10 A.2d 857 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1939
Argued October 11, 1939. The plaintiffs brought an action in assumpsit against *358 the defendant, an incorporated relief association. In their statement of claim they alleged that the deceased, William S. Lybrand, was a member in good standing in the defendant association at the time of his death; that they are designated as the beneficiaries on the books of the defendant association, under the provisions of the by-laws, and are entitled to death benefits in the sum of "Twenty-two Hundred Dollars ($2200) or more," with interest.
Instead of an affidavit of defense, the defendant filed a petition for permission to pay into court the amount due upon the death of the deceased member, and prayed for an order on beneficiaries designated by the member and certain relatives of the deceased, who claim they are entitled to the fund, to interplead. A rule was granted to show cause why the prayer of the petitioner should not be granted. No answer was filed, but an argument was had, and thereafter the court discharged the rule, holding that an interpleader should not be granted, because (1) no action had been started by the alleged rival claimants to the fund; (2) a contractual relationship existed between the plaintiffs and the defendant; and (3) the granting of an interpleader was discretionary and not mandatory. This appeal was taken by the defendant.
We will consider first these legal propositions in the above order.
1. Under the Interpleader Act of March 11, 1836, P.L. 76, § 4 (12 Pa.C.S.A. § 581) it was not necessary that the rival claimants, the nearest of kin of the deceased, should have actually instituted a suit to warrant the granting of an interpleader. That statute provided that if the defendant in any action ". . . . . . shall also allege, under oath or affirmation, that the right thereto isclaimed by, or supposed to belong to, some person not party to the action (naming him or them), who had sued or is expected to sue for the same, or shall shew some probable matter to the courtto believe that such suggestion is *359 true, the said court may thereupon order the plaintiff to interplead." (Italics supplied).
The defendant in its petition averred that it received a letter from the attorney for the next of kin of the deceased "objectingto the making of such payment to the said plaintiffs and claimingthe same" in behalf of his clients and that the designation of the plaintiffs as beneficiaries was of no effect as the consideration for naming them had failed. (Italics supplied). The petitioner further averred that it had no interest in the sum of money in dispute.
In McKinley v. Mutual Life Ins. Co.,
The averments of the present petition, not denied, were sufficient to show a bona fide claim to the fund by rival claimants.
2. The fact that a contractual relationship might have existed between the defendant and plaintiffs, by reason of plaintiffs' being designated as beneficiaries under defendant's by-laws, did not of itself deprive defendant of its right to an interpleader:Schmidt Brewing Co. v. Pittsburgh Life Trust Co.,
In Szajnecki v. Szajnecki,
3. The granting or refusal of a petition for interpleader is, in general, within the sound discretion of the court to which the petition is presented. It is true the provisions of the Act of 1836 are not mandatory, but the court is required to exercise a judicial and not an arbitrary discretion in determining the right to interplead: Schmidt Brewing Co. v. Pittsburgh Life TrustCo., supra; McKinley v. Mutual Life Ins. Co., supra; Barnes v.Bamberger,
We are of the opinion that as the averments in the defendant's petition brought it squarely within the provisions of the Act of 1836, the prayer of the petitioner should have been granted.
Furthermore, entirely independent of the statute, the court had the power, under the Pennsylvania common law, to order the interpleader: McKinley v. Mutual Life Ins. Co., supra (p. 304). In Clarke Cohen v. Real,
The defendant relief association is a mere stakeholder, without any interest in the final disposition of the fund. We can see no reason to deny it relief from the expense and inconvenience of defending possibly two actions and incurring the risk of double liability.
The petition prayed also that reasonable counsel fees be paid out of the fund and costs be allowed the petitioner. The appellant concedes that the court below was correct in holding that it did not have power to allow counsel fees or expenses under the statute.
The order discharging the rule for interpleader was, in our judgment, an abuse of judicial discretion, and is hereby reversed, with a procedendo. The petitioner should pay the costs of the action up to the time of filing its petition for interpleader and its offer to pay the fund into court.