In Re Oaks Partners, Ltd.

141 B.R. 453, 1992 WL 110067
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, N.D. Georgia
DecidedMarch 6, 1992
Docket15-64693
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 141 B.R. 453 (In Re Oaks Partners, Ltd.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, N.D. Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Oaks Partners, Ltd., 141 B.R. 453, 1992 WL 110067 (Ga. 1992).

Opinion

ORDER

JOYCE BIHARY, Bankruptcy Judge.

I. Introduction

This matter is before the Court on two competing plans, Debtor’s Plan of Reorganization as amended (“Debtor’s Plan”), and the Plan of Liquidation proposed by First Union Real Estate Equity and Mortgage Investments as amended (“First Union’s Plan”). First Union filed objections to Debtor’s Plan, and debtor Oaks Partners, Ltd. (“Oaks”), filed objections to First Union’s Plan. The hearing to consider confirmation of the plans commenced on October 21, 1991, and counsel for Oaks and First Union presented evidence and legal argument.

On December 9, 1991, the Court entered an Order concerning certain key issues raised by First Union’s objections to the confirmation of Debtor’s Plan. In re Oaks Partners, Ltd., 135 BR 440, 22 B.C.D. 673 (Bankr.N.D.Ga.1991). These issues included the appropriate cramdown rate of interest, the value of debtor’s property serving as First Union’s collateral, and the application of post-petition payments made by debtor to First Union during the pendency of this Chapter 11 case. At the conclusion of the December 9, 1991 Order, the Court directed the parties to appear on January 8, 1992 and advise the Court which factual and legal issues remained to be adjudicated in order to determine which plan should be confirmed.

On January 8, 1992, debtor filed its Second Modification to Debtor’s Plan to provide that interest on the unpaid amount of First Union’s claim would accrue at the rate of 10 V4% per annum or such other rate as the Court may designate in a confirmation order as being appropriate for purposes of cramdown under the Bankruptcy Code.

At the January 8, 1992 hearing, counsel advised the Court that the significant remaining issues involved First Union’s objections to debtor’s classification of claims and to the negative amortization feature in Debtor’s Plan. After hearing considerable argument with respect to the classification issues, the Court provided the parties with direction, suggesting that First Union’s objections based on classification could be met by minor amendments to Debtor’s Plan. Those amendments have been made and will be discussed herein. Unfortunately, the factual presentation regarding the negative amortization feature of Debtor’s Plan was not sufficiently clear for the Court to make any meaningful findings or rulings. Debtor had prepared some exhibits showing projected negative amortization, but had not shared them with First Union’s counsel prior to the hearing. In addition, the Court advised counsel that the amount of negative amortization proposed *456 was unreasonably high. The Court gave debtor time in which to amend Debtor’s Plan to eliminate or reduce the amount of negative amortization and to file a memorandum explaining clearly the proposed amount of deferred interest, by year, at the interest rates under consideration. The Court gave both debtor and First Union time to file briefs on the appropriateness of the amount of the negative amortization under any amended plan. Debtor and First Union have filed amendments, and the parties have filed briefs. Thus, the case is now in a posture to rule on the remaining objections to the two plans.

Having considered Debtor’s Plan and First Union’s Plan, the evidence and arguments presented, the effect of the Court’s rulings in the December 9, 1991 Order, and the post-hearing amendments and submissions of counsel, the Court finds that neither plan as modified yet satisfies the requirements for confirmation under the Bankruptcy Code. Both plan proponents • will be given a brief period in which to amend their respective plans, if they so choose.

II. The Debtor’s Plan

Most of the pertinent background facts including a description of the debtor and a description of Debtor’s Plan are set out in the December 9, 1991 Order, and those facts will not be repeated here. On January 14, 1992, debtor filed a Third Modification of its Plan which: (i) increased the effective pay rate of interest on First Union’s claim from 9.32% to 9.85%; (ii) eliminated debtor’s obligation to pay an insider a fee of 1% of gross income for administrative services; (iii) eliminated the requirement in the plan to establish and maintain a reserve fund of $70,000.00 designed to cover emergency expenses; and (iv) increased the minimum amount that must be raised from limited partners to $600,000.00 from $450,000.00.

A. Objection to Negative Amortization

The significant remaining objection to Debtor’s Plan is to the negative amortization feature. “Negative amortization” refers to the amount of deferred interest on the claim of First Union under Debtor’s Plan. Debtor’s Plan as now modified provides that First Union will be paid at the rate of 9.85%, while interest will accrue at the rate of 10.25% per annum or at such other rate as the Court may designate. While the parties have suggested that daily fluctuations in reported yields on treasury obligations might change the appropriate cramdown interest rate, for all the reasons given in the December. 9, 1991 Order and considering the published yield from December 9, 1991 to today’s date on a treasury bond maturing in August, 2000, the Court still finds that 10V4% is the appropriate cramdown interest rate. 1 The effect of debtor’s modifications is that there will be approximately $302,000.00 of deferred interest on First Union’s claim during the first seven years under Debtor’s Plan, and the deferred interest will not be fully paid until the end of the plan term in June, 2000. First Union objects and argues that this negative amortization feature of Debtor’s Plan is not fair and equitable under 11 U.S.C. § 1129(b).

To put this discussion into focus, it is useful to remember that First Union has not accepted Debtor’s Plan and is impaired under Debtor’s Plan. Thus, debtor has requested that its plan be confirmed under the “cramdown” provisions in § 1129(b) of the Bankruptcy Code. Under § 1129(b)(1), a plan can be confirmed notwithstanding the impairment of and nonacceptance by a class of claims, if the plan does not discriminate unfairly and if it is fair and equitable with respect to such class of claims. Accordingly, the Court cannot confirm Debt- or’s Plan without a finding that the plan is fair and equitable with respect to First Union.

The recent Ninth Circuit case of Great Western Bank v. Sierra Woods Group, 953 F.2d 1174 (9th Cir.1992) summarizes the current state of the law regarding whether a plan that includes negative amortization is fair and equitable with *457 in the meaning of § 1129(b). The Court in Sierra Woods surveyed most, if not all, of the reported Chapter 11 cases on the subject and noted that certain patterns have emerged. First, all but one of the courts which have considered the issue have rejected a per se rule against negative amortization and have determined that compliance with the fair and equitable requirement must be decided on a case-by-case basis.

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Bluebook (online)
141 B.R. 453, 1992 WL 110067, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-oaks-partners-ltd-ganb-1992.