In Re Will of Yost

141 N.E.2d 176, 102 Ohio App. 62, 2 Ohio Op. 2d 44, 1956 Ohio App. LEXIS 620
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 21, 1956
Docket903
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 141 N.E.2d 176 (In Re Will of Yost) 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
In Re Will of Yost, 141 N.E.2d 176, 102 Ohio App. 62, 2 Ohio Op. 2d 44, 1956 Ohio App. LEXIS 620 (Ohio Ct. App. 1956).

Opinion

Hunsicker, J.

This is an appeal on questions of law and fact from a judgment of the Probate Court of Belmont County, Ohio.

On the 18th day of December, 1933, Joel T. Yost and C. C. Sedgwick were appointed, by the Probate Court of Belmont County, as trustees of the trust created by Item XX of the will of George W. Yost, deceased. They proceeded to perform their duties as trustees until they were ordered removed from office. It is from such judgment, removing the trustees, that an appeal is lodged in this court.

Originally, the settlor, George W. Yost, who died in December, 1931, appointed a corporate trustee, and' his nephew, Joel T. Yost, as cotrustee. When the corporate trustee could not qualify, another cotrustee was named.

The removal of the trustees was ordered on January 21, 1954, after a hearing on a motion filed October 7, 1953, by Mrs. Yiolet A. Moll, one of the beneficiaries under such trust.

During the course of the trial, and also subsequent to the date of removal, the Probate Court ordered that the trustees make no distribution of assets except income attributable only to Mrs. Moll.

Other beneficiaries under the will of George W. Yost, deceased, who are entitled to a distribution of assets when one of the beneficiaries of the trust dies without issue, have been made parties to these proceedings in this court for the purpose only of asking that this order preventing distribution be ‘ ‘ rescinded, and that the Probate Court be reinvested with jurisdiction' to release or modify the limitations of the authority of said trus *64 tees to permit said trustees to make distribution to tbe parties to this motion of the portions of said assets to which they are entitled * * *.”

There is no reason in equity or good conscience why the assets and property coming to these several parties outside the trust created under the above-named Item XX. should be held pending the final determination of the controversy existing.between Mrs. Moll and the trustees.

The order with respect to the impounding of these assets is vacated.

The principal subject of this appeal de novo is the motion for removal of the trustees filed by Mrs. Moll.

The testimony and exhibits submitted at the hearing in the Probate Court, along with a small amount of additional testimony, is the evidence presented to this court.

Counsel for the trustees, at the opening of the trial in this court, and before any testimony was presented, moved the court:

(1) . To dismiss the motion because there is a defect of parties herein.

We tentatively overruled the motion at.that time, and we now adhere to such ruling. We know that there are many other persons outside the trust who .will share in a portion of the corpus of the trust because of the death of Nancy Yost without issue, and that these persons, when approached by Mrs. Moll to join her in the motion to remove trustees, refused to become a part of .such action. We do not deem these persons necessary parties herein, although most of them, by their action, have become parties by asking for a distribution of assets.

(2) To strike that portion of the motion relating to the conduct of C. C. Sedgwick in the trust of Ira B. Sedgwick, deceased. This is item “Ninth” of the motion to remove the trustees.

Such motion of appellant trustees was tentatively overruled, and we now adhere to that ruling.

It must first be remembered in these proceedings that, although both trustees were appointed by the Probate Court, one of them, Joel T. Yost, was named by his uncle, the settlor, knowing that his interest and that of the beneficiaries of the trust might at times conflict.

*65 It is not a part of the work of this court to speculate on the reasons why some of those recipients of the bounty of George W. Yost, the deceased testator, were given portions of his estate outright, and some were given only the income of a portion of the estate. Also, too, we might wonder if it was the testator’s intention to give, at any time, the cestuis que trustent any property outright. That subject, too, is no present concern of ours.

We are here concerned with the removal of trustees. Does the evidence submitted to this court require that we order a removal of these trustees upon one or more grounds of the motion as made by Mrs. Moll?

The statute upon which this action is founded is Section 2109.24, Revised Code, which, in part, reads as follows:

“The court may remove any such fiduciary, after giving such fiduciary not less than ten days’ notice, for habitual drunkenness, neglect of duty, incompetency, fraudulent conduct, because the interest of the trust demands it, or for any other cause authorized by law.”

There is no claim herein that there was, on the part of the trustees, habitual drunkenness, neglect of duty, incompetency, or fraudulent conduct. Are there other causes, authorized by law, which require the removal of the trustees, or does the interest of the trust demand it? The other causes authorized by law, such as failure to give bond, embezzlement, or concealment of trust assets, and the other statutory grounds, are not claimed herein.

The first complaint in the motion to remove the trustees says that the trustees, on their own initiative, have instigated and prosecuted repetitious, vexatious, expensive, unnecessary and protracted legal proceedings, in which proceedings the trustees have attacked and opposed the interests of Mrs. Moll.

Four actions were filed by the trustees between the date of their appointment in 1933, and the present. No criticism can conceivably be directed against the action taken in the first two actions so filed; they coneerened: first, a beneficiary under this trust, not a resident of the United States, Wayne Gilmore; and second, a distribution of bank stock, in which the trust, in order to facilitate the reopening of a bank, took more *66 assets than such trust was entitled to receive — the action adjusting this matter fairly.

The two actions filed more recently (Cullen McCarty and Nancy Yost) concerned the distribution of trust assets after the death of the beneficiaries.

We believe no criticism can fairly be directed against the trustees for filing these actions, since, as Mrs. Moll stated, in a letter to Mr. Joel Yost, one of the trustees: “Uncle George’s will seemed clear in regard to his immediate wishes but ambiguous, I thought,- as to his wishes following the deaths of the childless trust recipients.”

At the conclusion of those actions or instructions in the trial court, these trustees were not satisfied with the instructions they received, and in each instance an appeal was prosecuted from the judgment of the trial court.

Mrs. Moll also joined in an appeal of these matters, but that does not justify the appeal by the trustees unless it was proper and right for them to do so, where the decision of the trial court, whose help they sought by way of instructions, did not • adversely affect the trust estate.

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Bluebook (online)
141 N.E.2d 176, 102 Ohio App. 62, 2 Ohio Op. 2d 44, 1956 Ohio App. LEXIS 620, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-will-of-yost-ohioctapp-1956.