Alex Caplan v. C. Gordon Anderson
This text of 256 F.2d 416 (Alex Caplan v. C. Gordon Anderson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
This is an appeal, 11 U.S.C.A. §§ 47, 521, from two orders, one entered on January 31, the other on February 10, 1958, in a “Proceeding for Reorganization 1 in the Matter of T. M. T. Traylor, Inc., Debtor No. 3659 — M—Bankruptcy.”
Brought here by the trustee in two first preferred ship mortgages on four vessels given to secure the sum of $300,000, the object of the appeal was and is to obtain a review of the actions and orders of the district court denying it the relief sought. This as appellant states it in his brief, was “to vacate in respect of his two mortgages a stay enjoining enforcement of liens upon property of the debtor and to obtain leave to foreclose the mortgages and to adjudicate the debtor bankrupt.”
In emphasis of his plight, his need for relief therefrom, and the consequences of its continuance, appellant begins his brief with this preliminary statement:
“Although this proceeding has been pending 9 months (as of the date of the preparation of this brief), the Court below has never taken any testimony herein. All matters have been summarily decided on perfunctory and often curtailed oral argument.
“To appellant’s various petitions, some documented, no answer has ever been filed by appellees or any other party, so that they necessarily stand undenied or admitted. They were nevertheless uniformly denied or not acted upon by the Court below.
“To every petition filed by appel-lees and contested by appellant, he served a responsive pleading. None *418 of the issues so framed was ever tried, nor did the court below make (or could it have made) adverse findings or conclusions. In almost each instance, however, appellant’s objections were disregarded or overridden.”
Thus beginning and focusing attention upon the fact that the court took no evidence upon the condition of the debtor, the plight of the mortgage creditor, the prospects for, or even the chance of effecting a reorganization, he relies also upon the inadequacies and insufficiencies of the ground relied on by the district judge in the order of February 10th for denying his petitions. This, as stated in the order, was:
“That with the exception of one or two creditors all parties in interest have approved the continuance of the business of the Debtor, which involves the denying of the petition of the mortgage creditor Alex Cap-lan who is not, in the Court’s opinion, being harmed except by the use of his property for which the Court has ordered the Trustee to reserve for immediate mortgage payment a reasonable compensation, and that in the Court’s opinion the petitioner Alex Caplan appears to be amply secured and that Trustee’s operation involves no greater risk than did the debtor’s, and for these reasons it is
“Ordered and Adjudged that the petition and supplemental petition of the said Alex Caplan be and the same are hereby denied without prejudice to his right to renew his petition in the event future developments warrant
Urging upon us that on the record it appears: that no one has come up with a plan for reorganization; that no evidence has been offered to show that there is any probability, indeed possibility, of a successful reorganization, none that plaintiffs’ security is not being jeopardized; that, while no evidence has been taken in support of any of the court’s orders, the facts of record as to the large secured indebtedness make it apparent that no successful reorganization could occur; that the court has never received any sworn testimony or documentary proof, of debtor’s assets and liabilities, as to whether it has any equity in any assets, or whether it has operated or could operate at a profit or a loss; that no accounting has been filed and very few assets have been appraised; appellant hammers on his theme that it is crystal clear that debtor’s position is utterly hopeless, and appellant’s security is being jeopardized in an indefensible speculation. Arguing from these premises and invoking the law that a stay may not properly be issued as the automatic result of a petition for reorganization and if granted may not be continued in the absence of a clear showing that a reasonably early reorganization is feasible, and insisting that these proceedings have been begun and continued solely on the basis of the speculative hopes and wishful thinking of those who, having nothing to lose and everything to gain if the speculation turns out to be a success, appellant, urging upon us that the order appealed from should be reversed with directions to dismiss the proceeding, cites many cases supporting his view. 2
Pointing to the fact that Sec. 546, 11 U.S.C.A. provides that “petition shall be deemed not to be filed in good faith if * * * (3) it is unreasonable to ex *419 pect that a plan of reorganization can be effected” and invoking the principle of law that whatever might have been the case at the time the petition was filed, whenever want of good faith in the foregoing sense appears, the proceedings should be forthwith dismissed, it insists that it has been and is being deprived of due process in the enforcement of its mortgages and that the judgment should be reversed with directions to afford him relief.
Appellees state the question for decision as follows:
“Has the reorganization court abused its discretion in refusing to grant the appellant’s petition to modify the stay order of the court in order that the appellant may proceed to foreclose his mortgages on the vessels encumbered, the effect of which would be to put the debtor in reorganization completely out of business?”
Insisting that it should be answered in the negative and citing the decision of this court in Central Hanover Bank & Trust Co. v. Callaway, 135 F.2d 592, they urge upon us that the record will show: that there has been progress made toward the liquidation of a substantial portion of the balance of the obligations to appellant; and that, as in the Central Hanover case, the record in the court below, under the circumstances surrounding and attending the proceedings, supports the orders and actions of the court.
Pointing to the differences in the time that the restraining orders had been allowed to remain in effect in the Murel and Prudence cases relied on by appellant and to the fact that the judge below stated in his order that the appellant was amply secured for his indebtedness and further ordered that the petition be denied without prejudice to the right to renew his motion to vacate the stay order in the event further developments warrant, appellees insist that no abuse of discretion is shown and that the judgment should be affirmed.
Of the clear opinion: that the order appealed from should be reversed with directions for an immediate and full hearing on appellant’s petition for relief, because (1) it was entered without a hearing and determination on the merits of appellant’s claim for relief, 3
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256 F.2d 416, 1958 U.S. App. LEXIS 4936, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/alex-caplan-v-c-gordon-anderson-ca5-1958.