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Danner v. Shanafelt

Supreme Court of Ohio
Feb 18, 1953
110 N.E.2d 772 (Ohio 1953)

Summary

noting the line of Ohio Supreme Court cases upholding charitable trusts even where the proposed provisions are arguably vague, inexpedient, or impractical

Summary of this case from In re Parkview Hosp.

Opinion

No. 33036

Decided February 18, 1953.

Trusts — Charitable — Will not fail for want of trustee, when — Declination of trust by named trustee — Authority of court to appoint trustee — Testamentary bequest to the poor of named community — Trustee's discretion to select beneficiaries.

1. The law favors charitable trusts and such a trust will not fail for want of a trustee unless the language creating the trust shows that the settlor intended it to fail if his named trustee does not accept the trusteeship.

2. Where a testator in his will creates a charitable trust and expresses two contingencies upon which it will fail, neither of which has to do with the acceptance of the trust by the trustee whom the testator names, the declination of the trust by such named trustee will not cause the trust to fail. The Probate Court has the authority in such situation to appoint a trustee.

3. A bequest in a will, which provides for the distribution of sums of money during December and January of each year to the poor of a community but which does not provide how such poor are to be selected, impliedly gives to the named or appointed trustee the discretion, within proper bounds, to select the beneficiaries of the bequest and to make the payments to them. ( Palmer v. Oiler, Exrx., 102 Ohio St. 271, approved and followed.)

APPEAL from the Court of Appeals for Hardin county.

On May 29, 1947, appellees, who are the executors of the estate of Charles H. Shanafelt, deceased, and who will hereinafter be designated the executors, instituted this action in the Probate Court of Hardin County for the construction of the will of their decedent.

Among the items of the will concerning which construction is sought is the following:

"Out of the balance that is left of my estate if any, I then bequeath to Latham Lodge No. 154, Free and Accepted Masons of which I am a member at this time at Kenton, Ohio, twenty thousand dollars ($20,000.00) to be known as the Shanafelt Fund and this full amount to be invested in U.S. government bonds at all times and the interest derived therefrom to be divided among the poor people of Kenton, Ohio, in cash money during the months of December and January of each and every year and if the money is not so invested and so expended then this bequeath is to be void and the money returned to my estate and divided among my nephews and nieces as named below. The remainder of my estate shall be divided equal among my nephews and nieces named as follows, Willis Shanafelt, May S. Danner, Thomas L. Shanafelt, Irma M. Shanafelt and Ruth E. Figley."

The will was admitted to probate by the Probate Court of Hardin County on June 7, 1940. Subsequently an application to construe such will was filed, to which proceeding the Attorney General of Ohio was not made a party. In construing the will, pursuant to such application, the court found that the foregoing bequest "is a valid and subsisting one which said Latham Lodge No. 154, Free and Accepted Masons, can legally accept or renounce."

Thereafter on June 5, 1941, a resolution was filed in the Probate Court of Hardin County by Latham Lodge declining to accept the trusteeship. Thereupon the present action was instituted, and all the necessary parties, including the Attorney General of Ohio, were joined as defendants.

On May 9, 1949, the Probate Court entered a judgment construing the will, which provides in part as follows:

"* * * the legacy contained in said provision of said testator's will constituted a personal trust; that said legacy was officially rejected by the legatee named therein, to wit, Latham Lodge No. 154, Free and Accepted Masons, of Kenton, Ohio; that upon such rejection said trust failed and that said legacy became and now is a part of the residuary estate of the said Charles H. Shanafelt, deceased, to be distributed to the residuary legatees of said testator as provided in said will."

An appeal on questions of law and fact was perfected to the Court of Appeals by the Attorney General. That court appointed a special master commissioner to take testimony in writing, report it to the court and therewith report his conclusions as to the law and facts involved. After reciting the facts surrounding the execution of the will, the commissioner submitted conclusions of law in which he held that the trust provided for in the will was not created on personal confidence in the discretion of Latham Lodge, and that the trust lacks features essential to a charitable trust in that the whole scheme as set up in the will is vague, inexpedient, impractical, impossible of performance, and, therefore, invalid.

Thereafter the matter was heard by the Court of Appeals on the report of the commissioner.

