Dueck v. Clifton Club Co. , 95 N.E.3d 1032 ( 2017 )


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  • [Cite as Dueck v. Clifton Club Co., 2017-Ohio-7161.]
    Court of Appeals of Ohio
    EIGHTH APPELLATE DISTRICT
    COUNTY OF CUYAHOGA
    JOURNAL ENTRY AND OPINION
    Nos. 103868 and 103888
    ARTHUR P. DUECK, ET AL.
    PLAINTIFFS-APPELLANTS
    vs.
    THE CLIFTON CLUB COMPANY, ET AL.
    DEFENDANTS-APPELLEES
    JUDGMENT:
    REVERSED AND REMANDED
    Civil Appeal from the
    Cuyahoga County Court of Common Pleas
    Probate Court Division
    Case No. 2012 ADV 179424
    BEFORE: Laster Mays, J., E.T. Gallagher, P.J., and Boyle, J.
    RELEASED AND JOURNALIZED: August 10, 2017
    -i-
    ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLANTS
    Dennis R. Rose
    Arthur E. Gibbs III
    Casey J. McElfresh
    Hahn, Loeser & Parks, L.L.P.
    200 Public Square, Suite 2800
    Cleveland, Ohio 44114
    Ross M. Babbitt
    Ross M. Babbitt Co., L.P.A.
    1382 West 9th Street, Suite 220
    Cleveland, Ohio 44113
    ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEES
    For Clifton Club Company
    Adam M. Fried
    Julian T. Emerson
    David Ross
    Holly M. Wilson
    Reminger & Reminger Co. L.P.A.
    1400 Midland Building
    101 Prospect Avenue, West
    Cleveland, Ohio 44115
    For Trustees of Clifton Park Trust
    Kip Reader
    Mary Forbes Lovett
    Ulmer & Berne, L.L.P.
    Skylight Office Tower
    1660 W. Second Street, Suite 1100
    Cleveland, Ohio 44113
    -ii-
    Also Listed:
    Attorney for BAI, L.L.C.
    Leo M. Spellacy
    Porter Wright Morris & Arthur L.L.P.
    950 Main Avenue, Suite 500
    Cleveland, Ohio 44113
    Attorneys for Edmond and Mary Blades, Trustees;
    Louis and Cynthia Keppler; and Robert Stall
    Walter F. Ehrnfelt
    Thomas M. Ehrnfelt
    Waldheger Coyne & Associates Co. L.P.A.
    Gemini Tower One, #550
    1991 Crocker Road
    Westlake, Ohio 44145
    Attorney for Sarah Cohan; Leigh E. Fox, Trustee;
    Joanne H. Calkins, Trustee; Matthew and
    Susan Beverstock; Jeffrey S. and Stefanie
    Christian; Janna Dresing; Cynthia Dunn and
    Dale Cuthbertson; Mark and Nancy S. Graves;
    Scott and Amy C. Kimes; Andrew Logan; Peter
    and Linda Joy Nintcheff, Trustees; Ron and
    Beverly Rudin; Carolyn Seelbach; and Byron T.
    and Mary Anne Crampton, Trustees
    Michael C. Cohan
    Cavitch, Familo & Durkin Co., L.P.A.
    1300 E. Ninth Street, 20th Floor
    Cleveland, Ohio 44114
    -iii-
    Attorney for Charles and Patricia Geiger;
    Gordon D. and Susan S. Geiger; Christine R.
    Kraay, Trustee; and 17822 Lake Avenue L.L.C.
    Gary A. Vick, Jr.
    Connick & Associates Co., L.P.A.
    NorthPoint Tower, Suite 1720
    1001 Lakeside Avenue
    Cleveland, Ohio 44114
    Attorney for Joseph and Alicia A. Kerrigan
    F. Thomas Vickers
    Vickers Law Group Co., L.P.A.
    1119 Bassett Road
    Westlake, Ohio 44145
    Attorney for John F. and Margaret McCaffrey
    John F. McCaffrey
    Tucker Ellis L.L.P.
    950 Main Avenue, Suite 1100
    Cleveland, Ohio 44113
    Attorney for Thomas and Kelly O’Malley;
    Michael and Patricia Smith; and Kevin and
    Molly M. Spellacy
    Kevin M. Spellacy
    McGinty, Hilow & Spellacy Co., L.P.A.
    The Rockefeller Building, Suite 1300
    614 West Superior Avenue
    Cleveland, Ohio 44113
    -iv-
    Attorney for James and Nancy S. Seibert
    Michael J. Connick
    Connick & Associates Co., L.P.A.
    NorthPoint Tower, Suite 1720
    1001 Lakeside Avenue
    Cleveland, OH 44114
    Attorney for Melissa K. Meany
    Gregory D. Seeley
    Seeley, Savidge, Ebert & Gourash Co., L.P.A.
    26600 Detroit Road
    Cleveland, Ohio 44145
    Attorney for Michael Smith and Michelle Myers
    Michael E. Smith
    Frantz Ward L.L.P.
    2500 Key Center
    127 Public Square
    Cleveland, Ohio 44114
    Attorney Harold W. Goforth
    Brian J. Darling
    John Duffy & Associates
    Brendan Place
    23823 Lorain Road, Suite 270
    North Olmsted, Ohio 44070
    Attorney for James and Katherine Romer
    James D. Romer
    Polito, Paulozzi, Rodstrom & Burke
    21300 Lorain Road
    Fairview Park, Ohio 44126
    -v-
    Co-Counsel for Plaintiffs and Attorney for
    Rhonda Loje and Jeffrey Mansell
    Ross M. Babbitt
    Ross M. Babbitt Co., L.P.A.
    1382 West Ninth Street, Suite 220
    Cleveland, Ohio 44113
    Attorney for Saji T. Daniel, Trustee
    Christian M. Bates
    Corsaro & Associates Co., L.P.A.
    28039 Clemens Road
    Westlake, Ohio 44145
    Attorney for John G. and Solvita A. McMillan
    Solvita McMillan
    17904 Lake Road
    Lakewood, Ohio 44107
    Attorney for James and Mary Patricia Oliver
    James P. Oliver
    Squire Patton Boggs L.L.P.
    4900 Key Tower
    127 Public Square
    Cleveland, Ohio 44114
    Attorney for Kim Lansdowne, Trustee
    Dennis R. Lansdowne
    Spangenberg Shibley & Liber L.L.P.
    1001 Lakeside Avenue East, Suite 1700
    Cleveland, Ohio 44114
    -vi-
    William Ahern
    Kathy Franzinger
    18119 Clifton Road
    Lakewood, Ohio 44107
    R. Craig Andrews
    Ruth A. Andrews
    18117 Clifton Road
    Lakewood, Ohio 44107
    Gary D. Arbeznik
    Maureen A. Arbeznik
    18128 West Clifton Road
    Lakewood, Ohio 44107
    Suzanne Morphy Backus, Trustee
    Suzanne Morphy Backus Trust
    17862 Lake Road
    Lakewood, Ohio 44107
    Richard R. Baker
    Sandra W. Baker
    18150 Clifton Road
    Lakewood, Ohio 44107
    Deborah A. Baker
    1186 West Clifton Boulevard
    Lakewood, Ohio 44107
    John Ballard
    Karen Ballard
    1107 West Forest Road
    Lakewood, Ohio 44107
    Kevin Barry
    Sherri Whitaker
    17817 Lake Road
    Lakewood, Ohio 44107
    -vii-
    Russell L. Beeler
    Carolyn R. Beeler
    1123 Forest Road
    Lakewood, Ohio 44107
    Judith Bizga
    17900 Lake Road
    Lakewood, Ohio 44107
    Paul Bjorn
    Jean Bjorn
    1084 Lake Point Drive
    Lakewood, Ohio 44107
    John Blesi
    1131 Forest Road
    Lakewood, Ohio 44107
    Kevin R. Brown, Trustee
    Kevin R. Brown Family Trust
    17908 Lake Road
    Lakewood, Ohio 44107
    Markus Bruckner
    Louanne Jennings Bruckner
    17888 Clifton Park Lane
    Lakewood, Ohio 44107
    Ruth E. Budzar, Trustee
    Ruth E. Budzar Trust
    17835 Lake Road
    Lakewood, Ohio 44107 R. Craig Andrews
    Douglas Burry
    Cynthia Burry
    18104 Clifton Road
    Lakewood, Ohio 44107
    -viii-
    Dennis Butler
    Marilyn Butler
    18113 Clifton Road
    Lakewood, Ohio 44107
    Lawrence Campana
    Cynthia Mikula
    17859 Lake Road
    Lakewood, Ohio 44107
    Marc Castelluccio, Trustee
    Kent Castelluccio, Trustee
    Raymond Castelluccio 2011 Dynasty Trust
    17818 Lake Road
    Lakewood, Ohio 44107
    Ronnie Cheung
    Eva Lum
    18097 Clifton Road
    Lakewood, Ohio 44107
    Warren Coleman, Trustee, Clifton Park Trust
    Leslie D. Coleman, Trustee
    18136 Clifton Road
    Lakewood, Ohio 44107
    Frank Conway
    Karin Conway
    18176 Clifton Road
    Lakewood, Ohio 44107
    Peter Corrigan
    Kathryn Corrigan
    18179 Clifton Road
    Lakewood, Ohio 44107
    -ix-
    David B. Cottenden
    Courtney E. Cottenden
    18135 Clifton Road
    Lakewood, Ohio 44107
    Diana Curran
    17837 Lake Road
    Lakewood, Ohio 44107
    James Cutler
    18169 Clifton Road
    Lakewood, Ohio 44107
    Brian J. Dalisky
    Margaret Z. Dalisky
    18141 Clifton Road
    Lakewood, Ohio 44107
    David L. Dashiell
    Stacie F. Dashiell
    17894 Clifton Park Lane
    Lakewood, Ohio 44107
    Michael R. Davis
    Kathryn M. Davis
    18140 Clifton Road
    Lakewood, Ohio 44107
    William L. Davis
    Janice E. Davis
    18162 Clifton Road
    Lakewood, Ohio 44107
    Charles W. Debelak
    Hellene V. Debelak
    18106 Clifton Road
    Lakewood, Ohio 44107
    -x-
    Thomas Demitrack
    Peggy Ann Demitrack
    17804 Lake Road
    Lakewood, Ohio 44107
    Guy B. Schroen
    Carrie Schroen
    17863 Lake Road
    Lakewood, Ohio 44107
    Anthony W. Dimacchia
    1099 West Forest Road
    Lakewood, Ohio 44107
    Terrence J. Dobro
    Patricia A. Dobro
    18147 Clifton Road
    Lakewood, Ohio 44107
    Cynthia Dunn
    Dale Cuthbertson
    1106 Forest Road
    Lakewood, Ohio 44107
    Griffith R. Dye
    Nancy S. Dye
    17846 Clifton Boulevard
    Lakewood, Ohio 44107
    Hugh Fagan
    Alana Fagan
    17831 Lake Road
    Lakewood, Ohio 44107
    Thomas Feser
    Donna Feser
    17853 Lake Road
    Lakewood, Ohio 44107
    -xi-
    Daniel Flannery
    Caroline Flannery
    18148 Clifton Road
    Lakewood, Ohio 44107
    John W. Forgetta
    18121 Clifton Road
    Lakewood, Ohio 44107
    Victor Forgetta
    Rose Forgetta
    17901 Lake Road
    Lakewood, Ohio 44107
    Frank Foti
    17869 Lake Road
    Lakewood, Ohio 44107
    Grace A. Frank, Trustee
    1101 West Forest Road
    Lakewood, Ohio 44107
    Thomas J. Fraser
    Mary Ellen Fraser
    18177 Clifton Road
    Lakewood, Ohio 44107
    Billy T. Frazier
    17892 Clifton Park Lane
    Lakewood, Ohio 44107
    Juanita Dia Frenden
    17830 Lake Road
    Lakewood, Ohio 44107
    Robert Frost
    Amy M. Frost
    18126 West Clifton Road
    Lakewood, Ohio 44107
    -xii-
    John Gallagher
    Eileen Gallagher
    17850 Lake Road
    Lakewood, Ohio 44107
    Juliane Gillespie
    1117 Forest Road
    Lakewood, Ohio 44107
    Patrick Gowell
    18155 Clifton Road
    Lakewood, Ohio 44107
    Mark L Graves
    Nancy S. Graves
    17889 Lake Road
    Lakewood, Ohio 44107
    Sarah Grotta
    18188 Clifton Road
    Lakewood, Ohio 44107
    Kenneth Haber
    Kathleen A. Haber
    17897 Lake Road
    Lakewood, Ohio 44107
    Theodore Harakas
    Marybeth Harakas
    17881 Lake Road
    Lakewood, Ohio 44107
    Philip W. Hall, Trustee, Clifton Park Trust
    Marcia Hall
    1127 Forest Road
    Lakewood, Ohio 44107
    -xiii-
    Laurence Heidelberg
    Kathryn Heidelberg
    17852 Clifton Boulevard
    Lakewood, Ohio 44107
    Andrew Henderson
    Joselyn Tyler
    1109 Forest Road
    Lakewood, Ohio 44107
    John Henderson
    Mary Ann Henderson
    17890 Clifton Park Lane
    Lakewood, Ohio 44107
    Carol E. Herberger, Trustee
    17905 Lake Road
    Lakewood, Ohio 44107
    Jerry Hoegner, Trustee
    18163 Clifton Road
    Lakewood, Ohio 44107
    Robert Houck
    Joanne Houck
    1105 Forest Road
    Lakewood, Ohio 44107
    Timothy Jablonski
    Jennifer Jablonski
    17845 Lake Road
    Lakewood, Ohio 44107
    Christopher Jammal
    Patricia Jammal
    1133 Forest Road
    Lakewood, Ohio 44107
    -xiv-
    Maxwell S. Bombik
    18175 Clifton Road
    Lakewood, Ohio 44107
    Ronald Johnson
    Christine Johnson
    18123 Clifton Road
    Lakewood, Ohio 44107
    John Kappus
    Melissa Kappus
    18143 Clifton Road
    Lakewood, Ohio 44107
    Kim Katzenberger
    Nora Katzenberger
    1128 Forest Road
    Lakewood, Ohio 44107
    Kerala, L.L.C.
    17891 Captains Cove
    Lakewood, Ohio 44107
    George Khuri
    Elizabeth Khuri
    1088 Lake Point Drive
    Lakewood, Ohio 44107
    Mary Caye Kilbane
    18187 Clifton Road
    Lakewood, Ohio 44107
    Edward Hill and Karen Upton Hill
    1121 Forest Road
    Lakewood, Ohio 44107
    -xv-
    Michael J. King, Trustee
    Laura A. King, Trustee
    Michael J. King Trust
    18138 Clifton Road
    Lakewood, Ohio 44107
    Daniel J. Klenkar
    Carolyn M. Klenkar
    18115 Clifton Road
    Lakewood, Ohio 44107
    Donna Kolis
    17893 Lake Road
    Lakewood, Ohio 44107
    Peter A. Kuhn, Trustee, Clifton Park Trust
    Cathryn Thompson Kuhn
    1132 Forest Road
    Lakewood, Ohio 44107
    Raymond Krncevic
    Margarita Krncevic
    18158 Clifton Road
    Lakewood, Ohio 44107
    Gregg La Spisa
    Melissa La Spisa
    17823 Lake Road
    Lakewood, Ohio 44107
    Daniel P. Lavelle
    Carolyn B. Lavelle
    18101 Clifton Road
    Lakewood, Ohio 44107
    Kyle M. Lawrence
    1206 West Clifton Boulevard
    Lakewood, Ohio 44107
    -xvi-
    Patrick Lenehans
    Karen Lenehans
    1107 Forest Road
    Lakewood, Ohio 44107
    John Lewis
    Pauline Lewis
    17807 Lake Road
    Lakewood, Ohio 44107
    Timothy Liston
    Dawn Griffith Liston
    1101 Forest Road
    Lakewood, Ohio 44107
    Laura Novosel Little, Trustee
    Laura Novosel Little Trust
    Richard A. Little, Trustee
    Richard A. Little Trust
    18105 Clifton Road
    Lakewood, Ohio 44107
    David M. Lorenz
    Susan G. Lorenz
    17909 Lake Road
    Lakewood, Ohio 44107
    Mark Magnotto
    Pamela Magnotto
    17874 Lake Road
    Lakewood, Ohio 44107
    Cesare Mainardi
    17844 Lake Road
    Lakewood, Ohio 44107
    -xvii-
    Joel J. Jensen
    Laura A. Jensen
    17811 Lake Road
    Lakewood, Ohio 44107
    Goldie Maxim, Trustee
    Ernest J. Maxim Family Trust
    17805 Lake Road
    Lakewood, Ohio 44107
    Robert L. Mazzarella
    Judith C. Mazzarella
    18186 Clifton Road
    Lakewood, Ohio 44107
    Laura McBride
    1115 Forest Road
    Lakewood, Ohio 44107
    Timothy McBride
    Kathleen McBride
    17883 Lake Road
    Lakewood, Ohio 44107
    Robert McCabe
    17840 Lake Road
    Lakewood, Ohio 44107
    Nancy McCann
    17802 Lake Road
    Lakewood, Ohio 44107
    Brendan McCarthy
    Lori McCarthy
    18184 Clifton Road
    Lakewood, Ohio 44107
    -xviii-
    Rosalyn McGlynn
    18096 Clifton Road
    Lakewood, Ohio 44107
    James McGowan
    Margie Wright McGowan
    17839 Lake Road
    Lakewood, Ohio 44107
    Michael J. McMahon
    Laura A. McMahon
    17889 Lake Road
    Lakewood, Ohio 44107
    James H. McPolin
    Noel H. McPolin
    1110 West Forest Road
    Lakewood, Ohio 44107
    Robert C. Rose
    17856 Lake Road
    Lakewood, Ohio 44107
    Shelley Mellino
    17824 Lake Road
    Lakewood, Ohio 44107
    Estate of Burton J. McGlynn
    c/o Michael J. McGlynn
    18110 Clifton Road
    Lakewood, Ohio 44107
    Joanne S. Miller
    18109 Clifton Road
    Lakewood, Ohio 44107
    -xix-
    Susan Minnich
    17834 Lake Road
    Lakewood, Ohio 44107
    Ned Molovich
    Glenda Molovich
    1129 Forest Road
    Lakewood, Ohio 44107
    Benjamin D. Whiting, Trustee
    Melanie Whiting, Trustee
    Whiting Family Revocable Living Trust
    18137 Clifton Road
    Lakewood, Ohio 44107
    PNC Bank f.k.a. National City Bank, Trustee
    1900 East Ninth Street, Second Floor
    Cleveland, Ohio 44114
    Stephanie D. Neider
    17886 Beach
    Lakewood, Ohio 44107
    Charles G. Norton, Trustee
    Christe Norton McGraw, Trustee
    Suzanne H. Norton Trust
    1124 Forest Road
    Lakewood, Ohio 44107
    James E. O’Brien
    Rosanne M. O’Brien
    1134 Webb Road
    Lakewood, Ohio 44107
    Jill O’Brien, Trustee
    Jill F. O’Brien Revocable Trust
    17809 Lake Road
    Lakewood, Ohio 44107
    -xx-
    Daniel Oldfield
    Claudine Oldfield
    17906 Lake Road
    Lakewood, Ohio 44107
    Alec Pacella
    1130 Forest Road
    Lakewood, Ohio 44107
    Gregory Pacholski
    Terri A. Holliday
    18131 West Clifton Road
    Lakewood, Ohio 44107
    Ann Paras
    17841 Lake Road
    Lakewood, Ohio 44107
    Anthony Pietromica
    Anne Pietromica
    18185 Clifton Road
    Lakewood, Ohio 44107
    Michael Polito
    Annemarie Polito
    18156 Clifton Road
    Lakewood, Ohio 44107
    Mary Papandreas, Trustee
    John G. Papandreas Personal Trust
    17828 Lake Road
    Lakewood, Ohio 44107
    Brian Powers
    Maureen Powers
    17855 Lake Road
    Lakewood, Ohio 44107
    -xxi-
    Daniel Raynor
    Jennifer Raynor
    18111 Clifton Road
    Lakewood, Ohio 44107
    Mark H. Reinhold
    Jean S. Reinhold
    1120 Forest Road
    Lakewood, Ohio 44107
    Bradford J. Richmond
    Margaret A. Richmond
    1122 Forest Road
    Lakewood, Ohio 44107
    John S. Pyke, Jr., Trustee, Clifton Park Trust
    Judith A. Pyke
    17808 Lake Road
    Lakewood, Ohio 44107
    Peter Rose
    Erika Gadomski
    17870 Lake Road
    Lakewood, Ohio 44107
    Karen Ross
    18183 Clifton Road
    Lakewood, Ohio 44107
    Michael Rowell
    Jennifer Rowell
    17803 Lake Road
    Lakewood, Ohio 44107
    John E. Rupert
    18129 West Clifton Road
    Lakewood, Ohio 44107
    -xxii-
    Dorcas Russo
    18165 Clifton Road
    Lakewood, Ohio 44107
    Gregory Sanker
    Kim Sanker
    18124 West Clifton Road
    Lakewood, Ohio 44107
    Frank J. Schwelik
    Jennifer C. Schwelik
    18164 Clifton Road
    Lakewood, Ohio 44107
    Stephen W. Schwind
    Cheryl K. Schwind
    1119 Forest Road
    Lakewood, Ohio 44107
    Joyce Senney
    17849 Lake Road
    Lakewood, Ohio 44107
    Donald Shultzaberger
    Robert Paraska
    17896 Captains Cove
    Lakewood, Ohio 44107
    Robert E. Smitley
    Joel R. Toth
    18107 Clifton Road
    Lakewood, Ohio 44107
    Edward Spellman
    17854 Lake Road
    Lakewood, Ohio 44107
    -xxiii-
    Ryan M. Spicer
    Lisa M. Spicer
    1108 West Forest Road
    Lakewood, Ohio 44107
    Joseph Starck
    Rebecca Starck
    17873 Lake Road
    Lakewood, Ohio 44107
    Donald Strang
    Karen Strang
    17820 Lake Road
    Lakewood, Ohio 44107
    Robert A. Szabo
    Julie K. Szabo
    18161 Clifton Road
    Lakewood, Ohio 44107
    Nancy Tanis
    1082 Lake Point Drive
    Lakewood, Ohio 44107
    Richard D. Tanner
    Gail A. Tanner
    18153 Clifton Road
    Lakewood, Ohio 44107
    Charles Telliard
    Laurel Telliard
    17878 Lake Road
    Lakewood, Ohio 44107
    Jason Therrien
    Holly Therrien
    17825 Lake Road
    Lakewood, Ohio 44107
    -xxiv-
    Robert Thomas
    Diane Thomas
    17907 Lake Road
    Lakewood, Ohio 44107
    William Todia
    17882 Lake Road
    Lakewood, Ohio 44107
    Eleanor Truett, Trustee
    Irrevocable Trust B
    17880 Lake Road
    Lakewood, Ohio 44107
    Thomas Turner
    Linda Turner
    1102 Forest Road
    Lakewood, Ohio 44107
    Mark M. Twohig
    Mary E. Twohig
    17826 Lake Road
    Lakewood, Ohio 44107
    Ernest Vargo
    Trisha Vargo
    17877 Lake Road
    Lakewood, Ohio 44107
    Paul C. Venizelos
    Christina G. Venizelos
    17864 Lake Road
    Lakewood, Ohio 44107
    Terryl Q. Walker
    Susan Jane Walker
    18152 Clifton Road
    Lakewood, Ohio 44107
    -xxv-
    Clinton L. Weddell
    Tara M. Kerivan (f.k.a. Weddell)
    1116 Forest Road
    Lakewood, Ohio 44107
    Jeffrey Williams
    Erica Williams
    17843 Lake Road
    Lakewood, Ohio 44107
    Kent Winterhalter
    Lorysa Winterhalter
    18091 Clifton Road
    Lakewood, Ohio 44107
    Daniel Witzigreuter
    Amy Witzigreuter
    17827 Lake Road
    Lakewood, Ohio 44107
    Nicolas Young
    1 100 Forest Road
    Lakewood, Ohio 44107
    Rebecca Bugac Zak
    1102-1/2 Forest Road
    Lakewood, Ohio 44107
    Chad Zumkehr
    Mary Ellen Zumkehr
    17876 Lake Road
    Lakewood, Ohio 44107
    Louis S. Binder
    18171 Clifton Road
    Lakewood, Ohio 44107
    -xxvi-
    Francis Keller
    18173 Clifton Road
    Lakewood, Ohio 44107
    Wynne Morley
    1104 Forest Road
    Lakewood, Ohio 44107
    Eugene G. Drust, Trustee
    Nora E. Drust, Trustee
    Drust Family Trust
    17801 Lake Road
    Lakewood, Ohio 44107
    Jill C. Gilmore
    17829 Lake Road
    Lakewood, Ohio 44107
    Charles Drumm, Current Head Trustee, Clifton Park Trust
    Catherine A. Drumm
    17895 Lake Road
    Lakewood, Ohio 44107
    Paul A. Fox
    18139 West Clifton Road
    Lakewood, Ohio 44107
    Karen Wilson
    18180 Clifton Road
    Lakewood, Ohio 44107
    ANITA LASTER MAYS, J.:
    {¶1} Plaintiffs-appellants Arthur P. Dueck (“Dueck”), Todd Gilmore (“Gilmore”),
    Nancy Binder (“Binder), and William R. Keller (“Keller,” collectively “appellants”)
    appeal the trial court’s grant of summary judgment in a declaratory judgment action,
    interpreting a trust agreement in favor of defendants-appellees Clifton Park Trust Trustees
    (“Trustees”) and The Clifton Club Company (“Clifton Club”). This is a consolidated
    appeal.    In Dueck v. Clifton Club Co., 8th Dist. Cuyahoga No. 103888, appellant
    Dennis F. Butler states that his interests are aligned with the appellants, and that he adopts
    the arguments asserted. 1      After a thorough review of the record, we find that the
    nonresident members of the Clifton Club are not beneficiaries of the Trust and, as a
    result, have no legal rights. The matter is reversed and remanded as instructed herein for
    a hearing on the amount of sanctions.
    I.     FACTS AND BACKGROUND
    {¶2} Appellants are lot owners in the Clifton Park Allotment in Lakewood, Ohio
    (“Clifton Park”), a residential area owned and developed in the 1800s by the Clifton Park
    Association (“Clifton Park Association”), predecessors in interest to the Clifton Park
    Land & Improvement Company (“Land Company”).                      In 1912, the Land Company
    placed the Clifton Park private park and beach area (collectively the “Beach”) into a trust
    The trial court required that all lot owner Beneficiaries be named party defendants to the
    1
    declaratory judgment action below.
    (“Trust”) for the use and enjoyment of all Clifton Park lot owners, vesting lot owners with
    the legal status of Trust beneficiaries (“Beneficiaries”). The Clifton Club, a social club
    operating in Clifton Park since 1902, is a members-only establishment. Membership is
    open to the lot owner Beneficiaries, as well as nonresidents of Clifton Park (“Club
    Members”). While the Clifton Club’s membership is comprised of both resident lot
    owners and nonresidents, the focus of this case is whether Club Members, due to their
    status as Club Members, are Beneficiaries under the Trust and entitled to Beach access.
    {¶3} Several months after the creation of the Trust, the Clifton Club succeeded
    the Land Company as owners to sublots 38, 39, 40, and 41 (the “Club Lots”) in Clifton
    Park. Over the years, the Clifton Club membership has grown, creating crowded beach
    conditions. As a result, appellants seek a declaration that the Club Members are not lot
    owners; therefore, (1) they are not Beneficiaries of the Trust, and (2) they do not have the
    same legal rights as the lot owner Beneficiaries to access the Beach.
    A.     History and Formation
    {¶4} Clifton Park Association began development of Clifton Park in 1893 with
    the vision of establishing an exclusive residential community in a beach and park setting
    for the use and enjoyment of the Clifton Park lot owners. The 1897 deeds issued by
    Clifton Park Association to shareholders and founders William Starkweather and Henry
    Coffinberry included covenants and restrictions establishing that the beach and park areas
