Meldrim v. Trustees of Trinity Church

28 S.E. 431, 100 Ga. 479, 1897 Ga. LEXIS 88
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedMarch 8, 1897
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 28 S.E. 431 (Meldrim v. Trustees of Trinity Church) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Meldrim v. Trustees of Trinity Church, 28 S.E. 431, 100 Ga. 479, 1897 Ga. LEXIS 88 (Ga. 1897).

Opinion

Simmons, Chief Justice.

In June, 1869, The Central Railroad & Banking Company of Georgia leased the property of The Southwestern Railroad Company for and during the entire corporate existence of -the latter company under its charter. The lease-was to go into effect on the 1st day of December, 1869, and thereafter The Central R. R. & B. Co. was to exercise all rights, privileges and control which The Southwestern R. R. Co. previously had, and also to receive and dispose of all the earnings of The Southwestern R. R. Co., and to merge 'the same with the earnings of The Central R. R. & Bkg. Co., and to decide what dividends should he declared therefrom. “And the said The Central Railroad and Banking Company of Georgia hereby conveníante and agrees to and with the said The Southwestern Railroad Company, that during-the months of June and December in every year during the continuance of the term hereby granted, it will declare and pay to the stockholders of the said The Southwestern Railroad Company dividends which shall bear to the dividends declared and paid to its oiwn stockholders the ratio of eight-to ten. That is to- say, eight dollars to each share of Southwestern Railroad stock for every ten dollars declared and paid to each share of its own stock; and that no semi-annual dividend so- declared and paid to the stockholders of the Southwestern Railroad Company shall be less than at the rate of seven per -centum per annum, -on -the par value of their Stock; -and that whenever any stock dividend <or division of assets or accumulations shall be declared, paid or made to 'the stockholders of the said The Central Railroad and Banking Company of Georgia, a similar dividend or distribution shall be paid and made to the stockholders of the Southwestern-Railroad in the same proportion of eight to ten; and that all such dividends and distributions of every sort shall be paid to the stockholders of The Southwestern Railroad Company at M-acon and Savannah, as the company has heretofore paid its dividends, and free of all taxes to the stockholders.” In [481]*4811882 Robert Mclntire, of the county of Chatham, owned two hundred shares of the stock of The Southwestern Railroad Company. In August of that year he made a deed of' trust wherein he disposed of these two hundred shares, one hundred shares to the Trustees of Trinity Church for the' Methodist Episcopal Church South in Savannah, and one hundred shares to the Trustees of Wesley Monumental Church for the Methodist Episcopal Church South iu Savannah. In the deed thus made he reserved to himself the' right to hold the two hundred shares and collect the dividends and profits arising therefrom for and during his natural life, which dividends and profits during his life were to belong to him individually. The trustees of the two-churches were to receive no dividends or profits until after his death.

The record discloses that on the 1st of December, 1869,. The Central Railroad and Banking Company took possession of all the property and assets of The Southwestern Railroad Company, and that from that time until June, 1892, it paid to the stockholders of the Southwestern Railroad semiannual dividends of seven per cent, per annum on the par value of their stock, the dividends being paid directly to the stockholders. In 1892 The Central Railroad & Banking Co., becoming financially embarrassed, wtas placed in the hands of a receiver by order of the Circuit Court of the United States for the Southern District of Georgia, and so remained until it was sold by decree of the same court on October 7, 1895. Up to the day of sale of the Central, the receiver operated the Southwestern Railroad under .the lease. The purchasers «at the sale obtained a new charter under the name of the Central of Georgia Railway Company, and on October 17, 1895, another lease contract was made between the new company and The Southwestern Railroad Company, upon certain terms and conditions therein specified but unnecessary here to mention. In making the new lease there seems to have been a compromise m'ade between the new [482]*482company and The Southwestern Railroad Company as to the dividends which had accrued from June, 1892, to the date of the sale of the road. The Central of Georgia Railway Co. agreed to pay the stockholders of The Southwestern Railroad Co. a five per cent, dividend instead of the seven per cent, which had been agreed upon in the original loase. Payment of this five per cent, was made to the president and directors of The Southwestern Railroad Company, In December, 1895, the directors of The Southwestern R. Co. declared what they called a dividend to their stockholders. Before this dividend was declared, to wit on October 1, 1895, Mclntire died and his successors in the trust ■received the dividends on the two hundred shares of stock which he had given in trust to the two churches. This money they were about to pay to the trustees of the churches, when the executors of Mclntire gave them notice not to do so, as they would claim all the dividends up to the death of Mclntire. Mclntire’s successors in the trust then filed their bill of interpleader, setting up therein that the executors of Mclntire claimed these dividends as belonging to his individual estate and that the trustees of the two churches claimed that they belonged to them; and asking direction of the court. The case was submitted to the court upon an agreed statement of facts, without the intervention of a jury, and the money was awarded to the trustees of the churches and tíre court costs taxed against the executors. The executors excepted to- this judgment and bring it here for review. The lower court also decreed that the trustees of the churches should pay $100 out of the fund to the counsel filing the bill of interpleader. To 'this the trustees of the churches excepted.

1. It was contended by counsel for plaintiffs in error here, that the money paid to The Southwestern Railroad Company by the purchasers of The Central Railroad & Banking Company was not paid as dividends but as rent for the use and occupation of the Southwestern Railroad: that, [483]*483being rent and not dividends, it was apportionable, and the «estate of Melntire was entitled to all that part which had accrued up to «the time of his death and the trustees of the -churches were entitled to that which accrued after the- death of Melntire. On the other hand it was contended by the counsel for the defendants in error, that the money was paid as dividends, that dividends belong to the person owning the stock at the time they are declared, and that as Mc-Intire died before the dividends were declared and the trustees thereby became- owners of the stock and held the same iu December, 1895, when the dividends were declared, they, .and not the executors, were entitled to the money.

The view we take of the case renders it unnecessary for us •to determine whether either proposition is trae under the facts of this case. I am inclined to -think that rent is ap■portionable between the -estate of the life-tenant -and -the remainderman; and it is undoubtedly true that the owner of •.stock in a corporation is entitled to the dividends declared while he is owner. In this case neither proposition applies. In 1869 the lessor corporation leased all of its property to the lessee corporation, and the latter in that contract of lease .■stipulated and agreed to pay to the stockholders of the lessor at least seven per cent, per annum on the par value of their ■stock. They did not contract to p'ay it to the lessor company but to its stockholders directly.

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Bluebook (online)
28 S.E. 431, 100 Ga. 479, 1897 Ga. LEXIS 88, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/meldrim-v-trustees-of-trinity-church-ga-1897.