In Re Transamerica Business Corp.

86 B.R. 292, 1988 Bankr. LEXIS 662
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, S.D. Florida.
DecidedMarch 1, 1988
Docket17-21154
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 86 B.R. 292 (In Re Transamerica Business Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, S.D. Florida. primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Transamerica Business Corp., 86 B.R. 292, 1988 Bankr. LEXIS 662 (Fla. 1988).

Opinion

ORDER DENYING CONFIRMATION AND SETTING HEARING TO CONSIDER CONVERSION TO CHAPTER 7 OR DISMISSAL

THOMAS C. BRITTON, Chief Judge.

A confirmation hearing was held December 2,1986 in this chapter 11 case filed July 5, 1985, two and a half years ago.

The following day, an order was entered reserving ruling on confirmation for three weeks, pending the debtor’s filing certificates that the plan had been accepted by the creditors and that counsel held in his trust account sufficient funds to make the first distribution required by the debtor’s plan. (CP 145). The debtor has yet to file either certificate.

I now find that the plan before me, the debtor’s second 1 , has not been proposed in good faith and, for the reasons stated below, leave is denied to file another plan or a further modification of this plan.

A hearing, on notice to all counsel who have appeared in this case, will be held at 10:00 a.m. on March 22,1988 in room 326 at 701 Clematis Street, West Palm Beach, Florida, to determine whether this case will be converted to chapter 7 or dismissed.

The debtor’s motion (CP 185a) for reconsideration of the Order Extending Deadline For Debtor’s Compliance With Requirements For Confirmation of August 17,1987 (CP 183) is also denied.

The Debtor’s History

The debtor is a Florida corporate land developer formed 37 years ago. Twelve years ago H.J. Mellon became the president and chief executive. All or virtually all the stock was owned by Mellon and his wife. Mellon died in March 1985, five months before this bankruptcy. His daughter, A.M. Rene, succeeded her father, and Mrs. Mellon has been retained as an administrative assistant. They continue to control this debtor.

The bankruptcy was precipitated by the closing of all the debtor’s accounts by its banker, Barnett. However, the failure of the debtor resulted from three other circumstances.

The debtor sold subdivided lots in six Florida counties on ten-year agreements for deeds, half of which had been sold in Central and South America at prices quoted in foreign currency. In 1985, rapid inflation throughout most of that area drastically reduced the value of the debtor’s accounts receivable and its cash flow below survival levels. The debtor’s properties were heavily mortgaged and it had expensive commitments to complete land im- *294 proveniente required for the subdivisions it was marketing.

The debtor’s sales force was poorly supervised and diverted receipts, took kickbacks, and generally defrauded both the debtor and the debtor’s vendees. This not only reduced the cash flow, but also resulted in a number of lawsuits filed against the debtor, all of which have been stayed by this bankruptcy and remain pending and contributed to the debtor’s default with regulatory agencies.

The primary regulatory control of this developer is the Florida Department of Business Regulation’s Division of Land Sales, which requires a developer to deposit varying percentages of its vendees’ payments in trust accounts for the payment of the required roads, drainage and other commitments required of and made by the developer. The debtor’s defaults led to suspension of its authority to continue retail sales.

The debtor has ceased all business before it came in this court, and in the plan presently before me, it has abandoned any hope of ever resuming any activity.

The foregoing summary of the debtor’s history comes solely from the debtor. (CP 123). If it errs, therefore, it does not err as to the causes or extent of the debtor’s past shortcomings.

The debtor’s current chief executive, Ms. Rene, left college without a degree, has had experience as an accountant and a stockbroker and presently owns and operates a Lake Worth landscaping business.

The Debtor’s Assets, Liabilities and Cash Flow

The debtor’s acknowledged liabilities total $1.2 million, roughly half owed to mortgagees and half to unsecured creditors. Its assets are its outstanding agreements for deed and six subdivisions, three of which are in Volusia County and one in each of three other counties. 2

The agreements for deed have a face value of $3 million. The debtor values these contracts at $225,000 on the assumption that someone else will complete the subdivisions it cannot complete. Their value is, therefore, highly speculative.

The subdivisions are so heavily mortgaged that the debtor has yet to find an immediate cash purchaser of its claimed equity in a single one. The debtor initially valued these properties at $15 million, but now values its total equity in the six subdivisions at $1.4 million. This estimate is based upon speculative assumptions. The debtor is, in fact, insolvent.

In the six months immediately preceding the filing of its Amended Disclosure Statement on September 5, 1986, the debtor had received income of $93,725 and had spent $94,255. The expenditures included a weekly salary of $800 for Mellon’s daughter and $150 a month for Mellon’s widow. The most recent debtor’s report (DIP # 67) shows total receipts since bankruptcy of $156,461 and total expenses of $159,758, leaving a net balance on hand of $1,269, which is $3,296 less than this debtor had when it filed for bankruptcy.

The debtor’s only significant income ($1,478 for the first two weeks of this past month) is from agreements for deed. I doubt that any of these vendees can ever receive clear and unencumbered title to the property they are paying for.

This debtor has filed no federal tax return since 1981 and has paid no property taxes since at least a year or two before bankruptcy.

The “Amended” Amended Plan

The debtor’s Amended Plan (CP 113), filed August 8, 1986, was “supplemented” November 3, 1986 (CP 131a). This is the plan for which the debtor seeks confirmation.

In its present version it proposes a straight and complete liquidation and distribution, indistinguishable from a chapter 7 *295 liquidation except that this debtor rather than an independent trustee under the supervision of the U.S. Trustee would complete the liquidation and distribution.

Specifically, it proposes the bulk sale of each of the six subdivisions by auction during January 1987. However, a month past that deadline, it has conducted no auction and has conditionally sold only one subdivision, Poinciana in Martin County. That sale is to Marlin, the attorney for a realtor, Giovannetti, who will receive a 10% commission if the sale ever closes. The sale price is $448,500, 60% of which is to be financed for five years. I authorized the sale March 13, 1987, almost a year ago. No closing has yet been scheduled.

Martin’s commitment is conditioned upon his getting complete clearance from all federal, state, county and local regulatory agencies. Immediately, to meet those requirements, he must get $750,000 worth of road construction from Martin County through a bond issue secured by assessments to be levied against the adjoining property owners.

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