In Re Industrial Office Bldg. Corporation

171 F.2d 890, 1949 U.S. App. LEXIS 3544
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedJanuary 3, 1949
Docket9736, 9738
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 171 F.2d 890 (In Re Industrial Office Bldg. Corporation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Industrial Office Bldg. Corporation, 171 F.2d 890, 1949 U.S. App. LEXIS 3544 (3d Cir. 1949).

Opinion

BIGGS, Chief Judge.

The appeals in the instant cases were taken respectively by the debtor corporation, Industrial Office Building Corporation, and by holders of Cumulative 7% Income notes issued by the debtor from an order entered by the court below on May 19, 1948 authorizing and directing the trustee of the debtor to pay 6% to the holders of the First Mortgage bonds of the debtor “* * * as an interim distribution, which distribution shall be applied against the principal amount due on each of said bonds; such distribution * * * [being] directed without final determination of the rights of any creditor or any class of creditors to free assets, if any, and the Court [reserving] jurisdiction to determine finally the rights of any creditor or any class of creditors with respect to any cash assets, and to make such equitable adjustment among creditors or classes of creditors as may become necessary by reason of this interim distribution * * The appeals at bar followed and applications were made to this court to stay the execution of the order by the court below. We heard the applications for stay but denied them. The 6% distribution was then made by the trustee.

Thereafter and on October 11, 1948 an application was made for a further distribution of 10% to the first mortgage bondholders. The court below withheld action on this later application pending the disposition of the instant appeals, expressing some doubt as to whether an interim distribution is authorized by Chapter X of the Bankruptcy Act of 1938, as amended, 11 U.S.C.A. § 501 et seq. It should be pointed out that the appeals at bar are not moot for the reason that any payments, if unauthorized by law, made pursuant to the order of May 19, 1948 would be recoverable by the trustee either by way of suits against individual first mortgage bondholders or by way of readjustments under the plan of reorganization soon to be filed.

A brief recapitulation of the pertinent facts is necessary. The debtor filed its petition for reorganization pursuant to Chapter X on October 3, 1947 and on the same day the court below made an order adjudging the petition to be filed in good faith and in accordance with the provisions of the Bankruptcy Act. The' debtor’s business consists of the ownership and operation of a large office building, Industrial Office Building, in the City of Newark, New Jersey. The building is completely rented with the exception of a small part of the basement. A portion of the building was used by the State of New Jersey as office space for various courts and agencies of the State, including Chancery court rooms and chambers. Under the reorganization of the Courts of New Jersey, effected by the new Constitution of that State, the Chancery court rooms and chambers will become vacant and extensive alterations will be necessary in order to make the space available for ordinary office purposes. It is estimated that these alterations will require the expenditure of about $100,-000. Moreover, few major repairs could be made to the building during the period of World War II and a special reserve of approximately $136,000 was set up upon the debtor’s books in order to effect such repairs. But estimating generously it would appear that no more than $250,000 will be required to put the building in condition for continued, uninterrupted occupancy.

The debtor’s liabilities total approximately $3,760,000, and consist of first mortgage bonds in the principal amount of $1,-954,000, plus interest arrearages as of the maturity date of approximately $1,063,000; three unsecured claims aggregating approximately $10,000; and 7% cumulative income notes, due June 1, 1948, in the *892 principal amount of approximately $359,-000, plus interest accrued to October 3, 1947 in the approximate amount of $401,-000.

The bonds as indicated are secured by a mortgage on the office building and the mortgage indenture contains the usual provisions pledging the income from the mortgaged property upon default. The income notes are completely subordinate to the bonds, payment on the notes by the latter’s express terms being prohibited until all the bonds are paid. A majority of the notes is held by a testamentary trust which also holds the controlling block of the debtor’s common stock. The validity of the mortgage or of the bonds issued thereunder is in nowise contested.

The trustee has been receiving by way of net income from rentals sums in excess of $20,000 a month and he is presently engaged in negotiations of present leases for higher rentals. At the commencement of the proceedings the fund of cash held by the trustee amounted to almost $293,000. This fund, augmented by the rental income, increased to about $432,000 by March 31, 1948 and to about $448,000 by the end of the following month. If the distribution had not been made pursuant to the order subject to review the fund would have amounted to about $557,000 by September 30, 1948. The amount of the distribution made pursuant to the order appealed from was approximately $120,000.

The appellants attack the order appealed from on two grounds. They argue in substance (1) -that the court below was without power to make an ad interim distribution during the course of the Chapter X proceedings, and (2) that the ad interim distribution or distributions will so hamper the adoption of a plan of reorganization as to render reorganization difficult or impossible. We will deal with these arguments in the order in which they are offered.

The first is based upon the conception that a bankruptcy court must hold every debtor-creditor relationship completely in statu quo pending the submission, approval and execution of a plan of reorganization or until such time as the court may determine that no reorganization is feasible. The debtor contends that Fidelity Assurance Ass’n v. Sims, 318 U.S. 608, 621, 63 S.Ct. 807, 813, 87 L.Ed. 1032, is dispositive of the issue presented, relying on the language of Mr. Justice Roberts that “* * the * * * [Bankruptcy Act] does not contemplate a liquidation in a Chapter X proceeding but a liquidation in ordinary bankruptcy or a dismissal outright.” The-debtor relies as well on the decision of the' Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit in Re Realty Associates Securities Corporation, 163 F.2d 387, 390. The debtor asserts (as do the note holders) that since-the order appealed from authorized and directed a distribution of 6% on the principal amount of the bonds that this is in. fact and in legal effect a partial liquidation. Therefore, it is urged, since the purpose of Chapter X is reorganization and not liquidation, no partial liquidation can be brought within the authority conferred on. the court by Chapter X.

The authorities cited do not sustain the argument. In the Fidelity Assurance Ass’n case the Supreme Court held only that the petition of the debtor should be dismissed since it was not filed in good' faith and that the provisions of Chapter X were attempted to be availed of only as-a means toward actual liquidation. In the Realty Associates case the Court of Appeals for -the Second Circuit was merely passing inter alia upon the application of the “judgment theory” in a Chapter X proceeding.

We have found no decision by an appellate tribunal which rules the question presently before us.

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Bluebook (online)
171 F.2d 890, 1949 U.S. App. LEXIS 3544, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-industrial-office-bldg-corporation-ca3-1949.