King Estate

This is the third,1 hopefully the last, stage in the adjudication of the rights of the parties in this controversy.

Willis L. King died in 1936 having created in his will a trust for his widowed daughter-in-law for life with remainder to her three sons. Among the original assets of the trust estate were 778 shares of 7% cumulative preferred stock, and 783 shares of common stock, of the Jones Laughlin Steel Corporation. In 1937 the trustee sold 300 of the latter shares leaving 483 shares of common in the trust. At the time of testator's death unpaid dividends on the preferred shares had accrued to the extent of $26.25 per share; by the year 1941 this arrearage had increased to $46.25 per share. While the Jones Laughlin Corporation had a book surplus far in excess of the amount that would have been required to pay those dividends its assets apparently were not sufficiently liquid for that purpose, and, as no dividend could be declared on the common stock until the arrears on the preferred stock had been paid, the corporation resorted — as others have done under similar circumstances2 — to a method by which the potential rights of the preferred stockholders could be satisfied and the way cleared for the declaration of dividends on the common stock. The device thus adopted was that of a merger between the Jones Laughlin Corporation and two of its wholly owned subsidiaries, with a resulting recapitalization. There was issued new 5% cumulative preferred stock in exchange for the old preferred on a share for share basis, and there was given in exchange for each share of the old common of the par *Page 632 value of $100 one share of new common of no par value. Those exchanges do not enter into or affect the problem with which we are here concerned, but the recapitalization further involved a distribution of 1 1/4 shares of the new common stock for each share of the old preferred. As a result the King Estate, in addition to 778 shares of new preferred and 483 shares of new common in exchange for its old holdings, received 972 1/2 shares of new common stock (778 X 1 1/4), which, three years later, the trustee sold3 in the market for $20,809.93 and it is the proper apportionment of those proceeds between the life tenant and the remaindermen which is the problem presently presented. Such apportionment was ordered by the decree of this Court entered October 1, 1946 (King Estate, 355 Pa. 64, 70,48 A.2d 858, 862), the record being then remitted to the court below for that purpose. In pursuance of that decree an order was made by Judge BOYLE of the Orphans' Court of Allegheny County awarding to the life tenant the sum of $19,611.01 and to the trustee, to be held for the remaindermen, the sum of $1,198.92. Exceptions having been filed to that order, it was reversed by the court en banc in an opinion by Judge COX, President Judge TRIMBLE concurring and Judge BOYLE dissenting, and the entire sum of $20,809.93 was awarded to the trustee to be held for the remainderman, — none of it to the life tenant. The life tenant now appeals from that decision.

