Southern Ohio Savings Bank & Trust Co. v. Hayward

25 Ohio Law. Abs. 75, 9 Ohio Op. 333, 1937 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 993
CourtCourt of Common Pleas of Ohio, Hamilton County
DecidedSeptember 3, 1937
StatusPublished

This text of 25 Ohio Law. Abs. 75 (Southern Ohio Savings Bank & Trust Co. v. Hayward) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Common Pleas of Ohio, Hamilton County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Southern Ohio Savings Bank & Trust Co. v. Hayward, 25 Ohio Law. Abs. 75, 9 Ohio Op. 333, 1937 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 993 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1937).

Opinion

OPINION

By GORMAN, J.

This is an action by the present trustee of the estate of Ethan O. Hurd, who died testate on March 24, 1913, to construe certain provisions of his will.

The ninth item of the will reads as follows:

“(Section 9). The entire rest and residue of my estate real or personal, acquired or to bo acquired of which I may die possessed I give, devise and bequeath to my wife Anna Cora Carson Hurd and to The Central Trust & Safe Deposit Co., of Cincinnati, Ohio, a corporation under the laws of Ohio, to be held by them in trust as co-executors and co-trustees upon the following uses and trusts viz: They are to coliect its income and keep the real estate in first class repair and insured and pay all taxes and assessments. I empower them from time to time as they may deem best, to change said property from real to personal or from personal to real or to make such investments or reinvestments thereof as they may deem best; to sell and convey in fee simple upon such terms as they may deem best or to lease either temporarily or perpetually with or without privilege of purchase or renewal, any or all of said estate real or personal and no purchaser of the fee or any part thereof shall be bound to see to the application of the purchase money paid.
“After the death of my wife, Anna Cora Carson Hurd, such changes of investments or leases for over five years or leases with privilege of purchase shall be made only with the approval of the surviving heirs of legal age named in this section 9. My executors and trustees are to apply the net proceeds of the income from my estate to the payment to those so long as they -live as follows viz: First, to my wife, Anna Cora Carson Hurd, Six Thousand Dollars a year. The remainder of the net income and after my wife’s death the whole of the net income is to be divided so long as they live among the following, viz: (1st) To my wife, Anna Cora Carson Hurd, One (1) share. (This is in addition to the Six Thousand Dollars a year already allowed her). (2) To my sister Mary Hurd Robison, One (1) share. (3) To my niece, Anna Hurd Symmes, Two (2) shares. (4) To my great grand niece Marion Hayward, one share. (5) To my great grand nephew, Richard Folsom Hayward one share. To my nephew (6) Richard Hurd, one-half (%) share. To my (7) nephew James D. Hurd, one and one-half (1%) shares. I make this difference in the last two on account of what the former received from the latter on the death of the last survivor of these seven the whole of the estate named in this Section 9 is to go in fee to the lawful descendants at that date living of my nephew Richard Hurd, of my nephew James D. Hurd and of my grand nephew Philip Hayward; to each such descendant then living of whatsoever generation, one equal share in fee. Should there be no such descendants or descendant then the whole of said estate is to go in fee to the Young Men’s Christian Association of Cincinnati, Ohio. The devisees to my wife in this will I declare to be in lieu of dower in my estate and in lieu of one year’s allowance.
“In the event of her dying before me everything devised to her in this will is to go with and as the rest of the estate devised in trust in Section 9.”

On July 3.1, 1928 after the death of Anna Cora Carson Hurd the Central Trust <Ss Safety Deposit Company resigned as trustee and finally on January 28, 1937, after another bank had served in that capacity the plaintiff became trustee.

Under the terms of the will the trustee-therefor is to distribute the whole of the net income to certain designated beneficiaries. Anna Cora Carson Hurd, Mary Hurd Robinson, Anna Hurd . Symmes and, Richard Hurd are now dead and in accordance with the above quoted section, the three surviving life annuitants are Richard Folson Hayward, Marion Hayward Clancey and James D. Hurd.

There are certain heirs and descendants of James D. Hurd, Richard Hurd and Philip Hayward who, if living at the death of the life annuitants, will be entitled to the corpus of the trust outright.

[77]*77It will be noticed therefore that under the terms of the will Folsom Hayward, Marion Hayward Clancey and James D. Hurd are now as life annuitants entitled to the income, while at the death of all of these three the lawful descendants of James D. Hurd, Richard Hurd and Philip Hayward are entitled to the remainder.

The trustee is entitled to make changes of investments, but since Anna Cora Carson Hurd is dead, such changes can only be made with the approval of the life annuitants.

Certain changes in investments have been made which we shall set out in detail, and stock and cash dividends declared and paid to the trustee. The question is whether these dividends are to be considered as income payable to the life annuitants, or whether they are corpus to be held by the trustee for the benefit of the remaindermen.

In this case there were periodical sales made by the trustee at the request of the life annuitants and periodical reinvestments made. Both parties have classified these sales and purchases into three groups— those involving the purchase of Cleveland Cliffs Iron Company cumulative preferred stock, the Otis Steel Company preferred stock, and The Youngstown Sheet & Tube Company stock.

Between March 6, 1936 and April 8, 1936 the trustee sold certain securities of the trust amounting to $33,841.87. With the greater portion of these proceeds, $33,466.25, it. purchased five hundred shares of 5% cumulative preferred stock of the Cleveland Cliffs Iron Company in the following amounts on the following dates: March 19, 1936 — 10 shares; March 20, 1936 — 100 shares; March 21, 1936 — 15 shares; March 24, 1936 —100 shares; March 25, 1936 — 100 shares; April 8, 1936 — 175 shares.

At that time the Cleveland Cliffs Iron Company was in arrears in payment of its preferred dividends approximately $24.75 per share. On December 1, 1936 the board of directors of The Cleveland Cliffs Iron Company declared a cash dividend of $3 per share to the holders of the cumulative preferred stock as of record December 5, 1936. The dividend was payable December 15, 1936, and subsequently the plaintiff, as trustee, received $1,500 in cash as dividends.

Between December 1, 1936 and February 1, 1937 the trustee sold securities at the request and with the consent of the life annuitants for which it received $34,503.82. With $34,195.75 it purchased three blocks of the seven per cent preferred stock of The Otis Steel Company on the following days and in the following amounts: December 1, 1936 — 100 shares; December 3, 1936 — 92 shares; January 26, 1937 — 100 shares; February 1, 1937 — 8 shares.

On November 5, 1936 the shareholders of the Otis Steel Company adopted a plan of recapitalization whereby each share of the preferred stock was to be exchanged for one and 28/100 shares of new 5%% convertible first preferred stock and one-half share of common stock.

The plan was declared operative by the board of directors on December 3, 1936, and on that date a cash dividend of 4.12% cents a share was declared. Under this plan the trustee deposited the three hundred shares of old stock, and received in exchange three hundred and eighty-four (384) shares of the new preferred stock and one hundred and fifty (150) shares of the common stock. The trustee received as a cash dividend at that time $1,579.88.

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Bluebook (online)
25 Ohio Law. Abs. 75, 9 Ohio Op. 333, 1937 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 993, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/southern-ohio-savings-bank-trust-co-v-hayward-ohctcomplhamilt-1937.