Franklin Trust Co. of Phila. Case

179 A. 725, 319 Pa. 193, 1935 Pa. LEXIS 661
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMay 13, 1935
DocketAppeals, 270 and 271
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 179 A. 725 (Franklin Trust Co. of Phila. Case) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Franklin Trust Co. of Phila. Case, 179 A. 725, 319 Pa. 193, 1935 Pa. LEXIS 661 (Pa. 1935).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Maxey,

The court below sustained exceptions of the American Cigar Company, appellee, to the first and partial account of the secretary of banking, receiver of the Franklin Trust Company. In this account the secretary denied priority to the cigar company, as assignee and subrogee of the United States on its claim upon a dishonored certified check for $4,500, given by the cigar company in payment of internal revenue taxes owing to the United States.

The facts were agreed to in writing and were submitted to the court below at the hearing upon appellee’s exceptions. This agreed statement of facts shows that the American Cigar Company was a depositor in the Franklin Trust Company of Philadelphia. On October 3, 1931, the trust company certified a check, No. 1740, drawn by the appellee for $4,500, payable to the order of “Collector of Internal Revenue.” This check is the genesis of this controversy. At the time of the certification the appellee had on deposit with the trust company “free and clear of all claims, counterclaims and set-offs an amount in excess of $4,500.” The check was duly delivered to the payee thereof in payment of U. S. Internal Revenue Taxes, pursuant to section 109, Title 26, U. S. Code (37 Stat. 733). On October 5, 1931, the collector deposited it in the federal reserve bank at Philadelphia for collection. On the same day the trust company was taken over by the state secretary of banking. The next day, October 6th, the federal reserve bank presented the check to the trust company for payment, but payment was refused on *195 the grounds that the trust company was then in the possession of the secretary of banking. The check was returned immediately to the Internal Revenue Collector and the collector “acting pursuant to the provisions of section 109, Title 26, U. S. Code (37 Stat. 733), made demand upon the claimant and exceptant for payment of the amount of said dishonored certified check; and on or about October 15, 1931, claimant and exceptant was compelled to deliver to said Collector of Internal Revenue, as payee, its check No. 1779, in the sum of $4,500, dated October 15, 1931, drawn upon the Philadelphia National Bank and certified by said bank on October 15, 1931, which latter check was honored and paid upon presentment.” After the clearance and payment of the last mentioned check and on or about October 17, 1931, the Collector of Internal Revenue “executed an assignment to the claimant and exceptant whereby he, as Collector of Internal Revenue, did ‘sell, assign and transfer to the American Cigar Company, its successors and assigns, the claim of the United States Government against said Franklin Trust Company (arising out of the certification of check No. 1740, in the amount of $4,500), and the lien of the United States Government in such amount against the assets of said bank.’ ” This then was the claim of the appellee in the court below that it is “the assignee and subrogee of the United States, upon the statutory prior claim of the United States against and the statutory prior lien of the United States upon the assets of said Franklin Trust Company.” The court sustained the appellee’s claim.

From this decree, the secretary of banking and two depositors, Loux and Henderson, separately excepted to the adjudication and two separate appeals were taken. The appeal of the secretary of banking filed to No. 270, January Term, 1935, is, upon the motion of the appellee, quashed. We find from the agreed stipulation of the facts that he has neither an equity, nor a legal interest other than that of a mere stakeholder in the decree from *196 which this appeal is taken and so he has no standing to appeal: Cameron v. City Bank of York, 284 Pa. 187, 130 A. 407; Cameron v. Carnegie Trust Co., 232 Pa. 114, 117, 140 A. 768.

As to the appeal of the two depositors who filed their exceptions “on their own behalf and on behalf of all depositors in the Franklin Trust Company,” but who appealed in their own names, it is very doubtful Avhether they have a standing to appeal because of the condition of the record relating to their status. Nevertheless, we have decided to adjudge the matter on the merits.

Adverting to the legal questions arising upon the merits of the case, Aye find no decision of our appellate courts (and counsel has cited none), in which it was held that the right of priority accorded to the United States by Act of Congress or to the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania by statute, cannot either be legally assigned in writing or passed by subrogation to another. Counsel for the appellants refer us to the case of South Phila. State Bank’s Insolvency, 295 Pa. 433, 145 A. 520, as authority for such a proposition. No such legal question was raised or decided in that case. * That case merely stands for the proposition that the State’s “sovereign right to priority of payments over other depositors” of the bank could not be claimed by an individual “under the equitable doctrine of subrogation.” There, the claimant was a surety company which had entered into a depository bond to secure the deposits of the Commonwealth. The surety bond Avas “obtained and paid by the insolvent bank, not by the Commonwealth.” The bank failed and the surety company paid the Commonwealth the amount of its deposit. It then claimed that not only by virtue of the assignment by the state treasurer but also under the equitable doctrine of subrogation it was *197 subrogated to tbe State’s sovereign right of priority over other depositors of the bank. We held that the “special assignment was made without/warrant of law,” that is, that there was no specific legislative warrant for it. We also denied that under the facts in that case the equitable doctrine of subrogation could be made to apply to the sovereign rights of the State. We did, however, apply the equitable doctrine of subrogation to the rights of the Commonwealth as a depositor ” but not to enjoy its right of priority over other depositors,” for we held that it could not be entitled to the State’s sovereign right to priority of payment except by express legislation to that effect. The sovereign rights of a state cannot be transmitted to an individual through the avenues of the courts.

When the case just cited was before us on a former appeal (288 Pa. 300, 135 A. 748), we placed emphasis on some of “the facts in this case.” We showed that “the relation between the Commonwealth and defendant [surety company] was not that of principal and surety in the ordinary sense of those terms, but that of insurer and insured. We said in Young v. Amer. Bonding Co., 228 Pa. 373, 379 [77 A. 623]: fin all essential particulars the appellee here is an insurance company, and its obligation in this particular instance was that of an insurer. It was paid for its undertaking; the amount of its compensation being based on the calculation of risk assumed. The trend of all our modern decisions, federal and state, is to distinguish between individual and corporate surety-ship where the latter is an undertaking for money consideration by a company chartered for the conduct of such business. . . . While such corporations may call themselves ‘surety companies’ their business is in all essential particulars that of insurance. Their contracts are usually in the terms prescribed by themselves, and should be construed most strictly in favor of the obligee.’ ”

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Bluebook (online)
179 A. 725, 319 Pa. 193, 1935 Pa. LEXIS 661, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/franklin-trust-co-of-phila-case-pa-1935.