Renick v. Renick

6 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 304, 18 Ohio Dec. 308, 1907 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 47

This text of 6 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 304 (Renick v. Renick) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Common Pleas of Ohio, Franklin County, Civil Division primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Renick v. Renick, 6 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 304, 18 Ohio Dec. 308, 1907 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 47 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1907).

Opinion

Bigger, J.

„ The action is brought by the plaintiffs to obtain an accounting of a trust placed in the hands of J. O. B. Renick, and by him transferred with the property to his wife, Rebecca Renick. In substance, the facts stated in the petition are as follows:

[305]*305William Renick died in 1845, testate, and devised eight hundred and twenty-nine acres of land located in Pickaway county to the children of his son, J. O. B. Renick, and appointed his son, J. O. B. Renick, trustee to hold said lands for the benefit of his children, and with the discretionary power of selling said real estate, and directing him in case of sale to reinvest the proceeds in land.

During the years 1855, 1857 and 1858 the said J. O. B. Renick exercised the power conferred upon him by the will, and sold all the lands conveyed to him in trust, and mingled the proceeds with his own assets.

During the years 1856 and 1859 he invested the major portion of the proceeds in real estate, taking the title to the same in his own name. He afterwards sold a portion of these lands and converted the proceeds to his own use. He also appropriated the rents and profits to his own use.

J. O. B. Renick died in 1888, testate, and devised the lands purchased by him, with the proceeds of the trust estate, to his wife, Rebecca Renick.

J. O. B. Renick had five children, one having died before the grandfather and one being born after the grandfather’s death. Three of the four children living at the time of the death of William Renick died prior to 1856, all dying in infancy, intestate, unmarried and without issue. The fourth son, Daniel McNeil Renick, lived until 1862 and died at the age of 22 years, intestate, unmarried and without issue.

The plaintiffs in this case’are the children or the legal representatives of the deceased children of William Reniclc. This action was brought in the year 1900. The plaintiffs aver that they did not know and had no means of knowing until about May, 1899, that they had any right, title, interest or estate in the land bought by J. O. B. Reniek with the proceeds received from the sale of the lands in Pickaway county, and were in part prevented from knowing it by the action of J. O. R Renick taking title in hig own name to the real estate.

Under this state Of facts what iff any interest' have these children of William Bepick or their legal representatives in the trust estate!

[306]*306Very elaborate briefs have been filed upon both sides which raise and discuss a number of questions. I will not undertake to state all these various contentions at length, as in the view I take of the case it may be determined by the decision of one of these questions.

It is clear that the estate which was vested in William Renick in the Pickaway county lands came by devise to these children of J. O. B. Renick, J. O. B. Renick taking the legal title with a power of sale to be exercised at his discretion, and the equitable estate vested in the children.

Equitable estates descend as legal estates under the statute of

Upon the death of the brothers and sisters of Daniel McNeil descent and distribution. Bolten v. Bank, 50 O. S., p. 290. Renick, intestate, unmarried and without issue, their interest in the estate descended to Daniel McNeil Renick, whether the estate be considered ancestral or non-ancestral property. Upon the death of these children in succession the survivors would inherit from the deceased brother or sister under either Section 4158 or 4159. The entire equitable estate thus by inheritance finally centered in Daniel McNeil Renick. Had the Pick-away county lands which came to these children directly by devise from their grandfather remained in the hands of the trustee until the death of Daniel McNeil Renick, he would have been vested with the entire equitable estate, three-fourths of which came to him by descent from his brothers and sisters and one-fourth coming to him immediately by devise.from his grandfather. In that state of the case, as to this one-fourth interest which would have been ancestral real estate, J. O. B. Renick and his brothers and sisters and their legal representatives would have taken by descent. The other thr§e-fourths interest in the estate which came to him by descent from his brothers and sisters would have descended to his father and his next of kin of the blood of the ancestor from whom the estate came.

B.ut, during the lifetime of Daniel McNeil Renick the entirp estate in these Pickaway county lands was sold by the trustee, J. O. R. Renick, and the proceeds for the greater part invested in other real estate- This then raises the question whether or. [307]*307not any part of the estate which was vested in Daniel McNeil Renick at the time of his death was ancestral property which would descend to these plaintiffs.

In my opinion this question must be answered in the negative, and that the estate vested in Daniel McNeil Renick was hone of its ancestral property. In determining questions of descent of real property, regard is had only to the legal title, and that title must have come immediately from the ancestor.

In the ease of Brower v. Hunt, 18 O. S., p. 311, the title to real estate which must have come to an intestate by devise or deed of gift from an ancestor to constitute ancestral property is the title under which the intestate immediately held.

■It is held in that case that “where specific tracts of land have been allotted to co-devisees in pursuance of directions in the will of the ancestor, and afterwards one conveyed his tract to a co-devisee for a moneyed consideration as expressed in the deed, but in fact for a like conveyance by the latter of the tract he had received in the partition — held, that the title of neither was derived directly by devise from the ancestor, and that for the purpose of descent each was to be regarded as a purchaser. ’ ’

In Kihlken v. Kihlken, 59 O. S., 106, it was held that—

“Where an owner of ancestral lands conveys them to another on a written agreement that he will upon request reconvey them, the ancestral character of the land is thereby destroyed. And if a request to reconvey is made, but the grantor dies before it is executed, without issue but leaving a widow, brothers and sisters, a conveyance to the,widow is a proper execution of the trust, and the brothers and sisters of the deceased grantor have as heirs no legal or equitable title to the land.”

Judge Minshall, in discussing the question; in the opinion again .emphasizes the fact that the title must have come immediately from the ancestor or it will not be considered ancestral property.

Bouvier defines “immediate” as follows: “That which is produced directly by the-act to which it is ascribed without the intervention of any distinct immediate cause.”

[308]*308Webster defines “immediate” as meaning among other things “acting with nothing interposed or between, or without the intervention of another object as a cause.”

Wooster defines “immediate” as “having nothing intervening either as to place, time or action.”

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Bluebook (online)
6 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 304, 18 Ohio Dec. 308, 1907 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 47, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/renick-v-renick-ohctcomplfrankl-1907.