Toledo Trust Co. v. National Bank of Detroit

362 N.E.2d 273, 50 Ohio App. 2d 147, 4 Ohio Op. 3d 125, 1976 Ohio App. LEXIS 5856
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 13, 1976
Docket7962
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 362 N.E.2d 273 (Toledo Trust Co. v. National Bank of Detroit) 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
Toledo Trust Co. v. National Bank of Detroit, 362 N.E.2d 273, 50 Ohio App. 2d 147, 4 Ohio Op. 3d 125, 1976 Ohio App. LEXIS 5856 (Ohio Ct. App. 1976).

Opinion

Wiley, J.

This case involves an appeal from a final judgment in the Court of Common Pleas of Lucas County, in an action for a declaratory judgment, brought by the Toledo Trust Company as trustee of an inter vivos trust created by James Gerity of Adrian, Michigan. The action was brought to determine the validity and/or legal effect of the purported exercise of a power of appointment by defendant National Bank of Detroit, the appellant herein, as guardian of Virginia B. Gerity, incompetent. Virginia B. Gerity was granted the power of appointment under the terms of the inter vivos trust agreement. By a written decision entered April 14,1975, and by an order pertaining to such decision, entered April 16, 1975, and by a judgment entry amending such decision, entered April 25, 1975, the trial court determined that the instrument executed by the defendant National Bank of Detroit and delivered to the plaintiff, purporting to exercise the power of appointment, was invalid and of no effect. The judgment of the trial court further stated that the plaintiff should proceed to administer its trust in compliance with the terms and conditions therein and that the plaintiff pay the costs of the action. It is from this judgment that the appeal was taken.

The defendants in the action are the National Bank of Detroit, as guardian of the person and estate of Virginia B. Gerity and as executor of the estate of Virginia B. Gerity, deceased, and all persons named or described in the Trust Agreement having any interest, in the trust property in the event that a certain general power of appointment granted to Virginia Gerity by the terms of the trust agreement was not exercised.

The findings of fact made by the trial court were helpr ful to this court and included the following: James Gerity, Jr., and Virginia B. Gerity were married for forty-six years *149 and had no children. They resided in Adrian, Lenawee County, Michigan. By a trust agreement dated February 5, Í971, James Gerity, Jr., established an inter vivos revocable trust naming the Toledo Trust Company as trustee. The trust agreement provided that upon Gerity’s death, the trust corpus should be divided into two parts: The first was for the benefit of his wife, Virginia B. Gerity, referred to in the trust agreement as “Trust for Donor’s Wife” (Marital Trust), and the second, entitled “Residuary Trust,” was for the benefit of named beneficiaries other than his wife. Under the terms of the trust agreement, Virginia B. Gerity was given a lifetime, personal power of appointment as well as a general testamentary power of appointment, both vesting as of the date of James Gerity’s death, over that portion of the trust designated “Trust for Donor’s Wife.”

James Gerity, Jr., died November 26, 1973. The domiciliary administration of his estate, with the Ann Arbor Trust Company as administrator, was commenced in the Lenawee County of Michigan Probate Court in December 1973. The ancillary administration with the Toledo Trust Company as ancillary administrator is pending in the Probate Division of the Lucas County Common Pleas Court.

Under the terms of the will of James Gerity, Jr., the residue of his estate was bequeathed to the Toledo Trust Company as trustee, to be divided between the marital and residuary trusts. The marital trust provided that in the event Virginia B. Gerity survived James Gerity, Jr., but failed to exercise her personal power of appointment either during her lifetime or by her will, or to use up the property, that it was to go, at her death, to the beneficiaries named by James Gerity, Jr. In such event, the trust made provision for the payment of federal estate taxes caused by the inclusión of the value of the power of appointment to her estate. The balance of the trust assets constituting the residuary trusts were to be held for the benefit of, or distributed to, the same named beneficiaries of James Gerity, Jr. The trust agreement also provided that if Virginia should predecease James, Virginia’s three nieces and a nephew should receive $100,000 each; since Virginia sur *150 vived James, they are not entitled to receive this sum.

On the same day that he executed his trust, February 5, 1971, James Gerity, Jr., executed his will under which the bulk of his estate was bequeathed to the trustee. Virginia B. Gerity executed her will in 1958, which bequeathed her interest in the residence and household furnishings to her husband, James, and the residue of her estate to her nephew and three nieces.

On November 15, 1973, eleven days prior to his death, when James Gerity was confined in St. Vincent’s Hospital, Toledo, Ohio, substantially all of his securities were brought from Adrian to Toledo, Ohio.

At the time of James Gerity’s death, and for some months prior thereto, Virginia B. Gerity was incompetent. She had sustained a severe cardiac seizure or arrest in March of 1973 and her condition steadily worsened. At the request of the niece of Virginia B. Gerity, Margaret Longthorne, the National Bank of Detroit was appointed Guardian of the person and estate of Virginia B. Gerity by the Probate Court of Lenawee County, Michigan, on December 26,1973.

On January 14, 1974, in an ex parte proceeding in the Probate Court of Lenawee County, Michigan, upon a petition filed by the guardian, First National Bank of Detroit, the Probate Court entered an order granting the guardian’s request for interim authority to exercise the power of appointment over the assets comprising the marital trust, reserving in the court authority to ratify, modify, or nullify the acts of the guardian in its efforts to exercise the personal power of appointment.

Subsequently, on January 30, 1974, and February 20, 1974, hearings were held in the Probate Court of Lenawee County on the issue of whether or not the acts of the guardian in its efforts to exercise the personal power of appointment should be ratified, modified or nullified. At the request of counsel, following the hearing on February 20, 1974, the court reserved, ruling on the issues before it and continued the case to March 6, 1974, to allow counsel to file briefs. Briefs were filed on or about March 6, 1974; *151 however, between the hearing on February 20, 1974, and April 15, 1974, the date of the court’s final order, Virginia B. Gerity, on February 24, 1974, died. The final order of the Probate Court of Lenawee County, on April 15,1974, purported to ratify the guardian’s exercise of the power of appointment in favor of the guardianship estate of Virginia B. Gerity nunc pro tunc.

In addition to the above facts, the transcript of proceedings indicates that at the time of the death of the donor and prior thereto, from the date of the execution of the trust, the funding of the trust consisted of a deposit of money which was invested in a $25 savings bond, leaving a balance of $6.25 in cash. No other assets were conveyed, distributed or held by the trustee at any time and the trust had not been funded by a distribution from the donor’s estate at the time of the hearing on the declaratory judgment proceedings in the trial court, beginning December 11,1974.

The transcript of proceedings further indicates the donor, Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
362 N.E.2d 273, 50 Ohio App. 2d 147, 4 Ohio Op. 3d 125, 1976 Ohio App. LEXIS 5856, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/toledo-trust-co-v-national-bank-of-detroit-ohioctapp-1976.