Adair v. Sharp, Exr. and Trustee

197 N.E. 399, 49 Ohio App. 507, 3 Ohio Op. 369, 18 Ohio Law. Abs. 123, 1934 Ohio App. LEXIS 224
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 26, 1934
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 197 N.E. 399 (Adair v. Sharp, Exr. and Trustee) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Adair v. Sharp, Exr. and Trustee, 197 N.E. 399, 49 Ohio App. 507, 3 Ohio Op. 369, 18 Ohio Law. Abs. 123, 1934 Ohio App. LEXIS 224 (Ohio Ct. App. 1934).

Opinion

Barnes, J.

The above-entitled cause is now being determined on proceedings in error from the judgment of the Common Pleas Court of Franklin county, Ohio. The parties appear in the same order in this court as in the court- below.

Yery able and comprehensive briefs have been filed by the attorneys representing the respective parties.

Plaintiff, Mary Grace Adair, in her action sought to terminate a trust created under the last will and testament of her mother-in-law, Mary H. Adair. The will was probated in the Probate Court of Franklin county, *508 Ohio, in June, 1919. Plaintiff urged in her petition that she had acquired all the right, title and interest of all the beneficiaries; that all the beneficiaries were sui juris; that the continuation of the trust was unnecessary; that she had made demand upon the defendant trustee to turn over all property to her, and that he has refused so to do. The prayer of the petition is that the trust be terminated and the defendant be compelled to transfer and turn over to plaintiff any and all property remaining in his hands as such trustee.

The defendant trustee interposed a general demurrer, which was sustained, and the plaintiff not desiring to plead further the petition was dismissed at her costs.

• This is the final order from which plaintiff prosecutes error in this court.

The creation of the trust was under and by virtue of Item 8 of the last will and testament of Mary H. Adair, and reads as follows:

“Item 8. The proceeds from the sale of my real estate, the balance of my stock in The Hann & Adair Printing Company, my money in the Columbian Building and Loan Company, my stock in The Cochran & Pinkerton "Wholesale Grocery Company, of McConnelsville, Ohio, and all the residue of my estate I hereby give, devise and bequeath to Stephen A. Sharp, as trustee in trust for the following-purposes, to-wit:

“Said trustee shall invest and re-invest said money and property from time to time as he may see fit and best and the net income therefrom, or so much thereof as he thinks best, he shall give to Henry S. Adair and Mary Grace Adair, jointly or severally, or so much to each as he shall see fit, during their lives and to the survivor of them. My said trustee may give to them,, or either of them, so much of the said income as he* thinks they or he should have and the amount to be *509 given to them, or either of them is.to rest entirely with my said trustee. If it should become necessary in the judgment of my trustee to use a part or all of the principal of said trust property for the care, health, comfort or any other extraordinary necessity of either Henry S. Adair or Mary Grace Adair, he is hereby given power and authority to use such an amount of the principal as he thinks wise to use under the circumstances. At the death of the survivor of them, the property then remaining in the hands of my trustee shall be given by him to John Franklin Adair and Mary Carroll Adair, children of Henry S. Adair and Mary Grace Adair, share and share alike.”

Henry S. Adair was a son of the testatrix, and from the fact that no other child is mentioned in the will we may assume that he was the sole and only child surviving. Mary Grace Adair was a daughter-in-law of the testatrix and the wife of Henry S. Adair.

John Franklin Adair and Mary Carroll Adair are children of Henry S. and Mary Grace Adair. The two children, who were alleged to be sui juris, entered their appearance, waived summons, and admitted the transfer of their interest in the property to their mother, Mary Grace Adair, and consented to the transfer of the trust fund to her, as requested in her petition.

The petition also alleged that Henry S. Adair had assigned all his interest in the trust fund to the plaintiff, Mary Grace Adair.

In the answer filed by Henry S. Adair without the aid of an attorney, and also in the amended answer filed in this court, Henry S. Adair seeks to put in issue the legality of the transfer.

However, the only question submitted in this court is the sustaining of the general demurrer dismissing the petition in the court below.

Plaintiff in error’s position may be substantially *510 stated from the following quotation from 2 Perry on Trusts, 1561, Section 920:

“Although a trust may not have ceased by expiration of time, and although all its purposes may not have been accomplished, yet if all the parties who are or may be interested in the trust property are in existence, and sui juris, and if they all consent and agree thereto, and if there is no ultimate purpose requiring its continuance, courts of equity may decree the determination of a trust and the distribution of the trust fund among those entitled.”

The-brief also presents many cases from other jurisdictions in line with the above quotation. We also find cited the case of Gloyd v. Roff, 2 C. C., 253, 1 C. D., 472. This is an Ohio case claimed to be similar in its facts, and determinative of the instant ease. The syllabus-reads as follows:

“Where a testator, by his will, directed his executors to invest a specific fund, the income therefrom to be paid to the widow during her life and widowhood, and at her death the principal thereof to be paid to her two sons; and the sons, on both arriving at the age of maturity, executed under their hands and seals to the widow an assignment of all their interest and right in such fund, authorizing her thereby to receive, collect and use, and dispose of such fund in any manner she might see proper, there being no other parties having any interest in such fund; Held, a state of things having arisen not contemplated or provided for by the testator in his will, and the entire interest in the fund having vested in the widow, equity will declare the trust terminated and order the transfer of the fund over to her subject to the payment of all proper charges to the trustees.”

Counsel for defendant in error urge that the purpose of the trust has not been accomplished and that therefore it is requisite that the trust be continued. *511 This argument at once challenges the application of the quotation from Perry on Trusts, wherein there is presented as one of the items for the termination of the trust the clause “and if there is no ultimate purpose requiring its continuance.”

The ease of Gloyd v. Roff, supra, is distinguished in that in that case the instrument creating the trust directed the trustee to pay the entire income to the cestui que trust, whereas in the instant case discretion is vested in the trustee as to the amount to be paid to the beneficiaries.

It is further urged by counsel for defendant in error that Item 8 of the will of the testatrix under its language creates a spendthrift trust, and counsel then follow with a list of authorities holding that a spendthrift trust can not be terminated through court order.

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Bluebook (online)
197 N.E. 399, 49 Ohio App. 507, 3 Ohio Op. 369, 18 Ohio Law. Abs. 123, 1934 Ohio App. LEXIS 224, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/adair-v-sharp-exr-and-trustee-ohioctapp-1934.