Goetz's Estate
Goetz's Estate
Opinion of the Court
Opinion by
These two appeals will be disposed of together. The same questions are raised by each and the assignments of error are identical. It is not necessary that we decide whether the Ferdinand Goetz Sons’ Company has any standing as an appellant, as the appeal of Frederick W. Goetz, executor, must be sustained.
What the court had before it in adjudicating the account of the executors of Ferdinand Goetz, deceased, was his estate^ and the parties before it were his executors, his widow and children; but, in awarding to the widow what it found to be the net income of the estate of the testator, it undertoolrto find what the net profits of the Ferdinand Goetz Sons’ Company, a corporation, had amounted to from November 12, 1904, to January 1, 1910, and, after fixing the compensation to be paid out of them to the business manager of that corporation,
How are corporate profits to be ascertained and by whom are they to be distributed? Surely not by an Orphans’ Court, to which no living manufacturing company is ever answerable for the management of its affairs, and whose jurisdiction and supervisory powers do not extend to representatives of such a dead corporation. The affairs of a corporation are managed by a board of directors, who, in the first instance, are to determine whether profits have been earned and whether, in their discretion, they ought to be divided among the shareholders; and, if such discretion is abused, the remedy for its correction is not to be found in an Orphans’ Court.
Until a dividend of the profits of a corporation has been declared by its board of directors, a stockholder has no legal title to any interest in them. The shares of stock which he holds represent only a right to participate in the profits, and that right is to be enforced ordinarily only after a dividend of the profits has been
If profits have been earned by the Ferdinand Goetz’ Sons’ Company, to which the widow of the testator is entitled through dividends paid, or to be paid, to his executors, she will receive them; and, if William C. Bill-man is entitled to compensation for his services as business manager of the corporation, he has his remedy to compel it to pay him. Neither he nor Mrs. Goetz will be prejudiced by reversing the decree which the court below was powerless to make.
The first, second, thirteenth and fourteenth assignments of error filed in the appeal of Frederick W. Goetz, Executor, are sustained, and the decree of the court below, in surcharging the accountants with profits of the Ferdinand Goetz Sons’ Company, and in directing that William C. Billman be paid out of the same, as compen
Reference
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- Syllabus
- Jurisdiction — Tower over corporations — Continuance of decedent’s business. 1. Where the executors of an estate with the consent of the beneficiaries under the will organize a corporation for the purpose of continuing the testator’s business, and assign and transfer to the corporation the property of the estate, and thereafter the corporation makes large profits, the Orphans’ Court has no jurisdiction in auditing the account of the executors, to ascertain and distribute the profit made by the company; nor has it power to fix the compensation of one of the executors who was the business manager of the corporation, for his services as such. • 2. In such a case the estate, even as the holder of all of the stock, would not be the owner of the corporation, but only of the shares of its capital stock, which constitute a species of property entirely distinct from the corporate property. The directors of the corporation alone have the power to determine whether profits have been earned, and if earned whether they should be divided among the shareholders; and to the directors alone is entrusted the power of fixing the compensation of the officers and employees of the corporation. Over such powers the Orphans’ Court has no supervision.