Swank v. Myers

126 A.2d 267, 386 Pa. 331, 1956 Pa. LEXIS 396
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedSeptember 24, 1956
DocketNos. 5 and 6
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 126 A.2d 267 (Swank v. Myers) 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
Swank v. Myers, 126 A.2d 267, 386 Pa. 331, 1956 Pa. LEXIS 396 (Pa. 1956).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Jones,

These appeals, in the nature of certiorari, seek review’' of successive steps taken by the Secretary of Banking and the Banking Board of Pennsylvania in the exercise of prescribed administrative process for the disciplining of a bank official deemed to be guilty of violations of the State Banking Code.

The appellant, Boyd M. Swank, was president and director of the Yandergrift Savings and Trust Company. The action taken against him by the Secretary of Banking, whereof he complains, resulted from his conduct in entering into a written agreement with C. E. Palmer, president and principal stockholder of the Peoples Union Bank of McKeesport, Pennsylvania. By the agreement which Palmer drafted in Swank’s presence, the latter agreed, in consideration of a secret fee of [334]*334$100,000.00 to be paid Mm by Palmer, to use Ms influence in obtaining for Palmer shares of the capital stock of the Vandergrift Savings and Trust Company from holders thereof at a price of $500 per share and to sell his own holdings of 810 shares of such stock to Palmer (and any additional shares he might acquire within ninety days of the date of the agreement) for $600 per share.

The agreement was entered into and signed by Palmer and Swank on November 23, 1954. It emanated from Palmer’s desire to constitute the Vandergrift Savings and Trust Company a branch of the Peoples Union Bank of McKeesport. Swank succeeded in persuading the holders of 208 shares of the Trust Company stock to sell it to him at $500 per share. Shortly thereafter (circa mid-January, 1955), the agreement between Swank and Palmer, supposedly known to them only, in some manner became public information. The animosity toward Swank, which knowledge of the agreement at once engendered in the Trust Company’s stockholders caused him to withhold further activity in pursuance of the agreement, and he induced the shareholders who had sold their stock to him at $500 per share, instituted a suit against him in Westmoreland County in an effort to obtain $100 per share more for the stock they had sold him.

On February 14, 1955, Palmer exercised his option under the agreement to buy Swank’s 810 shares of the Trust Company stock at $600 per share. Swank refused to perform, but, after the draft of a bill in equity for specific performance had been exhibited to him, he complied. Thenceforth, Palmer dealt directly with the shareholders of the Trust Company, offering them $600 per share for their stock. Thus, he succeeded in acquiring, all told, 1,690 shares of the Trust Company [335]*335stock which, together with the 208 shares Swank had purchased from stockholders at $500 per share, accounted for all but 102 shares of the Trust Company’s outstanding capital stock of 2,000 shares.

On March 25,1955, Swank instituted two suits in the Court of Common Pleas of Allegheny County against Palmer and the Peoples Union Bank, jointly. In the one (an action of assumpsit) he claimed $100,000 damages for Palmer’s alleged breach of their agreement of November 23, 1954, and $5,512.50 for money allegedly had and received, representing the accrued earnings on the 810 shares of Trust Company stock (transferred by Swank to Palmer) between January 1, 1955, and March 9, 1955. The other suit was in equity and sought an injunction to prevent Palmer’s using the 810 shares of Trust Company stock in any way to effect Swank’s removal from his office as president of the Trust Company or from reducing the emoluments of that office. The institution of the suits was followed by extensive newspaper publicity and at once came to the attention of the Secretary of Banking who promptly secured copies of the complaints which were sworn to by Swank and which set forth the facts herein related, and more in detail.

By letter of March 31, 1955, addressed to Swank, the Secretary of Banking notified Mm that, by reason of Ms participation in the transactions described by him in Ms Allegheny County law suits, his continuance in office as president and a director of the Vandergrift Savings and Trust Company would render the conduct of the bank’s business unsafe and unsound. The Secretary thereupon demanded that Swank resign Ms bank offices at a special meeting of the board of directors on April 5, 1955, which the Secretary was causing to be called for that purpose. Swank responded to the [336]*336Secretary by a letter denying that tbe business of tbe bank was being conducted in an unsafe and unsound manner and questioning the Secretary’s authority in the premises. The board of directors met at the time of the scheduled special meeting and removed Swank from the office of president by a duly adopted resolution after all parties in interest, including Swank and his counsel, had been heard.

It is the action of the Secretary of Banking in demanding Swank’s ouster by the board of directors of the Trust Company from his offices with the bank and the board’s consequent removal of him as president of the Trust Company that Swank seeks to have reviewed on the certiorari issued on his appeal at No. 6 May Term, 1956. He later filed a petition with this court requesting permission to withdraw the appeal and for an order directing the Court of Common Pleas of Westmoreland County to proceed to a final disposition of a case, there pending but in no wise involved here, which was being held in abeyance awaiting action on the instant appeals.1 We entered an order granting the ap[337]*337pellant permission to withdraw the appeal, but he later formally declined so to do.

In any event, there is no procedural basis for such an appeal. The function of a certiorari is to bring up for appellate review the records and proceedings in an inferior judicial or quasi-judicial tribunal. The actions of the Secretary of Banking and the board of directors of the Vandergrift Savings and Trust Company did not entail the exercise of any judicial or quasi-judicial function but were purely administrative in character and, hence, not cognizable on certiorari: see Newport Township School District v. State Tax Equalization Board, 366 Pa. 603, 608, 79 A. 2d 641. There is no more authority for judicial review on certiorari of the action of a bank’s board of directors than there is of the action of any incorporated body’s board of directors. The motions of the Secretary of Banking and of the board of directors of the Vandergrift Savings and Trust Company to quash the appeal at No. 6 May Term, 1956, must be granted.

On April 6,1955, the day following Swank’s removal as president of the Vandergrift Savings and Trust Company by its board of directors, the Secretary of Banking wrote, repeating his demand of Swank that he resign as a director of the bank or suffer citation to the Banking Board to show cause why he should not be removed as a director. Swank refused to resign, and a citation, as forecast by the Secretary of Banking, duly issued calling on Swank to appear before the Banking [338]*338Board on May 11, 1955, to show cause why he should not be removed from his office as director of the Trust Company and the office declared vacant.

The hearing by the Banking Board was held, as scheduled, all parties in interest being present with Swank represented by counsel. Considerable testimony was taken, and, in addition, the Banking Board had before it copies of the agreement between Swank and Palmer and the several complaints that had been filed in the court proceedings that had grown out of the agreement.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
126 A.2d 267, 386 Pa. 331, 1956 Pa. LEXIS 396, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/swank-v-myers-pa-1956.