The Attorney General filed exceptions to the report of the commissioner, and the executors filed a motion to confirm his findings of fact and conclusions of law.

The Court of Appeals entered judgment that the report of the commissioner be approved, confirmed and adopted as the findings of fact and conclusions of law of that court; found that the bequest to the lodge is void, and that the trust funds mentioned in the bequest can not be invested or expended as prescribed in the will; and directed that the property be distributed in accordance with the last sentence of the bequest.

The cause is before this court upon the allowance of a motion to certify the record.

Mr. Dwight C. Cessna and Mr. Paul T. Mahon, for appellees.

Mr. C. William O'Neill, attorney general, Mr. Ralph Klapp and Mr. E.B. Wetherill, for appellants.


The Attorney General contends that the original finding of the Probate Court to the effect that the bequest in Charles H. Shanafelt's will "is a valid and subsisting one which said Latham Lodge No. 154, Free and Accepted Masons can legally accept or renounce" is res judicata on the question of the validity of the bequest as a charitable trust, regardless of the action of Latham Lodge. In view of the conclusion at which we have arrived, it is not necessary for us to consider that contention.

The question before us is whether the provision in the will creates a valid charitable trust of such a general nature that it survives after the declination of the trustee to accept it.

The Probate Court was of the opinion that the trust is dependent upon the acceptance by the trustee and that, upon its declination to serve, the trust fails, whereas the Court of Appeals was of the opinion that the trust is not personal as depending upon the acceptance by the trustee but that it is so impractical of operation and impossible of performance that it must necessarily fail.

The first question we consider is whether the trust is a personal one, that is to say, did the testator intend that it should not come into existence unless Latham Lodge accepted the obligation to execute it. In considering this question we must remember that it is axiomatic that equity favors a charitable trust and will not allow one to fail for want of a trustee unless the instrument creating such trust demonstrates that the settlor intended it to fail if his named trustee did not accept the trusteeship.

It is argued that the testator was a man who lived largely by himself; that his great and practically only interest in life was Latham Lodge No. 154, Free and Accepted Masons, of which he was a member; and that his entire social and religious outlet was through his membership in that fraternal organization. It is contended that because of this situation he must have had in mind, in providing $20,000, to be known as the Shanafelt Fund and to be invested in U.S. government bonds at all times, the interest therefrom to be divided among the poor people of Kenton, Ohio, in money, during the months of December and January each year, that Latham Lodge should do the investing and distributing, and that, if Latham Lodge declined to do so, the trust was to fail and the money given to his nephews and nieces.

There might be some force to the argument if the will had provided that the money was to be divided among the Masonic poor, or among the poor as Latham Lodge might select. It will be observed, however, that the money is to be divided among the poor people of Kenton, without any direction as to how they are to be selected, that there is no discretion in the trustee as to how the money shall be invested, and that the only duty of the trustee is to distribute the income.

It is argued that because decedent had such confidence in and devotion to Latham Lodge he must have intended the trust only if the lodge acted as trustee. However, it would be rare indeed for the creator of a trust to select a trustee in whom he did not have fullest confidence and with whom, if such trustee were a person or persons, he did not have friendly and affectionate relations.

It will be noted that the testator provided for two contingencies upon which the trust is to fail and those are the failure to invest the money in government bonds at all times, and the failure to expend the money as he directed. It would seem that if he had intended the trust to fail, if Latham Lodge declined to become trustee, he would have used appropriate language to indicate that intention.

Since a charitable trust is presumed not to fail for want of a trustee unless the language creating the trust so provides, we are of the opinion that the trust created by Charles H. Shanafelt is not dependent upon the acceptance thereof by Latham Lodge and that upon the declination of the lodge to be trustee, if the trust is otherwise valid, the Probate Court has the duty to appoint another trustee.

The next question before us is a consideration of the theory upon which the Court of Appeals held the trust invalid. That court decided that the provision in the bequest directing the interest earned on the government bonds to be divided among the "poor people of Kenton, Ohio" is vague, inexpedient and impractical in literal execution.

It is difficult to understand how the Court of Appeals came to the conclusion it did in view of the cases which have been decided by this court concerning trusts similar to the one involved herein.

