Gloyd v. Roff

2 Ohio C.C. 253
CourtOhio Circuit Courts
DecidedMarch 15, 1887
StatusPublished

This text of 2 Ohio C.C. 253 (Gloyd v. Roff) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Circuit Courts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gloyd v. Roff, 2 Ohio C.C. 253 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1887).

Opinion

Upson, J.

This is an action brought for the purpose of declaring terminated, or terminating, a trust created under the will of Chas. B. Roff. This will provided that the executors, who are Mr. Gloyd and Mr. Waite, should invest the most of the personal estate — all except the furniture, plate, glass, pictures, etc., which were to go to the wife — and that they should change the investments from time to time as they might think best to do, and conferred upon them most ample powers in regard to the investment. It says:

“ The entire income arising from the investments of my personal estate I direct my executors to pay, as the same shall' be realized, to my wife, Clara Manley Roff, until the oldest of my living children shall arrive at the age of 21 years, if she shall so long live and remain unmarried. From this income so paid to her she shall provide for the support, education and maintenance of my children, in a manner suited to their condition in life. The remainder thereof shall be for her use and benefit.”

[254]*254And the questions arising in this case depend upon the construction to be given to the trust created by the following clause of the will:

“ On the arrival of my oldest living child at the age of 21 years, I direct my executors, if my wife shall be then living, and shall not have married after my death, to set apart $50,000 in value of the securities they may then have on hand, arising from the investments of my personal estate and considered by them the most desirable, and hold the same for her use and benefit, paying to her the income thereof so long as she shall live and remain unmarried.”

The will then proceeds to dispose of the residue of the testator’s estate; providing generally that upon the arrival of the oldest of the children at the age of 25 years, it should be divided as prescribed by the terms of the will.

The petition sets forth that the executors entered upon their trust created b}*- the will; that the oldest child had arrived at the age of 25 years, and the youngest — -there being but two children — at the age of majority, and that the'only trust remaining to be performed was the trust relating to this $50,000, which was set apart as a fund, the income of which was to go to the wife during her life and widowhood. The petition then sets forth that no other persons excepting the plaintiffs, Frank E. Roff and Orrie M. Roff, had any interest in this fund of $50,000, except Clara M. Roff, the widow; that on the 11th day of March, 1885, the children executed under their hands and seals, and delivered to the said Clara M. Roil, an assignment of ail their right, title and interest in-and to all the securities aforesaid remaining in the hands of said defendants as aforesaid, and thereby authorized the said Clara M. Roff to receive, collect and use and dispose of said securities or the fund arising therefrom in any manner she might see proper; and, on the 23d of March, 1885, the said Clara M. Roff demanded in writing of the said defendants that they deliver to her the said securities, which demand the defendants refused, and still refuse to comply with, but insist on retaining the said securities in their hands, and to manage them according to their judgment and discretion.

[255]*255To this petition of Mrs. Roff and her two children a demurrer was interposed by the executors. The demurrer was overruled, and upon the hearing of the case the court of common pleas determined that by reason of the facts set forth in the petition, this trust had terminated, and decreed that the executors should deliver the securities in their, hands to Mrs. Roff. This petition in error is prosecuted for the purpose of reversing that judgment of the court of common pleas.

The claim upon the part of the executors is, that the trust has not been performed; that it is still their duty to retain these securities in their hands and change the investments from time to time, as at their discretion may seem best, and to pay over to Mrs. Roff the interest and income arising from this estate during her life, as provided by the will.

It is claimed upon the other hand that, in the first place, the whole estate — the whole beneficial estate — having vested in the widow by means of these assignments on the part of her children, she is now the only person interested in the fund, and that she has a right to control it herself. It is claimed that there has been what is called a merger — that the whole estate being vested in her, the trust is at an end. That term “merger” seems to us hardly applicable to a case of this kind; it is generally applied to real estate where the larger and the lesser estate become vested in the same person, the lesser estate is then said to have merged in the other. But here, by the terms of this trust, the legal title to these securities, and the control of them, is vested in the executors, and the executors have precisely the same title to the securities as they had before the assignments were made to Mrs. Roff by her children.

There have been other questions argued in the case, but we think the decision of the case must turn upon the question whether, under the facts as they now exist, the trust authority is terminated by the full performance of it; or, in the next place, whether, under the circumstances of the case, a court of equity has a right to direct a termination of the trust, and if so, whether the facts in this case are such as to give the exercise of that power.

[256]*256There are two cases in which a trust may be terminated; it may be terminated upon the accomplishment of the trust— when the trustees have performed till their duties and distributed the fund as directed, the trust is at an end. We are not able to cpme to the conclusion that in this case the trust has itself terminated; and, upo'n that point', we differ with the court of common pleas in the conclusion at which it arrived. We think the duties of the trustees were not terminated by the mere fact that the interests of the children had been transferred by them to their mother, and that unless some other action had been taken, it would have been the right and the duty of these executors under their trust to continue to manage that fund and terdispose of its income as provided by the terms of the will.

In the next place, although a trust may not have ceased by expiration of it, and although all its purposes may not have been accomplished, a court of equity may decree the termination of the trust and a distribution of the trust fund among those entitled to it. The question to be determined is whether really, under the facts of this case, it is proper that a court of equity should decree a determination of this trust, and the delivery of these securities to Mrs. Roff. Ordinarily, where the parties are sui juris — where the beneficiaries of the trust are not married women, with the rights only which married women had before the enactment of the recent law — for that language would hardly be applicable to married women at this time so frequently found in books relative to the jurisdiction of courts of equity — but if they were infant beneficiaries, or under any disability so they could not properly manage the property, or even if it was shown by the proof that there was a personal unfitness to take care of the property, so that the design of the testator would be frustrated if the property should be delivered over to the cestui que trust, then a court of equity should not decree a termination of the trust. But in this case it is not shown — or at least there is no proof to show —that Mrs.

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Related

Taylor v. Executors of Huber
13 Ohio St. 288 (Ohio Supreme Court, 1862)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2 Ohio C.C. 253, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gloyd-v-roff-ohiocirct-1887.