In re Estate of Dow

32 Misc. 2d 415, 156 N.Y.S.2d 804, 1955 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2403
CourtNew York Surrogate's Court
DecidedJanuary 25, 1955
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 32 Misc. 2d 415 (In re Estate of Dow) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Surrogate's Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Estate of Dow, 32 Misc. 2d 415, 156 N.Y.S.2d 804, 1955 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2403 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1955).

Opinion

Hugh Y. N. Bodine, S.

Charles M. Dow died December 10, 1920, leaving a will dated October 17, 1918, and a codicil thereto dated December 9,1920, the day preceding his decease. He left two children, Howard M. Dow, who died in 1926 leaving his widow Mary C. Dow and three children, Charles, Helen and Mary, and a daughter, Alberta Dow G-oodwill, who died in 1952 leaving two children, Eleanor and Charlotte.

Mr. Dow was a lifetime banker and a successful one. He founded the Jamestown National Bank in 1882, which later became a part of the National Chautauqua County Bank. He continued as president of the Jamestown National and successor bank down to his death in 1920, a span of 38 years. At his death he owned 1,510 shares, out of a total of 5,000 shares. The value of these shares as appraised was $226,500, the balance of the estate being some $224,000. This balance was willed to his wife and two children and by codicil to the children only, Mrs. Dow having predeceased him. Its disposition is unimportant save as reflecting on the general testamentary plan.

The issues here concern the disposition of the 1,510 shares of bank stock and the administration thereof through the testamentary trust set up in clauses Second and Tenth, as follows:

“ Second — I give and bequeath unto my trustees hereinafter named all my stock in the National Chautauqua County Bank, in trust, however, for the uses and purposes hereinafter prescribed, with full power and authority to hold the same as an investment for the purposes of this trust, or to dispose of the same, and to reinvest in proper securities, whenever all of such trustees shall concur in such action, it being my desire that the bank stock be retained in a common fund so long as this is found practicable.” * * *

“ Tenth — My executors are hereby authorized and empowered to sell and convey my real estate, subject to the life use of my wife, provided in the third numbered paragraph of this instrument, on such terms as they may deem proper. The executors may do any and all acts necessary and proper in the administration of my estate by a majority of their number, and the acts of such majority shall be valid for all purposes, but tohen acting as trustees of the trust fund herein created, they must act by unanimous consent and agreement, evidenced in writing, to authorize a sale of all or any part of my stock in the National Chautauqua County Bank, as well as upon the reinvestment of the proceeds and avails thereof.” (Emphasis mine.)

[417]*417There is sharp division of opinion as to just what testator intended by his choice of this language. Unquestionably testator, with good reason, had a family pride in his bank. It was his creation. His had been the guiding hand throughout the years and it had become a financial landmark in the community served by it and as the bank grew and prospered so also did the Dow name become a symbol of power and influence socially and financially, the bounds of which were far from being confined to the Western New York area. In fact, the National Chautauqua County Bank is referred to in the 1921 History of Chautauqua County as the ‘ mother ’5 of all Chautauqua banks. In recognition of his outstanding abilities and service it may be noted that two universities conferred upon Mr. Dow the honorary degree of Doctor of Laws.

It is obvious that a construction of the trust provisions must take into account these side lights into the character and nature of what may be assumed to be the thought which motivated the will. We may also take into account the fact that as the dominant figure in the bank, testator knew well the ability and character .of his officers, or lieutenants, and his board of directors, for had he not implicit confidence in them to carry on his policies it is not probable that he would have made the disposition he did. That he had every confidence in his son-in-law, Mr. G-oodwill, is abundantly evidenced in his expressed desire to have him succeed him as president.

The conclusion is clearly justified that pride in his banking success and the natural desire to preserve and foster the family name in connection therewith, motivated his trust plan. For no other discernible reason would he have declared his “ desire that the bank stock be retained in a common fund so long as this is found practicable ” and placed the strictures on its being broken up by providing that the three trustees “must act by unanimous consent and agreement, evidenced in writing ” to authorize it. What he intended by the term * ‘ practicable ’ ’ may, as I view it, be readily surmised. One contingency it seems he would not have deemed ‘‘ practicable ’ ’ would be to have the stock sold in appreciable quantities in a period of recession or depression when to do so would inevitably raise a danger signal, a manifestation of lack of faith in the institution which might well lead to disastrous results to stockholders and .the bank. We can well believe that such would have been the last thing he would have considered doing in such a crisis were he alive. Testator was surely cognizant of the limited market for bank stock in Jamestown. He undoubtedly recognized the distinction out of experience between sales en bloc by an outsider and those of bank officials or, to the same effect, stock which they controlled.

[418]*418The wording lends strength to this interpretation. He expressly stated his desire that the stock be retained in a common fund as long as found practicable. To say that this to him meant to sell any or all as soon as practicable from a mere sales standpoint is plainly a distortion for it would set at naught his expressed desire to retain the stock in a common fund — it could not be sold and kept together at the same time. Personally he had accumulated this stock over a long period. It had served him and his family well. He was content to have more than half of his large estate invested in it.

His will testifies to his faith that the bank would continue to grow and the value of the stock with it. He knew, we may assume, that his power over the ultimate disposition must end on the death of his two children. Just short of a direct prohibition to sell it, or, just short of a direct command to retain it, he provided as he did. Apparently the fear of lack of diversification in the trust assets or of “ too many eggs in one basket ” was not his. Rather, his apparent fear was speedy disintegration of his interest in the financial monument he had erected over the years and in which he had justifiable pride and faith.

On the other hand he was not blind to the fact that factors such as merger or reorganization, for example, might enter the financial picture; factors that might make it appear to the best interests of all concerned to dispose of the stock — a sitiuation that would make it practicable to sell rather than to retain.

The fact that the trustees did in 1925 sell 200 shares and thus indicate their opinion that piecemeal sales would not contravene the desire of testator is beside the point so far as bearing on what I deem the plain purport of the will. True, they could have sold it all so far as they were concerned but if this had turned out to have been bad business judgment in light of later developments, how about the rights of the remaindermen to complain, and complain they doubtless would especially had the trustees been third parties.

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Bluebook (online)
32 Misc. 2d 415, 156 N.Y.S.2d 804, 1955 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2403, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-estate-of-dow-nysurct-1955.