In re Third Avenue Transit Corp.

222 F.2d 466
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedMay 5, 1955
DocketNos. 68-72, Docket 23141-23145
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 222 F.2d 466 (In re Third Avenue Transit 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 Third Avenue Transit Corp., 222 F.2d 466 (2d Cir. 1955).

Opinion

MEDINA, Circuit Judge.

This is an appeal from an order of the District Court for the Southern District of New York, in proceedings for the reorganization of Third Avenue Transit Corporation and its subsidiaries under Chapter X of the Bankruptcy Act, 11 U.S.C.A. § 501 et seq., determining the status of $5,681,500 of bonds, certified under the First Refunding Mortgage of Third Avenue Railway Company, which were in the possession of the Debtor Third Avenue Transit Corporation when these proceedings were instituted.

On February 8, 1912, Third Avenue Railway Company, to whose rights and obligations the Debtor succeeded by merger in 1942, executed its First Refunding Mortgage dated December 20, 1911 and this mortgage is now the first lien upon the properties of the Debtor. Appellant, the Hanover Bank (formerly named Central Trust Company of New York, Central Union Trust Company of New York and Central Hanover Bank and Trust Company) is the Indenture Trustee under the mortgage. Between 1912 and the date of the approval of the petition for reorganization of the Debt- or under Chapter X, $21,990,500 face amount First Refunding Mortgage Bonds had been issued, of which $1,478,000 had been retired and were formally can-celled prior to the commencement of these proceedings. As a result, when the petition was approved, $20,512,500 of the bonds remained uncancelled. Of these $14,831,000 in face amount were outstanding and publicly held and $5,681,-500 were held by the Reorganization Trustee by virtue of his succession to the Debtor’s title.

These $5,681,500 of bonds held by the Trustee had been acquired by the Debtor and its predecessor or former subsidiaries by various transactions extending over a period of thirty-five years. Between November 26, 1912 and January 9, 1913 $500,000 face amount were purchased from public holders by Third Avenue Railway Company with cash from a fund variously referred to as a “Depreciation Fund,” “Depreciation Account” or “Fund for Depreciation and Contingencies,” and held for the Company by the Indenture Trustee in a safekeeping account entitled “Depreciation Fund Account.” Upon their certification in February, 1916, an additional $2,020,500 of the bonds were delivered into the same “Depreciation Fund Account,” in exchange for interim certificates which had been sold by Third Avenue to the Indenture Trustee of the First Refunding Mortgage, in its banking capacity, entitling the Trust Company to $2,020,500 face amount “when ready for delivery.” The certificates had subsequently been reacquired by endorsement to Third Avenue, in consideration of payments made by Third Avenue to the Trust Company from the “Fund for Depreciation and Contingencies.”

Between 1943 and 1946, $1,494,000 face amount of bonds were purchased [468]*468from public holders with moneys from a fund which resulted from a new depreciation policy adopted in July, 1942, for the purpose of providing a reserve for the retirement of some $55,000,000 of street railway assets which, it was contemplated, would be scrapped as a result of motorization. These bonds were carried on the Debtor’s books as “Securities for Depreciation and Credited to Accrued Amortization of Capital,” and are referred to as “Amortization Bonds.” Although some were subsequently pledged, these were redeemed by the Reorganization Trustee and all are now held in a safekeeping account.

Of the remaining $1,667,000 of bonds held by the Reorganization Trustee, $1,-293,000 were purchased between 1919 and 1947 with moneys from “Amortiza^ tion Funds” established pursuant to three orders of the New York. Public Service Commission. The fund set up under the first Public Service Commission order was to be used for the “retirement of mortgage bonds or for the acquisition of property for capital or investment purposes” and the other two “for the retirement of mortgage bonds of said company or for other purposes approved by the Commission.” Two subsidiaries of Third Avenue acquired $374,-000 of bonds, between 1919 and 1942, with cash from similar funds created under the last of the three Public Service Commission orders and the Debtor succeeded to these when the subsidiaries merged with the parent corporation. All $1,667,000 of these bonds were held in what was called a “Sinking Fund” account.

The Reorganization Trustee petitioned the District Court for an order determining that thé bonds held by him were enforceable against the mortgaged property on a parity with the bonds which were publicly held. After extensive hearings and the introduction of voluminous documentary evidence, the District Court determined that “all of the Treasury Bonds are enforceable by the Reorganization Trustee for the benefit of junior creditors except that part of the $1,667,000 ‘Sinking Fund Bonds’ purchased with funds accumulated under the second and third Public Service Commission orders” (because the Commission had never approved the use of such funds for any purpose other than the retirement of the bonds) and “except such, if any, part of the $1,-494,000 of ‘Amortization Bonds’ into which funds subject to the First Refunding Mortgage may be traced.”

It is from the determination of the enforceability of the major portion of these bonds that the Indenture Trustee and the owners of the publicly held bonds appeal. Cross-appellant, the Tinker Committee, representing holders of Adjustment Income Mortgage Bonds, which are subordinate to the First Refunding Mortgage Bonds, appeals from that portion of the District Court’s order excepting the minor portion of the First Refunding Mortgage Bonds from the declaration of enforceability.

The question which confronts us at the threshold of our inquiry and the one the answer to which is dispositive of this litigation is, whether a number of bonds which have been reacquired by the issuing corporation and have been treated by the corporation in such a manner as, presumably, to keep them alive for the purpose of subsequent reissuance or pledge, may, when held by a trustee in reorganization, appointed as a result of an intervening bankruptcy, properly be considered claims against the mortgaged property of equal status and priority with the outstanding bonds held by the public. The Reorganization Trustee claims that they should be so considered and that the proportionate share of the value of the mortgaged property allocable to the treasury bonds thereby become “free” assets against which the general creditors and the public bondholders, to the extent of any deficit on the bonded indebtedness, may claim equally. The First Mortgage Refunding Bondholders and the Indenture Trustee assert that the entire value of the [469]*469mortgaged property is security for the bonds which remain in the hands of the public and that the bonds held in the ■corporate treasury constitute no claim •or, at best, a subordinate claim, against those assets.

The policy implicit in the rule •of “absolute priority” clearly indicates the concern of the Supreme Court for the preservation of the rights of creditors, generally, and secured creditors, particularly, against the claims of others ■standing in a less preferred position. See Consolidated Rock Products Co. v. DuBois, 1941, 312 U.S. 510, 61 S.Ct. 675, 85 L.Ed. 982; Case v. Los Angeles Lumber Products Co., 1939, 308 U.S. 106, 60 S.Ct. 1, 84 L.Ed. 110; Northern Pacific Ry. Co. v. Boyd, 1913, 228 U.S. 482, 33 S.Ct.

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