Mercantile-Safe Deposit & Trust Co. v. Apponyi

152 A.2d 184, 220 Md. 275, 1959 Md. LEXIS 505
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJune 10, 1959
Docket[No. 270, September Term, 1958.] [No. 271, September Term, 1958.]
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 152 A.2d 184 (Mercantile-Safe Deposit & Trust Co. v. Apponyi) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mercantile-Safe Deposit & Trust Co. v. Apponyi, 152 A.2d 184, 220 Md. 275, 1959 Md. LEXIS 505 (Md. 1959).

Opinion

Hammond, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

In 1894, in Thomas v. Gregg, 78 Md. 545, this Court selected the Pennsylvania Rule of apportionment of stock dividends between income and principal of a trust estate—that so much of the surplus of the corporation as was earned after the creation of the trust is, when distributed in the form of stock, presumptively income to the life tenant—as the most practicable and equitable test. In 1915, in Northern Central *278 Dividend Cases, 126 Md. 16, the Court was urged by eminent counsel for the corporate trustee, which appears in the case at bar, to follow what is now called the New Jersey Rule (the rule that the life tenant is limited to the dollar amount of earned surplus capitalized, that is to say, entitled to no more than the number of shares which, at fair market value, equals the number of dollars transferred from earned surplus to capital). Our predecessors rejected the New Jersey Rule and adhered to the principles of Thomas v. Gregg.

In 1930, dealing with a stock dividend, Baldwin v. Baldwin, 159 Md. 175, 182, held that the life tenant was not entitled to the entire dividend even though all of it represented capitalization of surplus earned during the period of the trust, because the value of the original investment in the trust had to be preserved. It was further specifically held that such value was not market value but book value. In 1939 the (Uniform) Principal and Income Act, Code (1957), Art. 75B, provided that dividends in the form of stock of the distributing corporation were principal as far as trusts created by will or deed effective June 1, 1939, or thereafter were concerned. The Act has been held not to apply to estates created before June 1, 1939. Lindau v. Community Fund of Baltimore, 188 Md. 474, 478.

In 1957, in Donaldson v. Mercantile-Safe Dep. Co., 214 Md. 421, the same corporate trustee now appearing earnestly argued as to a pre-1939 trust that stock splits of the Texas Company and of the American Gas & Electric Company, even though in substantial part representing capitalization of surplus earned after the creation of the trust, were not apportionable because modern corporate and financial practices and the effects of inflation made the Pennsylvania Rule inequitable and inapplicable to currently prevalent stock splits. We adhered to the principles of the earlier Maryland decisions and held that the shares received by the trustee were to be apportioned according to three tests, which both the trustee and the life tenant agreed were the law of Maryland on the subject. Test number three —which is the only one now sought to be repudiated by the trustee—is that the number of shares remaining in the corpus of the trust, after giving the life tenant his shares, multiplied *279 by the number of dollars of book value per share as shown by the corporate books, must equal or exceed the original dollar book value of the trustee’s acquisition cost of the stock involved. If the distribution of the new stock to the life tenant would leave an insufficient number of shares in the trust corpus to bring about this result, then, to the extent of the deficiency, the number of shares distributable as income must be proportionately reduced.

Following the Donaldson decision, the corporate appellant in the instant case reviewed its many trust accounts and determined that there were some fourteen hundred in which apportionments of stock dividends or splits would have to be made; and, as a result, corpus would lose and income beneficiaries receive stock of the value of some seven million dollars. Whereupon, in an effort to retain in the corpus of the trusts a greater portion of these stock dividends and splits, the corporate appellant caused to be prepared and filed the test cases before us, which were consolidated below and argued together here. One of the cases is concerned with a trust created by the will of Edward F. Burke, who died in 1915, in which the trustee holds stock received in the 1954 stock split of the General Electric Company. In the other case, the trustee under the will of John Quinn, who died in 1899, holds stock distributions recently received from the American Cyanamid Company, the General Electric Company, the American Gas & Electric Company, and the Texas Company, as to which it desires instruction as to their proper apportionment.

The propositions urged in the alternative in the Burke case by the appellant corporate trustee, and concurred in by the remaindermen in that case, another appellant, are: the General Electric Company’s 1954 stock distribution was not a dividend calling for apportionment; the New Jersey and not the Pennsylvania Rule should apply; and, finally, the third test of the Pennsylvania Rule as used in Maryland should be “refined” (to use the word of the trustee) so as to compare book values as of the time of acquisition not in dollars but by the measure of real purchasing power calculated by the use of comparative indices, as against the book values at the time of the dividend.

The chancellor held that the General Electric stock distribu *280 tion was a dividend that required apportionment; that the Pennsylvania Rule, not the New Jersey Rule, applies; and that dollar book value at acquisition should be compared with dollar book value at the time of the dividend in determining whether corpus would remain unimpaired if all of the stock representing surplus earned during the trust was paid over as income. We think Judge Warnken’s holdings were right and that the prior Maryland cases foreclose the appellants from prevailing as to any of their contentions.

The contention that the General Electric distribution did not constitute an apportionable dividend rests on the claim that it was not a stock dividend but rather a change and conversion of no par value stock of the stated value of $6.25 a share into stock of $5.00 par value and, therefore, a reorganization similar to that considered in Safe Deposit & Trust Co. v. Bowen, 188 Md. 482. The Donaldson case answers these claims and requires their rejection. In that case the stock split of the American Gas & Electric Company, which was held to be apportionable, is not to be distinguished from the stock split of the General Electric Company. Both companies used the same mechanics. It is conceded that the General Electric distribution was supported as to 8of the new capital by a transfer from surplus earned during the period of the trust, and that the balance of 12was produced by the change in the outstanding capital stock. The Donaldson case established that where surplus is capitalized and paid over as a stock split, the life tenant is entitled to the proportion of the new stock that represents surplus earned during the trust. The Court of Appeals of New York reached the same conclusion as to the General Electric distribution now under discussion in In re Fosdick’s Trust, 152 N. E. 2d 228, 232-233.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Geier v. Mercantile-Safe Deposit & Trust Co.
328 A.2d 311 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1974)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
152 A.2d 184, 220 Md. 275, 1959 Md. LEXIS 505, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mercantile-safe-deposit-trust-co-v-apponyi-md-1959.