In re Colonial Trust Co.

189 Misc. 335, 67 N.Y.S.2d 534, 1946 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 3278
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 26, 1946
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 189 Misc. 335 (In re Colonial Trust Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Colonial Trust Co., 189 Misc. 335, 67 N.Y.S.2d 534, 1946 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 3278 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1946).

Opinion

Botein, J.

This is a proceeding brought pursuant to the provisions of section 122-a of the Beal Property Law for a modification of the trust mortgage bonds and indenture given in a prior reorganization. It is proposed to modify these bonds and the indenture so that a new first mortgage might be raised upon the mortgaged property, the proceeds thereof distributed prorata among the bondholders in reduction of the principal amount unpaid upon their bonds, and the present first mortgage bonds thereby reduced to the status of second mortgage bonds.

In opposition to the foregoing proposed modification, it is urged that the scope of section 122-a is limited to plans of reorganization which “ * * * provide for: (1) the extension of the maturity of the mortgage, deed of trust or indenture and the debts secured thereby and that any other proposed changes or modifications must relate to or be integrated with the above-quoted purpose. It is therefore argued that section 122-a was not intended to embrace the instant application for the modification of a trust indenture so as to permit the placing of a mortgage which would rank prior to the lien of the present indenture. And it is. further .argued that if section 122-a does allow the proposed modification, it violates the prohibition contained in section 10 of article I of the Constitution of the United States, that no State shall pass any law impairing the obligation of contracts.

I hold that the section is constitutional and that it is not restricted to the narrow limitations suggested by the objectants to this proposed plan, but may be properly invoked, in certain circumstances, for the authority to raise a new mortgage and ' subordinate the existing bonds.

Section 122-a sets forth a procedure to evolve a plan of reorganization which purports to modify a trust indenture formulated under a prior plan of reorganization. Such a plan of reorganization may be submitted prior to a default under the indenture and effectuated without a foreclosure. And the proposed plan, according to the terms of the statute, “ * * * may provide for: (1) the extension of the maturity of the mortgage, deed of trust or indenture and the debts secured thereby; (2) the modification of the provisions for interest, amortization or sinking funds; and (3) such other .changes, modifications or amendments as may be fair and feasible and for the best interests of the security holders.”

The statute further provides for hearings on the plan thus submitted. Court approval of the plan is required and is con[339]*339ditioned upon the court’s determination that-the plan is fair, feasible and for the best interests of the security holders.” After court approval, the plan is submitted to the security holders, and is deemed effective unless the holders of one third or more in principal amount of the outstanding securities file duly acknowledged dissents with the court. And even where the plan is adopted as aforesaid, a dissenter may obtain an appraisal of his securities and the payment or securing of “ his ratable share ’ ’.

A literal construction of section 122-a, which expressly refers to the formulation of a “ plan of reorganization * * * of the mortgage, deed of trust or indenture and the debts secured thereby ’ ’, does not permit of the suggested interpretation limiting its application to the extension of a maturity date. Reference, among its objectives, to “ other changes, modifications or amendments ”, together with the elaborate procedures and safeguards prescribed by section 122-a, furnish other internal statutory evidences of the legislative intent that applications pursuant to section 122-a should not be limited to maturity date extensions.

The best-grounded interpretation is that section 122-a has for its purpose the adaptation of prior plans of reorganizations to current economic circumstances affecting the status of the securities.

Viewed from the perspective afforded by the intervening years, the sharp outline of a legislative pattern emerges from the provisions of the Burchill Act (Real Property Law," §§ 119-123). The act originally provided that the indenture trustee could buy in the property (§ 119), and thereafter proceed either to operate it until a sale could be effected (§ 120) or to convey the property to a corporation pursuant to a plan of reorganization approved by the court and the security holders (§§ 121, 122).

Quite plainly, the design of the Burchill Act and the sequent Streit Act (Real Property Law, §§ 124-130-j) was to develop a comprehensive system for the orderly liquidation of investments in defaulted unguaranteed mortgage securities to the end that such interests will be properly conserved, administered and ultimately liquidated in the public interest.” (Real Property Law, § 324.) The acts thereby complemented and in many respects paralleled the statutory provisions made for the orderly liquidation of defaulted guaranteed mortgage securities (Sehackno Act [L. 3933, ch. 745] and Mortgage Commission Act [L. 1935, ch. 19]). Distress sales of property securing defaulted mortgage investments were averted by this statutory scheme, [340]*340and provision was made for a more adequate method of exploiting the underlying security for the benefit of the investors. The act’s provisions for the purchase, management, reorganization and sale of the underlying property are all part of the primary statutory objective to protect and tide over mortgage security holders’ investments jeopardized by default.

The effectuation of the objectives of the Burchill Act was further implemented by the subsequent passage of the aforementioned Streit Act (Beal Property Law, §§ 124-130-j), which made more definitive the authority and obligations of the indenture and voting trustees concerned with real property which constitutes the underlying security for mortgage investments. And in 1943 the Legislature enacted section 120-a of the Beal Property Law (L. 1943, ch. 675), wherein the trustee was empowered to sell the mortgage and was thereby provided with another method of liquidating the mortgage investment.

In this statutory context the full import of section 122-a becomes apparent. It is an attempt by the Legislature to enlarge the statutory scheme for the orderly liquidation of defaulted unguaranteed mortgage investments by providing for "a contingency not otherwise contemplated by the original plan or its implementing documents; for example, a change in economic conditions which renders an earlier plan anachronistic or an unforeseen development which warrants an adjustment in the plan to facilitate the orderly liquidation of the securities. Under section 122-a it is unnecessary to wait until these circumstances cause the debtor to default before action may be taken. Nor is it necessary to embark upon the tedious and expensive procedure of a foreclosure in order to launch a plan of action, as provided in section 122.

Where calculations as to future income made at the time of reorganization prove, in time, to be inaccurate, that contingency may be met simply by an extension of the maturity date. But many other contingencies may eventuate. The extension of the maturity date of the indenture and securities may not be sufficient to meet an economic situation not provided for adequately by the prior plan. Indeed, the new set of circumstances may render it unnecessary or inexpedient to extend the maturity date. Other means may be required.

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Bluebook (online)
189 Misc. 335, 67 N.Y.S.2d 534, 1946 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 3278, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-colonial-trust-co-nysupct-1946.