In Re Elm Creek Joint Venture

93 B.R. 105, 1988 Bankr. LEXIS 1955, 1988 WL 123137
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, W.D. Texas
DecidedSeptember 30, 1988
Docket19-30080
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 93 B.R. 105 (In Re Elm Creek Joint Venture) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, W.D. Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Elm Creek Joint Venture, 93 B.R. 105, 1988 Bankr. LEXIS 1955, 1988 WL 123137 (Tex. 1988).

Opinion

FINDINGS OF FACT AND CONCLUSIONS OF LAW ON CONFIRMATION OF PLAN OF REORGANIZATION

R. GLEN AYERS, Jr., Chief Judge.

On the 31st day of August, 1988, came on to be considered Debtor’s Second Amended Liquidating Plan of Reorganization (“Plan”), after due notice, and the Court, having considered the Plan, the objections to confirmation of the Plan filed by Alamo Savings Association (“Alamo”) and the Elm Creek Homeowners’ Association (“HOA”), and the objection of HOA having been withdrawn following the close of the evidence, and the Court having considered the testimony of the witnesses, the exhibits introduced into evidence and the arguments and representations made by respective counsel for Debtor, Alamo, HOA and Elm Creek Holdings, Ltd. (“Holdings”), and the Court having considered the applicable law and facts of the case hereby states its opinion containing Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law.

FINDINGS OF FACT

The Court first makes the following specific Findings of Fact:

1. Pursuant to the Plan, Debtor has properly classified priority claims, pre-petition tax claims, the secured claim of Alamo, the deficiency claim of Alamo, the claim of HOA, general unsecured claims and the claims of interest holders. The claims in each class are substantially similar. Upon written motion made prior to commencement of the hearing on confirmation, Debt- or reclassified the claim of HOA for treatment in Class 3. Such reclassification was made without objection and specifically was agreed to by the only unsecured creditor voting, Pape-Dawson Consulting Engineers, who also voted in favor of the Plan. Further, the Plan specifies whether each class is impaired or unimpaired and the treatment of each impaired class provides for the same treatment of each creditor in a class, provides for the means by which the Plan is to be implemented and does not contain any provision which is inconsistent with public policy or the interest of creditors or the equity security holders with respect to the management of Debtor after confirmation of the Plan. Debtor filed its First Amended Disclosure Statement (“Disclosure Statement”) which, upon notice and hearing, was approved by Order of the Court. Thereafter, the Plan, Disclosure Statement and Ballot for accepting or rejecting the Plan were mailed to all creditors and parties in interest more than 25 days prior to the commencement of the confir *107 mation hearing on August 31, 1988. No acceptances of the Plan were solicited prior to approval of the Disclosure Statement.

2.The Plan provides for Alamo to receive certain property upon which Alamo has a pre-petition lien and which is commonly referred to as the “Lots.” A credit against the debt owed to Alamo is to be given based upon a valuation made by the Court based upon the evidence adduced at the hearing on confirmation. The Court finds the fair market value of the Lots at the date of confirmation to be $4.1 Million. The Plan then provides for Alamo to receive payment of any Deficiency between the amount owed to Alamo and the fair market value of the Lots at date of confirmation with a provision for a first Deed of Trust Lien on the Property (as that term is defined in the Plan) to secure such payment.

The Plan further provides that Debtor will perform the following:

A. On the Effective Date, the payment in full of all priority claims in Class 1;

B. The payment of pre-petition tax claims in Class 1A, in full, within three years after the Effective Date, or upon the sale or refinancing of all or a part of the Property, whichever occurs first, with interest at the rate of nine percent (9%) per annum to be paid annually to each holder of an allowed claim in Class 1A. One vote was received in Class 1A from the City of San Antonio which voted in favor of the Plan;

C. The satisfaction of the Secured Claim of Alamo on the Effective Date by Debtor’s execution and delivery to Alamo of a Special Warranty Deed to the Class 2 Property providing specifically that there shall be no merger of the title thereby conveyed with Alamo’s pre-petition Deed of Trust lien. As set forth above, with respect to any Deficiency, Alamo shall received treatment in Class 3 for any such deficiency;

D. Satisfaction of the Deficiency claim of Alamo and the claim of HOA from the net proceeds from the sale or refinancing of the Property during a three-year term, commencing the first day of the calendar month after the Effective Date. Special provision is made for sale of the 26.64 Acre Tract first and for a disinterested third party to conduct any marketing and solicit sales. Further, provision is made to prevent any deadlock in acceptance of reasonable offers. Excess funds from any sales or refinancing are to be disbursed to the Creditors’ Fund provided for Class 4, the allowed unsecured claims;

E. Payment of claims in Class 4 by distribution from the Creditors’ Fund to be created from Net Proceeds from the sale or refinancing of the Property after the payment in full of the Class 3 Claims;

F. The payment of no sums to interest holders in Class 5 unless and until the holders of claims in Classes 1 through 4 and post confirmation loans by the ventur-ers are paid in full;

3. Alamo is to receive its pre-petition collateral, the Lots, with a lien on the remaining property to secure payment of any deficiency with interest on such deficiency payable at the rate of ten percent (10%) per annum, payable in annual installments beginning one year after the Effective Date. In this manner, Alamo receives the indubitable equivalent of its claim and is assured payment in full out of the assets of the estate upon which it was given a post-petition lien prior to payment of any inferior claims. The Plan leaves unresolved, for resolution pursuant to an ongoing adversary proceeding between Alamo and HOA, the question of relative lien priority as between Alamo and HOA. The evidence adduced at the confirmation hearing clearly establishes that the members of the joint venture stand ready, willing and able to inject funds as necessary for the payment of the annual interest which will accrue on the Class 1A and 3 claims. The evidence adduced at the confirmation hearing, further, is uncontroverted that a three-year period within which to make sale or refinancing of the remaining Property is more than sufficient.

4. Debtor has filed all Monthly Operating Reports and there is no evidence that Debtor has failed to comply with the provi *108 sions of Title 11 U.S.C. during the course of this Chapter 11 case.

5. Fees incurred prior to confirmation in the Chapter 11 case will be subject to Bankruptcy Court approval.

6. During the term of the Plan, there will be no change in the composition of Debtor or in the management of the Property.

7. In the event of a liquidation under Chapter 7 of the Bankruptcy Code, unsecured creditors in Class 4 would receive nothing, HOA would receive nothing and Alamo would receive less than the full amount of its secured claim. Accordingly, the creditors holding claims in Classes 2, 3 and 4 are receiving more under the Plan than they would receive in a liquidating case under Chapter 7 of the Bankruptcy Code.

8.

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Bluebook (online)
93 B.R. 105, 1988 Bankr. LEXIS 1955, 1988 WL 123137, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-elm-creek-joint-venture-txwb-1988.