In Re Epic Associates V

62 B.R. 918, 1986 Bankr. LEXIS 5701
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. Virginia
DecidedJuly 11, 1986
Docket14-72836
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 62 B.R. 918 (In Re Epic Associates V) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Epic Associates V, 62 B.R. 918, 1986 Bankr. LEXIS 5701 (Va. 1986).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION

MARVIN V.B. BOSTETTER, Jr., Chief Judge.

The following will supplement the findings and conclusions set forth in the record of the hearings held on March 11, 1986 and March 17, 1986 at the conclusion of which this Court approved the Disclosure Statement for the Debtors’ Second Amended Joint Plan of Reorganization (“Disclosure Statement”), and as further set forth in the record of the hearings held on April 16, 1986, April 17, 1986, and April 25, 1986 wherein this Court confirmed the Debtors’ Second Amended Joint Plan of Reorganization (“Joint Plan”).

The debtors before this Court are three hundred and fifty-two real estate limited partnerships of which Equity Programs Investment Corporation (“EPIC”) is the sole general partner. The business of each partnership consisted of purchasing residential properties and leasing them, either to real estate developers for use as model homes or to the public.

EPIC financed property acquisitions through a network of financial transactions, including the sale on the secondary market of first mortgage notes executed by the partnerships in favor of EPIC or an affiliate and the issuance of certificates of undivided beneficial interest in pools of these first mortgage notes. The primary purchasers of first mortgage loans and mortgage-backed securities were savings and loan institutions. The aggregate indebtedness of these partnerships on first mortgage notes exceeded one billion dollars. In addition, the operation of the partnerships was funded by limited partners’ capital contributions (consisting of payments on subscription notes), by the issuance of second mortgage notes on the properties, by rental income, and by unsecured advances of funds from EPIC.

Several factors made the unsecured advances of funds, which were obtained by EPIC from Community Savings and Loan, Inc., necessary; weak rental housing markets, inadequate appreciation of partnership properties and slow sales of new limited partnership interests rendered the partnerships exceedingly short of operating capital. When, as a result of a crisis in the Maryland savings and loan industry, Community Savings and Loan, Inc. refused to extend further credit to the EPIC entities, the partnerships quickly defaulted on their debts. Obligations on all first mortgage loans fell into default in August of 1985, and the debtors filed their petitions for reorganization under Chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Reform Act of 1978 on September 5 and September 19, 1985.

TARDY AND CHANGED VOTES ON THE JOINT PLAN

At the commencement of the March 11, 1986 hearing on approval of the Disclosure Statement, the Court heard oral motions to adjourn and reschedule the proceeding in *921 view of the voluminous amendments to the Amended Joint Plan of Reorganization and accompanying Disclosure Statement contained in the Second Amended Joint Plan and its accompanying Disclosure Statement, which had been served the previous evening. The Committee of Equity Security Holders urged that to proceed with the hearing would offend the Due Process Clause of the Fifth Amendment to the Constitution because the limited partners and others thereby would be deprived of a meaningful opportunity to examine and respond to the Debtors’ Second Amended Joint Plan of Reorganization and accompanying Disclosure Statement. Several other parties joined in the motion for a continuance, among them the United States Trustee, limited partners George E.P. Murray, Henry Heisey, Roger Brickley, and Dr. Francis A. Gaffney (collectively the “Class Action Plaintiffs”), 1 the two banks acting as trustees for institutions holding EPIC Mortgage Pass-Through Certificates, and at least one lending institution.

Facing the Court was the consideration of the intricacy of the initial Plan and Disclosure Statement and the copious modifications, which made telling substantive changes in the treatment of creditors under the Plan as well as expanded the information contained in the Disclosure Statement. Also to be considered, however, was the April 30, 1986 deadline imposed by the regulatory position of the Federal Home Loan Bank Board (“FHLBB”) regarding financial institutions holding mortgage loans upon which EPIC partnerships were in default 2 . Accordingly, the Court did not ad *922 journ the hearing. Rather, the Court permitted the proponents of the Plan to present argument concerning the contents of the newly-filed Second Amended Joint Plan of Reorganization and accompanying Disclosure Statement. A portion of the hearing was devoted specifically to the modifications made by the proponents in response to the objections filed by creditors, the Committee of Equity Security Holders, and the United States Trustee. The Court scheduled for March 17, 1986 a further hearing on such objections to the Disclosure Statement as might remain after consideration of the proponents’ modifications.

Because a hearing on confirmation of the Joint Plan previously had been set for April 16, continuation of the Disclosure Statement hearing reduced the time period available for dissemination of, voting upon, and objecting to the Joint Plan. Consequently, the Court sua sponte shortened the twenty-five-day notice period mandated by Bankruptcy Rule 2002(b), and designated April 10,1986 the bar date for objections to the Joint Plan. Pursuant to Bankruptcy Rule 3017, the Court designated April 9, 1986 the bar date for votes on the Joint Plan.

At the April 17, 1986 continuation of the hearing on confirmation of the Joint Plan, the Court heard the proponents’ motion, filed April 15, 1986, to extend the time for submission of ballots, and to permit creditor Yorkwood Savings & Loan Association, which had submitted a revised ballot, to change its vote. Also before the Court was the motion of American Savings & Loan Association of Irvine, California for permission to change its vote. Revealed in the ensuing argument was the additional fact that an undetermined number of limited partners may have already changed their votes by submitting a superseding ballot which had accompanied a letter of solicitation mailed by counsel for the debtors-in-possession. Such superseding ballots also could be among those ballots received out of time. The proponents made an oral request for approval of the proponents’ inclusion of all timely superseding ballots in the final tally of votes.

The Class Action Plaintiffs objected to the proponents’ motion to extend the time for submission of ballots. The objection, however, concerned only those tardy votes that were also superseding ballots submitted by limited partners. This objection will be considered in the discussion of the proponents’ request for permission to include changes of vote and superseding ballots in the final tabulation. No other party objected to the motion to extend time.

This Court has ample authority to modify its own orders. See Pfister v. Northern Illinois Finance Corp., 317 U.S. 144, 153, 63 S.Ct. 133, 139, 87 L.Ed. 146 (1942) (bankruptcy court may, in its discretion, extend time for filing a petition for review); Commercial Credit Corp. v. Skutt,

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
62 B.R. 918, 1986 Bankr. LEXIS 5701, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-epic-associates-v-vaeb-1986.