39 Ohio Misc. 28, 315 N.E.2d 825 (Ohio Ct. Com. Pl. 1974)
Shapira v. Union National Bank is a cornerstone Trusts & Estates case at the intersection of testamentary freedom and the fundamental right to marry.
Is a testamentary condition that a beneficiary must, within a specified period, marry a person of a particular religion (a Jewish woman whose parents are both Jewish) an unenforceable restraint on marriage or unconstitutional state action, or is it a valid, reasonable partial restraint consistent with public policy and testamentary freedom?
A testator may impose reasonable partial restraints on marriage in donative instruments, and such conditions are valid and enforceable if they do not constitute a total or unduly burdensome restraint and do not encourage divorce. Courts evaluate reasonableness by considering the scope of the limitation, the time allowed, and the availability of a meaningful pool of potential spouses. Enforcement of a private testamentary condition, which does not command or forbid marriage but conditions receipt of a gift, does not amount to unconstitutional state action; the Constitution restricts governmental, not private, choices about the disposition of property.
The marriage condition was a reasonable partial restraint and therefore valid and enforceable. It did not violate public policy, did not impermissibly burden the fundamental right to marry, and did not constitute unconstitutional state action. The son's challenge was denied, and the will provision was upheld.
Shapira is a leading case on partial restraints on marriage in wills. It teaches that courts will generally honor donor intent when conditions are framed as reasonable, time-limited, and non-divorce-inducing. The case is also a primer on the limits of constitutional arguments in private donative transfers: it clarifies that the right to marry does not guarantee a right to receive a particular inheritance. For students, Shapira provides a structured approach to analyzing restraint-on-marriage clauses, spotting state-action pitfalls, distinguishing religion- versus race-based restrictions, and understanding how to draft enforceable conditions and gift-overs.