In re La France Industries Inc.

42 F. Supp. 642, 1942 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3253
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedJanuary 7, 1942
DocketNo. 19393
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 42 F. Supp. 642 (In re La France Industries Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re La France Industries Inc., 42 F. Supp. 642, 1942 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3253 (E.D. Pa. 1942).

Opinion

KIRKPATRICK, District Judge.

This case is now before the Court upon some twenty petitions for allowances for compensation for services legal and otherwise in corporate reorganization proceedings, and for reimbursement for expenses.

La France Industries is a Pennsylvania corporation manufacturing upholstery fabrics (80% of its business) and miscellaneous textile products. It has its principal plant in Philadelphia, and in 1936 owned all the stock of two subsidiaries, one with a plant in the South, the other a Canadian corporation with a plant in Canada. In June, 1936, it filed a voluntary petition under Sec. 77B, Bankr.Act, 11 U.S.C.A. § 207, and was continued in possession of its assets, with direction to operate, until October 14, 1936, when J. Harris Warthman was appointed trustee for both the debtor and its American subsidiary. The Trustee’s operation of the properties continued until July, 1941, when a plan of reorganization, which had been approved by the Court December 8, 1939, and, after modification, confirmed June 5, 1940, was finally consummated.

Interim allowances (mainly to the trustee and his counsel) have already been made in the amount of $125,225, but it will simplify the discussion to disregard them and deal with totals rather than balances. Therefore all allowances fixed by this order will be for total compensation, and in each case the amount already received will be deducted before payment.

The allowances requested (including the interim payments) amount in all to $512,-058.50 for services and $20,016.44 for expenses. Certain other expenses, incidental to reorganization, have been paid in the course of the proceeding. If all requests should be allowed in full the over all cost of this reorganization would be more than $550,000.

In order to get a starting point, certain factors common to all the requests may be noted:

1. The size of the estate: Treating the debtor and the American subsidiary as one and including the capital stock of the Canadian company owned by the debt- or, the appraised valuation of the entire concern as of the beginning of the trusteeship was $2,036,087.18 for liquidation, and $4,326,279.77 as a going business. In connection with the latter figure the following facts have some bearing: The lien indebtedness of the old company was $1,-755,000 (bonds, $1,462,500, and defaulted interest, $292,500). The face value of the [644]*644bonds and mortgage and certificates of indebtedness of the new company are substantially less than this. In its report upon the proposed plan of reorganization filed in November, 1939, the Securities and Exchange Commission, dealing extensively with property earnings as a basis for valuation, reported the real value as approximately $3,360,000. I am inclined to think that, taking into consideration subsequent developments, if we call this a $4,000,000 enterprise in order to have some idea how much it should cost under normal conditions to reorganize it, we would be stating a figure which is certainly not too low. On this basis, the over all cost would be nearly 14% and the total of the requested allowances for services (excluding expenses) over 12% of the value of the whole. I am not attempting to set up any fixed rule of percentage for the allowable cost of reorganization, and I recognize that the percentages just stated are a little too high, because they do not take account of the fact that when the trustee took over executive duties of some officers there was a compensating reduction of salaries. This, however, I believe did not amount to more than $50,000 in all and to some extent would probably have been made in any event. However, it has been pointed out again and again that the value of the estate and the extent to which it will be burdened or depleted by the allowances are elements for consideration, and it seems plain that in the light of this principle the requested allowances are far too high, and justifiable only by something very unusual in the nature of the proceeding.

2. The whole reorganization was built upon a loan of $600,000 by the Reconstruction Finance Corporation, which was granted only upon condition that costs (not counting the interim allowances already made) would not exceed $250,000. This condition was known to and has been acquiesced in by all the petitioners, and consequently their claims have been presented with the knowledge that some, if not all, of them would have to be substantially reduced. I do not know to what extent, if at all, this fact may have been a subconscious element in the appraisal of the value of their own services by the respective petitioners, but even if it had no effect at all and the amounts requested were all fully justified, the Court would still have the task of distributing a fund of $250,000 among claims aggregating some $380,000.

3. I have referred to the legitimate cost of a normal reorganization. So far as I can see, the only thing about this one which appears to have been much out of the ordinary is the inordinate length of time it took — about four and one-half years, or, to be exact, 56 months. The delay was due almost entirely to a deadlock between two conflicting groups resulting in the abandonment of both competing plans for lack of sufficient consents, and in the total failure to get started upon a really constructive course for two years or more. The things which finally produced action were (chronologically) : (a) The entry of a new bondholders’ committee into the picture with a threat of liquidation, (b) constructive work on the part of the indenture trustee and the Securities and Exchange Commission, each of whom was in a position to take an impartial stand, and (c) the gradual acquisition by one of the two conflicting groups referred to of controlling interests in both the stock and the bonds.

I hesitate to say that the delay was avoidable, and, certainly, there is no thought of penalizing the present petitioners for the undue protraction of the proceedings. An unselfish attitude is not required or to be expected of security holders or creditors, and attorneys are bound to act in the interest of the parties whom they represent, even if their clients are stubborn and appear to be unreasonable. Still, the record of this case indicates that a good deal of the work done by creditors’ committees and their counsel prior to September, 1938, was not a contribution to the reorganization, and therefore more properly chargeable to the interests represented than to this debtor. On the other hand, it is not to be overlooked that this reorganization was entirely successful, and that the company is now operating under a fair and feasible plan approved by the Court after careful scrutiny by the Securities and Exchange Commission, and, so far as I know, satisfactory to all parties in interest. This result was reached without suspension or serious dislocation of the company’s business and after a period of highly satisfactory trustee management which, no doubt, made permanent improvements in methods and policies. For this reason it cannot be said that the de[645]*645lay in effecting a plan was detrimental to the whole enterprise. Possibly, confidence in the trustee’s ability to operate the company advantageously, which appears to have been generally entertained, removed the normal anxiety to get the company out of the hands of the Court as quickly as possible.

Coming now to the specific requests:

Trustee: Mr. Warthman is a textile manufacturer who, when appointed, had recently wound up a business of his own and was exceptionally well qualified by his training and experience to take over the operation of La France.

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Bluebook (online)
42 F. Supp. 642, 1942 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3253, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-la-france-industries-inc-paed-1942.