    were intended to be for the exclusive use of Clifton Park lot owners.
    {¶5}    Upon Starkweather’s death in 1899, the remaining parcels in Clifton Park
    were conveyed from Clifton Park Association to the Land Company, constituting
    approximately 143.23 acres of land. The deed provides that it is:
    [M]ade and accepted subject to the covenants of The Clifton Park
    Association in the certain deeds, to [Starkweather] and [Coffinberry] above
    named as to conveyances of said premises thereafter to be made and the
    grantee assumes and agrees to [illegible word] form to and abide by said
    covenants in like manner and with like effect as if the same had been
    entered into by it as the grantor named in said conveyances.
    {¶6} The deed dictates that the lots be used exclusively for private residences,
    and the “covenants, agreements and provisions shall run with the land for a period of fifty
    (50) years from the date hereof,” excepting property sold for:
    [S]tables, canal slips, boat houses casinos or clubhouses, ice houses or
    bathing houses for the use of the owners of the lots in said allotment, and
    that portion lying along Rocky River and bordering on the lake, known as
    the Flat Land, being a triangular piece not subdivided into separate lots, and
    containing about twenty (20) acres, more or less.
    B.     The Club Lease
    {¶7}    Defendant-appellee the Clifton Club was incorporated in 1902 as a
    for-profit corporation, formed for the purpose of building a clubhouse and to operate as a
    social club. The Clifton Club initially leased the Club Lots from the Land Company
    from 1902-1912 (“Club Lease”).
    {¶8} The Club Lease provisions include: (1) lots are to be used solely for a
    social club or private residence; (2) any residence erected shall not cost less than $12,000;
    (3) minimum required lot frontage; (4) a requirement that all other lot deeds or leases will
    contain similar restrictions that run with the land, for a period of 50 years; and 5) that
    the Land Company will convey the fee interest:
    [I]n the reserved and dedicated for park purposes * * * to a Board of
    Trustees of not less than three members who shall be property owners in
    said allotment with power to perpetuate said Board of Trustees and with
    power to hold said property for the use and benefit of persons owning land
    in said allotment.
    {¶9} The Club Lease includes a purchase option:
    [T]he first party will also give, grant and make to second party without
    further consideration and for same period of time a lease of a certain strip of
    land upon the Easterly bank of Rocky River for a boat house, and also a
    strip of land for the purpose of a stable, together with the right to use the
    approaches to the same. The location and size of the last three pieces of
    property to be hereafter agreed upon between the parties hereto.
    The Club Lease limits Clifton Club membership to 250 members unless the Land
    Company or its successors give consent to increase membership.
    C.     The Trust Deed
    {¶10} In March 1912, the Land Company conveyed the private beach and park to
    five trustees (“Trustees”) via a trust deed (“Trust Deed”). The Trust Deed references the
    Beach for the sole use and benefit of all the owners of sub lots, or parts of lots, in the
    Clifton Park Allotment. * * * (Emphasis added.)
    [B]eing the parts and parcels of land in the grantor’s said allotment, or lying
    adjacent thereto, which have been reserved for the use and benefit of the
    owners of land in said allotment.
    *      *      *
    To have and to hold the premises aforesaid, with the appurtenances
    thereunto belonging, unto the said grantees and their successors in trust and
    assigns, and the survivors or survivor thereof, and the heirs of such
    survivor, so that neither said grantor, nor its successors, nor any other
    person claiming title through or under it, shall or will hereafter claim or
    demand any right or title to the premises, or any part thereof, but they and
    every one of them shall be by these presents excluded and forever barred, in
    trust, nevertheless, for the sole use and benefit of all the owners of sub lots,
    or parts of lots, in the Clifton Park Allotment * * * and the heirs,
    representatives successors or assigns, of such owners subject to the terms,
    conditions and regulations herein contained.
    (Emphasis added.)
    {¶11} The Trust Deed directs that the Trustees hold the Beach in trust for the
    “common use of all of the [Clifton Park] lot owners, and their successors in title, and
    members of their households.” Appellants are lot owners and are, therefore, Beneficiaries.
    {¶12} The Trust Deed also states:
    [T]he Trustees are directed to collect funds for maintenance, snow removal
    and other repairs to the Property, including the “bathing pavilion,” and
    “establish regulations for the use of, and provide for proper policing of *
    * * parks and bathing pavilion and generally maintain all of said property
    in good order and condition for the use of lot owners in said allotment, as
    the same is now maintained.
    Pursuant to the Trust Deed, the Trustees collect an annual assessment from the
    Beneficiaries for the “care of the lands and buildings in the hands of the trustees, and
    their necessary expenses in carrying out their duties.” The assessment also applied to
    “several sub lots reserved to the Company in the deeds of conveyance for the same,”
    which would include the Club Lots that were subject to the Club Lease at the time of the
    Trust Deed conveyance.
    D.      The Club Deed
    {¶13} By deed dated July 1912, the Clifton Club received title to the Club Lots
    (“Club Deed”). In addition to the ownership transfer, the Club Deed conveys:
    [T]he right to use in common with other owners of the land in said
    allotment, all portions of said allotment which shall by the Grantor be
    devoted to the purposes of park or park spaces for the exclusive use and
    benefit of such lot owners but such use of the parks and of any pavilion or
    bath or boat houses as may be erected thereon by the said company for the
    benefit of owners of property in said allotment, shall be subject to such
    rules and regulations as may be established by said Company to provide for
    the taxes and expenses of the maintenance and preservation of the same,
    and the proportionate part of such taxes and expenses shall be chargeable to
    the lot herein conveyed and shall be a lien upon said lot to secure its
    payment. * * * [T]he grantee will not sell or allow to be sold on said
    premises any liquor, whether spirituous, vinous or fermented, or use said
    premises or cause or permit the same to be used for any business purposes
    whatsoever, or for any purpose [other] than that of a private residence or
    social club. * * *
    {¶14}    Finally, the Club Deed referenced the future creation of the Trust, though
    it had, in fact, been created several months prior:
    The said grantor further covenants with the said grantee that it will, before
    the period of its corporate existence or any renewal or renewals thereof
    expires, convey the fee in the land reserved for park purposes in the
    allotment of The Clifton Park Land and Improvement Company, as shown
    by plat thereof made and on file in the office of the Secretary of the
    Company, to a Board of Trustees of not less than three members who shall
    be property owners in said allotment, subject to such rules and regulations
    in regard to the use thereof as hereinbefore provided, and for that purpose
    the said Trustees shall succeed to all the rights, powers and duties of the
    Company as to use, maintenance, repairs, improvements, and for all
    purposes whatsoever.
    E.      The Current Action
    {¶15} The Club Members and Beneficiaries have enjoyed use of the Beach over
    the years. The only portion of the Trust property at issue is the Beach and the legal right
    of the Club Members, the Club Members who are not resident lot owners, to use the
    Beach.2
    {¶16}     There is no dispute between the parties that the Clifton Club is a direct
    Beneficiary as a successor lot owner. It is also undisputed that, beginning in 1942 and
    thereafter, the Clifton Club has made annual payments to the Trustees for the use of the
    Beach by the Club Members, based on various formulas determined by the Trustees.
    There is no disagreement that the Trustees have been vested with the power to enter into
    agreements with the Clifton Club regarding the formula for, and amount of, the payments.
    In fact, the Clifton Club states it has been making annual payments of $12,000 to
    $112,300 per year for the past 30 years, an amount greater than the assessment fee
    formula set forth in the Trust for parcel owners.
    {¶17} By 2011, overcrowding of the Beach and related parking became an issue.
    A number of Beneficiaries requested that the Trustees implement regulations to reduce
    use of the Beach by the Club Members. Appellants discovered at a December 2011
    meeting with the Trustees that the Trustees were not sure whether they had the authority
    to limit the number of Club Members accessing the Beach. The Trustees elected to
    Club Members who are lot owners are clearly direct Beneficiaries, though the status stems
    2
    from their lot ownership.
    address the issue by promulgating rules (“Beach Rules”) governing use of the Beach by
    both Beneficiaries and Club Members.
    {¶18} The Clifton Club issued a letter to the Trustees on December 1, 2011,
    protesting the Beach Rules.        The Clifton Club argued that the Beach Rules were
    “discriminatory” and placed “unilateral restrictions” on the Club Members. The letter
    warned that, “we believe the [Clifton] Park Trustees have breached their fiduciary
    responsibility to represent all Beach members fairly and without discrimination.”
    Appellants state they were not informed of the existence of the letter warning of the
    breach until the pending action.
    {¶19}    In February 2012, appellants Dueck and Butler met with two Trustees
    requesting pursuit of an action to determine the scope of the Club Members’ legal right of
    Beach access. Dueck also states that he and other Beneficiaries were informed, during a
    March 2012 meeting with the Trustees, that the Trustees had obtained a legal opinion
    regarding Club Members Beach access rights. Dueck requested that Trustee Drumm
    obtain an independent expert opinion regarding the legal source of the Club Members’
    Beach access rights, for which Dueck offered to pay half of the cost. The offer was
    rejected.
    {¶20} On April 27, 2012, Dueck and several other lot owners asked the Trustees to
    provide them with a copy of the legal memorandum obtained by the Trustees. The
    document was not provided.         The Trustees stated at a subsequent meeting with the
    Beneficiaries that, if any Beneficiary had further issues to resolve, they should take the
    matter to court, because the Trustees were no longer going to communicate with the
    Beneficiaries on the issue.
    {¶21} The Clifton Club and Trustees posit that the Club Members have the same
    legal right to use the Beach as the Beneficiaries pursuant to the Trust Deed and Club
    Deed. Appellants agree that the Club Members have the right to use the Beach with the
    permission of the Trustees, but deny that they are direct Beneficiaries, and further state
    that neither the language, nor the history, supported the position of the Clifton Club and
    Trustees.
    {¶22} The lot owners filed a declaratory action to determine Trust rights, on June
    2, 2012, appellants initiated the current action against the Clifton Club in the Cuyahoga
    County Court of Common Pleas, Probate Division, requesting that the trial court declare
    that the Club Members are not Beneficiaries and, as a result, have no legal entitlement to
    use the Beach. Appellants also sought a determination that any grant to use the Beach
    contained in the Club Deed is null and void. The declaratory action did not request that
    Club Members be barred from using the Beach on the negotiated fee basis.
    {¶23}    The Clifton Club filed a motion to dismiss under Civ.R. 12(B)(6),
    12(B)(7), and 19(A), and the Declaratory Judgment Act (R.C. Chapter 2721).
    Arguments included that the Trustees and fellow lot owners were necessary parties:
    The Plaintiffs purport to adjudicate the rights of non-parties with legally
    protectable interests. The Clifton Park Trustees hold title to Clifton Beach,
    the only land at issue in this case, and they owe fiduciary obligations to all
    Clifton Park beneficiary lot owners. To the extent the Court permits this
    action to survive Civ. R. 12(B)(6), the Trustees and the Plaintiffs’ fellow
    beneficiary-Clifton Park residents are Civ.R. 19 necessary parties needed
    for just adjudication. Likewise, R.C. 2721.12 mandates that the absence of
    these necessary parties constitutes a jurisdictional defect that prevents a
    declaratory judgment action from proceeding.
    The Clifton Club did not argue, however, that the Club Members were also necessary
    parties due to their “legally protectable” interests.
    {¶24} The Trustees filed an amicus brief supporting the Clifton Club’s argument
    that the Trustees and lot owners were necessary parties, and echoing the Clifton Club’s
    position that the Club Members were legally entitled to use the Beach. The trial court
    determined that the Trustees and all lot owner Beneficiaries were necessary parties and
    required joinder.
    {¶25} Appellants distributed a letter to residents explaining the trial court’s
    decision to include the lot owners and Trustees in the action. The Trustees also issued a
    notice to residents and Club Members, refuting a number of representations contained in
    appellants’ letter. The Trustees assured the recipients that they had not chosen sides in
    the matter, and advised that “[t]here are implications for each lot owner’s financial,
    insurance and homeowner’s circumstances” as a result of the lawsuit by appellants. The
    Trustees’ notice referred recipients to the Trustees’ website to review “FAQ’s”
    addressing the case.
    {¶26} On April 24, 2013, appellants filed a first amended complaint adding the
    Trustees and remaining Beneficiaries as parties. The first amended complaint requested
    that the trial court declare:
    a)      that the members of the Clifton Club who are not sublot owners are
    not beneficiaries under the Deed of Trust,
    b)      the members of the Clifton Club who are not sublot owners have no
    legal right to use Trust property (including the Beach), and
    c)      the provision of the Clifton Club Deed dated July 1, 1912 allowing
    use of Trust property by the members of the Clifton Club who are
    not sublot owners (including the Beach) in contradiction to the
    then-existing Deed of Trust is null and void.
    The first amended complaint requested, alternatively, the “court enter an order defining
    the rights of and relationship between the plaintiffs and the Club Members as to the use of
    the Trust property, including the Beach.”
    {¶27} On October 31, 2014, appellants filed a motion to remove the Trustees for
    breaching the duty of impartiality, before and during the suit, by siding with the Clifton
    Club on Beach access and by refusing access to Trust documents. The Trustees responded
    that their actions were justified by their interpretation of the Trust. The motion to
    remove the Trustees was denied without opinion on August 24, 2015.
    {¶28} Appellants also filed a motion with the court on June 25, 2015, requesting
    that the Trustees pay appellants’ attorney fees pursuant to R.C. 5810.04. The trial court
    denied the motion without opinion on August 24, 2015.
    {¶29}       On September 1, 2015, the Trustees filed a motion for summary
    judgment, claiming that there were no genuine issues of material fact that: (1) the Clifton
    Club, as a lot owner, is a Beneficiary with a legal right to use the Beach; and (2) the
    Trustees have the legal power to regulate the use of the Beach.
    {¶30} Appellants responded that the undisputed issues identified by the Trustees
    in their motion were not, in fact, the material issues in the case. The question before the
    court was not whether the Clifton Club, as a lot owner, was a Beneficiary of the Trust.
    The question before the court was whether the Clifton Club’s right to use the Beach as a
    Beneficiary extended as an enforceable, legal right to the Club Members. In other
    words, were the Club Members defined Beneficiaries?
    {¶31} The trial court granted summary judgment. The court determined that
    parole evidence3 was not required to interpret the Trust, and that the “principal issue in
    this case is whether” the Club Members “have a right to use” the Beach. The trial court
    explained that the Clifton Club, as a lot owner, is a Beneficiary “bound by the Trustees’
    regulation of Trust property.”         While finding that the Trust Deed stands alone for
    interpretation purposes, the trial court cited the portions of the Club Deed, and the Club
    Lease, to support its findings as to the Land Company’s intent in forming the Trust. The
    trial court rejected appellants’ argument that the Land Company could not grant a greater
    “‘The parol evidence rule is a rule of substantive law that prohibits a party who has
    3
    entered into a written contract from contradicting the terms of the contract with evidence of alleged or
    actual agreements.’” Ed Schory & Sons v. Francis, 
    75 Ohio St. 3d 433
    , 440, 1996-Ohio-194, 
    662 N.E.2d 1074
    , quoting Shanker, Judicial Misuses of the Word Fraud to Defeat the Parol Evidence Rule
    and the Statute of Frauds (With Some Cheers and Jeers for the Ohio Supreme Court), 23 Akron
    L.Rev. 2 (1989).
    right to use the Beach via the Club Deed, because the Land Company no longer had
    authority over the Beach, which had already been placed in Trust.
    {¶32} The trial court took judicial notice of dicta from Wallace v. Clifton Land
    Co., 
    92 Ohio St. 349
    , 
    110 N.E. 940
    (1915), for the premise that the Clifton Club
    membership has never been restricted to lot owners. 4 
    Id. at 359.
              The trial court
    concluded that it was “illogical to reason” that the rights of the Clifton Club as lot owners
    to “use” the Beach did not vest the same “privilege” in its members, finding there is
    nothing in the Trust Deed to suggest that the resident Club Members could have access,
    but the nonresident Members could not. Since the Clifton Club has been in existence
    since 1902, the trial court held that it does not make sense to think that the Land
    Company conveyed the Beach without intending that the Club Members have access.
    {¶33} Based on the foregoing, the trial court determined that, due to the status of
    the Clifton Club as a Beneficiary, “the Clifton Club, and through it, all of its members,
    has a legal right to use Trust property, including the beach, subject to the regulations and
    restrictions as set forth in the Trust Deed and Club Deed.” The Trustees’ motion for
    summary judgment was granted. This appeal ensued.
    II.    ASSIGNMENTS OF ERROR
    The sole question before the Wallace court was the “right of The Clifton
    4
    Land Company to devote these lots, covered by these restrictions, to street
    purposes, and that question must be answered in the negative.” 
    Id. at 361.
          {¶34} Appellants present three assignments of error: (1) the trial court erred in
    granting the Trustees’ motion for summary judgment, relying on appellees’ extrinsic
    evidence while ignoring the extrinsic evidence of appellants; (2) the trial court erred in
    refusing to remove the Trustees after the Trustees failed to provide documents to
    appellants during discovery as required by the Trust Code; and (3) the trial court erred in
    denying appellants’ motion for attorney fees.
    {¶35}        We begin with appellants’ first assigned error, that the trial court erred in
    granting the motion. We agree.
    A.      Summary Judgment
    1.        Standard of Review
    {¶36} Our standard of review for summary judgments is de novo. Grafton v.
    Ohio Edison Co., 
    77 Ohio St. 3d 102
    , 105, 1996-Ohio-336, 
    671 N.E.2d 241
    :
    De novo review means that this court “uses the same standard that the trial
    court should have used, and we examine the evidence to determine if as a
    matter of law no genuine issues exist for trial.” Brewer v. Cleveland Bd. of
    Edn., 
    122 Ohio App. 3d 378
    , 383, 
    701 N.E.2d 1023
    (8th Dist.1997), citing
    Dupler v. Mansfield Journal, 
    64 Ohio St. 2d 116
    , 119-120, 
    413 N.E.2d 1187
          (1980). In other words, we review the trial court’s decision without
    according the trial court any deference. Brown v. Cty. Bd. of Commrs., 
    87 Ohio App. 3d 704
    , 711, 
    622 N.E.2d 1153
    (4th Dist.1993).
    Under Civ.R. 56(C), summary judgment is properly granted when (1) there
    is no genuine issue as to any material fact; (2) the moving party is entitled
    to judgment as a matter of law; and (3) reasonable minds can come to but
    one conclusion, and that conclusion is adverse to the party against whom
    the motion for summary judgment is made. Harless v. Willis Day
    Warehousing Co., 
    54 Ohio St. 2d 64
    , 66, 
    375 N.E.2d 46
    (1976). If the
    moving party fails to satisfy its initial burden, “the motion for summary
    judgment must be denied.” Dresher v. Burt, 
    75 Ohio St. 3d 280
    , 293,
    1996-Ohio-107, 
    662 N.E.2d 264
    (1996). But if the moving party satisfies
    “its initial burden, the nonmoving party then has a reciprocal burden
    outlined in Civ.R. 56(E) to set forth specific facts showing that there is a
    genuine issue for trial and, if the nonmovant does not so respond, summary
    judgment, if appropriate, shall be entered against the nonmoving party.”
    
