Security Trust Co. v. Rammelsburg

97 S.E. 122, 82 W. Va. 701, 1918 W. Va. LEXIS 149
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 8, 1918
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 97 S.E. 122 (Security Trust Co. v. Rammelsburg) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Security Trust Co. v. Rammelsburg, 97 S.E. 122, 82 W. Va. 701, 1918 W. Va. LEXIS 149 (W. Va. 1918).

Opinions

Poefenbarger, President :

This appeal is from a decree on a bill of conformity filed by a trustee acting under the provisions of a will, creating a trust, for advice and instruction as to whether a stock dividend declared on certain shares of the capital stock of the Wheeling Steel and Iron Company shall be delivered over and transferred to the life tenant of the estate or retained and kept as part of the corpus of the estate for the benefit of the remainder-man. The court decreed the new shares representing the stock dividend to the life tenant, holding them [702]*702to be income, interest or profits within the meaning of the will, and the trustee has appealed.

The will places the fund in the hands of the trustee in trust for the use and benefit of Frank R. Wheat, the testator’s son, for and during his natural life, the trustee to pay over to him the "income, interests and profits therefrom,” for and during his natural life, and, at his death, to pay over, transfer, convey and deliver the principal to his child or children begotten by him in lawful wedlock and living at his death and the descendants of such children so begotten as may be dead, and, in default of such children .and descendants, to the testator’s heirs. Another provision absolves the sums paid to the life tenant from liability for his debts.

Among the assets placed in the hands of the trustee, there were certificates for 334 shares of the capital stock of the Wheeling Steel and Iron Company, a corporation. In February, 1917, a twenty per cent, stock dividend was declared out of earnings made by the corporation, as shown on its books, Jany. 4, 1913, a date prior to that of the death of the testator. As to this dividend, no question arises. It is retained by the trustee and swells his holdings to 401 shares. The dividend in question, one of twenty-five per cent., amounting to 1OO1/^ shares, was declared on or about March 1, 1918, out of a surplus shown on the books, as of Jany. 30, 1918, and earned after the death of the testator.

In many jurisdictions, dividends declared in cash, bills, notes, stocks of other corporations and other property, unless clearly amounting to a distribution of capital, as in the ease of liquidation of the corporation and distribution of its assets, are regarded as income and go to the life tenant, under such a trust as the one involved here, and stock dividends, as parts of the capital belonging to the corpus of the trust estate and going to the remainder-man, without reference to the date or manner of the accumulation of the fund in respect of which the cash dividend is declared and .paid or the stock dividend declared and issued, Gibbons v. Mahon, 136 U. S. 549; Towne v. Eisner, 245 U. S. 426; Adams v. Adams, 139 Mass. 449; Hemenway v. Hemenway, 181 Mass. 406; Lyman v. Pratt, 183 Mass. 58; Bromwell v. An[703]*703thony, 189 Mass. 442; Brinley v. Grou, 50 Conn. 66; Boardman v. Mansfield, 79 Conn. 634; Boardman v. Boardman, 78 Conn. 451; Smith v. Dana, 77 Conn. 543; Billings v. Warren, 236 Ill. 281; Bluin v. Gullett, 208 Ill. 473; De Koven v. Alsop, 205 Ill. 309. Re Brown et al. 14 R. I. 371; Richardson v. Richardson, 75 Me. 570, 574; Bouche v. Sproule C. R. 12 App. Cas. 385, decided by tbe House of Lords; Brander v. Brander, 4 Ves. 800; Irving v. Haristoun, 4 Pat. Sc. App. 521; Paris v. Paris, 10 Ves. 185; Clayton v. Gresham, 10 Ves. 288; Witts v. Steere, 13 Ves. 363; Re Hodgens, 11 Sr. Eq. 99; Barclay v. Wainewright, 14 Ves. 66, 80; Preston v. Melville, 16 Sim. 163.

The theory of these decisions is that, until actually severed from its corporate assets, the earnings of a corporation cannot be deemed or held to be in any sense, an income accruing to the holders of its shares. As profits or income, they legally belong to the corporation. It has full and complete title to them and dominion over them and right to treat them as its capital and use them as such in its business. In point of fact, they are generally so used, although sometimes carried on the books as surplus. They are not the property of the shareholder until divided and paid or delivered to him in such manner and to such an extent as to effect a transfer of the title and possession from the corporation to him. While they remain the property of the corporation, they enhance the value of the shares, but that does not make them the property of the shareholders nor an accrual to them as income any more than the enhancement of the value of real estate or personal property owned by an individual constitutes income. Issuance of shares representing it neither increases nor diminishes the value of the shareholder’s interest in the corporation. It merely divides that interest, not its assets, title to which he does not hold, into a greater number of shares of less value per share. Nor can he, by any means short of dissolution of the corporation and distribution of its assets, obtain its earnings or make them, individual income, against the will of the corporation.,, He cannot compel the declaration of a dividend, however great the earnings may be. When a distribution of assets occurs [704]*704as a result of liquidation and winding up of the corporation, it is regarded as a distribution of capital, not profits or earnings, even though earnings of the corporation may constitute part of the assets. The creator of the trust is deemed to have had this legal relation in mind and to have contemplated only severed and paid over earnings or even capital, as income or profits accruing upon the stock. In other words, he is deemed to have meant and intended the life tenant to have only what passes, in point of title and possession, from the corporation to the trustee and all of it, except in clear cases of distribution of capital.

In some other jurisdictions, the courts look beyond what they seem to regard as a technical basis of solution of the question, and give weight to the practical and equitable aspect of the situation. Of course, they class all ordinary cash dividends as income. In dealing with stock dividends, they make the disposition thereof as between the life tenant and the remainder-man depend upon the origin of the assets represented by the dividend certificates. If they are based principally upon earnings since the • creation of the trust estate, they go to the life tenant, because they are deemed to be practically and equitably, though perhaps not legally, earnings of the original shares or profits accruing thereon. Thus in McLouth v. Hunt, 154 N. Y., 179, it was held that “The courts must determine them according- to the nature and substance of the thing, and are not concluded from treating such earnings as income by the form of their distribution or by the terms employed by the corporation.” This case adheres to numerous decisions of the courts of New York previously decided and referred to in the opinion. The rule enunciated and applied by them seems to have been somewhat modified by the decision in Re Osborn, 209 N. Y., 450, holding that “Extraordinary dividends, payable from the accumulated earnings of the company, whether payable in cash or stock, belong to the life beneficiary, unless they entrench.

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97 S.E. 122, 82 W. Va. 701, 1918 W. Va. LEXIS 149, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/security-trust-co-v-rammelsburg-wva-1918.