Reilly's Estate

20 Pa. D. & C. 10, 1933 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 110
CourtPennsylvania Orphans' Court, Montgomery County
DecidedAugust 9, 1933
DocketNo. 56
StatusPublished

This text of 20 Pa. D. & C. 10 (Reilly's Estate) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Orphans' Court, Montgomery County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Reilly's Estate, 20 Pa. D. & C. 10, 1933 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 110 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1933).

Opinion

Holland, P. J.,

Decedent was a member of the Philadelphia Stock Exchange at the time of his death. Accountant did not inventory or account for this membership as an asset of the estate because the assignees for the benefit of creditors of the partnership laid claim to it as a firm asset, and the question of its ownership has been submitted to us. While the membership is in decedent’s name and thus, prima facie at least, a part of his estate, any doubts which might appear as to the jurisdiction of this court to decide the issue have been resolved by the submission of the parties thereto.

The facts appear in the stipulation of counsel submitted at the audit, to be thus: The membership or “seat”, as the customary terminology designates it, was purchased by decedent on October 21, 1913, for $7,500. Payment therefor was made by check of the firm, Reilly, Brock & Co., and this amount was then charged to decedent’s individual deposit account with the firm. On October 27, 1913, decedent was reimbursed the cost of the seat by the firm, by means of a credit to decedent’s deposit account, and on that same date a charge in that [11]*11same amount was entered on the firm’s general ledger in a separate account designated “Philadelphia Stock Exchange Seat”.

The first written partnership agreement was executed by decedent and Sidney F. T. Brock on November 12, 1913. It is therein provided, that decedent shall contribute $200,000 to the firm capital, “which shall include his seat on the Philadelphia Stock Exchange, insurance thereon, and the other benefits apperi taining to it, at a valuation of $7,500. . . .”

On March 1,1922, upon the occasion of the admission of three other partners into the firm, a new partnership agreement was executed. It is therein provided that there shall be charged, as a firm expense, the dues and death benefit contributions made by reason of decedent’s membership in the exchange; and that death benefits received from the membership shall become firm assets. The agreement further provides for the division of 25 percent of the firm’s net profits in proportion to the capital contributions of the partners.

A supplement to the latter agreement, dated May 1923, and an agreement of dissolution, dated February 14, 1925, were both executed by all five partners, but neither contains any reference to the exchange seat.

After the dissolution, decedent and Brock continued the business as partners, under the same firm name but without written agreement, until October 1, 1930, when such an agreement was executed by them. No provision regarding the exchange seat is made therein.

At all times from the date of its original entry to the date of decedent’s death, the seat was carried in the firm ledger in the account above mentioned as a firm asset, but it was revahied periodically as it depreciated. The seat was likewise. set up as a firm asset in the semiannual audits of the firm accounts during the entire period, which audits were made by well-known public accountants.

From the time decedent acquired the seat until his death, all dues and death benefits charged against it were paid by the firm as a partnership expense. Since decedent’s death other dues and death benefits have accrued, and these have been paid by the assignees of the firm for the benefit of creditors, under an agreement with counsel for the accountant to reimburse them if this court holds the estate to be the owner of the seat.

So much for the facts regarding the acquisition of the membership and the subsequent dealing therewith by the partners of Reilly, Brock & Co. Without considering for the moment the peculiar nature of a stock exchange membership, and treating it as we would an ordinary kind of property such as a piece of real estate or a block of securities,, even assuming that the “property” was decedent’s own individual property at the inception of the partnership, it is perfectly clear that it was the intention of all parties concerned, of decedent and the other partners from time to time, that his “property” be part of decedent’s contribution to the capital of the firm and therefore a firm asset. The facts that decedent was promptly reimbursed for its cost, its entry on the firm books in a separate account, the references to it in the several agreements, the payment of dues and death benefits by the firm as firm expenses, and the set-up in the audits all establish this beyond doubt. Indeed, in accountant’s brief on this question, it is even argued from a summary of these facts that it was the intention of the partners from the date of the “transfer” of the seat to the firm in 1913 that it constitute a firm asset. So we may take it as admitted that the claim of the estate to ownership of the seat rests entirely upon the peculiar nature of a membership in the Philadelphia Stock Exchange, and that but for this peculiarity the assignees would unquestionably be entitled to it as an asset of the firm.

It is stipulated that the constitution and rules of the said exchange restrict [12]*12membership therein to individuals who are determined by application, election, and compliance with stated rules of conduct; that membership is a privileged position, the privileges being personal and nonassignable per se; that membership is terminated by death, expulsion, or transfer to a duly qualified successor; and that partnerships cannot be members, nor do partnerships derive any rights to the seat or its proceeds by virtue of the mere fact that one of the partners in the firm is a member.

The constitution of the exchange as in effect at decedent’s death provides (presumably after providing that claims of other members shall be preferred against the proceeds realized upon transfer of a seat, although this does not appear in the stipulation) that any surplus “shall be paid to the person whose membership is transferred or to his legal representative upon the execution by him or them of a release . . .”. For this provision there was substituted by amendment to the constitution on November 16, 1932 (almost 2 years after decedent’s death), a provision that such surplus should be paid as before, “unless tEe arbitration committee shall determine either (a) that the protection of the creditors of the firm registered on the exchange in which said member is a general or special partner requires the use of said surplus or any part thereof, or (6) that said member has expressly agreed that said surplus shall be paid to such partnership, in either of which events said surplus shall be paid over to such firm upon the execution by said member or such firm of a release or releases satisfactory to the arbitration committee” (art. 22, sec. 3, par. 4).

The assignees base their claim to ownership principally upon the facts we have already considered, namely that the partners from the beginning considered the decedent’s membership a firm asset, and in that respect we have indicated complete accord. On the remaining point, the assignees contend that the restriction on membership to individuals only and the prohibition on firms or corporations becoming members are dictated by reasons of control and supervision alone, because of the obvious facility of controlling the conduct of individuals as against partnerships, each with a different agreement. They further contend that the question before us cannot be governed by the failure of the exchange’s constitution to consider the possibility that a membership might in fact not be the property of the person registered as such on its books.

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In re Stringer
253 F. 352 (Second Circuit, 1918)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
20 Pa. D. & C. 10, 1933 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 110, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/reillys-estate-paorphctmontgo-1933.