Cleveland Trust Co. v. Johnson

70 Ohio Law. Abs. 43
CourtCuyahoga County Probate Court
DecidedJuly 1, 1954
DocketNo. 477138
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 70 Ohio Law. Abs. 43 (Cleveland Trust Co. v. Johnson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Cuyahoga County Probate Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cleveland Trust Co. v. Johnson, 70 Ohio Law. Abs. 43 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1954).

Opinion

OPINION

By KINDER, J.

The Cleveland Trust Company as Successor Trustee under the will of Mary L. Johnson, brings this action for a declaratory judgment to construe certain provisions of such will and to determine questions said to exist as to the proper distribution of the trust estate thereby created.

The matter was heard by my predecessor, Judge Brewer, without final determination and is now before me upon a re-hearing or re-argument granted by him prior to his resignation.

Factually the case rests on testimony taken and exhibits offered at a hearing before Judge Brewer on April 9, 1953, a Stipulation of Facts (Court’s Exhibit 1) and certain additional testimony taken before me on December 21, 1953.

The case turns on the meaning and effect to be given to the last paragraph of Item VI of the will, which is as follows:

“Upon the death of the last survivor of my two sons above-named, this trust shall cease and determine and the entire amount of the principal thereof, together with all accumulations of income, shall be paid over by the Trustee to the then living issue of my children, including the issue of my deceased son, Malcolm B. Johnson, per capita and not per stirpes.”

David L. Johnson, the survivor of the testatrix’s two sons, died on October 7, 1951, and the estate became distributable. On that date there were living ten grandchildren and sixteen great-grandchildren of the testatrix. In this latter group is included William J. Cleveland, conceived prior to October 7, 1951, but born on November 23, 1951.

The question presented is: Under the provision quoted shall the dis[45]*45tribution of this estate — said to approximate in value the sum of one million dollars — be confined to the grandchildren per capita or shall such distribution be made per capita to the grandchildren and great-grandchildren?

The case has been thoroughly briefed and ably argued.

Counsel for the grandchildren invite me to hold that under the clause in question, distribution should be confined to the then — October 7, 1951— living children of the children of the testatrix, that is to say, to her grandchildren per capita. The argument proceeds upon the premise that the word “issue” is not a word of art or exactitude in legal meaning, but on the contrary has been held in many cases to have a variety of meanings. It is thereupon concluded that the situation of the testatrix at the time of the execution of the will on February 22, 1932, particularly the place and circumstances under which the will was prepared, the fact that at that time there were ten living children and no great-grandchildren and the consequences which would flow from a contrary construction, demonstrate that it could not have been the intent of the testatrix that the distribution of her estate should go beyond her grandchildren, that is to say, that the phrase “to the then living issue of my children, including the issue of my deceased son, Malcolm B. Johnson per capita and not per stirpes” means only the grandchildren of the testatrix. But this is not what the clause says — at least not in words — and the rule seems clear that the words employed in the will should be given their commonly accepted meaning unless the context of the will otherwise indicates that the testatrix employed them in another or different sense. But here again, I fail to find from a study of the provisions of the will otherwise, any indication that the phrase “the then living issue of my children * * * per capita and not per stirpes” is to be given any other or different meaning than that commonly and usually assigned to the phrase or the words used in making up the phrase.

It seems clear to the Court that the problem thus defined must be solved by ascertaining the meaning to be attributed to this phrase under the law of Ohio as it stood at the time of the execution of the will on February 22, 1932. I think this is so because of the circumstances surrounding the preparation and execution of this will and which under the authorities I am at liberty to consider. Pruden v. Pruden, 14 Oh St 251, 256.

Mrs. Johnson was the widow of a distinguished lawyer, who in his lifetime (Mr. Johnson died in 1920) was a member of the law firm of M. B. and H. H. Johnson. Her son, David L. Johnson, was likewise, until his death on October 7, 1951, a member of this firm and an able and experienced lawyer in his own right. It was David L. Johnson who prepared his mother’s will (Jean Raynor Johnson, Trans, p. 14).

Certain assumptions may be made here. Among other matters, it must have been that the nature and extent of Mrs. Johnson’s estate, the number and identity of her grandchildren, their ages, their characteristics and the fact that at that time (1932) one son, Malcolm B. Johnson, predeceased [46]*46her, were all the subject of discussion between the testatrix and her son. This would necessarily occur in the process of the formulation of her wishes with respect to the ultimate distribution of her estate. Here it must be assumed that the will prepared by the son was so drawn as to express the intent and carry out the wish of the mother.

Again, it must be assumed that the testatrix was familiar with the terms and the general effect, not only of her husband’s will, but also of the existence of the so-called Darmack Trust. In this connection, for example, the similarity of expression and, in part, of the content, between the will of her husband and that of the testatrix seems to me to establish, without question, that the will of the former must have been considered in the preparation of the latter. Likewise, I regard as significant that while the distribution provided for in the husband’s will and likewise in the Darmack Trust was per stirpes, the testatrix in her will provided for a per capita and not per stirpes distribution.

These documents have been considered by me only as a part of the background against which David Johnson used the phrase “then living issue of my children” as appropriate to carry out his mother’s wishes and intent. It has been urged upon me by counsel for the great-grandchildren that the nature and extent of the distribution effected under the M. B. Johnson will and the Darmack Trust should be considered as a matter of background' and possessing evidentiary value in any determination of the meaning of the phrase under dispute. I do not agree and have not accorded any weight to these considerations in coming to a conclusion as to the matter of intent, nor do I regard as of any weight the argument advanced from an inheritance tax standpoint.

I find that under the rule in Ohio when this will was drawn, the word “issue” had a broad meaning and in the absence of words of qualification it included children, great-grandchildren and all degrees of descendants. Watson v. Watson, 34 Oh Ap 311 (1929); Coehrel v. Robinson, 113 Oh St 526, 533 (1925). And I find nothing in any relevant decision since 1932 to qualify these cases. Welles v. Pape, 63 Oh Ap 432. I do not consider The Cleveland Trust Company v. Hart, 82 Oh Ap 450, to be to the contrary.

The great weight of authority outside of Ohio is to the same effect. Mazziotte v. Trust Co., 180 Md. Rep. 48, 23 A. (2nd) 4. Northern Trust Co., v. Wheeler, 345 Ill., 182, 177 N. E. 884; Schmidt v. Jewett, 195 N. Y., 486, 88 N. E. 1110; Ridley v. McPherson, 100 Tenn., 402, 43 S. W. 772.

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Related

Third National Bank & Trust Co. v. Clendening
175 N.E.2d 239 (Montgomery County Probate Court, 1960)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
70 Ohio Law. Abs. 43, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cleveland-trust-co-v-johnson-ohprobctcuyahog-1954.