In re the Estate of Heubach

165 Misc. 196, 300 N.Y.S. 802, 1937 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1991
CourtNew York Surrogate's Court
DecidedNovember 23, 1937
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 165 Misc. 196 (In re the Estate of Heubach) 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 Estate of Heubach, 165 Misc. 196, 300 N.Y.S. 802, 1937 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1991 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1937).

Opinion

Wingate, S.

Three motions are here presented for adjudication, one by an objector to the account of the trustees, which seeks a direction for the filing of an amended account, and two by his opponents, who are respectively such trustees and the special guardian for contingent remaindermen, to dismiss his objections.

The will erected a trust for the life use of the widow during which period she was to receive the whole net income ” thereof. The present objector is one of her executors. The salient facts underlying the controversy are that among the possessions of the decedent were 619 shares of preferred and 2,450 shares of common stock of Herman Behr & Co., Inc., which was the incorporation of a partnership in which he previously had owned a quarter interest and in which he received a stock distribution of a substantially equivalent proportion. The trustees were authorized to hold this stock as an investment, and did so. During the four years succeeding the testator’s death the business proved an extremely profitable one. In 1928 the company was consolidated with another corporation named the Manning Abrasive Company, a new corporation known as the Behr-Manning Corporation being organized. The trustees, as stockholders of Herman Behr & Co., received in exchange for their stock in the old company, 3,069 shares of the preferred and 6,125 shares of the common stock of the new company and also 2,450 shares of another corporation known as the Adamant Corporation. It was at this point in the history of the corporate mutations that an intermediate judicial settlement of the accounts of the trustees occurred. The decree in this regard was dated July 22, 1931.

, Subsequent to the date of the decree, several additional reorganizations and reincorporations occurred which finally resulted in the exchange, share for share, of the stock of the Behr-Manning Corporation for like stock of the B-M Holding Corporation, a Delaware concern. Three thousand of the common shares have [199]*199been sold, leaving 3,125 shares of this issue, 3,069 preferred shares and the 2,450 shares of the Adamant Corporation still in the hands of the trustees.

The life tenant has died and certain outright remainder legacies are now payable, the balance of the principal to be held on a secondary trust for the life of testator’s son, Gustav, who, in the capacity of executor under the will of his mother, the primary life beneficiary, is the present objector.

The supplementary petition of the accounting trustees reads in part as follows:

“ Upon information and belief, that Herman Behr & Company, Inc., Behr-Manning Corporation, Adamant Corporation, B-M Holding Corporation and the Norton Company have earned substantially larger profits than they have distributed to their respective stockholders, and that the profits which have been retained by the said corporations, have been and are responsible for the increased values of their stock, and have therefore materially increased the value of the assets of this estate.

That your petitioners are uncertain as to whether such increase or increment belongs to the corpus or principal of the estate, or whether it should, when turned into cash, be distributed to the life tenant or life tenants who were entitled to the income of the estate when such profits were earned. * * *

“ Your petitioners, therefore, pray: * * * 5. That this court instruct petitioners as to whether or not the proceeds of the stock of Herman Behr & Co., Inc., should be apportioned between income and principal and if such apportionment is to be made, upon what basis petitioners shall calculate with such apportionment.”

Strange as it may seem, the objections of the executor of the life tenant, which the trustees, as well as the special guardian, seek to dismiss, are chiefly founded on the same state of facts upon which the executors base this prayer for instructions. This apparent anomaly is somewhat alleviated in the memorandum filed on behalf of the trustees, which substantially adopts the traditionally correct attitude in this connection of a disinterested and impartial stakeholder. The real present controversy, accordingly, lies, as it should, between the representatives of the income beneficiary and the remaindermen.

The arguments of the special guardian for a dismissal of the objections are predicated principally on two premises, first, that the decree of July 22, 1931, made after the initial consolidation operation occurred, renders res adjudícala by reason of their inclusion as principal assets in the account then judicially settled the [200]*200allocation of the securities received in exchange for those originally owned by the testator and taken into the corpus of the trust on its initial erection; and, second, that the fact that the life beneficiary was a cotrustee of the trust, coupled with her failure to assert any rights which she may have had to a proper allocation as between principal and income of the securities received in such exchange, constituted a waiver of her rights in this regard and raised an estoppel against their present assertion by her personal representative.

It is important in approaching an evaluation of the first contention to note that the date of the decree effecting the former judicial settlement was July 22, 1931, which was prior to the amendment of section 145 of the Surrogate’s Court Act, enacted on May 1, 1933 (Laws of 1933, chap. 642) and effective immediately. Conceivably, the first contention of the special guardian might have been valid had the proceeding in which the decree was made been instituted subsequent to that date, but the amendment was not retroactive. (Matter of Hirshon, 251 App. Div. 546, 548.)

The purpose of the enactment was to prevent the recurrence in future of situations similar to that which arose in Matter of Jackson (135 Misc. 329; affd., 232 App. Div. 425; affd., 258 N. Y. 281), in which one of the questions litigated concerned the effect of a prior decree which determined that certain charges for the carrying of unproductive realty were to be allocated against principal (232 App. Div. 425, 430). Although the trustee had apparently acted on the theory that this accomplished an effective determination on the subject, both the Appellate Division and the Court of Appeals on the subsequent accounting decided to the contrary and considered the question de novo, both observing that the determination made by the intermediate decree is not binding as to the ultimate rights of the parties.” (232 App. Div. 425, 430; affd., 258 N. Y. 281, 288.)

The results of such a conception, which had the effect of making a fiduciary act at his peril in spite of a solemn judicial determination of the course of conduct which he should pursue, attained after full litigation of the question, seemed so subversive of usual principles of stare decisis, that a remedial statutory alteration appeared to be demanded, and was accordingly effected.

The decision in Matter of Jackson and similar previous precedents, however, makes it clear that prior to the amendment of section 145 a decree of judicial settlement prior to complete settlement of the estate was' conclusive only as to past transactions and payments covered by them ” (Bowditch v. Ayrault, 138 N. Y. 222, 231) and did not preclude a re-examination of any questions involved [201]

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Bluebook (online)
165 Misc. 196, 300 N.Y.S. 802, 1937 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1991, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-estate-of-heubach-nysurct-1937.