Brooklyn Trust Co. v. Kelby

134 F.2d 105, 1943 U.S. App. LEXIS 3497
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedFebruary 16, 1943
Docket163
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 134 F.2d 105 (Brooklyn Trust Co. v. Kelby) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brooklyn Trust Co. v. Kelby, 134 F.2d 105, 1943 U.S. App. LEXIS 3497 (2d Cir. 1943).

Opinion

FRANK, Circuit Judge.

Brooklyn Trust Company (which we shall call Brooklyn) brought suit in the Ncw York Supreme Court against the President and Directors of the Manhattan Company (which we shall call Manhattan), also joining as defendants a New York company (resulting from the reorganization under Bankr.Act § 77B, 11 U.S.C.A. § 207 of Prudence-Bonds Corporation, which we shall call the debtor) and two holders of bonds of the debtor. The United States District Court for the Eastern District of New York, sitting in the bankruptcy , reorganization proceeding of the debtor, entered an order restraining, temporarily, the prosecution or defense of that suit. Brooklyn appeals from that order.

1. This appeal is a chapter of a reorganization proceeding, begun some nine years ago, which has given rise to many earlier appeals. For an understanding of the present appeal, it is necessary to recite a portion of the complicated story. 1

The debtor, over a period of some fourteen years, sold throughout the country and abroad, great numbers of its bonds, divided into eighteen separate “series,” the bonds in each series being secured by separate “pools” of mortgages title to which was held by divers corporate trustees under separate trust agreements, one for each series. Each trust agreement reserved to the debtor the power to withdraw mortgages from the “pool” upon substituting other securities of equal value. The debt- or, becoming financially embarrassed, filed a petition for reorganization under § 77B of the Bankruptcy Act in June, 1934. There ensued many decisions relating to the rights of the bondholders and the corporate trustees. 2

In 1938, the bankruptcy court entered an order approving separate plans for each of the “series” of bonds and a “general” plan for the debtor, the court having found *108 that there was no “equity” for the debtor’s general creditors or stockholders. Under the “general” plan, a new company was to be created; its stock was to be placed in a voting trust, all the voting trust certificates to be distributed pro rata among the bondholders; the debtor and trustees in bankruptcy of the debtor were to transfer all their interests to this new company, which was to become liable on all the bonds. Under each of the separate plans for the several “series,” a separate supplemental trust agreement was to be made; each of the corporate trustees (which we shall call the old trustees) was to transfer the securities held by it to a new or successor corporate trustee. The order approving these reorganization plans reserved in the court jurisdiction to “give such further authorizations and directions as may be necessary in order to make effective, consummate and carry out, this order, the * * * plans of reorganization, and generally to determine any and all matters pertaining to these proceedings or to said * * * plans of reorganization and not determined heretofore or by this order.” This order, in it? entirety, was, on appeal, affirmed by this court; In re Prudence Bonds Corp., 2 Cir., 79 F.2d 205.

2. The bankruptcy court, as part of the proceedings to make effective and carry out the plans, then made an order which approved the form of the supplemental trust agreements; authorized and directed the debtor and its trustees in bankruptcy to assign all their right, title and interest in the collateral in the trust funds to the new company; authorized and directed the old corporate trustees to deliver their respective trust funds to the new corporate trustee under the supplemental trust agreements; designated a particular trust company as the new corporate trustee; and “authorized and directed” each of the old corporate trustees to file “in this proceeding” an account of its acts as trustee and to make application to the bankruptcy court for the judicial settlement of those accounts so that, after a hearing, such accounts should be “settled herein,” the order expressly providing that the “authorization and direction to account * * * ” should “not be prejudiced” by the fact that the old trustees were directed to turn the trust funds over to the new trustee “in advance of such accounting.”

None of the old corporate trustees ever objected to the order to account. 3 On the contrary, each of them, during the months of August and September, 1938, filed in the bankruptcy proceeding a purported accounting of its conduct as trustee from the inception of its trusteeship up to and subsequent to the date of the bankruptcy proceedings; and each old trustee also then filed a petition praying that the court judicially settle its account, releasing and discharging it from all responsibility as trustee, after a hearing given to all persons interested in the estate of the debtor, and for an order perpetually enjoining “all persons, firms and corporations from instituting or prosecuting or continuing the prosecution” of any suits including all suits then pending with respect to the trust agreements “or with respect to any matters contained in said accounts.” Pursuant to these petitions, the court entered orders that objections to such accounts be filed on or before a fixed date, and that hearings be held on subsequent named dates at which all parties to and intervenors in the bankruptcy proceedings, all creditors and stockholders of the debtor, and all other persons interested in the debtor’s estate, should show cause why the orders sought by the old trustees should not be made. Such notices were then given. 4

3. As the new corporate trustee, City Bank Farmers Trust Company, designated by the court was a trust company which had itself been an “old trustee” for some of the series, each of the supplemental trust agreements provided, at the instance of that trust company, that the new corporate trustee should “not be required to institute any actions, legal or equitable, against any of its predecessors as trustees under the *109 original trust agreement.” That clause was, of course, not intended to release the old corporate trustees from any such claims; provisions of each of the supplemental trust agreements and of the court’s order show that any such claims against the old trustees which, except for that clause, the successor trustee would have been obliged to pursue, were vested — derivatively and for the benefit of the respective trust funds— either in the new company or the bondholders. 5

When, in May 1938, the debtor and its trustees in bankruptcy, pursuant to the court’s order, transferred all their interests in the trust funds to the new company, neither the new company nor the trustees in bankruptcy nor the court were aware of any wrongful acts on the part of the old corporate trustees. Subsequently, the new company and the debtor’s trustees in bankruptcy asked the court for an extension of time in which to file objections to the accounts of the old corporate trustees, advising the court that they had just learned of facts which indicated that each of the old corporate trustees had, from time to time, negligently permitted the debtor, in the years before the bankruptcy, to withdraw collateral from the trust funds in violation of the trust agreements, without substitution of new securities of equal value, thereby depleting, as to each trust, the trust fund or res.

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Bluebook (online)
134 F.2d 105, 1943 U.S. App. LEXIS 3497, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brooklyn-trust-co-v-kelby-ca2-1943.