City Nat. Bank v. Slocum

272 F. 11, 1921 U.S. App. LEXIS 1579
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedApril 15, 1921
DocketNos. 3442-3444
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 272 F. 11 (City Nat. Bank v. Slocum) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City Nat. Bank v. Slocum, 272 F. 11, 1921 U.S. App. LEXIS 1579 (6th Cir. 1921).

Opinion

DENISON, Circuit Judge.

John Joy Halliday resided upon a Southern Ohio farm and there carried on an extensive creamery business, and had become largely indebted, the Delaware National Bank being his chief creditor. His mother, Annie Joy Halliday, lived with him and had indorsed many of his notes. In November, 1916, the mother and son were severally adjudicated bankrupt, and Mr. Slocum was made trustee of each estate. He filed a bill in the court below against the bankrupts, attacking, as a preference, a mortgage covering the farm, which the mother and the son had given to the bank within the four months period. In the same bill he set up that the bankrupts’ title to tlie farm had come from Mr. Halliday’s grandfather, Thomas Joy, and alleged that others of the latter’s descendants or next of kin were claiming title adverse to or supplementary to that of the bankrupts, and prayed not only to set aside the preference, but to have these clouds removed from the title of the bankrupts. He also filed a separate bill in behalf of the mother’s estate against the bank, alleging that a $10,000 cash payment to it and the giving of a pledge of certain [14]*14stocks had been preferences, and asking to have these vacated and the money and stocks restored to the estate. • There were extensive and complicated pleadings, but both cases were finally heard together in the court below. It was adjudged that the bankrupts had held the entire legal and equitable title to the farm, that the mortgage on the farm was a forbidden preference and should be canceled, and that the $10,000 payment had been preferential and must be refunded. The pledge of stocks is not mentioned in the decree, but apparently the trustee abandoned his attack upon it. From these decrees there are appeals: First, by the minor children of John Joy Halliday, who. claimed to own the fee to the farm; second, by the City National Bank of Columbus, which was the purchaser and owner of the preferential farm mortgage; and, third, by the Delaware National Bank, which was ordered to refund the $10,000 payment. The detailed facts are so complex that they can be stated better in connection with the discussion of the separate questions.

An inquiry into the title to the farm involves the original owner, Thomas F. Joy, his widow, Bettie Ann Joy, who survived him many „years, their .daughter, Annie Joy Halliday, her son, John Joy Halliday, and his three children, Ruth, Anna, and Elizabeth Halliday. To avoid confusion in names, arid for convenience, these parties will be hereafter referred to as the grandfather, the grandmother, the mother, Halliday, and the children. The title comes through, or is affected by, the successive wills of the grandfather and the grandmother. We think it more logical to determine, first, the effect of the grandmother’s will. Whether she was disposing of her own estate or whether executing a power or a trust is not important to this branch of. the inquiry. Her will was executed May 3, 1890, and was admitted to-probate in Delaware county August 28, 1916. The substantial part of the will, including the interlineation and without regard to the alleged erasure, is as follows:

“I. X give and bequeath to my beloved daughter, Anna J. Halliday, all the-personal property of every description which may be in my possession at the-time of my death.
“II. The use & control of the real estate I give & bequeath to my daughter Anna during her natural life.
“III. Should my grandson, Joy Halliday, then be living, I give & bequeath to him in trust for the heirs of his body all the real estate of which I may be-possessed at the time of my decease.
“IV. In case my grandson should die v#ithout issue, I give & bequeath one-half of all my real estate to the Ohio Wesleyan University of Delaware, O. The other half I desire should be divided among the brother and sisters of my beloved husband or their children.”

The question which we must decide, as to what we ought to treat as the contents of the will, arises under paragraph III. When the‘will was first written, the phrase in question read “bequeath to him •& the heirs of his body.” At some time or times the words “in trust for” had been written in the form of an interlineation extending diagonally both below and above the line, and across and largely covering up-the an ink line had been drawn through the words “in trust for,” the line being broken so as to be separate for each word, and a pencil [15]*15line had been drawn through the words “the heirs of his body.” The will therefore may be read, according as attention is or is not paid to these indications of change, in three different ways (all subject to the mother’s life estate): (1) “To him and the heirs of his body”; (2) “to him in trust for the heirs of his body;” (3) “to him.” The first form, it is agreed, would, under the laws of,Ohio, create an estate in fee tail, giving a life estate to him and remainder to his children. The parties also agree that the second form would give him no beneficial interest. The third form, it is said, would give him the fee, although that will call for attention later.

[1, 2] The court below had no probate jurisdiction. It might construe a will, but it could not determine the contents. That power of determination rested solely with the court which admitted the will to probate; but the decree of that court, like every contract or decree which forms the basis of rights asserted in another court, must be examined and construed to determine its force and effect, if there is room for construction. This probate order, seen in the light of admitted surrounding facts, at once indicates an ambiguity. As the will was filed for probate, it was in the condition which has been described; that is to say, the words “in trust for” were interlined in place of the an ink line was dravm through these three words, and a pencil line drawn through the words “heirs of his body.” The order recited that the matter came on to be heard on the petition to admit to probate and record a will “heretofore filed in this court therefor,” that notice had been given, and that the subscribing witnesses had testified to “the due execution and attestation of said will,” and proceeded:

"Whereupon the court fmils that the aforesaid instrument of writing is the last will and testament of the said Lettie A. Joy, deceased. - * * It is therefore by the court ordered that the said will be admitted to probate, and that it * * * bo entered of record in this court.”

Thereupon the will was entered at length upon the court records; and its condition, as above stated, was in all details reproduced upon the record, except for the and except for the distinction between an ink line and a pencil line; that is to say, the clause was first written “to him in trust for the heirs of his body,” and then an ink line was drawn through the words “in trust for the heirs of his body.” It was doubtless intended thus to find that the will at the testatrix’s death, and as left by her, was in the condition so reproduced; but was it the. intention of the probate proceeding, taken altogether, to declare that these words had been erased before the will was executed and so were no part of it, or rather that these words were then present and thus formed a part of the effective will ? Neither intent is inconsistent with what was done. The drawing of the lines through the specified words as written upon the record tends to show that they were not to be considered as present in the instrument recorded.

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Bluebook (online)
272 F. 11, 1921 U.S. App. LEXIS 1579, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-nat-bank-v-slocum-ca6-1921.