Holywell Corp. v. Bank of New York

59 B.R. 340, 1986 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 27878
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. Florida
DecidedMarch 20, 1986
Docket85-3225-CIV.; Bankruptcy 84-01590-BKC-TCB to 84-01594-BKC-TCB
StatusPublished
Cited by48 cases

This text of 59 B.R. 340 (Holywell Corp. v. Bank of New York) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Holywell Corp. v. Bank of New York, 59 B.R. 340, 1986 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 27878 (S.D. Fla. 1986).

Opinion

ORDER AFFIRMING CONFIRMATION ORDER AND PLAN

ARONOVITZ, District Judge.

I. THE NATURE OF THE APPEAL

THIS APPEAL involves, as appellants, five (5) related debtors who simultaneously filed Chapter 11 proceedings in the United States Bankruptcy Court, submitting almost identical Plans of Reorganization; and, as appellee, the principal creditor, the Bank of New York, a mortgage lien-holder for the subject real property development.

Appellants appeal from two (2) Orders of the Bankruptcy Judge, intertwined and interdependent:

*342 A. An Order approving the substantive consolidation of the debtors’ estates (Court Paper [“CP”] 840); and,
B. The trial court’s Order confirming the Plan of Reorganization proposed by the appellee here, the Bank of New York, the major creditor of the debtors’ estates (CP 906).

These appeals are taken from the Order approving Substantive Consolidation of the debtors’ estates and the Order Confirming the appellee’s Plan of Reorganization.

II. THE PARTIES AND THEIR RESPECTIVE INTERESTS

The debtors are as follows:

1. Holywell Corporation (“Holywell”) is a Delaware corporation, incorporated in 1976, which, together with its subsidiaries, owns, operates, and provides a full range of services for commercial real estate. Theodore B. Gould is the sole stockholder of Holywell.

2. Miami Center Limited Partnership (“MCLP”) is a Florida limited partnership which was formed in 1979. The general partners are Theodore B. Gould and Miami Center Corporation. There are numerous limited partners, which include Theodore B. Gould and Holywell. MCLP leased the land from Chopin Associates and then constructed the Miami Center Project on that land.

3. Miami Center Corporation (“MCC”), a Florida corporation, was incorporated in 1979. MCC is a subsidiary of Holywell. Holywell, in turn, is the principal stockholder of MCC.

4. Chopin Associates (“Chopin”), a Florida partnership composed of Theodore B. Gould and MCC, was formed in 1979 and is the owner of the land underlying the Miami Center.

5. Theodore B. Gould (“Gould”) is the sole stockholder, a director and president of Holywell, the president and a director of MCC, a general partner of MCLP, and a partner of Chopin Associates.

The Bank of New York (the “Bank”) was the construction lender for the Miami Center Project.

Construction of the Miami Center Project commenced in 1980. Chopin purchased the land and, together with MCLP, obtained a construction loan from the Bank of New York on March 23, 1980 in the initial amount of $112,500,000. Chopin’s mortgage was $23,000,000.

Gould, in addition to his interest in the Miami Center Project, also acquired four blocks of land, still vacant, adjacent to the Miami Center Project. That vacant land is not involved in these bankruptcy proceedings. Gould then entered into a joint venture in May 1981 with Olympia and York Florida Equity Corporation (“O & Y”), called the Miami Center Joint Venture (“MCJV”), which provided for the development of those blocks and further provided that O & Y would loan to MCJV $7,775,000. These funds were used by MCJV to acquire furniture, fixtures, and equipment (“FF & E”) which were leased to MCLP for use in the Pavilion Hotel and Podium, which are part of the bankruptcy estate. The MCJV-MCLP leases of FF & E were referred to by the parties and the Bank and in the proceedings below as Lease “A” and Lease “B”. MCJV is solvent and has not filed under the Bankruptcy Code.

MCLP also leased additional FF & E, including electronic and telephone equipment, from two subsidiaries of Holywell, Holywell Telecommunications Company (“Holywell Telecommunications”) and Ho-lywell Leasing Company (“Holywell Leasing”) (the “C” and “D” Leases, respectively) on February 1, 1983. Holywell and Gould supplied capital to Holywell Leasing and Holywell Telecommunications in the amount of $7,718,466 to purchase the FF & E which was leased by Holywell Telecommunications and Holywell Leasing to MCLP. Like MCJV, Holywell Telecommunications and Holywell Leasing are solvent companies and have not filed under the Bankruptcy Code.

The appellants are five (5) related or affiliated debtors which voluntarily sought *343 reorganization under the Bankruptcy Code. The debtors developed the Miami Center Project in downtown Miami. Only Phase I of that project was built. Phase I consists of an office building, a hotel, retail space connecting them, and a parking garage. The project failed financially, and several hundred 'creditors are still owed money by the debtors for goods and services. The appellee Bank was the construction lender for the project, and was owed more than $240,000,000. Total claims against the debtors exceed $350,000,000.

Over 400 creditors have or had an interest in these proceedings, of which at least 200 represent wage-earner claims. Since the confirmation of the appellee’s proposed plan of reorganization by the Bankruptcy Court’s Confirmation Order (which Order is the subject of this appeal), the Liquidating Trustee has paid, or has reserved funds to pay, all creditors in Classes 1 through 6, as those classifications were drawn under the Plan. 1 The amount paid out to claimants or “reserved” for payment by the Liquidating Trustee thus far is approximately $14 million, leaving approximately $8.9 million dollars remaining in the consolidated debtors’ estates to pay the remaining creditors’ claims.

III. PROCEDURAL HISTORY

The Chapter 11 proceedings, which culminated in the Order of Confirmation from which this appeal is taken, were initiated through the filing of voluntary petitions under Chapter 11 by each of the five debtors/appellants who are parties to this appeal. The voluntary petitions for reorganization were filed by the debtors on August 22, 1984, less than a month after the appel-lee had initiated foreclosure proceedings in state court upon declaring the debtors’ mortgage loans on the Miami Center to be in default.

In the course of Chapter 11 reorganization proceedings, both the debtors and the Bank of New York filed competing reorganization plans. The five debtors each submitted a separately filed plan, but the content of the five debtors’ plans was virtually identical. (The details of the competing plans are discussed in Part IV of this opinion, infra.) The various creditors’ committees and individual creditors, upon consideration of the competing plans, overwhelmingly approved the Plan of the appellee, the Bank of New York, and rejected the debtors’ Plans. The Bank’s Plan was subsequently confirmed by the Bankruptcy Court (CP 906).

The debtors then sought, unsuccessfully, to stay the implementation of the confirmed Plan, pending appeal to the United States District Court. When the Bankruptcy Court conditioned the issuance of such a stay upon the posting of a supersedeas bond in the amount of $140 million dollars (CP 1013), the debtors filed an emergency motion in the United States District Court seeking relief from the bond requirement.

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Bluebook (online)
59 B.R. 340, 1986 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 27878, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/holywell-corp-v-bank-of-new-york-flsd-1986.