Wax v. Wax

78 Pa. D. & C. 213, 1951 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 125
CourtPennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Philadelphia County
DecidedSeptember 21, 1951
Docketno. 4741
StatusPublished

This text of 78 Pa. D. & C. 213 (Wax v. Wax) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Philadelphia County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wax v. Wax, 78 Pa. D. & C. 213, 1951 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 125 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1951).

Opinion

Crumlish, J.,

— The above matter is before us on preliminary objection to bill in equity.

[215]*215According to the bill, Abraham Wax, on October 27, 1938, executed an irrevocable deed of trust to Moe Wax and George L. Rubens, as trustees (son and son-in-law, respectively, of settlor and defendants herein), transferring to the trustees certain shares of stock of the Keamco, Inc.; Stamco, Inc.; Royal Amusement Company and a 25 percent interest in the partnership conducted under the firm name of Stratford Amusement Company, to manage and supervise all property comprising the corpus of the trust, collect the income, issues, profits and accretions, and to pay the net income, issues and profits and discharge the principal of the trust to the cestuis que trustent therein named (relatives of settlor by blood or marriage) in various proportions.

The deed of trust provided, inter alia:

“Thirteenth: Trustees shall have.....the following powers:
“(j) To subscribe for stock or bond privileges and to join in any merger or reorganization affecting investments which may be a part of this trust, and to vote the said shares of stock in any manner as to them may seem desirable.
“(k) The Trustees shall have full power and authority to vote as stockholders of the corporations whose stock forms part of this trust, to have themselves elected as officers and directors thereof, to receive salaries and bonuses or other compensation, as may be duly voted or agreed upon by the directors of the said corporations, with the further express authority on the part of said Trustees to vote upon motions concerning the amount and payment of salaries payable to them as officers, directors, or employees of the said corporations, and to receive such salaries as may be paid by said companies without restriction as to amount.”

[216]*216The shares of stock transferred to the trustees amounted to exactly 50 percent of the shares of the stocks of the corporations mentioned therein, and the other 50 percent of the stock was and is owned by Morris Wax and Gertrude Wax, his wife, who are officers and directors of the corporations. The corporations own and operate motion picture theatres in the City of Philadelphia.

About 1940 the directors of the corporations, including defendants, voted to defendants salaries of $13,000 each from the corporations, and a salary of $26,000 to Morris Wax, which were reduced in 1950 to $11,700 for each of the defendants and $23,400 to Morris Wax.

Up to and including the year 1940, the theatres operated successfully and produced sufficient revenues to pay the salaries and a surplus for the cestuis que trustent.

As of September term, 1946, no. 3664, certain interested parties filed a petition in the Court of Common Pleas No. 3 for a declaratory judgment as a result of a dispute which arose with regard to the validity of the deed of trust. As of September term, 1946, no. 3670, a bill in equity was filed in Court of Common Pleas No. 1 by and against parties interested questioning the validity of, and powers conferred by, a certain management contract held by Morris Wax with Keamco, Inc., and Stamco, Inc. As of June term, 1948, no. 3121, a bill in equity in Common Pleas Court No. 5 was filed as a result of other disputes among the parties interested. Abraham Wax died intestate on August 6, 1940, and letters of administration were granted to his widow, Malke Wax. For a reason which does not clearly appear from the record, Anna Wax Kurland filed a petition in the orphans’ court in Philadelphia County to vacate the administratrix’s [217]*217discharge. Malke Wax died March 16, 1948, intestate, a resident of the State of New Jersey.

All the aforesaid litigation was finally settled by a written agreement executed December 30, 1948, and hereinafter referred to, which agreement was signed by plaintiffs and defendants and everybody interested in the trust.

The bill further alleges that defendants informed plaintiffs that for the years 1949 and 1950 the profits from the operation of the corporations were barely sufficient to pay the salaries of defendants and Morris Wax and that there was no surplus to pay any moneys to the cestuis que trustent. And further, that there is no reasonable expectancy that the cestuis que trustent will receive any income whatever.

It is further alleged “That the deed in trust intended that all the parties mentioned therein were to be beneficiaries thereunder and were to receive income therefrom and that it was not the intent of the settlor that the defendants should be the sole beneficiaries thereunder.” And that “Morris Wax did agree as a director of the said corporation to reduce his salary to an amount by which both the defendants would reduce their salary so that a fund may be created for the purpose of making payments to the other parties under a deed of trust” but that defendants refused to reduce their salaries accordingly; that the salaries for services performed by defendants should properly be $3,000 for Moe Wax and $7,800 for George L. Rubens.

Plaintiffs therefore pray:

(a;) That defendants be discharged as trustees under the deed of trust and that substitute trustees be appointed;

(b) or that defendants be directed to reduce their salaries as aforesaid;

(c) or that the trustees be directed to sell the corpus of the estate and to make distribution thereof in accordance with the deed of trust.

[218]*218(d) such other and further relief as the Court may deem meet.

The objections to the bill are:

1. That this is in effect a stockholders’ bill, and there is a failure to comply with the requirements of Rule 37 of the Rules of Equity Practice.

2. (a) Plaintiffs, as cestuis que trustent, do not have the standing to challenge salaries paid officers of corporations, the shares of stock of which form the corpus of the trust estate.

(b) Plaintiffs’ interpretations of the trust instrument is contrary to the unambiguous terms thereof.

(c) The terms of the trust instrument expressly authorize plaintiffs “to have themselves elected as officers and directors. ... to receive salaries and bonuses or other compensation as may be duly voted or agreed upon by the directors of the said corporations. . . . without restriction as to amount” and to vote the shares of stock of the corporation “in any manner as to them may seem desirable.”

3. That this court is without authority to interfere with the internal management of the two corporations whose stock is held in part as an asset of the trust under the circumstances.

4. Plaintiffs are guilty of laches.

The question involved may be stated thus: Where the corpus of a trust estate consists of shares of stock of corporations, and the trustees are authorized to be elected as directors and officers thereof, and to vote and receive salaries therefrom, without restriction as to amount, and it appears that the salaries are in amounts that diminish or prevent the payment of any income to the cestuis que trustent, do the cestuis que trustent have the standing in the absence of fraud, to invoke a decree of a court of equity to reduce the salaries without first applying to the internal manage[219]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
78 Pa. D. & C. 213, 1951 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 125, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wax-v-wax-pactcomplphilad-1951.