Leyendecker v. Leyendecker

59 A.2d 238, 142 N.J. Eq. 449, 1948 N.J. LEXIS 663
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedMay 13, 1948
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 59 A.2d 238 (Leyendecker v. Leyendecker) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Leyendecker v. Leyendecker, 59 A.2d 238, 142 N.J. Eq. 449, 1948 N.J. LEXIS 663 (N.J. 1948).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Heher, J.

The decree under appeal construes the will of Peter J. Leyendecker, who died on July 9th, 1926, survived by his wife, Mary A., and three children, the complainant, Josephine W., and the defendants, Herman W. Leyendecker and Henrietta Koerner.

When the will was made, December 29th, 1925, and also at the time of his death, the testator was the owner of 970 of the outstanding 1,000 shares of the capital stock of the Haddon Ice and Coal Company, a prosperous retailer of ice and coal', principally ice of its own manufacture; and he was also the owner of his place of residence, adjoining the company’s plant, and securities and other personal property of considerable value. Although there is some doubt as to when the certificates were actually issued, each of the testator’s three children held 10 shares of the remainder of the issued stock of the corporation. •

. The testator devised and bequeathed his entire estate to his wife for life, and, upon her death, a life estate to his complainant daughter, Josephine, in his “home and the grounds surrounding it and the free use thereof, as well as garage space for her automobile.” He provided that “all the expenses connected with the maintenance of the said home be borne by the Company before distribution of any dividends,” and that “the sum of $60 per week be paid” to his daughter Josephine “from the profits of the said Company, being the Haddon Ice and Coal Co., before 'distribution of dividends upon stock or otherwise, and said $60 is to be in addition to any earnings on stock which may be held” by Josephine “under the next succeeding clause” of the will, which clause directed that all his property and estate, except the life estate given to Josephine, “be divided into three equal parts and distributed unto” his three children, Henrietta, Josephine and Herman, “share and share alike.” And he then provided *451 that, upon Josephine’s death, “the home and grounds and garage space” given to Josephine for life “is to revert to the Haddon Ice and Coal Co. in fee simple.” The three children were appointed executors of the will, with power of sale of the real estate. This summarizes the entire testamentary-expression.

All three executors qualified; and their final account was allowed on May 20th, 1928.

The ice and coal business was established by the testator a quarter of a century before the will was made. Each of his daughters assisted him at times in the management of the enterprise. Herman and Henrietta’s husband, Charles T. Koerner, were in his employ, the latter from the day trade was commenced. In March, 1923, the corporation was organized, and the business was eventually transferred to it, in consideration of the issuance of 970 shares of the capital stock to him and, presumably, ten shares each to his three children. Josephine made a trip to Germany with her father in 1911, and returned a semi-invalid. She was 33 years old and unmarried when her father died and, it would seem, a chronic invalid; and there is no doubt that her condition made her the special object of paternal solicitude. The ultimate question is how far her father intended to go, as revealed by the language of the will, in providing for his ailing daughter.

Upon the testator’s death, Herman assumed the management of the business. His and Koerner’s salaries were increased from $70 to $100 per week. Poliowing the death of the testator’s widow, August 6th, 1929, there was an equal division of the corporate stock among the three residuary legatees; and all the rest of the personal property was made the subject of- a trust for the benefit of all three residuary legatees. The corporation was deficient in cash reserve; and the assets of the trust were used as a substitute for the ordinary liquid reserve, even as the testator’s personal estate was used as such during his lifetime. This was the primary, if not indeed, the sole purpose of the trust. The trustees were' Charles T. Koerner and Herman, who became, respectively, the president and the secretary and treasurer of the corpora *452 tion. At one time, the trust’s loans to the corporation totaled $60,000. Thereafter, all three .residuary legatees served on the corporation’s board of directors.

Prom October 12th, 1929, until March, 1930, the corporation paid Josephine $60 per week, and Herman and Koerner each $100 per week. During the remainder of the year 1930, all of 1931, and the first six months of 1932, Josephine was paid $120 per week, and Herman and Koerner each $200 per week. The weekly pajunents to all three were thereafter reduced from time to time; and from February 1st, 1941, to September '29th, 1944, Josephine received but $35 per week, and Herman and Koerner each $90 per week. From then on, Josephine was paid $48 per week. The payments to Josephine were treated as salary on the company’s books; but it is clear that she rendered no service which would give the payments a compensatory character. Plainly, in part at least, these were disbursements in keeping with the testamentary command. .

Due to adverse trade conditions, chargeable in large part to the general home use of mechanical refrigeration, there was a radical curtailment of corporate earning power which, for eleven successive years, resulted in substantial operational deficits; and this is assigned as the reason for reducing Josephine’s weekly payments below the sum fixed by the will. There were annual net losses from' 1932 to 1942, inclusive, aggregating in excess of $47,000. The net loss for 1941 and 1942 exceeded $22,000. There was a net profit of $600 in 1943 and $1,200 in 1944. Ho dividends were declared during this period of financial stress. The decline in trade was not reasonably foreseeable at the time of the testator’s death. The manufacture of ice constituted between 85% and 90% of the corporate business; and the unforeseen development of artificial refrigeration rendered the plant obsolete and made it necessary to introduce substitute facilities to the trade and to reconstitute the business to meet the altered conditions.

We have recounted the circumstances at some length because, if relevant at all -on the inquiry of intention, their significance in our view is not that perceived by the learned Vice-Chancellor. The Vice-Chancellor, invoking the interpretive principle of the case of Noice v. Schnell, 101 N. J. Eq. *453 &5£, &1S,, conceived that the testator’s “predominant idea” was that the “homestead should continue to be the home of his wife and dependent daughter, that it should be maintained as he had maintained it, and that his daughter should have an assured income of at least $60 per week;” that if a testator, “during his lifetime, has had and exercised complete control of a corporation and has acted as if its property was beneficially owned by him, a general legacy to one which, as the testator knows, can be paid only out of the assets of the corporation, will be so paid, even though he has bequeathed the stock in the corporation specifically to another,” and therefore the particular testator’s children received his gift of the stock “burdened with the obligations he had imposed,” and the gift to Josephine falls into the category of a demonstrative legacy.

The decree adjudges, inter

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Bluebook (online)
59 A.2d 238, 142 N.J. Eq. 449, 1948 N.J. LEXIS 663, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/leyendecker-v-leyendecker-nj-1948.