Cameron v. City of Bank of York

Supreme Court of Pennsylvania
Cameron v. City of Bank of York, 130 A. 407 (Pa. 1925)
284 Pa. 187; 1925 Pa. LEXIS 492
Moschzisker, Frazer, Walling, Simpson, Kephart, Sadler, Schaefer

Cameron v. City of Bank of York

Opinion of the Court

Per Curiam,

The Commissioner of Banking, now Secretary of Banking, assumed possession of the State Bank of York, Pa., because of its insolvency, and proceeded, under the law, to administer its affairs. He filed an account with a schedule of distribution, which was excepted to by various creditors, and, upon disposition of these exceptions, distribution was ordered, to which order the Secretary of Banking, alone, took exception, and, from the final decree confirming it, he alone has appealed.

*189 Neither appellant nor the Commonwealth has any legal interest in the decree of distribution from which this appeal is taken. The Act of July 7, 1919, P. L. 731, relied on by appellant, has no application to such decrees, for in them neither the Commonwealth nor any officer thereof is a party interested. The Secretary of Banking, as the representative of all the distributees, may defend a claim against the estate and appeal from a judgment or decree allowing it, and this is all that, is decided in 3d Corpus Juris 659, cited by appellant in his brief against the present motion to quash; but where, as here, the dispute was between two classes of distributees, he no more represents the one than he does the other, and hence has no standing to appeal for the benefit of either.

The appeal is quashed.

Reference

Full Case Name
Cameron, Appellant v. City Bank of York
Cited By
14 cases
Status
Published