The Northampton Trust Company presented a petition setting forth that it was duly incorporated and organized on April 3, 1902, under the laws of this Commonwealth providing for the incorporation of trust companiés; that the First National Bank of Easton was duly incorporated and organized under the laws of the United States as a national bank; that under an Act of Congress of Feb. 25, 1927, ch. 91, 44 Stat. at L. 1224, amending the Act of Nov. 7, 1918, ch. 209, 40 Stat. at L. 1043, by adding a new section, known as section 3 thereto, the consolidation of a trust company into a national banking association was authorized; which section, in part, reads as follows: “That any bank incorporated under the laws of any state, or any bank incorporated in the District of Columbia, may be consolidated with a national banking association located in the same county, city, town, or village under the charter of such national banking association on such terms and conditions as may be lawfully agreed upon by a majority of the board of directors of each association or bank proposing to consolidate. . . . The capital stock of such consolidated association shall not be less than that required under existing law for the organization of a national banking association in the place in which such consolidated association is located; and all the rights, franchises, and interests of such state or district bank so consolidated with a national banking association in and to every species of prop
The First National Bank & Trust Company of Easton demurred to the petition, assigning ten causes of demurrer. The eighth is as follows: “The Act of April 26, 1889, P. L. 56, applies only to banking institutions; and as the Act of May 9, 1889, P. L. 159, expressly forbade trust companies from doing a banking business, it has no application to trust companies, and there is no such state legislation applicable to trust companies.” That act was referred to in the opinion of the Department of Justice: In re Consolidation of State and National Banks, 12 D. & C. 626. After discussing the Act of Congress above quoted and the two cases of Petition of Worcester County National Bank of Worcester, 263 Mass. 394, 161 N. E. Repr. 797, and 263 Mass. 444, 162 N. E. Repr. 217, and Ex parte Worcester County National Bank of
The first, fifth, sixth, seventh, ninth and tenth causes of demurrer are as follows:
“First. That upon the face of the petition the petitioner is not entitled to the relief claimed. . . .
“Fifth. The contract of consolidation was an act of dissolution of the trust company, and when complete on July 1, 1929, it destroyed the stock and transferred all property rights to the respondent.
“Seventh. The Act of 1856 has no application to the state of facts set forth in the petition. . . .
“Ninth. The effect of the consolidation authorized by the Act of Congress of February 25, 1927, was to extinguish the trust company, and all its property became the property of the respondent.
“Tenth. The said trust company having been extinguished under the agreement of consolidation, and its approval by the Comptroller of the Currency, there is no authority to dissolve an already dead corporation.”
They raise the important questions to be decided.
We have examined the Act of 1856 with care in Easton Transit Company’s Petition, 17 Northamp. Co. Repr. 244, affirmed in 270 Pa. 136. In that case Mr. Justice Simpson said: “Under the Act of April 9, 1856, P. L. 293, the only question to be determined on the hearing of a petition by a corporation for leave to surrender any power contained in its charter, is whether or not such surrender may be granted without prejudice to the public welfare or the interests of the corporators.” In Bangor Electric Company’s Petition, 21 Northamp. Co. Repr. 317, affirmed in 295 Pa. 228, the second syllabus is the same as in the above case. An examination of the act itself shows that a live corporation, and not a dead one, is contemplated. There must be a meeting of the corporators, and a majority must pray for permission either to surrender a power contained in the charter, or for the dissolution of the corporation. It provides for passing on accounts of the managers, directors or trustees, and for dividends of the effects, if any, to the corporators. Omitting the impracticability of having the old stockholders meet after they have surrendered their stock and the same has been canceled and destroyed, and confining our attention only to the provisions of the act in reference to the division of the assets, it will be seen that the act was not intended to apply to a case like the present.
Section 17 of the Act of June 15, 1923, P. L. 809, as amended by the Act of May 5, 1927, P. L. 762 (the only change made by the latter act was to omit the words “after having been liquidated”), may, after two years from July 1, 1929, be invoked by the attorney-general, but that act is not now before us. In our examination we fail to see that there is any necessity for further proceedings to dissolve the trust company for the following reasons: in Ex parte Worcester County National Bank, 279 U. S. 347, the lower court decided, quoting from Mr. Chief Justice Taft’s opinion, as follows: “The third question the court discussed and decided was the validity and binding effect on courts of Massachusetts of the declaration in section 3 of the Act of Congress that the right of succession as trustee, executor or in any other fiduciary capacity, would follow to the same extent as it was held and enjoyed by such state bank. It first inquired what was its meaning, and held that it meant that the original appointment of the state bank was to continue wholly unaffected by the fact that the state bank had ceased to be, and that another and different corporation, whose credit, standing and competency had never been the subject of judicial inquiry for this purpose, must be substituted by virtue of section 3. The court found that this result was in contravention of the law of the commonwealth and contrary to the state and Federal Constitutions.” Again, he said: “In passing on this appeal, we must observe that in determining the policy of a state from its statutes and their construction,
We think, after having read the decisions above, that entirely too much importance is attached to the matter of the dissolution of a corporation. All the authorities are to the effect that it may happen, either by act of the parties interested, or by the act of the law. If a bank, chartered under the state, can become a national bank without consulting the state, by virtue of a National Banking Act, why cannot a trust company merge with a national bank without the consent of the state, under the provisions of section 3, supra, even if such merger works a dissolution of the trust company? See opinion of Mr. Chief Justice Rugg in 162 N. E. Repr. 217. When the state takes the position which seems to have been taken by the Massachusetts court, that the franchise directed to be transeferred to the national bank, does not mean its charter or its right to be a corporation, is not such a position an interference with a result authorized by Congress, of the same character as those frowned upon in N. P. R. Co. v. North Dakota, 250 U. S. 135; Telephone Co. v. South Dakota, 250 U. S. 163; Second Employers’ Liability Cases, 223 U. S. 1; First National Bank v. Fellows, 244 U. S. 416, and Missouri ex rel. Burnes National Bank v. Duncan, 265 U. S. 17? There seems to us to be no difference in principle. We do not think that the state can compel the trust company to proceed under the Act of 1856.
The mere fact that there is on our statute books the Act of 1856, providing for a voluntary surrender, and the Act of 1927, providing for an adverse proceeding by the attorney-general, does not make such consolidation “in contravention of the law of the state under which such bank is incorporated.”
The petition avers that the trust company has paid all taxes due the Commonwealth, and that it has no outstanding liabilities of any kind. For the purpose of getting the name “Northampton Trust Company” off of the records at Harrisburg, if that has not already been accomplished by filing the certificate of the comptroller of the currency, then the state will have to act by the attorney-general under the Act of May 5, 1927, P. L. 762, supra".
We have been furnished with an opinion by Judge Fox, of Dauphin County, in Commonwealth of Pennsylvania v. Safe Deposit Bank and Trust Company, 14 D. & C. 267. Judge Fox said: “The Commonwealth is asking for a decree
And now, March 10, 1930, this cause came on to be heard at this term, and was argued by counsel, and upon consideration thereof, it is ordered, adjudged and decreed that the first, fifth, sixth, seventh, ninth and tenth causes of demurrer be allowed, and that the petition be dismissed with costs.
The prothonotary will enter this decree nisi, and give notice of same to parties or their counsel, and if no exceptions are filed within ten days, this decree shall be entered by him as a final decree.
Prom Henry D. Maxwell, Easton, Pa.
