In Re the Accounting of Lloyd

54 N.E.2d 825, 292 N.Y. 280, 168 A.L.R. 156, 1944 N.Y. LEXIS 1361
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 13, 1944
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 54 N.E.2d 825 (In Re the Accounting of Lloyd) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals 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 Lloyd, 54 N.E.2d 825, 292 N.Y. 280, 168 A.L.R. 156, 1944 N.Y. LEXIS 1361 (N.Y. 1944).

Opinion

Desmoitd, J.

By the decree appealed from, these accounting testamentary trustees have been held subject to surcharges because they allocated wholly to income certain 1932 and 1936 cash dividends on corporate stock held in two of the three trusts erected in obedience to the commands of the will. The will named the widow and appellant trust company as executors and trustees, bequeathed a sum of money to the widow, gave the widow the life use of two residences, devised a country *282 estate to testator’s only daughter and then directed that the whole of the residue he divided into three separate trusts. Into the first trust went twelve sixteenths of the residue, with income to the widow for life and provisions for disposal of the principal and income after the widow’s death, for the benefit of the daughter, the daughter’s descendants and a grandson. The second trust is of three sixteenths of the residuary estate with income payable to the daughter and the remainder to pass to her children and grandchildren. The remaining one sixteenth, under the will, formed the corpus of a trust the income of which was to he used for the support and education of the grandson till he should reach the age of twenty-one years, the income thereafter to be paid to him until he should arrive at his thirtieth birthday, whereupon he was to have the principal. (The grandson has reached the age of thirty and has settled with the trustees, so his trust is not in litigation here.) -After ordering ,the setting up of those three trusts, the will made further directions as follows: u Tenth: Í hereby authorize my Executors and Trustees in their discretion to retain any investment which I may leave at the time of my death as a continuing investment, whether such investment be considered under the Laws of the State of New York a legal trust investment or not, and I further direct my Executors and Trustees to treat all dividends and all rights to subscribe for additional stock as entirely income, regardless of the fact that such dividends and rights may possibly encroach upon the principal of the trusts herein created, and I further direct that the shares of my estate, hereinbefore given to my Trustees, shall embrace income from the same date, viz., from the date of my death.” When testator wrote his will in 1918 and when he died in 1920 a large part (valued at several hundred thousand dollars) of his estate consisted of the preferred and common stocks of a corporation of which he had been president for many years. During his life and up to the time of his death that corporation enjoyed large profits and paid regular and substantial dividends. The above quoted language of article Tenth of the will is on its face a most emphatic and urgent command to the trustees that they pay out as income all dividends received by them, even though such payments result in an impairment of the principal values of the trusts. Beading that language, and keeping in mind while we *283 read it the size of testator’s holdings in the corporation to which we have above referred, and the fact that the income beneficiaries were his widow, her daughter and his grandson and the further fact that all his productive property went into the trusts, we cannot possibly doubt that the testator intended by article Tenth to issue a mandatory direction that all dividends received by Ms trustees on the stock of that corporation be distributed by the trustees to the income beneficiaries, for their support. However, the courts below, sustaining objections filed by a special guardian for infant (contingent) remaindermen, have ruled that a part of the dividends paid on the preferred stock in 1932 should have been accounted for as principal, not income, and that the whole of the 1936 preferred dividends were, similarly, principal and not income, in the hands of the trustees. (No dividends on common stock are here in dispute.) The special guardian grounded Ms objections, fundamentally, on the fact that when the 1936 dividends were declared and, similarly, when some of the 1932 dividends were declared, the corporation had previously exhausted its surplus but had created, in each year, a new “ book surplus ” by reducing its capital.

On January 14, 1932, when the corporation’s fiscal year began, it had no surplus but had on hand undivided profits of about $150,000. During that fiscal year it suffered an operating loss of about $650,000 and paid out $157,500 in three regular quarterly preferred dividends. In April of that year, by appropriate corporate action, it reduced its capital by $750,000, so that, starting out with the undivided profit fund and then giving effect to the dividend payments and the cut in capital, the corporation ended its fiscal year of 1932 with a net balance of about $90,000 in its capital surplus account ”. No attack is here made on the legality of the reduction of capital or of the dividend distributions made possible by that reduction (see Jay Ronald Co. v. Marshall Mortgage Corp., 291 N. Y. 227). The Surrogate, however, attached great importance to the fact that the first two quarterly dividends of that year, added to the losses sustained up to the times of the declaration of those dividends, had more than used up the credit balance which had been in the undivided profits account at the year’s beginning. Ruling that any payments to stockholders out of the new surplus *284 created by the reduction of capital belonged to the capital account of the trusts when received by them, the Surrogate made a calculation which worked out to the result that the second and third 1932 preferred dividends and a part (approximately two thirds) of the first such dividend of that year should have been assigned by the trustees to the capital account, not the income account, of the trusts. So much for 1932.

We consider now the 1936 dividends. No dividends were paid by the corporation during the fiscal years 1933, 1934 and 1935, so that at the beginning of 1936, the accumulated arrears on the preferred stock were over $800,000. Analyzing the corporation’s history for its fiscal year 1936, the Surrogate came to the conclusion that a dividend of $2.25 per (preferred) share, paid December 28, 1936, on account of arrears, should not have been turned over by the trustees to those entitled to the income of these trusts. As of the beginning of that year the corporation’s capital had been impaired to the extent of about $935,000. In December it reduced its capital by $1,500,000 and was thus able to show on its books a new surplus of $565,000. In 1936, unlike 1932, the business itself was carried on at a profit of $77,000, which operating profit exceeded by about $10,000 the 1936 dividend payment of $67,050. But this dividend, also, the Surrogate ordered treated as principal, not income. Pointing out that the New York statute (Stock Corp. Law, § 58) forbids the payment of dividends except from surplus and that a created ” surplus resulting from a reduction of capital does not change the fact of a prior capital deficit, the court reasoned that the placing in a trust’s income account of dividends paid to it after the corporation’s capital deficit has been eliminated, not by accumulation of earnings but by bookkeeping entries consequent on capital reduction, operates to reduce the “ intact value ” of the trust.

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Bluebook (online)
54 N.E.2d 825, 292 N.Y. 280, 168 A.L.R. 156, 1944 N.Y. LEXIS 1361, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-accounting-of-lloyd-ny-1944.