Bosler, Trustee v. Sanderson, Trustee

74 N.E.2d 113, 81 Ohio App. 35, 49 Ohio Law. Abs. 321, 36 Ohio Op. 371, 1947 Ohio App. LEXIS 630
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 20, 1947
Docket1923
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 74 N.E.2d 113 (Bosler, Trustee v. Sanderson, 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
Bosler, Trustee v. Sanderson, Trustee, 74 N.E.2d 113, 81 Ohio App. 35, 49 Ohio Law. Abs. 321, 36 Ohio Op. 371, 1947 Ohio App. LEXIS 630 (Ohio Ct. App. 1947).

Opinion

OPINION

By MILLER, J.

This is an appeal on questions of law from the Court of Common Pleas of Montgomery County, Ohio. Edwin Best Bosler, plaintiff-appellee, as one of three trustees under a deed of trust, sought a declaratory judgment of the invalidity of a purported lease of real estate entered into in the year 1942, upon thé ground that the two co-trustees could not exercise *322 the power to lease conferred jointly upon all three trustees by the trust deed. Joined as defendants were his two co-trustees, the grantors of the trust deed, all living beneficiaries under the trust deed, and the defendant-appellant, Sidney M. Netzorg, claimant under lease of trust real estate, executed in 1942 by the two co-trustees, but not by the plaintiff-appellee.

The defendant-appellant filed an amended answer and cross-petition and prayed that the trial court declare the purported lease valid. The trial court found in favor of the plaintiff-appellee, declared the lease invalid and dismissed the defendant-appellant’s cross-petition. Prom this judgment the defendant-appellant, Sidney M. Netzorg, prosecutes this appeal, all other parties defendant having failed either to perfect or to join in this appeal.

The petition contained the formal averments and the allegation that only two of the three surviving and successor trustees executed and delivered the lease and alleged verbatim the trust deed and the purported lease. The defendant-appellant admitted the trust deed and the purported lease entered into in 1942, and, in addition to the formal averments, that only two of the three surviving and successor trustees executed and delivered the purported lease. The various defenses consisted of a general denial, alleged the sufficiency of the signatures, the payment of rent and the acceptance of'the same by the trustees, and in so doing that the lease has been ratified by all the trustees, and that they are estopped from challenging the validity of the lease.

The amended cross-petition alleges breach of covenant and prays for damages.

The plaintiff-appellee’s amended reply pleads the statute of frauds.

The trust deed referred to in the petition, entered into on June 14, 1934, and in which the defendants, Ida Best Bosler, Etta Best Bishop and Florence Best Phillips, created an irrevocable trust, conveyed to the three co-trustees the real estate which is the subject of the lease. Each of the grantors, all sisters, named one of the original three co-trustees as a representative of her family group, and the trust deed expressly provides for the nomination of a successor trustee by the family group losing its representative by death, resignation or removal, making it mandatory that “* * * our trustees shall be so constituted and selected that each of the three family groups have a representative * * * .” The trust deed does not expressly empower,any less than all three co-trustees to act on behalf of the trust, but does expressly provide that the trustees *323 shall have the power to sell, lease, transfer or mortgage any part of said property. It expressly exonerates the trustees from “liability and responsibility to the beneficiaries” for the consequences of the trustees’ exercise of the powers conferred, if such powers are exercised in conjunction with the written consent of “* * * two of the grantors (two or more being alive) or * * * of the surviving grantor (two grantors being dead), * * *. Strangers dealing with the trustees need not see that such consent has been obtained and so far as such strangers are concerned, the acts of the trustees shall be final and conclusive.”

After providing that the trustees always shall be so con-' stituted and selected that each of the three family groups have a representative, the trust deed further provides:

«* * * The trustees herein named, together with any successors * * *, shall have the absolute and final right to deal with strangers to the trust and the strangers so dealing need not look behind the act of the trustee (s). And all instruments of conveyance or otherwise, affecting the trust property, properly signed and attested and acknowledged by the trustees shall be as good a conveyance as though signed, attested, and acknowledged by the grantors herein.”

The trust deed also provides that the proceeds of any sale • of the trust real estate shall be divided into three equal parts and shall “become three separate shares or estates,” and thereupon it

“* * * shall no longer be necessary for three trustees to administer the whole. On the contrary, we direct that * * * a trustee be selected by each family group to handle exclusively, the trust share belonging to that group. * * * The three trustees * * * shall deliver the three trust shares to the three trustees selected for the representative family shares and the receipt of such trustee shall be a complete acquittance and discharge of the obligation of the three trustees acting at such time for the whole estate.”

The purported lease referred to in the petition bears the date of May 23, 1942, and is for a term of 33 years. The annual rental throughout the entire period is $12,000.00 plus four per cent of the annual gross sales in excess of $300,000.00. This lease was never executed by the plaintiff-appellee or his mother' although they were mentioned therein, and in the signatory *324 clause lines were apparently reserved for their signatures.

After defining all three trustees as lessors it concludes as follows:

“Lessors guarantee that they have full and complete power and authority to make and execute this lease under the provisions of the trust agreement hereinbefore referred to.”

The record discloses that in November, 1936, all three co-trustees jointly with all three grantors, executed and delivered a lease of the trust real estate to Virginia Dare Stores, Inc., for a term of ten years from February 1, 1937, to January 31, 1947, with an option to the lessee to renew for an additional term of ten years. The annual rental under the lease was $12,000.00 for the first year and $15,000.00 thereafter for the next nine years, and $17,500.00 during the renewal term. The defendant-appellant executed this lease on behalf of the lessee as its president.

The Virginia Dare Stores, Inc., the lessee named in the 1936 lease, operated a store in the leased premises from February 1, 1937, to the end of 1938, thereafter going into bankruptcy and undergoing a reorganization, after which it was not an operating company. Thereafter several successive corporations were formed which were wholly owned subsidiaries of Virginia Dare Stores, Inc., and which conducted the business. The annual rental paid under the 1936 lease was $12,-000.00, although the lease called for more than this amount, and one year a lesser amount was paid.

In 1936 the defendant-appellant owned the controlling stock and was president of the Virginia Dare Stores, Inc., and continued to own such controlling stock interests. With the corporate lessee in default in rent under the 1936 lease and the lessee thereunder having ceased to be an operating company, the defendant-appellant endeavored in April, 1942, to negotiate a new lease.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
74 N.E.2d 113, 81 Ohio App. 35, 49 Ohio Law. Abs. 321, 36 Ohio Op. 371, 1947 Ohio App. LEXIS 630, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bosler-trustee-v-sanderson-trustee-ohioctapp-1947.