Moore v. Foresman
Moore v. Foresman
Opinion of the Court
The appellees have filed a motion to dismiss this appeal for want of prosecution upon the ground that the appellant is in violation of certain rules of practice of this court in that the appellant failed to attach to its brief a two-page “supplemental opinion” which corrected a mistake in the basic opinion of the Probate Court (this was later filed prior to oral argument, with copies to all counsel of record) and failed to include record references in the assignment of errors.
The court finds no serious breach of the rules of this court and further finds that no party has been prejudiced by the alleged rule violations.
The motion to dismiss this appeal for want of prosecution is hereby overruled.
The appellees contend that this appeal should be dismissed on the ground that the Court -of Appeals abused its discretion in vacating its initial judgment not within term. This court decided this question in favor of the appellant, upon the allowance of the motion to certify in this case.
The appellees contend that, so far as Helen Louise Johnston and William Kurtz Foresman are concerned, the appellant has shifted from a claim of legal title to the stock to a claim of equitable title, that the assignment of errors to the Court
A careful reading of the petition of the trustee filed in the Probate Court for the construction of the Foresman will makes it clear that the theory of this cause has not been changed since its beginning. The trustee recognizes that legal title exists in the trustee and seeks direction from the court as to whom such legal title should now be transferred under the terms of the will. This requires a determination of the equitable ownership of the corpus, as the equitable owner would be entitled to conveyance of the legal title held by the trustee. The only question then before the Probate Court and the Court of Appeals was: Who, as equitable owner of the trust res, is now entitled to a conveyance of the legal title to that property1?
The question which is raised by the judgment of the Court of Appeals is whether the Uniform Stock Transfer Act is applicable to the transfer of the equitable or beneficial ownership or interest in the 80 shares of bank stock which formed the res of this trust.
The answer to this question is found in the Uniform Stock Transfer Act itself. Section 1705.04, Revised Code, provides as follows:
‘ ‘ Title to a certificate and to the shares represented thereby can be transferred only by #
Section 1705.01, Revised Code, defines the words, title and transfer, as used in Section 1705.04, Revised Code, as follows:
“ ‘Transfer’ means transfer of legal title.
“ ‘Title’ means legal title and does not include a merely equitable or beneficial ownership or interest.” •
This language makes it unmistakedly clear that the Uniform Stock Transfer Act applies to the transfer of legal title and does not apply to the transfer of the equitable or beneficial ownership or interest.
The appellees, Helen Louise Johnston and William Kurtz Foresman, contend that their conveyances are not binding against them, since the interest they attempted to convey was inalienable as a contingent remainder. No such argument can
A future interest, whether contingent or executory, is alienable. This was the rule in Ohio even prior to the enactment of Section 2131.04, Revised Code, in 1932. Lessee of Thompson v. Hoop (1856), 6 Ohio St., 480; Needles, Exr., v. Needles (1857), 7 Ohio St., 432; Thomas v. Trustees (1904), 70 Ohio St., 92.
The text writers have endorsed such a rule, particularly where the future interest is in personalty preceded by an interest in trust, as here. Simes & Smith, Law of Future Interests, 167, Section 1857; 2 Scott on Trusts (2 Ed.), 986, Section 132; Bogert on Trusts and Trustees, Section 188; Restatement of the Law of Trusts (2d), (Rev. Ed.), 1959, Sections 132 and 129. See W. B. Saunders Co. v. Galbraith (1931), 40 Ohio App., 155, 159.
The principle regarding the transferability of equitable property interest was recognized by this court in Lozier v. Lozier (1919), 99 Ohio St., 254, 257. See, also, First National Bank of Cincinnati, Exr., v. Tenney (1956), 165 Ohio St., 513; Cleveland Trust Co., Trustee, v. White (1938), 134 Ohio St., 1.
Equitable or beneficial ownership and interest in securities is alienable and may be conveyed. See Stuart v. Sargent (1933), 283 Mass., 536, 186 N. E., 649; Martindell v. Fiduciary Counsel, Inc. (1943), 133 N. J. E., 408, 30 A. (2d), 281; Equitable Trust Co., Exr. v. Gallagher (1949), 31 Del. Ch., 88, 67 A. (2d), 50, affirmed, 32 Del. Ch., 401, 77 A. (2d), 548; Whitney v. Nolan (1937), 296 Mass., 419, 6 N. E. (2d), 386; Orpheum Building Co. v. Anglim (1942), 127 F. (2d), 478, 481. This rule has been announced also in Ohio in Andrews v. Watson (1887), 12 C. D., 686 and 692, affirmed without opinion in 51 Ohio St., 619, where the Circuit Court held, in the fifth paragraph of the headnotes :
“The legal title to stock must be transferred on the books or by assignment of certificate, although the equitable title may be otherwise transferred.”
The appellees had an equitable or beneficial ownership
The only interest these appellees had in the trust res of bank stock was equitable. This was transferable and they transferred it.
Under the law, the Uniform Stock Transfer Act has no application to such a transfer. Upon termination of the trust, the trustee, under the terms of item 19 of the will of William Foresman, must convey legal title to the trust res to the equitable owner, the appellant.
Judgment reversed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.