Pardee's Estate

21 A.2d 904, 343 Pa. 79, 1941 Pa. LEXIS 572
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedApril 14, 1941
DocketAppeal, 122
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 21 A.2d 904 (Pardee's Estate) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pardee's Estate, 21 A.2d 904, 343 Pa. 79, 1941 Pa. LEXIS 572 (Pa. 1941).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Parker,

This contest is between a life tenant and a remainder-man and the question, which arose on the audit of a trustees’ account, is whether a certain portion of funds in the hands of trustees is principal or income. The particular items which raise the dispute are dividends aggregating $4,700 on 940 shares of Pardee Land Company, received by the trustees during 1937. The accountant treated one-half of the dividends as income and the other half as principal. The orphans’ court held, in part, that all the dividends represented part of the net earnings of the corporation from its coal properties, that the corporation was a “wasting asset” corporation, and the items were therefore payable to the life tenant as income even though the intact value of the stock was reduced. *81 The remainderman appealed to the Superior Court and, the members of that court being equally divided, the case was certified to this court. We are all in accord with the result reached by the orphans’ court. It becomes necessary to refer to the will of the testator and the organization, history, and practices of the Pardee Land Company.

Calvin Pardee, the testator, died March 18, 1923, leaving a will whereby he provided bountifully for his wife and his grandchildren and divided the residue of his estate into eight equal parts. Five of these parts were left in trust for five of his children for life with remainder to their respective descendants, if any, and if not per stirpes among his own descendants. The will provided that “all stock dividends or proceeds of sale of rights to subscribe for stock upon any stock” held by the trustees should be treated as principal and not as income. The present appeal involves the trust insofar as it concerns one of his sons, Alfred Day Pardee. By stipulation, this decision will govern the distribution to other beneficiaries in this trust and in other trusts. Among the assets of the trust in question are shares of capital stock of Pardee Land Company, which came from the testator through his executors.

Pardee Land Company was incorporated in 1914 under the laws of West Virginia with broad corporate powers and particularly with power to hold and lease coal, oil and gas lands, and the right to buy, sell and deal in oil, gas and other mineral lands, timber and timber products. At the time of testator’s death in 1923 the company held approximately 25,000 acres of land, most of which was located in Logan and Boone Counties, West Virginia, and was leased to three operating coal companies. The royalties coming from the mining of coal on these lands constituted practically the entire income of the company until 1937. The mines were opened during the lifetime of the testator and have been continuously operated since that time.

*82 In 1936, the corporation entered into an agreement with the Hoppers Company to sell it or its nominee 4444.5 acres of undeveloped coal lands in Wyoming County, West Virginia, for the sum of $555,562.50, payable in five annual installments the first of which, in the sum of $100,000 with interest, fell due on July 9, 1937. The balance of the consideration was covered by four notes in the sum of $113,890.63, each payable with interest in one, two, three, and four years, secured by a purchase-money mortgage or a deed of trust. The initial payment was paid and accounted for. Conveyance was to be made to the Loup Creek Colliery Company. That tract of land was entirely separated from the leased lands, it had no railroad access, and it had never been developed except for unimportant timber operations. The company never sold any other land and never itself operated any mines. It made small and unimportant purchases of land to round out its holdings. Prior to 1937, the company paid dividends in varying amounts, dependent upon business conditions, particularly those existing in the coal industry.

During 1937 the corporation paid to the trustees four quarterly dividends at the rate of one and one-half per cent, or a total of $2,820, and what are described as extra dividends at the rate of ten per cent, or $4,700. It is a firmly established principle that ordinary dividends, in the absence of unusual circumstances, are to be regarded as income payable to the party entitled to receive them at the date of their declaration: Nirdlinger’s Estate (No. 1), 327 Pa. 160, 165, 193 A. 33. The “unusual circumstances” referred to are described in Opperman’s Estate (No. 1), 319 Pa. 455, 460, 179 A. 729. The appellant contends that there are here “unusual circumstances” shown by the financial history and corporate actions of the land company to which we will refer.

The Pardee Land Company was organized with a capital of $986,150, represented by 19,723 shares of the par value of $50 each and a paid-in surplus of approxi *83 mately $1,027,000. The capital stock account has remained the same. On January 1, 1923, the paid-in and earned surplus was $993,141.33 and on the date of testator’s death in March it amounted to $1,004,351.62 after an allowance for depletion. The corporation, largely for income tax purposes, adopted the plan of setting up a depletion account based on a fixed sum per ton of coal mined. The net returns from coal operations were credited to surplus and surplus was debited with the depletion reserve and dividends paid. Between January 1, 1923, and January 1, 1937, the net earnings, before depletion taken, exceeded the dividends paid by the sum of $203,668.90. It is also true that by charging depletion to surplus, the paid-in and earned surplus was reduced in the same period by $239,145.97. There were also additional earnings from coal operations in the year 1937. The total dividends paid during 1937 amounted to $157,-784, a sum considerably less than the balance of net earnings before depletion for the period from March 18, 1923, to December 31,1937.

If further unusual circumstances are not present, it is clear under our decisions that the portion of these earnings paid out in dividends and reaching this trust belonged to the life tenant, Alfred Day Pardee. In Knox’s Estate, 328 Pa. 177, 195 A. 28, we definitely decided that where a trust estate held stock in a “wasting asset” corporation, the withholding of reserve funds by the corporation did not alter the rights of the life tenant to the earnings when finally distributed. This was but a corollary to the rule of property that where an owner of land containing opened mines creates a legal life estate with the remainder over, the life beneficiary is entitled to retain for himself the net proceeds derived from the operations without making provision for a fund to offset depletion: Neel v. Neel, 19 Pa. 323; Irwin v. Covode, 24 Pa. 162; Westmoreland Coal Co.’s Appeal, 85 Pa. 344. We declined in the Knox case to follow the rule as stated in §239 of Restatement — Trusts.

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Bluebook (online)
21 A.2d 904, 343 Pa. 79, 1941 Pa. LEXIS 572, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pardees-estate-pa-1941.