Meredith v. Meredith

31 A.2d 216, 133 N.J. Eq. 196, 1943 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 78, 32 Backes 196
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedMarch 31, 1943
DocketDocket 51/732
StatusPublished

This text of 31 A.2d 216 (Meredith v. Meredith) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Court of Chancery primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Meredith v. Meredith, 31 A.2d 216, 133 N.J. Eq. 196, 1943 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 78, 32 Backes 196 (N.J. Ct. App. 1943).

Opinion

William F. Meredith, Joseph D. Meredith and City Bank Farmers Trust Company, as trustees of the special trust created in and by the sixth paragraph of the last will and testament of William T. Meredith, deceased, in presenting their second intermediate account pray instructions (1) as to their duties with respect to 400 shares of capital stock of W.T. Meredith Estate, Inc., now held in said trust and (2) with respect to their duty in regard to the payment of taxes heretofore and hereafter assessed upon real estate owned by said corporation located in Staten Island, New York.

William H. Osborne, Jr., as guardian ad litem for various infants, all of whom are grandchildren of two of the present *Page 198 life tenants of said trust and as such may be, at some time in the future, life tenants or remaindermen or both, excepts:

(a) To the allowances prayed by the trustees for income distributed to the life beneficiaries by loaning and advancing funds at the life tenant's direction to W.T. Meredith Estate, Inc., for the payment of its taxes on the Staten Island real estate and the failure of the trustees to include as assets of the trust notes given by the corporation to the life tenants evidencing said loans.

(b) To the allowances prayed by the trustees for income distributed to the life tenants in May, 1941, because taxes on the Staten Island real estate owned by W.T. Meredith Estate, Inc., were unpaid at the time of such distribution.

It is the guardian's contention that it is the duty of the trustees to pay the taxes on the corporation's property from the income of the trust.

William T. Meredith died on March 5th, 1920, leaving a will and nine codicils. At the time of his death he owned the entire capital stock (400 shares) of W.T. Meredith Estate, a New York corporation, which stock had a par value of $25 per share or a total par value of $10,000 and an inventory value of $20,244. The assets of the corporation consisted of a large tract of land located in Chelsea, Staten Island, New York, most of which was unimproved. The land now remaining undisposed of is all unimproved.

The testator acquired this property in 1884 for approximately $3,000, and organized the corporation under the laws of the State of New York on February 14th, 1908, with broad powers to hold, buy, sell and operate real estate and other investments. The corporation accepted Mr. Meredith's offer to sell to it the Staten Island real estate for the entire capital stock of the corporation. The testator held the stock at the time of his death. In the interim he had advanced to the corporation from time to time an aggregate amount of $48,453.02 for taxes and carrying charges which amount was inventoried as a part of his estate and is still carried as an asset in the four residuary trusts known as the "Consolidated Trusts." On March 22d 1923, the form of the indebtedness *Page 199 of the corporation to the estate was changed to a promissory note for the same amount. Each of the four consolidated trusts now holds a note for one-quarter of this amount.

The testator in the sixth article of his will made a specific bequest of "all the capital stock which I may own, at the time of my death, in The Titanium Alloy Manufacturing Company and in the W.T. Meredith Estate, corporations duly organized and existing under and by virtue of the laws of the State of Maine and the State of New York, respectively," together with real property in Perth Amboy, New Jersey (which was later withdrawn by a codicil), in trust during the lives of his four children, William F. Meredith, Mary Meredith Dana, Joseph D. Meredith and Gertrude Meredith Nichols and of such husbands, wives and issue of said four children as shall be living at the time of his death, "the net interest, rents and income thereof" to be paid to his said four children during their respective lives in equal portions and upon the death of each of said children his or her portion thereof was to be paid to his or her spouse and issue, perstirpes. Upon the death of the last survivor of the above mentioned persons living at his death, the principal was directed to be distributed "in equal shares to the issue then living of my said four children, taking per stirpes and not per capita, to have and to hold the same absolutely."

Pursuant to decree of this court November 12th, 1930, this trust as set up consisted of 1,550 shares of the common stock of the Titanium Alloy Manufacturing Company which had an inventory value of $19,933 and the 400 shares of W.T. Meredith Estate, Inc., at their inventory value of $20,244.

The common stock of Titanium Alloy Manufacturing Company was highly speculative and of little value. It paid no dividends and it was not until April 5th, 1927, more than seven years after the testator's death, that the first dividend was paid. This stock is now quite valuable and is producing large dividends. It is this fact that prompted the exceptions of the guardian ad litem.

At decedent's death the Staten Island property was not producing any net income and the testator apparently contemplated *Page 200 that it would not do so. In the executors' first account it appears that from the testator's death to the end of the following year the executors advanced to the corporation $3,037.60 for real estate taxes, franchise taxes and miscellaneous expenses.

The trustees hold the stock of W.T. Meredith Estate, Inc. The corporation and the executors and trustees have made every effort to sell same over a period of more than twenty-three years, during all of which time the corporation has paid over $100,000 in taxes. The property is unproductive and highly speculative in value. Unless the trustees are required to apply income the only way the funds can be provided for the payment of taxes is by liquidation of all or part of the stock of the Titanium Alloy Manufacturing Company held in the trust under the sixth paragraph of the will (which everyone but the guardian opposes and which is inadvisable because of its inherent value as well as its income producing power), the sale of mortgage investments, which could only be made at a sacrifice, or the sale of the Federal Farm Mortgage Corporation debentures, now held in the trust under the eighth paragraph, which would produce about $12,500. If these debentures were sold the proceeds would barely pay the taxes now in arrears and the problem as to the future would be the same.

At the present time there are taxes due amounting to something more than $10,000 with interest. There is no prospect of selling the property at any price in spite of intensive efforts to do so.

The question to be determined is whether the trustees are obliged to advance further moneys to the corporation and, if so, from what fund or funds such advances shall be made.

The guardian ad litem contends that the trustees should continue to use funds of the trust for this purpose and that it is their legal duty to apply the income for this purpose without regard to the question of whether the property has any value. The cases which he cites have no application to the instant matter. The testator organized this corporation to which he transferred this real estate so that it would *Page 201 be held by the corporation and not by him individually. Throughout his will and nine codicils, he made it clear that he distinguished between real estate and personal property and between real estate owned by him and real estate which was owned by corporations of which he held the stock. The guardian's argument disregards entirely the corporate entity.

The court will not disregard the corporate entity unless some compelling reason is shown.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
31 A.2d 216, 133 N.J. Eq. 196, 1943 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 78, 32 Backes 196, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/meredith-v-meredith-njch-1943.