Price v. Long

101 A. 195, 87 N.J. Eq. 578, 2 Stock. 578, 1917 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 67
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedMay 11, 1917
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 101 A. 195 (Price v. Long) 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
Price v. Long, 101 A. 195, 87 N.J. Eq. 578, 2 Stock. 578, 1917 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 67 (N.J. Ct. App. 1917).

Opinion

Lane, V. C.

Philip II. Long died on December 9th, 1908. Under his will he gave to his executors and trustees, .Frederick W. Taylor and Mathias J. Price, sixty-five shares of stock of the Long & Koch Company, to be held by them in trust for a period of twenty-five years. The income or dividends from twenty-seven and a half shares of such stock is to be paid to his wife, Emily A. Long, so long as she lived; if she dies prior to the expiration of the twenty-filve years, then the income on such twenty-seven and a half shares is to be paid to her brother Edmund Taylor, a sister, Kate Prosser, and her sister-in-law Mrs. Emily Taylor, and such of her nephews'and nieces as shall be living at the time of her death, except that if her nephew Harry E. J. Taylor should predecease her, the share that he would be entitled to if living is to be paid to his wife and children. The income on the remaining thirty-seven and a half shares is to be divided equally between testator’s two brothers, Frederick T. Long and Walter L. Long, and such of testator’s nephews and nieces as shall be living at the time of testator’s death, and his cousin Philip J. Long also is to share in the income so long as he shall remain an employe of the company. At the end of twenty-five years the said sixty-five shares of stock is to be sold and disposed of, certain relatives having the first right to purchase. The proceeds are to be divided among certain charities and among certain relatives. Some of the beneficiaries are at this time unascertained; the residences of those that have been ascertained are widely scattered in this country and abroad; some are infants.

The Long & Koch Company is a manufacturing concern founded by Philip Long and to which he gave his attention up to the-time of his death. Its chief business is the making of cheap jewelry, with a very small margin of profit. During the life of Mr. Long it was extremely successful, and for a few years after his death continued to be. Its dividends for several successive year’s were as follows: 1904, eighty per cent.; 1905, one hundred per cent.; 1906, one hundred and thirty per cent.; 1907, one hundred and seventy-five per cent.; 1908, one hundred per cent.; from 1908 to 1912, one hundred per cent. In [580]*5801913, the dividends were reduced to fifty per cent.; in 1914, further reduced to twenty per cent.; and since 1914, no divi'dends have been declared. The testimony is to the effect that, although a dividend may be declared for the year 1911, it will be small. The corporation is a close corporation; it has but one hundred and fifty shares of stock. Of this the estate holds sixty-five; Mrs. Emily Long, ten; Julius Koch, seventy-four; Mrs. Koch, one. The control is 'evenly divided between the Koch and the Long interests. Mr. Koch is now at the head of the concern, and Frederick W. Taylor, one of the trustees, is emploj^ed by the coloration at a salary.

The reason for the decline of the business is attributed to two sources—first, the loss of Mr. Long; whose genius had built up the business; second, the general depression in the jewelry trade. The book value of the stock is in excess of $1',000 a share. Mr. Koch has offered to buy out the interest of the estate at a price óf $400 a share.’ Frederick W. Taylor, one of the trustees, is against the acceptance of the offer, whereas Mr. Price, the other trustee, considers it not only advisable in the interest of the estate, but necessarj; if great loss is not to be sustained, that the offer be accepted. He, therefore, brings this bill asking this court to direct the sale, and malee parties.all persons whom he knows to have an interest in the estate. The application is resisted by certain of those entitled to income, among them the widow, and also by the co-trustee. Many of the parties have not appeared. The answering defendants, while admitting that because of the uncertainty attending the present investment it may be desirable that the stock be sold, yet insist that the price is not adequate and raise by their answers the question of the power of the court in the premises. Mr. Price is in nowise connected with the company, and he takes the position that it is his duty to bring the situation to the attention of the court. The attitude of Mr. Taylor is unconsciously affected by the fact that 'a sale of the stock may mean the loss of his -position with the company, and will,' unquestionably, lead to the loss' of the influence which he now enjoys. While the book-value of the stock is in excess of a thousand 'dollars, it is impossible to sell i't to anyone except Mr. Koch for any reasonable figure. Mr. Taylor frankly [581]*581concedes this. Koch says $400, considering all of the circumstances, is about fair value of the stock, and I think that under all the circumstances it is. Counsel for the. complainant furnished me memoranda of the cases on both sides of the question, and I have considered them.

Chancellor Eunyon, in Fidelity Company v. United Company, 36 N. J. Eq. 405 (at p. 408), says: “It is the rule that the directions for investment contained in .an instrument of •trust are imperatively obligatory on the trustee; but by the direction of a competent court he may depart from them. The court, however, should exercise its authority only in view of the existence of a necessity. The power of this court to abrogate or annul any of the terms of the before-mentioned agreements should not be exercised except for clear and cog'ent reasons, and with full opportunity to the parties who are to be affected by such action to he heard.”

Chancellor Yroom had said, in Oliver v. Oliver, 3 N. J. Eq. 368 (at p. 373) : “One thing is certain, this court will not interfere with the appropriation of this trust fund, or direct it differently from the intention of the testator except in a very clear case.”

In Dodd v. Una, 40 N. J. Eq. 672, the court of errors and appeals held that this court had no power to. impose its view upon the method in which the funds of a savings bank was to be dealt with where the details were specified by statute. In Lister v. Weeks, 61 N. J. Eq. 623, the court of errors and appeals sustained an order made by the court of chancery directing a certain investment to be changed, but put its decision upon the ground that the parties in interest, especially the appellants, had consented to it and could, not thereafter withdraw their assent. The power of the court of chancery in the exercise of its general administrative jurisdiction to sanction or direct trustees to perform acts contrary to the provision of an instrument of trust where there arises an emergency or a state of circumstances which it may reasonably be supposed was not foreseen or anticipated by the author of the trust, and is unprovided for by the trust instrument, and which renders it desirable and perhaps even essential in the interest of the beneficiaries that such act [582]*582should be done, has been sustained in England in the cases of In re New et al. (1901), 2 Ch. Div. 534; In re Tollemache (1903), 1 Ch. Div. 955. In the first case, Bomer, J., said: “The principle seems to be this—that the court may, on an emergency, do something not authorized by the trust.

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Bluebook (online)
101 A. 195, 87 N.J. Eq. 578, 2 Stock. 578, 1917 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 67, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/price-v-long-njch-1917.