Cleveland Clinic Foundation v. Humphrys

97 F.2d 849, 121 A.L.R. 163, 1938 U.S. App. LEXIS 3879
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedJuly 2, 1938
Docket7694
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 97 F.2d 849 (Cleveland Clinic Foundation v. Humphrys) 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
Cleveland Clinic Foundation v. Humphrys, 97 F.2d 849, 121 A.L.R. 163, 1938 U.S. App. LEXIS 3879 (6th Cir. 1938).

Opinion

HAMILTON, Circuit Judge.

Appellants and appellee, the Central National Bank of Cleveland, Trustee, were defendants below and appellee, Ethel Tod Humphrys, was plaintiff, and they will thus be referred to in this opinion.

This controversy relates to an equitable claim of the plaintiff against a trust created by her for the benefit of her daughter, Sarah Tod McBride and to the ownership and control of income arising from a trust created by the will of J. H. McBride, lifelong resident of Cleveland, Ohio, who died August 2, 1913. He executed his will in 1910 and at that time had four living children. A son, Herbert McBride, had died in 1907, leaving the plaintiff, his widow, and two infant- daughters, Sarah Tod McBride and Elizabeth McBride. The elder McBride, by his will, divided his residuary estate into five equal parts, giving to each of his four living children one part and leaving the other in trust to his grandchildren, the daughters of Herbert.

The clause of his will establishing the trust is as follows:

“Item III: I hereby direct that the rest and residue of my estate, real, personal and mixed, be divided into five equal parts, and I give, devise and bequeath those equal parts to my beloved children as follows, to-wit:
“One of said equal parts to Grace E. Crile;
“One of said equal parts to Malcolm Lee McBride;
“One of said equal parts to Edith L. Sherman;
“One of said equal parts to Dcftiald McBride, and their heirs, and the remaining equal part to Malcolm Lee McBride, Donald McBride and George W. Crile, for my beloved granddaughters, Sarah Tod McBride and Elizabeth McBride, the daughters of my deceased son, Herbert McBride, in trust, nevertheless, upon the following terms and conditions, to-wit:
“1st. Said share shall be held for the equal benefit of my said granddaughters until they shall respectively arrive at the age of twenty-five (25) years, and when the first of said granddaughters so arrives at the age of twenty-five years, the then existing trust estate shall be divided into two equal parts, and one part thereof, with all accumulations thereon, transferred to said granddaughter, and the remaining part held until said other granddaughter arrives at the age of twenty-five years, when said remaining part, with all accumulations thereon, shall be transferred to her. Until my said granddaughters shall so arrive at the age of twenty-five years, such portion or all of the net annual income derived from said trust estate as their mother, Ethel Tod McBride, desires, shall be paid to her. to be expended by her according'to her own judgment; and in the event of her decease prior to the termination of said trust estate, I hereby authorize and empower my said Trustees, and their successors, in their discretion, to expend for the maintenance and education of my said granddaughters, *853 or either of them, any portion or all of said net annual income; and if, in any year, any portion of said net annual income he not paid to the said Ethel Tod McBride or expended by my said Trustees or their successors as hereinbefore provided, such portion thereof shall, each year, be added to and become part of the principal of said trust estate.
“2nd. In the event of the decease of either of said granddaughters without issue, the survivor thereof shall be entitled to all of said net annual income, and upon the arrival of said survivor at the age of twenty-five years, the then existing entire trust estate shall be transferred to said survivor.
“3rd. The issue of a deceased granddaughter shall be entitled to the share .of said decedent, which said share shall be transferred to the legal representatives of said issue at the time said decedent would have been entitled to the same; and while said share is so held in trust,, the income therefrom may be paid, in the discretion of my said Trustees and their successors, for the maintenance and editcatiou of said issue, as provided by the terms hereof for said decedent.
“4th. In the event of the death of both of said granddaughters without issue and before arriving at the age of twenty-five years, I hereby direct that said trust estate shall be terminated and distributed, share and share alike, to my children, Grace E. Crile, Malcolm Lee McBride, Edith L. Sherman and Donald McBride, and their heirs.”

The trustees named in the will qualified and served until the death of Donald McBride, who was succeeded by appellee, Central National Bank of Cleveland.

Elizabeth McBride died at the age of fifteen, and when Sarah Tod McBride reached her twenty-fifth birthday the corpus of the McBride trust was conveyed to her and that trust terminated.

At the time the testator made his will, he knew the plaintiff had an annual income sufficient to maintain herself and her children luxuriously and her income continued throughout the period of the trust. Shortly after his death, plaintiff established a comfortable home for herself and daughters in New York and thereafter maintained and educated them in the manner and according to the standards to which they had been accustomed, using her own income.

On February 15, 1916, the contingent remaindermen, under the trust, transferred all of their present or future interest in its accumulated income to the plaintiff and in April, 1916, she made formal demand upon the trustees for payment to her of its annual income. On May 5, 1916, the trustees appointed the Superior Savings Bank & Trust Company, hereafter called the Bank, predecessor of the defendant, the Central Union National Bank, their agent for safekeeping and administration of the trust. It was directed by the trustees to pay to the plaintiff all the income until otherwise notified in writing by them. On May 9, 1916, the Bank advised the plaintiff of the agency agreement and that it had transferred all the income accruing to the estate from October 25, 1915, to May 1, 1916, to an account separate from the estate and called it “The Ethel Tod McBride Trust” and on May 24, 1916, this agreement was ratified and approved by the plaintiff but was modified by her in December, 1916 and March, 1918.

On June 30, 1920, plaintiff converted the agency agreement into a formal trust and in its preamble referred to the following facts:

1. The death of her daughter, Elizabeth, April 2, 1920.

2. That she (plaintiff) was authorized to expend all or any part of the net annual income derived from the McBride trust as she chose.

3. That instead of expending the income as authorized under the McBride trust, she had expended her own funds for the education and support of her daughters and had caused the income arising from the trust to accumulate in a separate account known as the “Ethel Tod McBride Trust.”

4. That she proposed to continue the expenditure of her funds for the education and support of her daughter, Sarah, and to permit the income from the J. H. McBride trust to accumulate as it had theretofore.

In the sixth paragraph she named the beneficiaries and stated the life and termination of the trust, which reads as follows :

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Bluebook (online)
97 F.2d 849, 121 A.L.R. 163, 1938 U.S. App. LEXIS 3879, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cleveland-clinic-foundation-v-humphrys-ca6-1938.