Steele Estate

103 A.2d 409, 377 Pa. 250, 1954 Pa. LEXIS 506
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMarch 24, 1954
DocketAppeals, 53, 97 and 98
StatusPublished
Cited by47 cases

This text of 103 A.2d 409 (Steele Estate) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Steele Estate, 103 A.2d 409, 377 Pa. 250, 1954 Pa. LEXIS 506 (Pa. 1954).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Bell,

Three charities which are remaindermen under Mr. Steele’s will vigorously contend that a stock dividend which is admittedly income should not be distributed to the life tenant but should be retained in the trust, and its equivalent in cash be distributed to the life tenant.

II. J. Steele died March 19,1933. He created 5 other trusts in his will in which he clearly disclosed that his wife and daughter were the primary objects of his *252 bounty. The trust here involved covers the stocks and bonds of the Easton Publishing Company, which at the time of his death were a part of his residuary estate. In the Ninth Paragraph of his will the testator gave and bequeathed his residuary estate “. . . in trust to pay the net income thereof in equal shares to my wife and daughter during their natural lives and upon the death of either then to the survivor and upon the death of both then to pay the principal thereof as follows: one fourth to the issue of my daughter and if there be no such issue living at that time then to the Easton Childrens Home, one fourth to St. Johns Lutheran Church of Easton; one fourth to Lafayette College and one fourth to the Easton Hospital as part of its endowment fund.” Mrs. Fretz, testator’s only daughter, is still living but has no issue.

Testator appointed his wife, his daughter, Mrs. Fretz, and The First National Bank and Trust Company of Easton as Trustees of his estate. Although his widow died in June, 1937 no successor trustee was appointed; The First National Bank and Trust Company was succeeded as trustee by the Easton National Bank.

Part of the principal of Mr. Steele’s trust consisted, at the time of Ms death, of 3,925 shares and $105,000 par value bonds of the Easton Publishing Company. The shares of stock then outstanding totaled 8,000 shares. On March 14, 1951 the Easton Publishing Company declared a 25% stock dividend, of which the Steele Estate received 981% shares. The trustees thereafter filed an account in order to have the Court determine, as between life tenant and remaindermen, who, was entitled to this stock dividend. The intact value of each share of Easton Publishing Company at Mr. Steele’s death was $114.55. On March 14, 1951, after declaration of the stock dividend in question, the intact value had increased to $135.42 a share. Even after *253 payment of the stock dividend and the transfer from surplus to capital of §200,000 to cover the dividend, the company had a surplus of §354,000 as compared with §116,000 surplus at testator’s death.

The remaindermen admit, as they must, that under Pennsylvania’s Intact Value Rule, which was established in 1857 in Earp’s Appeal, 28 Pa. 368, and has been followed ever since, until changed by the legislature in the Principal and Income Act of July 3, 1947, P. L. 1283, 20 PS 3470, a dividend of stock of a corporation which represents earnings accumulated by the corporation since the death of the testator is income and distributable as such to the life tenants, provided, of course, that the intact value (existing at the testator’s death or at the time of its acquisition) is preserved.

The Principal and Income Act of 1947 cannot be applied retroactively to trusts created prior thereto with respect to the ascertainment and distribution of accumulated corporate earnings and profits: Crawford Estate, 362 Pa. 458, 67 A. 2d 124.

.Appellants allege throe reasons for retaining the slock dividend in the principal of the trust and giving the life tenant the equivalent thereof in cash: (1) A. distribution of the stock dividend in kind would work substantial damage to the trust by reason of reducing its voting strength from 49% to 39%; (2) testator’s will shows an intention that the working voting control of this stock should be preserved as principal; and (3) Sirs. Fretz’s self-interest conflicted with the best interests of the trust and prevents, under the doctrine of self-dealing, the receipt by her of this stock dividend. We shall discuss, these seriatim.

(1) Testator’s wife and daughter — not the charities —were the primary objects of.his.bounty,, and he directed' that they and the survivor Rliqiüd ..be. paid the net income during their and the survivor’s’ life. The *254 stock dividend in question was admittedly income, and under Mr. Steele’s will must be paid or distributed to Ms daughter (or at her option sold and the proceeds of sale distributed to her), unless the testator directed otherwise, or unless she forfeited her right thereto.

Appellants contend that the market value of the estate’s holding of stock in the Easton Publishing Company would be very greatly reduced if the stock dividend were distributed to the life tenant instead of being added to and retained by the corpus of the trust. The complete answer is that even if true this is immaterial; under the testamentary direction to pay the net income to his daughter, and under the then existing law of Pennsylvania, market value is of no materiality; and the fact, if it be a fact, that the market value of the stock held in trust would be greatly reduced is not sufficient to defeat Mrs. Fretz’s legal right to this stock dividend: King Estate, 361 Pa. 629, 635, 66 A. 2d 68; Waterhouse’s Estate, 308 Pa. 422, 428, 162 A. 295; Jones v. Integrity Trust Co., 292 Pa. 149, 152, 155, 140 A. 862; Packer’s Estate (No. 1), 291 Pa. 194, 197, 139 A. 867.

In Jones v. Integrity Trust Co., 292 Pa., supra, Mr. Justice Simpson said (page 155) : . . Market value has nothing to do with such distributions; under all the situations which arise only the intact value is to be considered. . . .”

In Packer’s Estate (No. 1), 291 Pa., supra, this Court said (page 197) : “. . . Neither market value, nor any other value than the actual or intact value of the shares, is of any moment in determining how such a distribution [of extraordinay stock dividend] is to be made. . . .”

Furthermore', we are convinced that there is neither authority nor reason nor equity to justify the retention *255 of a stock dividend which is income, in the principal of the trust and exclude such stock dividend from distribution to the life tenant, because its payment or distribution to the life tenant would reduce the working and voting influence of the testamentary trustees in the Easton Publishing Company by virtue of reducing the trust’s percentage of voting stock from 49% to 39%. We therefore find no merit in this contention,

(2) The testator did not disclose, as appellants contend, an intention in his will that the so-called working control of this newspaper stock should be preserved as principal. Appellants rely upon the Sixth Paragraph of testator’s will to sustain their argument on this point.

“Sixth: I hold and own a quantity of the capital stock and bonds * of the Easton Publishing Company of the City of Easton and it may be

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Bluebook (online)
103 A.2d 409, 377 Pa. 250, 1954 Pa. LEXIS 506, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/steele-estate-pa-1954.