In re Moorhead Knitting Co.

52 F. Supp. 8, 1943 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2063
CourtDistrict Court, M.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedOctober 16, 1943
DocketNo. 10280
StatusPublished

This text of 52 F. Supp. 8 (In re Moorhead Knitting Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, M.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 Moorhead Knitting Co., 52 F. Supp. 8, 1943 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2063 (M.D. Pa. 1943).

Opinion

JOHNSON, District Judge.

To the Revised Plan of Reorganization filed in the above matter the Securities and Exchange Commission filed objections and also filed exceptions to the Report of the Special Master approving the Revised Plan.

By order of this Court dated June 18, 1943, issues were framed by rule and answer and evidence thereon produced before this court. The issues are separate and relate to three distinct subject matters.

The first issue pertains to a certain fund which by order of this court dated January 18, 1943, was deposited in a special account in order to distinguish it from the general funds in this reorganization. The fund arose from the sale of real estate of the debtor located in Chambersburg, Pennsylvania, against which a first mortgage to secure the sum of $7,500 was recorded in favor of one E. S. Herman, Sr.

In this issue it is the contention of the Securities and Exchange Commission that payment of the fund to the original mortgagee would constitute a preference in that the mortgage debt was illegally contracted [9]*9without the adoption by the board of directors of the debtor corporation of a resolution setting forth a proposed increase in corporate indebtedness and directing that the question of that proposed increase be submitted to a vote of the shareholders of the corporation at an annual or special meeting. It is the contention of the original mortgagee that the mortgage was a valid instrument properly executed in behalf of the mortgagor corporation to secure a loan of money to be used, and which actually was used, in the usual course of business of the corporation for payment of obligations then due.

From the evidence the following facts appear: In December of 1939 the Moor-head Knitting Company was in need of funds to meet current expenses then due, including the payroll. At a meeting of the executive committee of the corporation, E. S. Herman, Sr., one of the directors, offered to lend the company the sum of $7,-500 provided he receive as security therefor a mortgage on the Chambersburg property. The executive committee authorized the loan and, because the need for the money was immediate, E. S. Herman, Sr., issued his check for $7,500 payable to Moorhead Knitting Company and accepted a note as temporary security therefor. The check was deposited to the credit of Moorhead Knitting Company on December 20, 1939. On that same day upon the books of Moor-head Knitting Company in the “Transcript of Voucher Register and Bank Statement” the first entry shows a check for $8,550.70 drawn for use of the payroll account. At the time the check of $7,500 was deposited to the credit of Moorhead Knitting Company, the bank balance of that concern was in the approximate amount of $2,200 and the amount then due for the payroll alone was in excess of the amount loaned by Herman. Prior to the transfer of the sum of $8,550.70 to the payroll account the bank balance had been reduced by checks issued to the approximate amount of $1,100 and although other funds were deposited and other withdrawals made, the only testimony produced was to the effect that all the money deposited was used in the usual course of business of the corporation for payment of obligations then due. On January 3, 1940, at a regular meeting of the board of directors, attended by a majority of the members thereof, a resolution was offered providing that the corporation borrow from E. S. Herman the sum of $7,500, repayable within five years from the date of the loan, and authorizing the giving of a mortgage on the Chambersburg real estate to secure the loan and also appointing an attorney-in-fact to act for the corporation in effectuating the transaction. The resolution was duly seconded and approved and the mortgage subsequently executed and recorded.

The contention of the Securities and Exchange Commission cannot be sustained. Under the evidence submitted it was not necessary to submit the transaction of the loan and mortgage to a meeting of stockholders. Sec. 309, Article 3, of the Act of May 5, 1933, P.L. 364, 15 P.S. § 2852—309, expressly provides that: “Nothing herein contained shall be construed to apply to indebtedness contracted in the usual course of corporate business.” This proviso applies to the transaction under consideration. Sun Coal Corporation v. New Upper Lehigh Coal Company, 340 Pa. 547, 17 A.2d 885. The fund as set aside from the proceeds of the sale of the Chambersburg real estate should be used in discharge of the obligation due E. S. Herman, Sr.

The second issue pertains to certain claims based upon the 5% mortgage bonds of the debtor allowed in the Revised Plan of Reorganization and approved by the Special Master in his Report.

By a trust indenture dated July 1, 1936 between the Moorhead Knitting Company and the Central Trust Company of Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, the following obligation was imposed upon the debtor: “(Article I): ‘Section 5. The Corporation, its successors and assigns, will pay to the Trustee on or before May First, 1939, an amount sufficient to retire Five Thousand ($5,000.) Dollars par value of said Bonds, on or before May First of the years 1940, 1941, and 1942 an amount sufficient to retire Ten Thousand ($10,000.) Dollars par value of said Bonds in each' of said years, and on or before May First of the years 1943, 1944 and 1945 an amount sufficient to retire Fifteen Thousand ($15,000.) Dollars par value of said Bonds in each of said years. Said amount or amounts shall constitute a sinking fund, which shall be used by the Trustee from time to time for purchasing any of said Bonds at a price not exdeeding their redemption price effective on the dates of purchase together with accrued interest [10]*10thereon; or for redeeming and retiring on the first interest paying date of said Bonds following the receipt of said amount or amounts at the redemption price effective upon such interest paying dates together with accrued interest thereon such of said Bonds as shall be ascertained for redemption in the manner provided in Section 4 of Article I of this indenture of Mortgage or Deed of Trust.’ ” Section 4 of Article I sets forth the following method for redemption and reads in part as follows: “The Bonds to be redeemed, if in part, shall be ascertained by drawing the respective numbers thereof by lot by the Trustee at least thirty (30) days prior to said date upon which the same are proposed to be paid. Notice of all Bonds to be redeemed, whether in whole or in part, shall be given to the holders thereof by publication or advertisement thirty (30) days prior to said date upon which said Bonds are proposed to be redeemed, in a newspaper of general circulation published in the City of Harrisburg, Pennsylvania.”

It is the contention of the Securities and Exchange Commission that by reason of the failure of the debtor to comply with the terms of the trust indenture public holders of bonds issued thereunder were deprived of any opportunity to participate in the retirement provisions of the trust indenture and that certain bond holders, to wit, J. W. Bowman, Bowman & Company, E. S. Herman, Sr., J. C. Herman, J. C. Herman & Co., F. H. Neale, and H. T. Neale, named by the Securities and Exchange Commission as “officers, directors and insiders”, by reason of their connections with the debtor, participated in practices which should result in the subordination of their claims so that they should not share on an equal basis with the other bond holders. Counsel for the above named bond holders maintain that the provisions of the trust indenture were followed.

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Related

Sun Coal Corp. v. New Upper Lehigh Coal Co.
17 A.2d 885 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1941)

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Bluebook (online)
52 F. Supp. 8, 1943 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2063, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-moorhead-knitting-co-pamd-1943.