Stern's Estate

19 Pa. D. & C. 582, 1933 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 312
CourtPennsylvania Orphans' Court, Philadelphia County
DecidedNovember 24, 1933
DocketNo. 1501 of 1933
StatusPublished

This text of 19 Pa. D. & C. 582 (Stern's Estate) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Orphans' Court, Philadelphia County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stern's Estate, 19 Pa. D. & C. 582, 1933 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 312 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1933).

Opinion

The facts appear from the following extract from the adjudication of

Van Dusen, J., Auditing Judge.

Harry L. Stern died July 27,1932, leaving a will dated April 26,1923, whereby he gave $2,500 and his personal effects to his wife, Emma L. Stern, $1,000 to Ms trustees for the maintenance of Ms burial lot, certain legacies to charitable institutions as hereinafter recited, and the residue of his estate to his trustees in trust to collect the income and remit each month the sum of $50 to his sister, Ida Stern, and to pay the balance of the income to his wife, Emma L. Stern, for and during the term of her natural life, and, should the balance of the income be less than $7,000 in any year, to pay her a sufficient amount out of principal to make up the deficit; and upon her death, subject to the annuity to his sister, he gave the principal of his estate one half to such of his brothers and sisters as should then be living, and to the issue of such as should be deceased, per stirpes, and one half to be retained by his surviving trustee in perpetual trust for the charitable organizations therein set forth.

By election dated May 17,1933, and now lodged for record, Emma L. Stern, widow, has elected to take under the will.

[583]*583A question arises under item 5 of the will, wherein the testator provided as follows:

“5. In ease my estate, exclusive of all real estate, shall, at the time of my death have a clear value of $125,000, after the payment of my just debts, then and in that case only I give and bequeath the four following specific money bequests absolutely:
“a. To the Reformed Congregation of Keneseth Israel of Philadelphia, $1,000.
“b. To the Jewish Hospital Association of Philadelphia, $2,000.
“e. To the Jewish Foster Home and Orphan Asylum Incorporated of the City of Philadelphia, $1,000.
“d. To the National Farm School Incorporated now located at Doylestown, Pennsylvania, $1,000.”

The value of the personal estate at the time of the testator’s death, as appears by the inventory and appraisement, was $119,693.22, and this has been reduced by the payment of debts and expenses of administration to $114,819.55, the balance shown by the account.

The four legacies for charitable purposes, aggregating $5,000, were conditioned upon the clear value of the estate, exclusive of real estate, being $125,000 at the time of the testator’s death.

Two of these legatees, the National Farm School and the Jewish Hospital Association of Philadelphia, contend that the value placed by the appraisers on 1,187 shares of Sibson and Stern, Inc., and 640 shares of Germantown Braid Company, was too low, and that a proper appraisement thereof would increase the net value of the estate to at least $125,000, in which event the legacies to charity would be payable.

Sibson and Stern, Inc., and Germantown Braid Company are both close corporations, the stock of which is owned entirely by members of two families and a few employes. They are engaged in the same general type of textile manufacture on the same premises, the Braid Company occupying on lease certain space in the building owned by Sibson and Stern, Inc. There is no market for the stock of either company.

The capital of Sibson and Stern, Inc., is made up of 3,305 shares of no par value. The following is a statement of the company as of July 29,1932:

Current assets:
Cash and United States treasury certificates... $46,063.04
Accounts receivable ........................ 2,354.36
Inventory ................................. 19,642.64
-- $68,060.04
Fixed assets:
Machinery $54,186.58, less reserve for depreciation $52,159.13 — net ................... 2,027.45
Real estate (assessed for tax purposes at $53,-
• 700) .................................... 72,986.79
Other assets............................... 11,023.58
-- 86,037.82
Total assets.................... $154,097.86
Current liabilities, accounts payable.......... 334.23
Net........................... $153,763.63

The book value of 3,305 shares, figured in current assets, and allowing a liberal discount for the items of accounts receivable and inventory, was $17 per [584]*584share. Figured in both current and fixed assets, the book value was more than $40 per share.

The appraisers valued the testator’s 1,187 shares at $20 per share.

As to the Germantown Braid Company, its capital is 2,640 shares of $25 par value.

Current assets:
Cash and United States treasury certificates.. .$18,707.51
Accounts receivable......................... 1,869.21
Inventory.................................. 9,447.85
- $25,024.57
Fixed assets:
Machinery $54,788.40, less reserve for depreciation $54,788.40 .......................... 0.00
Other assets ............................... 804.12
Total assets .................. $25,828.69
Current liabilities, accounts payable.......... 686.28
Net .......................... $25,142.41

The book value of 2,640 shares was $9 per share.

The appraisers valued the testator’s 640 shares at $5 per share. The except-ants contend the value should be at least $8 per share.

The machinery of each company has been written off by 20 or 30 years of depreciation to what is now “junk” value, and it was testified that its value in liquidation would be no more than this.

Sibson and Stern, Inc., showed a profit in 1 year: 1928 loss, $6,641.61; 1929 loss, $7,749.39; 1930 loss, $9,361.34; 1931 gain, $2,642.91; ' 1932 loss, $6,647.60.

Germantown Braid Company was conducted at a loss in the 5 years before and including that of testator’s death: 1928 loss, $7,576.92; 1929 loss, $9,-077.66; 1930 loss, $16,248.92; 1931 loss, $4,069.64; 1932 loss, $6,230.33.

On January 24, 1933, Sibson and Stern, Inc., in partial liquidation of the corporation, redeemed certain of its shares and distributed some $6,000 to its stockholders at the then book value of $41.41 per share. It was explained that at this time the corporation had something over $45,000 in cash, and as business was poor and they were running at a reduced capacity it did not seem necessary to keep such a considerable balance of cash; certain of the stockholders wanted cash, and this method of distribution was adopted.

The purpose of the testator in making bequests to charity conditioned upon the value of the estate, was obviously for the protection of the widow and other legatees.

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Related

Fidelity-Philadelphia Trust Co. v. Simpson
143 A. 292 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1928)

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19 Pa. D. & C. 582, 1933 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 312, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sterns-estate-paorphctphilad-1933.