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Do you know the method of closure? Is the company completely dissolved? How did you learn and what do you know about the company's having "gone under"?
I think whoever the Personal Representative was should have deposited the check and reissued checks to each of the heirs, leaving it up to them to decide how to address their share. Who was the Personal Representative (formerly known as Executor or Executrix) of the Will?
I don't understand how one of the siblings could think that reinvestment of the proceeds could yield more dividends if the company dissolved, although I assume that this sibling wasn't aware of the pending dissolution.
This is a long shot, but research how the company dissolved. If it was a Ch. 11 instead of direct dissolution, the "proceedings" for "rearrangement" might still be in process.
Contact the Trustee for the Ch. 11 bankruptcy proceedings and raise the issue. To the best of my knowledge Ch. 11 suits are filed in federal district courts, so you'd have to do a bit of digging by calling the court clerk.
If the company just shut down and disposed of all its assets, most likely any creditors had priority liens either through security agreements or UCCs, and they would be priority creditors, leaving little if anything for unsecured creditors like stockholder.
How did you find out about the dissolution of the company?
I'm really sorry to read about this situation; it must be frustrating, and it could have been avoided.