In re Inland Gas Corp.

92 F. Supp. 810, 1949 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1816
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Kentucky
DecidedOctober 1, 1949
DocketNos. 989-B, 991-B, 115
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 92 F. Supp. 810 (In re Inland Gas Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Inland Gas Corp., 92 F. Supp. 810, 1949 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1816 (E.D. Ky. 1949).

Opinion

FORD, Chief Judge.

From time to time during the pendency o'f these proceedings, various questions and issues have been raised. Those questions and issues were referred to and stated in general terms in the orders entered herein on February 4, 1948, and July 19, 1948. Proof was taken in August, 1948, with respect to a number of the questions and issues. The deposition of A. H. Grayburn, taken at Ashland, Kentucky, August 3, 4, 5, 1948, relates in considerable detail to the facts and to the records with respect to certain issues. Further testimony, statements, and arguments were heard by the Court at hearings held on October 11, 25, 26, 27, 1948.

A final determination of all of the pending questions and issues which are referred to in the aforesaid orders of February 4th and July 19, 1948, should be made; and the Court deems it appropriate to now determine them and will do so in the order hereinafter stated.

1. Are Columbia Claims Subordinated to Stock? The Court has been called upon to determine whether or not the claims of the Columbia Gas System, Inc. (prior to its recent change of name known as Columbia Gas and Electric Corporation and herein called Columbia) should be subordinated to stock as well as to the claims of creditors. It is contended by creditors of American Fuel and of Kentucky Fuel that a proper construction of the opinion and mandate of the Circuit Court of Appeals in the cases of Columbia Gas and Electric Corporation v. United States et al., 6 Cir., three cases, reported in 151 F.2d 461, 470 requires that the claims of Columbia be subordinated to the claims against all of the debtor corporations, individually and collectively, namely : Inland Gas Corporation, Kentucky Fuel Gas Corporation, and American Fuel and Power Company, without regard to the separate corporate entity of said companies. It is argued by creditors of the American Fuel and the Kentucky Fuel that approximately 73% of the capital stock of Inland being owned by the American Fuel and pledged as security for the payment of bonds issued by it, and approximately 26% of the capital stock of Inland being owned by Kentucky Fuel and pledged as security for the payment of bonds issued by it, Columbia’s claims against Inland should be subordinated to the stock of Inland." On the other hand it is contended by Columbia that the opinion and mandate of the Circuit Court of Appeals by clear and explicit language limited in remedy the subordination of Columbia claims against each particular corporation to the claims of all other creditors of such corporation and did not authorize or direct the subordination of Columbia’s claims to the stock of either of the corporations.

The Court regards this as a pure question of law to be determined from the consideration of the opinion and mandate of the Circuit Court of Appeals in the cases here-inabove referred to.

[813]*813The mandate of the Circuit Court of Appeals, filed February 4, 1946, and corrected on February 7, 1946, ordered that “the decree will be limited in remedy to the subordination of the Columbia claims to the claims of all other creditors of every class, and as so amended, the judgment is affirmed.” The Circuit Court of Appeals reviewed the judgment entered by this Court on October 30, 1943, which directed that all claims of Columbia filed in these proceedings be rejected. The Circuit Court of Appeals held that the claims of Columbia should not be rejected but only subordinated “to the claims of all other creditors of every class.”

Article II, Chapter X of the Bankruptcy Act, 11 U.S.C.A. §§ 506-507, defines the words claims, creditor and debts as follows :

“(1) ‘claims’ shall include all claims of whatever character against a debtor or its property, except stock, whether or not such claims are provable under section 63 of this Act and whether secured or unsecured, liquidated or unliquidated, fixed or contingent ; * * *

“(4) ‘creditor’ shall mean the holder of any claims; * * *

“(6) ‘debts’ shall include all claims;”.

It will be noted that the statute in defining the word “claims” expressly excludes stock. The definitions of “creditor” and of “debts” respectively are limited to “the holder of any claims” and to “all claims.”

This Court is convinced that the Circuit Court of Appeals in using the language limiting the remedy to subordination rather than to the rejection of Columbia’s claims was thoroughly familiar with the statutory ■definitions above quoted; and, that in-choosing the language used intended that Columbia’s claims against each of the respective corporations should be put at the bottom of the list of “claims” of other ■“creditors" of each corporation but did not intend that Columbia’s claims should be subordinated to capital stock of either of said corporations. The Circuit Court of Appeals in its opinion said:

“In the main, his findings are not controverted insofar as they disclose the origin and purpose of the debtors and the story of Columbia’s interest in their activities which follows. Inland Gas Corporation was incorporated in 1927, and Kentucky Fuel Gas Corporation in 1928, both for the purpose of producing, transporting and selling natural gas to industrial consumers. They were promoted by the same person and financed by the same group of bankers, and each issued securities to the public and distributed its common stock to the promoters and underwriters as compensation for services. The promoters also, in July, 1928, organized the American Fuel & Power Company for the purpose of taking over and holding stock of Inland and Kentucky Fuel and other operating companies which might later be organized, in order to integrate and expand their operations through unified control and management. Stockholders of Inland and Kentucky Fuel exchanged their stock for stock in the holding company, and in July, 1929, American Fuel issued and sold to the public an issue of convertible gold notes, maturing July 1, 1934. The proceeds thereof were used to provide financial aid to the operating companies, and to acquire additional gas acreage and transmission lines. American Fuel also organized and financed other subsidiary companies for the purpose of having them acquire, hold and operate various properties.”

The fact that the capital stock of Inland and of Kentucky Fuel was issued as promotion stock and the corporations did not receive cash or capital assets in return therefor may have been considered by the Circuit Court of Appeals in its determination that the equities required the remedy to be limited to the subordination of Columbia’s claims “to the claim of other creditors of every class”. The Circuit Court of Appeals also may have considered the rights and remedies which the stockholders had and which the creditors did not have.

The Circuit Court of Appeals in its decision rendered on October 9, 1945, directed that: “The decree will be limited in remedy to the subordination of the Columbia claims and stock interests in each class to the claims and stock interests of others in such class, and so amended, the judgment is affirmed.” In at least some of the peti[814]*814tions for rehearing and modification of that decision, it was forcefully argued that the established equitable principle of subordination “should be applied under the facts in this case, to completely subordinate Columbia’s claims -and, stock interests to all other claims and stock interests m the American Fuel <and its subsidiaries.”

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Bluebook (online)
92 F. Supp. 810, 1949 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1816, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-inland-gas-corp-kyed-1949.