In re the Construction of the Will of Feinson

196 Misc. 590, 92 N.Y.S.2d 87, 1949 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2764
CourtNew York Surrogate's Court
DecidedAugust 12, 1949
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 196 Misc. 590 (In re the Construction of the Will of Feinson) 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 Construction of the Will of Feinson, 196 Misc. 590, 92 N.Y.S.2d 87, 1949 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2764 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1949).

Opinion

Frankenthaler, S.

The executor-trustee under the will of decedent asks a construction of the will, a determination of the validity and effectiveness of certain conditions annexed to bequests of shares of stock, and also instructions as to the effectiveness of directions given to the trustee in the will respecting the voting of shares of stock. Decedent died on March 16,1949. The second paragraph of his will deals with shares of stock of American Dispenser Company, Inc. The dispositive provisions are prefaced by recitals wherein decedent recounts the history of the business and his hopes concerning its development. Prior to January, 1947, the decedent conducted the business as an individual. In that year the business was transferred to a corporation of which he was sole owner. The entire capital stock consists of 200 shares. Decedent desired that the stock of the corporation be owned by or for the benefit of certain individuals thereafter named in his will. He thereupon bequeathed upon the terms and conditions hereinafter set forth, and not otherwise, to the following named persons respectively, the following number of shares of the capital stock of American Dispenser Company, Inc.” In the subdivision lettered A ” he gave his trustee 100 shares of the stock to be held in trust during the life of his wife. Upon her death the principal is to be divided into six parts and one part given to each of his three brothers and three sisters. In subdivisions lettered B ” to G- ” inclusive, he disposed of 90 shares by giving 15 shares to each of his brothers and sisters. In the next two subdivisions he gave to two employees 8 and 2 shares, respectively. Subdivision “ J ” reads as follows:

J. I direct, however, that the foregoing bequests listed under items * B ’ to ‘ I ’ inclusive, shall be subject to and, accordingly, I make such bequests, and each of them, upon the following terms and conditions, viz:

“ 1. Each of the legatees listed under items ‘ B ’ to ‘ I ’ of paragraph * Second ’ of this will, shall agree to vote for and elect my wife, Helene, during her lifetime, as a Director of American Dispenser Company, Inc., and they shall further agree that they will instruct and direct the corporation by their affirmative vote to elect, appoint, and employ my said wife, Helene, during her lifetime as an executive at a salary of $500.00 per month, said salary to be received by her for services as director and executive of the American Dispenser Company, Inc.

[592]*592“2. If the agreement referred to in the next immediately proceeding paragraph hereof shall not be executed as therein provided, within such reasonable time as may be fixed therefor by my executor, then and in such event, I revoke, cancel and annul such bequest as to any person failing to execute and deliver the same.

“ 3. My executor before delivering certificates for any of the shares of the capital stock bequeathed under items B ’ to ‘ I ’, inclusive, of paragraph ‘ Second ’ of this will shall take from said legatees and each of them, such agreements as, in his judgment, shall be necessary to carry out effectually the terms and provisions of the bequests, the form thereof to be exclusively determined by my said executor. * * * ”

In the sixth paragraph of the will he gave the following directions to his trustee: 1 ‘ Sixth: I direct that my trustee shall, at all times during the lifetime of my wife, Helene, the beneficiary of the trust set up under this, my will, vote for said Helene as a Director of the American Dispenser Company, Inc., and that he exercise his legal power and influence as the owner in trust of the one hundred shares of stock of American Dispenser Company, Inc. to secure the election and employment of said Helene during her lifetime as Director and Executive of American Dispenser Company, Inc. at the salary of $6,000.00 per annum; and I further direct that my trustee shall, at all times, vote for my nephew, Burton L. Feinson as a Director of the American Dispenser Company, Inc., and that he exercise his legal power and influence as the owner, in trust, of the one hundred shares of stock of American Dispenser Company, Inc. to secure the election and employment of said Burton L. Feinson as Director and General Manager of American Dispenser Company, Inc. at a salary to be computed on the basis of three (3) percent of net sales,”

The petition propounds eighteen separate questions respecting the bequests of this stock. Some of the questions are of only academic interest at the present time because they assume facts which may never develop. The court will discuss first the general principles of law applicable to the bequests of stock to the individual legatees and then the questions relating to the sixth paragraph of the will and the instructions to the trustee.

It is now well established that stockholders of a corporation may validly agree to elect specified persons as directors. (Clark v. Dodge, 269 N. Y. 410; Kassel v. Empire Tinware Co., 178 App. Div. 176; Matter of Block, 186 Misc. 945, 949.) Moreover, the complete owners of a corporation may, by agreement among themselves, control the exercise of power and discretion by the directors of the corporation, provided that the interests of cred[593]*593itors of the corporation are not prejudiced and the public policy of the State is not offended. (Clark v. Dodge, supra; Kassel v. Empire Tinware Co., supra; Matter of Buckley [Rickerson] 183 Misc. 189; Meck, Employment of Corporate Executives by Majority Stockholders, 47 Yale L. J. 1079.) Even though a contract might impinge somewhat upon the provisions of section 27 of the General Corporation Law, there is no reason for holding it illegal if the enforcement of it “ damages nobody — not even, in any perceptible degree, the public ”. (Clark v. Dodge, supra, p. 415.)

In the matter now under consideration there can be no possible harm to other stockholders because all who will receive any stock are required to become parties to the agreement, and then only as a condition to becoming recipients of -the bounty of the decedent.

In the enforcement of such an agreement as is required under the will, there is no threatened harm to the State or to the public generally. Each legatee agrees to vote for the widow as a director. This was expressly held in Clark v. Dodge (supra, p. 417) to be * a perfectly legal contract ’ ’. The proposed agreements do not contemplate stripping the board of directors of ' power or authority in relation to the employment of the widow. The legatees are required to agree only that they will instruct and direct the corporation by their affirmative vote to elect, appoint, and employ my said wife, Helene, during her lifetime as an executive at a salary of $500.00 per month ”. The terms of the will may not necessarily contemplate an initial single employment contract to extend over the lifetime of the widow any more than it contemplates a single election as director for life. It is not material now whether there is eventually to be a single employment contract, or successive contracts, each extending over the term which the particular board of directors serves, or an employment without fixed term coupled with an obligation on the part of the stockholders to renew instructions at each meeting. Whether a single act or a succession of acts is necessary, the stockholders will be required to carry out their agreement in good faith.

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Bluebook (online)
196 Misc. 590, 92 N.Y.S.2d 87, 1949 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2764, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-construction-of-the-will-of-feinson-nysurct-1949.