Fisher v. Agricultural Trust Co.

3 Pa. D. & C. 491, 1922 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 15
CourtPennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Lancaster County
DecidedNovember 11, 1922
DocketTrust Book No. 25
StatusPublished

This text of 3 Pa. D. & C. 491 (Fisher v. Agricultural Trust Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Lancaster County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fisher v. Agricultural Trust Co., 3 Pa. D. & C. 491, 1922 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 15 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1922).

Opinion

Landis, P. J.,

By the Act of May 21, 1919, § 21, P. L. 209, the Commissioner of Banking is authorized, under certain circumstances therein enumerated, to take possession of the business and property of any corporation subject to the supervision of the Banking Department. In accordance with this authority, the plaintiff, as Commissioner of Banking, in June, 1921, took possession of all the assets of the Agricultural Trust Company. It is conceded that the trust company was at that time insolvent. By his deputy, he then proceeded to liquidate the same, and on May 20, 1922, he filed his account, and subsequently a schedule of claimants and claims, listing the same as first and second class claims. Numerous exceptions having been filed to the account and schedule, the matters of dispute covered thereby are now before the court for determination. These exceptions we will take up in their order as they were presented to us.

The real preliminary question which arises is, how the distribution of these fund's shall be made. The general exceptions which have been filed by John A. Coyle and Charles G. Baker, Esqs., counsel for a number of parties, must, therefore, be first considered. They are to the effect that Charles D. Zell gave a bond of the ZEtna Casualty and Surety Company to the Agricultural Trust Company in the sum of $20,000 for the faithful performance of his duties as secretary and treasurer of said trust company; that the amount of this bond was collected by the receiver and is embraced within his account, and that this money should be distributed to all the creditors, and not alone to those of the first class.

[493]*493The Act of May 23, 1913, P. L. 354, provides “that in case of any distribution of the money, funds, property or other assets whatsoever of any trust company in the course of its liquidation by legal process or otherwise, distribution shall be made and preferred in the following order, namely:

“1. To the payment of all depositors in the trust company, whether the deposits be subject to immediate check or only payable after specified notice or at the expiration of a fixed period, whether or not such notice has been given or such period expired at the time of such distribution. Bona fide holders for value of certified checks on such trust company, or of certificates of deposit issued by such trust company, or of- checks or drafts of such trust company, given in exchange for or in payment of checks or drafts of depositors of such company drawn thereon, not exceeding the balance to the credit of such depositor, shall also be treated and considered as depositors within the meaning of this act.
“2. To the payment and discharge of all the remaining liabilities of such trust company. . . .
“3. The residue, if any, shall be distributed to the shareholders of the trust company . . . according to their respective legal rights.”

Was, then, the bond of Zell included in the “money, funds, property or other assets” of the defunct trust company? It seems to me that no serious question can arise out of this proposition. It was given to the Agricultural Trust Company to indemnify the company “for such pecuniary loss of money, funds or other personal property belonging to the employer, or in the custody of the employer, and for which it is legally responsible, as shall be sustained by the employer by reason of any dishonest act or acts of any of the employees named upon said schedule, . . .” and it stood for the loss which might be occasioned thereby. If, then, this indemnity was embraced within the words “money, funds, property or other assets,” it is distributable first for “the payment of all depositors” as specified in the act of assembly. There can be no doubt that it comes under the words of the act, and for this reason these exceptions must all be overruled.

The first exceptions presented on the hearing are those filed by John Rothfus, administrator of the estate of Jacob Rothfus, deceased. On April 27, 1921, the claimant received the following receipt:

“Received from John Rothfus, Adm. of Jacob Rothfus Est., of Lancaster, Pa., Fifty-nine hundred ninety-nine & 69/100 Dollars as payment for trust fund. The Agricultural Trust Company.
$5999.69. By Chas. D. Zell.”

This claim was classified by the receiver as belonging to the second class, and the exceptions allege that it should be embraced within those of the first class. The evidence showed that Zell received this money and did not deposit it, according to the books of the bank. Zell testified that it went into the general funds of the bank, but not as a deposit. What he meant by this I do not know. It is sure that no account was ever opened. If it was not a deposit, it cannot be allowed as a first class claim. The exceptions are, therefore, overruled.

The next claim is that of James B. Miller. The claimant had a savings account at the Agricultural Trust Company. On April 1, 1921, he deposited $9200, which was entered in his savings account book. On April 1, 1921, he checked out $1000, and on May 1, 1921, $2000. The claim for the balance of $6200 was disallowed by the receiver, for the reason that he found among the cheeks one dated April 4,1921, for $9200. It was admitted that Miller did not [494]*494on that day get this amount of money, or in fact any money, and that he did not then have that sum owing to him on this account. Zell testified that he filled out the check; that the amount was withdrawn from Miller’s account, but he got no portion of it and no credit; that it was given over to the bank towards the deficit, and that the evidence that the bank owed him money was his book, which shows a balance of $6200; that the book was continued as his general savings deposit and not his checking account. The claimant said that the signature to the check looked like his, and he may have signed it, but he could not say whether or not it was his, and that he did not sign any check for $9200. Zell said it was not clear to him why Miller signed the check, but he did sign it; “the reason for his signing it I don’t remember; what was said in connection with it I don’t remember.” Under this statement of the facts, I am of the opinion that this was either a general deposit or a savings fund account, and, in either event, it should be allowed. The fund is to be distributed “to the payment of all depositors in the trust company, whether the deposits be subject to immediate check or only payable after specified notice, or at the expiration of a fixed period. ...” I think this deposit falls within the wording of this portion of the act, and it should be allowed in the schedule of claims of the first class. Admittedly, Miller’s money was on deposit. He never drew this $6200 from the account. While Zell likely in some way got him to sign a cheek for the whole deposit of $9200, yet the money was not paid, and the check was only used to cover up Zell’s defalcation, and was purely a paper transaction. The exception is, therefore, sustained and the proportionate share of the claim for $6200 is allowed.

The next claim is that of Hyman Mishkin. The claimant was a depositor in June, 1921, and had a pass-book of the Agricultural Trust Company. He asserts that he made a deposit on June 2, 1921, of $200, consisting of $187 in currency and $13 in silver, which is not in his pass-book; that this deposit was not made by him personally, but by a boy of thirteen years, named Ralph Long, who was one of his employees.

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Bluebook (online)
3 Pa. D. & C. 491, 1922 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 15, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fisher-v-agricultural-trust-co-pactcompllancas-1922.