In Re Georgian Hotel Corporation

82 F.2d 917, 1936 U.S. App. LEXIS 3147
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedMarch 31, 1936
Docket5577
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 82 F.2d 917 (In Re Georgian Hotel Corporation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Georgian Hotel Corporation, 82 F.2d 917, 1936 U.S. App. LEXIS 3147 (7th Cir. 1936).

Opinion

ALSCHULER, Circuit Judge.

The appeal is from an order of the District Court confirming a plan for the debtor’s reorganization under section 77B of the Bankruptcy Act (11 U.S.C.A. § 207).

In 1925 the debtor gave its mortgage upon its hotel property to secure its bond issues of $1,400,000, of which $1,300,000 were first lien bonds and $100,000 second lien; the first now reduced to $1,255,000, and the second to $39,500. Appellants own $18,500 of the first. There is a bond issue of $500,-000 secured by a junior mortgage on the property, and there are other debts, some with subordinate security and some unsecured, aggregating about $150,000.

The plan which the court confirmed had the expressed approval of about 94 per cent, of the first and second lien bonds, of all of the junior mortgage bonds, and of practically all the other creditors, as well as of the debtor.

Appellants challenged the fairness and good faith, as well as the legality, of the plan as approved. The plan is quite lengthy and complicated, but its salient features with which we are here concerned are:

The organization of a new corporation to take over the assets of the debtor, such new corporation to have, an authorized capital of 20,000 shares of common stock, of which about 18,690 will be issued.

The allotment of the issued stock shall be 70 per cent, thereof to the holders of the present first and second lien .bonds, on the basis of one share of stock for each $100 of the bonds as held by the respective bondholders ; 30 per cent, of the issued stock to be allotted to second mortgage bondholders, general creditors, and stockholders of the debtor in proportions not here material.

The new corporation to issue to the holders of the $1,255,000 outstanding first lien bonds, at the rate of 50 per cent, of the principal amount of old bonds, its first mortgage sinking fund income bonds in the amount of $627,500, said new bonds to mature in twelve years and to bear interest at the rate of 5 per cent, per annum if earned, 2 per cent, of the interest to be cumulative during the first four years, and the full 5 per cent, to be cumulative thereafter. The trust deed securing the new bonds shall provide that it may be released and the income bonds satisfied for a consideration equal to or less than the total amount of such bonds outstanding, and that the terms and provisions of the new trust deed or of the income bonds may be otherwise altered or modified upon written consent of 75 per cent, or more in amount of the outstanding income bonds.

Appellants particularly assail the provision for eliminating the first mortgage bonds, and in their stead giving their holders one-half of their holdings in first mortgage income bonds of the new corporation secured on the hotel property, and corporate stock for the balance.

For the benefit of its creditors, this debtor has brought into bankruptcy all its assets, beyond which these bondholders could in no event thereafter have looked for satisfaction of their bonds.. The acceptance of.the plan extends the time of the maturity of the bonds, and the 50 per cent, of their face remains a first lien as before. If the operations of the newly formed corporation prove successful and its stock should *919 prove valuable, to that extent the remaining half of the original debt will be protected (except as to the 30 per cent, of the stock set aside for the other creditors). If it should not be successful, it is very unlikely that the retention of the lien of the original first lien bonds would have realized any more for their holders. So, while the form of the security is changed, we are of the opinion that in substance it is not materially impaired.

Reasonable modification of existing securities is within the powers conferred by section 77B(b) of the Bankruptcy Act, 11 U.S.C.A. § 207(b), 1 and is in general supported by many decisions.

If we understand the contention correctly, appellants urge that section 77B, in so far as it empowers the bankruptcy court to require minority nonconsenting creditors of a particular class to accept any major modification of their original contractual relation, is unconstitutional and void. No cases in point are cited to support the proposition, and, in view of the generally contrary trend of authority, 2 we will not undertake further discussion of the proposition beyond stating that we do not sustain it.

Appellants assert gross unfairness in that part of the plan which permits such changes in the terms of the new bonds to be subsequently made as may be authorized by 75 per cent, of the holders of those bonds. The evident intent of this was to provide power and flexibility for meeting unforeseen contingencies as they might arise, and to provide, so far as may be, against resort to another reorganization proceeding in case this one cannot without alteration be ultimately carried out.

Unquestionably this or any other granted power may be abused. Fraudulent and oppressive invasion of minority rights and equities which appellants’ brief points out might be attempted by the majority. But prevention of such inequities is a subject-matter of the jurisdiction of equity, whose long and strong arm may readily and presumably effectively be invoked against it. This provision is not materially different from like provisions of bankruptcy, which prescribe the majorities which may bind an entire class.

In Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., et al. v. Lawton-Byrne-Bruner Ins. A. Co. (C.C.A.) 79 F.(2d) 804, 818, the court dealt with this and some other of the propositions here, saying: “The evident purpose of making the bonds income bonds is to remove the very menace of fixed charges which occasioned the difficulties of the business resulting in reorganization. * * * The provision giving 75 per cent, of the bonds power to consent to release or to alteration is not unfair. No release or alteration could affect appellant in any way different to other bondholders; it is not to be assumed that 75 per cent, of bonds (widely held) would agree to release or alteration disadvantageous to themselves; the provision permits elasticity of action for accommodation to future situations as they may develop in the progress of the business.”

As to allotment of 30 per cent, of the stock to the subordinate creditors, we believe that this was fairly within the judicial *920 discretion of the District Court. While it is not likely that at the present time the subordinate creditors would have realized anything if the first mortgage had been foreclosed, these creditors would, for three months after one year following the foreclosure sale, have had a right of redemption —a right which might have been valuable. And there is the possibility that, with a substantial “come-back” in affairs, property values may increase sufficiently to give the debtor a substantial equity in the property of which these creditors would have the benefit. Such possibilities would tend to support the court’s discretion in making some allowance to these creditors in a proceeding under which there is to be effected a present adjustment of all the claims against the debtor, of whatever rank or class. This was evidently the view taken by the District Court, and it receives support from Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., v.

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Bluebook (online)
82 F.2d 917, 1936 U.S. App. LEXIS 3147, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-georgian-hotel-corporation-ca7-1936.