    Id. Hinton v.
    Newburgh Hts., 8th Dist. Cuyahoga No. 103412, 2016-Ohio-2727, ¶ 10-11.
    2.       Issue Clarification
    {¶37} We find it necessary to clarify the issue in this case prior to analysis. We
    reiterate here that appellants requested a declaration as to:
    (1) whether the Club Members are Beneficiaries under the Trust Deed;
    (2) that Club Members have no legal right to use the Beach; and
    (3) whether the Club Deed provision extending use of the Beach to Club
    Members is valid since the settlors had no control over the Beach after the
    Trust creation.
    (Emphasis added.)
    {¶38} In contrast, the Trustees present a different description of the issue:
    Whether individual Clifton Club members are themselves beneficiaries of
    the Trust, however, has never been an issue in this case. Defendant Trustees
    have never made such an argument. Rather, the position consistently taken
    by the Trustees is that the issue in this case is whether the Clifton Club
    members had a right to use the Beach, given the fact that the Clifton Club
    itself is a beneficiary of the Trust and clearly has a right to use all of the
    Trust property. The Probate Court agreed with the Trustees’ position.
    (Emphasis added.)
    {¶39}        The trial court determined that the Clifton Club was a Beneficiary under
    the Trust Deed by its acquisition of the Club Lots, an issue that is not in dispute in this
    case. The trial court capsulized the issue to be whether the Club Members “have a right
    to use” the Beach under the Trust Deed. The trial court concluded that the only way the
    Clifton Club could exercise its rights to access the Beach was through the members, and
    that the documents and history supported that the Club Members “had the right” to use
    the Beach.
    {¶40} Appellants have consistently argued that the Club Members do not have a
    “legal right” to use the Beach, but that the right is by permission and subject to
    regulations by the Trustees. Appellees maintain the same position. Thus, it appears that
    the parties actually agree that Club Members may use the Beach by permission, for an
    annual fee, with regulatory oversight by the Trustees.
    {¶41}        We construe the pending question to be whether the nonresident Club
    Members are direct Beneficiaries under the Trust Deed, as stated in Count I of the first
    amended complaint, arguably entitling them to equal access and commensurate status as
    the owner Beneficiaries.
    3.      Law and Analysis
    {¶42} A trust is defined as:
    [A] fiduciary relationship with respect to property, subjecting the person by
    whom the title to the property is held to equitable duties to deal with the
    property for the benefit of another person, which arises as a result of a
    manifestation of an intention to create it.
    Restatement of the Law 2d, Trusts, Section 2 (2012).
    {¶43}         The Ohio Trust Code (“OTC”), effective January 1, 2007, 2006
    Am.Sub.H.B. 416, No. 126, 5 found in R.C. Chapters 5801 through 5811, is Ohio’s
    adaptation of the Uniform Trust Code, promulgated in 2000 (“UTC”). The UTC is the
    first effort at national codification of the law of trusts, drawing from the common law,
    Restatements, and current statutes. See R.C. 5801.01, Official Comment, Uniform Trust
    Code Section 103.
    {¶44}      The OTC defines the “terms of a trust” as “the manifestation of the
    settlor’s intent regarding a trust’s provisions as expressed in the trust instrument or as
    may be established by other evidence that would be admissible in a judicial proceeding.
    R.C. 5801.01(V). A trust instrument is defined as “an instrument executed by the settlor
    that contains terms of the trust and any amendments to that instrument.”                              R.C.
    5801.01(W).
    {¶45}       In Ohio, a court’s interpretation of the terms of a trust is guided by the
    settlor’s intent. “Courts look to the express language of the trust agreement to provide an
    indication of that intent. The words used in the instrument are presumed to be used in
    their ordinary sense.” Hobeck v. Soc. Natl. Bank, 8th Dist. Cuyahoga No. 66029, 1994
    Ohio App. LEXIS 4191, *6 (Sept. 22, 1994), quoting Ohio Citizens Bank v. Mills, 
    45 Ohio St. 3d 153
    , 
    543 N.E.2d 1206
    (1989). “When the language of the trust instrument is
    Generally, the Ohio Trust Code applies retroactively, except as otherwise provided in the
    5
    statutes, where it would substantially interfere with constitutional rights, or conflicts with express trust
    terms. R.C. 5811.03.
    unambiguous, a court can ascertain the settlor’s intent from the express terms of the trust
    itself, and extrinsic evidence is not admissible to interpret the trust provisions.” Domo v.
    McCarthy, 
    66 Ohio St. 3d 312
    , 314, 
    612 N.E.2d 706
    (1993).
    {¶46} There is also a presumption in Ohio that a deed of conveyance expresses the
    intention of the grantor and grantee at the time that the deed was executed. Am. Energy
    Corp. v. Datkuliak, 
    174 Ohio App. 3d 398
    , 2007-Ohio-7199, 
    882 N.E.2d 463
    , ¶ 53 (7th
    Dist.). Extrinsic evidence will only be considered where the deed language is ambiguous
    or unclear, “or when the circumstances surrounding the deed invest the language of the
    deed with a special meaning * * * an effort to give effect to the parties[’] intentions.”
    Sedlak v. Solon, 
    104 Ohio App. 3d 170
    , 176, 
    661 N.E.2d 265
    (8th Dist.1995), citing 37
    Robinwood Assocs. v. Health Indus., Inc., 
    47 Ohio App. 3d 156
    , 
    547 N.E.2d 1019
    (10th
    Dist.1988).
    {¶47} As a written contract of conveyance, a trust is subject to the rules of
    contract and instrument interpretation as a matter of law, and the rules of contract
    construction apply. Long Beach Assn. v. Jones, 
    82 Ohio St. 3d 574
    , 576, 1998-Ohio-186,
    
