135 A. 133 | Pa. | 1926
Previous to November 8, 1924, the Carnegie Trust Company, of Carnegie, Pa., was designated as the depository of funds belonging to the Allegheny County Home conducted by the Directors of the Poor of Allegheny County for that portion of the county not within the City of Pittsburgh. The moneys so deposited are admitted to be public funds. The directors demanded that the trust company furnish further security for their existing and future deposits, and informed the company that if such security were not furnished the deposit would be withdrawn. On the date above mentioned, and pursuant to such request, the board of directors of the trust company adopted a resolution authorizing its proper officers to deposit corporate bonds of the Carnegie Coal Company to the amount of $300,000 with the directors of the poor, as security, and in accordance with the resolution such bonds were delivered to the poor directors on December 29, 1924, and by them deposited for safe keeping at the Colonial Trust Company in a safe deposit box rented and paid for by the Allegheny County Poor Directors, the keys being kept in the possession of the directors, under an arrangement, however, whereby the box should be opened only in the presence of the president of the trust company who was to have access in this manner for the purpose of securing the interest coupons attached to the bonds as they matured. On April 27, 1925, plaintiff, the secretary of banking of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, took possession of the business and property of the Carnegie Trust Company under the State Banking Act of June 15, 1923, P. L. 809. He then filed this bill to secure possession of the bonds in question on the theory that the pledge was invalid and the proceeds of the bonds should be administered as part of the assets of the trust company for the benefit of all its creditors. The court below dismissed the bill and plaintiff appealed. *329
The power of the Carnegie Trust Company to make the pledge to secure a deposit of public funds was discussed and sustained in the case of Cameron v. Christy,
The decree of the court below is affirmed at the costs of plaintiff.