Stinchcomb v. Mercantile-Safe Deposit & Trust Co.

263 A.2d 845, 257 Md. 482, 1970 Md. LEXIS 1329
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedApril 3, 1970
DocketNo. 226
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 263 A.2d 845 (Stinchcomb v. Mercantile-Safe Deposit & Trust Co.) 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
Stinchcomb v. Mercantile-Safe Deposit & Trust Co., 263 A.2d 845, 257 Md. 482, 1970 Md. LEXIS 1329 (Md. 1970).

Opinion

Finan, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

In writing this opinion we find sustenance in the aphorism that, “No will has a twin brother,” 1 and hence the improbability that we shall soon again encounter a testamentary document of similar import.

Mercantile-Safe Deposit and Trust Company (Mercantile), one of the appellees, as Substituted Trustee under the will of Frederick Schoenherr, deceased, filed a bill of complaint in the Circuit Court of Baltimore City for the construction of his will. This required the joining as defendants the remaindermen of the trust created by [484]*484items second through eleventh of the will. Among the defendants were the executors of four estates, including the appellants as executors of the estate of the testator’s widow, Lillian Anita Staub, formerly Lillian Anita Schoenherr, and also unknown persons who might have an interest in the trust under the will.

The remaindermen (appellees) contended that the remainders were vested in them and that the remainders included all of the corpus of the trusts including the appreciation in the corpus. The executors of the residuary legatee, the widow, who was also the life tenant, contended that, reading the will as a whole it should be construed to mean: (1) that the remainders were vested but subject to be divested by the death of a named remainderman prior to the death of the life tenant, and (2) that the appreciation in the principal of the trust following the sale of the stocks, which constituted the original principal, was not disposed of by the remainderman provisions of the trusts but fell into the residue of the estate and passed under the residuary clause of the will to the widow.

The testator, Frederick Schoenherr, died childless in the City of Baltimore on September 3, 1924, survived by his widow, Lillian Anita Schoenherr, who, as we have already indicated, subsequently married Mr. Staub. The testator had no brothers and only one sister, Mrs. Selma J. Wolff, one of the contingent remaindermen under item tenth of the will. Mr. Schoenherr’s will was dated March 18, 1924, and it is uncontradicted that at the time of its execution he was aware that he was suffering from a fatal illness. The will was drawn in New Jersey by a member of the bar of that state.

At the time of Mr. Schoenherr’s death the principal assets of his estate consisted of shares of stock in two corporations in which he was the majority stockholder, The Interstate Shade Cloth Company (Interstate) and The Lapsley-Interstate Shade Cloth Company (Lapsley). He owned 1,512 shares of Interstate stock, valued in the inventory of his estate at $109.00 per share or a total of [485]*485$164,808.00; he owned 4,170 shares of Lapsley stock, valued in the inventory of his estate at $39.00 per share or a total of $162,630.00, making the total appraised value of the Lapsley and Interstate stock of $327,438.00.

The testimony reveals that the testator and Mr. Robert Wilson had been intimate friends since their early boyhood in Hoboken, New Jersey. During the year 1914, the testator, who had already made a successful start in business in Baltimore, backed Mr. Wilson in a similar venture in New Jersey. In 1918 the testator and Mr. Hehrlein became acquainted while in military service, and the latter went to work for the testator during that year. It is apparent that all three of these gentlemen were fortunate in enjoying a most amicable and prosperous business association. Mr. Norman J. Freeman and Mr. James Bright Kelly, also objects of the testator’s bounty, were employees of the corporations for many years and each was referred to in the will as “my friend.” It is against such a background that the actions of the testator in making his will must be viewed. Hebden v. Keim, 196 Md. 45, 48, 50, 75 A. 2d 126 (1950), and Slingluff v. Johns, 87 Md. 273, 280, 39 A. 872 (1898).

Item first of the will contains the usual directive that the just debts and funeral expenses of the testator be satisfied.

Item second demonstrates a strong desire on the part of the testator that the control and management of the two companies which he had built up over many years, namely Interstate and Lapsley, “be vested solely in my friend and business associate, Robert Wilson, upon the terms and conditions herein set forth * * In order to effectuate this purpose he directed his executors and trustees to deposit all of his Interstate and Lapsley stock with the Safe Deposit and Trust Company of Baltimore (now Mercantile-Safe Deposit and Trust Company) “in escrow” subject to an option in Robert Wilson to purchase these shares at their book value.

The stock was to be held by the Safe Deposit and Trust-Company in escrow until the death of Mr. Wilson or un[486]*486til he had exercised the privilege of purchasing it, or until both of the companies should have failed for one calendar year to pay dividends of not less than six per cent, or until title to the shares of stock became vested in various named legatees. Mr. Wilson was given the right to vote the stock while it was held in escrow so as to exercise management control over the two companies.

Item third of the will provided that Robert Wilson could only exercise his option to buy the stock by purchasing the testator’s holdings in both companies in their entirety.

Item fourth restated the conditions set forth in item second to the effect that the option to purchase the stock would remain open to Robert Wilson only as long as the companies declared an annual dividend of not less than six per cent.

Item fifth directed that all dividends declared upon the stock held in Interstate and Lapsley should be paid from time to time, as and when declared, to the testator’s widow.

Item sixth directed that the executors invest the proceeds of the sale of the testator’s stock in Interstate and Lapsley in such a manner that at least $50,000.00 would be invested in United States Bonds, “and the balance in bonds secured by first mortgages on improved real estate and high grade investment securities of municipalities or of companies having established records for the payments of interest or dividends.”

By items seventh, eighth and ninth, the testator made provisions which are identical except as to the named legatee and the amount of the gift, for his three friends, Edward H. Hehrlein, Norman R. Freeman and James Bright Kelly.

We set forth item seventh in full, as follows:

“Seventh: Upon the death of my wife (provided my shares in said companies have not then been purchased by the said Robert Wilson or or otherwise disposed of pursuant to the provi[487]*487sions of this my will), I direct my executors and trustees or the survivors or survivor of them to set apart and hold five hundred shares of Interstate Shade Cloth Company and one thousand shares of The Lapsley-Interstate Shade Cloth Company, in trust for the benefit of my friend, Edward H. Hehrlein, of Passaic, New Jersey, to pay to the said Edward H. Hehrlein the dividends declared upon such shares of stock from time to time during the lifetime of the said Robert Wilson or until my said executors and trustees shall have sold my shares of said stock in said companies either to the said Robert Wilson or any other party pursuant to the terms of this my will. Upon the death of the said Robert Wilson I direct my said executors and trustees and the survivor of them to deliver to the said Edward H.

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Bluebook (online)
263 A.2d 845, 257 Md. 482, 1970 Md. LEXIS 1329, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stinchcomb-v-mercantile-safe-deposit-trust-co-md-1970.