Smith v. Cotting

120 N.E. 177, 231 Mass. 42, 1918 Mass. LEXIS 999
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedJuly 29, 1918
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 120 N.E. 177 (Smith v. Cotting) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Smith v. Cotting, 120 N.E. 177, 231 Mass. 42, 1918 Mass. LEXIS 999 (Mass. 1918).

Opinion

Braley, J.

The plaintiff is entitled for life to the income of’ a fund created by a deed of. trust under which the -defendants Cotting and Dexter are trustees, while the other defendants take the principal at her death. A part of the fund having been invested in stock of the Old Colony Trust Company, referred to herein as the corporation, which increased its capital by issuing a certain number of new shares at par, and also declared a cash dividend exactly equivalent to the increase which the trustees who subscribed for their proportion of the new stock used in payment, the first question is whether the plaintiff is entitled to the amount as part of the income.

We find no occasion for special comment "on the objections to the competency as evidence of statements found in certain paragraphs of.the agreed statement of facts, all of which with the exception of the program laid out by “ one of the vice-presidents of the company,” and the method adopted by the corporation in 'dealing with trusts controlled by it, were admissible under Hemenway v. Hemenway, 181 Mass. 406, Gray v. Hemenway, 212 Mass. 239, and Talbot v. Milliken, 221 Mass. 367, 368. The defendants contend that the plaintiff is estopped from maintaining the bill, because without protest she assented to the twelfth account of the trustees enumerating as among the securities the ninety-four shares of the new stock. But it properly could be shown that she had no knowledge of the transactions leading to the acquisition of the shares, and having been innocently misled by the form of the statement, she can demand a full accounting, which necessarily raises the questions presented by the record. Bennett v. Pierce, 188 Mass. 186.

By St. 1903, c. 416, the corporation was authorized to increase its capital stock to a certain amount “in such manner and upon such terms and conditions as the stockholders . . . may determine: provided, that no certificate of shares shall'be issued until the par value of such shares shall have been paid in in cash. . . .” But St. 1911, c. 128, §§ 1, 2, authorized the corporation to merge with three other trust companies, the merger to become effective -only “when the terms thereof have been approved, at meetings called for the purpose, by votes of at least two thirds in interest of the stockholders of each of the contracting trust companies,” and by § 4, to “increase its capital stock to the aggregate amount [45]*45of the authorized capital stocks of its constituent corporations, subject to the provisions of chapter one hundred and eighty-nine of the acts of the year nineteen hundred and five.” The St. 1905, c. 189, provides that a trust company subject to the approval of the commissioner of savings banks may increase its capital to the maximum amount allowed by R. L. c. 116, § 5, in the manner provided for business corporations under St. 1903, c. 437, but “no such stock shall be issued by any trust company until the par value thereof shall be fully paid in in cash.” While St. 1905, c. 189, is repealed by St. 1916, c. 37, § 2, it is under the authority conferred by St. 1911, c. 128, that the directors on June 6,1911, voted to recommend to the stockholders to accept the act and to increase the capital “to seven and.a half million dollars . . . being the aggregate amount of the authorized capital stocks” of the trust companies named in the statute, and to issue to stockholders after such merger is completed $2,500,000 par value of the new stock of the corporation “for cash at par.” The directors then recommended that before the issue of the new stock “an extra cash dividend of one hundred dollars . . . per share, being” $2,500,000 “be paid to such stockholders” by the corporation “out of surplus.” The stockholders at their meeting duly held voted to accept the statute, and the terms of the merger agreed upon by the respective boards of directors, which had been approved by the bank commissioner who had succeeded to the powers and duties of the board of savings banks commissioners, and also voted to increase its capital stock to be paid for in cash at par leaving “the time, terms and manner of the issue . . . and of the payment” to be fixed by the directors, all new stock not taken by the stockholders to be sold for cash at not less than par at such time or times and in such manner as the board might determine. The directors, who alone had power to declare dividends, voted at a subsequent meeting with the record of the meeting of the stockholders before them, and after it had been suggested that the corporation “pay an extra cash dividend out of surplus which stockholders may apply, if they so desire, in payment for new stock,” and that the surplus consisted in part of “an accumulation of earnings or profits; and in part paid in as the result of the issue of stock at prices above par,” which amounted to more than the par value of the new stock, to issue the new stock at par to the [46]*46stockholders of record who were entitled thereto, and fixed the date at which the right to subscribe, and the time of payment would expire. A further vote was passed, that “an extra cash dividend of one hundred dollars . . . per share, payable not out of accumulated earnings but out of paid in surplus . . . resulting from the issue of stock . . . from time to time at prices above par, be' and the same is hereby declared, out of the said surplus, such dividend to be payable” to the stockholders at a certain date, being the time named in the previous vote for the final payment of subscriptions to the new stock. The agreed facts state that these proceedings were designed “to accomplish substantially the same result as a stock dividend.” But trust companies are expressly prohibited from making stock dividends by B. L. c. 116, § 5, from which provision the corporation is not exempted by St. 1911, c. 128. And under the vote of the directors the dividend is designated as a cash dividend. It is plain that the distribution cannot be deemed as comprising both stock and cash, a stock dividend to share owpers who chose to take stock, and a cash dividend to those who chose to take money. And whatever the intention of the directors may have been they could not determine the question whether as between the parties the dividend is capital or income. Heard v. Eldredge, 109 Mass. 258, 260. Nor can the dividend be called a mere form as in Rand v. Hubbell, 115 Mass. 461, 477, where the directors voted, that the dividend must be applied in payment for new stock simultaneously created. The money having been deposited in a national bank, separate warrants were sent to the stockholders respectively entitled extra dividend warrant, and stock subscription warrant, which they could indorse if they elected to take stock, or use the dividend warrant if cash was preferred. A stockholder accordingly had the option to use either warrant, and he was not bound legally or morally to take stock rather than cash in payment. Davis v. Jackson, 152 Mass. 58. Lyman v. Pratt, 183 Mass. 58. Hyde v. Holmes, 198 Mass. 287.

The answers however aver, and the agreed facts state, that the dividend was “declared and paid out of the paid in surplus . . . resulting from the issue of stock . . . from time to time at prices above par.” It is contended that even if the trustees had accepted cash, the dividend actually represented a capitalization of permanent assets, and therefore it would not have been income. Hemen[47]*47way v. Hemenway, 181 Mass. 406, 408. D’Ooge v. Leeds, 176 Mass. 558, 561.

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Bluebook (online)
120 N.E. 177, 231 Mass. 42, 1918 Mass. LEXIS 999, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-v-cotting-mass-1918.