In Re Tenney Village Co., Inc.

104 B.R. 562, 1989 Bankr. LEXIS 1336, 1989 WL 95444
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, D. New Hampshire
DecidedJuly 31, 1989
Docket14-12172
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 104 B.R. 562 (In Re Tenney Village Co., Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, D. New Hampshire primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Tenney Village Co., Inc., 104 B.R. 562, 1989 Bankr. LEXIS 1336, 1989 WL 95444 (N.H. 1989).

Opinion

OPINION

JAMES F. QUEENAN, Jr., Bankruptcy Judge.

Tenney Village Company, Inc. (the “Debtor”) moves for approval of its Chap *563 ter 11 secured financing agreement (the “Financing Agreement”) with Maine Savings Bank (“the Bank”). Objections have been lodged by other lienholders and the committee of unsecured creditors. The Financing Agreement proposes an additional real estate mortgage to the Bank having priority over other lienholders; it would also grant numerous procedural and substantive rights to the Bank during the reorganization. Disposition of the motion involves largely undefined principles concerning the standards for valuation of security interests and the extent to which an agreement for Chapter 11 financing may benefit the lender.

The Debtor operates a ski area at Tenney Mountain, New Hampshire encompassing some 1,000 acres which contain twenty-seven trails, two major lifts and three minor lifts (the “Ski Area”). The Debtor is also engaged in the construction and sale of condominium units on a tract (the “Condominium Tract”) adjoining the Ski Area. On March 24, 1987, in order to finance the condominium project, the Debtor and its two principals, Robert C. Palcilli and George M. Diemer, executed as co-makers a $15,650,000 construction loan agreement with the Bank whose advances were to be secured by the Condominium Tract and related personal property. Some sixty-seven condominium units have since been constructed, of which twenty-eight have been sold. The Debtor has substantially completed the sewer system. The Bank is now owed about $16,500,000 under the construction loan and about $100,000 under a reimbursement agreement executed in connection with a letter of credit issued for construction of the sewer system. It holds a first mortgage and security agreement covering only the Condominium Tract and related personal property.

The Debtor has financed improvements to the Ski Area through bonds issued by the Industrial Development Authority of the State of New Hampshire under a first trust mortgage and security interest (the “trust mortgage”) covering the Ski Area and related personal property. This debt has a present balance of about $1,300,000. Bank of New England, N.A. (“BNE”) is the trustee of the trust mortgage; all the bonds are held by Fidelity Bank of Philadelphia (“Fidelity”). The Debtor owes Samuel G. Hall and Bernice M. Hall (the “Halls”) about $600,000 under its 1985 purchase of both parcels of real estate from the Halls. Securing this debt is a mortgage and security agreement (the “Hall mortgage”) on both the Ski Area and Condominium Tract which is expressly subordinate to any future mortgage or security interest securing payment of funds borrowed for construction or improvement of the property. BNE also holds on its own behalf an attachment lien and a mortgage (the “BNE lien”) securing loan indebtedness of about $500,000 and covering both the Ski Area and Condominium Tract.

The Financing Agreement proposes an additional $1 million loan from the Bank; the proceeds would be used for improvement of both the Ski Area and Condominium Tract. The Debtor wishes to enhance the quality of ski trails and facilitate snow-making on them through regrading and erosion control measures. Ski Area equipment is in need of repair, particularly a snow-making pipeline which is not now operational, and the pond supplying water for snow-making requires redredging. Substantial erosion control and site improvement work is also planned for the Condominium Tract. The Financing Agreement, as modified on the record at the recent •hearing, would grant the Bank a mortgage upon the Ski Area and the Condominium Tract securing its entire pre-petition and post-petition debt and having absolute priority over the BNE lien covering the Condominium Tract and limited priority over the trust mortgage and the BNE lien covering the Ski Area. The latter priority would exist only with respect to the requested new advances to the extent that they are used to pay projected expenditures totaling about $778,000 for general operations and improvement of the Ski Area.

I. LIEN PRIORITY

The Bank seems to suggest in its trial memorandum that approval of these priorities is not now before the Court because *564 the interim order entered by another judge of this Court, which allowed $55,800 of advances, approved the Financing Agreement and set a date for the final hearing “on the sole matter of the authority of the Debtor to borrow funds in excess of $55,-800 under the terms and conditions of the [Financing Agreement] ...” The question of priorities, and indeed all the provisions of the Financing Agreement, nevertheless remain open. The interim order, drafted by Bank counsel, was issued on one day’s telephonic notice. Such financing agreements may be finally approved on no less than fifteen days’ written notice, unless the Court shortens the notice period. Bankr.R. 4001(d). Here the prior judge required thirty days’ notice of the final hearing because of his concern that creditors receive adequate notice. A reasonable inference from other provisions of the interim order, moreover, is that the order reserved to the court at the final hearing jurisdiction to pass on the entire Financing Agreement, including its proposed priority of liens.

A Chapter 11 debtor may obtain credit secured by a lien with priority which is senior or equal to that of an existing lien only if “(A) the [debtor] is unable to obtain such credit otherwise; and (B) there is adequate protection of the interest of the holder of the [other] lien....” 11 U.S.C.S. § 364(d) (Law. Co-op. 1985 & Supp. 1989). The parties introduced evidence concerning both of these requirements, but I will deal only with the question of adequate protection for the other lienholders. The Debtor has the burden of proof on this issue. § 364(d).

The Debtor argues that Fidelity’s trust mortgage would receive adequate protection in the proposed finding because the Ski Area should be valued under a going concern standard of valuation through a discounted cash flow method, and that this value is $2,354,000, as testified to by its expert who assumed for the purpose of his opinion that the projected improvements have been made. From this amount the Debtor deducts the proposed priming lien of $778,000, leaving $1,576,000 in value for the $1,300,000 in trust mortgage debt. The Debtor justifies use of a going concern standard of valuation by its plan to remain in operation and sell the Ski Area as a going business. Alternatively, the Debtor urges the presence of adequate protection for the trust mortgage on the theory that the projected improvements will enhance what would otherwise be its liquidation value of $759,000 by at least the $778,000 primary lien, and that the new going concern value could be as little as $1,600,000 for this enhancement to take place. Neither the BNE lien nor the Hall mortgage, says the Debtor, is an interest worthy of protection because (i) neither has value in its coverage of the Condominium Tract due to the Bank’s senior lien, and (ii) without the proposed funding the Debtor will be forced to cease operations and liquidate its Ski Area assets; both experts agree that this would pay these junior liens nothing. In this fashion the Debtor rather inconsistently applies a liquidation value to these junior interests and finds them presently valueless. The Debtor also points to the automatic subordination provision of the Hall mortgage as further reason to disregard its interest.

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Bluebook (online)
104 B.R. 562, 1989 Bankr. LEXIS 1336, 1989 WL 95444, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-tenney-village-co-inc-nhb-1989.