Neafie's Estate

25 Pa. D. & C. 608, 1936 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 45
CourtPennsylvania Orphans' Court, Philadelphia County
DecidedMarch 20, 1936
Docketno. 136
StatusPublished

This text of 25 Pa. D. & C. 608 (Neafie's Estate) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Orphans' Court, Philadelphia County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Neafie's Estate, 25 Pa. D. & C. 608, 1936 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 45 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1936).

Opinion

Stearne, J.,

The exceptions, to an auditor’s report of an adjudication of a trustee’s account in a trust estate, chiefly involve the apportionment, between income and. principal, of the proceeds of a sale both of rights to subscribe for corporate stock and of the stock itself.

In Waterhouse’s Estate, 308 Pa. 422, the present chief justice has written a compendium of the principles and decisions respecting the apportionment of income and principal. In applying any given formula, it is well to keep constantly in mind the fundamental principle upon which the Pennsylvania rule is based. It is one of testamentary intent that “income” means all the earnings derived because of the ownership of the stock. Such earnings are due income whether paid in cash or stock, or reflected in accumulated surplus, or otherwise, when the stock is sold or distributed. However, upon equitable principles, the corpus or principal must be preserved intact: Nirdlinger’s Estate, 290 Pa. 457.

Out of the veritable forest of facts and complicated figures submitted by the learned auditor and by the able counsel in their excellent briefs, there appear to emerge two major problems, the solution of which will largely settle most of the controverted questions. ■

The two questions may be stated as follows:

1. Where one of successive life tenants permitted the proceeds of the sale of rights to subscribe for corporate stock to be included in principal, although such proceeds were properly income, and as a result such proceeds were allocated to principal by the orphans’ court in adjudications which have since become absolute and incapable of review, upon a subsequent sale of the stock itself what effect has this situation upon the apportionment of such proceeds?
2. Where a trust company depreciates the value of its securities and loans, and upon its books charges such loss to its surplus, is such loss to be regarded as a capital [611]*611loss, or a loss in operation chargeable to income, or is it to be equitably divided between principal and income?

In approaching a solution to the first problem our first inquiry is as to the rights of income and principal in the proceeds of rights to subscribe for corporate stock. The formula is well defined in Waterhouse’s Estate, supra, pages 429, 430.

u[d] Proceeds arising from the sale of stock rights should be distributed in the same manner and have the same presumptions following as in the sale of stock. They are a species of stock. This is the main question here involved.
“We have held that proceeds from the sale of stock rights, . . must be apportioned in the same manner as an extraordinary stock dividend would he; that is, there should be allotted to the corpus of the trust sufficient thereof to maintain unimpaired the intact value of the stock held by it, and the life tenant should receive the balance, because it represents corporate earnings which accumulated after he became entitled to all dividends . . .’ But in the case cited we considered the sale of stock rights in reference to intact value and accumulated earnings only, but decided nothing as to stock rights sold at a profit due to the stock’s earning power, goodwill, or its intrinsic or speculative value in the market. The benefits resulting from the sale of stock rights under the latter circumstances should be apportioned in the same manner as in the sale of stock. In all cases, in determining the share which the life tenant is to receive based on apportionment, his share is limited to such an amount as is attributable to income or can be fairly included therein. It does not include increases of capital assets not due to earnings, and in the sale of stock rights earnings do not include such items as speculative value, enhanced market value, or the stock’s earning power.
“When the trustees sell stock rights, the presumption is that the proceeds derived therefrom represent capital assets of the estate, and the burden of showing the con[612]*612trary rests on those who assert a claim to the fund or part of it.”

Page 429: “[c] Where stock that produces income owned by the estate is sold for a price greater than the intact value [as defined and considered above] and such greater price is due to an accumulation of income, the proceeds are apportionable; that is, so much of the proceeds as necessary to preserve the intact value [as defined] goes to the trustees for the corpus, and only so much of the balance that represents income goes to the life tenant.

“But where the greater value is due to the stock’s earning power, good will, or its intrinsic, speculative, or enhanced market value, all the proceeds are part of the corpus and belong to the remainderman; the increase is capital gain.
“The presumption is that the proceeds from the sale of stock belong to the corpus of the trust and the burden of proving that they do not rests on the person asserting a claim to them.”

Referring to one of the corporations involved as an example, the Fidelity Trust Company, and applying formula (d) of Waterhouse’s Estate, supra, to the facts: Shares at death of testator had an intact value of $244.41 per share. The trustee sold rights to subscribe, subsequently issued, at $515.87 per share. At that time the book value of such shares was $687.73. The difference between the book value, $687.73, and the intact value, $244.41, was $443.32, which, according to the undisputed proofs, represented accumulated earnings. It seems undisputed that, because the intact value remained unimpaired, the income should have been allotted $443.32: Jones v. Integrity Trust Co. et al., 292 Pa. 149. However, as the rights sold for $515.87, the excess over $443.32, or $72.55, should have been regarded as a capital gain and allocated to principal.

Despite the right of the life tenant, entitled to the income as above indicated, she chose to permit the entire [613]*613proceeds derived from the sale of such rights to subscribe to be included in principal. As a consequence it was so allotted by an auditing judge, and years afterward was so reallotted by a subsequent adjudication. It is conceded that the fund cannot be returned to income. No such claim is made. All agree that the fund must remain in principal.

However, in 1934, the stock itself was sold and the proceeds are before the court for distribution. The life tenant presently entitled to income maintains that, because the rights to subscribe were sold for $515.87 and paid into principal, the effect thereof was to “wipe out” the intact value of the shares, to wit, $244.41. She maintains that, there being no intact value to preserve, she is therefore entitled to all of the proceeds from the sale of the stock itself. Her counsel relies upon Bullitt’s Estate, 308 Pa. 413. The auditor negatived such claims and we agree with his conclusion. As we view the present facts, Bullitt’s Estate, supra, is contrary to such contention, and is authority for precisely what the auditor ruled.

In Bullitt’s Estate, supra, this court, with a dissenting opinion by Van Dusen, J., made an erroneous decision, which was reversed by the Supreme Court. The present opinion writer assumes a full share of responsibility for leading our court into error. In that ease a 33% percent stock dividend was declared, attributable to accumulated earnings, which clearly should have gone to income.

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Related

Nirdlinger's Estate
139 A. 200 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1927)
Bullitt's Estate
162 A. 288 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1932)
Jones v. Integrity Trust Co.
140 A. 862 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1928)
Graham's Estate
146 A. 111 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1929)
Chauncey's Estate
154 A. 814 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1931)
Dickinson's Estate
132 A. 352 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1925)
Baird's Estate
148 A. 907 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1929)
Waterhouse's Estate
162 A. 295 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1932)

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Bluebook (online)
25 Pa. D. & C. 608, 1936 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 45, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/neafies-estate-paorphctphilad-1936.