In re Erie Trust Co.

21 Pa. D. & C. 425, 1934 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 130

This text of 21 Pa. D. & C. 425 (In re Erie Trust Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Erie County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Erie Trust Co., 21 Pa. D. & C. 425, 1934 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 130 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1934).

Opinion

Hirt, J.,

This matter is before the court on the petition of a depositor in the savings department of Erie Trust Company, now in liquidation, with whom other depositors have joined, praying for such order as may be necessary to recover for the benefit of all depositors of the bank bonds, with their accompanying mortgages, aggregating in face value about $1,500,000, pledged by the bank to D. N. McBrier, F. B. McBrier, and A. W. Milne to secure a so-called “special deposit” made by them. The petition avers that the resolution of the board of directors of the bank, pledging these assets as security for the repayment of the special deposit, and the agreement made pursuant thereto were ultra vires, illegal, and void, and that inasmuch as the pledge of these assets was not reflected in the subsequent published statements of the bank, and actual notice thereof was not given depositors, the whole transaction was fraudulent as to them.

To this petition, answers have been filed by William D. Gordon, Secretary of Banking, by the substituted trustees appointed by the court to make collections on the pledged mortgages, and by D. N. McBrier, F. B. McBrier, and A. W. Milne, denying that the bank was insolvent at the time of making the pledge, averring that the transaction was for the benefit of the bank and all depositors, and denying fraud, either actual or constructive.

The essential facts, shorn of immaterial detail, are stated in the course of the following discussion:

Early in this industrial depression, the people’s faith in banks began to waver and in 1931 became acute. Apparently, in this community, whether or not justified, much of this lack of faith was directed against Erie Trust Company and manifested itself in increasing demands upon the resources of the trust company by depositors who insisted upon closing out their accounts. In this case, it is important to bear in mind that we are concerned with the situation as it existed on November 4, 1931, and at that time, although in the [426]*426previous month depositors had withdrawn funds to the extent of about $900,-000, the trust company was nevertheless solvent.

To provide cash to maintain legal reserves and to meet this drain of withdrawals the trust company from time to time had borrowed from Guaranty Trust Company and Chemical National Bank & Trust Company, of New York. On November 4, 1931, these loans amounted to $947,000 and were obtained by the trust company only upon depositing marketable securities, the quickest and best assets of the bank, with a market value of about $1,400,000, as security for the loans. The terms of these loans were unfavorable in that they were callable monthly.

According to the testimony, the officers of the trust company considered it important that these marketable securities be recovered because of the danger that the loan might be called and the pledged securities sacrificed in an unfavorable market, and for the further reason, as given by them, that these securities, if recovered, would furnish resources upon which the trust company could raise money quickly to meet emergencies of the future. To pay off this New York loan of $947,000 and to recover the marketable securities pledged, the board of directors of Erie Trust Company, prior to November 3, 1931, selected a block of mortgages amounting, in face value, to about $1,500,000 upon which to raise the necessary cash. These mortgages, for the most part, were long-term real estate loans for which, according to the testimony, there was no market. If there was no opportunity for raising funds by a sale of these mortgages, the trust company had the alternative either of borrowing upon the mortgages as collateral or of creating a special deposit secured by assignment of the block of mortgages. This last method was the one adopted, and the trust company entered into an agreement in writing with D. N. McBrier, P. B. McBrier, and A. W. Milne, under the terms of which these three directors supplied $1,100,000 to the credit of Erie Trust Company. Prom this fund, the trust company paid its loans with the New York banks, amounting to $947,000, and reclaimed its marketable securities pledged for these loans. D. N. McBrier, P. B. McBrier, and A. W. Milne were then credited on the books of Erie Trust Company with a special deposit of $1,100,000, and the trust company issued its passbook to them in the usual form as evidence of the deposit. In accordance with the terms of the agreement, the trust company delivered the block of mortgages in question to these depositors, and with each mortgage delivered an assignment piece in blank. The depositors were obliged to keep the mortgages in their own vault box in Erie Trust Company, subject to the right of the agent of the trust company to inspect the same on reasonable notice. Payments of principal and interest were to be collected by the trust company, to be paid to the depositors periodically in reduction of their deposit, and when the deposit should be paid in full the remaining uncollected mortgages were to be reassigned to Erie Trust Company. These depositors were to receive interest on the deposit at a rate equal to, but no higher than, what they were obliged to pay on the loans made by them in New York, where they, as individuals, borrowed the entire sum of $1,100,000 with which to create the deposit.

What was accomplished then, on November 4, 1931, by the trust company and these three depositors amounts to this: For the former liability of the trust company on its New York loans was substituted the liability of the trust company on this special deposit, and by the pledging of this block of mortgages, marketable securities of about the same value were reclaimed from the New York banks.

These facts raise a legal question of fundamental and vital importance which [427]*427may be stated thus: Is there legal authority for the act of Erie Trust Company in creating a special deposit in favor of these three directors?

In considering this question, we are bound to bear in mind that Erie Trust Company is not a “banking institution” in the ordinary sense, governed by general banking laws: Gordon, Secretary of Banking, v. Winneberger, 310 Pa. 362; but that it is a trust company of a peculiar type, and that its status, rights, and powers are defined and limited by the particular acts of assembly under which it was organized.

Erie Trust Company was incorporated in 1902 under section 2, par. 19, and section 29 of the General Corporation Law of April 29, 1874, P. L. 73, not as a bank but as a company for the insuring of titles to real estate. By supplementary legislation, further powers had been granted from time to time to this class of corporations, among them the powers of a trust company and of receiving deposits. The Act of May 29, 1895, P. L. 127, gave the additional power “to receive deposits of moneys and other personal property and issue their obligations therefor, to invest their funds in and to purchase real and personal securities, and to loan money on real and personal securities.”

Before this Act of 1896, and as early as 1877, the Supreme Court of this State decided that the bank in that case, incorporated by a special act of assembly, had the power to give a mortgage to one of its directors as security for his deposit in consideration of his maintaining a large deposit in the bank, that this act of the bank did not require the approval of the stockholders, and, further, that the special depositor was entitled to the benefit of his security against the claims of general depositors and other creditors when that bank finally became insolvent: Ahl v. Rhoads et al., 84 Pa.

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Related

Gordon v. Winneberger
165 A. 408 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1933)
Cameron v. Allegheny County Home
135 A. 133 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1926)
Cameron v. Christy
133 A. 551 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1926)
National Surety Co. v. Franklin Trust Co.
170 A. 683 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1933)
Ahl v. Rhoads
84 Pa. 319 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1877)

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21 Pa. D. & C. 425, 1934 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 130, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-erie-trust-co-pactcomplerie-1934.