Ruple v. Hiram College

171 N.E. 417, 35 Ohio App. 8, 1928 Ohio App. LEXIS 376
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 17, 1928
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 171 N.E. 417 (Ruple v. Hiram College) 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
Ruple v. Hiram College, 171 N.E. 417, 35 Ohio App. 8, 1928 Ohio App. LEXIS 376 (Ohio Ct. App. 1928).

Opinion

Mauck, J.

A demurrer was sustained to the petition of the plaintiff in the court of common pleas. Judgment was entered on the demurrer, and an appeal taken to this court. The question here is whether the petition states a cause of action.

The plaintiff, Alfred W. Ruple, sues as the administrator of the estate of Nellie C. Ruple, deceased. Mrs. Ruple was a daughter of Harrison R. Newcomb, who died February 4, 1910, leaving a will executed August 11, 1903, with two codicils executed respectively July 10,1909, and October 20, 1909. By Ms original will the testator made certain *9 minor bequests to Ms wife and daughter, after which his executors were directed to turn over the residue of his property to a trust company, to be held and invested by it, with directions that it pay to his wife $4,500 during her life, and $1,500 to the daughter, Mrs. Ruple. In case of the death of either the widow or daughter, the survivor was to take the whole of the amounts mentioned.

After the death of both the wife and daughter, the trust company was directed to pay to A. W. Ruple the sum of $10,000. The residue of the estate w;as then to be divided equally between Hiram College and the Associated Charities of Cleveland. By the codicil of July 10, 1909, and for reasons therein set forth, the bequest of $10,000 to Mr. Ruple was revoked. Other changes made by that codicil, and by the codicil of October 20, 1909, do hot affect this case and need not be referred to herein. The provisions of the will as executed in 1903, so far as it relates to the bequest to the defendants, and to the $10,000 bequest to Mr. Ruple, read as follows:

“If after the death of my wife, and óf my daughter my daughter shall leave no descendants of her own blood, then I give, devise and bequeath my entire estate, then remaining in the hands of The Citizens Savings &, Trust Company, and direct it to distribute and pay the same as follows:
“To my son-in-law, A. W. Ruple, if he be living at such time, the sum of ten thousand dollars ($10,-000.00). If my son-in-law be not living at such time, then said ten thousand dollars ($10,000.00) shall remain a part of said estate, to be distributed by said The Citizens Savings & Trust Company as next hereinafter provided,
*10 “One half of the entire remainder of said estate to Hiram College, situated at Hiram, Ohio, the other one half of said entire remainder of said estate to the Bethel Associated Charities, of Cleveland, Ohio.”

After the execution of the codicils of 1909, and the revocation of the $10,000 bequest, the provision above quoted was reduced to the following: “If, after the death of my wife, and of my daughter, my daughter shall leave no descendants of her own blood, then I give, devise, and bequeath my entire estate, then remaining in the hands of The Citizens Savings & Trust Company and direct it to distribute and pay the same as follows: One half of the entire remainder of said estate to Hiram College, situated at Hiram, Ohio, the other one half of said entire remainder of said estate to the Bethel Associated Charities, of Cleveland, Ohio.”

The claim of the plaintiff is that inasmuch as Section 10504, General Code, renders void any bequest made to charity by a will executed within one year prior to the testator’s death, the revocation by the testator of the $10,000 bequest to Mr. Ruple operated to increase the residuum of the estate in the amount of $10,000, and that this revocation having been made within one year prior to the testator’s death, the resulting increase of the residuum to this extent is void, and, consequently, that Mr. New-comb died intestate so far as the $10,000 bequest was concerned.

The petition discloses that the whole residuum of the estate was paid to the two defendants mentioned and it is now claimed that as Mrs. Ruple Was the only child of Mr. Newcomb, and as Mr. Newcomb *11 died intestate so far as the $10,000 was concerned, Mrs. Ruple’s administrator is entitled to have Hiram College and the Associated Charities declared trustees as to said sum and to account for that sum to Mrs. Ruple’s administrator.

The original section, defining the right of one to dispose of his estate by will, was passed in 1852 (50 Ohio Laws, 297), and is in effect found in what is now Section 10503, General Code. In 72 Ohio Lawis, 3, that original section was re-enacted, with a proviso, and that proviso consists of what is now Section 10504, General Code; the severance of the sections having been accomplished by the revisers of the statutes. Section 10504, General Code, is therefore a proviso attached to the preceding section, and is an exception to the right of testamentary disposition conferred by that preceding section. It renders void that which but for its enactment would be vital. It is destructive in purpose and effect. It must consequently be given a strict construction.

The purpose of this section is clear. It is to prevent a testator, under the fears incident to impending death, from disposing of his estate to the prejudice of his descendants. Zollmann on Charities, Section 506.

The statutes of the several states that have seen fit to legislate along this line widely differ. The period preceding death, during which the testator cannot favor a charitable institution, one year under the Ohio statute, is longer than it is in some of the other states. Our statute, however, is more liberal than some others, in that it does not operate at all unless the testator dies leaving issue of his *12 body. It is apparent therefore that, while this section may incidentally inure to the benefit of others, the object of the statute is to protect the testator’s direct issue. Davis v. Davis, 62 Ohio St., 411, 57 N. E., 317, 78 Am. St. Rep., 725. It recognizes that while generally a testator may dispose of his property as he pleases, a direct descendant shall not be prejudiced by any charitable bequest made within the last year of the testator’s life.

In Lightner’s Appeal, 57 Pa. Super. Ct., 469, the testatrix, as in the case at bar, gave legacies to individuals and bequeathed the residue to a charity at a time in relation to her death outside the condemnation of the statute. Later, as in this case, by codicil, within the proscribed period, she revoked those legacies, thus enlarging the residuum. The court held that the charity could not take so much of the residuum as resulted from the revocation made by the codicil. This case would appear to sustain the plaintiff’s position in the case at bar.

The differences in the statutes of Pennsylvania and Ohio are, however, vital. In Pennsylvania, the statute covers only the period of thirty days, and applies to all estates, whether the testator leaves issue or not. In that state the object of the statute clearly is the protection of the estate as a whole and the protection of every one who might be interested therein, while in Ohio, as we have pointed out, the statute only seeks to protect the issue of the testator.

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Bluebook (online)
171 N.E. 417, 35 Ohio App. 8, 1928 Ohio App. LEXIS 376, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ruple-v-hiram-college-ohioctapp-1928.