First National Bank v. Bryn Mawr Beach Building Corp.

283 Ill. App. 267, 1936 Ill. App. LEXIS 643
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJanuary 13, 1936
DocketGen. No. 38,246
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 283 Ill. App. 267 (First National Bank v. Bryn Mawr Beach Building Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
First National Bank v. Bryn Mawr Beach Building Corp., 283 Ill. App. 267, 1936 Ill. App. LEXIS 643 (Ill. Ct. App. 1936).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Friend

delivered the opinion of the court.

Subsequent to the entry of a decree of foreclosure and sale by the superior court an intervening petition was filed by a protective committee, after the term in which the foreclosure decree had been entered, to construe the terms of a deposit agreement, approve a plan of reorganization and confirm the foreclosure sale held in pursuance of the plan. Before the confirmation of the sale one of the nondepositing bondholders filed a petition asking that the foreclosure proceeding be consolidated with a suit for the liquidation of the mortgagor corporation which had been filed in the same court prior thereto. The court permitted the filing of the petition but denied the prayer thereof, approved the report of sale and with certain modifications also the plan of reorganization submitted by the committee, directed the trustee, who had been in possession of the property during the pendency of the suit, to file a report and account of its operations, and to distribute the net operating income on hand pro rata among all the bondholders. From that order certain objecting bondholders, who will hereinafter be referred to as respondents, have prosecuted this appeal.

It appears that October 1, 1931, the mortgagor, Bryn Mawr Beach Building Corporation, paid the instalment of interest which became due on that date on all outstanding bonds, but failed to pay the $200,000 principal amount of bonds which had then matured. December 17, 1931, the default having continued for more than 30 days, the trustee, in accordance with the provisions of the trust deed, accelerated the maturity of all outstanding bonds, aggregating $6,000,000, and filed its bill for foreclosure. A foreclosure decree was entered February 20,1934.

During the pendency of the proceeding the trustee operated the mortgaged property for the benefit of all bondholders. The mortgagor corporation and the tenants of the building were designated as defendants in the foreclosure suit, and David H. Brill, who was appointed by the court as attorney for the nondepositing bondholders, appeared before the master to whom the foreclosure proceeding had been referred and the court on behalf of nondepositing bondholders throughout the proceeding. January 11,1935, the master published notice that the foreclosure sale would be held February 4, 1935. January 17, 1935, the trustee caused notice of the time and place of the sale to be mailed to all nondepositing bondholders. Harold C. Bull, acting as the nominee for the protective committee, bid in the property for the sum of $1,040,225.

Thereafter, February 9, 1935, the committee filed its petition averring in substance that it represented the holders of $5,183,400 of the outstanding bonds and that it had caused Bull to bid at the master’s sale as its nominee; that it had on December 18,1934, formulated a plan of reorganization for the property in connection with its bid at the foreclosure sale, and that it desired the court to consider the plan, notice of which had previously, on December 18, 1934, been sent to all non-depositing and depositing" bondholders; that it desired the court to determine whether the' plan was fair, equitable and just and within the rights and powers fixed in the deposit agreement under which the committee was acting; that it desired the court to supervise the consummation of the plan and accord to all bondholders who had not previously deposited their bonds an opportunity to participate in the plan upon such terms as the court might direct. The court allowed the committee to file its petition, authorized the issuance of process to certain depositing bondholders as representatives of all depositing bondholders and to certain nondepositing bondholders as representatives of that class. By the same order the court set the master’s report of sale and the petition for hearing March 20, 1935, and directed the master to notify all depositing and nondepositing’ bondholders of the time and place of the hearing, and that they might on that date present objections to the confirmation of the sale or to the plan of reorganization. Pursuant to that order the master sent a notice to all bondholders February 16, 1935, advising them of the hearing upon the proposed plan and confirmation of the foreclosure sale, and that any bondholder might file objections thereto and be heard by the court. When the matter came on for hearing March 20 and 21, 1935, certain evidence was introduced by the committee and by respondents, and bondholders were advised that the committee would welcome any changes in the plan of reorganization which the court might consider advisable for their protection. The court then took the matter under advisement until April 3,1935. On that date Bernard D. Harris filed a petition asking that the foreclosure proceedings be consolidated with a suit for liquidation of the mortgagor corporation which he had filed in the superior court February 28, 1935. When his petition was presented no process had been served upon the mortgagor corporation in the liquidation suit, and it was not at issue. The court permitted the filing of the petition, but denied the prayer thereof, entered an order approving the report of sale, the plan of reorganization submitted by the committee with some modifications, and, as heretofore stated, directed the trustee to account, provided that objections to its account be filed within a short date and ordered the distribution of the net operating expenses pro rata among all bondholders.

The property under foreclosure consists of a 19-story and basement apartment hotel, located at 5555 Sheridan road, adjoining the Edgewater Beach Hotel. The building contains a total of about 1,550 rooms, composing apartments of various sizes, mostly unfurnished. There are numerous shops on the street level, the building contains a large garage, swimming pool, dining room, barber shop, beauty parlor and commissary. A total of 7,754 bonds, for the aggregate principal amount of $6,000,000, were issued and outstanding against the property. When the reorganization plan was announced, December 18, 1934, more than 3,150 persons had deposited bonds aggregating $5,183,400 with the committee, and some 750 persons had not deposited their bonds.

Respondents advance two major contentions for reversal of the court’s supplemental order or decree. It is first urged that the court lacked jurisdiction to pass upon the plan and to construe the deposit agreement, after the expiration of the term during which the foreclosure decree was entered. Respondents take the position that the committee’s petition was filed as a pretext for invoking the court’s jurisdiction to construe an agreement which was in nowise ambiguous and required no construction or interpretation; that the decree became final February 20, 1934, and the court reserved jurisdiction therein solely to pass upon the approval of the sale and the trustee’s accounting or to enforce the provisions of the decree; and that since none of these matters was made the subject matter of the petition the court was wholly without jurisdiction to entertain the intervening petition after term.

It may be conceded that this was a final decree. (Myers v. Manny, 63 Ill. 211, 213; Kirby v. Runals, 140 Ill. 289, 295.) Respondents cite two Illinois cases and one recent decision of the Circuit Court of Appeals (U. S.) for this district, to support the contention that ' the court lacked jurisdiction. In Totten v. Totten, 299 Ill.

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283 Ill. App. 267, 1936 Ill. App. LEXIS 643, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/first-national-bank-v-bryn-mawr-beach-building-corp-illappct-1936.