Succession of Quintero

24 So. 2d 589, 209 La. 279, 162 A.L.R. 1150, 1945 La. LEXIS 934
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedApril 30, 1945
DocketNo. 37261.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 24 So. 2d 589 (Succession of Quintero) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Succession of Quintero, 24 So. 2d 589, 209 La. 279, 162 A.L.R. 1150, 1945 La. LEXIS 934 (La. 1945).

Opinions

O’NIELL, Chief Justice.

The widow of Lamar C. Quintero died leaving a will in which she bequeathed to Miss Dorothy Spencer several particular legacies, including 20 shares of the capital stock of the Times-Picayune Publishing Company. That was the extent of Mrs. Quintero’s ownership of stock in the corporation at the. time when she made her will, and was represented by 2 certificates for 10 shares each, of the par value of .$100 per share. Nearly three months after Mrs. Quintero made her will, and during her lifetime, the Times-Picayune Publishing Company declared a 100 per cent stock dividend, out of surplus and undivided profits accumulated in the years previous to the date of the will. The stock dividend was charged against this accumulation of surplus and undivided profits, and the corporation then issued to each stockholder a certificate, or certificates, for the amount of capital stock which he or she already owned. Accordingly, an additional stock certificate was issued to Mrs. Quintero, for 20 shares, of the par value of $100 per share. The only outstanding stock of the corporation was its original issue of common stock, amounting to less than half of its authorized capital; and the corporation owed no bonds or other funded debt.

About a year after receiving the stock dividend Mrs. Quintero died, having in her possession the three stock certificates, representing 40 shares of the increased capital stock of the corporation. The testamentary executor, in a provisional account rendered to the court, listed the 40 shares of stock as belonging to Miss Spencer, because they represented identically the same interest which the testatrix had in the total capital stock of the corporation at the time when she made her will, bequeathing to Miss Spencer that interest in the total capital stock of the corporation, and describing the legacy correctly as 20 shares of stock. Ten legatees, to each of whom Mrs. Quintero had bequeathed a certain sum of money, opposed the provisional account, claiming that the 20 shares of stock representing the stock dividend should be *283 converted into cash, to be applied to a deficit in the amount of cash available for the payment of the ten cash legacies. The judge decided in favor of the ten legatees. Miss Spencer is appealing from the decision.

In Mrs. Quintero’s will, immediately following the particular legacies, including the legacies to Miss Spencer, is a stipulation that all inheritance taxes that might be due on these legacies shall be paid out of the estate, and not out of the particular legacies. Immediately following that stipulation are the ten cash legacies, amounting to $34,200, ranging in amount from $200 to $5,000, bequeathed to the ten legatees who are contesting Miss Spencer’s claim. The testatrix expressed the desire that the ten cash legacies should be paid in full and that any inheritance tax that might be due on them should be paid out of the residue of the estate, but that, if the value of the estate should not be sufficient to pay the ten cash, legacies in full, they should be reduced proportionately. Mrs. Quintero bequeathed the residue of her estate to Mrs. Elize Goodey and Miss Spencer jointly, and named the Hibernia National Bank in New Orleans as executor. The value of the estate was not enough to pay the ten cash legacies in full.

What Mrs. Quintero intended to bequeath and did bequeath to Miss Spencer was the proportionate share or interest which Mrs. Quintero owned in the total outstanding capital stock of the Times-Picayune Publishing Company. The reason why the testatrix described the legacy as 20 shares of stock was that the legacy was then evidenced or represented by the two certificates for 10 shares each. That evidence or representative of the incorporeal property which constituted the legacy was changed into three certificates for 40 shares, by the declaring of the stock dividend, but the value or identity of the legacy, as being a certain proportion of the total outstanding capital stock of the corporation, was not changed by the issuing of the new or additional evidence or representative of the incorporeal property. It is declared in article 1716 of the Civil Code that a mistake made in naming or describing a legacy in a will is of no moment “if it can be ascertained what the thing was which the testator intended to bequeath.” What Mrs. Quintero intended to bequeath and did bequeath to Miss Spencer was. properly called 20 shares of stock in the Times-Picayune Publishing Company at the time when the will was made; and the subsequent conversion of the legacy into 40 shares of the increased capital stock in the corporation did not change the substance or value or the identity of the incorporeal property which was bequeathed to' Miss Spencer. The three certificates, amounting to 40 shares, which Mrs. Quintero held at the time of her death, constituted merely the evidence of the same incorporeal right which she had bequeathed to Miss Spencer, and which was evidenced originally by the two certificates for 10 shares each. The record does not show nor does it matter what was the total number of outstanding shares of stock in the corporation. For the purpose of illustrating, we may assume any number to be the *285 true number of outstanding shares of stock at the time when the will was made. For example, if the total number of shares was 1,000, Mrs. Quintero’s 20 shares constituted one-fiftieth of all of the capital stock of the corporation; and when she received her stock dividend of 20 additional shares her 40 shares still represented one-fiftieth of the total outstanding capital stock of the corporation. When she received the additional certificate for the 20 shares representing the stock dividend she knew that she had not bought or paid for any additional stock, and she knew that the additional stock certificate was merely additional evidence of the interest which she already owned in the total amount of outstanding capital stock in the corporation. Hence she saw no necessity for adding a codicil to her will, or for making a new will, in order to make a testamentary disposition of that which she had already bequeathed to Miss Spencer under the description of 20 shares of stock in the Times-Picayune Publishing Company. At the time when Mrs. Quintero made her will she had no reason to anticipate that the Times-Picayune Publishing Company might declare a stock dividend and thus change the evidence — without changing the substance or identity — of her interest as a stockholder in the corporation. Hence at the time when she made her will she had no intention at all as to what disposition she might eventually make of any stock dividend that she might receive from the Times-Picayune Publishing Company. She knew that the legacy of 20 shares of stock which she bequeathed to Miss Spencer would not entitle Miss Spencer to any additional stock which Mrs. Quintero might afterwards acquire by purchase, or except as a stock dividend. When she described the legacy as 20 shares of stock she intended to bequeath and did bequeath the interest which she then owned in the total outstanding stock of the corporation. That interest was identically the same at the time when Mrs. Quintero died as it was when she made her will. It is likely that Mrs. Quintero regarded her interest in the total outstanding capital stock of the Times-Picayune Publishing Company, at the time when and after she made her will, in the broad sense in which shares of stock in a corporation are generally regarded,-— thus:

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Bluebook (online)
24 So. 2d 589, 209 La. 279, 162 A.L.R. 1150, 1945 La. LEXIS 934, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/succession-of-quintero-la-1945.