Meier v. Union Trust Co., Exr.

176 N.E. 42, 93 Ind. App. 457, 1931 Ind. App. LEXIS 139
CourtIndiana Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 1, 1931
DocketNo. 13,973.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 176 N.E. 42 (Meier v. Union Trust Co., Exr.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Meier v. Union Trust Co., Exr., 176 N.E. 42, 93 Ind. App. 457, 1931 Ind. App. LEXIS 139 (Ind. Ct. App. 1931).

Opinion

Neal, P. J.

John A. Kurtz deceased November 5, 1913. His will was probated six days thereafter in the Probate Court of Marion County, Indiana. ■ The Union Trust Company of Indianapolis was appointed by the terms of the will as executor and trustee thereunder, and subsequently qualified. On November 26, 1926, the appellee filed its first and final report; the appellants filed objections thereto. On change of venue, the trial was had in the Hancock Circuit Court. The court made a special finding of facts and stated its conclusions of law thereon. The errors assigned challenge separately the conclusions of law numbered one to eight inclusive, the overruling of the separate and several motions of appellants for a venire de novo, and the overruling of the separate and several motions for a new trial.

The estate of John A. Kurtz consisted of personal property inventoried as follows: “Debts, dues, demands, etc.,” at $118,055.46, and tangibles at $29. The testator owned at the time of his death three parcels of real estate: (1) Homestead in Woodruff Place, Marion County; (2) a duplex in Woodruff Place; (3) two lots and buildings on Northwestern Avenue in Indianapolis.

The testator in his lifetime was engaged in the manufacturing business, manufacturing magnetos under the name of “Hercules Electric Company.” The company *460 was incorporated in 1906, under the Nevada law. John A. Kurtz caused the stock of the company to be issued to himself, with qualifying shares, one each, to his son, Stewart H. Kurtz, one of the appellants, and one to the testator’s brother, William E. Kurtz, also a manufacturer. William E. Kurtz was actively engaged in the business of the Hercules Electric Company, especially while his brother John, the testator, was ill. Chauncey D. Meier, son-in-law of the testator, was vice-president of the Hercules Electric Company from 1909 until about July, 1920, and was actively engaged in the work during that time at the factory.

The appellee, Union Trust Company, by the will was nominated executor thereof, was so appointed executor and trustee, and, as such trustee, the entire estate was bequeathed and devised to it. The Union Trust Company exercised the duties of both offices continuously from November 11, 1913, until the summer of 1926, when it sought to resign, in the Marion Probate Court, as trustee, but, by some mischance, the resignation did hot become a matter of record in the court. The Union Trust Company served as such executor and trustee until November 26, 1926, when, both as executor and trustee, it filed its first and final report in the probate court. On October 22, 1926, on the application of the appellants, the Marion Probate Court appointed appellant Stewart H. Kurtz, only son of the testator, trustee of the trust estate created by the will and he immediately qualified. When the appellee filed its first and final report, it delivered to the clerk of the probate court all money, securities and all other tangible property belonging to the estate of John A. Kurtz, deceased, and, thereafter, Stewart H. Kurtz, as such successor trustee, receipted to the clerk for all the property except the “880 shares of stock in the Hercules Manufacturing Company.”

The facts as found by the court may be summarized as *461 follows: As to all items of the report except five, the objectors, at the beginning of the hearing, stated in open court that the objectors would make no contention; the five objections are as follows: All matters relating to: (1) “Hercules” property and “Hercules” stock; (2) the sale of two parcels of real estate in Woodruff Place, Indianapolis; (3) compensation heretofore paid to the Union Trust Company; (4) compensation paid by the estate to the attorneys of the Union Trust Company; and (5) further compensation to the Union Trust Company and to its attorneys.

That the decedent, John A. Kurtz, at the time of his death, was a resident of Indianapolis, Marion County, Indiana; that he died testate November 5, 1913, and left surviving his wife, Katherine Blake Kurtz, and their five children, to wit, the exceptors, Stewart H. Kurtz, Mary J. Meier, Helen Douglas, Lila Kurtz and Margaret D. Zimmer, all adults; and that the decedent left no other child of his or any child of a deceased child of his surviving him.

The will of John A. Kurtz was dated and executed June 12, 1912, and was, on November 11,1913, probated in the Probate Court of Marion County. Item 1 of the will directed that the executor pay all of the testator’s just debts, the funeral expenses and the necessary cost and expense of administering the estate; Item 2 devised and bequeathed all of the testator’s property and estate, real, personal and mixed, unto the Union Trust Company, of Indianapolis, subject to certain trusts and powers hereinafter mentioned, that is to say, the trustee “shall hold, manage and control all of the property for the purpose of making it produce income”; shall rent the real estate and shall receive all the rents, incomes and profits of all such trust property and estate; shall, from the income, keep up the repairs to the real estate and discharge all proper expenses necessary to the *462 proper management of the trust property and pay the whole of the net income to Katherine Blake, testator’s wife, as long as she shall live; Item 3 is to the effect that, upon the death of testator’s wife, and until the death of the last to die of the five children, the trustee shall pay the net income to the children in the proportions therein specifically set forth; Item. 4 directs that, upon the death of the last to die of the six persons, the widow, four daughters and one son, naming each of them, “the trust hereby created shall at once cease and determine, and, immediately upon such termination, all of the said trust property and estate then held by my trustee hereunder, in the form it then shall be, shall go in fee simple and shall be conveyed and transferred by my trustee in fee simple, freed of all trusts, to the issue of my children as follows':” (the will then, in detail, directs the disposition of the corpus of the estate to the issue of testator’s five children).

Items 7 and 8 of the will read as follows: “I hereby empower my executor, as executor, to sell and transfer any of my real estate at the executor’s discretion if such sale shall seem necessary, as a part of the ordinary administration of my estate in court; such sale or sales to be made at such time or times and for such price and on such terms as to my executor may deem best, and the executor may make any such sale or sales without any order of court and without appraisement or other formality.

“I hereby authorize and empower my trustee herein, after the settlement of my estate proper in court, as trustee, and from time to time, to sell and transfer, at the trustee’s discretion and for prices and on terms satisfactory to the trustee, for purposes of investment and re-investment and for the repair and improvement of real estate, any part or parts or all of my real estate and of my personal property, and any real estate or per *463

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
176 N.E. 42, 93 Ind. App. 457, 1931 Ind. App. LEXIS 139, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/meier-v-union-trust-co-exr-indctapp-1931.