Smith v. Hooper

51 A. 844, 95 Md. 16
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedApril 5, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by34 cases

This text of 51 A. 844 (Smith v. Hooper) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Smith v. Hooper, 51 A. 844, 95 Md. 16 (Md. 1902).

Opinion

McSherry, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This record contains cross-appeals. Each appeal presents one question. Both questions grow out of the same facts and but one opinion will be needed to dispose of the whole con *21 troversy. The facts are not disputed in any way. They are as follows : By the seventh clause of the will of the late William E. Hooper, who died in eighteen hundred and eighty-five, there was bequeathed to his four sons and the survivors and survivor of them, the sum of ten thousand dollars “upon trust to invest the same and pay to (his) daughter, Mary Elizabeth Smith, during her lifetime, for her sole and separate use, the dividends and income thereof as the same shall accrue, without power to her to anticipate the payment of such income and dividends, or to charge or encumber the trust estate,” with remainder over after the death of the daughter, to her children and the descendants of any deceased child, with a power of appointment by the daughter if no child or descendants of a deceased child survived her, and in the event of there being no child or descendant of a deceased child surviving the daughter and upon failure to make an appointment there is an absolute bequest of “this portion of” the testator’s estate to all his grandchildren then living and the surviving issue of any deceased grandchild. The fund was paid over to the trustees. By the nineteenth clause of the will the trustees were empowered “to invest the moneys that shall come into their or his hands * * * in such property, real or personal, stocks, bonds or securities, as in their or his judgment may be advisable, and all such investments from time to time to change or vary in their or his discretion; as also to sell any property other than money coming to hand as parcel of the trust estate and the proceeds reinvest in their or his discretion, &c.”

R. Tynes Smith, the husband of the cestui que trust was engaged in the manufacture of cans. Associated with him was William A. Weeks, and the firm name was Smith and Weeks. In the latter part of the year eighteen hundred and eighty-seven the property, buildings, letters-patpnt, machinery and tools of the firm were sold at public auction, and, by the request of the cestui que trust, were purchased by the trustees who paid therefor the sum of seven thousand, seven hundred and forty-four dollars and ninety-three cents, out of the *22 ten thousand dollar trust fund held by them under the seventh clause of the will. After paying for the property so purchased, the trustees still had in hand the sum of two thousand, two hundred and fifty-five dollars and seven cents, the residue of the ten thousand dollar trust fund. The trustees then transferred the property thus purchased by them, to a corporation formed under the general corporation laws of this State, which company was known as the R. Tynes Smith Can Company. In payment for the property so transferred, the trustees received from the company three hundred shares of its capital stock at its par value of one hundred dollars per share. Subsequently the trustees sold fifty shares of this stock for five thousand dollars. The five thousand dollars added to the two thousand, two hundred and fifty-five dollars and seven cents, part of the original ten thousand dollar trust fund, gave them seven thousand, two hundred and fifty-five dollars and seven cents in cash, in addition to the remaining two hundred and fifty shares of the capital stock of the R. Tynes Smith Can Company, still retained by them. At or about that time, as the seventh paragraph of the bill of complaint charges, the cestui que trust, Mary Elizabeth Smith, “paid over and delivered to” the trustees “the sum of two thousand, seven hundred and forty-four dollars and ninety-three cents, in cash for no other reason or purpose * * * * than that they might still have in their possession and hold intact, without any abatement whatever, cash amounting to ten thousand dollars. In other words, that the cash in their hands might be restored to the original sum of ten thousand dollars, being the sum bequeathed to them in trust under the said seventh clause of the last will and testament of William E. Hooper, deceased.” This sum of two thousand, seven hundred and forty-four dollars and ninety-three cents has relation to the question raised on the second appeal, but is alluded to now merely to preserve the continuity of the narrative. In 1889 Mr. Smith organized another corporation for the manufacture of cans. It was located at Keokuk, in the State of Iowa, and was called the Tri-State Can Company. The trustees *23 subscribed for ten thousand dollars of the capital stock of this company. They received three hundred and fifty shares and paid for them with the $2,255.07 of the original ten thousand dollar trust fund, in their hands as heretofore stated ; the $5,000.00 received by them from the sale of the fifty shares of the R. Tynes Smith Can Company’s stock; and the $2,744.93 turned over to them by Mrs. Smith as just above indicated. At that time the trustees held two hundxed and fifty shares of the stock of the R. Tynes Smith Can Company and three hundred and sixty shares of the stock of the Tri-State Can Company. Up to February, 1901, they had collected in dividends on the two hundred and fifty shares, the sum of $27,500.00, and in interest on the ten thousand dollars or portions of it before its investment, the sum of $2,270.07, all of which had been paid over to the cestui que trust. In May, 1901, The American Can Company, a New Jersey corporation with a capital of eighty-eight millions of dollars, was formed. Its whole capital stock was divided into an equal number of common and preferred shares of the par value of one hundred dollars each. That corporation was organized for the purpose of acquiring the business of all other companies engaged in the manufacture of cans. It accordingly purchased the assets of both the R. Tynes Smith Can Company and the Tri-State Can Company. As a result of this absorption the trustees received in lieu of the two hundred and fifty shares of the R. Tynes Smith Can Company, then owned by them, nine hundred and sixty-two shares of the preferred and nine hundred and sixty-two shares of the common stock of the American Can Company ; 62 shares of the stock of another concern, and thirty-seven thousand, five hundred dollars in cash. They afterwards sold the nine hundred and sixty-two shares of common stock for twenty-five thousand, one hundred and fifty dollars and ninety-five cents. The final result of their investment of the $7,744.93 in the purchase of the property of Smith and Weeks is, that they now have in place of that sum, through the medium of the exchanges and sales alluded to, the $37,500.00 cash received *24 from the American Can Company, the$25,150.95 just mentioned, as the proceeds of the sale óf the 962 shares of common stock—these items of cash aggregating $62,650.95— and the 962 shares of the preferred stock of the American Can Company, together with 62 shares of the Johnson Company.

The trustees received from the American Can Company in exchange for the 360 shares of the Tri-State Can Company, held by them, 180 shares of the preferred and 180 shares of the common stock of the American Can Company, and $16,500.00 in cash.

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Bluebook (online)
51 A. 844, 95 Md. 16, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-v-hooper-md-1902.