178 A. 288 | Pa. | 1935
On the audit of the account of the secretary of banking as receiver of The Royersford Trust Company, these four appellants each claimed a preferential payment out of the fund for distribution. There was no dispute as to the amounts of the claims, but only as to the right of the several parties to have such preferences. The court below refused to allow the preferences, whereupon each of the parties took one of these appeals. The basis of each decision below was that "Before priority in payment may be decreed, there must be [and in these cases there was not] a tracing of the trust res to, and a showing that it is contained in some particular property, security, fund or account" which forms part of the assets for distribution. This conclusion is correct. *492
In Freiberg v. Stoddard,
In Lebanon Trust Safe Deposit Bank's Assigned Est.,
In Cameron v. Carnegie Trust Co., supra, the Ottumwa National Bank, sent to the trust company, at a time when it was insolvent and shortly before it was taken over by the secretary of banking, a note for collection and *493 remittance. The trust company collected the note, but instead of remitting the proceeds sent its draft therefor to the Ottumwa Bank, which was not paid on presentation because the secretary of banking had closed the trust company and taken possession of its assets. The amount of the note was meanwhile deposited in a particular account, and there remained, separate from the trust company's general assets, until the time of distribution of the estate of the trust company. We held that the Ottumwa Bank was entitled to a preference because the fund could be and was traced into the particular account, where it at all times was.
In Mehler's App.,
This being the law at the time under consideration here, — though probably altered by section 1011, paragraph third of the Act of May 15, 1933, P. L. 565, 614, subsequently enacted — it is only necessary to state the facts regarding the separate appeals.
The order of the court below, so far as concerns the preferences claimed by these four appellants, is affirmed, and each appeal is dismissed at the cost of the appellant therein.