Brown v. Security Nat. Bank of Greensboro in Re Carolina Mills, Inc

200 F.2d 405, 1952 U.S. App. LEXIS 3511
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedDecember 16, 1952
Docket6508_1
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 200 F.2d 405 (Brown v. Security Nat. Bank of Greensboro in Re Carolina Mills, Inc) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brown v. Security Nat. Bank of Greensboro in Re Carolina Mills, Inc, 200 F.2d 405, 1952 U.S. App. LEXIS 3511 (4th Cir. 1952).

Opinion

PARKER, Chief Judge.

This is another appeal in the reorganization proceedings of Carolina Mills, Inc. The appeal here is by David H. Brown, principal creditor and sole stockholder of the corporation, from an order of the District Court allowing attorneys’ fees in the sum of $8,000 to counsel for the Jefferson Standard Life Insurance Company, a creditor of the corporation, secured by a deed of trust on its plant and machinery, and the Security National Bank of Greensboro, trustee under the deed of trust.

The debtor corporation had borrowed from the insurance company on November 5, 1946 the sum of $300,000 and had issued its first mortgage bonds in that amount secured by the deed of trust. When the petition for reorganization of the debtor corporation was filed and approved on November 11, 1948, there was due on these bonds, which had been declared in default, a balance of $138,750. The deed of trust contained the following provisions as to attorney’s fees:

“Article IX, Section 2(a): The Trustee may, and upon request in writing by the (holders of a majority of the bonds hereby secured then outstanding and unpaid and upon offering to the Trustee adequate indemnity against any and all loss, liability, costs and expenses, shall proceed with the collection of11 the amount due upon said bonds, and any other sums due by the Company as herein provided by suit, foreclosure, or other judicial proceedings, and may apply to the Court for a sale of the property and for appointment of a receiver thereof, and shall take such steps as may be necessary or-proper for the enforcement of said indebtedness against the security given.. In any such proceedings at law or in, equity commenced by the Trustee, the-Trustee shall, as a matter of right, be entitled ex parte to the appointment of a receiver of and for all and singular the trust estate herein described, and; by and through said receiver. In any such proceeding, the Trustee shall be allowed all his expenses, costs and charges, including any and all attorney’s fees incurred. * * *.
“Article XI * * * Section 4(f). The Trustee shall have a lien on the property conveyed and the proceeds thereof * * * for its reasonable expenses, counsel fees, compensation for services rendered, and advances made by it in the discharge of the duties devolving upon it, pursuant to the provisions hereof. * * * ”

Upon the filing and approval of the petition for reorganization on November 11, 1948 the court appointed trustees to- continue the operation of the textile manufacturing plant of the debtor, which had not only mortgaged its plant and machinery under the deed of trust hereinbefore mentioned, but had also given a factor’s lien upon its stock in process and receivables for advancements which it had re *407 ceived from a New York corporation that was selling its product. The insurance company and the trustee employed Will-cox, Hardee, Houck and Palmer, attorneys at law of Florence, S. C., to protect their interest under the deed of trust and to take such steps as might be necessary to collect the balance due on the bonds. Within less than a month after the filing of the petition for reorganization these attorneys filed a petition with the court asking that the trustee be allowed to proceed with the foreclosure of the deed of trust and asserting that the rights of creditors and particularly of their clients would be prejudiced by the proceedings for reorganization. This petition was denied, hut similar efforts to obtain a foreclosure were made by the attorneys at hearings had on July 1, 1949 and January 11, 1950. Not succeeding in their efforts to have the property released to them for foreclosure, the attorneys gave attention to the operation of the plant by the trustees, attended numerous hearings relating thereto and recommended to the court and secured approval of orders requiring interim payments of interest and of maturing bonds. In this way they collected on the bonds approximately $50,000 before the plan of reorganization was carried out in September 1952. Under the plan they have collected the balance due on the principal and interest. They asked attorneys’ fees in the sum of $10,000 and filed affidavits of reputable and outstanding members of the bar that their services were reasonably worth that amount, one of the attorneys valuing them at as much as $12,-500. No affidavits in contradiction were filed.

We think there can be no question but that allowance of attorneys’ fees for services such as were rendered here was provided for under the terms of the deed of trust which we have quoted. Upon the approval of the petition for reorganization, it certainly was the duty of the trustee to intervene in the reorganization proceedings and see that proper steps were taken therein to collect the amount due under the bonds and to protect the security covered by the deed of trust, which has been taken into possession and was being operated by the trustees of the bankruptcy court; and it was clearly the intention of the parties, as evidenced by the passage quoted, that expenses so incurred including counsel fees should constitute a charge on the mortgaged property. Such intervention was certainly a “step” both “proper” and “necessary” for enforcing the indebtedness secured by the deed of trust against the security given, and was unquestionably a judicial proceeding entered upon for the purpose of collection. It is immaterial that such proceeding was not an independent one but was taken in connection with the bankruptcy reorganization which had been commenced. It was none the less a necessary proceeding in a court and was entered upon for the purpose of preserving rights under the deed of trust and for collecting the indebtedness thereby secured. Legal services rendered to the trustee in connection therewith are just the sort of services which the quoted passages of the deed of trust were intended to cover.

Directly in point is the South Carolina decision of Branyan v. Kay, 33 S.C. 283, 11 S.E. 970, 971. In that case a mortgage of real estate securing a note provided for the payment of attorneys’ fees if the note should be collected by suit. Upon the death of the mortgagor, the heirs commenced a proceeding to partition the land and the mortgagee wa's made a party to the proceeding, in which the rights of the mortgagee as holder of the note were adjudicated. In holding that an allowance of attorneys’ fees in accordance with the stipulation of the mortgage was proper, the Supreme Court of South Carolina said:

“The only question, then, is whether the money was ‘collected by suit.’ There certainly was a legal proceeding, which resulted in its collection. True it is that in that proceeding the company was not the plaintiff. Mrs. Bran-yan died, and the heirs took the initiative for partition, but they made the company a party defendant, and they answered claiming affirmative relief. ‘The word “suit” is a generic term, and denotes any legal proceeding of a civil kind by one person against another. The term is, however, used in opposition to “action;” “suit” being the proper word for a litigation in chancery. *408 and “action” for a contest in a court of law.’ 2 Rap. Si L. Law Diet. 1235. The suit here was in equity, where, although ' all parties having an interest should be before the court, not much stress is laid upon the fact whether they are named as plaintiffs or defendants. As Mr. Adams (Eq.

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Bluebook (online)
200 F.2d 405, 1952 U.S. App. LEXIS 3511, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brown-v-security-nat-bank-of-greensboro-in-re-carolina-mills-inc-ca4-1952.