Continental Illinois Nat. Bank & Trust Co. v. Hession

97 F.2d 902, 1938 U.S. App. LEXIS 3891
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedJuly 7, 1938
DocketNo. 6438
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 97 F.2d 902 (Continental Illinois Nat. Bank & Trust Co. v. Hession) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Continental Illinois Nat. Bank & Trust Co. v. Hession, 97 F.2d 902, 1938 U.S. App. LEXIS 3891 (7th Cir. 1938).

Opinion

TREANOR, Circuit Judge.

This is an appeal in a section 74, Bankr. Act, 11 U.S.C.A. § 202, proceeding challenging the District Court’s order confirming debtor’s plan for extension, on the ground that the approved plan is not feasible.

Debtor is the owner of an apartment building at 7800-7802 South Marshfield Avenue (and 1641 W. 78th Street), Chicago, which contains twelve apartments. Debtor and her husband acquired the property in 1924 for $82,000, the purchase price being paid for in cash and trades. A first mortgage securing $30,000 of bonds ($27,-000 now outstanding) was executed April 15, 1930, maturing annually until 1935, with the Continental Bank as trustee. The bank now holds $24,000 of said issue. There is a $9,535 second mortgage, dated November 10, 1924, but not subordinated to the first mortgage, which is security for a $500 debt. The first mortgage carried interest at 6% (7% after default). Default occurred in October, 1932. The bank agreed to annual extensions, and in 1934 reduced the contract interest rate of 6% to 4%% and in November, 1935, further reduced it to 4%, interest paid at reduced rate being received as payment in full. Under these extensions debtor paid $40 monthly rent on her apartment and did the janitor work without charge. Foreclosure proceedings were instituted in December, 1936, and a receiver took possession. Section 74 proceedings were begun February 17, 1937.

Interest has not been paid since April 15, 1934. But at the time of the filing of the petition debtor had $636 on deposit with the bank, which the bank applied to payment of the interest maturing October 15, 1934.

Debtor scheduled $5,034 unsecured debts. The sole outside income of debtor consisted of $10 weekly payments to her by her son, and her husband’s weekly salary of $37.

The parties have stipulated that the fair cash market value of the -property is $27,000 (the amount of the principal of the mortgage) and that the net annual income (after payment of taxes, operating expenses and 3% interest) is $420 a year. One witness testified that approximately $2,000 is needed for repairs to place the building on a par with neighboring buildings and preserve the property. This expenditure would preserve the property and justify an increase of approximately $10 per month in the rental of each apartment. No repairs had been made on the build-' ing since the section 74 proceedings had been instituted.

Debtor’s husband quitclaimed his interest in the property to the debtor shortly before this proceeding was instituted, and pursuant to the plan, debtor and her husband have executed and placed in escrow, a deed to the property to the Bank, to be recorded in the event of their default (continued for 60 days) under the plan.

The material features of the approved plan are:

(1) Two years’ extension of maturity of principal and presently unpaid interest.
(2) Interest rate at 3% .(balance of contract rate of interest extended with other extensions).
(3) Debtor to be placed in possession and given an apartment rent free (valued at $42.50) in exchange for services, and required to file quarterly statements with the Clerk of the U. S. District Court.
(4) Gross income to be used first for operating expenses, real estate taxes, interest on notes, sinking fund for payment of delinquent interest on first mortgage and retirement of bonds.
(5) The court retains jurisdiction of the debtor and the subject matter during the period of the extension.

The debtor deposited $496.23 for the payment of real estate taxes assessed against the property and $100 for the cost of the proceeding.

The referee after carefully scrutinizing the factual situation estimated that there would be $900 net income available for sinking fund.

The chief question here presented is one of feasibility of the debtor’s proposed plan as approved by the referee and the [904]*904District Court. That we reasonably may doubt the .feasibility does not dispose of the question, since there are strong considerations in support of the conclusion of feasibility. To clarify the issue we have enumerated the arguments pro and con on the controversy of feasibility and present them here:

Pro:
(1) Debtor and her husband paid $82,000 in cash and trades for this property which' will be lost to them if this plan fails.
(2) The stipulated fair cash market value is now $27,000, from which it may be assumed that the real or intrinsic value of the property is greater than that sum.
(3) The plan contemplates only a short extension, namely, 2 years.
(4) The bank in the interim has in escrow the deed conveying property, which can be recorded after sixty days after default.
(5) The District Court retains jurisdiction of the debtor and the subject matter during the period of extension.
(6) There is a probability of -the sum of $900 net income annually available from the operation of the property for sinking fund purposes (the stipulated amount available is $420).
(7) Possibility of appreciation of real estate values in Chicago, and rise in rental values.
(8) Estimated $2,000 necessary for repairs (not covered by plan) are probably not as necessary as bank’s witness would intimate inasmuch as he thereafter states the property would be so improved, the rental on each apartment might be increased $10.
Con:
(1) No provision is made for repairs, estimated to require $2,000. No repairs have been made since Sec. 74 proceedings started in Feb. 1937.
(2) Bank has granted voluntary extensions twice since* 1932 and has reduced the interest fate twice and yet debtor has been unable to rehabilitate self, and there is no reason to believe she will be more fortunate in the future.
(3) There have been no consents to the plan.
(4) Property is now worth $27,000 which is the amount of the mortgage, and therefore it is not equal to the mortgage debt augmented by unpaid interest, and there is probability of acceleration of deterioration and depletion in absence of repairs.
(5) Postponement of half of the contract rate of interest (6%) until termination of the extension is claimed to be viola-tive of creditors’ constitutional rights.
(6) The small amount available ($420) from operation of the property will not be of much help, not being even equal to the postponed half of the interest rate.

This court several times has passed on the feasibility of plans for extension under Section 74, but has recognized the impossibility of attempting to state any definite rule or test of general applicability. An order approving a plan of extension was reversed when the facts were such that this court could say “that if the plan is consummated as debtor proposes and she realizes her fondest hopes and makes all payments contemplated, she will at the end of the extension period be overwhelmed with her debts, and liquidation is bound to follow.”1

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Bluebook (online)
97 F.2d 902, 1938 U.S. App. LEXIS 3891, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/continental-illinois-nat-bank-trust-co-v-hession-ca7-1938.