In Re Mechanics Trust Co.

181 A. 423, 119 N.J. Eq. 141, 18 Backes 141, 1935 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 17
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedNovember 4, 1935
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 181 A. 423 (In Re Mechanics Trust Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Court of Chancery primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Mechanics Trust Co., 181 A. 423, 119 N.J. Eq. 141, 18 Backes 141, 1935 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 17 (N.J. Ct. App. 1935).

Opinion

A plan of reorganization has been submitted by the Mechanics Trust Company, which seventy-five per cent. of its depositors, creditors and mortgage participation certificate holders have consented to in writing. Two-thirds of its stockholders of outstanding capital stock have likewise consented to the plan. The court's approval is sought.

This court issued an order directing the company's depositors, creditors and certificate holders to show cause why the plan should not be approved as fair and equitable. The order also provided that those who did not consent in writing to the plan, should file their dissent, and failing to do so, they would be deemed to have consented to it, and would be bound thereby.

The proceedings are based upon chapter 116, laws of 1933, and the acts amendatory thereto, viz., chapter 407, laws of 1933, and chapter 221, laws of 1935. The statute provides that any bank, trust company, c., which is insolvent or the possession of its property or business has been taken by the commissioner of banking and insurance, may be reorganized and permitted to resume its normal and usual business upon such terms and conditions as may be approved by the commissioner of banking and insurance, and the court of chancery, after notice of the terms and provisions of the proposed reorganization plan and after a hearing by the court shall have been given to the depositors, creditors and stockholders; and that upon such approval of the plan, it shall become *Page 143 effective and binding upon all the depositors, creditors and stockholders if the court shall find, inter alia, that the plan is fair and equitable to the depositors, creditors and stockholders.

The plan, briefly, provides that the depositors shall receive forty per cent. of the deposits in cash and the balance of sixty per cent. in preferred "B" stock of the reorganized bank. The bank certificate of incorporation has been amended to permit the issuance of two classes of preferred stock — class "A" and class "B." The first named class "A" goes to the Reconstruction Finance Corporation in exchange for a loan of $100,000 made, or to be made, by it to the bank. The other class, "B," is to be issued to the depositors and creditors who are not certificate holders. The certificate holders are required to surrender their certificates for which they receive new certificates evidencing their interest in the particular mortgages under which the certificates were issued in connection with each series — the trust company having observed the plan of issuing mortgage certificates in series. In addition to the exchange of certificates, the trust company sets up a special fund of approximately $86,000 for the benefit of such certificate holders to secure them against loss. Some of the mortgage participation certificates are held by the trust company in its trust department; these, in effect, amount to a preference because the institution would be liable as a trustee and obliged to pay.

There is a reserve of $75,000 set up to secure the beneficiaries of the trusts against loss. It is estimated that the whole of this reserve fund will be available for the mortgage participation certificate holders generally, in addition to the reserve of $86,000.

The $86,000 trust fund is to consist of bonds secured by mortgages or other obligations secured by mortgages, which will include a note mortgage or a note and mortgage. Such bonds and obligations and mortgages must be held until all losses are determined, in order to insure fair distribution among those entitled. The amount of the second mortgages and obligations to be taken by the trust company are indicated on the mortgages and the properties underlying each *Page 144 series. As to what bonds and obligations and mortgages are to be set up in the trust fund, the selection is to be made by representatives of the certificate holders and of the reorganized trust company. The approval of the federal agencies is only to be had if they require it.

At the hearing, proof was submitted to sustain the plan as fair and equitable to all of the interests concerned. The depositors, creditors and stockholders who have assented to the plan, are far in excess of the percentage required by the statute; while the dissensions constitute but a very small minority of the aggregate depositors and mortgage participation certificate holders.

The objections urged by the dissenters may generally be classed as follows: (a) denial of knowledge or information to form a belief as to whether or not the plan is fair and equitable; (b) that it is misleading, or inconsistent; (c) that the legislative acts under which the plan is presented are unconstitutional; (d) that they, the objectors, were depositors prior to the adoption of the 1935 act, in consequence of which that act or "prior statutes to which it is an amendment" are unconstitutional as violating paragraph 3, section 7, article 4 of the state constitution and article 1, section 10, of the federal constitution providing against the impairment of contracts; (e) that the plan is indefinite in that it is subject to changes, additions or amendments, material or otherwise, by government agencies without giving the defendants any voice in the proceedings, or opportunity to be heard with regard to their moneys, thus denying them their constitutional rights — depriving them of their property without due process of law; (f) that the reserve fund set up for the mortgage participation certificate holders is inadequate; (g) that the government agency (Reconstruction Finance Corporation) is given all preferences as against depositors.

Considering the objections to the fairness of the plan, paragraph 1 g. thereof provides:

"No dividends shall be declared, set aside, or paid to common stockholders until all of the Preferred Stock "A" and Preferred Stock "B" shall have been retired, nor until all mortgage participation certificate holders have been paid in full." *Page 145

The objectors declare that this recited provision is inconsistent with the fourth paragraph of the plan. They do not specifically point out wherein it is; I fail to discover any such condition. The fourth paragraph of the plan provides that mortgage participation certificate holders are required to release the trust company from any and all liability arising out of the certificates held by them. That provision is not inconsistent with the provisions of paragraph 1 g. of the plan. The holders of the common stock are not entitled to dividends upon their stock until all of the mortgage participation certificate holders have been paid in full; and if such certificate holders are not paid in full as a result of the provisions made for their benefit under the plan, they are left in a position to deal with the common stockholders.

The objection that the government agency is given all preferences as against depositors, although the amount of money of the depositors far exceeds that of the agency, I am satisfied is entirely without substance. The government agency steps in to aid an institution crying for help and it is advancing new money which is essential to the operation of the plan of reorganization; it is given no preference other than what is essential for its protection. The conditions imposed by the government have been embodied in the amended certificate of incorporation.

The objection that the provisions of the plan are indefinite and uncertain, and dependent upon the will of persons and agencies other than the depositors, mortgage participation certificate holders and creditors, is rather general.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
181 A. 423, 119 N.J. Eq. 141, 18 Backes 141, 1935 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 17, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-mechanics-trust-co-njch-1935.