While it cannot be said, of course, that the additional common stock distributed by the Jones Laughlin Corporation in this instance constituted a stock dividend in the ordinary sense of that term, it was issued in order to compensate the preferred stockholders for the effective cancellation of their right to receive the accumulated *Page 633 unpaid dividends on their stock, and the reasons which call for an apportionment in the case of an actual stock dividend apply equally to a situation such as that here presented, for here too a trust estate has become the recipient of a large number of additional shares of stock and the same problem must therefore be met as to who, life tenant or remaindermen, is entitled to that accretion. Since this stock was given, if not in express payment of accumulated arrears of dividends, at least in lieu of, or compensation for, the surrender of the right to receive such dividends, it would naturally result that the life tenant is entitled to the stock thus acquired and therefore to the proceeds of its sale, — a right subordinated, however, as in every case where the doctrine of apportionment applies, to the necessity of maintaining the intact value of the stock held by the Estate in the Jones Laughlin Corporation as it existed at the time of testator's death. The problem therefore resolves itself into the simple question:4 What proportion of the 972 additional shares received by the trust estate would it have been necessary to set aside to corpus in order to preserve the intact value of the stock of the Jones Laughlin Corporation held by the Estate? Of course the merger did not in any way impair the intact value of the preferred stock, which remained in the amount of $100 per share, but, due to the fact that the assets of the corporation were now represented by a greater number of shares of common stock, there obviously resulted an impairment of the intact value of the 483 shares of common stock held by the Estate, and that impairment must be taken into account since all the stock owned by the Estate in the Jones Laughlin Corporation must be regarded for this purpose as a single, integrated investment. At the time of testator's death the intact value *Page 634 of the common stock was admittedly $158.80 a share, making a total value of the 483 shares of $76,700.40. The award of 1 1/4 shares of common stock for each share of preferred amounted to a total issue by the corporation of 733,920 new shares, which, added to the original number of shares of common stock of the corporation of 576,320, made a new total of common stock outstanding-of 1,310,240 shares. The book value of the assets of the corporation at the time of the merger, after deducting the par value of the outstanding preferred stock, amounted to $116,176,053, and the division of that amount by the 1,310,240 shares shows that the book value of each share of common stock after the merger was $88.67. What then was the situation of the Estate as the result of the merger? Instead of holding 483 shares of common stock the intact or book value of which was $76,700.40, it now held 1455 shares (483 + 972) of a book value of $88.67 per share or a total of $129,014.85. Thus, by the merger, the Estate, due to the fact that it held a large block of preferred stock and, at that time, a much smaller holding of common stock, profited in the total value of its stock in the Jones Laughlin Corporation to the extent of $52,314.45. It is therefore obvious that, at $88.67 per share, the Estate would have had to own, in order to preserve the intact value of its common stock, only 865 shares of the new common ($76,700.40 ÷ $88.67), and consequently had to retain for corpus, out of the 972 new shares it received, only 382 shares in addition to the 483 shares already held by it (382 + 483 = 865); by the same token, the remaining 590 of the new shares represented the portion of the stock received which was not required to maintain intact value and was therefore clearly allocable to the life tenant. The result is that the fund of $20,809.93 received from the sale of the 972 shares must be apportioned on that basis, namely, 382/972 or $8,178.03 to corpus and 590/972 or $12,631.90 to the life tenant. Such a method of apportionment *Page 635 is prescribed in all of our adjudicated cases; for example:Earp's Appeal, 28 Pa. 368; Flaccus's Estate, 283 Pa. 185,129 A. 74; Mallory's Estate, 285 Pa. 186, 131 A. 714; Dickinson'sEstate, 285 Pa. 449, 132 A. 352; Flinn's Estate, 320 Pa. 15,25, 181 A. 492, 496, 497; Daily's Estate, 323 Pa. 42, 48,186 A. 754, 757; Barnes' Estate, 338 Pa. 555, 12 A.2d 912. Such cases as Nirdlinger's Estate, 290 Pa. 457, 139 A. 200; andWaterhouse's Estate, 308 Pa. 422, 162 A. 295, have here no relevancy whatever, since they did not deal with a receipt by the trust estate of any additional stock, but merely with a sale by the trustee of stock already held by it, and the question of apportionment was therefore concerned only with the excess obtained in such sale over the original intact value depending upon whether or not such excess was due to an accumulated surplus from the earnings of the corporation.

The adjudication by Judge BOYLE erred in this — that it was based only on a consideration of the impairment of the intact value of the common stock as between the time of the testator's death and the time immediately prior to, instead of immediately after, the merger, thus wholly ignoring the real question as to the impairment resulting from the merger itself. On the other hand, the decision of the court en banc erred because it was based on the mistaken conception that the intact value of the stock had to be maintained, not by the book value of the additional stock awarded to the Estate, but by the sale price of the stock when sold by the trustee three years after the merger. The necessity of preserving intact value does not mean a preservation in the sense of the estate's actually obtaining the amount of that intact value in cash, but only a preservation of its book value; intact value and market value are, for this purpose, wholly unrelated; many stocks sell on the market for less than one-tenth of their book values, while other *Page 636 stocks, especially if speculative in nature, sell for many times their book values; the value of a stock in the market depends upon a myriad of factors other than the actual inventory value of the company's assets as reflected in the books of the corporation. Thus, while the intact value of the Jones Laughlin common stock at the time of testator's death was $158.80 a share, the stock had nothing like that value in cash on the market, and that a like discrepancy between market value and book value existed when the stock was sold is obvious from the fact that the price realized of $21.67 per share was far less than the book value at that time.

