Under a will bequeathing stock in a corporation and government
bonds in trust to pay "the dividends of said stock and the interest
of said bonds as they accrue" to a daughter of the testator "during
her lifetime, without percentage of commission or diminution of
principal," and directing that upon her death, "the said stocks,
bonds and income shall revert to the estate" of the trustee,
"without encumbrance or impeachment of waste," a stock dividend
declared by a corporation which from time to time, before and after
the death of the testator, has invested accumulated earnings in its
permanent works and plant, and which, since his death, has been
authorized by statute to increase its capital stock, is an
accretion to capital, and the income thereof only is payable to the
tenant for life.
This was a bill in equity by Mary Ann Gibbons against Jane Owen
Mahon to compel the transfer to the plaintiff of shares in the
Washington Gaslight Company held by the defendant as trustee under
the will of Ann W. Smith. The case was heard upon bill and answer
by which, and by thee acts of Congress concerning that company, the
facts appeared to be as follows.
Mrs. Smith, a widow and the mother of both parties to this suit,
died March 26, 1865, owning two hundred and eighty shares in that
company, and leaving a last will, dated February 11, 1865, and
admitted to probate April 8, 1865, containing the following
bequest:
"I hereby give, devise and bequeath to my daughter, Jane Owen
Mahon, wife of David W. Mahon, of the City of Washington aforesaid,
and to her heirs and assigns, two hundred and eighty shares of
stock of the Washington Gaslight Company, also forty-five shares of
stock of the Franklin Insurance Company, both in the City of
Washington aforesaid; also eight thousand five hundred dollars in
government bonds of the government of the United States of America;
said stock and bonds or any portion of them remaining at my death
a
Page 136 U. S. 550
part of my said estate, to have and to hold the same in and upon
the trusts and provisions following, that is to say, in trust for
the advantage and behoof of my said daughter, Mary Ann Gibbons, and
that after my decease the said Jane Owen Mahon, her heirs and
assigns, shall cause the dividends of said stock and the interest
of said bonds as they accrue to be paid to my said daughter, Mary
Ann Gibbons, during her lifetime, without percentage of commission
or diminution of principal, and in case of the death of the said
Mary Ann Gibbons, then the said stocks, bonds and income shall
revert to the estate of my said daughter, Jane Owen Mahon, without
encumbrance or impeachment of waste."
The Washington Gaslight Company was incorporated by the Act of
Congress of July 8, 1848, c. 96, with a capital of $50,000, divided
into shares of $20 each. 9 Stat. 722. It was authorized to increase
its capital stock to $350,000 by the Act of August 2, 1852, c. 79,
and to $500,000 by the Act of January 3, 1855, c. 22, 10 Stat. 734,
835. At the death of the testatrix, the capital stock amounted to
$500,000, consisting of 25,000 shares of $20 each. By the Act of
May 24, 1866, c. 97, the capital stock was increased to $1,000,000.
14 Stat. 53.
The company from time to time declared and paid dividends in
money upon its stock, and such dividends were paid by the defendant
to the plaintiff.
Before and after the death of Mrs. Smith, and before and after
the passage of the act of 1866, and before November 1, 1868, the
company from time to time invested portions of its net earnings,
income, and profits in the enlargement and extension of its
permanent works and plant employed in its legitimate business under
its charter, and the actual cost of its works and plant, as shown
by its construction account, amounted on January 1, 1865, to
$842,623.02; on January 1, 1866, to $892,224.08; on January 1,
1867, to $935,039.55; on January 1, 1868, to $963,803.37; on July
1, 1868, to $988,914.84, and on January 1, 1869, to $1,039,287.17,
and amounted in fact at the time of the passage of the act of 1866,
to not less than $900,000, and on October 1, 1868, to more than
$1,000,000.
Page 136 U. S. 551
On November 1, 1868, the board of directors of the company
adopted the following resolution:
"Whereas the construction account of this company exceeds one
million of dollars, and as the capital of the company has been
increased by an act of Congress to one million of dollars,
therefore be it resolved that the increased stock be awarded among
the stockholders, share for share, as they stood on the first of
October, 1868."
