In Re Mayer Pollock Steel Corp.

174 B.R. 414, 1994 Bankr. LEXIS 1797, 26 Bankr. Ct. Dec. (CRR) 328, 1994 WL 661906
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedNovember 23, 1994
Docket19-11534
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 174 B.R. 414 (In Re Mayer Pollock Steel Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy 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 Mayer Pollock Steel Corp., 174 B.R. 414, 1994 Bankr. LEXIS 1797, 26 Bankr. Ct. Dec. (CRR) 328, 1994 WL 661906 (Pa. 1994).

Opinion

OPINION

DAVID A. SCHOLL, Chief Judge.

A INTRODUCTION

Before us is the issue of whether this court should confirm the Debtor’s [sic] Joint Amended Second Plan of Reorganization Pursuant to Chapter 11 of Title 11 of the United States Code (“the Plan”) over the Objections of the Debtors’ largest secured creditor, Midlantic Bank, N.A., successor to Continental Bank (“the Bank”). These Objections are now confined to a few technical issues; a contention that the Bank is not being treated “fairly and equitably,” pursuant to 11 U.S.C. §§ 1129(b)(1) and (b)(2)(A) because the Debtor proposes to allow it to choose only an interest rate on its loan balance which is either the present contract floating rate of 1.5 percent above prime or a fixed rate of nine (9%) percent; and an analysis of evidence presented at the hearing which allegedly throws doubt upon the Plan’s feasibility, which the Debtors are required to establish pursuant to 11 U.S.C. § 1129(a)(ll).

Observing that the Debtors conduct a “real” business of buying, processing, and reselling scrap steel rather than consisting of an entity which merely operates a single asset of real estate, as in many of the eases relied upon by the Bank; that, in addition to the Bank, all but ten small unsecured creditors out of 132 voting secured and unsecured creditors have accepted the Plan; and that none of the issues pressed by the Bank, including feasibility and its own treatment, appear sufficiently meritorious to justify denial of confirmation, we will confirm the Plan.

*416 B. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

MAYOR POLLOCK STEEL CORPORATION, the operating debtor entity, and THE POLLOCK CORPORATION, which manages the foregoing debtor (“the Debtors”), with PEPCO CORPORATION, a related entity the acquisition of which led to much of the Debtors’ financial difficulties and whose case was subsequently converted to Chapter 7 and closed as a no-asset case, all filed Chapter 11 bankruptcy cases on April 3, 1993. These eases elicited one previously-reported Opinion, of August 18, 1993, published at 157 B.R. 952 (herein cited as “Pollock I”), in which the main players in the confirmation dispute, the Debtors, the Bank, and an active Official Committee of Unsecured Creditors (“the Committee”), joined forces to defeat an alleged reclamation of certain steel products by an unsecured creditor, London Salvage & Trading Co.

It is relevant to reiterate our observations, in Pollock I, supra, 157 B.R. at 955, that there had been “an unusually bitter and prolonged struggle between the Debtor and the Bank over the terms of periodic cash collateral orders” at the outset of the case, which spilled over into several later hearings. In deference to the vigor of the Bank’s contentions, we allowed the Debtors to make interest payments of about $25,000 monthly to the Bank as adequate protection payments beginning in June, 1993, over the Committee’s Objections. The Committee objected even more vigorously to the Debtors’ request, in August, 1993, to additionally make payments of principal of about $25,000 more per month as additional adequate protection. However, we allowed all of these payments, totalling about $50,000 monthly, to be made through the present.

After a hearing on a motion of General Electric Capital Corporation (“GECC”) for relief from the automatic stay to foreclose on certain equipment leased from it by the Debtors, this court entered an Order of July 9, 1993, requiring the Debtors to pay GECC $6,000 monthly and to file a plan of reorganization and an accompanying disclosure statement on or before November 26, 1993, as a condition for retaining the leased equipment. However, after the Bank filed, on August 3, 1994, a motion for relief from the automatic stay to foreclose on virtually all of the Debtors’ assets, subject to its security interest, the Debtors not only agreed to pay monthly principal and interest payments to the Bank, but also began negotiating a consensual plan with the Bank which would feature the Debtors’ obtaining a loan of about $2.1 million to cash out a significant portion of the Bank’s remaining debt of about $4 million.

A plan dependent upon such financing was proposed in early 1994, but the requisite funding was not forthcoming. The Bank refused to continue the confirmation hearing and a hearing on its motion for relief beyond April 6, 1994. The Committee at that juncture joined the Bank in insisting that matters be brought to a head, hinting that it intended to file a plan of its own. After a lengthy hearing of April 6,1994, we entered an Order of April 7, 1994, denying confirmation of the Debtors’ plan as “patently infeasible” without its funding in place; terminating the Debtors’ exclusivity to file a plan on May 6, 1994; and requiring the Debtors to file a new plan, which would feature an alternative financing proposal and which appeared potentially acceptable to the Bank, and an accompanying disclosure statement, on or before June 24, 1994.

An amended plan and disclosure statement was filed in June, although the Debtors never obtained the hoped-for financing. At the hearing on the disclosure statement accompanying this plan, on July 20,1994, the Debtors were granted permission to amend the plan again. A disclosure statement accompanying a further slightly amended plan was approved on July 25, 1994, and a confirmation hearing was scheduled on September 14, 1994. After a week’s continuance, it was agreed by the Bank, the Debtors, and the Committee that the plan would be amended slightly again and that, if the Debtors failed to achieve confirmation at a final confirmation hearing, set for October 19, 1994, the Bank would forthwith be granted relief from the automatic stay on its motion.

A lengthy contested confirmation hearing of October 19, 1994, ensued. The Debtors made several more modifications to the plan *417 just before the hearing, most notably adding, to the nine (9%) percent interest rate to be paid to the Bank in the current plan, an option for the Bank to accept the contract rate, a variable rate of prime plus 1.5 percent. After the hearing, in light of the court’s assessment of a bevy of technical objections of the Bank to confirmation, the Debtors expressed a desire to make one last round of minor plan amendments. This court issued an Order requiring all amendments to be made by October 24, 1994, and for the parties to thereafter simultaneously submit Opening Briefs and Reply Briefs addressing the issue of confirmation on or before November 4, 1994, and November 10, 1994, respectively.

The Plan, in its final form, is to be funded by the Debtors’ operations, downsized to eliminate a low-profit-margin steel brokerage business, which gave rise to the litigation at issue in Pollock I, and a $200,000 equity contribution from several shareholders of the Debtors. No loan is now contemplated. Five secured claims, including that of GECC, are placed in respective separate classes.

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Bluebook (online)
174 B.R. 414, 1994 Bankr. LEXIS 1797, 26 Bankr. Ct. Dec. (CRR) 328, 1994 WL 661906, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-mayer-pollock-steel-corp-paeb-1994.