In re Fisher Holding Co.

12 B.R. 195, 1981 Bankr. LEXIS 3888
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. Indiana
DecidedApril 20, 1981
DocketBankruptcy No. EV 79-6-RA
StatusPublished

This text of 12 B.R. 195 (In re Fisher Holding Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. Indiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Fisher Holding Co., 12 B.R. 195, 1981 Bankr. LEXIS 3888 (S.D. Ind. 1981).

Opinion

MICHAEL H. KEARNS, Bankruptcy Judge.

FINDINGS OF FACT, CONCLUSIONS OF LAW AND ORDER

This matter came before the Court upon the Application for Appointment of Receiver of applicants, Paul A. Teegarden, James A. Marksberry, Jerry F. Embry and Jerry F. Embry, Inc. Hearing on said Application and supplemental motions was held, evidence and arguments thereon were heard on December 5, 1980.

The Court, having heard the evidence and arguments thereon, having observed the demeanor of the witnesses and weighed their credibility, and being duly advised in the premises, now enters the following Findings of Fact, Conclusions of Law and Order.

FINDINGS OF FACT

1) This Court has jurisdiction over the subject matter and the parties by reason of the Bankruptcy Act as amended.

2) The debtor, Fisher Holding Company, Inc., filed a Voluntary Petition for an Arrangement under Chapter XI of the Bankruptcy Act in the United States District Court for the Southern District of Indiana on August 21, 1979, and said cause was referred to the Judge in Bankruptcy in and for said District, Evansville Division, on that date.

3) Pursuant to an order of the Bankruptcy Judge entered on August 23, 1979, the debtor has remained in possession and operated its business, making monthly reports to the Court.

4) Fisher Holding Company (hereinafter the debtor or FHC) is a corporation organized under the laws of the Commonwealth of Kentucky. The debtor corporation is engaged in the coal brokerage business. Debtor’s principal asset is a coal supply contract (hereinafter the contract) with Big Rivers Electric Company (hereinafter BREC) of Henderson, Kentucky. Said contract calls for a certain monthly quantity (currently 30,000 tons) and quality of coal to be delivered to BREC. The supply of coal under said contract constitutes the only business currently being conducted by the debtor in possession.

5) Applicants allege that the principals of the debtor corporation have a conflict of interest in that said principals, particularly Fred A. Smith, Jr., own controlling interests in Delta Mining Corporation, (Delta), and Grandview Dock Corporation, Inc., (GDC), both creditors of the debtor corporation.

6) In its current operations, debtor buys all of the coal supplied to BREC under the contract from Delta and pays for the use of GDC’s facilities in shipping the coal. Delta produces some coal and buys the rest from suppliers, some of whom previously supplied the debtor directly. Delta has undertaken to mix the coal to meet the average monthly quality specifications under the contract, and in fact absorbs quality penalties under the contract as a “philosophical thing.” Fretina Corporation, of which Fred Smith is president and principal owner, supplies managerial staff to the debtor corporation without compensation.

Fretina’s management team consists of Fred A. Smith, Jan P. Adams and Hugh Trobridge, who are president, vice president and secretary respectively of Delta, GDC and Fretina. FHC’s officers are Smith, president; Jerry Douglas, Vice president; Adams, secretary; and Trobridge, treasurer.

7) Jerry F. Embry, former president of FHC, testified at the receivership hearing that FHC operated the Grandview Dock and owned equipment there prior to June 18, 1979. The equipment, on which FHC was making financing payments, included feeders, computerized scales, several different conveyors and a crusher, all of which equipment is still at the Grandview Dock. GDC has agreed to pay rental on said equipment from June 19,1979, after an appraisal of the rental value is completed.

8) On average monthly gross receipts of Five Hundred Ninety-seven Thousand Five Hundred Sixty-one Dollars and Twenty-six Cents ($597,561.26) in the fifteen (15) months preceding the receivership hearing [197]*197m this cause, the debtor in possession reported an average monthly profit of Twenty Thousand Four Hundred Sixty-eight Dollars and Ninety-three Cents ($20,468.93). In the two (2) months since the hearing, debtor has reported monthly gross receipts of Seven Hundred Twenty-one Thousand Fifteen Dollars ($721,015.00) and Eight Hundred Seventy-eight Thousand Two Hundred Thirty-two Dollars ($878,232.00) and profits of Twenty-eight Thousand Three Hundred Twenty-two Dollars ($28,-322.00) and Eighteen Thousand Fifty-nine Dollars ($18,059.00) respectively. Applicants argue that the debtor’s business would be more profitable, and consequently better serve the interests of the general creditors, if operated by a party without the conflicting interests of current management of the debtor. There is evidence before the Court that FHC did not make a profit under previous management.

9) In 1978, FHC entered into a Bareboat Charter and Purchase Option for the towboat “Wally Fulghum.” The purchase option provided that the debtor could purchase the boat for One Hundred Eighty Thousand Dollars ($180,000.00) less two-thirds (%) of the charter hire ($4,500.00 per month) paid prior to the exercise of the option. The option required debtor to give written notice to the towboat owner, Sero-dino, Inc., during the first six (6) months of the charter in order to exercise said option. FHC paid rent for approximately fifteen (15) months under the charter agreement. No notice of intent to exercise the purchase option was ever given to Serodino.

10) In 1979, FHC fell into default under the bareboat charter and Serodino, Inc. undertook arrangements to regain possession of the vessel. On June 7,1979, Mr. Leonard D. Slutz, attorney for Serodino, wrote Mr. Jerry F. Embry, then president of FHC, regarding redelivery of the boat. Subsequently, Mr. Joseph Harrison, attorney, contacted Mr. Slutz on behalf of Fred A. Smith, Jr., regarding the exercise of the option under the charter agreement. Mr. Harrison informed Mr. Slutz that Fred Smith “had some way in which he could take over operation of the dock” and wanted to buy the vessel. Slutz told Mr. Harrison that Serodino’s position was that the charter had been breached and rent was in default. Mr. Slutz indicated he did not know if the owner was interested in selling the Wally Fulghum, but a “fair price” might be arranged, and that he believed the vessel was worth in excess of One Hundred Eighty Thousand Dollars ($180,000.00) less the two-thirds (%) of the rent paid, as called for under the purchase option of the charter agreement. In June of 1979, Serodino sold the boat to Fred Smith and Joseph Harrison. Leonard Slutz described the sale price,

“I have in my notes some calculations and in one place, it comes to $144,000 plus $50.00 per day from June the 21st. Another place it comes out to $144,750 and I think I was trying to figure approximately what the option price would be if you gave credit for the payments that had been made. Although I knew I wasn’t bound by that price, I could quote whatever price I thought was all right. I see that eventually, we agreed to $145,100.

Slutz stated in his deposition that, during this transaction, he was under the impression that Joseph Harrison was the lawyer for FHC.

11) The Wally Fulghum was subsequently, and is currently, titled in the names of Fred Smith, Jr. and Joseph H. Harrison.

12) William F. Carrier, a Marine Survey- or, testified by deposition that he valued the Wally Fulghum at a fair market value of between Two Hundred Sixty Thousand Dollars ($260,000) and Two Hundred Seventy-five Thousand Dollars ($275,000) in April of 1978.

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12 B.R. 195, 1981 Bankr. LEXIS 3888, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-fisher-holding-co-insd-1981.