On September 29, 1868, the defendant surrendered to the company
the certificate for the two hundred and eighty shares mentioned in
Mrs. Smith's will, and those shares were transferred on the books
of the company to the name of the defendant, as trustee, and on
November 17, 1868, the company made out and delivered to the
defendant, as trustee, a certificate for the five hundred and sixty
shares.
The defendant paid to the plaintiff from time to time the
dividends afterwards declared on the five hundred and sixty shares,
but never transferred to her the two hundred and eighty new
shares.
The court dismissed the bill, and delivered an opinion reported
in 4 Mackey 130, and the plaintiff appealed to this Court.
Page 136 U. S. 557
MR. JUSTICE GRAY, after stating the case as above, delivered the
opinion of the Court.
The question presented by the claims made in the bill and answer
and by the arguments of counsel is whether the two hundred and
eighty new shares of stock in the Washington Gaslight Company are
to be treated as dividends, to the whole or part of the principal
of which the plaintiff is entitled under the will, or are to be
treated as an increase of the capital of the trust fund, and the
plaintiff therefore entitled to receive only the income thereof.
The court below held that the new shares must be treated as
capital, the income only of which was payable to the plaintiff. She
contends that the new shares are in the nature of a dividend to the
whole of which she is entitled, or, if that position should not be
maintained, that so much of the new shares as represents earnings
made by the corporation since the death of the testatrix should be
held to be income payable to her. Upon full consideration of the
case, on reason and authority, this Court is of opinion that the
decision below is correct.
The distinction between the title of a corporation and the
interest of its members or stockholders in the property of the
corporation is familiar and well settled. The ownership of that
property is in the corporation, and not in the holders of shares of
its stock. The interest of each stockholder consists in the right
to a proportionate part of the profits whenever dividends are
declared by the corporation during its existence under its charter,
and to a like proportion of the property remaining, upon the
termination or dissolution of the corporation after payment of its
debts.
Van Allen v.
Assessors, 3 Wall. 573,
70 U. S. 584;
Delaware Railroad
Tax, 18 Wall. 206,
85 U. S. 230;
Tennessee
Page 136 U. S. 558
v. Whitworth, 117 U. S. 129,
117 U. S. 136;
New Orleans v. Houston, 119 U. S. 265,
119 U. S.
277.
Money earned by a corporation remains the property of the
corporation, and does not become the property of the stockholders
unless and until it is distributed among them by the corporation.
The corporation may treat it and deal with it either as profits of
its business or as an addition to its capital. Acting in good faith
and for the best interests of all concerned, the corporation may
distribute its earnings at once to the stockholders as income, or
it may reserve part of the earnings of a prosperous year to make up
for a possible lack of profits in future years, or it may retain
portions of its earnings and allow them to accumulate, and then
invest them in its own works and plant so as to secure and increase
the permanent value of its property.
Which of these courses shall be pursued is to be determined by
the directors with due regard to the condition of the company's
property and affairs as a whole, and unless in case of fraud or bad
faith on their part, their discretion in this respect cannot be
controlled by the courts, even at the suit of owners of preferred
stock, entitled by express agreement with the corporation to
dividends at a certain yearly rate, "in preference to the payment
of any dividend on the common stock, but dependent on the profits
of each particular year, as declared by the board of directors."
New York, Lake Erie & Western Railroad v. Nickals,
119 U. S. 296,
119 U. S. 304,
119 U. S. 307.
Reserved and accumulated earnings, so long as they are held and
invested by the corporation, being part of its corporate property,
it follows that the interest therein represented by each share is
capital, and not income, of that share as between the tenant for
life and the remainderman, legal or equitable, thereof. Whether the
gains and profits of a corporation should be so invested and
apportioned as to increase the value of each share of stock for the
benefit of all persons interested in it, either for a term of life
or of years, or by way of remainder in fee, or should be
distributed and paid out as income to the tenant for life or for
years, excluding the remainderman
Page 136 U. S. 559
from any participation therein, is a question to be determined
by the action of the corporation itself at such times and in such
manner as the fair and honest administration of its whole property
and business may require or permit, and by a rule applicable to all
holders of like shares of its stock, and cannot, without producing
great embarrassment and inconvenience, be left open to be tried and
determined by the courts as often as it may be litigated between
persons claiming successive interests under a trust created by the
will of a single shareholder, and by a distinct and separate
investigation, through a master in chancery or otherwise, of the
affairs and accounts of the corporation, as of the dates when the
provisions of the will of that shareholder take effect, and with
regard to his shares only.