    697 N.E.2d 208
    ; Arnott v. Arnott, 
    132 Ohio St. 3d 401
    , 2012-Ohio-3208, 
    972 N.E.2d 586
    ,
    ¶ 14 ; Sedlak v. Solon, 
    104 Ohio App. 3d 170
    , 176, 
    661 N.E.2d 265
    (8th Dist.1995).
    {¶48} We look to the Trust Deed to determine whether the intent of the settlors
    may be discerned from the four corners of the document. Soc. Natl. Bank, 8th Dist.
    Cuyahoga No. 66029, 1994 Ohio App. LEXIS 4191, *6. The Trust Deed provides, in
    pertinent part, that the Land Company conveys the described property:
    [I]n consideration of the covenants and agreements entered into by said
    company with the several owners of lots and lands in its allotment herein
    described * * * [grants to the Trustees] all such right and title as the said
    grantor has or ought to have in the [property] * * * which have been
    reserved for the use and benefit of the owners of land in said allotment, * *
    * for the sole use and benefit of all of the owners of sub lots, or parts of lots,
    in the Clifton Park Allotment * * * and the heirs, representatives, successors
    or assigns, of such owners.
    * * *
    (1) The trustees shall hold title to and preserve all the land deeded to them
    for the common use of all the lot owners in the Clifton Park Allotment, and
    their successors in title, and members of their households. (2) No part of
    said land shall be sold, conveyed or dedicated to public use without the
    unanimous consent of all the lot owners in said allotment. (3) The trustees
    shall collect money from the persons interested as hereinafter provided, and
    from such sums so collected, * * * [to pay taxes, maintenance, etc.]; shall
    establish regulations for the use of, and provide for proper policing * * *
    for the use of lot owners in said allotment, as the same is now maintained.
    * * *
    The cost of all ordinary care of the lands and buildings in the hands of the
    trustees, and their necessary expenses in carrying out their duties, shall be
    divided among the several lot owners and collected from them by an annual
    assessments as follows: Each sub lot, or part of sub lot, in the allotment
    shall be charged with such proportion of the total annual expense as its
    value for taxation, exclusive of buildings, is of the total value of all the sub
    lots in said allotments, exclusive of buildings. The owner of such sub lots,
    or part of sub lot[,] shall be bound to pay the sums so assessed to the
    trustees upon their written notice and demand; and the lien upon the several
    sub lots reserved to the Company in the deeds of conveyance for same to
    secure the payment of such assessments, is transferred to the said trustees,
    and may be enforced by them.
    (Emphasis added.)
    {¶49} There is no dispute that the Clifton Club is a Beneficiary as a successor lot
    owner to the Land Company. The language of the Trust Deed makes it clear that the
    settlors’ intent was to convey the Beach for the use and benefit of the Clifton Park lot
    owners. At the time of creation, the Land Company held title to the Club Lots, which
    were then subject to the Club Lease. The Trust Deed specifically provided that the
    assessment fees for the Beach also applied to the Land Company’s retained parcels, and
    vested in the Trustees a lien right for that purpose.
    {¶50} As to the legal rights of the Club Members, the trial court determined, and
    appellees advocate, that the Clifton Club, as a corporation, holds its property in trust for
    the members, and that the members are therefore the “beneficial owners” of the
    corporation’s property. Trustees’ brief, citing Bogert, The Law of Trusts and Trustees,
    Trusts and Estates, Section 16. The Trustees also cite Raulston v. Everett, 
    561 S.W.2d 635
    (Tex.Civ.App.1978), which concluded that a membership corporation is similar to an
    unincorporated association, though it is incorporated. Members acquire “not a severable
    right to any of its property or funds, but merely a right to the joint use and enjoyment
    thereof so long as he continues to be a member.” 
    Id. at 638.
    {¶51} Additionally advanced by the Trustees is the premise that usage by the
    members is considered to be usage by the Clifton Club, such as in the case of Saunders
    Point Assn. v. Cannon, 
    177 Conn. 413
    , 
    418 A.2d 70
    (1979). The Saunders court was
    asked to determine whether the plaintiff club had established a prescriptive easement,
    based on the members’ open use and belief for the previous 40 years, to use a beach
    located on property recently purchased by the defendant. A factor the Saunders court
    considered in finding the existence of the easement based on the totality of the
    circumstances, was the members’ belief that their access entitlement was due to the club
    membership,
    and not as individuals, so that the usage could be imputed to the club. 
    Id. at 420.
    {¶52} The Trustees’ cited cases support the proposition that the Club Members
    possess a permissive or derivative right due to the Clifton Club’s status as a Beneficiary.
    We do not, however, find that the cases establish that the Club Members are direct legal
    Trust Beneficiaries, the query pending here.
    {¶53} The Trust Deed was authored in 1912. At that time, the Clifton Club was
    a for-profit corporation with shares owned by a limited number of shareholders with a
    capped number of members. The Clifton Club is not specifically mentioned in the Trust
    Deed and the Clifton Club did not acquire its interest until the subsequent Club Deed.
    {¶54} Thus, briefly shifting our attention to the question posed by appellants
    regarding the scope of the rights conveyed to Members via the Club Deed, we agree with
    appellants that the Land Company could confer no greater rights to the Clifton Club than
    it possessed at the time of issuance of the Club Deed. The Trust had already been
    created and control over the Beach relinquished. Further, there are no terms in the Trust
    Deed expressly reserving authority to expand rights under the Trust post-creation:
    For trusts created before January 1, 2007, the rule is that “after the grantor
    has completed the creation of a trust, she is without rights, liabilities, or
    powers over the trust unless expressly provided for by the trust agreement.”
    Minnesota Life Ins. Co. v. Cole, N.D.Ohio No. 1:12-CV-00509, 
    2013 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 62928
    , *10 (May 2, 2013), quoting Lourdes College v. Bishop, 94 Ohio Misc.2d 51, 
    703 N.E.2d 362
    (C.P.) citing 1 Bogert, Trusts and Trustees 431, Section 42 (2 Ed.Rev.1984);
    R.C. 5806.02.
    {¶55} The Trust Deed “transfers only those rights which a grantor has at the time
    of the conveyance.” Finomore v. Epstein, 
    18 Ohio App. 3d 88
    , 90, 
    481 N.E.2d 1193
    (8th
    Dist.1984), citing Jonke v. Rubin, 
    170 Ohio St. 41
    , 
    162 N.E.2d 116
    (1995), at paragraph
    one of the syllabus. See also Alston v. Alston, 
    4 Ohio App. 2d 270
    , 276, 
    212 N.E.2d 65
    (10th Dist.1964):
    In 26 Corpus Juris Secundum 946, Deeds, Section 118, it is said: “The title
    to real property may be as effectually conveyed or transferred by a quitclaim
    deed as by a warranty deed or any other form of conveyance. Such a deed
    will convey whatever title or interest the grantor may have in the land at the
    time it is given * * *.”
    
