal with investments. As the regulatory and tax laws were enacted and expanded in the 1930s and 1940s it was necessary that the staff of BSC grow to cope with them. Within certain parameters, once a core staff for an investment company is assembled it can manage more funds than it presently has charge of without substantial increase in personnel — i.e., the economy of size. See remarks of Merill Griswold, then chairman of the board of trustees of Massachusetts Investors Trust, at Senate hearings on the Investment Company Act, reproduced in Report of the Securities and Exchange Commission on Public Policy Implications of Investment Company Growth, H. Rep. No. 2337, 89th Cong. 2d Sess. (SEC Rep.) at 94-95. The court finds that BSC staff had the capability to handle BTC work without serious incremental cost.

For the period from 1911 to 1957, the three sons of Henry Phipps — John S. Phipps, Howard Phipps, Henry C. Phipps — as well as Henry Bradley Martin, husband of Helen Phipps Martin, daughter of Henry Phipps, were active in *341 managing the affairs of both BSC and BTC. The fifth child Amy Phipps Guest, served as a director of BTC. Each child had an equal one-fifth interest in BSC from 1911 and in BTC from 1907.

In the early 1930s the Congress enacted a gift tax effective in mid-1932. This as a result of testimony before the Senate to the effect that individuals of substantial wealth avoided paying estate taxes by giving their assets to their children and grandchildren while alive, by creating trusts, the income going to their children and the corpus to their grandchildren.

It is fair to assume that the tax consequences to future generations resulting from the retention of individual ownership of the BSC common stock until after the effective date of the gift tax was obvious to the five children by Henry Phipps. In June 1932, with the exception of Howard Phipps who did not then have minor children, each of the children of Henry Phipps executed indentures of trust with the Palm Beach Trust Company, which was and is another wholly-owned family trust company, and one or more of their brothers or sisters as trustees, and transferred to said trusts their respective holdings in BSC. Subsequently, Howard Phipps created similar trusts for the benefit of his children. As of December 31, 1933 Palm Beach Trust Company resigned as trustee and BTC replaced it as trustee, effective January 1, 1934. Subsequent to the commencement of this action BTC has abandoned claims for corpus commissions prior to January 1, 1934.

One of the June 1932 trusts was established by Amy Guest for the benefit of her daughter, now known as Diana Guest Manning. This trust is designated by BTC as D-6. Since there are five branches of the family, each branch is designated alphabetically by a letter from A to E; e.g., John S. Phipps, A; Henry C. Phipps, B; Howard Phipps, C; Amy Guest, D; and Helen Martin, E, and each trust is designated by a number indicating the sequential order in which that trust was established within that branch of *342 the family.

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

Related

In the Matter of the Leslie Karen Ross Trust, Etc.
New Jersey Superior Court App Division, 2025
In re Prudential Insurance
659 A.2d 961 (New Jersey Superior Court App Division, 1995)
Matter of Prudential Ins. Co. Litig.
659 A.2d 961 (New Jersey Superior Court App Division, 1995)
Connell v. American Funding Ltd.
555 A.2d 745 (New Jersey Superior Court App Division, 1987)
City of Atlantic City v. Atlantic County Board of Taxation
2 N.J. Tax 30 (New Jersey Tax Court, 1980)
BESSEMER TRUST COMPANY v. Boegner
397 A.2d 708 (New Jersey Superior Court App Division, 1979)
First Security National Bank & Trust Co. Lexington v. Cognets
563 S.W.2d 476 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1978)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
371 A.2d 316, 147 N.J. Super. 331, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-bessemer-trust-company-njsuperctappdiv-1976.