In re the Accounting of Tod

12 Mills Surr. 41, 85 Misc. 298, 147 N.Y.S. 161
CourtNew York Surrogate's Court
DecidedApril 15, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 12 Mills Surr. 41 (In re the Accounting of Tod) 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 Tod, 12 Mills Surr. 41, 85 Misc. 298, 147 N.Y.S. 161 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1914).

Opinion

Fowler, S.

This matter, involving large sums and important questions, comes on for hearing on an agreed statement of fact and pursuant to an assignment requested in person by counsel, including that elevated and distinguished member of .’the bar, Mr. John L. Cadwalader, whose lamented death has since intervened: “ Et Ule quidem deploratus, plenus aimis ■abiit, plenus honoribus.”

The trustees under the last will and testament of Mr. John S. Kennedy, deceased, have filed an account of their proceedings as such trustees, and objections thereto have been filed by attorneys for the remaindermen and by the special guardian for certain infant remaindermen. The validity of these objections is presented to the surrogate for his determination.

It appears that the late Mr. John S. Kennedy died testate on the 31st day of October, 1909. At the time of his death testator was a resident of our county of New York. His will creates a number of trusts and appoints certain trustees of the trusts so created. The executors are directed to divide the residuary estate of testator into sixty-four equal parts. A certain number of these parts are given to the trustees “ to invest each part in any of the property or securities mentioned in paragraph ninth of this article of my will, to hold the same in trust during the life of each beneficiary and to apply the income thereof to his or her use semi-annually or oftener if practicable, and upon the death of such beneficiary to divide such part equally among his or her lawful issue.”

The executors under the will duly accounted for their acts as executors, and on the 23d day of February, 1911, they transferred to themselves, as trustees of the trusts created by the will, the corpus of the trust funds which they were directed to hold under the terms of the will. As the objections raised by the various remaindermen are all alike, and refer to the [43]*43action of the trustees in paying over stock dividends to life tenants, I will confine myself to a consideration of the trusts created for the benefit of William S. Tod. My conclusion touching the action of the trustees of the trusts for Mr. William S. Tod will apply to the trustees9 action in respect of the other trusts, where similar objections have been filed.

Among the securities constituting the residuary estate of the testator were certain shares of stock of the- Standard Oil -Company, a New Jersy corporation. On the 23d day of February, 1911, 300 of these shares of stock were set apart by the executors to. constitute a portion of the trust fund to be held by them as trustees of the trusts created for the benefit of William S. Tod, one of the residuary legatees under said will. On June 10, 1911, a further allotment of 200 shares of the same stock was made to the same trustees for the same purpose. Upon the dissolution of the Standard Oil Company of New Jersey, pursuant to the decree of the Supreme Court of the United States and the distribution to the shareholders therein of their proportionate shares of stock in the subsidiary-companies, the trustees aforesaid received on account of the 500 shares of such stock so held by them for the benefit of William S. Tod (in addition to stock in other subsidiary companies of the Standard Oil Company), 5,78085-983383 shares of the stock of the Standard Oil Company of Indiana, an Indiana corporation, and 3,47351-983383 of the capital stock of the Standard Oil Company of Nebraska, a Nebraska corporation. On the 29th of March, 1912, a stock dividend of 2900 per cent, was declared by the Standard Oil Company of Indiana, to be distributed ratably to the stockholders of record on the 1st day of April, 1912. In accordance with this resolution, the trustees of the trust fund for the benefit of William S. Tod received on or about May 15, 1912, 147,297-699-983383 additional shares of the capital stock of the Standard Oil Company of Indiana as the stock dividend of 2900 [44]*44per cent, upon the 5,78085-983883 shares previously held by them. On the 16th of December, 1912, these 147,297699-983-883 shares of the capital stock of the Standard Oil Company of Indiana were paid over, assigned and delivered by the trustees as income to the life beneficiary of the trust fund at a valuation of $322 a share, and the amount is included by them in their account as a payment of income amounting to $47,-431.48.

On the 5th of March, 1912, the Standard Oil Company of Nebraska also declared a stock dividend of thirty-three and one-third per cent., payable to the stockholders of record on the 15th day of March, 1912. The trustees of the fund, held for the benefit of William S. Tod, received on or about April 15, 1912, -1,15783-983383 additional shares of the capital stock of the Standard Oil Company of Nebraska, as the stock dividend of thirty-three and one-third per cent, upon the shares of that corporation previously held by them. These, 1,15783-983383 shares were on the 16th day of December, 1912, assigned and delivered by the trustees to the life beneficiary of the trust fund as income, at a valuation of $296 a share.

The objections of the remaindermen as well as of the special guardian for other infant remaindermen all relate to the trustees’ payments or distributions of the stock dividends, declared by the Standard Oil Company of Indiana on the 29th day of March, 1912, and the stock dividends declared by the Standard Oil Company of Nebraska on the 5th of March, 1912. It is apparent that these objections present what is called “ the troublesome question ” of the better title of life tenants and life beneficiaries, as against remaindermen, to what our Court of Appeals terms “ extraordinary dividends.” Matter of Osborne, 209 N. Y. 458. The question is troublesome only when the will, as in this instance, is silent or fails to provide expressly for the disposition of such extraordinary [45]*45dividends, for in that event it becomes necessary to determine the intention of the testator. Under such a state of fact, the court determines the intention of the testator by the application of equitable canons of interpretation laid down in adjudged cases of authority. Matter of Osborne, 209 N. Y. 450, is the latest of such adjudications in order of time.

In Matter of Osborne, the Court of Appeals more distinctly pronounced the rule governing the proper distribution of stock dividends as between life tenants and remaindermen. They say, in substance, that if the language of the will shows that the testator intended that any extraordinary dividend, declared upon the corpus of the trust fund, should be paid to the life beneficiary, such intention should be effectuated by the trustees. An examination of the testator’s will, in this particular matter before me, disclosed that he has not indicated an intention that the capital of the fund should be in any way impaired by the payment of income to the life beneficiaries, or that such life tenants should receive the entire amount of those 56 extraordinary dividends ” which diminish the capital of the trust funds. It is conceded that the dividend of 2900 per cent declared by the Standard Oil Company of Indiana and the dividend of 38% per cent declared by the Standard Oil Company of Nebraska were “ extraordinary dividends.” Therefore, as the late Mr. Kennedy’s will discloses no intention that the extraordinary dividends should be paid to the life tenants, it would seem that the rule stated in Matter of Osborne, supra, is applicable in this matter. It is declared in Matter of Osborne that:

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Bluebook (online)
12 Mills Surr. 41, 85 Misc. 298, 147 N.Y.S. 161, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-accounting-of-tod-nysurct-1914.