In re Miners & Merchants Bank

18 Pa. D. & C. 537, 1932 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 336
CourtPennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Cambria County
DecidedSeptember 5, 1932
DocketNo. 654
StatusPublished

This text of 18 Pa. D. & C. 537 (In re Miners & Merchants Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Cambria County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Miners & Merchants Bank, 18 Pa. D. & C. 537, 1932 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 336 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1932).

Opinion

McKenrick, J.,

This matter comes before the court on the exceptions to the first and partial account of William D. Gordon, Secretary [538]*538of Banking, through George P. Taylor, Jr., special deputy in charge of the Miners & Merchants Bank of Nanty-Glo, Pa. Numerous exceptions and claims have been filed which, if allowed, will necessitate changes in the account as filed. Hearings were had upon the said exceptions and claims, at which testimony was given on behalf of the exceptants and claimants, as well as on behalf of the receiver. On the basis of the testimony so produced, disposition is now made of the following exceptions and disputed matters, and the statement of facts given in connection with the various claims is to be considered as the findings of fact of the court in regard thereto.

Exceptions of John W. Kephart, J. H. Weaver and First National Bank of Patton, Pa.

The above exceptants were owners of certain shares of stock of the Union Bank of Nanty-Glo, which was consolidated with the Miners & Merchants Bank of Nanty-Glo. The latter bank agreed to redeem the stock of the Union Bank at $8.55 per share. The Miners & Merchants Bank set up on its books sufficient moneys to take care of this stock when presented for payment. The moneys were never segregated, however, but remained in the general funds of the bank. Exceptants claim to be preferred creditors and entitled to be paid in full. The accountant, however, contends that the exceptants are general creditors and are entitled to receive only a dividend on their claims.

The case of Com., ex rel., v. Tradesmens Trust Co., 61 Pa. Superior Ct. 137, has been cited as sustaining the position of the accountant. In that case the principle is laid down that where a trust fund has been mingled with the general assets and the identity of the fund cannot be traced, the right to pursue it fails. In the present case, however, the fund held by the bank for the redemption of stock was not derived from moneys deposited by the owners of said stock. There was not the usual relation between bank and depositor which would constitute the bank debtor and the depositor creditor. It seems that this makes some difference, as was pointed out in Conneautville Bank’s Assigned Estate, 280 Pa. 545, 549, where the court referred to a statement in the opinion rendered in Webb v. Newhall, Assignee, 274 Pa. 135. None of the exceptants were depositors in the Miners & Merchants Bank, and the indebtedness of said bank did not arise out of the relationship of banker and depositor.

The funds were sufficiently earmarked, we think, to enable the exceptants to claim them. No creditors are here objecting. Ordinarily a check drawn on a bank should be presented for payment within a reasonable time, but the present case does not involve payment of a cheek, and the delay in presenting the stock for redemption should not militate against the exceptants. We, therefore, sustain the exceptions in each of the above cases and direct that the accountant pay to John W. Kephart the sum of $171, to J. H. Weaver the sum of $171, and to the First National Bank of Patton, Pa., the sum of $256.50, and that the account be so amended and corrected as to show compliance with this order.

Exceptions of Hugh Kelly

Hugh Kelly was the tax collector in the Borough of Nanty-Glo and had on deposit in his checking account on October 25, 1930, the sum of $244.38. On Saturday evening, October 25, 1930, between the hours of 6 and 8 o’clock, the Miners & Merchants Bank being open, Kelly deposited currency in the amount of $70, checks drawn on the Miners & Merchants Bank aggregating $331.19, and checks and money orders drawn on other banks aggregating $345.09, making a total of $746.28. The items included in the Saturday evening deposit were entered in Kelly’s passbook, but whether the entry was dated October 25,1930, [539]*539does not appear. The items included in the deposit, however, were not entered upon the books of the bank. The cash deposit of $70 was mingled with the funds of other depositors. The bank did not open on Monday morning, October 27, 1930.

From the testimony before us, the cheeks drawn on the Miners & Merchants Bank were never entered upon its books and never operated to reduce the deposit fund of the drawer of the check nor to increase the deposit fund of the payee. The cheeks were never paid by the bank from the funds of its depositors in its hands. The checks and money orders drawn on other banking institutions, aggregating $345.09, were collected by the receiver after he took charge of the bank. In the case of Eppinger, Exec’r, v. Allen et al., Trustees, 8 D. & C. 321, 329, it is said:

“When a bank, which becomes insolvent or which makes an assignment for the benefit of creditors or goes into the hands of a receiver, has at that time uncollected paper on hand, its authority to collect is thereby terminated and the depositor is entitled to a return of the paper; if, instead, it is actually collected, the depositor is entitled to a return of the proceeds”.

In the case before us, the receiver collected the moneys represented by the cheeks and money orders from the institutions on which they were drawn, and he holds that money for Hugh Kelly, the payee in the checks. Hugh Kelly is, therefore, a preferred creditor to the extent of $345.09 and should be paid in full.

So far as the checks drawn on the Miners & Merchants Bank are concerned, there could be no withdrawal from the deposit fund of the maker of the check and a corresponding addition to the deposit fund of the payee except upon the books of the bank. The entry in the passbook of the depositor does not, we think, change the situation. If the checks so deposited had for any reason not been paid, the bank would have the right to “charge back” the uncollected paper. We understand that section 25 of the Banking Act of June 15, 1923, P. L. 809, as amended by section 9' of the Act of May 5, 1927, P. L. 762, provides that the status of the parties shall be created as of the date of possession. The bank ceased to do business when it closed its doors at 8 p. m. October 25, 1930. The status as it then existed was this: The bank had on its desks or in its vaults certain checks and money orders turned in by Hugh Kelly. The mere possession of the checks and money orders did not increase the bank’s assets, nor did they reduce the deposits of the drawers or increase the deposit of the drawee. The bank was only custodian of the papers and could have handed them back the next day. The ease is different, however, as to the $70 deposited in cash. It is not shown that the money was segregated as in the case of Corn Exchange National Bank v. The Solicitors’ Loan & Trust Co., 188 Pa. 330, where, when the bank suspended, $2,000 in two-dollar bills was found intact in a package, or, as in the case of Washington Shoe Mfg. Co. v. Duke, etc., 126 Wash. 510, 218 Pae. 232, referred to in Eppinger, Exec’r, v. Allen et al., Trustees, supra, at page 327, where all the deposits made on the day before the bank suspended business were placed in separate envelopes bearing the name of the particular depositor. The essential thing to constitute a person a preferred creditor as to a cash deposit is his ability to trace the cash, and that ability is lacking in the present ease and, therefore, no preference can be allowed for the item of cash. The deposit of Hugh Kelly was, then, as of the date of taking possession of said bank, the sum of $314.38.

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Bluebook (online)
18 Pa. D. & C. 537, 1932 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 336, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-miners-merchants-bank-pactcomplcambri-1932.