Perkins v. Safe Deposit & Trust Co.

113 A. 877, 138 Md. 299, 1921 Md. LEXIS 90
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedApril 6, 1921
StatusPublished

This text of 113 A. 877 (Perkins v. Safe Deposit & Trust Co.) 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
Perkins v. Safe Deposit & Trust Co., 113 A. 877, 138 Md. 299, 1921 Md. LEXIS 90 (Md. 1921).

Opinion

Pattison, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

Ottmar Mergenthaler was, in the: year eighteen hundred and ninety-nine, and for many years prior thereto', conducting a machine shop and engaged in the: work; of inventing and *300 perfecting machinery and appliances in the City of Baltimore.

On October 10th of that year, Mergenthaler being in bad health and wishing to arrange his affairs in contemplation of death, formed a corporation by the name of the Ott Mergenthaler O'ompany to1 purchase and acquire his business in said city and to acquire and hold his interest “in any and all inventions, patents and patent rights, and all royalties and monies arising therefrom, and all agreements and contracts made by him with various companies, corporations or individuals in this or foreign countries, relating to any invention or patents.”

The property and assets so to be acquired by the corporation from Mergenthaler were valued at fifty thousand dollars and this was the amount named in the certificate of incorporation as the capital stock of the corporation, consisting of five thousand shares, each of the par value of ten dollars.

On the 13th day of October, 1899, three days after the formation of the corporation, Mergenthaler and his wife conveyed said property unto the corporation in consideration of four thousand nine hundred and ninety-one shares of its stock; and on the same day he, with the assent of his wife, granted, bargained and sold unto the Safe Deposit & Trust Company and Abner Greenleaf of said city, and their successors in the trust, the said four thousand nine hundred and ninety-one shares of stock

“to be held (as in said deed stated) by said trustees for the following uses and trust purposes, that is to say: To hold said property for the use and benefit of my children, so that during their minority the net revenue arising therefrom, or so much as in the judgment of my said trustees may be necessary and proper, shall be applied by said trustees to the liberal support, maintenance and education of my children; and as each of my sons shall arrive at the age of twenty-one years, I direct that an equal share of the principal shall be paid over and delivered to them respectively; but as to the shares of my daughters, I direct that *301 the same shall continue to he held hy my said trustees for the term of their natural lives, paying over to them after they arrive at legal age, into their own hands and not into the hands of others, whether claiming hy their authority or otherwise, the net income therefrom, and upon their deaths, respectively, I direct the trust as to their share shall cease, and I hereby grant and assign the same to their children, then living, and the then living descendants of any deceased children of theirs per stirpes, and in default of issue, then to such person or persons as they may respectively name in their last wills and testaments, full power and authority being hereby conferred upon them to execute wills in case of their deaths without issue. Should any of my sons die under twenty-one years of age leaving issue, such issue shall he entitled to his share absolutely, and in default of issue, then the share of such son shall go to and belong to my then surviving children, and the descendants of deceased children, per stirpes, except that the shares of my said daughters shall he held hy said trustees upon the same trusts as their original shares are held. I further provide that any income not expended hy my said trustees during ..the minority of my children shall he added to the principal.”

After the execution of said deed, but upon the same day of its execution, Mergenthaler' executed his last will and testament, disposing of what remained of his estate after the aforesaid grant.

After a specific bequest of two thousand dollars and a devise to his wife of one-third of all the rest and residue of his estate, he devised the remaining two-thirds thereof to the Safe Deposit & Trust Company and Abner Greenleaf and their successors in trust, to he held hy them for exactly the same uses and trust purposes as those mentioned in said deed to> them from Mergenthaler and wife for the stock of said corporation. The language in the will creating the trust estate *302 being identical with that used in said deed in relation to the trust estate thereby created.

Mergenthaler at the time of the execution of said deed had three sons living, Eritz, Eugene and Herman, and one daughter, Pauline, the appellant, now the wife of Rody P. Perkins.

They all survived their father, who died on the 28th day of October, 1899. The daughter, the youngest of his children, who was born on the 27th day of October, 1893, was then but six years of age.

By both the deed and will the income upon the appellant’s shares of the trust estates thereby created, or so much thereof as in the judgment of the trustees should be thought necessary, was to be applied by them to her liberal support, maintenance and education, during her minority, and upon her arrival at “legal age” the entire net income was to be paid to her so long as she lived. •

The appellant, upon reaching the age of eighteen years, on the 27th day of October, 1911, thinking she had reached “legal age ” and was entitled from that time to the entire income from her shares of the trust estates created by said deed, made demand upon the trustees to pay to her from that time all of said income. The trustees, however, were in doubt whether they should pay to her from that time all of said income or whether they should continue to’pay to her, until she reached the age of twenty-one years, only so much of said income as they thought necessary for her support, maintenance and education, and invest the balance as a part of the corpus of the trust estate.

In 1905 the corporation ceased to do any business except to collect the royalties owingi to it from time to time upon the patents owned by it, and therefore it was thought unnecessary to- continue the capital stock of the corporation at so much as fifty thousand dollars, and consequently it was reduced to ten thousand dollars, consisting of one thousand shares each of the value of ten dollars; of which stock two hundred and fifty shares were held by said trustees in trust for the appellant. The stock greatly increased in value and *303 the income therefrom was at the time of the arrival of the appellant at the age of eighteen years 'much greater1 than her needs and, as she had great confidence in the trustees and in their ability to manage and invest the surplus over and above the requirements for her support, maintenance and education, she agreed with them, that they should continue to invest the surplus income, with the understanding, however, that in consenting thereto she waived no rights in connection therewith, but reserved to herself the right, at any time, either before or after she reached the age of twenty-one years, to proceed to enforce her claim thereto, if necessary.

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Bluebook (online)
113 A. 877, 138 Md. 299, 1921 Md. LEXIS 90, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/perkins-v-safe-deposit-trust-co-md-1921.