14 A.2d 581 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1940
Argued May 7, 1940. Reliance Building and Loan Association borrowed *317 $17,600 on its note from appellee bank. This note was unpaid on December 10, 1937 when the Secretary of Banking took possession of the association for the purpose of liquidation. Admittedly the assets of the building and loan association in liquidation are more than sufficient to satisfy outside creditors in full but insufficient in addition, to return to shareholders the full value of their shares. In the distribution account of the receiver interest was allowed only to the date the receiver took possession of the insolvent association. The question involved is whether, under the circumstances, interest accruing during receivership shall be allowed on the undisputed claim of appellee, a general creditor.
The "Department of Banking Code" of 1933, P.L. 565, as amended, 71 P. S. § 733, § 1011 B, sets forth "the order and preference followed by the secretary in the distribution, pursuant to the provisions of this act, of the assets of any building and loan association the affairs of which he as receiver is liquidating: . . . . . . [With the first and second preferred classes we are not concerned.] Third. Any claim of a creditor of the association, other than the claim of a shareholder arising from his ownership of shares; Fourth. Any claim of a shareholder, whether or not reduced to a judgment, arising from his ownership of shares. . . . . ." The above subsection B is silent on the question of the allowance of interest on creditor's claims, but subsection A, of § 1011 of the same code (which however, applies to institutions other than building and loan associations), denies interest to depositors in closed banks accruing after the date of taking possession by the Secretary of Banking. Appellant argues that because interest is denied a depositor in a closed bank there is stronger reason for the denial of interest to a general creditor of a building and loan association, in that a creditor's claim, on general principle, is in fact of lower dignity *318
than that of a depositor in a bank. However, in Guardian Bank andTrust Co. Case,
A clear statement of the rule governing the allowance of interest appears in American I. S. Mfg. Co. v. Seaboard A.L.R.Co. [
The fallacy of appellant's position lies in the assumption that the claim of a shareholder arising out of his ownership of stock is "of equal dignity" with the claim of an outside creditor to interest during receivership. Shareholders "are not creditors in the ordinary sense; they are really partners in the enterprise, and their rights are very different from those of persons whose claims are based wholly on outside transactions": Malis v. HomerBuilding Loan Assn.,
The rule is that the principal of a claim cannot be placed on a different footing from the interest accruing thereon. In Com.v. Flowers,
For these reasons the claim for interest to the date of payment of the principal must be allowed in full.
Order affirmed at the costs of appellant receiver.