    Id. at 276.
    {¶56} In further assessing the Club Members’ legal status in 1912 as it relates to
    the settlors’ intent, we examine the nature of the Clifton Club as a corporate legal entity
    holding title to the lots:
    The idea that a corporation is a legal entity separate and distinct from its
    members is an accepted principle of law. As stated by the United States
    Supreme Court in Cedric Kushner Promotions, Ltd. v. King, 
    533 U.S. 158
    ,
    
    121 S. Ct. 2087
    , 
    150 L. Ed. 2d 198
    (2001), a corporation and an employee
    “are different ‘persons,’ even where the employee is the corporation’s sole
    owner.” 
    Id. at 163.
    The court reasoned that this construction is
    appropriate because the “basic purpose” of incorporation is to create a
    “distinct legal entity, with legal rights, obligations, powers, and privileges
    different from those of the natural individuals who created it, who own it, or
    whom it employs.” 
    Id. The Ohio
    Supreme Court also agrees with this
    proposition. See Agley v. Tracy, 
    87 Ohio St. 3d 265
    , 268, 
    719 N.E.2d 951
           (1999) (“A corporation is an entity separate and apart from the individuals
    who compose it; it is a legal fiction for the purpose of doing business.”)
    (Emphasis omitted.) Kiddie Co. Enrichment Ctr. v. Cuyahoga Cty. Bd. of Revision,
    2012-Ohio-5717, 
    984 N.E.2d 347
    , ¶ 13 (8th Dist.). See also Boedeker v. Rogers, 
    140 Ohio App. 3d 11
    , 
    746 N.E.2d 625
    (8th Dist.2000) (a shareholder’s right to pursue an
    action addressing a wrong to the corporate entity was invented in equity as a
    representative action; and the shareholder, a nominal party, has no right, title, or interest
    in the claim itself.) 
    Id. at 20.
           {¶57} While this describes the derivative nature of a shareholder’s interest, the
    members were not shareholders. 
    Id. “A member
    of an incorporated club *          *   * does
    not have any title to any of the [club] property.” Reynolds v. Surf Club, 
    473 So. 2d 1327
    ,
    1334 (Fla.App.1985). “This is an incorporated club and title to the property is in the
    corporation and not in the membership.” 
    Id. at 1334,
    citing 14 C.J.S. Clubs Section 4,
    p. 1280, 1281.       See also Hardy v. Hardy, 2d Dist. Montgomery No. 22964,
    2010-Ohio-561, ¶ 11 (club memberships are intangible assets, typically nontransferable,
    illiquid, and lack fair market value).
    {¶58} In discerning the settlors’ intent, we find that the Club Members are not
    defined Beneficiaries under the Trust Deed and were vested with no legal rights
    thereunder. However, it is clear by the terms of the Trust Deed that the Clifton Club’s
    rights as a Beneficiary are also to be protected, to the extent they comport with the
    settlors’ intent that the conveyance was “for the sole use and benefit of all of the owners
    of sublots, or parts of lots, in the Clifton Park Allotment.” Therefore, we determine that
    extrinsic evidence is required to determine the settlor’s intent regarding the scope of the
    Clifton Club’s use of the Beach, including the Trustees’ historical interpretation and
    administration of the rights accordingly.
    {¶59} The Club Lease capped Clifton Club membership at 250 Club Members.
    The Club Lease, Trust Deed, and Club Deed indicate an intent that the Clifton Club, as
    lessees and successor lot owners, have access to the Beach, but that such access was
    subject to the rules and regulations implemented by the Trustees.
    {¶60}    Records prior to 1942 were destroyed in a fire at the Clifton Club.
    However, subsequent Clifton Club and Trustee meeting minutes confirm that the Trustees
    made an annual determination on the amount that the Clifton Club was to pay to allow the
    members access to the Beach. Various formulas were implemented.
    {¶61} Over the years, the meeting minutes of the Trustees as well as the Clifton
    Club’s board of directors document the understanding that use of the Beach by the Club
    Members was regulated by the Trustees.             On June 29, 1942, the Clifton Club
    unanimously adopted a resolution designating a committee to investigate the legal
    authority and right of the Trustees to enter into an agreement with the Clifton Club
    regulating use of the Beach by the Club Members, and to advise the Trustees that the
    Clifton Club “authorized a call to each member * * * for one quarter of the annual dues”
    to be paid to the Trustees for “full use of all facilities of the beach in common with, and
    to the same extent as lot owners in Clifton Park.”
    {¶62}     At the July 8, 1942 Clifton Club board meeting, the Clifton Club
    committee read for the record a letter to the Clifton Club from the Trustees
    acknowledging the acceptance of the Clifton Club’s proposal to the Trustees for payment
    by the Club Members to access the Beach. The minutes further reflect that:
    The letter expressly stated that “neither this letter nor any action taken, or to
    be taken, hereunder shall impair or affect either your rights or the rights of
    our beneficiaries or of us with respect to any of such questions, nor shall it
    or any such action constitute a precedent for a future year.”
    The call was approved by the Board.
    {¶63} The Clifton Club determined at the August 7, 1947 meeting that, in 1948
    and thereafter, it would pay the Trustees for operation and maintenance of the Beach:
    [A] certain share of the expenses incurred in the particular year in the
    operation and maintenance of said Beach: which share to be that fraction of
    the total of such expenses for the particular year that the number of Club
    members entitled to use the Beach bears to the total of (1) the number of
    such members, and (2) the number of sublots in Clifton Park. * * *
    [S]uch arrangement shall continue unless the same shall be terminated or
    changed by the affirmative vote of a majority of either the stockholders or
    of the members of this Club present, in person or by proxy, at a meeting
    called for such purpose.
    {¶64} The annual payments continued. A January 19, 1963 letter authored Trustee
    Clayton Quintrell, Esq., printed on his law firm’s letterhead, is addressed to his fellow
    Trustees, and discusses the Club Members’ access to the Beach. The Clifton Club
    suggested that the Club Members pay the Trustees directly for Beach access to avoid a 20
    percent tax assessed upon Clifton Club dues. In pertinent part, Quintrell opines:
    Even if the 20 percent tax could be avoided, the Trustees might be
    compelled to charge the Club members a 10 percent admissions tax. The lot
    owners of course pay no admissions tax because they are using their own
    property. Club members, as such do not have any property interest in the
    beach. For example, they are not responsible for and have never
    contributed toward payment of the taxes upon the beach property. The
    resolution which was passed at the special meeting of the members and
    stockholders of the [Clifton] Club made it perfectly clear that this was a
    permissive use afforded to the Club [M]embers, terminable at any time by
    the Club [M]embers themselves upon short notice.
    Consequently, even if the 20 percent could be avoided, a 10 percent
    admissions tax might be required to be collected and paid by the Trustees.
    (Emphasis added.)
    {¶65} Notes by Clifton Club director Smith memorialize a May 4, 1970 meeting
    between Clifton Club personnel and Trustees. At that meeting, Trustee Hartford stated
    the Club Members had no rights “under the land deed” and that the rights were reserved
    to the lot owners. The parties agree that the fee arrangement has been in place for the
    past 70 years, and that the Clifton Club has paid a mutually agreed upon annual
    maintenance assessment for the Beach at a higher rate than the formula set forth in the
    Trust Deed.
    {¶66} Recitation of the foregoing events serves to confirm a historical
    understanding by the Trustees and Clifton Club that the Club Members’ right to access
    the Beach is permissive, and that the Trustees have full authority to regulate Beach
    access.   The Club Lease, capping the membership number subject to the settlors’
    consent, confirms that the Clifton Club’s use, even as a direct Beneficiary, is not
    unfettered, particularly since the purpose of the Trust is to allow the lot owners to enjoy
    the Beach.
    {¶67}      We conclude that the trial court correctly determined that the Club
    Members have a “right” to use the Beach. However, in response to the declaration
    explicitly requested by appellants, we find that the Club Members have no legal right of
    access as Beneficiaries. Access by the Club Members is by permission and regulation of
    the Trustees.
    B.       Breach of Fiduciary Duties
    {¶68} Appellants argue in their second assigned error that the trial court erred in
    denying their motion to remove the Trustees. It is asserted that the Trustees breached
    their fiduciary duties by advocating against the owner Beneficiaries on behalf of the
    Clifton Club and the Club Members, and denying appellants the right to access Trust
    documents upon reasonable request.
    {¶69} It is axiomatic that a trustee has a fiduciary duty to a trust beneficiary. R.C.
    5808.02 (a “trustee shall administer the trust solely in the interests of the beneficiaries”).
    “It is well settled that every violation by a trustee of a duty which equity lays upon him.”
    Shuster v. N. Am. Mtge. Loan Co., 
    139 Ohio St. 315
    , 343, 
    40 N.E.2d 130
    (1942). This is
    true “whether [the violation] is wilful and fraudulent, or done through negligence, or
    arising through mere oversight or forgetfulness, is a breach of trust.”   
    Id. {¶70} To
    prove a breach of fiduciary duty, appellants must demonstrate:
    (1) the existence of a duty arising from a fiduciary relationship; (2) a failure
    to observe the duty; and (3) an injury resulting proximately therefrom. * *
    * A “fiduciary” has been defined as a person having a duty, created by his
    undertaking, to act primarily for the benefit of another in matters connected
    with his undertaking.
    (Citations and quotations omitted.) Scanlon v. Scanlon, 2013-Ohio-2694, 
    993 N.E.2d 855
    , ¶ 15 (8th Dist.), citing Lombardo v. Mahoney, 8th Dist. Cuyahoga No. 92608,
    2009-Ohio-5826, ¶ 18; Gracetech Inc. v. Perez, 8th Dist. Cuyahoga No. 96913,
    2012-Ohio-700. We find that appellants have demonstrated that a breach has taken place.
    {¶71} While R.C. 5810.01 lists a range of remedies for breach of trust, appellants
    seek removal of the Trustees pursuant to R.C. 5807.06:
    (A)     The settlor, a cotrustee, or a beneficiary may request the court to
    remove a trustee, or the court may remove a trustee on its own
    initiative.
    (B)     The court may remove a trustee for any of the following reasons:
    (1)    The trustee has committed a serious breach of trust;
    (2)    Lack of cooperation among cotrustees substantially impairs
    the administration of the trust;
    (3)    Because of unfitness, unwillingness, or persistent failure of
    the trustee to administer the trust effectively, the court
    determines that removal of the trustee best serves the interests
    of the beneficiaries.
    (C)     Pending a final decision on a request to remove a trustee, or in lieu
    of or in addition to removing a trustee, the court may order any
    appropriate relief under division (B) of section 5810.01 of the
    Revised Code that is necessary to protect the trust property or the
    interests of the beneficiaries.
    R.C. 5807.06.
    {¶72}     This court has held:
    The removal of a trustee is generally considered a drastic action and the
    party seeking to remove a trustee must show a basis for removal by clear
    and convincing evidence. Diemert v. Diemert, 8th Dist. Cuyahoga No.
    82597, 2003-Ohio-6496, ¶ 15-16. Further, “[t]he greater the grant of
    discretion by the settlor to the trustee, the broader the range of permissible
    conduct by the trustee in exercising it.” R.C. 5808.14(A).
    Tomazic v. Rapoport, 2012-Ohio-4402, 
    977 N.E.2d 1068
    , ¶ 33 (8th Dist.)
    {¶73} To prove a breach of fiduciary duty, appellants must demonstrate:
    (1) the existence of a duty arising from a fiduciary relationship; (2) a failure
    to observe the duty; and (3) an injury resulting proximately therefrom. * *
    * A “fiduciary” has been defined as a person having a duty, created by his
    undertaking, to act primarily for the benefit of another in matters connected
    with his undertaking.
    (Citations omitted.) Scanlon v. Scanlon, 2013-Ohio-2694, 
    993 N.E.2d 855
    , ¶ 15 (8th
    Dist.), citing Lombardo v. Mahoney, 8th Dist. Cuyahoga No. 92608, 2009- Ohio-5826, ¶
    18; Gracetech Inc., 8th Dist. Cuyahoga No. 96913, 2012-Ohio-700.
    {¶74}     Appellants point out that:   (1) removal is proper for a serious breach of
    trust, or where removal serves the interests of the beneficiaries (R.C. 5807.06(B)(1) and
    (3), citing UTC Section 706); 5810.01(B)(7)); and that removal is particularly appropriate
    where the trustees engage in conduct detrimental to beneficiary interests. 
    Id. (Official Comment,
    UTC Section 706(b)), citing Restatement of the Law 3d, Trusts, Section 37,
    Comment d; Restatement of the Law 2d, Trusts, Section 107 (1959).
    {¶75}     The fiduciary duties and powers of Trustees are enumerated in R.C.
    Chapter 5808. Appellants focus on: (1) breach of the duty of impartiality where there
    are two or more beneficiaries under R.C. 5808.03; (2) breach of the duty to keep
    beneficiaries reasonably informed about trust administration and material facts required to
    protect their interests under R.C. 5808.13; and (3) breach of the duty to promptly respond
    to beneficiary’s request for information regarding trust administration, unless
    unreasonable under the circumstances, also under R.C. 5808.13.
    {¶76}        We first analyze the claims regarding the Trustees’ alleged breach of the
    cited fiduciary duties to determine the propriety of the remedy of removal.
    1.       Duty of Impartiality
    {¶77}        Trustees are charged to act impartially where there are multiple
    beneficiaries. R.C. 5808.03. The Official Comments provide further elucidation:
    The duty to act impartially does not mean that the trustee must treat the
    beneficiaries equally. Rather, the trustee must treat the beneficiaries
    equitably in light of the purposes and terms of the trust. A settlor who
    prefers that the trustee, when making decisions, generally favor the interests
    of one beneficiary over those of others should provide appropriate guidance
    in the terms of the trust. See Restatement of the Law 2d, Trusts, Section
    183 (1959).
    
