Succession of Warren

110 So. 891, 162 La. 649, 1926 La. LEXIS 2304
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedNovember 2, 1926
DocketNo. 27655.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 110 So. 891 (Succession of Warren) 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 Warren, 110 So. 891, 162 La. 649, 1926 La. LEXIS 2304 (La. 1926).

Opinion

O’NIELL, O. J.

Harry G. Warren, residing in New Orleans, died on the 4th of February, 1925, leaving property exceeding $100,-000 in value, and being half of a community estate. He was survived by his wife, but had no forced heirs. Among the assets of the estate were 594 shares of the capital stock of Walker Bros. & Co., Limited, a corporation domiciled in New Orleans, and engaged in the wholesale drygoods business. The deceased was president of the corporation, and was one of the active managers of the business. The other officers, associates of Mr. Warren, and employees of the corporation, were H. O. Barker, owning 110 shares of stock, R. J. J.anness, owning 100 shares, P. E. Lacourrege, owning 50 shares, and R. L. Montgomery, owning 45 shares. The total outstanding capital stock was 1,800 shares of the par value of $100 per share. The 594 shares belonging to the estate of Harry G. Warren was appraised in the inventory at $64,746, being $109 per share.

The deceased left an olographic will, in which he appointed the Canal-Commercial *651 Tryst & Savings Bank executor and trustee of his estate, and directed with minute detail how the trust should be administered. The clauses now in dispute, and which we are called upon to interpret, have reference to the disposition of the 594 shares of stock in Walker Bros. & Co., Limited, and are contained in the tenth section or article of the will, in five paragraphs, as follows:

“Tenth. I direct my said executor and trustee to proceed with the liquidation and adjustment of my affairs, particularly the business of Walker Brothers & Company, Ltd., in which I hold a certain interest, using in all its administration good business judgment to safeguard the investments I have made and to protect the assets of my estate.
“I direct that as soon as possible after my death my executor and trustee shall sell at a price not less than book value all of the capital stock owned by me at my death in Walker Brothers & Company, Ltd. The proceeds from such sale to be reinvested by the trustee in good interest paying securities. Said trustee in making said investment having due regard to the safety of the principal rather than to high rate of return. The trustee is empowered to sell any and all bonds and securities from- time to time and to reinvest the proceeds in other like bonds, as its judgment may direct.
“As Walker Brothers & Company, Ltd., stock will be one of the principal assets of my estate, I realize that when I am gone that the value of this asset should be immediately converted into cash and for this reason I have authorized and directed my executor and trustee to convert the same into cash.
“As my relations with the officers and employees of Walker Brothers & Company, Ltd., have been very harmonious, I now direct my trustee to first offer the stock as a whole to the officers and employees of Walker Brothers & Company, Ltd., who are actively engaged in promoting the business of the company and who own stock in'said company; the right being given to them to purchase in proportion to their respective holdings therein. For the purpose of making this offer and delivery, the board of directors of Walker Brothers & Company, Ltd., shall act as agents for such persons above designated. Such persons shall exercise this right by written notice to the trustee, either through themselves, individually or collectively, or through the board of directors of Walker Brothers & Company, Ltd., and by payment in cash to the trustee of the hook value of the said stock holdings on or before six months from date of my death. This right must be exercised by all persons within the class above described. The trustee may likewise give a written notice of its intention to sell the said stock and failure on the part of said persons to exercise the right herein granted within the period aforesaid shall release the trustee from the obligations herein imposed.
“Book value for the purposes of this article shall be taken to mean the value of the stock shown by the audit of the business of the company up to the date of my death.”

The Canal-Commercial Trust & Savings Bank accepted the executorship and the trust, and qualified as executor. Thereafter, at the request of the attorneys for the executor and trustee, with, the approval of Messieurs Barker, Janness, Lacourrege, and Montgomery, a firm of certified public ac'countants, namely, Caballero & Miller, made an audit of the business of Walker Bros. & Co., Limited, to the date of the death of Harry 6. Warren, February 4, 1925, which showed the book value qf th'e capital stock to be $107.-776 per share, making the 594 shares worth $64,018.95. Accordingly, Messieurs Barker, Janness, Lacourrege, and Montgomery notified the Canal-Commercial Trust & Savings Bank that they accepted the privilege given them by the will of the late Harry G. Warren of buying the 594 shares at its book value according to the audit, and they tendered the sum of $64,018.95 to the executor and trustee, and asked for the stock certificates. The executor and trustee objected to the audit, because of certain items that were carried on the books as contingent liabilities, and declined to transfer the stock at the price of the book value shown by the audit. Barker, Janness, Lacourrege, and Montgomery then brought this proceeding by rule to compel the trustee to transfer the stock to them at the book value shown by the audit, and again tendered the $64,018.95 in payment, and deposited the amount into the registry of the *653 court. Answering the rule, the executor and trustee insisted that the contingent liabilities appearing on the books of the corporation, being additional income taxes claimed hy the internal revenue department for the years 1918, 1919, 1920, 1923, and 1924, amounting to $63,484.62, should not be carried on the books as liabilities. The defendant contends that it is not likely that the government will finally insist upon the payment of these additional taxes, and shows that, if they were not carried as liabilities on the books of the corporation, the book value of the stock would bé $143.04 per share. The defense or attitude of the executor and trustee is explained in the following two paragraphs in the answer to the rule, viz.:

“That the late Air. Warren contemplated that the actual value was to be paid for the stock, as shown by a proper audit of the books, and not an audit that carried debatable claims, by way of deduction.”
“Respondent further avers that it desires to carry out the will of the late Harry G. Warren, and particularly to sell the stock in question, but is unable to do so with safety and certainty, owing to the diversity of opinion, and is therefore "entitled to the aid and assistance of this court in construing the provisions of decedent’s will and to determine what is the book value of this stock. And respondent is entitled to this advice because in the absence of knowledge of what constitutes the book value of said stock it is unable to accept the offer made by these plaintiffs.”

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Bluebook (online)
110 So. 891, 162 La. 649, 1926 La. LEXIS 2304, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/succession-of-warren-la-1926.