Pew Trust

158 A.2d 552, 398 Pa. 523, 1960 Pa. LEXIS 617
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMarch 15, 1960
DocketAppeal, No. 79
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 158 A.2d 552 (Pew Trust) 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
Pew Trust, 158 A.2d 552, 398 Pa. 523, 1960 Pa. LEXIS 617 (Pa. 1960).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Benjamin R. Jones,

This appeal presents a problem in the field of apportionment; does a common stock distribution in 1954 by the Sun Oil Company to its stockholders, including this trust, unaccompanied by a contemporaneous capitalization of earnings, constitute an apportionable event under the Pennsylvania Rule of Apportionment?

On June 2,1932, Mary C. Pew created an inter vivos trust to which she transferred 40,000 shares of the common stock of the Sun Oil Company (herein called Company).1 Under the provisions of the trust instrument the settlor actually created two trusts, one for her grandson, Arthur E. Pew, Jr., and the other for her grandson, Walter C. Pew, each trust having an original corpus consisting of 20,000 shares of the Company’s common stock.2 Each grandson is to receive the net income from the corpus of his trust during his lifetime; upon the death of a grandson, the net income from the corpus of his trust is to be paid to his child or children until the child or children reaches the age of 24 years. Distribution of the corpus is to be made to each grandson’s child or children in three stages: [525]*525twenty percent at age 2á, thirty percent at age 28 and the balance of fifty percent at age 32. In the event a grandson dies without child or children surviving, then the trust provides for a gift over to the child or children of the other grandson and, in the event both grandsons die without child or children surviving, then a gift over to charity is provided. That which now commands our attention is the trust created for the grandson, Arthur E. Pew, Jr.

When the trustees filed their second account of the administration of this trust, the life tenant, Arthur E. Pew, Jr., filed several objections thereto; the only objection presently relevant is that the trustees failed to apportion to income 6359.75 shares of the common stock of the Company received by the trustees on December 30, 1954 and that such shares were carried in principal. The Orphans’ Court of Montgomery County dismissed this objection and entered a decree nisi; exceptions filed thereto were dismissed by a final decree entered July 2, 1958. From that decree the life tenant appeals.

An adequate understanding of the instant problem requires a brief recital of some of the Company’s financial background with particular reference to the past history of the Company’s common stock distributions as- related to the Company’s earnings.

Prior to May 26, 1925, the Company had an authorized capital stock of 320,000 shares having a par value of $100 per share. By appropriate corporate action taken on that date, this stock was changed from par value to no par value stock, provisions were made for the issuance of three no par value shares of stock to each stockholder in place of each share of $100 par value stock previously held and authority was granted to increase the number of authorized shares of stock over and above the number necessary to accomplish [526]*526this change, the directors being empowered to fix the consideration for any remaining unissued shares which might be later issued. As a result of this action the Company then had outstanding 960,000 shares of no par value stock and its books reflected a capital of $32,000,000 equal to $33.33 per share, an amount considered by the Company as the “capital value” of each share of its stock.

Prior to 1948, the Company annually — with the exception of 1931, 1938, 1939, 1942, 1943 and 1946 — declared a $1 cash dividend and a stock dividend, the book value of the latter being equal to or greater than the cash dividend. From 1925 to 1946 inclusive, the Company contemporaneously with the declaration of each stock dividend, transferred on its books from earned surplus to the capital stock account amounts equal to the established “capital value” of $33.33 per share.

Coincident with the payment of a stock dividend on January 1, 1948, the Company instituted a policy of compliance with a rule of the New York Stock Exchange (herein called Exchange) which required, as a requisite for Exchange listing of the stock, that any distribution of stock, wherein the number of new shares issued is less than twenty-five percent of the outstanding shares (that is, of the class with respect to the new shares distributed), must be capitalized by a transfer on the corporate books from the earned surplus to the capital account of the “fair market”, rather than the “book”, value of the new shares. This rule of the Exchange further provides that: (a) in stock distributions of twenty-five to one hundred percent it is presumed that no capitalization is necessary and (b) in stock distributions greater than one hundred percent no capitalization is required.

Prior to 1948, the stock dividends issued by the Company had been capitalized at approximately $33.33 [527]*527per share; as a result, the Company was enabled to retain most of its earnings and, at the same time, through the medium of stock dividends, make available a large proportion of such earnings to its stockholders. As a result of the Exchange rule which required capitalization at “fair market” value, the policy of the Company had to be changed since the “fair market” value of the shares was consistently higher than the “book” value of the shares.3 Consequently, in the post 1948 period smaller stock dividends were declared even though the amount of the earned surplus capitalized per dividend was larger, and the stock dividends did not distribute the full amount of the earnings capitalized.

Prior to 1954 the instant trust owned 25,439 shares of the common stock of the Company and at that time the total capitalization of the Company in excess of the “book” value of the shares was $44,674,626.

In 1954 the Company’s directors adopted the following resolution: “. . . the Board of Directors . . . declare that it is advisable that each four (4) shares of Common Stock, without nominal or par value, now issued and outstanding, shall be equal to and are hereby changed into five (5) shares of Common Stock, without nominal or par value, and the holders of said Common Stock, without nominal or par value, now outstanding, shall be entitled to receive one (1) additional share of said Common Stock, without nominal or par value for each four (4) shares of Common Stock held . . . .” After stockholder approval of this resolution, the directors adopted another resolution: “. . . the additional shares of Common Stock, without nominal or par value, to which holders of said Common Stock are entitled as [528]*528a result of the split-up of said Common Stock . . . [shall] be issued on December 30, 1954 to common stockholders of record . . . November 29, 1954 . . . .”4 (Emphasis supplied.) In connection with the issue of these additional shares no transfer was effected on the corporate books from earned surplus to the capital stock account. As a result of this corporate action this trust received 6359 additional shares of the common stock and a scrip certificate representing a 75/100th share.

If this 1954 stock distribution was a “stock split”5 it did not constitute an apportionable event.

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Bluebook (online)
158 A.2d 552, 398 Pa. 523, 1960 Pa. LEXIS 617, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pew-trust-pa-1960.