    Id. (Official Comment,
    Uniform Trust Code Section 803).
    {¶78}        Appellants cite, in further support of their position, Restatement of the
    Law 3d, Trust, Section 79. “In managing real estate * * * held in the trust estate,
    impartiality is important in matters ranging from decisions concerning leasing to third
    parties or allowing one or more beneficiaries the use of Trust property.”     
    Id. {¶79} Appellants
    state that, in 2011, the Clifton Club insisted that the Club
    Members are Trust Beneficiaries, regardless of lot ownership, and the Trustees changed
    their position to support the Clifton Club’s interpretation. The current action was initiated
    after the Trustees refused to join appellants in an action against the Clifton Club, or to
    petition for clarification by the court, regarding the legal rights of Club Members to use
    the Trust property. The Trustees filed an amicus brief supporting the Clifton Club’s
    argument that the Trustees and lot owners were necessary parties to the suit. After joinder
    of the Trustees and lot owners, the Trustees advocated on behalf of the Clifton Club
    against the owner Beneficiaries, supporting the Clifton Club’s interpretation of the Trust
    Deed. This behavior allegedly demonstrates a breach of the duty of impartiality. Pivotal
    documents to our analysis are discussed below.
    a.     December 1, 2011 Correspondence from Clifton
    Club to Trustees
    {¶80} In this correspondence, the Clifton Club comments on the “potentially
    catastrophic impact disparate restrictions levied against” Club Members would have on
    the Clifton Club’s financial structure, as well as relationships between friends and
    neighbors. Expressing dismay that the new rules and “unilateral restrictions on the Clifton
    Club members” were already in the mail, the Clifton Club advises the Trustees:
    From our perspective, the proposed new restrictions unfairly discriminate
    against members of The Clifton Club. As such, we believe the Park
    Trustees have breached their fiduciary responsibility to represent all Beach
    members fairly and without discrimination. Even more alarming is the
    implied threat to engage in further discriminatory actions in the future if the
    Park Trustees deem it appropriate after what amounts to a 13-week trial run
    next summer. * * *
    Clearly, you gave preference to the input from a dissident group of Park
    residents, with only a portion of residents participating, should not have
    been sufficient to impose restrictions of the magnitude involved. * * *
    Let me reiterate, in the Trust Deed under the heading “Duties of Trustees,”
    the Trustees are obligated to carry out their role “for the common use of all
    the lot owners in the Clifton Park allotment.” Not some owners, not just
    vocal and irritated lot owners, but “all” lot owners. * * *
    [G]iven the importance and gravity of the issues involved, we must formally
    object to these rules and request that you consider other modifications
    between now and the 2012 beach season to address the issue of
    overcrowding without treating The Clifton Club unfairly. As we have
    consistently communicated, we are ready, willing and able to work with you
    on a cooperative basis to deal with the underlying issues and are open to
    discussing all options, including a voluntary reduction of our membership.
    b.     Legal Memorandum of Clifton Club Beach Access
    {¶81} On May 9, 2012, the Trustees secured a legal analysis on the question of
    Club Members’ access to the Beach, involving review of the Club Lease, Trust Deed, and
    Club Deed, seeking an assessment of the legal rights of Club Members to access the
    Beach. The analysis determined that the Clifton Club and its members “have rights to
    access the beach” pursuant to the Trust Deed and Club Deed, and that the historical use of
    the Beach supports the conclusion.
    c.     Trustees Notice to Clifton Park Owners and Club
    Members
    {¶82}    The notice issued by the Trustees to Clifton Park residents and Club
    Members references an April 19, 2013 letter issued to the residents by the appellants. The
    appellants’ letter advises residents that the declaratory judgment action is still pending,
    but that the court requires that all owners and the Trustees be added as parties to the case.
    {¶83} The Trustees’ notice states the 2012 Beach rules had been effective at
    alleviating overcrowding, but the appellants continue to pursue the lawsuit. While
    appellants’ letter states the lot owners are not required to file a response to the suit, the
    Trustees’ notice advises the lot owners that they have a duty to respond to the summons
    and complaint by law, and suggests that each owner seek legal counsel for advice. The
    notice also provides:
    A ruling in favor of the plaintiffs could cause a substantial and significant
    increase in the lot owners’ assessments if the Clifton Club were to be
    banned from having beach access and the Clifton Club discontinued its
    substantial contribution to the Trust annual expenses.
    {¶84}     The Trustees also explain that they “have not chosen sides in this matter,”
    and that they petitioned the court to include them as a party because of their fiduciary
    duty to administer the Beach. Notice recipients were referred to the Trustees’ website
    for additional information in the form of “FAQs.”6
    {¶85}     Excerpts from the FAQ are also contained in the notice:
    1.      Beneficiaries. The beneficiaries of the Clifton Park Trust are the owners
    of the lots in Clifton Park. Clifton Club is a lot owner and thus is a
    beneficiary.
    2.      Access and Use. Annually before the beginning of the summer season the
    Trustees publish and distribute to the beneficiaries “Clifton Beach Rules”
    that regulate access to and use of the beach and its facilities. As an
    example, for 2012 the Trustees established new rules for behavior at and
    access to the beach in response to issues raised by beneficiaries about
    overcrowding.
    Clifton Park Trustees (www.cliftonparktrustees.org) (accessed 08/02/2016).
    6
    3.      Control. The Clifton Park Trustees control access
    to the privately-owned Beach by
    maintaining security guards at the
    entrance to the beach to check
    visitors and issuing a limited number
    of vehicle stickers to lot owners and
    permitted Club Members.
    4.      Club Members. The Clifton Club, which owns four lots, is a beneficiary
    of the Trust. The 1902 lease of the lots to the Clifton Club and the 1912
    deed conveying title to the lots to the Clifton Club provides the Clifton
    Club with beach access rights that they have been exercising for over one
    hundred years. In recognition of this right, the Clifton Club annually
    contributes a significant amount of money to the Trust for its operations.
    5.      Limit of Club Members. The Trustees establish the number of Club
    Members who can access the beach. For the 2012 season the Trustees
    limited the Clifton Club beach access to 224 members (the Clifton Club
    has more than 224 members but only 224 were permitted to have beach
    access). Even if the number of Club Members grew to an “unlimited”
    number, the Trustees can and will reasonably limit the number of Club
    Members with beach access.
    {¶86} The notice concludes that the current Beach access protocol comports with
    historical practices and the Trust Deed. Finally, the Trustees explain that they began their
    amicus brief, filed in response to the declaratory complaint, with the phrase, “[t]his dispute does
    not belong in court,” stating they believe the historical methodology continues to work.
    {¶87} Cases cited by appellants generally hold that “in a dispute between two parties
    claiming to be beneficiaries, a trustee may not advocate for either side or assume the validity of
    either side’s position.”   Matter of Duke, 
    702 A.2d 1008
    , 1024 (NJ. Super. 1995); In re Cudahy,
    
    131 N.W.2d 882
    (Wis. 965); N. Trust Co. v. Heuer, 
    560 N.E.2d 961
    (Ill.App. 1990); Shelton v.
    Tamposi, 
    62 A.3d 741
    (N.H. 2013); and State ex rel. Strykowski v. Wilkie, 
    261 N.W.2d 434
    (Wis.1978). R.C. 5808.03, UTC 803.
    {¶88}     Appellees renounce appellants’ cases and position, claiming that the
    Trustees “did not ‘take sides’ in a ‘dispute between beneficiaries.’” The Trustees posit
    that they lawfully opposed an action seeking to “override” or “circumvent” the express
    terms of the Trust Deed, which the Trustees have a legal duty to defend and uphold, citing
    to Bogert, The Law of Trusts and Trustees, Section 581 (3d Ed.):
    Equity imposes upon the trustee the duty of defending the integrity of the
    trust, if he has reasonable ground for believing the attack is unjustified or if
    he is reasonably in doubt on that subject.
    {¶89} Appellees further cite R.C. 5808.16(N) for the premise that the trustees
    have a statutory duty to contest any claim against the Trust. Here, they state the Trustees
    had a statutory duty to resist appellants’ demand that:
    [T]he Trustees cease “establishing regulations” for the usage of the Beach
    and allow the Trust to be governed instead by new “regulations” written by
    a small group of beneficiaries (the six Plaintiffs and their allies), or by a
    court. In short, under the law, the Trustees could not “stand neutral” in the
    face of Plaintiffs’ attack on those provisions of the Trust.
    Brief of Trustees, p. 26.
    {¶90}    Appellees present In re Estate of Dawson, 
    117 Ohio App. 3d 51
    , 
    689 N.E.2d 1008
    (2d Dist.1996), as an analogy to the Trustees’ obligations in this case:
    We agree that in general a fiduciary should remain neutral in disputes
    between beneficiaries. However, where, as here, the testamentary purposes
    of the decedent are manifest in a validly executed will, the fiduciary has a
    responsibility to make reasonable efforts to carry out those purposes.
    
