Schneider v. Dorr

210 N.E.2d 311, 3 Ohio Misc. 103, 32 Ohio Op. 2d 391, 1965 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 328
CourtLake County Probate Court
DecidedJanuary 12, 1965
DocketGuardian’s Docket 2, No. 212
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 210 N.E.2d 311 (Schneider v. Dorr) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Lake County Probate Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Schneider v. Dorr, 210 N.E.2d 311, 3 Ohio Misc. 103, 32 Ohio Op. 2d 391, 1965 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 328 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1965).

Opinion

Pollock, J.

This is an action for a declaratory judgment brought by Hubert H. Schneider, as successor trustee under the will of Harrison T. Chandler, deceased, to determine the disposition of the corpus of the trust estate created by his will. All proper and necessary parties to this determination have been named defendants and are properly before the court.

The testator’s will, dated February 15, 1904, a [107]*107codicil, dated January 19, 1905, and a second codicil, dated October 18, 1910, were duly admitted to probate in this court, following the testator’s death on January 1, 1912, at the age of 69. All parties, through counsel, have signed an agreed statement of facts, or have failed to do so, although given full opportunity, upon proper notice thereof. A few supplemental facts were admitted on hearing by consent of all counsel present.

Approximately two-thirds of the assets in the estate were distributed to the distributees named in the will, the major portion going to his wife. The other one-third passed into a trust provided for by items 6 through 10 of his will. The assets coming into the trust were inventoried at $360,400.00 and consisted of stock in three corporations in which Mr. Chandler was the dominant figure, the most important one being The Chandler and Price Company. The stock in the two minor corporations have been sold by the trustee but the trustee still holds the Chandler and Price Co. stock and the trust has now grown to have a value of approximately $2,000,000.00.

Mr. Chandler was survived by his wife, Ellen F. Chandler, who died February 8, 1912, a month and eight days after her husband, and left her entire estate to their two daughters, Gertrude L. C. Tucker, who died March 25, 1953, and Constance Chandler Fraekelton, who died May 1, 1963. Gertrude died without issue or surviving spouse and left her entire residuary estate to Western Reserve University. Constance also died without issue or surviving spouse and left her entire residuary estate to five local hospitals, which are defendants in this proceeding.

The trust provisions of Mr. Chandler’s will are found in items 6 through 10 of which items 9 and 10 are most important to this action. They read as follows:

“Item 9. If after the death of my said wife and both of my said daughters there shall be a child or children of/either or both of my said daughters, who shall survive my said wife and both my said daughters for a period of ten (10) years, then and in that event I give, bequeath and devise to such child or children, each, all and every of said stocks, moneys, or re-invested property or securities, and all of the property left, provided hereby to go into the possession and control of said Ro[108]*108bert J. Frackelton and Ms successors, to such cMld or cMldren, to it or them and to its or their heirs and assigns forever, in the following proportions: If each of my said daughters shall leave a child or children who shall survive until ten (10) years after the death of my said wife, and both of my said daughters, then the child or children of my said daughter Gertrude L. C. Tucker shall take one-half thereof, and the child or cMldren or of my said daughter Constance L. Chandler shall take one-half thereof. And in the event that either of my said daughters shall leave issue which shall not survive to the end of said period of ten years from and after the death of my said wife and both my said daughters, then if the other daughter shall have left issue which shall so survive, then the child or children of such daughter as shall survive, shall receive the entire property so left in trust, with any unpaid income thereof, to it or them and to its or their heirs and assigns forever. And in the event of the death of my said wife and of both of my said daughters, without issue of my said daughters, or of either of them, living at the end of said period of ten years after the death of my wife and daughters as aforesaid, then and in that case, I give, devise and bequeath unto my sister, Mary J. H. Shaw, of Peters-burg, Illinois, to her and her heirs forever, one-fourth of said property, moneys and stocks described in Items 6 and 7 hereof; and to my nieces Clarissa C. Frackelton and Louise Frackelton, the daughters of my sister, Marie Louise Frackelton (of Peters-burg, Illinois), deceased, share and share alike, one-fourth of the said property, moneys and stocks, described in Items 6 and 7 hereof; and one-fourth of said trust properties, moneys and unpaid income, I hereby give and bequeath to my brother Charles E. Chandler, of Peoria, Illinois, Ms heirs and assigns forever; and the remaining one-fourth of said trust properties and moneys and unpaid income, I hereby give and bequeath, share and share alike, to the then living lineal descendants of my brothers John T. Chandler and Linas C. Chandler, their heirs and assigns forever.

“Item 10. The object and purpose of the trust herein created being to provide an income assuring my wife and daughters an annual income which shall protect them against adversity and want, and to keep the said property named and described in Items 6 and 7 in persons of my own blood, as here[109]*109tofore provided, and to the end that the same shall not descend to the husbands of my said daughters, nor be controlled by them or either of them, I direct that the husband of either of my said daughters shall not, at my death, or at any time thereafter, become a trustee of the property and funds herein described and provided for.”

Item 12 gives to his wife and two daughters, “share and share alike, to them, their heirs and assigns forever, all the remainder of my property of every kind and nature * * *.”

The first codicil is unimportant here. Items 2 and 3 of the second codicil, dated October 18, 1910, contain the following provisions.

“ITEM TWO (2) By Item Ten (10) of my said Will I provided that the husbands of either of my said daughters Gertrude and Constance should not become a Trustee of said trust property provided for in said Will. At this time my daughter Constance was unmarried. Since making said Will she has married said Robert J. Frackelton. I therefore modify and revoke said Item Ten (10) of my said will and Item Twelve (12) of my said Will, so far as they relate to the husband of said daughter Constance.

“ITEM THREE (3) If by reason of death or from other cause, any portion of said trust estate shall not be finally disposed of under said Will and this Codicil, then, and in that event it is my will that the same pass into my residuary estate provided by Item Twelve (12) of my said Will, to my said wife and daughters share and share alike, to them their heirs and assigns forever.”

The main controversy in the case revolves around the issue as to whether item 3 of the codicil was designed by the testator to prevent the operation of the anti-lapse statute Section 10581, General Code (now Section 2107.52, Revised Code). If this is decided in the negative, the question next in importance is whether the provisions of item 9 require the distribution of the corpus of the trust to be delayed for ten years after the death of the last life tenant, which occurred on May 1, 1963. Then, if it should be held that the anti-lapse statute governs the distribution of the corpus so that it goes to his heirs rather than the university and hospitals, hereafter referred to as the charities, under the residuary clauses in the wills of decedent’s [110]

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Bluebook (online)
210 N.E.2d 311, 3 Ohio Misc. 103, 32 Ohio Op. 2d 391, 1965 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 328, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schneider-v-dorr-ohprobctlake-1965.