Walbridge v. Toledo Trust Co.

23 N.E.2d 980, 62 Ohio App. 358
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 6, 1939
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 23 N.E.2d 980 (Walbridge v. Toledo Trust Co.) 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
Walbridge v. Toledo Trust Co., 23 N.E.2d 980, 62 Ohio App. 358 (Ohio Ct. App. 1939).

Opinion

Overmyer, J.

The three above captioned causes were filed in the Common Pleas Court by the appellants as plaintiffs in the order indicated, and, each plaintiff seeking the same relief on the same evidence, they were, on hearing, consolidated for purposes of trial, but separate decrees were entered. They have been presented in this court on separate appeals, but were argued and submitted together and what is said herein applies to each and all of them.

In the Common Pleas Court a decree was entered in each case against the plaintiff and in favor of the defendant trustee, and the causes are submitted on appeal on questions of law and fact in this court upon the evidence submitted in the Common Pleas Court, the transcript of docket and journal entries, the arguments and briefs of counsel.

The plaintiffs in their respective petitions alleged that each was the donor under separate written trust *360 indentures, of which the defendant, The Toledo Trust Company, is now trustee, each trust consisting of certain securities. It is alleged that in the years 1935 and 1936 certain securities were sold from the corpus of the trusts at a large profit, by a predecessor trustee, and that each plaintiff had made demand upon the present trustee, defendant herein, that it pay over to plaintiffs as distributees, out of the assets of the trust estates, the profits of such sales or the proceeds thereof, which the trustee failed and refused to do. The prayer is for an accounting and an order requiring the trustee to pay over to the respective plaintiffs the sum so realized as profits from the sales of the securities.

The trustee filed answers .and cross-petitions alleging in substance, that, by the terms of the respective trust indentures, profits or gains realized from the sales of securities became a part of the corpus or principal of the trust estates, and not income; that by the terms of the trust indentures the plaintiffs were entitled only to the income from the trusts during their lives; that the trusts were and are by their very terms irrevocable and were not subject to alteration, control or revocation by the plaintiffs as donors; and that the ultimate beneficiaries of the trusts (the children of plaintiffs and grandchildren of the original donor of the trust securities) each had acquired a vested and non-disturbable interest in the trusts’ corpus, precluding the allowance of plaintiffs’ demands.

A further defense was made by the trustee that at the time of the appointment by the Common Pleas Court of this county of the present trustee, The Toledo Trust Company, the trustee filed an action in that court for instructions and a construction of the trust indentures, making all interested persons parties, and that in that cause and court a decision and judgment was entered on December 30, 1936, from which no *361 appeal was prosecuted, finding the trnst instruments to be irrevocable and conferring only a life interest in tbe income from tbe trust corpus upon tbe plaintiffs, and that such finding and judgment is res judicata upon the questions here raised and dispositive of the issues here sought to be made.

Briefly, the undisputed facts are as follows:

In 1924 Mrs. Elizabeth Cummings Walbridge, who had theretofore inherited a valuable estate from her father, desired to distribute some of the securities of her estate to her three children, who are the appellants herein, and her grandchildren. Accordingly, with the acquiescence and approval of plaintiffs, she transferred to them in substantially equal portions the securities referred to, placing them into the custody of her husband, then living, now deceased. The plan she proposed, which was agreed to by the plaintiffs, contemplated the creation by these plaintiffs of three separate trusts, by the terms of which each of the plaintiffs should receive the net income for life from the securities so transferred, and upon the death of each plaintiff the net income was to be paid to the mother, if still surviving; if not, or upon her death, the life income was to be paid one-half to the surviving spouse of the plaintiff and one-half to the children of that plaintiff. Upon the death of a surviving spouse of the plaintiff, the entire income was to be paid to the children of such plaintiff until they reached certain specified ages, when the trust should terminate and the entire corpus of the trust should be distributed {per stirpes) to the children of plaintiff.

In conformity with the plan and with the full cooperation and approval of all parties, three separate trust instruments were created by plaintiffs herein as of June 14, 1926, and at the same time a fourth trust instrument was created by Mrs. Walbridge, containing substantially the same terms, reserving to herself the life income, with the corpus ultimately distributable to *362 all her grandchildren (children of plaintiffs) per stirpes. The securities constituting the corpus of each trust were thereupon delivered to the trustee (predecessor of the defendant) hy the husband of Mrs. Walbridge, the father of plaintiffs, who had held them in custody since 1924.

The two questions presented are as follows; vi¿:

1. Are the plaintiffs entitled to the profits resulting from the sales of the securities referred to, by the trustee, under the terms of the trust indentures executed by them?

2. Is the finding and judgment of the Court of Common Pleas entered December 30,1936, res judicata on the construction and interpretation of the trust indentures on the issues here made?

The paragraph, identical in each agreement, which it is claimed requires interpretation and construction by the court, is paragraph 12, which provides as follows:

“In consideration of the trustee accepting and assuming the trusts herein created, upon the terms and conditions, and under the reservations and limitations, hereinbefore and hereinafter contained, the transfer and delivery of securities concurrently herewith made, and the trusts herein created, are hereby made irrevocable. The donor, however, during his lifetime, may create liens against said trust estate, and in case any such liens are in existence at the time of his death, the same shall be discharged by the application thereto of sufficient proceeds from the sale of such part thereof as may be necessary to pay the same, if there be not sufficient funds for that purpose in donor’s estate, or by such sale, if the liens are unsatisfied at the time of their maturity and such lienholders demand of trustee such sale. The donor, during his lifetime, may also direct any change he desires in the beneficiaries hereof and hereunder, or in their respective shares, or the time and manner of payment thereof.” (Italics ours.)

*363 It is proper also to note paragraph 13 (d) of each agreement executed by plaintiffs, giving the trustee power, among other things “to determine, within reasonable limits of discretion, whether money or property coming into its hands hereunder shall be treated as principal or income, except that stock dividends and profits from sales, shall be treated as principal.” (Italics ours.)

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23 N.E.2d 980, 62 Ohio App. 358, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/walbridge-v-toledo-trust-co-ohioctapp-1939.