    Id. at 59.
    Distilled, Dawson is instructive, but not determinative.
    {¶91} Dawson involves the denial of attorney fees to an attorney hired by the
    executrix, a co-beneficiary of the probate estate, to defend the estate against a breach of
    contract claim filed by two beneficiaries. 
    Id. at 53.
    The trial court denied the fees, holding
    that the hiring of the attorney was an improper charge, adverse to the estate and for the
    benefit of the executrix. 
    Id. {¶92} Dawson
    quotes In re Estate of Zonas, 
    42 Ohio St. 3d 8
    , 
    536 N.E.2d 642
    (1989), to support the conclusion that, “although a fiduciary has no duty to defend, he
    may nonetheless undertake to do so.” Dawson, 
    117 Ohio App. 3d 51
    , 59, 
    689 N.E.2d 1008
    . However, the Zonas quotation provides in toto:
    Although [an executor] may defend the will, he is not required to do so and
    may cast the defense burden onto the legatees and devisees. A fiduciary
    represents the entire estate and has the duty to distribute the estate property
    but should not enter into controversies among rival contestants. Doty [v.
    Peters, 
    106 Ohio App. 435
    , 440, 
    155 N.E.2d 239
    (12th Dist.1958)].
    (Emphasis added.) 
    Id. at ¶
    12. See also Nolan v. Hinzey, 2016-Ohio-4657, 
    55 N.E.3d 1158
    , ¶ 36 (7th Dist.), citing Zonas and Dawson for the premise that a fiduciary is not
    required to defend, but also observing that the fiduciary’s duty in such an action is to
    preserve and protect the property of the estate, not to become involved in controversies
    between beneficiaries.
    {¶93} Thus, while Dawson to some degree also supports appellants’ position in
    this case, we observe that the exculpatory provisions of R.C. 5810.06
    must also be considered:
    A trustee who acts in reasonable reliance on the terms of the trust as
    expressed in the trust instrument is not liable to a beneficiary for a breach of
    trust to the extent the breach resulted from the reliance. 
    Id. {¶94} In
    Damas v. Damas, 6th Dist. Lucas No. L-10-1125, 2011-Ohio-6311, the
    question was     whether a successor trustee (“ST”) violated his fiduciary duty of
    impartiality (R.C. 5808.03). The ST petitioned the court to approve distribution of
    residual estate assets involving securities. The ST was also an owner of a company that
    received a portion of the distribution. 
    Id. at ¶
    21-22.
    {¶95}    The court turned its attention to the impartiality analysis under R.C.
    5808.03. 
    Id. at ¶
    28. Upon review of the terms of the trust and intent of the settlor, the
    court held that there was no breach, because the “trustee acted
    within the express authority granted by the settlor.” 
    Id. That finding,
    the court stated,
    was supported by R.C. 5810.06, providing that acting in reasonable reliance of the trust
    terms negates liability for a fiduciary breach. 
    Id. at ¶
    29.
    {¶96} The Trustees deny taking sides in the dispute, positing they acted only to
    perform their fiduciary duty to protect the Trust property. See R.C. 5808.16(Y) (duty to
    protect Trust). It is beyond dispute that the Trustees are subject to a duty of impartiality,
    and that the cited evidence may be construed as a breach of that duty.
    {¶97}   In 2011, the Trustees were aware that the Beneficiaries were disturbed
    about overcrowding of the Beach, and several meetings were held with some of the
    Beneficiaries, including appellants, to discuss the problem. The question arose as to
    whether the Trustees had the legal right to regulate the Clifton Club’s use of the Beach.
    Also in December 2011, the Clifton Club took issue with the Beach Rules circulated by
    the Trustees. The Clifton Club asserted that the rules disproportionately benefitted the
    vocal lot owner Beneficiaries and detrimentally impacted the Clifton Club. The Clifton
    Club also stated the rules constituted a breach of the Trustees’ fiduciary duties, but said
    they were willing to work with the Trustees to resolve the situation.
    {¶98}   At the time of the 2011-2012 over-crowding issue, the Trustees were
    aware that the interests of the Clifton Club and lot owner Beneficiaries were in conflict.
    According to the Trustees’ website, a printout of which is in the record, the Trustees
    “were compelled to seek counsel of attorneys” when “some residents threatened to legally
    challenge the 100 year practices of the Trustees with respect to the relationship with the
    Clifton Club.”     On May 9, 2012, a legal memorandum was issued to the Trustees
    opining that the Clifton Club and Club Members have the “legal right to access” the
    Beach.
    {¶99}   Appellants’ request to see the legal memorandum was denied by the
    Trustees. The Trustees also refused to seek a judicial interpretation of the Trust rights,
    resulting in the filing of the instant action on June 2, 2012.
    {¶100} The Trustees’ amicus brief was filed in support of the Clifton Club’s
    motion to dismiss.7 The Trustees argued: (1) they were necessary parties as title owners
    to the Beach; and (2) as fiduciaries of the Trust, and pursuant to the express terms thereof,
    they were charged with the duty to hold the Beach for “the use and benefit of all of the
    owners.” R.C. 5808.09,8 5808.01,9 and 5808.11.10
    {¶101} The Trustees proffer that there is no ambiguity in the Trust Deed that the
    declaratory matter was moot because recent regulations had alleviated the Beach
    crowding issue. “For over 100 years it has been clear pursuant to the ‘Trust Deed’” that
    all lot owners, including the Clifton Club, have a right to use the Beach, and that “this
    includes the members of the” Clifton Club.
    {¶102} The Trustees’ position has supported that of the Clifton Club, though
    assertedly offered to protect the Beach. There is also the issuance of the 2013 letter to
    residents and Club Members addressing the notice circulated by appellants emphasizing
    that the Club Members had the right to access the Beach per the Trust Deed.
    Appellants opposed the Trustees’ motion, refuting that the Trustees were necessary parties
    7
    and arguing that the proper vehicle for intervention was via Civ.R. 24(a)(2) motion to intervene.
    However, the trial court granted the motion, joining the Trustees as a party.
    A Trustee shall take reasonable steps to take control of and protect the
    8
    trust property.
    A Trustee shall administer the trust in good faith, in accordance with its terms and purposes
    9
    and the interests of the beneficiaries.
    A Trustee shall take reasonable steps to enforce claims of the trust and to
    10
    defend claims against the trust.
    {¶103}      At this point, the Trustees arguably crossed the fine line between the
    duty to defend the Trust and the duty of impartiality as between beneficiaries. At the time
    appellants requested that the Trustees file an action to declare the legal rights to Beach
    access, the Trustees could have petitioned the court for direction regarding interpretation
    of the Trust Deed pursuant to R.C. 5802.01, UTC 201. See, e.g., N. Trust Co. v. Heuer,
    202 Ill.App.3d 1066, 
    560 N.E.2d 961
    , 
    148 Ill. Dec. 364
    (Ill.App. 1 Dist.1990) (trustee
    properly sought court’s construction of trust agreement regarding appropriate distribution;
    however, in arguing that the trust should be interpreted in a manner beneficial to one
    beneficiary versus the other, it exceeded its role as trustee and breached its duty of
    impartiality).
    {¶104} We find that the Trustees breached the duty of impartiality in this case by
    engaging in advocacy between the beneficiaries.
    C.        Duty to Inform, Report, and Promptly Respond
    {¶105}       Appellants base this argument on the Trustees’ failure to provide
    requested information prior to inception of this case, as well as during discovery, and to
    notify the owner beneficiaries of the Clifton Club’s 2012 correspondence to the Trustees
    indicating that the Trustees had breached their fiduciary duty. Appellants also assert that
    the Trustees’ failure to fulfill the duty to inform is another indicator of the breach of
    impartiality.
    {¶106}    R.C. 5808.13, UTC 813, provides in pertinent part:
    (A) A trustee shall keep the current beneficiaries of the trust reasonably
    informed about the administration of the trust and of the material facts
    necessary for them to protect their interests. Unless unreasonable under the
    circumstances, a trustee shall promptly respond to a beneficiary’s request
    for information related to the administration of the trust.
    (B)    A trustee shall do all of the following:
    (1)    Upon the request of a beneficiary, promptly furnish to the
    beneficiary a copy of the trust instrument.
    {¶107} The appellants state that the Trustees failed to notify them of the Clifton
    Club’s letter alleging a breach of fiduciary duty, and containing statements about the
    Trustees responding in favor of the vocal group of “dissidents” (i.e., appellants) who were
    being appeased by the actions. It is argued that notice should have been provided to
    appellants and the other Beneficiaries pursuant to R.C. 5808.13(A). According to the
    Official Comment, the duty to notify:
    [M]ay include a duty to communicate to a qualified beneficiary information
    about the administration of the trust that is reasonably necessary to enable
    the beneficiary to enforce the beneficiary’s rights and to prevent or redress a
    breach of trust. * * *
    Performance is excused only if compliance is unreasonable under the
    circumstances. Within the bounds of the reasonableness limit, this provision
    allows the beneficiary to determine what information is relevant to protect
    the beneficiary’s interest.
    {¶108} Appellants reference an exhibit attached to their reply to the motion to
    remove the Trustees. The email, authored by co-appellant Butler, is dated February 14,
    2012. Butler thanks the Trustees for a February 2, 2012 meeting and their February 7,
    2012 follow-up email. Butler’s email states that “[w]e are still in the planning states and
    want to responsibly seek judicial relief for a long standing controversy that needs
    clarification and interpretation.” The email also requests “access to the trustee’s records
    in a way that will not delay their being digitized.”
    {¶109} Butler’s email also references a request to conduct a discussion with the
    Trustees and their counsel as “a positive step,” and concludes with the statement that the
    request is presented pursuant to R.C. 5808.13(A). Appellants state the Trustees refused
    the requests. Additional documents were requested during the litigation, some of which
    the trial court required to be delivered in response to appellants’ motion to compel.
    {¶110}       Trustees are required to respond to a beneficiary’s information request as
    it relates to the administration of a trust. Zimmerman v. Patricia E. Zirpolo Trust, 5th
    Dist. Stark No. 2011CA00142, 2012-Ohio-346, ¶ 22 (“Once the requirements of R.C.
    5808.13 were satisfied, the Trustee had a duty to provide the requested documents to the
    beneficiaries.”).
    {¶111} In Alan Newman, George G. Bogert & George T. Bogert, The Law of
    Trusts & Trustees, Section 962 (3d Ed.2010), the purpose of the fiduciary’s duty to
    disclose is explained:
    A beneficiary of a trust is the equitable owner of the trust property, in whole
    or in part. The trustee, although holding legal title, is a fiduciary whose
    function is to manage the trust property for the beneficiary’s benefit in
    accordance with the terms of the trust and applicable law. The fact that the
    settlor has created a trust, and thus required that the beneficiary enjoy the
    property interest indirectly, does not imply that the beneficiary is to be kept
    in ignorance of the trust, the beneficiary’s interest in the trust, the nature of
    the trust property, and the details of the trustee’s administration of that
    property. For the beneficiary to be able to hold the trustee accountable for
    its administration of the trust, the beneficiary must know of the trust, the
    beneficiary’s interest in it, its property, and how that property is being
    managed.
    
    Id. {¶112} According
    to Scott on Trusts, Section 173, each beneficiary is entitled to
    know the status of the property, and how the trustee is administering the trust. “ Trustees
    and executors owe beneficiaries a fiduciary duty of full disclosure of all material facts
    known to them that might affect [the
    beneficiaries’] rights. Montgomery v. Kennedy, 
    669 S.W.2d 309
    , 313 (Tex. 1984).”
    Huie v. DeShazo, 
    922 S.W.2d 920
    , 923 (Tex. 1996) (original proceeding).
    {¶113}     Several documents were withheld by the Trustees under a claim of
    attorney-client privilege. The question of when, if ever, a trustee’s claim of attorney-client
    privilege is justifiable to withhold documents has spawned two lines of cases, as
    explained in the Comments to R.C. 5808.13, UTC 813:
    The courts are split because of the important values that are in tension on
    this question. “The [attorney-client] privilege recognizes that sound legal
    advice or advocacy serves public ends and that such advice or advocacy
    depends upon the lawyer’s being fully informed by the client.” Upjohn Co.
    v. United States, 
    449 U.S. 383
    (1981). On the other hand, subsection (a) of
    this section requires that a trustee keep the qualified beneficiaries
    reasonably informed about the administration of the trust and of the material
    facts necessary for them to protect their interests, which could include facts
    that the trustee has revealed only to the trustee’s attorney. There is authority
    for the view that the trustee is estopped from pleading attorney-client
    privilege in such circumstances. In the leading case, Riggs Natl. Bank v.
    Zimmer, 
    355 A.2d 709
    , 713 (Del. Ch. 1976), the court reasoned that the
    beneficiary, not the trustee, is the attorney’s client: “As a representative for
    the beneficiaries of the trust which he is administering, the trustee is not the
    real client * * * .” This beneficiary-as-client theory has been criticized on
    the ground that it conflicts with the trustee’s fiduciary duty to implement the
    intentions of the settlor, which are sometimes in tension with the wishes of
    one or more beneficiaries. See Louis H. Hamel, Jr., Trustee’s Privileged
    Counsel: A Rebuttal, 21 ACTEC Notes 156 (1995); Charles F. Gibbs &
    Cindy D. Hanson, The Fiduciary Exception to a Trustee’s Attorney/Client
    Privilege, 21 ACTEC Notes 236 (1995). Prominent decisions in California
    and Texas have refused to follow Delaware in recognizing an exception for
    the beneficiary against the trustee’s attorney-client privilege. Wells Fargo
    Bank v. Superior Court (Boltwood), 
    990 P.2d 591
    (Cal. 2000); Huie v. De
    Shazo, 
    922 S.W.2d 920
    (Tex. 1996). The beneficiary-as-client theory
    continues to be applied to ERISA trusts. See, e.g., United States v. Mett,
    
    178 F.3d 1058
    , 1062-64 (9th Cir. 1999). However, in a pension trust the
    beneficiaries are the settlors of their own trust because the trust is funded
    with their own earnings. Accordingly, in ERISA attorney-client cases
    “[t]here are no competing interests such as other stockholders or the
    intentions of the Settlor.” Gibbs & Hanson, 21 ACTEC Notes at 238.
    