In the case of Palmer v. Oiler, Exrx., 102 Ohio St. 271, 131 N.E. 362, this court construed a provision in a will which gave to The Cleveland Trust Company the residue of a testator's estate to be devoted to "needy and poor women." In that case it was contended that the residuary clause was invalid for the reasons that the beneficiaries were too indefinite and not limited to any locality, that no definite class was designated from which the individuals could be selected, that no way was provided for their selection, and that the bank was not expressly given discretionary power to select them.

This court held in the syllabus:

"1. A last will contained the following residuary clause, to wit: `The residue of my estate I give to The Cleveland Trust Company to be devoted to the needy poor women.' Held: To be a valid testamentary charitable gift.

"2. It is not necessary that the beneficiaries be limited to any particular locality.

"3. In the absence of express power of selection being given to the testamentary trustee, such authority will be implied."

In the present case the beneficiaries are a much more limited class than in the Oiler case, for at least they are limited to the poor people of Kenton. Under the doctrine of the Oiler case, the trustee would, within proper bounds, have the implied power of selection in distributing the income of the investment during December and January of each year.

In the case of Hunt, Trustee, v. Edgerton, 9 C.C. (N.S.), 353, 19 C.D., 377, affirmed without opinion in Edgerton, Admr., v. Hunt, Trustee, 75 Ohio St. 594, 80 N.E. 1126, it was held that a valid charitable trust was created by a bequest which provided that the fund was to be applied "by my trustee to the education of colored children, by which I mean in whole or in part of negro blood."

In the Edgerton case, nothing was said about locality, the selection of beneficiaries or the discretion of the trustee.

In the case of Landis et al., Exrs., v. Wooden, 1 Ohio St. 160, 59 Am. Dec., 615, this court was called upon to construe a residuary clause in a will, which provided, "The remainder of my estate I do hereby give and devise to the poor and needy, fatherless, etc., of Jefferson and Madison townships, of the county aforesaid; to such poor as are not able to support themselves, to be divided as my executors may deem proper without any partiality."

The court, Judge Ranney writing the opinion, held that the clause in the will was a valid and effectual one for the purposes therein expressed; that courts of chancery in this state on general principles, independent of the statute of charitable uses (43 Elizabeth), have jurisdiction to enforce such trusts; that the spirit and policy of the act for the relief of the poor would sustain such jurisdiction and the bequest; and that no trust will fail for want of a trustee, as one will be appointed by a court of chancery.

In view of the uniform decisions of this court through the years, upholding the validity of charitable trusts much more vague and indefinite in their provisions than the one considered in the present case, we conclude that a gift to the poor of Kenton is not so impractical as to make it invalid, for the reason that discretion in the trustee as to the manner and extent of the distribution of such gift is implied.

The Probate Court of Hardin County has jurisdiction to effectuate the trust herein by the appointment of a trustee to serve as a substitute for Latham Lodge No. 154, Free and Accepted Masons, and to counsel with and advise the trustee upon application as to the validity of any proposed method of distribution to carry out the terms of the trust.

The judgment of the Court of Appeals is reversed and the cause remanded to the Probate Court of Hardin County for further proceedings according to law.

Judgment reversed and cause remanded.

WEYGANDT, C.J., TAFT, MATTHIAS, HART and ZIMMERMAN, JJ., concur.


Study of the record convinces me that the testator intended and did undertake to create a trust personal to the Masonic Lodge of which he was a member, and that the trust failed when that lodge rejected the trust. This conclusion is consistent with that reached by the Probate Court and would require affirmance of the judgment of the Court of Appeals, even though that court based its decision upon a different theory.


Summaries of

Danner v. Shanafelt

Supreme Court of Ohio
Feb 18, 1953
110 N.E.2d 772 (Ohio 1953)

noting the line of Ohio Supreme Court cases upholding charitable trusts even where the proposed provisions are arguably vague, inexpedient, or impractical

Summary of this case from In re Parkview Hosp.
Case details for

Danner v. Shanafelt

Case Details

Full title:DANNER ET AL., EXRS., APPELLEES v. SHANAFELT ET AL., APPELLANTS

Court:Supreme Court of Ohio

Date published: Feb 18, 1953

Citations

110 N.E.2d 772 (Ohio 1953)
110 N.E.2d 772

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