In ascertaining the rights of such persons, the intention of the
testator, so far as manifested by him, must, of course, control,
but when he has given no special direction upon the question as to
what shall be considered principal and what income, he must be
presumed to have had in view the lawful power of the corporation
over the use and apportionment of its earnings, and to have
intended that the determination of that question should depend upon
the regular action of the corporation with regard to all its
shares.
Therefore when a distribution of earnings is made by a
corporation among its stockholders, the question whether such
distribution is an apportionment of additional stock representing
capital or a division of profits and income depends upon the
substance and intent of the action of the corporation as manifested
by its vote or resolution, and ordinarily a dividend declared in
stock is to be deemed capital, and a dividend in money is to be
deemed income, of each share.
A stock dividend really takes nothing from the property of the
corporation and adds nothing to the interests of the shareholders.
Its property is not diminished and their interests are not
increased. After such a dividend, as before, the corporation has
the title in all the corporate property; the aggregate interests
therein of all the shareholders are represented by the whole number
of shares, and the proportional interest
Page 136 U. S. 560
of each shareholder remains the same. The only change is in the
evidence which represents that interest, the new shares and the
original shares together representing the same proportional
interest that the original shares represented before the issue of
new ones.
In
Bailey v. Railroad
Co., 22 Wall. 604, cited for the plaintiff, the
point decided was that certificates, issued by a railroad
corporation to its stockholders, as representing earnings which had
been used in the construction and equipment of its road, and
payable at the option of the company, with dividends like those
paid on the stock, were within that provision of the internal
revenue laws, which enacted that any railroad company
"that may have declared any dividend in scrip or money due or
payable to its stockholders, . . . as part of the earnings,
profits, income, or gains of such company, and all profits of such
company carried to the account of any fund, or used for
construction, shall be subject to and pay a tax of five percentum
on the amount of all such . . . dividends or profits, whenever and
wherever the same shall be payable, and to whatsoever party of
person the same may be payable."
Acts of June 30, 1864, c. 173, § 122, 13 Stat. 284; July
13, 1866, c. 184, § 9, 14 Stat. 138, 139. The question at
issue was not between the owners of successive interests in
particular shares, but between the corporation and the government,
and depended upon the terms of a statute carefully framed to
prevent corporations from evading payment of the tax upon their
earnings. The opinion delivered by Mr. Justice Clifford, though
containing some general expressions which, taken by themselves,
might seem to ignore the settled distinction (affirmed by this
Court in earlier and later cases above cited) between the property
of the corporation and the interests of the shareholders yet
explicitly recognized that "net earnings of such a company may be
expended in constructing or equipping the railroad, or in the
purchase of real estate or other properties," and "may be
distributed in dividends of stock or of scrip or of money;" that
"purchasers of stock have a right to claim and receive all
dividends subsequently declared, no matter when the fund
appropriated for the purpose was earned;" that, "as a general
Page 136 U. S. 561
rule, stock dividends, even when they represent net earnings,
become at once a part of the capital of the company;" and that
"such a dividend, if earned and declared, necessarily increases
the value of the old stock if new stock is not issued, and in that
mode reaches substantially the same result."
22 Wall.
89 U. S.
635-637.
In Great Britain, it is well settled that where a corporation,
whether authorized or unauthorized by law to increase its capital
stock, accumulates and invests part of its earnings and afterwards
apportions them among its shareholders as capital, the amount so
apportioned must be deemed an accretion to the capital of each
share, the income of which only is payable to a tenant for life.
