179 A. 592 | Pa. | 1935
Arnold-Blair-Rottner, Inc., is a corporation engaged in the real estate business. It has a large number of clients, including insurance companies for whom it acts as agent, managing properties, collecting rents and remitting to the owners. In 1931, when the Franklin Trust Company failed, it had three separate accounts with that bank, entitled, respectively, "Arnold-Blair-Rottner, Inc., General Account"; "Arnold-Blair-Rottner, Inc., Insurance Account"; and "Arnold-Blair-Rottner, Inc., Agency Account." The money in the "Insurance Account" represented collections on behalf of insurance company clients; that in the "Agency" represented collections on behalf of other clients whose properties it managed and from which it collected rent. Separate check books were maintained for the three accounts, and checks drawn on any one of the three accounts bore the name of that particular account.
It was stipulated that "the deposits in the Agency and Insurance Accounts consisted entirely of collections made by Arnold-Blair-Rottner, Inc., on behalf of its clients. . . . No part of the deposits in the Agency and Insurance Accounts represented funds of Arnold-Blair-Rottner, Inc." There was also set forth in the stipulation the names of the various clients for whom this company acted as agents, the properties, and the amount of rent collected and on deposit.
The secretary of banking, in settling his account, refused to pay a dividend on the Insurance and Agency accounts, claiming that he had the right to set off against these accounts the larger sum of $27,290.30 which the company individually owed to the bank. This was resisted, and, in the adjudication in the court below, the court held that, as the Franklin Trust Company had no knowledge or notice of any facts whatsoever indicating the nature of appellant's business or the nature of the funds contained in these checking accounts beyond their mere designations, the secretary was entitled to set off *370 these accounts against the notes which it held of the Arnold-Blair-Rottner Company.
The status of the parties was fixed as of the date of the bank failure and the appointment of the receiver, and whatever right of set-off existed accrued as of that date: Shipler v. New Castle Paper Products Corp.,
As a general rule, a bank may set off the deposit account of a particular creditor against the debt due it by that creditor, but may a bank set off a sum represented by a depositor's account in his name as "Agent" or an "Insurance Account" when the money represented therein is the property of other persons? In other words, may a bank take money affirmatively proved to be that of other persons to pay a debt due it by a depositor? If so, it can do more than an attaching creditor of the depositor could do: Bank of Northern Liberties v. Jones Cole,
The case turns on the question of mutuality in quality of right with respect to a set-off. The bank's claim was against the company (depositor) in the latter's own right for its individual debt; what the bank claimed the right to set off was a demand (deposit) in the name of its creditor as agent in which that creditor had no property right, the property right being in third persons. In Gordon v. Union Trust Co.,
The court below, in justifying its conclusion that the bank had a right to use the funds on deposit in these accounts as a set-off, depended largely on the fact that the bank did not know of the nature and character of these accounts, and that it therefore had the right to use them in payment of the note which it held against this company. There is, however, no contention that the bank was actually misled, or that the owners of the fund were guilty of misleading conduct with respect to the form of the deposit. While the right of set-off was fixed as of the date of receivership, there had been no appropriation of the moneys represented by these accounts. Nor would such act destroy the property right in third parties to the fund, or the right to assert it.
The company, acting in behalf of its clients and as their representative, now asserts their property right to these funds. This it was bound to do. It sustains that assertion by undenied proof submitted that the funds belong to third parties and not to itself. These facts distinguish this case from those relied on by the court below. Thus in Laubach v. Leibert,
Again in Patterson v. Marine N. Bank,
It can be readily seen that the instant case is not controlled by any of these decisions. We said in Trestrail v. Johnson,
We stated in Trestrail v. Johnson, supra: "Generally speaking, in all cases where the ownership of the fund itself has been in dispute, and not the right to administer it, the court has been particular to do nothing which would disturb in the slightest the fund reaching its destined lawful end, without unnecessary risks that might come if a more liberal policy was adopted, it being conceded the fund was a trust or one that can be called such. In Hunter v. Henning, supra, we held that, as between the personal representative and third parties, while the representative might be regarded as the owner of the fund for its protection, yet where, by his act, there was a possibility of the funds being in jeopardy to the detriment of the trust estates, we kept them inviolable as far as that proceeding was concerned."
Under the circumstances, the court below was in error in permitting the secretary to credit or set off the agency deposit and the insurance account deposit on the note that was due by appellant; a dividend should have been permitted on account of these two deposits.
The decree of the court below is reversed and the record is remitted with a procedendo; costs to be paid from the funds of the bank in the receiver's possession.