Homan v. First National Bank

20 Pa. D. & C. 380, 1934 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 339
CourtPennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Philadelphia County
DecidedJanuary 5, 1934
Docketno. 5002
StatusPublished

This text of 20 Pa. D. & C. 380 (Homan v. First National Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Philadelphia County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Homan v. First National Bank, 20 Pa. D. & C. 380, 1934 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 339 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1934).

Opinion

Smith, P. J.,

The plaintiffs as receivers for Lake Superior Corporation brought suit in assumpsit against the defendant, First National Bank of Philadelphia, to recover the sum of $5,912.50, which it is alleged is justly due and payable by defendant to plaintiffs upon the cause of action fully [381]*381set forth in the statement of claim. The statement alleges that the plaintiffs were duly appointed receivers for Lake Superior Corporation and that the defendant is a corporation, and also pleads the Corporation Act of 1896 of New Jersey, P. L. 277, 298, sec. 65, Compiled Statutes of New Jersey, page 1640, as also sections 66 and 68 of said Corporation Act, at pages 1643 and 1644 of the Compiled Statutes of New Jersey.

In paragraph 4 of the statement of claim, it is alleged: “On or about May 21, 1904, the corporation issued and delivered $3,000,000 principal amount of its bonds, all of said bonds being identical in tenor, dated May 21, 1904, maturing October 1, 1924, payable to bearer, with interest thereon payable to bearer of the coupons annexed thereto upon presentation and surrender of such coupons. On August 29,1924, the corporation entered into an agreement with a majority of the holders of said bonds whereby the date for the payment of the principal thereof was extended to October 1, 1929.”

. Paragraph 5 of the statement sets forth that: “Each of said bonds provided inter alia that the corporation ‘acknowledges itself indebted to the bearer hereof in the sum of-dollars ($ ), in gold coin of the United States of America, of the present standard of weight and fineness, which sum it promises to pay in such gold coin to the bearer hereof on the first day of October 1924, at its office or agency in the City of Philadelphia, with interest thereon in the meantime at a rate not greater than 5 percent per annum, payable annually on the first day of October in each year, from the net income and revenue of the company for the fiscal year ending the thirtieth day of the preceding month of June as ascertained and declared by its board of directors, in accordance with the provisions of a certain agreement hereinafter referred to, to be applicable to such interest payments, but only upon surrender for cancellation of the respective coupons representing such interest payments hereto annexed as the same respectively mature. Such interest shall not be cumulative and no part thereof unpaid in any 1 year from the income of that year shall be a charge upon or shall be paid from the income of any other year’.”

It is also stated in the said fifth paragraph of the statement: “The interest coupons attached to said bonds provided as follows: ‘On the first day of October 19 — , Lake Superior Corporation will pay to bearer at its office or financial agency in the City of Philadelphia such sum not less than one and not greater than 5 percent upon the face of the bond to which this coupon is annexed, as shall be duly ascertained and declared by the board of directors of the company to be payable upon said bond from the net income of the company.’ ”

The trust agreement mentioned in the bonds is fully set out in the seventh paragraph of the statement of claim; and it is alleged in the eighth paragraph that “from time to time during the term of said bonds the board of directors of the corporation declared and ascertained the interest to be payable thereon in each year. A resolution passed by said board on August 16,1910, read as follows : ‘Be it therefore resolved that the board of directors of Lake Superior Corporation hereby declares that the amount of net income for the fiscal year ending June 30,1910, applicable to the payment of interest on the income bonds secured by the above recited agreement is the sum of $75,000. . . . That out of the said net income so applicable to the payment of interest on the said income bonds there be set aside the sum of $75,000, being an amount sufficient to pay on the first day of October 1910 interest at the rate of 21 percent for the year ending June 30,1910, on all the bonds issued under the said agreement and outstanding. . . . And the board of directors . . . hereby declares that the amount of interest payable on the same income bonds be 21 percent for the year ending June 30, [382]*3821910, and that the same be payable at First National Bank in the City of Philadelphia, Pa., on October 1, A. D. 1910, on presentation of the coupons therefor. . . . That the proper officers be and they are hereby directed and authorized to make and publish notice in accordance with the terms of the trust "agreement in regard to interest coupons on such income bonds.’ ”

It is further alleged that all other resolutions declaring interest payable on said bonds were identical in form with the resolution above quoted, with the exception of the dates and amounts declared payable thereon, and that at each annual declaration the board by resolution also determined the agency in Philadelphia at which the interest should be payable and authorized the publication of notice of the amount of such interest and the place where it would be payable, and each of such resolutions, also, was identical with the exception of dates and amounts payable.

It is further alleged that on or before the respective due dates of the interest coupons, for the purpose of having available the funds for their payment, the corporation deposited with defendant in cash an amount equal to the amount then due upon all such coupons, and at the same time authorized the defendant to pay out of such funds so deposited and for the account of the corporation such interest coupons then maturing as should be presented to defendant; and that the defendant has from time to time, under such authorization and out of the funds so deposited with it, paid sueh coupons as have been presented to it; but there now remains in defendant’s possession a balance in cash of $5,912.50, the amount of interest due by the corporation upon bonds the interest coupons appurtenant to which have never been presented to defendant for payment.

Paragraph thirteen of the statement of claim sets forth that by writing dated March 23,1933, the corporation assigned to the plaintiffs as receivers all of its right, title, and interest in the said sum of $5,912.50; and in paragraph fourteen the plaintiffs set forth that they have elected to revoke the prior authority of defendant to pay any of said coupons now outstanding and not heretofore presented for payment, and that although they have frequently demanded payment to them by defendant of said sum the defendant has refused so to do.

An affidavit of defense was filed by the defendant admitting paragraphs one to nine, inclusive, of the statement. As to paragraph ten, the defendant states that it admits that “on or before the respective due dates of the interest coupons attached to the bonds described in paragraphs four to seven of plaintiff’s statement of claim, Lake Superior Corporation deposited with the defendant in cash an amount equal to the amount then due upon all such coupons and at the time of each such deposit the corporation authorized the defendant to pay out of the funds so deposited the interest coupons then maturing on such bonds which might be presented to it for payment,” but the defendant avers that “the funds so deposited were the funds of the bondholders and not of Lake Superior Corporation and that by said deposits the said Lake Superior Corporation parted with all control thereover.”

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Related

Austin-Nichols & Co. v. Union Trust Co.
137 A. 461 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1927)
In re Interborough Consol. Corp.
288 F. 334 (Second Circuit, 1923)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
20 Pa. D. & C. 380, 1934 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 339, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/homan-v-first-national-bank-pactcomplphilad-1934.