In re Caffall Oil Corp.

22 F. Supp. 484, 1937 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1198
CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Louisiana
DecidedNovember 2, 1937
DocketNo. 5834
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 22 F. Supp. 484 (In re Caffall Oil Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Caffall Oil Corp., 22 F. Supp. 484, 1937 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1198 (W.D. La. 1937).

Opinion

DAWKINS, District Judge.

The Caffall Oil Corporation has proposed a plan of reorganization, which in substance provides that all of its capital stock shall be excluded from participation, and its bondholders, with claims in the principal amount $227,700 and $6,261.75 accrued interest, shall receive all of the stock of the reorganized corporation, amounting to the sum of $22,770 par value, or one-tenth of the face of the bonds; the only ordinary creditor being its attorneys for their fees, to continue unsecured and be paid in due course; and the claim of Stanolind Oil & Gas Company, consisting of a judgment with principal, interest, and attorneys fees amounting to the sum of $10,246.41, secured by judicial mortgage recognizing a vendor’s lien against 131 acres of land of the debtor, obtained and recorded against a former owner of the land and superior in rank with respect to this particular property to the rights of the bondholders, should he reduced to the sum of $3,500, which is to bear interest at 6 per cent, from January 16, 1937, and in consideration of said reduction said company shall receive a paid-up mineral lease upon the lands on which it holds the lien for three years, and shall take “no legal action for the collection of the judgment * * * for a period of three (3) years from the date of the confirmation of this plan.” It is further provided that any income realized from the property known as the “Hoyt Farm” (being the property on which the Stanolind Oil & Gas Company holds its judicial mortgage and lien) shall be expended in the following manner:

(1) To pay the taxes on the property;

(2) To pay premiums for insurance on the property;

(3) To pay expenses incident to absolutely necessary repairs;

(4) To pay the Stanolind Oil & Gas Company in reduction of the hereinabove mentioned judgment.

It is further provided that the business of the corporation shall be conducted by the “present officers and board of directors, and or their successors, * * * without' remuneration, and in accordance with the provisions of the charter of this corporation as amended to conform to the herein-above proposed plan.”

The plan has been accepted in writing (as required' by section 77B of the Bankruptcy Act, as amended, 11 U.S.C.A. § 207, under which this proceeding was filed) by more than three-fourths of the bondholders, the Stanolind Oil & Gas Company, the sole ordinary and general creditor, to wit, the attorneys for the debtor, and by more thau three-fourths of the outstanding capital stock of the debtor.

The assets of the corporation are listed as follows:

Cash on hand................................. $ 270.81
Frozen balance In Calcasieu Nil. Bank $137.57 ....................................... 10.00
Interest in real estate of tho book value of $301,533.00................................. 41,250.00
Total ......................................$41,530.81

The purpose is to relieve the debtor of the heavy overhead of interest on the bonded and other indebtedness and, in effect, to give the bondholders, in the proportions which the amounts of their claims bear to the total, the entire stock ownership of the corporation. The present stock is, with a few exceptions consisting of small amounts, also owned by the present bondholders.

At the hearing Mrs. Mary A. Dalby, Neal Whisenhunt, and C. E. Pool, holders of $4,600, $1,600, and $5,000, respectively, of the first mortgage bonds of the debtor, opposed the plan of reorganization on the grounds:

(1) That they cannot be compelled to take stock in place of their bonds for the reason it would deprive them of their property without due process of law “by transferring them from the position of secured creditors with first mortgage to the rank of ordinary, unsecured stockholders without any protection as creditors, and also would place Messrs. J. H. Heinen and Cline, Thompson & Lawes, whose claim against the corporation for services, * * * in the sum of $1500.00, is a mere ordinary, unsecured claim, in a preferential position as first creditor.”

[486]*486(a) That it is an “obvious attempt * * * to prefer the Stanolind Oil & Gas Company, * * * giving it the rank of a preferred creditor over opponents in violation of the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments to the Federal Constitution, and sections 2 and 6 of article 1 and section 15 of article 4 of the State Constitution.”

The same individuals have also filed a motion to dismiss these proceedings for the following reasons:

(1) The proposed plan is “inequitable, unfair, unreasonable, unconstitutional and null and void, for it seeks to destroy your movers’ lien and mortgage without providing payment of the bonds”;

(2) That it proposes to grant to Stanolind Oil & Gas Company, whose claim is inferior in rank to the movers’ except as to the 131 acres of land upon which the judicial mortgage rests, a preference over the rights of movers;

(3) That the plan proposes to place the attorneys, whose claims are unsecured, also in a superior position over the movers;

(4) That the plan “is impracticable and unbusinesslike, is not filed in good faith, and is not a compliance with the provisions of section 77B of the National Bankruptcy Law [as amended] * * * ”;

(5) It contemplates the “transposing” of the positions of creditors with inferior rights to positions superior to those of movers, in violation of the same provisions of the Federal and State Constitutions as set out in the, opposition to the plan.

At the final hearing on the plan, at which it was submitted for consideration of the court, the attorneys, J. H. Heinen and Cline, Thompson & Lawes filed in this proceeding a document in which it is stated:

“That in the interest of seeing said plan approved by the court your appearers agree to withdraw their claim against the said corporation, in the event of the plan in all other respects being approved by this honorable court.” This document is verified by the oath of .Robert Lawes, a member of the firm of Cline, Thompson & Lawes, in which he swears “that he is one of the attorneys for the appearers in the foregoing petition (meaning the document quoted from immediately above), that all of the allegations contained therein are true and correct, and that he has been authorized by his principals to execute the waiver contained therein.” In the brief submitted in support of confirmation of the plan, which is signed only by Cline, Thompson & Lawes, attention is called to the waiver, and it is stated that the said claim for $1,500 of said firm and the said J. H. Heinen need not be discussed herein in view of the fact that the holders of that particular claim have, in the interest of seeing the proposed plan of reorganization eventually consummated, agreed to waive, in the event of the consummation of said plan, their right to any part of the $1,500.

Of course, if this claim is lawfully eliminated and the corporation will not at any time have to pay it, then the ground of complaint by the dissenting bondholders on that score has been removed.

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Related

In Re Los Angeles Lumber Products Co.
24 F. Supp. 501 (S.D. California, 1938)

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Bluebook (online)
22 F. Supp. 484, 1937 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1198, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-caffall-oil-corp-lawd-1937.