Union Trust Co. v. National Indemnity Co.

23 Pa. D. & C. 47, 1934 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 208
CourtPennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Washington County
DecidedDecember 15, 1934
DocketNo. 544
StatusPublished

This text of 23 Pa. D. & C. 47 (Union Trust Co. v. National Indemnity Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Washington County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Union Trust Co. v. National Indemnity Co., 23 Pa. D. & C. 47, 1934 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 208 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1934).

Opinion

Brownson, P. J.,

The claims made under this classification are for losses alleged to have been suffered in consequence of the issuing by Joseph Mendola to depositors of the Bank of Donora & Trust Company of pass books of the Union Trust Company of Donora, crediting such depositors, inter alia, with the amounts of certain deposits, made by them with the former, which the latter had not assumed and agreed to pay. ...

[51]*51The plaintiff’s position, with respect to these transactions, is that Mendola’s acts were dishonest, and had the effect of imposing upon it, without its knowledge and without its consent, liabilities which by the agreement with the Donora bank it had not undertaken to assume.

The defendant takes the positions: (a) That the issuing of these pass books by Mendola was not dishonest, because the persons to whom they were issued had actually deposited with the Donora bank the amounts entered therein; (b) that even if the pass books issued by Mendola could be regarded in the light of a promise made in plaintiff’s name binding it to pay the amounts credited therein, no loss has resulted therefrom to the plaintiff, because, having taken over all the Donora bank’s assets, it was already liable for all the debts of the latter; and (c) that no loss has resulted, because Mendola’s act in undertaking to bind the plaintiff to pay deposits in the Donora bank which the plaintiff had not assumed, was unauthorized and not binding on the plaintiff, and did not place it under an obligation to pay the same. ...

2. The transaction between the two institutions consisted of the following elements: (a) The giving to the plaintiff by the Donora bank of a note for $1,317,116.26 (which was the aggregate amount of the latter’s indebtedness as shown by its books) and an absolute and unconditional engagement by the plaintiff to pay those debts; (b) the sale, outright, to the plaintiff of certain real estate, at the price of $141,500, which sum was to be credited upon this note; (c) the pledge with this note, as collateral security therefor, of Donora bank’s other assets, with authority to liquidate the same and apply the proceeds thereof to the discharge of the note; and (d) a provision that if the pledged assets should prove more than sufficient to satisfy the note, the surplus should be returned to the Donora bank, but if they should [52]*52prove insufficient, the plaintiff should have legal remedies to collect the amount of the deficiency.

An arrangement such as this cannot be construed to amount to a voluntary assignment for the benefit of creditors when the undertaking and obligation to pay creditors is absolute and not dependent upon the disposition of the transferred property and the amount of money realized therefrom: 12 R. C. L. 587, sec; 103; Miller v. Shriver, 197 Pa. 191, 195. In the cases such as Love v. Clayton et al., 287 Pa. 205, which have held transfers to amount to assignments for the benefit of creditors, the obligation of the transferee has been to pay to creditors only the proceeds of the property turned over by the debtor when converted into money. Here, there was an absolute and unqualified assumption and undertaking to pay debts of the Donora company to the amount of $1,317,116.26, this being represented and guaranteed to be the whole of its indebtedness.

When, however, the transfer is of the whole of the debtor’s property, the transferee may under some circumstances become liable to creditors other than those the payment of whose claims has been expressly assumed; but the mere circumstance that payment of all creditors may not be provided for will not of itself render the transfer fraudulent, nor render the transferee accountable for debts not preferred, if the transfer be for a full consideration and bona fide, honest and without an intent to hinder or delay creditors: The York County Bank v. Carter, 38 Pa. 446; Lake Shore Banking Co. et al. v. Fuller, 110 Pa. 156, 163; Miller v. Shriver, 197 Pa. 191, 195. There was in this instance no such intent. It was believed by both parties, upon the best evidence that was obtainable, viz., the accounts found in the books of the Donora bank, that the amount of indebtedness which the plaintiff was asked to and did assume and undertake to pay constituted the Donora bank’s entire indebtedness. Under these circumstances, [53]*53the utmost for which the plaintiff could be held accountable-to creditors (beyond its promise to pay) would be the excess, if any, in the value of the transferred assets over and above the sum which it explicitly agreed to pay to creditors: 12 R. C. L. 582-583, sec. 100; idem 641-642, sec. 148. In this case the uncontradicted evidence shows that, taking into account the proceeds realized from the pledged assets insofar as these have been liquidated and converted into money for application upon the note as provided for in the agreement, and taking all yet unconverted assets at full face value, the total of the assets pledged to the plaintiff to secure the note given and to reimburse it for the payment of the debts assumed, have fallen short of being sufficient to meet the note by considerably more than $100,000. I therefore find that it has not been shown that there was any excess in the value of the assets turned over to the plaintiff above the consideration paid by it, viz., the payment of the scheduled indebtedness amounting to $1,317,116.26, and that, on the contrary, the plaintiff, by assuming the payment of that amount of indebtedness, gave for the transfer a consideration that was in excess of the assets transferred.

The defendant, however, takes the position that, the Donora bank being a corporation, the applicable rule is different from that which would apply if the transfer of assets were made by an individual; that when a corporation, in the event of insolvency or impending insolvency, transfers all its assets to another, without making provision for and causing to be paid all its indebtedness, the transaction having the effect of terminating its business, the creditors unprovided for will have an equitable lien for their claims upon the transferred assets in the hands of the transferee, pro rata with the creditors whose claims the transferee has assumed to pay. In support of this position defendant cites Williams v. Commercial National Bank, 49 Or. 492, 90 Pac. 1012, and [54]*5491 Pac. 443; Modoc County Bank v. Ringling et al., 7 F. (2d) 535; and Erhard v. Boone State Bank, of Boone, Iowa, et al., 65 F. (2d) 48. Each of those cases had in it one or more elements not present here. Thus in Williams v. National Bank the court found that the transferee was not an innocent purchaser in good faith; in Modoc County Bank v. Ringling et al., certain statutes of the State of California figured; and in Erhard v. Boone State Bank, of Boone, Iowa, et al., it was held that the transferee bank was upon notice or inquiry respecting the fraudulent cancellation, by an officer of the transferor bank, of the account of the plaintiff which thereupon was omitted from the list of claims to be assumed by the transferee. Moreover, in the present case the deposit claims not exhibited by the Donora bank’s books, and not assumed by the plaintiff, were not left without recourse to any source of payment other than the transferred assets, because those depositors could resort to the statutory liability of the Donora bank’s stockholders, imposed by section 5 of the Act of May 13, 1876, P. L. 161.

However, defendant relies upon a statement at page 498 in the Williams case, supra, quoting 10 Cyc.

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Bluebook (online)
23 Pa. D. & C. 47, 1934 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 208, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/union-trust-co-v-national-indemnity-co-pactcomplwashin-1934.