In Re MCorp Financial, Inc.

160 B.R. 941, 1993 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 14276, 1993 WL 408298
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. Texas
DecidedOctober 1, 1993
DocketCiv. A. H-93-395
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 160 B.R. 941 (In Re MCorp Financial, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re MCorp Financial, Inc., 160 B.R. 941, 1993 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 14276, 1993 WL 408298 (S.D. Tex. 1993).

Opinion

Opinion on ConfiRmation

HUGHES, District Judge.

1. Introduction.

After four years of complex bankruptcy litigation, the prospect of a vitalizing reorganization disappeared long ago. The debtors’ estates are mere shells holding assets to distribute to their creditors. The debtors, creditors committee, and senior bondholders have proposed plans to liquidate those assets, without converting the case formally to a liquidation proceeding. A critical element of the plans is a settlement between the senior bondholders and the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation that resolves all of the claims and counterclaims among the regulatory agency, debtors, and related entities. An analysis of the plans under the code, facts, and economics reveals that they, including the settlement, are in the best interests of the creditors, follow the law, and maximize the value of the estates’ assets. The plans will be confirmed.

2. Background.

In confirming a plan, the court must look only at the plan’s effect on the assets as they exist today; the court cannot judge the plan by comparison to actions that could or should have been taken in the past. The hard-fought, twisted past of these debtors may well have been full of missed opportunities for better results than are now offered, but only what is now possible can form a plan today. The only way the plans can be tested is by comparison to the present alternatives. Knowing how the estates have arrived at this point is, however, a useful context for the confirmation analysis.

A. The Bankruptcies.

Mercantile Bank of Dallas became a holding company that owned a group of separate banks. By the early 1980s, it had evolved into MCorp, owning twenty-five banks and five other kinds of subsidiaries. The collapse of oil prices at the end of 1985 resulted in a *945 parallel collapse in real estate. These twin economic shifts put a fatal strain on the banking system in Texas that was already suffering from excess capacity and desperate speculation. In the 1980s approximately one-third of Texas banks failed. MCorp was struggling to complete its absorption of Southwest Bancshares, another multi-bank holding company that had been near failing.

In the spring of 1989, worried creditors of MCorp filed involuntary petitions. As the holding company was meeting that challenge, the government engineered the insolvency of some of the subsidiary banks. It then closed twenty of MCorp’s banks. The closures provoked two spasms of litigation: these bankruptcies and the Dickensesque claims between the debtors and the regulators. The FDIC has been the principal agency, but some cases have involved the Comptroller of the Currency and the Federal Reserve System. See generally In re MCorp Financial, Inc., 137 B.R. 219 (Bankr.S.D.Tx.), appeal dismissed, 139 B.R. 820 (S.D.Tx.1992).

B. The Debtors.

Technically, the debtors are three distinct companies. MCorp was the ultimate parent company, a bank holding company. MCorp Financial was the subsidiary that operated the banks. MCorp Management was a technical services subsidiary of MCorp Financial. MCorp Management, apart from intercompa-ny debts, had relatively few creditors. The three bankruptcies have been jointly administered.

In addition to the banks, the debtors had significant non-bank assets. Although only one bank remains property of the estates, the total value of the estates’ assets is over $407 million, excluding anything from the FDIC litigation. At this stage in the evolution of the estates, the assets include about $88 million of non-cash assets. Combined with the complexity of the debtors’ affairs, the magnitude of the related losses, and the intrusion of the government, this wealth has resulted in an unusually high volume and intensity of litigation.

Approximately 2,000 claims for over $4 billion were filed against the debtors. The debtors objected to over $3.5 billion of these. In processing these claims, the estates have settled many claims for all of the normal reasons people choose contract over trial. Not all claims could be compromised, and the debtors have initiated or responded to numerous adversary proceedings.

Before proposing these plans, the debtors had eliminated over $900 million in claims for under $40 million by settlement. These settlements have been approved and paid. As part of the plans, the debtors propose a group of noncontroversial additional settlements of claims of $65 million for payments of about $18.5 million. These settlements exclude the settlement of the FDIC litigation.

Beyond the bankruptcy proceedings, litigation arising from the government’s seizure of the banks and related regulatory acts includes:

MCorp v. Clarke, CA3-89-831-F;
MBank New Braunfels, N.A. v. FDIC, CA3-89-1064-F;
MCorp v. United States of America, H-92-959;
FDIC, as Receiver for MBank Abilene, N.A v. The North River Ins. Co., CA3-89-2138-F;
SRE Real Estate Fund v. MCorp Properties, 91-1599, 192d Judicial Dct., Dallas;
MCorp v. The Prentiss/Copley Investment Group, H-91-1131.
MCorp v. Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, H-89-1677.

C. The FDIC Litigation: Defensive.

The FDIC and the debtors have been fighting on two fronts for four years. The debtors’ defensive front is in Houston where the FDIC has brought fourteen claims against the estates totaling between $262 million and $305 million. These claims were originally brought for over $800 million.

The debtors have responded with several counterclaims. Some of these claims repeat or depend on the outcome of the debtors’ Dallas litigation. Some of them would result in establishing claims that would be paid from the receivership estates of closed banks, including intercompany debts. Not counting *946 the value of the repetitive claims, the debtors’ counter for approximately $84 million.

D. The FDIC Litigation: Offensive.

The debtors’ affirmative front is in Dallas, where the debtors have sued the FDIC for damages from the governmental conduct that culminated in the wrongful closing of twenty banks. In essence, the debtors contend that the FDIC and the Comptroller of the Currency manufactured claims of insolvency against the banks that were solvent so that the agencies could get control of the bulk of the MCorp banking empire rather than being limited to the prospect of receiverships for the two metropolitan banks. The debtors’ theory produces damages estimated from $76 million to $327 million.

Also in Dallas, the debtors have filed a complaint against the FDIC and Comptroller under the Federal Tort Claims Act seeking $200 million based on the same conduct.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
160 B.R. 941, 1993 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 14276, 1993 WL 408298, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-mcorp-financial-inc-txsd-1993.