Martin v. Martin

374 N.E.2d 1384, 54 Ohio St. 2d 101, 8 Ohio Op. 3d 106, 1978 Ohio LEXIS 533
CourtOhio Supreme Court
DecidedApril 26, 1978
DocketNo. 77-557
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 374 N.E.2d 1384 (Martin v. Martin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Martin v. Martin, 374 N.E.2d 1384, 54 Ohio St. 2d 101, 8 Ohio Op. 3d 106, 1978 Ohio LEXIS 533 (Ohio 1978).

Opinion

O’Neill, C. J.

Appellants’ arguments are encompassed in three propositions of law, which state as follows:

1. “A trust which provides that distributions shall be made in the sole and absolute discretion of the trustee is a discretionary trust and as such is not subject to being-reached by a creditor’s bill brought by a creditor of one of the beneficiaries. ’ ’

2. “A divorced wife holding an out-of-state lump sum alimony award reduced to an Ohio judgment has no different status nor greater rights than any other judgment creditor.”

3. “A trust which terminates at a specified date and which is to be distributed at that- time to each living child of the donor or to the living issue of any deceased child of the donor (who shall succeed to such deceased child’s share) does not create' a vested interest in any such child until the time for distribution, survival to such date being a condition precedent to vesting.”

[107]*107Under their first proposition of law, appellants urge that the trust in question is a discretionary trust and, therefore, the trust property can not be reached by a creditor of a beneficiary.

The trust instrument provides, in Section 2(a), Article II, that until the principal of the trust is distributed “the Trustees shall from time to time pay to the child for whom such trust is designated * * * so much of the net income and, if necessary, of the principal of such trust held for such child as Walter H. Zebulske, as one of the Trustees, or any successor appointed to succeed him as trustee, in his or her sole and absolute discretion, shall deem necessary or advisable for the comfort, care, support and education of such adult child of Donor.”

The trust instrument provides, in Article III, entitled “Prohibition Against Alienation,” as follows:

“Section 1. If the beneficiaries hereunder shall attempt at any time or times to alienate, sell, conspire, assign, pledge or otherwise encumber the whole or any part of the income and/or principal reserved to such beneficiary, or if any such beneficiary should become a debtor in bankruptcy proceedings, or if any creditor or person having a claim or demand of any sort against any such beneficiary, levies an attachment or otherwise attempts to subject the income and/or principal reserved hereunder to such beneficiary to the satisfaction of such beneficiary’s debts or other obligations, then and in that event and from that time forward, the absolute right of such beneficiary to the income and/or principal hereunder reserved shall cease and determine and all income and/or principal hereunder reserved for such beneficiary, shall thereafter be held and distributed by the Trustees during the remainder of the life of the trust for such beneficiary in all or any of the following ways:
“(a) All or any part of such income may be accumulated, or
“(b) Such part of such income, accumulated income and principal which may be needed or desirable for the education, care, comfort or support of such beneficiary or [108]*108such beneficiary’s spouse and/or issue, if any, may be paid to or applied to the use of such beneficiary or such beneficiary’s spouse and/or issue, if any, as the Trustees in their absolute and uncontrolled discretion think fit.”

The foregoing provisions of the trust instrument are similar to the provisions of the testamentary trust construed by the court in Bureau of Support v. Kreitzer (1968), 16 Ohio St. 2d 147, 243 N. E. 2d 83. Those provisions read:

“ * * * [I]n the event a share is established upon my death for the benefit of my daughter, Naomi M. Swallow, the trustee shall distribute, i'n its sole and absolute discretion, so much of the income and the principal of her share as it, in its sole and absolute discretion, determines to be necessary for her care, comfort, maintenance and general well-being for and during her lifetime. Any income from her share of the trust estate not distributed by the trustee as hereinabove provided for her benefit shall be divided equally among the other shares of the trust * * *.”

It was argued in Kreitzer that the beneficiary had “no claim to any distribution.” The court determined otherwise, reasoning, at page 150, as follows:

“* * * The trust is equivocal. It confers upon the trustees ‘absolute and sole discretion,’ but defines the standard by which that discretion is to be employed. It can, therefore, be characterized neither as a purely discretionary trust nor as a strict support trust. See 1 Restatement of the Law, Trusts, 2d 320, 323, Sections 154, Í55.
“Admittedly, the beneficiary of a discretionary trust for care, comfort, maintenance or well-being is endowed with no property which an ordinary creditor may reach. When, however, a fiduciary’s discretion, notwithstanding it is ‘absolute or sole,’ is to be exercised with reference to needs for care and maintenance, that discretion cannot be wholly beyond a review which measures the actual need against the standard by which payments may be made. 3 [109]*109Scott on Trusts (3 Ed), 1501, Section 187, Control of Discretionary Powers: 1 Restatement of the Law, Trusts, 2d 408-409, Section 187.”

Thus, the trust in question may he characterized as being neither “a purely discretionary trust nor as a. strict support trust.” Therefore, appellants’ argument, that due to the discretionary nature of the trust the trust property may not he reached hy a creditor, is not well taken.

The terms of the trust here indicate that the trustees are empowered in their “sole and absolute discretion” or their “absolute and uncontrolled discretion” to distribute income and principal to the beneficiaries. That “absolute” discretion, however, as was the ease in Kreitzer, “is to be exercised with reference to needs” for either the “comfort, care, support and education of such adult child of donor” or, in the event of attempted alienation or attachment for debt, the “education, care, comfort, or support of such beneficiary or such beneficiary’s spouse and/ or issue.”

The latter quoted provision from the trust instrument evinces an intention on the part of the settlor that the trustees may be required to exercise their discretion to: distribute income or principal for the purposes there . described in the event of attempted alienation or attachment for debt. Application of the rationale of the Kreitzer case here leads to the conclusion that the trustees can be required, after attempted alienation or attachment, - to distribute income or principal for purposes of “education, care, comfort or support of such beneficiary or such beneficiary’s spouse and/or issue,” and that debts incurred for the enumerated purposes are obligations which the trustees are required to discharge.

It is thus necessary to determine whether appellee’s claim as a judgment creditor falls within the ambit of those debts which the trustees may be required to, satisfy from the trust income and principal prior to distribution of the corpus^ The determination of this issue will resolve the question posed in appellants’ second proposition of law [110]*110yhich asserts that a divorced wife’s judgment for alimony-should not be accorded a favored status over claims of other creditors.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
374 N.E.2d 1384, 54 Ohio St. 2d 101, 8 Ohio Op. 3d 106, 1978 Ohio LEXIS 533, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/martin-v-martin-ohio-1978.