From the beginning of this century, it has been established by
decisions of the Court of Chancery in England and of the House of
Lords on appeal from Scotland, that where a bank, having no power
by law to increase its capital stock, has used its accumulated
profits as floating capital, and invested them in securities which
can be turned into cash at pleasure, an extraordinary dividend or
bonus declared out of such profits is capital, and not income, of
each share as between owners of the life interest and of the
interest in remainder therein, without inquiring into the time when
the profits were actually earned.
Brander v. Brander, 4
Ves. 800;
Irving v. Houstoun, 4 Paton 521;
Cuming v.
Boswell, 2 Jurist (N.S.) 1005, 1008, 28 Law Times Rep. 344,
and 1 Paterson 652. In
Irving v. Houstoun, Lord Eldon
(Lord Rosslyn and Lord Alvaney concurring) said that if an owner of
bank stock
"gives the life interest of his estate to anyone, it can
scarcely be his meaning that the life renter should run away with a
bonus that may have been accumulating on the floating capital for
half a century,"
and that to take an account of the precise amount of profits
which had accumulated before and after the commencement of the
life-interest in particular shares would lead to inconveniences
which would be intolerable. 4 Paton 530-531. In
Cuming v.
Boswell, above cited and relied on by the present plaintiff,
the person held entitled to bonuses declared on bank stock was, as
stated in the judgment delivered by Lord Cranworth,
Page 136 U. S. 562
"not a life renter, but an absolute fiar" -- in other words, not
a mere tenant for life, but an owner in fee, although his estate
was determinable by his death without issue.
It is unnecessary for the purposes of this case to consider how
far the English decisions upon the question whether a dividend in
money, not declared to be made out of accumulated earnings, should
be considered as capital or as income, can be reconciled with each
other or with sound principle. But there are two recent cases of
great authority concerning stock dividends which directly bear upon
the question before us.
In one of those cases, shares in a steam navigation company were
settled by their owner upon trust to pay "the interest, dividends,
shares of profits, or annual proceeds" to a woman during her life,
and after her death in trust for her children. The directors,
acting within the scope of their authority, retained part of a
half-year's profits, and applied it to pay for new boats, and the
company passed a resolution to issue to existing shareholders new
shares representing the money so applied. It was argued that
"the company had no power to compel the tenant for life to risk
any more in the venture than the shares originally held, and could
not be allowed for themselves, by declaring or withholding a
dividend out of the profits, to alter the rights as between tenant
for life and remainderman."
But Vice-Chancellor Wood (afterwards Lord Chancellor Hatherley)
held otherwise, and said:
"As long as the company have the profit of the half year in
their hands, it is for them to say what they will do with it,
subject, of course, to the rules and regulations of the company. .
. . The dividend to which a tenant for life is entitled is the
dividend which the company chooses to declare. And when the company
meet and say that they will not declare a dividend, but will carry
over some portion of the half year's earnings to the capital
account and turn it into capital, it is competent for them, I
apprehend, to do so, and when this is done, everybody is bound by
it, and the tenant for life of those shares cannot complain. The
only mode in which a tenant for life could act would be to use his
influence with his
Page 136 U. S. 563
trustees as to their votes with reference to the proposed
arrangement. . . . If a man has his shares placed in settlement, he
gives his trustees, in whose names they stand, a power of voting,
and he must use his influence to get them to vote as he wishes. But
where the company, by a majority of their votes, have said that
they will not divide this money, but turn it all into capital,
capital it must be from that time. I think that is the true
principle, and I must hold that these additional shares formed part
of the capital fund under the settlement, and went to the children,
and not to the tenant for life (their mother)."
Barton's Trust, L.R. 5 Eq. 238, 243-245.
