In re Liquidation of City Savings & Loan Co.

31 Ohio Law. Abs. 569, 17 Ohio Op. 541, 1937 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 1023
CourtCuyahoga County Common Pleas Court
DecidedJune 29, 1937
StatusPublished

This text of 31 Ohio Law. Abs. 569 (In re Liquidation of City Savings & Loan Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Cuyahoga County Common Pleas Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Liquidation of City Savings & Loan Co., 31 Ohio Law. Abs. 569, 17 Ohio Op. 541, 1937 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 1023 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1937).

Opinion

OPINION

By HURD, J.

This cause comes before this court at this time upon the application of Wm. M. Kroeger, superintendent of Building & Loan Associations of Ohio, by L. J. Sulzer, special deputy superintendent of Building and Loan Associations of [570]*570Ohio, in charge of the liquidation of the City Savings & Loan Company. The applicant represents to the court that on or about the 14th day of September, 1933, the affairs, assets, property and operations of said City Savings & Loan Company of Cleveland, Ohio, were taken over by the superintendent of Building and Loan Associations of Ohio for the purposes of liquidation under the statutes of Ohio granting such authority.

The applicant further represents that he is now in receipt of an offer from the City Savings Association, an Ohio corporation, to purchase from him in bulk certain assets of the City Savings & Loan Company. The assets are described in said application as being cash and Home Owners’ Loan Corporation Bonds in the aggregate sum of $500,000, 43 mortgages having a principal balance due of $119,444 and 22 parcels of real estate having an appraised value of $315,000, making a total valuation of $919,000 as set forth in said application. The applicant further represents to the court that it appears to be to the best interest of the liquidating estate and of persons directly or indirectly connected therewith that the offer be accepted.

A copy of the offer, marked Exhibit A. is attached to the application and is in manner and form as follows:

“March 25, 1937.
Honorable William H. Kroeger, Superintendent of Building and Loan Associations of the State of Ohio
Columbus, Ohio
Dear Mr. Kroeger:

On behalf of The City Savings Association of Cleveland, Ohio, an Ohio corporation, I hereby offer to purchase from you, as Superintendent of Building and Loan Associations of the State of Ohio in charge of the liquidation of The City Savings & Loan Company of Cleveland, Ohio, the following assets of said company, more particularly described in the attached schedules:

Cash and HOLC Bonds $500,000.00
Mortgages 119,000.00
Real Estate 300.000.00
$919,000.00

for which the new City Savings Association will issue to you its shares insured by The Federal Savings & Loan Insurance Corporation in equal amount.

It is mutually understood that you will distribute the shares of The City Savings Association so delivered to you as a dividend to the holders of Certificates of Claim of The City Savings & Loan Company, and that only sufficient assets will be transferred by you, and only sufficient shares delivered to you to enable you to pay a dividend of 30% of the deposit liability of The City Savr ings & Loan Company as of the date of said transfer of assets, said deposit liability being based on both proven and unproven claims in the original amount, before the payment of the 10% cash dividend heretofore disbursed.

It is further understood that any adjustment of assets to be transferred required to equal -the 30% dividend shall be made in the item of cash.

Very respectfully yours,

ROB: EM”

The foregoing application, although signed individually by an agent is made on behalf of the proposed new corporation to be formed for the purpose of taking over the assets.

The court has conducted an extended hearing upon this proposal and numerous briefs of counsel have been filed, both in favor of and in opposition to the proposed application. In a consideration of this proposal we do not deem it necessary to burden the record with a statement of the history of the liquidation of the company. Suffice it to say that in 1931 the company went upon a restricted basis and thereafter in September of 1933 the superintendent took charge of the company for the purposes of liquidation and has been in charge administering its affairs ever since that date. A dividend of 10% was paid to all depositors in May, 1936, since which time no dividends have been paid. The City Savings Association mentioned in the application as the proposed purchaser of the assets above described is a new company organized by a group of stockholders of the old company. According to the tes[571]*571timony the corporate organization has not been completed and the new corporation has no assets.

A proposal had been previously made to purchase all of the assets of the company by the group sponsoring the new company. The previous application was voluntarily withdrawn.

In a consideration of any proposal made with respect to the assets of a liquidating bank or savings and loan company, the court must be guided by what is for the best interests of the depositors. Any plan wnich does not serve the best interests of depositors should be disapproved. If there is doubt about a plan serving the best interests of depositors it should be disapproved.

Coming now to a consideration of the application of the superintendent which is denominated application “for authority to sell certain assets in bulk” we find upon analyzing the offer of the new company, Marked Exhibit “A” above, that it is not in fact “a sale of assets in bulk.” It appears to the court that it is rather a proposal that the superintendent of Building & Loan Associations deliver to the new company over $900,000 thereof in cash and Home Loan Corporation Bonds without any consideration other than that the new company will capitalize said assets and issue its shares in said new company in exchange for said assets. In other words the proposers offer to capitalize the assets and issue shares against them. It appears that according to the statement of the liquidator as of April 30, 1937, the cash on hand amounted to $418,973. It appears also that since that date additional cash has come into the hands of the superintendent so that the cash alone being considered in connection with this application amounts to almost $500,000.

We fail to see how this proposed transaction can be properly denominated “a sale” of the assets in bulk. We do not sell money, and wnile we sell bonds the bonds of the Home Owners’ Loan Corporation are practically the same as cash, selling on the open market at prices fluctuating around par.

As above shown the proposed value of the real estate is $516,000 and the appraised value of the mortgages is $119,444. Since the date of the application something over $40,000 has been paid on the mortgages so that the mortgages passing are jess than the appraised value of $100,000 while the cash has increased in the ratio that the mortgages are reduced.

■ • We come to the conclusion, which to us is inevitable, that this court cannot consider this transaction as a “sale” of assets in bulk. For this reason alone, we believe that the application should be disapproved. However, we have decided to consider the application on its merits as a plan of reorganization.

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Bluebook (online)
31 Ohio Law. Abs. 569, 17 Ohio Op. 541, 1937 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 1023, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-liquidation-of-city-savings-loan-co-ohctcomplcuyaho-1937.