Haggerty v. Squire, Supt.

26 N.E.2d 603, 63 Ohio App. 300, 17 Ohio Op. 63, 1939 Ohio App. LEXIS 328
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 27, 1939
StatusPublished

This text of 26 N.E.2d 603 (Haggerty v. Squire, Supt.) 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
Haggerty v. Squire, Supt., 26 N.E.2d 603, 63 Ohio App. 300, 17 Ohio Op. 63, 1939 Ohio App. LEXIS 328 (Ohio Ct. App. 1939).

Opinion

Stevens, J.

Harry W. Haggerty, as plaintiff, filed an action in the Court of Common Pleas of Cuyahoga county against S. H.: Squire, Superintendent of Banks, in charge of the liquidation of the Union Trust Company, the Union Trust Company, and the Cleveland *301 Trust Company, as defendants, seeking to set aside certain transactions in connection with, a trust of which the Union Trust Company was trustee; also to procure the restoration of the corpus of the trust to the Superintendent of Banks for liquidation, for a money judgment in the amount of the sales price of all outstanding land trust certificates issued in pursuance of that trust, for allowance of a claim as general creditor of the Union Trust Company in the amount of the sales price of all outstanding land trust certificates, for the appointment of a receiver to disburse the liquidating dividends upon the general creditors’ claims, when allowed and paid, and for equitable relief.

The suit was brought as a class suit, and, as a condition precedent thereto, plaintiff presented to the Superintendent of Banks, for allowance, not only his own claim in the amount of the sales price of the certificates purchased by him, but, combined therewith, a claim for all other certificates, in the aggregate amount of all certificates sold in pursuance of the trust.

Upon rejection of this claim by the Superintendent of Banks, plaintiff filed his petition, asserting that he brought the action “not only upon his own behalf, but on behalf of all the certificate holders of said purported trust.”

The petition bottoms the claim to the relief sought upon two grounds:

“1. The statutes of Ohio do not authorize, and, during all of the time herein referred to, did not authorize, the Union Trust Company to act in the dual capacity of settlor and trustee by creating a trust out of its own property and selling certificates representing interests therein to the public, all of which the Union Trust Company did or attempted to do in creating and administering the purported trust herein described.

*302 “2. Such, undertakings are opposed to sound public policy and are invalid.”

In the trial court, the relief sought was granted, and an appeal by the defendant Superintendent of Banks upon questions of law and fact has lodged the cause in this court.

A hearing de novo before a special master commissioner appointed by this court was had, and a transcript of the evidence, the report of the master commissioner, together with his findings of fact and conclusions of law, the briefs of counsel, and the motion of appellee to confirm the report of the master and enter judgment in accordance therewith, are before us.

At the hearing in this court, counsel agreed that the court might dispose of the case upon the motion, or might disregard the motion and dispose of the case upon the evidence taken by the master, the same as if that evidence had been presented to the court, which, of course, this court has a right to do without consent of counsel.

Much incompetent and irrelevant evidence was permitted to be introduced before the master, but from the transcript the following facts appear:

Prior to 1926, the Ontario Street Land Company, an Ohio corporation, resident of Cleveland, Ohio, in the regular course of its business borrowed from the Union Trust Company various sums of money, which loans were in most instances secured by what have been termed “holding title agreements.” Under these agreements, the bank held the legal title to certain real estate as security for the repayment of the money loaned by it, but the equitable title remained in the Ontario Street Land Company.

In the summer of 1923, the land company borrowed $130,000 from the Union Trust Company, to purchase six sublots located on Carnegie avenue in the city of Cleveland, and caused the title to the lots to be *303 conveyed to the Union Trust Company under a holding title agreement. By the terms of that agreement, the bank agreed to hold title to the property as security for the repayment of the loan, and, upon its repayment, to convey the premises in accordance with instructions issued by the land company.

In 1924, the premises which secured the $130,000 loan were leased to Thomas Cusack upon a lease providing for a lease renthl of $14,000 a year. Cusack later assigned that lease to the Carnegie-Twelfth Company, a subsidiary of the General Outdoor Advertising Company, which latter company then expended $100,000 in the construction of buildings thereon.

The $130,000 loan was thereafter paid, and later other sums borrowed by the land company, which were repaid from a loan of $240,000 made by the bank to the land company in July of 1926. This latter loan was secured by a holding title agreement on not only the Carnegie avenue property but also on two other parcels of real estate, designated as the Oregon avenue and Sumner properties.

Prior to October, 1926, upon written instructions from the land company, an indenture of trust and land trust certificates were prepared by attorneys, and in their preparation the officials of the Union Trust Company collaborated. The corpus of the trust was the Carnegie avenue property. Later an agreement in writing was consummated between the Ontario Street Land Company and the Phillip H. Collins Company, a brokerage concern, whereby the latter company agreed to purchase the entire issue of the land trust certificates (456) at a price of $216,000.

An escrow agreement was executed, which does not appear in the evidence, but the transcript does disclose that, upon written instructions from the land company, the Union Trust Company, which had theretofore held the legal title to the Carnegie avenue property as trustee for the Ontario Street Land Company and as *304 security for the payment of the money owing to it by that company, conveyed to itself, as trustee, under the indenture of trust heretofore referred to, the legal title to the Carnegie avenue property. Thereafter, in pursuance of written instructions to that effect, the Union Trust Company issued certificate No. 1 under the indenture of trust for all of the fractional interests (456) in favor of the Ontario Street Land Company, which company caused the certificate to be endorsed to the Phillip H. Collins Company upon that company paying into the escrow at the Union Trust Company the sum of $216,000, to be disbursed upon the order of the Ontario Street Land Company.

Thereupon, and again in pursuance of written instructions, certificate No. 2 for all of the fractional interests was issued by the bank, as trustee, to the Phillip H. Collins Company..

Between October 19, 1926, and June 1, 1927, the Phillip H. Collins Company sold various interests in the land trust to numerous persons, among whom was the plaintiff, Haggerty, who purchased 30 interests for $15,150.

Prom the amount of $216,000, paid into the escrow with the Union Trust Company by the Phillip H.

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Related

Ulmer v. Fulton, Supt.
195 N.E. 557 (Ohio Supreme Court, 1935)

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Bluebook (online)
26 N.E.2d 603, 63 Ohio App. 300, 17 Ohio Op. 63, 1939 Ohio App. LEXIS 328, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/haggerty-v-squire-supt-ohioctapp-1939.