In the most recent English case on the subject, William Bouch
bequeathed to his executor, in trust for his widow for life, and
after her death to the executor, his personal estate, including
shares in an iron company, whose directors had power, before
recommending a dividend, to set apart out of the profits such sums
as they thought proper as a reserved fund for meeting
contingencies, equalizing dividends, or repairing or maintaining
the works. Four years after the testator's death, the company, upon
the recommendation of the directors and out of a fund so reserved
in the testator's lifetime, and of undivided profits, about half of
which accrued before his death, made a bonus dividend, and an
allotment of new shares, with liberty to each shareholder to apply
the bonus dividend in payment for the new shares. Bouch's executor
took the new shares, and applied the bonus dividend in payment
therefor. The House of Lords, reversing the judgment of the Court
of Appeal and restoring an order of Mr. Justice Kay, held that the
corporation did not pay or intend to pay any sum as a dividend, but
intended to and did appropriate the undivided profits as an
increase of the capital stock; that the bonus dividend was
therefore capital of the testator's estate, and the widow was not
entitled either to the bonus or to the new shares. The difference
of opinion was not as to the general principle which should govern,
but only as to its application to the action of the corporation in
the particular case. The House of Lords fully approved the
statements of the general principle by Vice-Chancellor Wood in
Barton's Trust, above
Page 136 U. S. 564
cited, and by Lord Justice Fry, in delivering the judgment of
the Court of Appeal, as follows:
"When a testator or settlor directs or permits the subject of
his disposition to remain as shares or stock in a company, which
has the power either of distributing its profits as dividend or of
converting them into capital, and the company validly exercises
this power, such exercise of its power is binding on all persons
interested under him, the testator or settlor, in the shares, and
consequently what is paid by the company as dividend goes to the
tenant for life, and what is paid by the company to the shareholder
as capital, or appropriated as an increase of the capital stock in
the concern, inures to the benefit of all who are interested in the
capital. In a word, what the company says is income shall be
income, and what it says is capital shall be capital. . . . In most
if not in all cases, the inquiry as to the time when the profits
were earned by the company is an immaterial one as between the
tenant for life and remainderman. Their rights have been made
dependent on the legitimate action of the company, and [subject to
any rights arising from the law of apportionment, which was not in
question] are determined by the time, not at which the profits are
earned by the company, but at [by] the time at which they are by
the action of the company made divisible amongst its members."
Sproule v. Bouch, 29 Ch.D. 635, 653, 658-659;
Bouch
v. Sproule, 12 App.Cas. 385, 397, 402, 407-408.
The same principle was established in Massachusetts before the
case of
Sproule v. Bouch had come before the courts of
England.
Atkins v. Albree, 12 Allen 359;
Minot v.
Paine, 99 Mass. 101;
Daland v. Williams, 101 Mass.
571;
Leland v. Hayden, 102 Mass. 542;
Rand v.
Hubbell, 115 Mass. 461;
Gifford v. Thompson, 115
Mass. 478. And in Connecticut, Rhode Island, and Maine, a dividend
of new shares, representing accumulated earnings, is held to be
capital, and not income.
Brinley v. Grou, 50 Conn. 66;
In re Brown, 14 R.I. 371;
Richardson v.
Richardson, 75 Me. 570, 574.
In New York, the recent judgments of the Court of Appeals appear
to have practically overruled the decisions of the lower courts in
Clarkson v. Clarkson, 18 Barb. 646;
Simpson
v.
Page 136 U. S. 565
Moore, 30 Barb. 637;
Woodruff's Estate, Tucker
58, and
In re Pollock, 3 Redfield 100, cited in behalf of
the plaintiff, and to have settled the law of that state in
accordance with that of England and of Massachusetts.
In
Hyatt v. Allen, 56 N.Y. 553, the defendant, by a
contract made August 11, 1871, under which he transferred to the
plaintiffs certain stock in a manufacturing corporation, agreed to
pay them "all profits and dividends of and upon the stock up to the
first day of January, 1872." In April, 1872, the corporation
declared a dividend of fifteen dollars a share, five-sixteenths of
which were found by a referee to have been derived from the
increase in value of its property between August 11, 1871, and
January 1, 1872, and the court below gave judgment for the
plaintiff for that proportion of the dividend. But the Court of
Appeals reversed the judgment, and said:
"A shareholder in a corporation has no legal title to the
property or profits of the corporation until a division is made. .
. . When, therefore, a contract is made in relation to dividends or
profits, it must be deemed to have reference to dividends or
profits to be ascertained and declared by the particular company,
and not to growing profits from day to day, or month to month, to
be ascertained upon an investigation by third persons, or courts of
justice, into the accounts and transactions of the company."
