In Re Continental Investment Corporation, Debtor. Appeal of Monte J. Wallace and Neil W. Wallace

642 F.2d 1, 1981 U.S. App. LEXIS 20840, 7 Bankr. Ct. Dec. (CRR) 628
CourtCourt of Appeals for the First Circuit
DecidedJanuary 20, 1981
Docket80-1490
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 642 F.2d 1 (In Re Continental Investment Corporation, Debtor. Appeal of Monte J. Wallace and Neil W. Wallace) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the First Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Continental Investment Corporation, Debtor. Appeal of Monte J. Wallace and Neil W. Wallace, 642 F.2d 1, 1981 U.S. App. LEXIS 20840, 7 Bankr. Ct. Dec. (CRR) 628 (1st Cir. 1981).

Opinion

COFFIN, Chief Judge.

Whatever else they may accomplish, the reorganization proceedings of the bankrupt Continental Investment Corporation assuredly will have supplied material for a continuing series of installments in the pages of the Federal Reporter, 2d Series. Unfortunately, however, this saga of appellate review will have as its dominant motif the undesirability of precisely such piecemeal and fragmented interlocutory litigation.

For we have now been called upon to review decisions of the district court four times — each time by the same party — while the reorganization proceedings have continued unabated before that court. We have seen little merit to the three prior appeals, and have consistently seen no clear basis even for appellate jurisdiction over them. See In re Continental Investment Corp., 586 F.2d 241 (1st Cir. 1978) (CIC I); In re Continental Investment Corp., No. 80-1362 (1st Cir., Oct. 31, 1980) (CIC II); and In re Continental Investment Corp., No. 80-1248 (1st Cir., Dec. 5, 1980) (CIC III). We see less of each in the instant appeal, and again affirm the judgment of the district court.

The protagonists in the current chapter of our tale remain the Wallaces, the majority shareholders in the bankrupt, who once again seek to set aside a district court order approving a proposed compromise of creditors’ claims. Indeed, the posture of the present appeal and its procedural facts in schematic form are precisely the same as in CIC III: creditors press claims against the bankrupt; the trustee challenges those claims; the creditors and the trustee negotiate a compromise; the majority stockholders object; the court approves the compromise; and the majority stockholders appeal. The substance of the claims and objections at issue here is of course very different, and while appellants’ attack focuses exclusively on alleged procedural inadequacies in the district court, assessing those charges requires a brief explication of the underlying facts.

After CIC defaulted prior to bankruptcy on loans received from a consortium of 16 banks, it negotiated with them an Omnibus Refinancing Agreement (ORA) reducing and reorganizing its debt. As part of the ORA, the stock of a CIC subsidiary, Investors’ Mortgage Group (IMG), was to be sold at auction; the banks were to offer an immediate debt reduction of $34 million and a subsequent additional reduction for any appreciation in the value of IMG stock, less carrying charges at the time the banks resold it or at the end of five years if they had not resold by then. No other bidders appeared at the sale — after extensive publicity — and the stock accordingly was sold to the banks. Seven months later, the banks resold the stock for approximately $36.7 million.

These facts in turn formed the basis for the trustee’s and the appellants’ objections to the banks’ claims in the reorganization proceedings. Those objections, at least in appellants’ view, centered on a claim that the banks had made a “gentleman’s agreement” with the appellants not to resell the *3 stock for some longer period than seven months. The procedural history of the objections in the district court is as follows. On February 25, 1980 the trustee filed a proposed plan of reorganization; the banks filed objections and a proposed alternative plan, as did appellants and the other major groups of creditors and shareholders. On June 3 the trustee’s counsel set forth in open court the essence of a compromise with the banks settling all his objections to their claims and all their objections to his proposed plan. Appellants objected to this compromise on June 4 on three grounds, and sought discovery from each of the 16 banks regarding those grounds; both the banks and the trustee opposed appellants’ petition. On June 17 the trustee filed an application for approval of the compromise, and the court ordered all objections to be submitted by June 24. The trustee’s counsel filed an affidavit in support of the compromise on June 23, describing the trustee’s pre-compromise investigation of the bank claims. The agent bank for the 16 banks produced its CIC files for inspection by the trustee and the appellants between June 20 and June 24. On June 24 the trustee filed a modified reorganization plan, affidavits describing the discovery he had taken and its results, and a legal memorandum in support of the application. Appellants on June 24 and 25 moved for a continuation of the hearing and for additional discovery. On June 25 one of the banks moved for an order suspending further discovery by appellants, and the district court after a hearing issued such an order the same day. A hearing on the compromise itself was held on June 25 and 26, and on June 27 the district court entered its order approving the trustee’s application.

Appellants press three alleged defects as fatal to the adequacy of the district court’s procedures: first, that it acted without receiving an adequate trustee’s report of facts pertaining to any causes of action available to the estate; second, that it denied appellants their constitutional and statutory rights to notice and a hearing; and third, that it failed to secure an SEC advisory report prior to approving the compromise. We find each argument to be without merit.

Before addressing those arguments, however, we pause to note again our continuing doubt as to whether appellate jurisdiction exists to review such an interlocutory order. See CIC III, supra, slip op. at 2. Appellants assert in a single sentence that because the order appealed from was entered in a proceeding in bankruptcy we have jurisdiction under 11 U.S.C. §§ 47(a) and 521 (repealed 1978 but still applicable to these proceedings; see CIC II, supra, slip op. at 3, n.l). We had occasion to examine this jurisdictional provision at some length in CIC II, noting that it turned on a distinction between a “proceeding” and a “controversy” —“a distinction which has been characterized as ‘not always simple’, ‘hairline thin’, and ‘obscure and indefensibly confusing’ ”, id. at 4 (footnotes omitted). Appellants make no attempt to justify their assertion that this is a proceeding, and, as we suggested in CIC III, supra, slip op. at 3, we do not consider it self-evidently to be one. See In re Lewis Lumber Co., Debtor, 635 F.2d 542 (6th Cir. 1980) (debtor’s challenge to creditor’s claim held a controversy); cf. CIC II, supra, slip op. at 4, n.5 (setting forth the traditional view of this distinction). We consider this failure to address a significant jurisdictional question at best careless and perhaps disingenuous, particularly in the third consecutive appeal in which jurisdiction has been problematic. Nonetheless, because the question of our jurisdiction is a close one, and because the appeal is so clearly lacking in merit, we assume jurisdiction without definitely ruling on it.

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Bluebook (online)
642 F.2d 1, 1981 U.S. App. LEXIS 20840, 7 Bankr. Ct. Dec. (CRR) 628, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-continental-investment-corporation-debtor-appeal-of-monte-j-ca1-1981.