Central Trust Co. v. McCarthy

57 N.E.2d 126, 73 Ohio App. 431, 40 Ohio Law. Abs. 526, 29 Ohio Op. 123, 1943 Ohio App. LEXIS 606
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 22, 1943
Docket6318
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 57 N.E.2d 126 (Central Trust Co. v. McCarthy) 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
Central Trust Co. v. McCarthy, 57 N.E.2d 126, 73 Ohio App. 431, 40 Ohio Law. Abs. 526, 29 Ohio Op. 123, 1943 Ohio App. LEXIS 606 (Ohio Ct. App. 1943).

Opinion

OPINION

By MATTHEWS, J.

This is an action for a declaratory judgment, determining the legal status of, and construing the trust instrument under which the plaintiff acts. The executor of the settlor, while denying the validity of the trust instrument and the legal effect of its provisions, nevertheless joins in the prayer for a declaration on the subject. All the other defendants in one way or another support the position of the plaintiff. The case comes to this Court on appeal on questions of law.

On June 6th, 1932, Lucy A. Smith, owning an undivided 30/96th, and seven other co-tenants, conveyed to The Central Trust Company by general warranty deed the absolute fee simple title to nineteen parcels of real estate. This deed was duly recorded, thereby vesting in The Central Trust Company the complete title of record. On the same day, a trust agreement was entered into between the grantee and the grantors, setting forth the terms under which the grantee held the property and the rights of the grantors as beneficiaries of the trust.

The trust agreement provided that the trustee should collect the rentals and other income and pay the net income to the grantors quarterly in proportion to their respective interests during their respective lives, and in the event any part should be sold or exchanged the cash and readily marketable securities should be distributed. Provision was made for making reports and for withholding enough to pay the expenses of a prudent management and preservation of the property.

By Paragraph 4 it was provided that:

“On the death of any Grantor the payments, transfers and conveyances that would have been made to said Grantor, *529 had he or she been alive, provided said Grantor has not previously transferred his interest therein, shall be made to the person or persons named to receive the sanie by valid last will and testament or codicil thereto of the deceased Grantor, and in default thereof to the residuary devisee or devisees named in the valid last will and testament or codicil thereto of said deceased Grantor, and in default thereof to the heirs at law of said deceased Grantor, determined as of the time of his or her death according to the statutes of the State of Ohio then in force.”

And further provision was made for intestacy, as follows:

“If no .valid last will or testament is offered for probate in a court having jurisdiction at the residence of the Grantor within six (6) months after the death of the Grantor, or within one (1) month after a previous will has been finally adjudicated invalid, then the Trustee shall be entitled to distribute to the heirs of such decedent.”

By subsequent paragraphs, it was provided that:

“The interest of any devisee, residuary devisee and/or heir shall be a vested interest from the time of the death of the Grantor under whom he claims.

“This trust shall terminate either when all the property in trust has been reduced to cash and/or readily marketable securities and the cash and/or readily marketable securities distributed to the persons entitled thereto, or-at the expiration of twenty-one (21) years from the date of the death of the last survivor of the Grantors, whichever event occurs first. This trust may be altered, modified or revoked by directions in writing delivered to the Trustee and signed by all of the persons at that time the owners of equitable interests in the trust, and guardians shall have the right to sign such instruments for their respective wards; but no alteration or modification of this trust shall be effective unless and until accepted in writing by the Trustee. Whatever property is in the hands of the Trustee on the date of termination of the trust shall be distributed by appropriate payment, assignment, conveyance or other method of transfer to the persons entitled thereto.

*530 “The entire equitable interest of any Grantor or other person in the trust property, or any part thereof, may be transferred by the owner thereof by appropriate instrument executed with the formality required for the transfer of any interest in real estate in Ohio, and such transfer shall, if so intended, be free of the contingent interest of Grantor’s devisees or heirs, and any transferee shall have the power similarly to convey a fee simple equitable interest.”

“The Trustee shall have full and continuing power and authority, in its discretion, to insure, improve, sell, transfer, exchange, convey, with or without warranty; to lease, at will, perpetually or for a term of years, with or without privilege of purchase; to mortgage or otherwise encumber; the whole or any part of the property, real or personal, at any time held in trust, all without notice, appraisement, valuation or court order at public or private sale, for such price or prices and upon such terms and conditions as to payment or otherwise as to it may seem advisable; ánd in connection with exchanges it may assume mortgages or other liens or encumbrances, as Trustee. It shall also have full and continuing power and authority to manage the real estate and improvements thereon as it sees fit, to make alterations, repairs and improvements thereon, to raze and demolish buildings or other improvements, or any part thereof, and in all other respects to deal with said property as though it were the sole owner thereof.”

“The Trustee shall have the exclusive right to manage and control the trust estate as it may deem for the best interests of the Grantors or their transferees, free from all control by the Grantors or their transferees, as fully and to the same extent as if the Trustee were the sole owner thereof, and shall not be subject to any obligations to the Grantors or their transferees other than such as are expressly assumed hereunder or are imposed upon it by law.”

The grantors for themselves and their transferees waived all right to partition.

There are many other provisions whereby the trustee is given full power and protection in the exercise of such power, and for compensation for.its services.

The trustee proceeded to administer said trust, collected the rent, managed the property, sold some tracts and otherwise exercised the power conferred without let or hindrance during the lifetime of Lucy A. Smith. She died on August 12th, 1938, *531 leaving a will which was duly probated on September 3rd, 1938, and Peter J. McCarthy, Sr., and another who has since died, wére appointed executors. The other grantors are still living.

By her will, Lucy A. Smith provided that:

“I give devise and bequeath to Mr. Peter J. McCarthy, Sr. my friend and legal adviser together with some one the Lincoln National Bank of Cincinnati, Ohio may appoint, to take possession of my home, 3054 Lischer Ave., Westwood and all my property both Real and Personal, and I now hereby appoint them both as Executors of my Estate, without Bond, empowering them to deal with everything, both Real and Personal in which I am interested, with full power, and authority to sell any, and all Real Estate according to their best judgment.”

She then gave specific articles of personal property located in her home on Lischer Avenue, Cincinnati Ohio, to various friends and relatives.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
57 N.E.2d 126, 73 Ohio App. 431, 40 Ohio Law. Abs. 526, 29 Ohio Op. 123, 1943 Ohio App. LEXIS 606, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/central-trust-co-v-mccarthy-ohioctapp-1943.