56 N.Y. 557-558.
In
Williams v. Western Union Telegraph Co., 93 N.Y.
162, the Court of Appeals, in the course of an elaborate discussion
of the right of a corporation, when unrestrained by statute, to
make a stock dividend , said:
"When a corporation has a surplus, whether a dividend shall be
made, and, if made, how much it shall be, and when and where it
shall be payable, rest in the fair and honest discretion of the
directors, uncontrollable by the courts. . . . Whether they shall
be made in cash or property must also rest in the discretion of the
directors. . . . Desiring to use the surplus and add it to the
permanent capital of the company, and having lawfully created
shares of stock, they could issue to the stockholders such shares
to represent their respective interests in such surplus. . . .
After a stock dividend, a corporation has just as
Page 136 U. S. 566
much property as it had before. It is just as solvent, and just
as capable of meeting all demands upon it. After such a dividend,
the aggregate of the stockholders own no more interest in the
corporation than before. The whole number of shares before the
stock dividend represented the whole property of the corporation,
and after the dividend they represent that and no more. A stock
dividend does not distribute property, but simply dilutes the
shares as they existed before."
93 N.Y. 189, 192.
Finally, in
Kernochan's Case, 104 N.Y. 618, the Court
of Appeals applied the same rules as between the remainderman and
the person entitled for life to the income of shares bequeathed in
trust; rejected the test of determining what part of a cash
dividend should be deemed principal and what part income by
ascertaining how much was earned before and how much after the
death of the testator; approved the general principle laid down in
the cases of
Barton's Trust, L.R. 5 Eq. 238, 245, and
Sproule v. Bouch, 29 Ch.D. 635, 653, above cited, and
said:
"From the shares in question no income could accrue, no profits
arise to the holder, until ascertained and declared by the company
and allotted to the shareholder, and that act should be deemed to
have been in the mind of the testator, and not the earnings or
profits as ascertained by a third person, or a court, upon an
investigation of the business and affairs of the company, either
upon an inspection of their books or otherwise. . . . The rule is a
reasonable and proper one, which limits the rights of a stockholder
to profits by the action of the managers of a corporation or
company. It is their sole and exclusive duty to divide profits and
declare dividends whenever, in their judgment, the condition of the
affairs of the corporation renders it expedient, and it would lead
to great embarrassment and confusion if a court should undertake to
interfere with their discretion so long as they do not go beyond
the scope of their powers and authority."
104 N.Y. 628, 629.
In
Earp's Appeal, 28 Penn.Stat. 368, on the other hand,
the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania declined to follow the early
English cases, and adopted the rule that, where a corporation,
Page 136 U. S. 567
after having accumulated large surplus profits for many years
before and since the death of the testator, increased its capital
stock, and issued additional shares to the stockholders, so much of
the surplus profits as had accumulated in the lifetime of the
testator should be deemed capital, and so much as had accumulated
since his death should be deemed income, and in
Wiltbank's
Appeal, 64 Penn.Stat. 256, where a corporation voted to
increase its capital stock by an issue of new shares to be
subscribed and paid for by the stockholders, and a trustee holding
shares sold the right to take some new shares, and took others and
sold them at an advance, that rule was carried so far as to hold
that the sums so received by the trustee were income of the old
shares, for the reason that the right to subscribe to new shares,
the court thought, "was not a part of the capital of the old stock,
but a mere product of an advantage belonging to it," "a right
incidental to the stock, and therefore income." The rule upon which
those two cases proceeded has since been treated as settled in
Pennsylvania, although there has been some difficulty, if not
inconsistency, in applying it, and in one case Mr. Justice Paxson,
now Chief Justice of Pennsylvania, spoke of both those cases as
exceptional and depending on peculiar circumstances.
Moss'
Appeal, 83 Penn.St. 264, 269-270;
Biddle's Appeal, 99
Penn.St. 278;
Vinton's Appeal, 99 Penn.St. 434. The only
other states, so far as we are informed, in which the Pennsylvania
rule prevails are New Jersey and New Hampshire.
Van Doren v.
