6 A.2d 425 | Pa. | 1938
The secretary of banking brought four separate bills in equity against the shareholders of four closed banks to compel them to pay the full amount of their statutory liability pursuant to Section 5 of the Act of May 13, 1876, P. L. 161. In each suit the shareholders of the respective banks, who were all joined as respondents, filed preliminary objections contesting the right to equitable relief and the constitutionality of the statutory provision for double liability. The court below sustained *4 the preliminary objections and entered decrees for the respondents.
Without expressing an opinion on any other question, this Court feels that the preliminary objections were properly sustained, for the reason that the secretary of banking mistook his remedy. Where he seeks to recover the full amount of the double statutory liability, he has an adequate and complete remedy at law in assumpsit, provided by the statute. There is no longer a necessity for a discovery, accounting and a judicial decree of assessment. This rule does not conflict with the decision in Dreisbach v. Price,
The powers of the secretary of banking, as receiver, are far greater. He has the power, as pointed out in Squire v.Fridenberg,
Since it is unnecessary for the secretary to invoke the jurisdiction of equity for the purpose of assessment, the mere plurality of defendants will not require the assumption of jurisdiction by equity. See Kennedy v. Gibson and others,
A different situation was presented in Cook v. Carpenter (No.1),
Notwithstanding the failure of the court below to pass upon the question, this Court may properly hold that the adequacy of the legal remedy bars equitable recovery. Dunn v. Hild,
The statutory provisions for an action by the secretary of banking as receiver do not create special equitable jurisdiction in the collection of assessments. The Banking Act of June 15, 1923, P. L. 809, Section 37, *6
which is applicable to the present proceedings, was intended to give to that officer the right to enforce a cause of action which did not previously vest in him. The words giving him the right to proceed mean that he can employ the appropriate remedies for enforcing shareholders' liability, and his right to proceed in one or the other forum depends on the customary principles of legal and equitable jurisdiction. In so far as the statute affords a complete and adequate remedy at law, equity will not assume jurisdiction: Patterson et al. v. Laneet al.,
Decrees affirmed at appellant's cost.