In Re Lion Capital Group

49 B.R. 163, 12 Collier Bankr. Cas. 2d 1031, 1985 Bankr. LEXIS 6254
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, S.D. New York
DecidedApril 25, 1985
Docket19-22251
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 49 B.R. 163 (In Re Lion Capital Group) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Lion Capital Group, 49 B.R. 163, 12 Collier Bankr. Cas. 2d 1031, 1985 Bankr. LEXIS 6254 (N.Y. 1985).

Opinion

OPINION AND ORDER

HOWARD C. BUSCHMAN, III, Bankruptcy Judge. '

In this proceeding, the Trustee of the estate of Lion Capital Group (“Lion”) and several of its affiliates, Lion Capital Associates, Blackburn Associates, Hamilton Gregg Asset Management Ltd. and Hamilton Gregg Monetary Management Ltd. (jointly “debtors”) 1 seek an order of this Court pursuant to Rule of Bankruptcy Procedure 9019 approving a proposed settlement of an adversary proceeding commenced by Bradford Trust Company (“Bradford”) against the Trustee and some thirty-seven creditors. Those creditors are primarily school districts and municipal agencies (the “Open Repo Creditors”) who had entered into repurchase agreements with Lion which were open when the debtors filed petitions under Chapter 11 of the United States Bankruptcy Code, 11 U.S.C. § 1101, et seq. (1984) (the “Bankruptcy Code”). Objections to the settlement wére filed by some 42 entities (the “Closed Repo Creditors”). They are defendants in an action commenced by the Trustee on November 2, 1984 to recover for the estate certain transfers by Lion resulting from the prepetition closing of repurchase transactions. An evidentiary hearing was held regarding the Settlement on March 1, 11 and 12, 1985.

I

When the debtors filed their petitions on May 2, 1985, Bradford Trust Company (“Bradford”) held some $45 million in securities in Lion accounts consisting primarily of United States Treasury obligations. It claimed them as security for loans to Lion pursuant to an agreement styled as a “General Clearance, Draft Receivable Financing and Security Agreement” (the “Security Agreement”). Upon the joint application of the Trustee and Bradford, this Court entered an order dated May 14, 1985 empowering the Trustee to liquidate the securities and directing him to hold the proceeds in a cash account at the Federal Reserve Bank of New York (the “Federal Cash Account”). The order provided that all parties would retain the same rights in the Federal Cash Account as they had in the securities. Bradford then filed a summons and complaint seeking a determination by this Court of the validity of its lien. The Trustee and the Open Repo Creditors asserted counterclaims against Bradford and cross-claims against each other. This action and its proposed settlement involves the resolution of those various claims.

A. The Lion Accounts at Bradford

From the evidence at the hearing, it appears that on June 7, 1983, Lion and Bradford entered into the Security Agreement *170 whereby, in exchange for advances by Bradford to Lion, Bradford was granted a security interest in

... the balance and contents of every and all deposit(s) or account(s), now or hereafter existing, of [Lion] with BTC, any other claim of [Lion] against BTC, now or hereafter existing, and all money, instruments, securities, documents, chattel paper, general intangibles, credits, accounts, contract rights, claims, demands and any other property, rights and interests of [Lion] which at any time shall come into the possession or custody or under the control of BTC or any of BTC’s agents, associates or correspondents, or in which BTC shall have any right or interest for any purpose, and shall include the proceeds, products and accessions of and to any of the foregoing ...

As contemplated by the Security Agreement, Bradford opened a government securities clearance account in Lion’s name (the “Clearance Account”). In October, 1983, Lion began entering into non-possessory repurchase agreements primarily with school districts and municipalities solicited by an entity known as National Money Market Services Inc. Bradford opened three segregation accounts for Lion (the “Segregation Accounts”).

Although Bradford contends that the Security Agreement embraces securities contained in the Segregation Accounts, the document does not expressly refer to accounts designed to contain securities held for Lion’s customers. The great preponderance of the evidence on this record confirms that such coverage was not intended. Bradford’s Standard Methods & Procedures Manual states that “[securities in segregation accounts may never be used as collateral for loans.” Furthermore, each of the Account Profiles for each of Lion’s three segregation accounts contains the statement that this “Account will be used solely for segregation of customers’ fully-paid securities.” The meaning of this is made clear by comparing the caption to the principal Segregation Account, “Lion Capital Group Customer Segregation Account” (Exh. 8a) with the Clearance Account caption, “Lion Capital Group.”

The Clearance Account contained $32,-562,169.67 when Lion filed its Chapter 11 petition. Approximately $1,000,000 of unpaid interest on the securities in the account had accrued, thus yielding a real value in excess of $33,500,000. Bradford, however, contends that an additional $10 million belongs in the Clearance Account. It alleges that Irving Comerchero, the Lion official directly responsible for dealings with Bradford, instructed Bradford, on or about March 5, 1985, to transfer approximately $10 million from the Segregation Accounts to the Clearance Account. According to the Trustee, Comerchero denies giving that instruction. In any event, the transfer was not consummated since the Bradford employee simultaneously completed transfer tickets both debiting and crediting a' Segregation Account in that amount.

Of the three Segregation Accounts, only two contained any securities as of the filing date. The first Segregation Account contained securities of a value of $12,513,963 and the second, $468,750. According to the Trustee, these figures were subject to upward adjustment for unpaid accrued interest, so that the total value of the securities in the Segregation Accounts approximated $13 million.

B. Lion Repo Transactions

A typical Lion nonpossessory repurchase transaction (“repo”) 2 began, according to *171 the Trustee, with Lion informing a company known as National Money Market Services Inc., of the amount of security repurchase transactions (“repos”) it would be willing to transact on a particular day and at what interest rate. National Money Market apparently would then solicit clients and inform Lion later in the day of the amount of repos it was able to place.

A client, often a school district or municipal agency, would thereupon wire funds directly to Bradford or to a Bradford account at a bank such as National Westmin-ister Bank. The wire transfers instructed Bradford to deposit the funds in Lion’s account with it. Upon receipt of the wire transfer and apparently after telephonic communications with Lion, Bradford would prepare an internal memorandum reflecting the name of the client, the date, the amount and a notation that the funds were intended for the Lion Clearance Account.

For its repo transactions, Lion employed government securities, which it delivered or transferred to a custodian bank designated by the client (“possessory” repos) or which Lion informed the client were being “held in safekeeping” at Bradford (“non-possessory” repos).

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Bluebook (online)
49 B.R. 163, 12 Collier Bankr. Cas. 2d 1031, 1985 Bankr. LEXIS 6254, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-lion-capital-group-nysb-1985.