Olden, 19 N.J.Eq. 176;
Ashhurst v. Field, 26 N.J.Eq.
1;
Van Blarcom v. Dager, 31 N.J.Eq. 783, 793;
Lord v.
Brooks, 52 N.H. 72;
Peirce v. Burroughs, 58 N.H. 302,
303. Upon the grounds already stated, that rule appears to us to be
open to grave objections, both in principle and in application, as
well as opposed to the weight of authority.
In the case at bar, the testatrix bequeathed to her daughter,
Jane Owen Mahon, two hundred and eighty shares of stock in the
Washington Gaslight Company, as well as some shares in an insurance
company, and bonds of the United States, "in trust for the
advantage and behoof of" her daughter, Mary Ann Gibbons, and
directed that after the decease of the testatrix,
Page 136 U. S. 568
the trustee should
"cause the dividends of said stock and the interest of said
bonds, as they accrue, to be paid to my said daughter, Mary Ann
Gibbons, during her lifetime, without percentage of commission, or
diminution of principal. And in case of the death of the said Mary
Ann Gibbons, then the said stock, bonds, and income shall revert to
the estate of my said daughter, Jane Owen Mahon, without
encumbrance or impeachment of waste."
Upon the face of the will, it is manifest that the testatrix
used the word "dividends" as having the same scope and meaning as
"income" and "interest," and nothing more, and intended that the
plaintiff, as equitable legatee for life, should take the income,
and the income only, of the shares owned by the testatrix at the
time of her death, and that the whole capital of those shares,
unimpaired, should go to the defendant, as legatee in
remainder.
The admitted facts present the following state of things: the
accumulated earnings of the company were kept undivided, and
actually added to the capital of the corporation, by investing them
from time to time in its permanent works and plant until the value
of the works and plant amounted to $1,000,000; no owner of
particular shares, or of any interest therein, had the right to
compel the company to divide or apportion those earnings, and while
they remained so undivided and invested the capital stock of the
company was increased to the same amount by the act of Congress of
May 24, 1866. The greater part of the earnings in question had been
so invested before the making of the will and the death of the
testatrix in 1865, a still larger proportion before the passage of
the act of Congress of 1866, and the whole before the resolution of
the directors of November 1, 1868, under which the new shares were
issued to the defendant, and in which it was recited, in accordance
with the truth, that the construction account of the company
exceeded $1,000,000, and that its capital had been increased by act
of Congress to that amount, and it was therefore "resolved, that
the increased stock be awarded among the stockholders, share for
share, as they stood on the 1st of October, 1868."
Page 136 U. S. 569
To hold the plaintiff to be entitled to the whole of the new
shares issued to the defendant would be to allow the plaintiff the
exclusive benefit of earnings, the greater part of which had
accrued and had been invested by the company as capital before her
interest began, and would be contrary to all the authorities. To
award to her a proportion of those shares, based upon an account of
how much of those earnings actually accrued after the death of the
testatrix, would be to substitute the estimate of the court for the
discretion of the corporation, lawfully exercised through its
directors, and would be open to the practical inconveniences
already stated.
The resolution is clearly an apportionment of the new shares as
representing capital, and not a distribution or division of income.
As well observed by Mr. Justice James, delivering the opinion of
the court below:
"Certificates of stock are simply the representative of the
interest which the stockholder has in the capital of the
corporation. Before the issue of these two hundred and eighty new
shares, this trustee held precisely the same interest in this
increased plant in the capital of the corporation that she held
afterwards. She merely had a new representative of an interest that
she already owned, and which was not increased by the issue of the
new shares. A dividend is something with which the corporation
parts, but it parted with nothing in issuing this new stock. It
simply gave a new evidence of ownership which already existed. They
were not in any sense, therefore, dividends for which this trustee
had to account to the
cestui que trust. She stood, after
the issue of the new shares, just as she had stood before, and the
trustee was obliged to treat them just as she did -- namely as a
part of the original, and to pay the dividends to the
cestui
que trust."
4 Mackey 136.
Decree affirmed.
MR. JUSTICE BREWER, not having been a member of the Court when
this case was argued, took no part in the decision.