Krueger v. Central Trust Co.

136 N.E.2d 121, 101 Ohio App. 383, 1 Ohio Op. 2d 318, 1956 Ohio App. LEXIS 709
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedJuly 23, 1956
Docket8102
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 136 N.E.2d 121 (Krueger v. Central Trust Co.) 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
Krueger v. Central Trust Co., 136 N.E.2d 121, 101 Ohio App. 383, 1 Ohio Op. 2d 318, 1956 Ohio App. LEXIS 709 (Ohio Ct. App. 1956).

Opinion

Matthews, J.

This is an action in which the plaintiff seeks to have the court declare null and void a certain trust instrument executed by her mother, Clara K. Nebel, on May 31, 1951, whereby she designated the defendant, The Central Trust Company, trustee of certain personal and real property which she then and thereafter transferred to it. Clara K. Nebel died on December 6, 1954. The defendants are The Central Trust Company, as trustee under the aforesaid trust instrument and as executor of Clara K. Nebel’s will, and certain, but not all, beneficiaries under the trust agreement.

The action was filed in the Court of Common Pleas of Hamilton County, Ohio, and comes into this court on appeal on questions of law and fact.

By stipulation, the case was submitted to this court on the *384 pleadings, a transcript of the evidence introduced and offered in the Common Pleas Court and the arguments and briefs of counsel.

Perd Nebel died on April 6, 1950, leaving a will in which he named his wife, Clara K. Nebel, executrix and principal beneficiary of an estate of about $750,000. The will was admitted to probate, and she accepted the appointment as executrix and proceeded with the administration of the estate with the assistance of the attorney who had drafted the will and who had been her husband’s attorney for many years. The administration involved the sale of stock of The Nebel Machine Tool Company, in which stock a large part of the wealth of Perd Nebel was invested. As it was apparently a nonlisted stock, a prospective purchaser had to be found and a price negotiated, but by the end of 1950 the stock had been sold and the administration of the estate completed. Clara K. Nebel thereupon became the owner of this large estate and faced with the necessity of determining how she would handle it. It was then that she sought the advice of the defendant and arranged for the execution of this trust agreement.

By the first provision of the trust agreement, Clara K. Nebel transfers and conveys to The Central Trust Company a described amount of cash, stock, bonds and other securities listed in an exhibit attached to the trust agreement. By subsequent provision, the transferee is required to hold the property so transferred to it in trust, to pay the entire net income to the grantor for and during her life, and, upon her death, to pay from the corpus of the trust fund $5,000 to Hilda Ginter, $5,000 to Amelia Kiessling, $5,000 to George Sand, and $5,000 to the then living children of Louise Poertsch, all relatives by blood or marriage of Clara K. Nebel. She provided also for the payment of $2,000 to Mike Kaster, an employee, $1,000 to the Walnut Hills Cemetery Association and $1,000 to General Protestant Orphan Asylum.

After payment of the aforesaid gifts, the trust instrument provided that The Central Trust Company should continue to hold, manage and invest the residue in trust, and from the net income pay the sum of $10,000 per year to Irma Krueger, daughter of Clara K. Nebel, and the plaintiff in this action, for and *385 during- her natural life; and, in addition, the trustee in its uncontrolled discretion was authorized to pay from the income or principal any sum which it might consider necessary, advisable or appropriate for the comfortable maintenance and support of Irma Krueger.

By paragraph 10 of the trust agreement, the grantor reserved the power at any time or times to “modify, alter or revoke this agreement, in whole or in part, by instrument or instruments in writing delivered to the trustee; and upon written notice from grantor the trustee is to return to or deliver for grantor, any and/or all the cash or property that trustee may be holding under the terms hereof; provided, however, that the duties, powers and liabilities of the trustee shall not be substantially changed or increased without its written consent.”

It was directed that, upon the death of Irma Krueger, the balance of the trust fund be paid to First Reformed Church, the Monfort Heights Community Methodist Church and the General Protestant Orphan Home, in equal shares.

As was authorized by the trust agreement, additions were made to the corpus of the trust and there were withdrawals. The provision in favor of Irma Krueger was modified, so as to make her the beneficiary of the entire net income for her life, after her mother’s death, and to provide that if Irma Krueger should leave surviving her any children, natural or adopted, they should receive the net income until the time when the youngest reached the age of 21 years or would have, in the event he or she died before reaching that age, and, upon that time being reached, the entire fund should be distributed to them per stirpes. In the absence of there being any child or children, the trust fund was to be paid to the aforesaid institutions, then surviving-, in equal shares.

The provision in favor of those who were to be paid on Clara K. Nebel’s death was also amended so as to double the grant to all except Mike Kaster, and the grant to him was increased to $5,000.

At the same time the trust agreement was executed, Clara K. Nebel executed her will, naming The Central Trust Company as executor. The will was duly probated, and The Central Trust Company was appointed executor and is a defendant *386 in this action in that capacity. There was no reference in either the trust agreement, or the will, to the other.

The validity of the trust agreement is assailed because of the power reserved to the grantor in paragraph 10, which we have quoted. It is said that Clara K. Nebel did not relinquish control during her lifetime and, therefore, the transaction cannot be sustained as an inter vivos gift; and, further, that it shows an intent to provide for a disposition of her property upon death, and not inter vivos; and that it is testamentary in character and, as it was not executed in compliance with the statutory requirements, is ineffective as a will.

The owner of property contemplating a gratuity has a choice of methods by which he may make effective his benefactions. If his intent is to divest himself of the title and all control at once, and to invest the transferee with title and complete control at once, he may do so by compliance with the law relating to gifts, which we inherited as a part of the common law from England. All that law requires is the delivery of the subject matter and the surrender of all control or dominion with the intent to do so. The common law made no provision for qualified transfer or control. If the owner contemplated retention of some control over the subject matter, a common-law gift would not carry out his purpose.

As Clara K. Nebel had no intention to relinquish all interest in and control of the subject matter at the time she executed the trust agreement and delivered the property to The Central Trust Company, it would serve no purpose to consider or discuss the requirements of the law relating to gifts. To carry out her purpose, she was required to find another method. In this situation, she had recourse to that jurisdiction which was administered in England by the Court of Chancery, which we inherited and which is now administered by the same Ohio courts as administer the common law.

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Related

Central Trust Co. of Cincinnati v. Welch
193 F. Supp. 336 (S.D. Ohio, 1961)
Drew v. Richards
177 N.E.2d 631 (Court of Common Pleas of Ohio, Hamilton County, 1960)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
136 N.E.2d 121, 101 Ohio App. 383, 1 Ohio Op. 2d 318, 1956 Ohio App. LEXIS 709, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/krueger-v-central-trust-co-ohioctapp-1956.