In Re After Six, Inc.

177 B.R. 219, 25 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. 2d (West) 928, 1995 Bankr. LEXIS 41, 1995 WL 29610
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedJanuary 23, 1995
Docket19-10932
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 177 B.R. 219 (In Re After Six, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re After Six, Inc., 177 B.R. 219, 25 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. 2d (West) 928, 1995 Bankr. LEXIS 41, 1995 WL 29610 (Pa. 1995).

Opinion

OPINION

DAVID A. SCHOLL, Chief Judge.

A. INTRODUCTION

The instant contested matter is an Objection (“the Objection”) presented by the Official Unsecured Creditors’ Committee (“the Committee”) of AFTER SIX, INC. (“the Debtor”), on behalf of the reorganized Debt- or, to an unsecured Proof of Claim (Claim No. 320) (“the Claim”) filed by Corestates Bank, N.A., as successor to the Philadelphia National Bank (“the Bank”), in an amount now reduced to $5,059,772.10. The Claim arose out of the Debtor’s guaranty on a mortgage taken by G Street Associates (“G St.”), an affiliate of the Debtor, on real estate located at G Street and Hunting Park Avenue, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania (“the Realty”), at which the Debtor last conducted its business.

The Objection is based upon three grounds: (1) the Debtor received no consideration for the guaranty; (2) the Bank’s deficiency claim should be barred because, after foreclosure, it failed to dispose of the Realty in a commercially reasonable manner; and (3) the Bank’s claim should be equitably subordinated because of the combined effect of its foregoing conduct and also because, when pressured by organized labor, it urged an affiliated lender to withdraw from financing a pre-petition sale transaction which would have paid substantially more to all unsecured creditors than was realized in the subsequent bankruptcy sale of the Debtor’s assets, as authorized in an Opinion of June 11, 1993, reported at 154 B.R. 876 (“After Six 7”).

We find that the first ground is utterly meritless; the third ground has some equitable basis but is insufficient to support the narrow circumstances in which the extraordinary remedy of equitable subordination will be imposed; and the circumstances relating to the disposition of the Realty, while justifying a reduction in the Claim, is likewise insufficient, in and of itself or taken together with the Bank’s other conduct, to justify imposition of equitable subordination. We will also reduce the Claim to give credit for *222 the Bank’s claim on behalf of G St., as as-signee of its lease with the Debtor, but only in the net amount of this claim.

B. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

The Debtor, formerly a manufacturer of quality men’s formal wear, was a venerable, internationally-famous institution in Philadelphia for many years. It began its formal relationship with the Bank’s predecessor after a solicitation for business from the Bank’s predecessor in 1986, at which time the Debt- or sold its former downtown facility in order to relocate to the more spacious facility at the Realty. In that transaction, the Debtor received a $13 million revolving line of credit (“the Line”), which was ultimately paid off. In addition, G St. borrowed $6.3 million to acquire the Realty (“the Loan”). 1 The Loan was secured by, inter alia, a mortgage on the Realty, an assignment of a lease between G St. and the Debtor (“the Lease”), and a guaranty of G St.’s obligation from the Debt- or (“the Guaranty”).

As a result of a substantial decline in the textile industry throughout the United States, and particularly the Philadelphia area, due to the availability of far cheaper labor in South and Central America and Asia, plus certain unwise decisions by Debtor to diversify into other product lines, the Debt- or’s business began to decline markedly in the second half of the 1980’s and the early 1990’s. Despite the Debtor’s efforts to cut expenses and its decision to cease its unprofitable collateral enterprises, it became clear to the Debtor’s management that they could not resurrect the business, and thus a search for potential purchasers of the business was begun. Among the few interested parties found, CSE Acquisition Corp. (“CSE”) looked the most promising. CSE was primarily interested in the Debtor’s name and good will. It had hoped to move the Debt- or’s operations to Maryland and continue there the manufacture of certain lines of tuxedos, while farming out certain other manufacturing to “overseas” companies. The parties now assert wildly divergent approximations of what the sale price in this transaction would have been. The Debtor claims that it would have been $25 million. The Bank, supported by a “Prospect Analysis” attached to the proposed Asset Purchase Agreement (“the Agreement”) with CSE, pegs the sale price at $8.6 million.

In any event, the labor union with which the Debtor had a collective bargaining agreement, the Amalgamated Clothing and Textile Workers Union (“the Union”), was opposed to the offer because of CSE’s contemplated relocation of the Debtor’s manufacturing plant would result in an apparent loss of employment for about 300 of its Philadelphia-based members. However, despite the Union’s objections, the Debtor entered into the Agreement with CSE on May 26, 1992.

It was contemplated that the CSE deal would be financed, in part, by a $22 million dollar loan from Congress Financial Corp. (“Congress”), eighty (80%) percent of which was owned by CoreStates Financial Corp. (“CFC”), also the owner of the creditor Bank’s predecessor. Because the purchase price offered by CSE would not have been sufficient to retire all debt owed by the Debt- or, negotiations with certain key creditors, including the Debtor’s senior lender, the Union pension funds, the Debtor’s bondholders, and the Bank’s predecessor, were being pursued at the same time that Congress was considering the underlying financing. Despite Congress’s initial reluctance to fund the CSE purchase, it did not refuse to do the deal outright, but instead investigated the transaction further. As that investigation proceeded, Congress’s reluctance to enter into the transaction dissipated. Indeed, Congress ultimately issued a loan proposal letter to CSE (“the Proposal”), received its loan committee’s consent to offer the financing, secured the consent of the Bank’s predecessor to offer the financing, and even circulated several draft commitment letters to the parties involved. Unfortunately for the Debtor, just as all the loan negotiations were coming *223 to a head, so too were the pressures being exerted by the Union, which very much wanted to kill the deal.

The Union’s initial tactic in its effort to frustrate the deal was a federal lawsuit against the Debtor and CSE. The Union argued, in that suit, that the proposed sale to CSE would violate the Debtor’s contract with the Union. After several days of testimony, the district court issued an Opinion, Philadelphia Joint Bd. of Amalgamated Clothing & Textile Workers Union v. After Six, Inc., 1992 WL 202170 (E.D.Pa. August 6, 1992), in which it dismissed this suit.

Undaunted, the Union redirected its attack at the Bank, having learned that its affiliate intended to finance the deal. The Union picketed several of the Bank’s branches and handed out protest leaflets there. Union leadership also enlisted the support of many prominent politicians, several of whom publicly condemned the loss of local jobs which would result from the sale. The Union’s opposition culminated on August 18, 1992, in a highly-publicized protest involving approximately 50 Union members who showed up uninvited at the Bank’s central corporate offices and demanded the withdrawal of Congress from the CSE deal.

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177 B.R. 219, 25 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. 2d (West) 928, 1995 Bankr. LEXIS 41, 1995 WL 29610, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-after-six-inc-paeb-1995.