First National Bank v. Lasalle-Wacker Building Corp.

280 Ill. App. 188, 1935 Ill. App. LEXIS 374
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedMay 6, 1935
DocketGen. No. 37,935
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 280 Ill. App. 188 (First National Bank v. Lasalle-Wacker 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. Lasalle-Wacker Building Corp., 280 Ill. App. 188, 1935 Ill. App. LEXIS 374 (Ill. Ct. App. 1935).

Opinions

Mr. Presiding Justice O’Connor

delivered the opinion of the court.

By this appeal defendants, Halsey, Stuart & Co., reorganization manager, LaSalle-Wacker Corporation, and Phelps Kelley, seek to reverse an order entered awarding $15,000 in payment for services rendered by solicitors for certain bondholders, and $1,578.07 in payment of disbursements made by the chairman of such bondholders ’ committee.

The record discloses that The First National Bank of Chicago as trustee filed a foreclosure suit on behalf of the holders of $6,500,000 Series A Bonds executed by the LaSalle-Wacker Building Corporation, to finance the cost of constructing a large building. $8,000,000 worth of bonds were issued consisting of $6,500,000 Series A bonds and $1,500,000 Series B bonds. The foreclosure suit contemplated a plan for a reorganization of the property, and defendant Halsey, Stuart & Co., the underwriter of the bond issue, and defendant Phelps Kelley, who was associated with that house, and others, prepared a plan for such reorganization. Certain of the holders of Series A bonds were not satisfied with the plan on the claimed ground that the interest of such bondholders was not properly protected, and sought to intervene in the foreclosure suit. The chancellor refused to permit them to intervene until the property had been sold by the master in chancery, when they could object to the confirmation of the report. The property was sold by the master on March 23, 1934, and on May 19, 1934, an order was entered permitting J. L. Monaghan, Dr. C. Gr. Johnson and Kenneth C. Lindsay to intervene for the protection of certain bondholders of Series A bonds. Before they were permitted to intervene they brought a suit in the United States District Court and another suit in the circuit court of Cook county, seeking to enjoin the parties in the instant case from carrying out their proposed reorganization plan. These two suits were dismissed and afterward, as stated, leave was given to these parties to intervene in the foreclosure suit.

As a result of the intervention of Monaghan and others on behalf of certain owners of Series A bonds, the plan proposed by the parties in the foreclosure suit was materially changed and modified. The original plan provided for the approval of it by persons who had deposited their bonds with a bondholders’ committee without submitting the plan to the court for approval or for the right of bondholders to participate in it after the hearing. The plan was modified and changed by the decree as finally entered.

The plan as modified, counsel for interveners say, “gave the bondholders the opportunity to control the property rather than to have Halsey, Stuart & Co. control it,” as the plan originally provided. A number of other changes in the proposed plan were brought about through the intervention of Monaghan and others which, as found by the court, resulted in benefit to all the bondholders and stockholders in the reorganized property.

In passing on the question of allowing fees to the solicitors involved in the matter before us, the court said: “Well, they [the intervenors] have accomplished the modification of the plan of reorganization whether you deny it or not. . . . And I think, the record ought to show that it is the opinion and the deliberate judgment of the court that the objecting bondholders in this proceeding have been of greater assistance to the Court in the manner in which they have presented their objections toward the modification of the plan and the adoption of the plan, which I think is infinitely more beneficial to the bondholders, than in any proceeding that has come to my attention; they have approached it in a lawyer-like and sensible way; they filed their objections specifically; have presented them; they presented their reasons for them; there has been a great deal of time spent in doing that, and it has been done, I think, in a way that resulted in a better plan, and it has been of great help to the Court.” And later the court further said: “Now, it seems to me it would be ridiculous to invite bondholders to come in and object where they have a valid objection and where their objections, many of them, are ultimately sustained, and then say for those services they should not be paid anything, but that the attorneys and the parties who otherwise were interested should be paid for everything they do. I assume that the Halsey Stuart committee and the building, corporation, and everybody else here who has retained counsel, have been paid. . .It seems to me it would be rather a perversion of justice to say that the objectors, simply because they are in the minority, should not be paid, and I have not yet heard any objections or any valid reason stating why they should not. . . . and where their objections have substance to them, and I say that in this case, I think, more than in any matter that has come to my attention, the objections were made in good faith and were valid objections, and were well presented.

. “Now if you say that they should not be compensated for that, then I say that nobody else in the proceeding ought to be compensated for anything they did, because they have not any different interest, — the difference is only in the matter of degree.”

. It further appears from the record that The First National Bank, as trustee, was represented by counsel and for a part of the same period of time the same counsel represented the Halsey, Stuart & Company committee which had done the work in the preparation of the original proposed plan of reorganization. For the services they rendered the complainant trustee' $25,000 was awarded, and for services rendered to the Halsey-Stuart committee $9,800. The attorneys for the building corporation were paid $20,000 by the reorganization manager, but without court approval, $5,000 of which was claimed for services rendered in the collection of rent. As stated by the chancellor, counsel for all the parties appear to have been paid substantial sums for the services they performed.

The solicitors whose fees are involved in the instant case prepared an itemized statement of the services they rendered, which tends to show, as stated by one of the solicitors, that they had necessarily expended 1,500 hours. On the hearing before the chancellor the attorneys claimed $25,000 for such services. The court refused this amount and stated he would allow $10 an hour for 1,500 hours, or a total of $15,000. The $1,578.07 was for disbursements made by the intervenors which were shown by the itemized statement.

On the hearing of the matter before the chancellor one of the solicitors for the complainant, The First National Bank of Chicago, as trustee, who filed the bill, stated, “Well, my feeling, your Honor, is that the only interest that the trustee [the complainant] has is to see that it is not an unreasonable amount. . . . My own feeling is that these gentlemen [solicitors for intervenors] are entitled to compensation.”

On the hearing counsel for defendants who appeal objected to the allowance of the solicitors’ fees on the ground that the bondholders did not understand that the solicitors expected to be paid because some of the statements. made in writing (in the nature of letters by the intervenors to bondholders) stated that the bondholders would not be obligated in any way; also that Mr. Monaghan would bear all the expenses incurred.

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Bluebook (online)
280 Ill. App. 188, 1935 Ill. App. LEXIS 374, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/first-national-bank-v-lasalle-wacker-building-corp-illappct-1935.