Cosmopolitan State Bank, Inc. v. Barnes

9 Pa. D. & C. 490, 1927 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 81
CourtPennylvania Municipal Court, Philadelphia County
DecidedAugust 1, 1927
DocketNos. 274 and 276
StatusPublished

This text of 9 Pa. D. & C. 490 (Cosmopolitan State Bank, Inc. v. Barnes) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennylvania Municipal Court, Philadelphia County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cosmopolitan State Bank, Inc. v. Barnes, 9 Pa. D. & C. 490, 1927 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 81 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1927).

Opinion

Lewis, J.,

The Cosmopolitan State Bank, Inc., in possession of Peter G. Cameron, Secretary of Banking for the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, as plaintiff, sued to recover from the defendant upon two promissory notes, each in the sum of $1000, one bearing date of Dec. 3, 1924, and the other Jan. 7, 1925, both payable to the order of the Cosmopolitan Bank, Inc. The execution of the notes, as well as the demand and refusal to pay, were admitted.

By stipulation between counsel, it was agreed that the two actions as of the above term and numbers should be tried together, and that the court’s findings as to one be conclusive of the other.

The actions were tried by the court without a jury, and the testimony developed the following situation:

The Cosmopolitan State Bank, Inc., was organized in the latter part of 1923, and opened for business some time in January of 1924.

The defendant was both a vice-president and a stockholder of the bank.

On Jan. 29, 1925, the bank being in an unsound financial condition, the Department of Banking of the State of Pennsylvania, by virtue of the authority vested in it, took up for examination the plaintiff bank and appointed George W. Brown, Jr., special deputy and agent to take over its affairs on Feb. 13, 1925.

The special deputy and agent of the Commonwealth suggested to the defendant and to the other directors that they secure additional funds for the bank so that it might be permitted to remain open and do business.

Certain collateral of the Cosmopolitan State Bank, Inc., having been deposited with the Northwestern National Bank as security for a debt of the former institution, the defendant, together with three other officers of the Cosmopolitan State Bank, Inc., personally discounted a note in the sum of $8000, which, with $3700 additional, they turned over to Mr. Brown, who delivered it to the Northwestern National Bank, which latter institution then released the [491]*491collateral of $37,500 belonging to the Cosmopolitan State Bank, Inc. The latter institution, after the receipt of this sum, remained open for several days, and then closed its doors.

Upon his liability on the $8000 note discounted as aforesaid, the defendant Barnes has paid the sum of $1200, and it was contended in his behalf that, because of his further liability on said loan to the extent of at least $800 more (there having been four signatories to the note), he should be allowed a set-off in the sum of $2000 against plaintiff’s claim in this action. In effect, it is maintained that the entire transaction, whereby the additional cash was raised so that the bank might be permitted to remain open, was a loan to the bank. If it is determined that the money thus paid over to Mr. Brown and to the bank and raised, in part, by the defendant, was a loan to the Cosmopolitan State Bank, Inc., a finding ought to be made for the defendant, otherwise the plaintiff must succeed.

Upon the surface, certainly it would seem that the defendant has a genuine claim for a set-off, and an extended and able argument was presented to the trial judge in an effort to convince him that the transaction amounted to a loan and that the set-off should be allowed.

On the other hand, it was urged upon the court that what the defendant did was voluntarily to make a contribution to the bank, so as to permit it to continue its business, and that, therefore, no set-off of plaintiff’s claim upon defendant’s note can, under the circumstances, be permitted.

This question does not seem to have been heretofore directly raised in our State, but authorities in other jurisdictions have, on a number of occasions, passed upon the point involved.

In Brodrick v. Brown, 69 Fed. Repr. 497, the receiver of an insolvent bank brought an action to recover on three promissory notes of the defendant. In answer to the action, defendant counter-claimed by showing that he loaned the bank $20,500, which had never been repaid to him. The issue there was whether the money advanced by the defendant to the bank was a loan or a voluntary contribution for the betterment of the stock to enable the bank to resume business.

Welbourn, District Judge, in a careful opinion, says:

“The law is well settled that where stockholders voluntarily assess themselves to relieve the corporation from pecuniary embarrassment or for the betterment of their stock, whatever may be the occasion of the assessment, the advances thus made are not debts against, but assets of, the corporation: Bidwell v. Railroad Co., 6 Atl. Repr. 729; Leavitt v. Mining Co., 1 Pac. Repr. 356; 2 Thompson on Corp., § 1717.
“While there is some conflict in the oral testimony as to the nature of the transaction which eventuated in the raising of the $50,000, of which defendant’s payment of $20,500 was a part, careful consideration of all the evidence satisfies me that the advances thus made were not loans, but voluntary contributions by the stockholders for the betterment of their stock and to enable the bank to resume business. The chief contention of the defendant is that where money is deposited with a bank generally, without any special agreement in reference thereto, such deposit is a loan and, therefore, a debt against the bank in favor of the depositor. This proposition, rightly understood, is unquestionably correct and abundantly sustained by authority.
“In the case of Scammon v. Kimball, 92 U. S. 370, cited and quoted from defendant’s brief, the principle is thus stated:
. . Sums which are paid,’ says Lord Denman, ‘to the credit of a customer with a banker, though usually called deposits, are in truth loans by the [492]*492customer to the banker, and the party who seeks to recover the balance of such an account must prove that the loan was in reality intended to be hiS' and that it was received as such: Sims v. Bond, 5 Barn. & Adol. 392.
“ ‘Exactly the same rule was laid down in the Court of Exchequer, where it was held that money deposited with a banker by his customer in the ordinary way is money lent to the banker with a superadded obligation that it is to be paid when demanded by a check: Pott v. Clegg, 16 Mees & W. 327.’
“From this quotation, particularly the latten paragraph, it will be seen that to make the deposit of money in bank a loan in 'the absence of an express contract it is essential that the money be deposited ‘in the ordinary way.’ This statement of the law reveals the vulnerable point in defendant’s argument, for manifestly the money paid by defendant to J. B. Lazier, the bank examiner, for the use of the bank was not money deposited ‘in the ordinary way.’ The bank, at the time, was not doing business ‘in the ordinary way;’ indeed there was an entire suspension of its usual business. The bank was closed and in the charge of the Comptroller of the Currency of the United States. There was no one who could on its account have received deposits ‘in the ordinary way;’ no such power resided even in the comptroller. The most and all that he could do was to prescribe the conditions on which there could be a resumption of business. This course he did adopt, and the prescribed condition was that the stockholders should raise and turn over for the use of the bank $50,000. This condition was complied with.

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Related

Scammon v. Kimball
92 U.S. 362 (Supreme Court, 1876)
Hurd v. . Kelly
78 N.Y. 588 (New York Court of Appeals, 1879)
Bidwell v. Pittsburgh, Oakland & East Liberty Passenger Railway Co.
6 A. 729 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1886)
Leavitt v. Oxford & Geneva S. M. Co.
3 Utah 265 (Utah Supreme Court, 1883)
Skordal v. Stanton
95 N.W. 449 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1903)

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Bluebook (online)
9 Pa. D. & C. 490, 1927 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 81, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cosmopolitan-state-bank-inc-v-barnes-pamunictphila-1927.