391 N.E.2d 746 | Ohio Ct. App. | 1978
This case presents a question to us which, to our knowledge, has never before been considered by the Supreme Court or the Courts of Appeal of Ohio: whether a Probate Court errs if it fails to appoint a nonresident corporation licensed to do business in this state as executor of a resident testator's estate where the testator has named that corporation as executor in his will.
The testator in this case, John J. Emery, designated the appellant, Girard Trust Bank, a Pennsylvania banking corporation, and his wife, Irene Emery, as co-executors of his estate in his last will and testament dated November 25, 1968. Irene Emery predeceased the testator, who died on September 24, 1976. The testator's will was submitted for probate on October 18, 1976, accompanied by an application from Girard Trust to be appointed executor. The will was admitted to probate and record on December *8 17, 1976, on the same date that the Probate Court denied Girard Trust's application to be appointed executor for the reason that Girard Trust, being a nonresident corporation, was not qualified by statute.
The statutory authority by which the Probate Court denied Girard Trust's application is found in R. C.
"Any fiduciary, except an executor appointed pursuant to section
R. C.
"When a will is approved and allowed, the probate court shall issue letters testamentary to the executor named in the will, if he is suitable, competent, accepts the trust, and gives bond if that is required. The court may issue letters testimentary to a surviving spouse or one of the next of kin, even though a nonresident of the county or of this state."
It is our finding that the clear import of these two statutes is that the trial court's discretion in the appointment of a nonresident executor has been limited to those persons who are surviving spouses or next of kin. Under the old maxim of statutory interpretation expressio unius est exclusio alterius the legislature has eliminated other nonresidents from consideration for appointment.
If we were to read the first sentence of R. C.
We do not find that appellant should be exempted from this application of the statutes on the basis that, as a foreign corporation licensed to do business in this state, it should be considered as a resident. Paragraph 1 of the syllabus of B. F.Goodrich Co. v. Peck (1954),
"In the absence of the expression of a contrary legislative intention, a corporation incorporated under the laws of a foreign state will generally be included by the use in a statute of the word `nonresident.'"
There is no expressed legislative intention that indicates that a foreign trust company doing business in this state should be treated as a resident for any particular or general function that it performs. We distinguish the case of In re Lawrence'sEstate (1938),
Nor do we find that it is necessary to create an exemption for appellant by deeming it a resident to avoid nullification of those provisions of R. C. Chapter 1109 which refer to trust companies performing the duties of executors. R. C.
If there were a conflict, we would have to find that R. C.
Likewise, we find no merit in appellant's contention that the legislature could not have intended to exclude foreign trust companies from acting as executors, because it substantially increased their annual license fee. There are still substantial areas of the trust business a nonresident trust company may perform in Ohio if it chooses. We find it equally logical that the fee increase was designed to discourage foreign trust companies from doing business in Ohio, thus protecting domestic companies. The overall economy and revenues of this state are just as easily benefitted by such protection as by the receipt of the relatively insignificant fees charged to foreign trust companies for the privilege of doing business here.
Having determined that appellant does not qualify *11 under Ohio law to be appointed as executor of the testator's estate, we come to the question of whether, by excluding it, the Ohio statutes so doing violate the Constitution of Ohio and of the United States.
Appellant asserts first that its exclusion from acting as an executor violates Section
On the other hand, a will is ambulatory and takes effect only upon the death of the testator. Patton v. Patton (1883),
But besides being one which takes away or impairs vested rights, a retrospective law that is prohibited by Section 28, Article II, is also one which attaches a new disability in respect to transactions or considerations already past. State, exrel. Michaels, v. Morse (1956), 75 Ohio Law Abs. 536, affirmed in
As we noted, the statute eliminating appellant from consideration as executor by the Probate Court was effective prior to the testator's death and the submission of his will for probate. Moreover, Girard Trust renewed its license to do business in this state annually, and its present license was issued more than eight months after the statutes excluded it from acting in the capacity of executor of the testator's estate. Since appellant was presumed to have notice of the statute at the time it renewed its license, and since the testator was not deceased at the time of the statute's effective date, any disability which the statute placed on appellant was prospective only. Therefore, we do not find the statute, as applied to appellant, violates Section
Likewise, we do not find that the exclusion of a nonresident trust company licensed to do business in Ohio from acting as executor of an Ohio resident's estate violates either the Due Process Clause or the Equal Protection Clause of the Constitution of the United States.
As a rule, a foreign corporation is not a person who may invoke the provision of the Due Process Clause that protects against deprivation of liberty, as the liberty guaranteed by the
In fact, because the Constitution has committed to the state the power to make rules to regulate the disposition of property left in this state by a man dying here, the Equal Protection Clause also will not operate to prevent the state from excluding nonresident executors from administering an Ohio decedent's property. It is for the legislature of this state to make laws for the distribution of property within this state, and the vague generalities of the Equal Protection Clause will not interfere so long as no specific constitutional guarantee is violated. Labine v. Vincent, supra. The exclusion of nonresident corporations or nonresident persons who are not surviving spouses or next of kin does not involve a suspect classification as did the case of Reed v. Reed (1971),
This state has a strong interest in the administration of its citizens' estates. It has always been considered that the legislature which created the right to dispose of property by will in this state must be held to have unlimited authority to regulate the exercise of that right, including the course of administration the testator's property shall take when he dies testate. Hane v. Kintner (1924),
It has long been within the inherent power of the Probate Court to determine that a nonresident of the state is an improper person to appoint as executor. In re Evans (1938), 27 Ohio Law Abs. 550. The fact that the legislature has seen fit to exclude certain classes of nonresidents who do not fall within a suspect classification is not, in our opinion, a violation of the Equal Protection Clause of the United States Constitution, in view of the commitment to the state of the power to control the distribution of and *14 its strong interest in the administration of its decedents' estates.
Appellant's first assignment of error is overruled.
Appellant's second assignment of error is made in support of appellant's appeal from the Probate Court's appointment of two of the testator's daughters as co-administratrices with the will annexed, which appeal was consolidated with appellant's appeal of the Probate Court's denial of its application to be appointed executor. Appellant asserts that the Probate Court erred in the appointment of the co-administratrices and in the overruling of appellant's motion to set that appointment aside.
We have found, in our disposition of appellant's first assignment of error, that the trial court correctly refused to appoint appellant as executor, because, as a nonresident corporation, appellant is statutorily disqualified from holding that position. Being statutorily disqualified, appellant is not in a position to have been appointed executor if the judgment below had not been given. Therefore, the Probate Court's appointment of the co-administratrices does not affect appellant's substantial rights. It is fundamental that an appeal lies only on behalf of a party aggrieved whose substantial rights have been affected, and appellant has not demonstrated that it is an aggrieved party. Ohio Contract Carriers Assn. v.Public Utilities Comm. (1942),
Having considered the merits of the second assignment of error and for the reasons set out above, the same is hereby overruled.
The judgments of the Court of Common Pleas, Probate Division, are affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.
SHANNON, P. J., and KEEFE, J., concur. *15