In Moss's Appeal, 83 Pa. 264, this Court said (pp. 270, 271): "The fallacy of this theory consists in the fact of estimating the one hundred and forty shares, not at their actual value at the time of the transaction, but at their market value, three years afterwards. A more uncertain rule could not well be imagined. It would make the rights of the parties depend upon the condition of the stock market, which is as variable as the tides, without their regularity. Market values are well enough upon a question of distribution, where the parties are about to realize; but upon a question of values between life tenants and remaindermen, a judicial decree should go down through the shifting sands of the stock market until it reaches the solid rock of actual values. The application of any other rule might work serious injustice. It is well known that within the last year the stock of more than one large corporation has varied in price over one hundred per cent. Even if the market value were a proper test, why take it three years after the transaction occurred? Why not one year, two years, or any other time? The tenant for life and remaindermen might well differ as to the precise day which should fix the market value, as the bulls or the bears might happen to be in the ascendant. . . . In such a case as this, the *Page 637 solemn judgment of a court upon a question of values, defining the rights of parties in the future, must have a more secure foundation. The date at which the value of this stock must be estimated is the time when the transaction took place. Its actual value then was $170 per share. This valuation is based, not upon the caprice of the market, but upon actual assets in the hands of the company."

In Smith's Estate, 140 Pa. 344, 21 A. 438, Judge PENROSE in the Orphans' Court of Philadelphia said (p. 348): "Before the issue of the new stock, the assets of the company, after payment of liabilities, were divisible among the holders of fifteen thousand shares of stock; after the issue, the same assets became divisible among the holders of twenty thousand shares. The effect of the transaction, therefore, was simply to change the shares by an increase of number, with a corresponding lessening of intrinsic value. It is of no importance, if it be the fact, that the market price of the stock was not affected by the new issue. As between tenant for life and remainderman, as was said in Moss's App., 83 Pa. 271, the question of value is to be determined, not by the fluctuations of the stock market, but by the actual assets held by the corporation making the stock dividend." Our own Court, in affirming Judge PENROSE'S decision, said (p. 357, A. p. 440): "It is true the market value of the shares was not greatly, if any, impaired by the increase [in the number of shares], but the question of value is to be determined, not by fluctuations of the stock market, but by the actual assets held by the corporation: Moss's Appeal, supra; Biddle's Appeal, supra. It is the intrinsic value of the shares, to be ascertained from the amount and value of the assets at the death of the testator, and at the time of the increase of the stock, which governs in the apportionment of the surplus profits." *Page 638

To the same effect is Stokes' Estate, No. 1, 240 Pa. 277,285, 87 A. 971, 974, and Stokes' Estate, No. 2, 240 Pa. 288,87 A. 975. See also 33 Am. Jur. 917, § 393, footnote 17, and 33 Am. Jur. 920, § 395.

The decree of the court below is reversed, and the record is remitted with direction to award $8,178.03 of the fund for distribution to the trustee to be held for the remaindermen, and $12,631.90 to the life tenant; costs to be paid out of the estate.

1 King Estate, 349 Pa. 27, 36 A.2d 504; King Estate, 355 Pa. 64,48 A.2d 858.

2 For example, the Pittsburgh Crucible Steel Company, as to which see Fisher's Estate, 344 Pa. 607, 26 A.2d 192.

3 More accurately, the trustee sold the 1/2 share immediately, and it was the remaining 972 shares which three years later realized the sum of $20,809.93.

4 The merger having antedated the enactment of the Uniform Principal and Income Act of May 3, 1945, P. L. 416, the provisions of that statute do not apply here.