    Id. {¶114} The
    issue of attorney-client privilege in trust relationships was more
    recently addressed by the United States Supreme Court in United States v. Jicarilla
    Apache Nation, 
    564 U.S. 162
    , 
    131 S. Ct. 2313
    (2011). The Apache nation sued the
    government for mismanagement of tribal funds. 
    Id. at 165.
    The nation argued that the
    government held the funds in trust, alleging breach of fiduciary duty. 
    Id. {¶115} During
    discovery, the nation requested documents, but the trustee
    asserted attorney-client privilege. The nation responded that the documents should be
    produced under the fiduciary privilege exception to the attorney-client privilege rule. 
    Id. at 165-166.
           {¶116} The court provided a comprehensive analysis of the fiduciary privilege
    issue. During the 19th       century, the courts of England implemented the fiduciary
    exception to trust law, adopted by the American courts beginning in the 1970s:
    The rule was that when a trustee obtained legal advice to guide the
    administration of the trust, and not for the trustee’s own defense in
    litigation, the beneficiaries were entitled to the production of documents
    related to that advice. (Citations omitted.) The courts reasoned that the
    normal attorney-client privilege did not apply in this situation because the
    legal advice was sought for the beneficiaries’ benefit and was obtained at
    the beneficiaries’ expense by using trust funds to pay the attorney fees. *
    * *
    
    Id. at 170.
    {¶117}       The court cited Riggs Natl. Bank of Washington, D. C. v. Zimmer, 
    355 A.2d 709
    (Del.Ch.1976), as “the leading American case” (id. at 170), recognizing that the
    dual criteria applied in Riggs is also used by federal appellate courts to determine
    application of the fiduciary exception:
    [T[he beneficiaries of a trust estate [in Riggs] sought to compel the trustees
    to reimburse the estate for alleged breaches of trust. The beneficiaries
    moved to compel the trustees to produce a legal memorandum related to the
    administration of the trust that the trustees withheld on the basis of
    attorney-client privilege. The Delaware Chancery Court, observing that
    “American case law is practically nonexistent on the duty of a trustee in this
    context,” looked to the English cases. 
    Id. at 712.
    Applying the
    common-law fiduciary exception, the court held that the memorandum was
    discoverable.
    Jicarilla at 171.
    {¶118} The Jicarilla court explained Riggs two-pronged analysis in
    determining application of the fiduciary exception. The inquirer first looks
    to the capacity in which the trustees served when the legal advice was
    requested: First, the court explained, the trustees had obtained the legal
    advice as “mere representative[s]” of the beneficiaries because the trustees
    had a fiduciary obligation to act in the beneficiaries’ interest when
    administering the trust. 
    Ibid. For that reason,
    the beneficiaries were the
    “real clients” of the attorney who had advised the trustee on trust-related
    matters, and therefore the attorney-client privilege properly belonged to the
    beneficiaries rather than the trustees. 
    Id. at 711-712.
    The court based its
    “real client” determination on several factors: (1) When the advice was
    sought, no adversarial proceedings between the trustees and beneficiaries
    had been pending, and therefore there was no reason for the trustees to seek
    legal advice in a personal rather than a fiduciary capacity; (2) the court saw
    no indication that the memorandum was intended for any purpose other than
    to benefit the trust; and (3) the law firm had been paid out of trust assets.
    That the advice was obtained at the beneficiaries’ expense was not only a
    “significant factor” entitling the beneficiaries to see the document but also
    “a strong indication of precisely who the real clients were.” 
    Id. at 712.
           The court distinguished between “legal advice procured at the trustee’s own
    expense and for his own protection,” which would remain privileged, “and
    the situation where the trust itself is assessed for obtaining opinions of
    counsel where interests of the beneficiaries are presently at stake.” 
    Ibid. In the latter
    case, the fiduciary exception applied, and the trustees could not
    withhold those attorney-client communications from the beneficiaries.
    Jicarilla at 172.
    {¶119} Next, Jicarilla addressed the second prong of Riggs’s analysis that
    balanced the interests of the parties:
    Second, the court concluded that the trustees’ fiduciary duty to furnish
    trust-related information to the beneficiaries outweighed their interest in the
    attorney-client privilege. “The policy of preserving the full disclosure
    necessary in the trustee-beneficiary relationship,” the court explained, “is
    here ultimately more important than the protection of the trustees’
    confidence in the attorney for the trust.” 
    Id. at 714.
    Because more
    information helped the beneficiaries to police the trustees’ management of
    the trust, disclosure was, in the court’s judgment, “a weightier public policy
    than the preservation of confidential attorney-client communications.”
    
    Ibid. Jicarilla at 172-173.
    {¶120} We find that the Trustees’ refusal to provide Trust documents prior to the
    litigation, and during, constitutes a breach of R.C. 5808.13. The “real client” in securing
    the information was the Beneficiaries.      Jicarilla at 171, citing Riggs at 712.      The
    breaches occurring prior to suit, necessitated the pursuit of legal resolution. Breaches
    occurring during the litigation impeded equal access to necessary information for an
    equitable resolution, thus causing injury. The preservation of full disclosure in a trustee
    beneficiary relationship is of utmost importance. Jicarilla at 172, citing Riggs at 714.
    D.     Remedy for Breach of Fiduciary Duties
    {¶121} Based on a thorough review of the record, we find that the Trustees have
    breached the duties of impartiality and to inform and report, pursuant to R.C. 5808.03 and
    5808.13, respectively. However, we do not agree that the acts of the Trustees were so
    unreasonable and egregious that removal is required. Rapoport, 2012-Ohio-4402, 
    977 N.E.2d 1068
    , ¶ 33 (“removal of a trustee is generally considered a drastic action.”)
    {¶122} R.C. 5810.01, UTC 1001, delineates the range of remedies available for a
    breach of trust where removal is not deemed appropriate:
    (1)    Compel the trustee to perform the trustee’s duties;
    (2)    Enjoin the trustee from committing a breach of trust;
    (3)    Compel the trustee to redress a breach of trust by paying money,
    restoring property, or other means;
    (4)    Order a trustee to account;
    (5)    Appoint a special fiduciary to take possession of the trust property
    and administer the trust;
    (6)    Suspend the trustee;
    (7)    Remove the trustee as provided in section 5807.06 of the Revised
    Code;
    (8)    Reduce or deny compensation to the trustee;
    (9)    Subject to section 5810.12 of the Revised Code, void an act of the
    trustee, impose a lien or a constructive trust on trust property, or
    trace trust property wrongfully disposed of and recover the property
    or its proceeds; and
    (10)   Order any other appropriate relief.
    {¶123}     Taking into consideration the history of the parties and the need to move
    forward in the best interests of the Trust and Beneficiaries, we find that the appropriate
    remedy in this case is that the Trustees compensate appellants for the reasonable costs of
    appellants’ attorney fees, costs, and expenses. R.C. 5810.01(B)(3) and 5810.01(B)(10).
    See also R.C. 5810.04, which allows for the award of reasonable attorney fees, costs and
    expenses in judicial proceedings regarding a trust. Jakubs v. Borally, 8th Dist. Cuyahoga
    No. 101756, 2015-Ohio-2696, ¶ 10, citing the official comment to R.C. 5810.04.
    {¶124} As R.C. 5810.04 prescribes,
    [T]he court, as justice and equity may require, may award costs, expenses,
    and reasonable attorney fees to any party, to be paid by another party, from
    the trust that is the subject of the controversy, or from a party’s interest in
    the trust that is the subject of the controversy.
    In this case, we find that justice and equity requires that the Trustees, for breach of the
    cited fiduciary duties, pay to appellants the reasonable costs, expenses, and attorney fees
    for this action in an amount to be determined at a evidentiary hearing conducted by the
    trial court.
    III.   CONCLUSION
    {¶125}    We determine that the lot owners are the sole legal beneficiaries of the
    Trust. The Clifton Club is a lot owner and thus a beneficiary. The Trust Deed is the
    sole conveyor of legal rights to the beneficiaries. The Club Deed transferred title to the
    Club Lots. The Club Deed did not, and could not, convey any greater rights to the Trust
    property than those that are set forth in the Trust Deed, because title to, and control of, the
    Trust property was vested solely in the Trustees via the Trust Deed.
    {¶126} The Club Members are not equal or direct Beneficiaries of the Trust. The
    Club Members’ have a permissive right to access the Beach as regulated by the Trustees
    pursuant to the Trust Deed.
    {¶127} The Trustees breached the duties of impartiality, and to inform and report
    to appellants as Beneficiaries. The Trustees are ordered to compensate the appellants for
    reasonable attorney fees, costs, and expenses.
    {¶128} This case is reversed and remanded to the trial court to enter judgment for
    appellants in accordance with this court’s findings, and to conduct an evidentiary hearing
    to determine the reasonable amount of attorney fees, costs, and expenses.
    It is ordered that appellants recover from appellees costs herein taxed.
    The court finds there were reasonable grounds for this appeal.
    It is ordered that a special mandate issue out of this court directing the common
    pleas court to carry this judgment into execution.
    A certified copy of this entry shall constitute the mandate pursuant to Rule 27 of
    the Rules of Appellate Procedure.
    ________________________________________
    ANITA LASTER MAYS, JUDGE
    MARY J. BOYLE, J., CONCURS;
    EILEEN T. GALLAGHER, P.J., DISSENTS WITH SEPARATE OPINION
    EILEEN T. GALLAGHER, P.J., DISSENTING:
    {¶129} I concur with the majority’s resolution of appellant’s first assignment of
    error. I respectfully dissent, however, from the majority’s finding in appellant’s second
    assignment of error that the Trustees breached their duty of impartiality. I further dissent
    from the majority’s conclusion that appellants are entitled to reasonable attorney fees,
    costs, and expenses as a result of the Trustees alleged breach of their duty to “promptly
    respond to a beneficiaries request for information related to the administration of the
    trust.”
    {¶130} Regarding the merits of appellant’s declaratory judgment action, I agree
    with the majority’s finding that the Club Members are not beneficiaries under the Trust
    Deed and, therefore, have no legal right to access the subject beach. Logically, the trial
    court raised several persuasive arguments concerning the nature of the Clifton Club and
    its relationship with its members. As the court stated,
    It is illogical to reason that the [Clifton] Club, as a lot owner, has a right to
    use common land deeded to it, but that its members would not also have this
    privilege. What is a club without its members? A building, a simple
    structure, cannot enjoy a beach. People can. And for what reason would
    someone be a Club [M]ember if they could not enjoy the legal benefits
    provided to the [Clifton] Club; in fact, that is the only reason a person
    would become a member.
    {¶131} However, while I recognize the trial court’s position, our independent
    review of the relevant trust and the express language used therein requires us to find to the
    contrary. The trust simply does not contain any language from which this court can
    reasonably conclude that the members of the Clifton Club share the same legal rights as
    the Clifton Club itself. Accordingly, the trial court erred in awarding summary judgment
    in favor of the appellees. It is my hope that, on remand, the parties negotiate a fair and
    equitable agreement that would grant members of the Clifton Club access to the beach on a
    permissive basis.
    {¶132} With respect to appellant’s motion to remove the trustees, I respectfully
    dissent from the majority’s conclusion that the Trustees breached their duty of impartiality
    by “taking sides” with the Clifton Club throughout this case. In my view, the Trustees’
    actions were not predicated on the “taking of sides,” but were motivated by their
    obligation to defend and uphold the purpose of the Trust Deed in accordance with the
    information and legal opinions they had in front of them at the time this action was
    initiated.
    {¶133} Nevertheless, even if the Trustees were operating in good faith, they were
    not relieved of their duty to inform, report, and promptly respond pursuant to R.C.
    5808.13. With that said, I concede that the evidence submitted in this matter demonstrates
    that the Trustees may have breached their fiduciary duty to promptly respond by initially
    denying appellants’ access to certain trust-related information upon a reasonable request.
    {¶134} From this record, however, it is difficult to determine the extent to which
    the Trustees’ inaction harmed the appellants.        The majority states that the Trustees
    conduct “impeded equal access to necessary information for an equitable resolution, thus
    causing injury.” After careful consideration, I cannot say the Trustees’ conduct in this
    case prevented an equitable resolution of this litigation.
    {¶135} Here, the record reflects that the Trustees provided appellants with over
    12,000 pages of copied Trust documents “via disc” in the course of discovery. To the
    extent appellants argue that the Trustees breached their fiduciary duties to the
    Beneficiaries by failing to grant access to materials that were alleged by the Trustees to be
    privileged, I note that this issue was adequately addressed and resolved by the trial court
    following appellant’s April 2015 motion to compel discovery. The Trustees were ordered
    to produce the original trust documents for inspection and were required to produce three
    of the eight trust documents addressed in appellants’ motion to compel. There is nothing
    in this record to suggest the Trustees did not comply with the trial court’s August 2015
    discovery order. Moreover, appellants do not appeal from the trial court’s order.
    {¶136} In short, it is my belief that the appellants were furnished with the necessary
    information to protect their interests in this case — the precise goal of R.C. 5808.13.
    Under these circumstances, I do not believe the pillars of justice and equity require the
    Trustees to pay reasonable costs, expenses, and attorney fees.
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 103868 & 103888

Citation Numbers: 2017 Ohio 7161, 95 N.E.3d 1032

Judges: Laster Mays

Filed Date: 8/10/2017

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 1/12/2023

Authorities (22)

Wells Fargo Bank, N.A. v. Superior Court of L.A. Cty. , 91 Cal. Rptr. 2d 716 ( 2000 )

Saunders Point Assn., Inc. v. Cannon , 177 Conn. 413 ( 1979 )

Reynolds v. the Surf Club , 473 So. 2d 1327 ( 1985 )

Northern Trust Co. v. Heuer , 202 Ill. App. 3d 1066 ( 1990 )

Shuster v. Mtg. Loan Co. , 139 Ohio St. 315 ( 1942 )

Riggs National Bank of Washington, D. C. v. Zimmer , 355 A.2d 709 ( 1976 )

Brewer v. Cleveland Bd. of Edn. , 122 Ohio App. 3d 378 ( 1997 )

Brown v. Scioto Cty. Bd. of Commrs. , 87 Ohio App. 3d 704 ( 1993 )

37 Robinwood Associates v. Health Industries , 47 Ohio App. 3d 156 ( 1988 )

In Re Estate of Dawson , 117 Ohio App. 3d 51 ( 1996 )

Doty, Exr. v. Peters , 106 Ohio App. 435 ( 1958 )

Sedlak v. Solon , 104 Ohio App. 3d 170 ( 1995 )

Finomore v. Epstein , 18 Ohio App. 3d 88 ( 1984 )

Alston v. Alston , 4 Ohio App. 2d 270 ( 1964 )

Huie v. DeShazo , 922 S.W.2d 920 ( 1996 )

Montgomery v. Kennedy , 669 S.W.2d 309 ( 1984 )

Boedeker v. Rogers , 140 Ohio App. 3d 11 ( 2000 )

Upjohn Co. v. United States , 101 S. Ct. 677 ( 1981 )

Cedric Kushner Promotions, Ltd. v. King , 121 S. Ct. 2087 ( 2001 )

United States v. Jicarilla Apache Nation , 131 S. Ct. 2313 ( 2011 )

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