In Re Associated Gas & Electric Co.

149 F.2d 996, 1945 U.S. App. LEXIS 4410
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedMarch 27, 1945
Docket203, 204
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 149 F.2d 996 (In Re Associated Gas & Electric Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Associated Gas & Electric Co., 149 F.2d 996, 1945 U.S. App. LEXIS 4410 (2d Cir. 1945).

Opinion

AUGUSTUS N. HAND, Circuit Judge.

We have before us appeals from two orders, the first an order approving a plan of reorganization to which the Securities and Exchange Commission has given its approval; the second, an order approving a compromise of controversies existing between the estates of the respective debtors and among various classes of their security holders and creditors. We shall hereafter speak of the debtor Associated Gas and Electric Company as Ageco, and the debtor Associated Gas and Electric Corporation as Agecorp. Ageco is a top holding company, the assets of which consisted of stocks, bonds and other obligations of its subsidiary companies. Ageco and Age-corp are both public utility holding companies, and the reorganization proceedings of both were instituted by separate petitions filed January 10, 1940 under Chapter X of the Bankruptcy Act, 11 U.S.C.A. § 501 et seq.

The assets of Agecorp are valued at from $90,000,000 to $115,000,000. The liabilities of Agecorp on unsecured bonds and debentures in the hands of the public are $189,421,095, made up as follows:

8% Bonds due 1940 (8s of 40) $ 7,438,510

Convertible Fixed Interest Debentures due 1973 (73s) 24,221,465 1

Income Debentures due 1978 (78s) 133,539,655

Ageco has no assets except its interest in Agecorp, consisting of common stock and notes subordinated to all other indebtedness of Agecorp. Under the existing capitalization, neither Ageco nor any of its creditors would be entitled to share in the Agecorp assets, but by the compromise of claims in litigation against the Agecorp estate, which has been approved by the District Court, the 73s and the 78s would participate on a parity with certain creditors of Ageco in the plan of reorganization of the two companies after provision for the 8s of ’40 to which the 73s and 78s are subordinate. The compromise (known as the Recap compromise) relates to two litigations, one pending in the Agecorp proceedings (called the Recap Litigation) and one in the Ageco proceedings (known as the CDC Litigation).

The Recap Litigation was a lawsuit instituted in the Agecorp proceeding by the petition of the Ageco trustee seeking adjudication of the following matters, among others: (a) The right, title, lien and interest of the Ageco trustee in and to the assets held by the Agecorp trustees, (b) The right of some or all of the unsubordinated security holders and other creditors of Ageco to share in the Agecorp assets on a parity, or better, with some or all of the Agecorp security holders and other creditors. The granting of any of this relief was opposed by the Agecorp trustees, and by the protective committees and indenture trustees for the 73s, the 78s and the 8s of 40.

A number of proofs of claim were filed in the Ageco proceeding by, or on behalf of, among others, holders of Convertible Debenture Certificates (hereafter referred to as CDCs); holders of Convertible Obligations Due 2002, who originally obtained their securities in exchange for CDCs, or the personal representatives, legatees, distributees or statutory successors of such original holders (collectively referred to as Original COs); holders, other than original holders, of Convertible Obligations Due 2002 (hereafter referred to as Non-original COs) ; holders of Convertible Certificates without fixed maturities; holders of Convertible Obligations with fixed maturities; holders of Interest Bearing Scrip, and holders of Non-Interest Bearing Scrip. These proofs of claim sought adjudications that the respective claimants were unsubor *1001 dinated creditors of Ageco and, as such, were entitled to share in the Ageco assets with other unsubordinated security holders and creditors. This was the CDC Litigation.

On November 9, 1942, the Ageco trustee and Agecorp trustees proposed a plan for the compromise of the Recap Litigation and related issues. The proposed compromise encompasses all the controversies involved in the Recap Litigation and the issues in the CDC Litigation relating to CDCs and Original COs, as well as other matters not relevant to the present appeals. The compromise plan would settle these issues by establishing a relative basis upon which the various security holders and creditors will share in the combined assets of Ageco and Agecorp. No provision is made for Scrip holders or for Non-original COs. The compromise received the approval of the District Court conditional upon its being embodied in a plan of reorganization accepted by creditors and confirmed by the court. The plan of reorganization, also approved, gives effect to the compromise.

The parties-appellant representing the interests of the 73s and 78s object to the approval of the compromise. They argue that, while the approval of a compromise concededly is within the sound discretion of the District Court, the soundness of the exercise of such discretion necessarily depends upon the claims to be compromised having sufficient merit to render the outcome of the litigation substantially uncertain, and that the claims advanced by the Ageco trustee in the Recap Litigation were not of sufficient merit. It would then follow that it was improper for the District Court to approve the compromise.

The dominant personality who seems to have controlled both Ageco and Agecorp was one Howard C. Hopson.

The Honorable Frederick E. Crane, Special Master, made findings which were approved by the District Court, of which the following are a part:

“16. Since prior to 1922, Ageco has been a public utility holding company, owning directly or through intermediate holding companies, voting stocks and other securities of electric, gas, water, ice, and transportation companies. * * *

“17. Between March 14, 1922 and April, 1923, Howard C. Hopson and John I. Mange acquired all the outstanding shares of the only class of Ageco stock having voting rights at all times up to January 10, 1940. Although other classes of Ageco stock obtained voting rights at various times during this period, Hopson and Mange held and exercised voting control of Ageco continuously from March, 1922. until January 10, 1940.

“18. From 1922 until January 10, 1940, Hopson controlled the financial and accounting policies of the Associated System.

“19. From 1922 until January 10, 1940, most of the officers of Ageco and Agecorp received no salary from Ageco or Agecorp directly, but were paid by companies owned by Hopson and his family * * * which furnished auditing, corporate, security, transfer, tax consultant, and other services to Ageco and its subsidiaries.

“20. Minute books of Ageco, Agecorp, Associated Properties, Inc., Associated General Electric Corporation, and Associated Utilities Investing Corporation, were kept by employees of the Hopson service companies, and resolutions appearing in the minute books were prepared almost en-' tirely by such employees.

“21. The charges made by the Hopson service companies for services rendered to companies in the Associated System, enabled Hopson to derive profits, from 1922 through 1938, in excess of $6,500,000.

“22.

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Bluebook (online)
149 F.2d 996, 1945 U.S. App. LEXIS 4410, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-associated-gas-electric-co-ca2-1945.