Pritchitt v. Nashville Trust Co.

96 Tenn. 472
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 2, 1896
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 96 Tenn. 472 (Pritchitt v. Nashville Trust Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pritchitt v. Nashville Trust Co., 96 Tenn. 472 (Tenn. 1896).

Opinion

Caldwell, J.

Samuel Pritchitt died testate at his residence, in Davidson County, on the twenty-first day of September, 1891. The second item of his will is in the following language: “I will, devise, and bequeath to my wife, Ann Pritchitt, all the real estate 1 die seized and possessed of, for [473]*473and during her natural life; also, one-fourth of all the balance of my estate, not including what is herein given her absolutely, for her life, and, at her death, the real estate and the said one-fourth of the balance of my estate is to be divided between my two sons, H. C. Pritehitt and Samuel Pritehitt, Jr., and my grandchild, Annie P. Draughan, only child of my deceased daughter, Nettie P. Draughan, share and share alike. All my household furniture, carriage, buggy, and horses are willed to my wife absolutely.” One item of that part of the testator’s property designated by him as ‘‘ the balance of my estate,” was $100,000 of stock in the Nashville Gaslight Company, and therefore “one-fourth,” $25,-000, of that stock passed to his widow, “for her life,” with remainder to his two sons and his granddaughter. The will was promptly probated, and, thereupon, $25,000 of the stock was transferred, by consent, to the Nashville Trust Company, to hold as trustee for the parties entitled under the second item of the will.

On the twenty-ninth of June, 1892, the directors of the gaslight company declared “a cash dividend of five per cent.” and “a stock dividend of ten per cent.” on the capital stock of the company, such dividends to be paid July 1 and July 15, 1892, respectively; and, on the nineteenth of June, 1895, they declared “a stock dividend of twenty-five per cent.,” by preamble and resolution, in the following words: “Whereas, a large amount of the [474]*474net earnings of the company has been used in making permanent betterments and additions to its plant, and such profits have been withheld from the stockholders for that purpose, instead of distributing them among the stockholders as dividends; and, whereas, there has been accumulated and permanently added to the value of the assets and capital of the company more than twenty-five per cent, of the amount of the present capital stock; therefore, be it resolved, that a stock dividend of twenty-five per cent, be declared payable, and distributed on July 1, 1895, among the stockholders of the company of record of that date, in proportion to their holdings.”

The first two dividends, like the third one, were declared from the £ ‘ net earnings ” or “profits ’ ’ of the company, and each of the three dividends was based, entirely, upon ‘ ‘ net earnings ” or “ profits ’ ’ made after the death of the testator. The cash dividend upon the $25,000 of stock, set apart for the beneficiaries of the second item of the will, was paid to the widow, and the two stock dividends thereon were turned over to the Nashville Trust Company, which held the $25,000 of original stock, as trustee. The first of the stock dividends amounted to $2,-500, being ten per cent, on $25,000, and the second one amounted to $6,875, being twenty-five per cent, on $27,500 ($25,000 plus $2,500), the amount of the original stock with first stock dividend added. The two stock dividends aggregated $9,375, and the certificates, or shares, issued therefor constitute the [475]*475subject-matter of the present litigation. The widow claims to own those certificates, or shares, absolutely as a part of the income of the $25,000 of stock bequeathed to her for life, and the remaindermen claim to own them as capital, and say that she is entitled only to receive cash dividends thereon, as on the $25,000 of original stock. In view of this controversy, the Nashville Trust Company refused to surrender the stock dividends to the widow, and, upon that ‘refusal, she brought this suit in equity against all proper parties. The Chancellor ruled in favor of the remaindermen, and decreed “that said two stock dividends go to the carpios, and that the life tenant will be entitled to all cash dividends upon the stock thus increased.” The Court of Chancery Appeals reversed the decree of the Chancellor, and adjudged the stock dividends to be the absolute property of the life tenant, as a part of the income of her life estate in the original stock.

The precise question is this: Which of the two, the life tenant or the remainderman, of corporate stock bequeathed, is the ultimate owner of stock dividends, declared from net earnings, made after the respective rights of the two persons attached to the original stock % Do such dividends belong, absolutely, to the life tenant as income, or do they form a part of the corpus, and pass to the remain-derman as such ?

This question, in one form and another, has perplexed the Courts for a century, and numerous ad[476]*476judged cases are found in support of either view. The learned Chancellor followed one line of decisions, and the learned Court of Chancery Appeals followed the other, both recognizing the irreconcilable conflict of authority.

This case, as we believe, is relieved of much difficulty when it is considered that the controversy is solely between the life tenant and the remainder-men, and that no prerogative of the gaslight company is involved. The question is one of ownership merely, and concerns only those claimants. The corporation is not a party to the suit, and cannot be affected by the result.

If the purpose of the bill were to compel the corporation to undo what it has done, and disburse in cash the net earnings represented by the two stock' dividends, instead of using them to increase its capital stock, the complainant would have no standing in court, for a corporation, so long as it acts in good faith and within its charter powers (and there is no claim that this corporation has done otherwise), is rightfully allowed to decide such matters for itself without let or hindrance from any source.

Undoubtedly the action of the gaslight company, in converting net earnings into capital stock, gave them that character and status for all corporate purposes. But did it have any legal effect beyond that? Does it follow that they were converted into technical corpus, as between the life tenant and the [477]*477remaindermen owning a portion of the original stock? We think not.

When property is given to one person for life, with remainder to another, the former is entitled to the use for the period limited, and the latter to the corpus after that time. Neither may encroach upon the right of the other. The life tenant may not diminish the corpus nor the remainderman the use, and what they may not do themselves, others may not do for them. The life tenant may not be deprived of the use to augment the corpus, nor the remainderman of the corpus to augment the use. The right to the use of the property entitles the life tenant to its net income, As applied to land, it entitles him to the crops or rent; as applied to money or bonds, it entitles him to the interest; and as applied to corporate stock, it should, upon the same reasoning, entitle him to the net earnings. If the life tenant may not be deprived of crops or rents to make the land better, or of interest to enlarge the corpus

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Bluebook (online)
96 Tenn. 472, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pritchitt-v-nashville-trust-co-tenn-1896.