Ulmer v. Fulton, Supt.

195 N.E. 557, 129 Ohio St. 323, 129 Ohio St. (N.S.) 323, 2 Ohio Op. 326, 97 A.L.R. 1170, 1935 Ohio LEXIS 341
CourtOhio Supreme Court
DecidedApril 24, 1935
Docket24996 and 24997
StatusPublished
Cited by63 cases

This text of 195 N.E. 557 (Ulmer v. Fulton, Supt.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ulmer v. Fulton, Supt., 195 N.E. 557, 129 Ohio St. 323, 129 Ohio St. (N.S.) 323, 2 Ohio Op. 326, 97 A.L.R. 1170, 1935 Ohio LEXIS 341 (Ohio 1935).

Opinion

Zimmerman, J.

Did the bank possess power and authority to create trusts of the kind here involved?

It is a prevailing rule, in Ohio and elsewhere, that banks and trust companies, though organized primarily for private profit, are of a preeminently public nature and have only such powers as are expressly conferred on them by their charters and by statute, of such as may fairly be implied from those expressly given. 5 Ohio Jurisprudence, 363, Section 73; 3 Ruling Case Law, 419, Section 46; 7 Corpus Juris, 585, Section 213; 4 Michie on Banks and Banking, 8, Section 5; 2 Morse on Banks & Banking (6 Ed.), 1557, Section 777; 1 Morse on Banks & Banking, 14, Section 6.

Do the statutes of Ohio authorize a combined bank and trust company to create a trust out of its own assets and sell participation certificates therein to others ?

A number of Ohio statutes define the powers and functions of trust companies. Those asserted to be applicable, as cited and commented upon by counsel, are as follows:

“Sec. 710-156. A trust company may receive cmd hold moneys, or property in trust, or in deposit from executors, administrators, assignees, guardians, trustees, corporations or individuals upon such terms and conditions as may be agreed upon between the parties.”
“Sec. 710-159. A trust company may act as agent, and take, accept and execute any and all trusts, duties *333 and powers in regard to the holding, management and disposition of any property or estate, real or personal, which may be committed or transferred to, or vested in said trust estate, and the rents and profits thereof or the sale thereof, as may be granted or confided to it by any person, association, corporation, municipal or other authority; and may act as trustee under any will or deed or other instrument creating a trust for the care and management of property under the same circumstances and in the same manner, and subject to the same control by the court having jurisdiction of the same as in the case of a legally qualified person.”
“Sec. 710-164. In the management of money and property held by it as trustee, such trust company may invest such money and property in a general trust fund of the trust company. But it shall be competent for the authority making the appointment to direct whether such money and property shall be held separately or any part thereof invested in a general trust fund of the trust company. The trust company always shall follow and be entirely governed by the directions contained in any will or instrument under which it acts.”
“Sec. 710-165. No property or securities received or heldloj any trust company in trust shall be mingled with the investments of the capital stock or other properties belonging to such trust company or be liable for its debts or obligations. Moneys pending distribution or investment may be treated as a deposit in the trust department or may be deposited in any other department of the bank, subject in other respects to the provisions of law relating to deposit of trust funds by trustees and others.” (108 Ohio Laws, part 1, 122.) (Italics ours throughout.)

Under the laws of Ohio, a banking institution such as The Commercial Savings Bank & Trust Company, with a single board of directors, is one corporate *334 entity, no matter how many departments it may form, either as a matter of convenience in transacting its business, or to meet requirements prescribed by law.

Statutes relating to the same subject-matter must be read and construed together. A perusal of the Ohio Banking Act, particularly the part relating to trust companies, is unconvincing in support of the proposition that a bank with trust powers may create a trust out of its own securities and sell participating shares therein. Such procedure is foreign to the accepted notions of the proper business and functions of a trust company, viz., the acceptance and execution of trusts at the instance of others, and we are unwilling through conjectural and dubious construction to'extend to banks exercising trust prerogatives such broad and far-reaching powers as the formation of trusts out of their own property would give them, when the General Assembly has not seen fit to do so through plain and unequivocal language.

Besides, such course of conduct is so antagonistic to the fundamental conceptions of the manner in which a bank and trust company should operate and offers so many openings for abusive practices as to be opposed to sound public policy. Think of the ensuing possibilities. A bank by setting up trusts in its own securities (which securities are changeable at will), and selling participation certificates therein, may cause an immediate conflict between its general depositors and the holders of the participation certificates. The opportunity is afforded to place the first class securities in the trusts and allow the poorer securities to remain among the general assets, to the prejudice of the general depositors, or vice versa. ^A bank owes the duty of impartiality and fair dealing toward all with whom it does business.

The profit feature is another indefensible element. That á trustee may directly profit from the management of a trust estate, at least in the absence of an *335 express agreement to that effect, is against every established, notion connected with the administration of trusts. In these modern times a trustee is, of course, entitled to reasonable compensation for his services, but such compensation may not take the form of direct profits from the manipulation of the trust estate.

The records in the cases before us are clear that the bank was engaged in a profit-making venture. For instance, the rate of interest on the various mortgages apportioned to the several alleged trusts was not less than six per cent, whereas the rate of interest to be paid on the participation certificates was not more than five or five and one-half per cent, the bank pocketing the difference. Again, the bank bought an entire issue of The Jamestown Land Company bonds, amounting to $60,000, at a price of ninety-three cents on the dollar, and shortly thereafter turned them into purported trust No. 636 at par, taking credit of one hundred cents on the dollar therefor. What would there be to prevent the bank in the hands of an unscrupulous management from buying low grade first mortgages at substantial discounts, selling them to itself as trustee at face value for placement in the participation trusts, and making a clear profit of the difference? No interference by way of restrictions or supervision stands in the way.

Transactions partaking of somewhat analogous characteristics have been condemned, disapproved and nullified by this court on a number of different occasions. Cox, Admr., v. John, 32 Ohio St., 532; Caldwell v. Caldwell, 45 Ohio St., 512, 523, 15 N. E., 297; Riddle and Parker v. Roll, 24 Ohio St., 572; Piatt v. Longworth’s Devisees, 27 Ohio St., 159, 195. And see, St.

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Bluebook (online)
195 N.E. 557, 129 Ohio St. 323, 129 Ohio St. (N.S.) 323, 2 Ohio Op. 326, 97 A.L.R. 1170, 1935 Ohio LEXIS 341, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ulmer-v-fulton-supt-ohio-1935.