In Re Victory Const. Co., Inc.

42 B.R. 145, 11 Collier Bankr. Cas. 2d 243, 1984 Bankr. LEXIS 5270, 12 Bankr. Ct. Dec. (CRR) 349
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, C.D. California
DecidedAugust 2, 1984
DocketBankruptcy LA 80-07936-JA
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 42 B.R. 145 (In Re Victory Const. Co., Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, C.D. California primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Victory Const. Co., Inc., 42 B.R. 145, 11 Collier Bankr. Cas. 2d 243, 1984 Bankr. LEXIS 5270, 12 Bankr. Ct. Dec. (CRR) 349 (Cal. 1984).

Opinion

CONSOLIDATED MEMORANDUM OF DECISION REGARDING DEBTOR’S MOTION FOR CONFIRMATION OF PLAN, CREDITOR’S MOTION FOR CONFIRMATION OF AN ALTERNATE PLAN, AND CREDITOR’S MOTION TO DISMISS OR CONVERT CASE.

JOHN D. AYER, Bankruptcy Judge.

INTRODUCTION

This is another chapter in a narrative that bids fair to become a bankruptcy epic. Four years ago, Victory Construction Co. filed a petition for relief under Chapter 11. The debtor’s only asset was a single parcel of real property. Just nine days after filing, four secured creditors, intending to realize on their liens, filed a complaint seeking relief from the automatic stay. Five months later, the court granted relief. The court issued an opinion that has entered the folklore on the doctrine of “good faith” in bankruptcy law. See In re Victory Construction Co., Inc. 9 B.R. 549 (Bankr.C.D.Calif.1981) (“Victory I”). 1

Ironically, four years after filing and three and a half years after the order for relief, the debtor remains in possession of the property, major creditors remain stayed from foreclosure and the case remains pending before me. Currently on the table are three applications: (1) a motion by the debtor seeking confirmation of its second amended plan of reorganization; (2) a motion by the largest creditor seeking confirmation of its competing plan of reorganization; (3) an alternative motion by the same creditor (who was one of the “winners” three and a half years ago) to dismiss the case or convert it to a case under Chapter 7. Mindful that my decision is almost certainly not the last in the matter, and hopeful that the whole case is sui generis, I find that the debtor’s plan meets the requirements of confirmation, and that the creditor’s plan does not meet the standards of confirmation.

THE FACTS

The early history of Victory is well known to bankruptcy specialists. There is a building at 8511 Beverly Place in Los Angeles. It was once owned by an entity known as the Cave Club, Inc. A majority stockholder in the Cave Club was John Hadley (“Hadley”). California Federal Savings and Loan (“Cal Fed”) held a security interest in the real estate. The Cave Club sold the real estate to Leslie Linder’s London Club (“the London Club”). Hadley, as trustee for the Cave Club shareholders, took back a security interest, junior to Cal Fed’s. When the London Club failed to make payments, Cal Fed, relying on a due-on-sale clause in its trust deed, recorded a notice of default and intention to sell.

Before Cal Fed could sell, the London Club filed a petition in bankruptcy. The bankruptcy trustee, unable to service the debt, determined to sell the real estate. He first put it up for option, where he got a bid of $1.85 million, which he rejected as too low. Thereupon the trustee set out to find another and better sale.

Fred Roven (“Roven”) is experienced as a real estate developer and trader. He has operated through a number of entities. One was a firm called Devonshire Corporation (“Devonshire”). Another is Victory Construction Company (“Victory”). From 1976 to 1979, Victory was dormant and Roven was operating through Devonshire. In 1979 Devonshire filed a bankruptcy petition under old Chapter XI. Later the same year, Roven began to dicker with the trus *147 tees of the London Club for the purchase of the London Club real estate.

The property was subject to a number of liens, including those of Cal Fed and Hadley, Victory I, 9 B.R. 549, 550. Roven saw it as a speculative opportunity — at one point he called it a “crap shoot.” In any event, on December 3, 1979, he paid $5,000 to purchase an option on the property. He signed an option agreement saying that “buyer wishes to purchase the real property by assuming [existing] liens but needs time in which to negotiate with holders of the liens on the real property terms for the assumption of the liens.” The option agreement identified the prospective buyer as Victory.

Roven needed help to put the deal together. He negotiated an informal partnership with Severyn Ashkenazy (“Ashken-azy”), also an experienced entrepreneur. They made an oral agreement to share the costs and profits of the project (Ashkenazy operating through something known as “the Stad Trust”). They made some preliminary forays at development, hoping to replace the existing building with a hotel. Roven negotiated with lenders. They were unable to get agreements restructuring the debt. Nonetheless on March 24, 1980, Victory exercised the option. Victory paid $107,500 to exercise the option (in addition to the $5,000 “crap shoot”) and assumed debts of about $2.9 million, but with the hope of scaling them down. Hadley promptly recorded a notice of default under his trust deed. Victory sued in state court to enjoin the prospective foreclosure. The state court refused the injunction. Hadley set his sale for August 12, 1980. On August 11, Victory filed this petition. Four creditors (including Hadley but not including Cal Fed) brought their action from relief from the stay and on January 26, 1981, Judge Ordin filed his opinion granting relief from the stay. Victory I, 9 B.R. 549.

Most of this is familiar to those who have read Victory I. (For a more detailed statement of facts, see Victory I at 560-63). The rest of the story is less well known, although the next chapter begins with the next case in the reports — Hadley v. Victory Construction Co., Inc, 9 B.R. 570 (C.D.Calif.1981) (“Victory II”), filed just a month later on February 23, 1981. What happened was this. Victory owed Hadley some $1.35 million. Victory appealed Victory I, and sought a stay pending appeal. Victory offered to pay, as a condition of the stay, interest at the contract rate — eight percent per annum. The court granted Victory its stay, but only on condition that it pay at the market rate — which the court, in February, 1981, found to be 18 percent. Victory acquiesced, undertook to pay the 18 percent, and took its appeal.

One might have thought that the focus would have shifted to the appellate panel at this point, but it was not to be so. Instead on May 19, 1981, Victory, enjoying the protection of its appeal stay, made the logical next move of a Chapter 11 debtor — it proposed a plan. The plan undertook, among other things, to reinstate Hadley at his original contract rate. The debtor later abandoned that first plan, evidently anticipating that Judge Ordin would deny confirmation. 2 Instead, the debtor on December 10, 1981 offered an amended plan. The most noteworthy distinctions of the amended plan were, first, a 50 percent increase in the interest rate proposed for Hadley (from eight to 12 percent), and, second, the inclusion of a personal guarantee from Severyn Ashkenazy and his brother, Arnold Ash-kenazy (“the Ashkenazy brothers”).

Over the next year and a half, that amended plan subsided into a farrago of conflict where it very nearly disappeared. There were a succession of objections, hearings on objections, findings, objections *148 to findings and the like, all of which seemed to accomplish little on either side, except to generate attorneys’ fees.

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Bluebook (online)
42 B.R. 145, 11 Collier Bankr. Cas. 2d 243, 1984 Bankr. LEXIS 5270, 12 Bankr. Ct. Dec. (CRR) 349, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-victory-const-co-inc-cacb-1984.