In re the Accounting of Bankers Trust Co.

34 Misc. 2d 884, 229 N.Y.S.2d 517, 1962 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 3303
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedMay 16, 1962
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 34 Misc. 2d 884 (In re the Accounting of Bankers Trust Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re the Accounting of Bankers Trust Co., 34 Misc. 2d 884, 229 N.Y.S.2d 517, 1962 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 3303 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1962).

Opinion

Birdie Amsterdam, J.

This is á proceeding under article 79 of the Civil Practice Act brought by the petitioner, Bankers Trust Company, as trustee of an inter vivos trust, for a judicial settlement of its intermediate account of its trusteeship from the inception of said trust on November 20,1936, up to and including January 20, 1960.

The problem presented herein relates to the allocation of stock distributions, as between principal and income, received from various corporations of which the trust has been a shareholder during the period covered by the account. The issues are whether or not these stock distributions are, wholly or in part, within the meaning of the trust indenture, dividends payable in the stock of the corporation authorizing or declaring them” and thereby distributable to the income beneficiary; whether stock splits of shares the par or stated value of which had been increased some time earlier are income or principal; and whether that part of a stock distribution which is supported by a transfer of capital surplus represents a distribution of earnings entitling the income beneficiary to any of the shares.

The trust involved herein was created on November 20, 1936 by an indenture between the settlor, Martha Locke Shoenhair, now known as Martha Milam, and the Bankers Trust Company, and Theodore K. Shoenhair, Jr., as trustees. Under its terms, as amended in 1951, she reserved the right to income for life as well as a limited power to invade principal. She provided that upon her death the trust is distributable to and among her children in such shares as she shall by will appoint:

Article fifth of the said trust provides in part as follows:

“ fifth: All cash dividends, whether ordinary or extraordinary; all dividends payable in the stock of the corporation authorizing or declaring them, and all dividends payable in the stock of a corporation other than the one authorizing or declaring them shall be treated by the Trustees as income.

‘ All dividends of every nature declared by corporations engaged in mining, the production of lumber, oil,- gas, sulphur, the sale of real estate, or other similar activities (commonly called 1 wasting asset corporations ’) or paid by a corporation holding stock of any such wasting asset corporation, or derived directly or indirectly from the operations of any such wasting asset corporation, shall be treated by the Trustees as income.

[887]*887‘ All dividends declared but unpaid, and all interest which shall have accrued on securities at the- time of the delivery thereof to the Trustees, whether such delivery be made upon the execution of this agreement or at some future date, shall be treated by the Trustees as income. ” ■

Objections to the account have been filed by the settlor, as life beneficiary, through her assignee, the Bank of California National Association, and by the remaindermen.

The income beneficiary or the remaindermen or both have raised objections to the trustees’ determinations with respect to the treatment of stock distributions of 14 different corporations. These are: (1) The 1958 distribution of three shares of $5 par value of Addressograph Multigraph Corp. for each share of $10 par value held; (2) the 1956 distribution of one and one-half shares of $10 par value of American Electric Power Co. (formerly known as American Gas and Electric Co.) for each share of $5 par value held; (3) the 1950 distribution of two shares of $25 par value of American Viscose Corp. for each share of $14 par value held; the 1955 distribution of one additional share of $25 of par value for every four shares held; (4) the 1945 distribution of one additional share of $1 par value of Burlington Industries, Inc. (formerly known as Burlington Mills Corp.) for each share of $1 par value held; and the 1946 distribution of one additional share of $1 par value of said corporation for each share of $1 par value held; (5) the 1952 distribution of one share of $17 par value of Cincinnati'Gas & Electric Co. for each share of $8.50 par value held; the 1953 distribution of two shares of $8.50 par value for each outstanding share of $17 par common; (6) the 1951 distribution of one additional share of $5 par value of Continental Oil Co. for each share of $5 par válue held and the 1957 distribution of one additional share of $5 par value of said corporation for each share of $5 par value held; (7) the 1947 distribution of four shares of $15 par value of Dow Chemical Co. for each share of no par stock, having a stated value of $29.87, held; (8) the 1954 distribution of three shares of $5 par value of General Electric Co. for each share of no par stock, having a stated value of $6.25 held; (9) the "1955 distribution of one additional share of $10 par value of B. F. Goodrich Co. for each share of $10 par value held; (10) the 1947 distribution of two additional shares of no par stock having a stated value of $13.33 of Johns-Manville Corp. for each share of no par stock, having a stated value of $40, held; (11) the 1955 distribution of one additional share of $1.50 [888]*888par value of Minneapolis-Honeywell Regulator Co. for each share of $1.50 par.value held; (12) the 1954 distribution of one additional share of $25 par value of Standard Oil Co. of Indiana for each share of $25 par value held; (13) the 1951 distribution of two shares of $15 par value of Standard Oil Co. (New Jersey) for each share of $25 par value held, and the 1956 distribution of three shares of $7 par value of said corporation for each share of $15 par value held; and (14) the 1943 distribution of one share of Consolidated Natural Gras Co. for each Id shares of Standard Oil Co. (New Jersey) held.

The following table succinctly sets forth the issues between the respective parties. Column “A” relates to the trustees’ allocations; column B ” the allocations the income-beneficiary claims should have been made; column “ C ” the allocations the remaindermen claim should have been made.

ABC

Slock Trustee Income Beneficiary Remaindermen Principal Income Principal Income Principal Income

Addressograph Multigraph Corp. 600 0 400 200 No objection

American Electric Power Co. 714.42 185.58 300 600 900 0

American Viscose 1G0.41 239.59 112 288 400 0

Burlington Industries, Inc. 800 0 200 600 No objection

Cincinnati Gas& Electric Co. 1,000 0 500 500 No objection

Continental Oil Co. (1951 and 1957) 300 9 00 No objection 1,200 0

Dow Chemical Co. 877.38 592.62 867.39 602.61 1,470 0

General Electric Co. 375 525 No objection . 900 0

B. F. Goodrich Co. 600 0 300 300 No objection

Johns-Manville Corp. 300 0 150 150 No objection

Minneapolis-Honeywell Regulator Co. 800 • 0 400 400 No objection

Standard Oil Co. of Indiana 286.06 113.94 200 200 400 0

Standard .Oil Co. (New Jersey) 1,173.29 26.71 714.29 485.71 1,200 0

Consolidated Natural Gas Co. 20 0 0 20 No objection

The foregoing stock distributions are separated and grouped into three different categories.

In the group listed below, no previously uncapitalized earnings were capitalized simultaneously with the" issuance of new cer[889]*889tificates. The remaindermen agree with the trustee as to this allocation but the life beneficiary objects.

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Related

Ingersoll v. Security Trust Co.
51 A.D.2d 874 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1976)
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37 Misc. 2d 1051 (New York Surrogate's Court, 1962)

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34 Misc. 2d 884, 229 N.Y.S.2d 517, 1962 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 3303, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-accounting-of-bankers-trust-co-nysupct-1962.