Media-69th Street Trust Company's Trust Mortgage Pool Case

25 A.2d 344, 344 Pa. 223, 1942 Pa. LEXIS 363
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJanuary 26, 1942
DocketAppeals, 11 and 12
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 25 A.2d 344 (Media-69th Street Trust Company's Trust Mortgage Pool 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
Media-69th Street Trust Company's Trust Mortgage Pool Case, 25 A.2d 344, 344 Pa. 223, 1942 Pa. LEXIS 363 (Pa. 1942).

Opinion

Opinion by

Me. Justice Maxey,

This is an appeal from the decree of the Court of Common Pleas of Delaware County sustaining exceptions to the orders of the Auditing Judge. The petition of the Substituted Trustee for leave to pay the Receiver the sum of $9,214.23 in compromise of all claims against the fund of $25,002.98 was dismissed. The petition of the Receiver for leave to pay the executors of Frank B. Rhodes the sum of $9,214.23 received from the Substituted Trustee was also dismissed. The petition of Y. Gil-pin Robinson et al. for an order of court directing that the Receiver return to the Substituted Trustee the sum of $9,214.23 was granted. The Receiver was ordered to pay to the Substituted Trustee the sum of $9,214.23 to be retained by the latter and held until further order of court.

*226 On September 30, 1933, the Secretary of Banking took possession of the Media-69th Street Trust Company (hereinafter called the Company) because of its insolvency. This Company was the trustee of a certain Trust Mortgage Pool consisting of 153 mortgages. The Company was also Trustee, Guardian, etc., of 829 separate and distinct estates, and in administering 529 of them it had invested their funds in participating certificates in the Trust Mortgage Pool, each estate receiving a particular certificate in the amount of the funds so invested. For some time prior to September 30,1933, the Company as Trustee for the Mortgage Pool had made payments to certain certificate holders in anticipation of the receipt of interest on various mortgages of the Pool, which interest was in default at the time the payments to certificate holders were made, and on the date stated the Company as Trustee had advanced the sum of $25,002.98 in excess of the interest actually received on the mortgages. The interest so advanced was taken from the general trust fund accounts which it carried in the First National Bank of Media and the Real Estate Trust Company and with itself. In these deposit accounts the Company deposited funds coming into its hands in its fiduciary capacity, including not only principal and income' from the Trust Mortgage Pool but also principal and income from all other investments made or carried by the Company as Trustee or Guardian or received by it in its capacity as fiduciary. On the date of the Company’s closing the Receiver received $25,002.98 to make up the shortage in the Trust Fund Account.

Thereupon Frank B. Rhodes, who when the Company closed was its President, and William D. Gordon who in his capacity of Secretary of Banking was Receiver of the Company, entered into an agreement, identified herein as the Gordon-Rhodes Agreement, pursuant to which Rhodes delivered to Gordon cash and securities to the value of $72,800.85, all these being the former’s personal property. The overdraft in the Trust Mortgage Pool in *227 the sum of $25,002.98 ivas included in the Agreement and was one of the items for which the sum advanced by Rhodes was indemnity.

Between September 30, 1933, and October 15, 1934, the Receiver collected interest on the mortgages in the Pool to the amount of $28,736.82 and applied this interest to the extent of $25,002.98 to repaying the various estates whose funds had been depleted in making advances to certificate holders in the Pool. On October 15, 1934, pursuant to the order of the court, the Receiver turned over to the Chester-Cambridge Bank and Trust Co., Substituted Trustee for the Pool, all of the mortgages and income constituting this Pool except the sum of $25,002.98 and in his account the Receiver asked credit for this sum of $25,002.98 for the reason above indicated. Exceptions to this credit were upheld by the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania and it directed on March 21,1938, (329 Pa. 587) that this sum be turned over to the Chester-Cambridge Bank and Trust Co., Substituted Trustee for a further accounting and on May 24,1938, this was done.

Frank B. Rhodes died on January 17, 1939, and his executors filed a petition on April 27, 1940, averring, inter alia, “That the sum of $25,002.98 so turned over Avas the money of Frank B. Rhodes, being the proceeds of the sale of the securities constituting the indemnity fund set up by Frank B. Rhodes under the Gordon-Rhodes Agreement and said fund was never the property of said Company in any capacity whatsoever, but was derived from the private means of Frank B. Rhodes and continued to remain so subject to the terms of the Gordon-Rhodes Agreement.”

The Chester-Cambridge Bank and Trust Company, Substituted Trustee, filed its accounting in accordance with the “further proceedings” suggested by the Supreme Court. Exception to this accounting was filed by Rhodes and Luther A. Harr (the then Receiver), setting forth specifically that the sum of $25,002.98 appearing in the account of the Substituted Trustee should be returned to *228 the Receiver and Frank B. Rhodes, or so much thereof as could be shown to be due them under the law as expressed in the Supreme Court’s opinion already referred to.

At a hearing held by the court below it was shown that there was collected by the Receiver, as delinquent interest on mortgages in the Pool, $9,214.23; by the Substituted Trustee either in the form of interest or as net rents, $4,775.78; by the Receiver as interest accrued on all mortgages between the late due date and the day of closing, $7,530.44; and the amount of such interest collected by the Substituted Trustee either in the form of interest or net rents, $2,611.36.

The foregoing sums total $24,131.81. The contentions of the Receiver and Mr. Rhodes were as follows: “1. They were presently entitled to be reimbursed in the sum of $24,131.81. 2. Even though they should not be entitled to reimbursement on the basis of collections of accrued interest, they were presently entitled to the sum of $13,-990.01. 3. Even though they be not entitled to any interest or rents collected by the Substituted Trustee on delinquent mortgages they were presently entitled to $9,-214.23. 4. No matter what they were presently entitled to receive, they could in the future from time to time as additional interest was received on said delinquent, mortgages and as the various accounts of the said Substituted Trustee should be filed, claim reimbursement to the extent of such collections without any limit as to time and up to the full extent of $25,002.98.” The opposing contentions of the Substituted Trustee were as follows: “Frank B. Rhodes and the Receiver Avere entitled to be reimbursed: 1. Only out of interest from mortgages delinquent on the day of closing. 2. This only providing the interest on such mortgages had become paid up in full or current.”

The amount of interest on current or delinquent mortgages was less than $9,214.23. After the death of Mr. Rhodes on January 17, 1939, three parties: the then Re *229 ceiver, Rhodes’ Executors and the Substituted Trustee, entered into an agreement subject to the court’s approval to compromise the claims oí the Receiver and the Executors against the Substituted Trustee for the sum of $9,-214.23 to be paid by the Substituted Trustee to either the Receiver or the Executors. A rule to show cause why this compromise agreement should not be carried out was granted and a copy of this rule was served upon Y.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
25 A.2d 344, 344 Pa. 223, 1942 Pa. LEXIS 363, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/media-69th-street-trust-companys-trust-mortgage-pool-case-pa-1942.