DocketNumber: Appeal, 32
Judges: Stadtfeld, Keller, Cunningham, Baldrige, Stadteeld, Parker, James, Rhodes
Filed Date: 12/11/1935
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
Argued December 11, 1935. A petition was filed by the Philadelphia Investment Building and Loan Association to reduce its liability to stockholders, in accordance with the Act of May 5, 1933, P.L. 457, Section 621, PS Title 15, Section 1074.
The petition alleged that most of the association's assets were second mortgages, and that the Board of Directors ordered an appraisal, examination and audit of the assets and liabilities. The appraisals showed that the fair value of the assets was 50% less than the total amount due all shareholders, (including those who gave notice of withdrawal), which was approved by the Directors. The Department of Banking also approved the appraisals and the application for reduction.
Appellant's answer admitted the averments in the petition, but set up under New Matter that she held full-paid stock in the Ever Ready Building and Loan Association, which Association merged on September 21, 1931, with petitioner, and since the merger notices of withdrawal were filed both orally and in writing by the appellant, and that the petition cannot apply to her because, being a full-paid stockholder, she is a preferred creditor. *Page 150
On April 15, 1935, after hearing, the lower court granted the prayer of the petition and ordered that liability of petitioner to shareholders be reduced 50% of the amounts paid in to said Association, and in an opinion filed by KUN, J., held that appellant being a full-paid stockholder had no greater right than an installment stockholder. Exception to this ruling was taken by appellant and this appeal followed.
From the pleadings and the case presented to the lower court, the only question involved was appellant's right to be preferred because she was a full-paid stockholder. She at no time occupied the position of a dissenting stockholder in the merger, and the decisions under such circumstances do not apply.
In her answer she avers that "many notices of withdrawal have been filed by your deponent, both orally and in writing, from 1931 to date." There was no averment, nor was there any proof that she gave a notice prior to September 21, 1931, the date of the merger. There is no definite averment of any particular or specific notice.
Appellant relies upon the case of Weinroth v. Homer Bldg.
Loan Assn.,
Likewise in Brown v. Victor Bldg. Assn.,
In Stone v. Schiller Bldg. Loan Assn.,
We do not believe that there was any impairment of the vested rights as contended by appellant. Appellant's right to withdraw was under certain limitations; that is, the Acts of Assembly provided that at no time shall more than one-half of the funds in the treasury of the *Page 152 association be applicable to the demands of withdrawing stockholders, and payment of the value of the stock so withdrawn shall only be due when the funds so applicable are sufficient to meet and liquidate the same, and then only in the order of the respective times of presentation of the notice of such withdrawals, which must be in writing.
As stated in 12 C.J. 955: "Rights are vested when the right to enjoyment, present or prospective, has become the property of some particular person or persons as a present interest."
As stated by DAVIS, P.J., In re: Great Oak Building and Loan Assn., 22 Pa. D. C. 156: "It was evidently the purpose of the Building and Loan Code of 1933 to distribute the losses equitably among all members, and to sustain the claim of Higgins would be to afford him a preference. Nor does the petition impair any of his rights, for it merely is official recognition of the existing fact of shrinkage of his pro rata share of the assets."
We see no error in the decree of the lower court.
The assignments of error are overruled and decree affirmed at costs of appellant.