In re the Accounting of Stevens

4 Mills Surr. 538, 46 Misc. 623, 95 N.Y.S. 297
CourtNew York Surrogate's Court
DecidedApril 15, 1905
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 4 Mills Surr. 538 (In re the Accounting of Stevens) 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 the Accounting of Stevens, 4 Mills Surr. 538, 46 Misc. 623, 95 N.Y.S. 297 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1905).

Opinion

Woodbury, S.

Julia A. Brooks died a resident of this, county on the 5th day of November, 1896, leaving a will bearing date October 5, 1896, which was, on the sixteenth day of November of the same year, admitted to probate by .this court and letters testamentary were thereupon issued to Frederick H. Stevens and Ella Brooks Solano, two of the three executors. [541]*541therein named, the other executor having renounced his ap>pointment.

. The testatrix by separate articles of her will created five separate and distinct trusts in her executors, each of 247 shares of the capital stock in the Brooks Locomotive Works, a corporation located at the city of Dunkirk in this county, for the benefit of her grandchildren, Jesse Brooks Nichols, Marion Brooks Patterson (now Marion Brooks Barlow), Jessie Brooks Patterson (now Jessie Birooks Tyler), Kathleen Stevens and Grretchen Stevens, each of said grandchildren being the beneficiary of one of such trusts. These trusts are created in identical language and a reference to the one on behalf of Jesse Brooks Nichols, contained in Article Eight of the will, presents the question as to all of them. It reads as follows:

“ Article. Eighth.

I give and bequeath to my Executors hereinafter named Two hundred and forty seven (247) shares of the capital stock of the Brooks Locomotive Works aforesaid, to have and to hold the same in trust nevertheless, to- collect and receive the dividends, issues 'and profits thereof and to apply the same to the use of my grandson Jesse Brooks Nichols in semi-annual payments or as often as the same shall be declared, paid or realized, until my said grandson shall arrive at the age of thirty years. When my said grandson shall arrive at the age of thirty years, I direct that the said shares of stock with any accumulations or earnings thereon, be then transferred- to him absolutely. If my said grandson Jesse Brooks Nichols shall die before attaining the age of thirty years, leaving issue born in lawful wedlock, him surviving, then and in that event I do give and bequeath such shares of stock with any accumulations or earnings thereon to said issue. If my said grandson Jesse Brooks Nichols shall die before attaining the age of thirty years leaving no issue born in lawful wedlock, him surviving, then and in that event [542]*542I do give and bequeath such shares of stock with any accumulations or earnings thereon to my then surviving children and grandchildren share .and share alike, they to take the same per capita, and not per stirpes. The provisions of this article shall be subject to the provisions of Article Thirteenth of this Will.”

The Thirteenth Article of the will referred to, which is to be read into and made a part of each of the said trusts, reads, .as follows:

“ Article Thirteenth.

I do further will and direct that my said Executors shall not be held liable for any depreciation in the value of the stock of the Brooks Locomotive Works aforesaid', and while I here express the wish that the investment should be maintained in the said stock of the Brooks Locomotive Works, as I now hold ■it, so long as my said Executors continue to hold said stock and it seems to them prudent so ¡to do> I nevertheless authorize my said executors or a majority of them to sell and convert the said shares whenever by reason of any change in the conditions surrounding the business of building locomotives, it shall seem necessary or wise in the judgment of a majority of said executors so to do for the preservation of the principal sum invested and to reinvest the proceeds thereof from time to time as they may deem prudent and necessary, and in such investments and securities as they shall deem safe and proper. And my said executors shall not be held liable for ¡any loss or depreciation in such investments or securities- resulting from any mistakes in judgment in making said investments or purchasing said securities.”

The Brooks Locomotive Works was organized as a corporation under the laws of this State, by H. G. Brooks, husband of the testatrix, in the year 1869, for the manufacture of railroad locomotives. The capital stock of the company was fixed at $250,000, divided into 2,500 shares of the par value of $100 per share, -and has ever since remained the same. Upon its or[543]*543ganization Mr. Brooks became the president of the company and remained its president and was its dominating spirit to the time of his death, which occurred in 1887. Prior to the death of Mr. Brooks the company had become solvent and prosperous, and: at that time was a prosperous business concern, although at various times during its existence it had passed through great business depressions. TJpon the death of Mr. Brooks the majority of the stock of the company passed to the testatrix, and, by virtue of her ownership of such stock, the control of the corporate affairs of the company rested in her hands and so continued until the time of her death in November, 1896. The prosperous condition of the company which existed at the time of the death of Mr. Brooks continued down to the death of the testatrix, the company shortly thereafter paying a dividend of 15 per cent, upon its capital stock from earnings for the period of six months ending October thirty-first preceding her death, and leaving a large amount of accumulated surplus earnings still on hand. Prior to the time of making her will and the death of the testatrix in 1896, there began a new era in locomotive building, and thereafter, the business of the company was greatly increased. The demand of railroad companies for engines of a heavier type, the position of the company, with its superior equipment, to meet these demands, enabled it to enormously increase its output and earnings, and this condition continued to the time when the business and tangible property of tiie company were sold in the year 1901, and1 it went out of business. In fact, during this period, the company experienced the greatest prosperity it had ever attained.

At the time of the death of the testatrix the book value of the assets of the company, .after deducting all indebtedness, amounted to $1,791,708.59, according to the inventory taken by the officers of the company shortly prior thereto, which is the only evidence upon the subject, and which 'all parties agree may be considered as the basis of value of such assets at the time of [544]*544her death. This amount was made up of $1,093,345.78', value of plant equipment and materials, and $698,362.81 of cash, hills receivable, etc., of which $418,492.50 was represented by •invested surplus earnings, .and in the balance of cash, bills receivable, etc., was coneededly included the working cash capital used in the conduct of the business. (But this amount does not include as an element of value the good will, franchise, rights or dividend earning power of the company as a prosperous business concern.

The capital stock of the corporation held by the respective shareholders stood as the representatives of these assets, and had the corporation been dissolved at that time all of such assets would have been distributed to the shareholders of the stock in proportion to the number of shares held by each, and this irrespective of whether the amount distributed represented capital of the corporation or accumulated earnings, and also irrespective of the question .as to the rights of life tenants .and remaindermen in the division of said assets when paid over on the respective shares.

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Bluebook (online)
4 Mills Surr. 538, 46 Misc. 623, 95 N.Y.S. 297, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-accounting-of-stevens-nysurct-1905.