In re Realty Associates Securities Corp.

74 F.2d 61, 1934 U.S. App. LEXIS 3871
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedDecember 3, 1934
DocketNo. 183
StatusPublished

This text of 74 F.2d 61 (In re Realty Associates Securities Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Realty Associates Securities Corp., 74 F.2d 61, 1934 U.S. App. LEXIS 3871 (2d Cir. 1934).

Opinions

CHASE, Circuit Judge.

The appeals in this cause have been consolidated and will be so treated herein.

Realty Associates Corporation filed its voluntary petition in bankruptcy in the District Court for the Eastern District of New York on July 10, 1933, and was adjudicated a bankrupt on that day and the cause referred to the referee. At the same time Fred L. Gross and Frank Fox were appointed receivers. They qualified as such and conducted the business of the bankrupt until January 4, 1934, when Fox resigned. Thereafter Gross as sole receiver carried on the bankrupt’s business.

The bankrupt corporation had done a large business in real estate mortgages and in installment sales contracts. It owned real estate, cash, and securities. Its debts consisted largely of bonds it had issued which were secured by three mortgages to the Manufacturers’ Trust Company as trustee, although it owed other debts to the amount of $208,-133.90 when its petition was filed.

It made an offer in composition which was accepted by a majority of its creditors in number and amount, but that was not confirmed, and on appeal to this court the order of the District Court was affirmed. In re Realty Associates Corporation, 69 F.(2d) 41. Thereupon the offer in composition was modified, accepted, and confirmed. The referee and the receiver, Gross, alone have appealed, and the only questions presented relate to the correctness of the order respecting their compensation and the adequacy of the order to protect the receiver from personal liability on tax claims.

The composition offer accepted and confirmed provided that

“1. All debts which have priority shall be paid in full. * * *
“3. The amount to be paid to all creditors whose claims are based on presently outstanding bonds of Realty Associates Securities Corporation, and whose claims have either been filed or allowed or are included in the schedules filed by the bankrupt (claims of such creditors to be stated as of July 10, 1933), shall be fifteen per cent (15%) of the amount of their claims as filed and allowed or if not filed and allowed then fifteen per cent (15%) of the amount at which such [63]*63claims appear in the schedule in bankruptcy filed herein. The remaining eighty-ñve per cent of the amount on which said fifteen per cent (15%) is computed shall be evidenced by the existing outstanding bonds as reduced and modified as hereinafter provided.
“The amounts of any coupons duo prior to April 1, 1933, which are or were attached to the presently outstanding bonds of the Company shall not be included in the computation of any claim for the purposes of this composition, but such coupons shall be paid in full from the sums heretofore deposited with the respective paying agents. * * s.
“5. The amount to be paid to all creditors (not entitled to priority) whose claims are not based upon presently outstanding bonds of Realty Associates Securities Corporation, shall be fifteen per cent (15%) of the amount of their claims as filed and allowed, or if not filed and allowed, then fifteen per cent (15%) of the amount at which such claims appear in the schedules in bankruptcy filed herein, and at the time of such payment such creditors shall also receive presently outstanding bonds now in the treasury of Realty Associates Securities Corporation issued under the indenture above mentioned dated October 1, 1928 (reduced and modified in the same manner as the presently outstanding bonds as provided in subdivision 4 hereof and as hereinafter provided) equal in such reduced face amount to 85% of the amount of their said claims on which said 15% payment in cash is computed.”

The modification, so far as now important, of the bonds which represented 85 per cent, of the indebtedness to be paid by the bankrupt made the due date of all of them October 1, 1943, changed the rate of interest from 6 per cent, to 5 per cent, per annum, and reduced the principal to 85 per cent, of the original amount. The modified offer of composition contained detailed provisions calculated to protect the bondholders in their right to receive or enforce payment of the bonds.

The total amount of the claims covered by the offer was $13,008,038.30. The court allowed the referee one-half of 1 per cent, of the 15 per cent, of this amount which was to be paid in cash and one-half of 1 per cent, of the present value of the 85 per cent, in bonds which he found amounted together to $4,812,974.17. The referee claimed an allowance computed on the entire amount of the indebtedness, insisting that the offer in composition was to pay that in full, while the appellees claim that only the 15 per cent, in cash was the amount to be paid on which the fee of the referee may be computed. Yet they did not appeal, and now urge the affirmance of the order on the ground that, as no greater allowance can lawfully bo made in any event, the referee has not been harmed.

The compensation of referees is only what the Bankruptcy Act allows. The provision, for it is found in section 40a of the act, as amended (11 USCA § 68 (a). So far as here applicable it provides:

“Sec. 40 Compensation of Referees, (a) Referees shall receive as full compensation for their services, payable after they are rendered, * * * one-half of 1 per centum on the amount to be paid to creditors upon the confirmation of a composition.”

What is meant by “amount to be paid” is not confined to cash, but includes whatever the composition agreement provides for. Kinkead v. J. Bacon & Sons (C. C. A.) 230 F. 362. The composition agreement is a bargain which the bankrupt makes with his creditors to release his property from creditors’ claims and secure his own discharge in return for the “amount to be paid” which he has offered and which has been accepted by sufficient creditors and approved by the court as the act requires. Myers v. Internat. Trust Co., 273 U. S. 380, 47 S. Ct. 372, 71 L. Ed. 692. Where the bankrupt’s payment is all in cash, no difficulty can arise in computing the compensation of the referee. If property in kind should be the subject-matter of the offer in whole or in part, some means would have to be found for determining the statutory fee of the referee and whether or not that would take the form of finding the value in money of the property to be turned over to creditors and taking the proper percentage of that need not now be decided. This appeal requires a decision only on the present facts which show that wo are dealing only with a situation where the amount to be paid is part cash and part in promises to pay contained in bonds of the bankrupt in terms payable in cash in the future. These bonds are in large part physically the same bonds which the creditors held before the composition, but because of the composition agreement they are to be altered in material respects by changing the principal amount, the interest rate, and the due date, they are in law new obligations enforceable only in accordance with the new promise they contain which has superseded the old one. When the holders turn them in and receive them back so altered they have their old securities no more than they would have if the old pieces of pa[64]*64per were not returned altered by a rider attached but instead new bonds were issued in exchange for the old.

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Bluebook (online)
74 F.2d 61, 1934 U.S. App. LEXIS 3871, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-realty-associates-securities-corp-ca2-1934.