Washington v. Gordon

8 F. Supp. 913, 1934 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1512
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedOctober 4, 1934
DocketNos. 7845, 7849
StatusPublished

This text of 8 F. Supp. 913 (Washington v. Gordon) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Washington v. Gordon, 8 F. Supp. 913, 1934 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1512 (E.D. Pa. 1934).

Opinion

WELSH, District Judge.

On the 25th day of August, 1933, Laura A. Washington, a citizen of the state of Conneetieut, instituted proceedings in equity against William D. Gordon, Secretary of Banking, and Robert G. Funkhouser, Special Deputy, as agent in possession of the Chester County Trust Company.

The bill sets forth that the complainant is the holder of a participation certificate issued by the Chester County Trust Company of West Chester, Pa., in the sum of $40,000, of a trust fund mortgage pool; that this trust fund mortgage pool represents moneys received by the Chester County Trust Company, to be maintained as a trust fund, separate and apart from its assets, and invested in first mortgages secured on real estate in the state of Pennsylvania; that participation certificates in this pool have been issued by the Chester County Trust Company to varir ous persons aggregating in amount the sum of $2,901,236.07; and that the funds have been invested in mortgages set apart from the assets of the trust company, as the property of complainant and other certificate holders.

The bill further avers that on February 14, 1933, the Chester County Trust Company was closed at the direction of William D. Gordon, Secretary of Banking of the State of Pennsylvania, by reason of its insolvent and unsafe condition, and the Secretary of Banking thereupon took possession of its assets, and is in the process of liquidating same; that at the time that the Secretary of Banking took possession of the assets of the trust company, he also took custody of the assets of the trust fund forming the mortgage pool.

The bill alleges that since the Secretary of Banking took into his custody the said mortgage pool, interest payments on many of the mortgages comprising part of its assets and taxes due on many parcels of real estate incumbered by mortgages of the mortgage pool have not been paid by the mortgagors or received by the Secretary of Banking or his deputy, and that little effort is made to secure the collection of such charges; that there is danger of sales of the incumbered real estate by reason of the nonpayment oí taxes and little effort is made by the Secretary of Banking to compel payment of these taxes; that no interest or income has been received by the complainant or other certificate holders since the closing of the Chester County Trust Company, nor has the Secretary of Banking filed an account in relation to the said mortgage pool; that the management is, therefore, making little effort to protect the assets of the trust fund to the detriment and damage of complainant and like holders of [914]*914trust certificates. Complainant prays for the appointment of a receiver to conserve and administer the assets of the trust estate comprising the mortgage pool, for the benefit of its certificate holders exclusively.

On the same day the complainant filed her bill, she also filed a motion for the appointment of a receiver pending hearing on the bill and answer. A hearing was fixed on said motion for August 30, 1933. Due service was made of said bill, motion, and notice of hearing.

On August 30, 1933, a hearing was held, at which time counsel for complainant and defendants appeared. Defendants’ counsel vigorously opposed the appointment of a receiver. Ño answer was filed at the time, nor has it since been filed. After argument, and upon consideration of the averments of complainant’s bill, the court granted complainant’s motion for appointment of a receiver, and entered an order appointing Edward W. Wells, Richard F. Ennis, Louis Breitinger, and John Hemphill, receivers, with directions to take possession of all mortgages, property, and assets comprising the trust mortgage pool originally held by Chester County Trust Company in its fiduciary capacity, but now in the custody of the Secretary' of Banking, in possession of the Chester County Trust Company. Although the order appointing the receivers did not specifically so state, it was intended that this appointment should be temporary only until hearing on bill and answer. The court subsequently modified its original order so that the appointment was temporary until hearing on the bill and answer.

This matter is now before the court on two petitions filed by the Secretary of Banking for the State of Pennsylvania, one to vacate the order of appointment of receivers, and the other to dismiss the bill. The court fixed Friday, September 22, 1933, as a time for hearing on the said petitions. At this time counsel for both complainant and defendants again appeared and argued the questions involved at length. The' Secretary of Banking resisted the appointment of receivers for the mortgage pool, principally on the ground that the federal court was without jurisdiction because, first, the action involved a suit against the state of Pennsylvania, and, second, because the Secretary of Banking, having filed a certificate of taking possession of the Chester County Trust Company’s assets in the Judgment Index of Chester County, the Chester county court alone retained jurisdiction.

It is somewhat difficult to understand the position of the Banking Department of the State of Pennsylvania in this ease. What interest and standing has that department? Their position is one of bare, temporary custody, with the duty and responsibility thrown upon them to divest themgelves of even that status at the earliest possible moment. Section 40 of the Act of 1923 (Act June 15,1923, P. L. 809).

Subsection (b) provides as follows: “Substituted Fiduciaries—Upon determining to liquidate the affairs of such corporation or person, the secretary shall forthwith give written notice to all parties interested in any such funds, property, or investments held in • a fiduciary, capacity, so far as such notice is practicable, requiring them within thirty days to apply to the proper court or official for the appointment of substituted fiduciaries to take the place of such corporation or person. On the failure or neglect of the parties so notified to make such application within the time designated, or in ease the parties in interest can not be notified, the secretary shall himself apply for such appointment of substituted fiduciaries.” 7 PS Pa. § 40 (b).

In order that this might be made perfectly plain and be beyond all question of doubt, the amending Act of May 15,1933, P. L. 678, § 801 (71 PS § 733—801), specifically, provides as follows: “References in this act to funds, property, or investments held in a fiduciary capacity by an institution of which the secretary has taken possession, shall apply only to funds, property, or investments held in such fiduciary capacity by the trust department of such institution, and shall not apply to funds, property or investments which were held by the commercial department of such institution.”

This court continued the hearing on this ease on two separate occasions in order to permit holders of participating certificates to appear and be heard. The court required all such persons who desired to intervene to do so and expressed a request for an expression of their views. No such holders of participating certificates have taken advantage of this offer and no one of such class is in any way concerned so far as the record in the instant case appears. At the last hearing it was stated by a member of the Bar present in the court that one of his associate members of the Bar desired him to state orally to the court that participating holders in a large amount would prefer that the matter be adjudicated in the local eourts of Chester county, Pa.

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Related

Elson v. Mortgage Building & Loan Ass'n
4 F. Supp. 779 (E.D. Pennsylvania, 1933)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
8 F. Supp. 913, 1934 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1512, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/washington-v-gordon-paed-1934.