Manufacturers Credit Corp. v. Securities & Exchange Commission

395 F.2d 833
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedMay 16, 1968
DocketNos. 17088, 17112
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 395 F.2d 833 (Manufacturers Credit Corp. v. Securities & Exchange Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Manufacturers Credit Corp. v. Securities & Exchange Commission, 395 F.2d 833 (3d Cir. 1968).

Opinion

FORMAN, Circuit Judge.

This case involves the consolidation of two appeals from an order of the United States District Court for the District of New Jersey of January 12, 1968. In Appeal No. 17088, twenty-six debtor corporations and an official creditors committee question the propriety of that order which granted the motion of the Securities and Exchange Commission (hereinafter SEC) to dismiss arrangement proceedings under Chapter XI of the Bankruptcy Act, 11 U.S.C. § 701 et seq., unless amended petitions are filed either by the debtors or their creditors complying with the reorganization provisions of Chapter X of the Bankruptcy Act, 11 U.S.C. § 501 et seq. In Appeal No. 17112, appellants, Sidney, Emanuel and Isidor Engelhardt (hereinafter Engelhardt) and Kenron Co., challenge only that part of the District Court’s order which relates to four of the corporations in which they claim substantial interests.

I — Appeal No. 17088

In 1932 Theodore J. Richmond formed a New Jersey corporation named Manufacturers Credit Corporation (hereinafter Manufacturers) to conduct a finance business. Sometime prior to 1948 it became a holding company and by 1967 a complex of twenty-six subsidiary or affiliated companies had been incorporated or acquired. Mr. Richmond was president of each company and controlled its affairs. The stock of each [836]*836was owned directly or indirectly by Mr. Richmond, his wife and two daughters. The companies have been classified as follows:

Company Business

1. Inter-City Transportation Co., Inc. Franchised Inter-State Bus Line

2. Northeast Coast Lines Franchised Inter-State Bus Line

3. Orange & Black Bus Lines, Inc. Franchised Inter-State Bus Line

4. Warwick-Greenwood Lake & New York Transit, Inc. Franchised Inter-State Bus Line

5. Homestead Transit Co., Inc. Franchised Intra-State Bus Line

6. Inter-City Lines of New York, Inc. Franchised Intra-State Bus Line

7. Lake Region Coach Co., Inc. Franchised Intra-State Bus Line

8. Fairview Motor Repairs, Inc. Franchised Intra-State Bus Line Bus Leasing

9. New Jersey-New York Transit Co., Inc. Bus Leasing

10. Warwick Coaches, Inc. Bus Leasing

11. Washington Corp. Bus Leasing and Financing

12. Clifton Terminal Corp. Real Estate

13. Donal, Inc. Real Estate

14. Fairtrans Realty Corp. Real Estate

15. Jaytee Securities Corp. Real Estate

16. Monroe Securities Corp. Real Estate and Financing

17. Orblack Securities Corp. Holding Company

18. Waldwick Realty Company, Inc. Holding Company

19. Manufacturers Credit Corporation Financing and Holding Company

20. Intercity Securities Corporation Financing
21. Inter-State Securities Corporation Financing

22. Mondrich Securities Corp. Financing

23. Tee Jay Ar Securities Corp. Financing

24. Te Jay Commercial Corp. Financing

25. Transit Securities Corporation Financing

26. Inter-City Tours, Inc. Transportation Broker

Nine corporations, including Manufacturers, are engaged in the financing business. Seven are engaged in the operation of bus lines. One company is a transportation broker and another owns real estate in New Jersey not used in connection with the bus operations. Except for Orange & Black Bus Lines, Inc., [837]*837none of these companies owns the buses used in its service. The buses and other equipment are leased to the operating companies by four of the affiliated companies. Similarly, the operating companies do not own the garages, parking lots or terminals which they use. These facilities are leased from four other affiliated companies which are engaged in the real estate business.

In 1948 Manufacturers began the sale to the public of its unsecured corporate promissory notes bearing interest at rates ranging from 9 percent to 15 percent and maturing generally in three years. By 1954, the principal debt outstanding from these notes approximated $400,000. Since then, the amount borrowed by Manufacturers has increased to more than $48,000,000 owed to about 4,000 public investors. Eight of Manufacturers affiliated or subsidiary corporations engaged in similar borrowing operations and now owe more than 900 lenders almost $10,000,000. It is alleged that no registration statement, required by the Securities Act of 1933, 15 U.S.C. § 77a et seq., was filed during the twenty years of public financing, although it does not appear that any exemption from registration was available. It is further alleged that many persons acted as “finders” on a regular basis and were paid bonuses or commissions for their services in bringing in new investors and that they now hold notes in upwards of $2,000,000.

In reality, Mr. Richmond employed these financing corporations as instrumentalities whereby he borrowed ever incx-easing huge amounts of money from the public. His scheme was to have the corporations turn over to him the proceeds from the sale of the unsecured promissory notes whereupon he paid the interest charges and other expenses. The corporations were represented as the borrowers to preclude the defense of usury. As interest accrued and principal amounts matured new notes were sold and their proceeds used to meet the earlier obligations. The result of this method of financing was an increasingly complicated debt structure with thousands of notes outstanding issued by various debtors, bearing different interest rates and maturing at different dates.1 ******The payments required by the terms of these notes in 1966 amounted to approximately $6,000,000 for interest and an equal amount for principal. As against this debt servicing charge of $12,000,000, the 1966 combined profits of all of the companies was approximately $300,000.

The crisis which followed precipitated the filing of a joint petition under Chapter XI of the Bankruptcy Act by Manufacturers and nineteen of its subsidiary or affiliated corporations on August 1, 1967. Pursuant to a petition by Mr. Richmond as president of six additional corporations, an order was entered on August 3, 1967 extending the original Chapter XI proceedings over them. A receiver was appointed who has supervised the operations of all of the debtors.2 An official creditors committee was formed and it has actively participated in the proceedings.

On August 28, 1967 each of the debtors filed schedules and statement of affairs. In the aggregate, assets totalled $136,217,309, including $109,443,183 of inter-company receivables, and liabilities amounted to $120,660,618, including inter-company debts or sums owed to Mr. Richmond of $54,716,433. Actual tangible assets listed in the schedules totalled $10,000,000 not including the value of the franchises, while liabilities, exclusive of debts owed to Mr. Richmond [838]*838and affiliated companies, amounted to $65,950,361.

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395 F.2d 833, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/manufacturers-credit-corp-v-securities-exchange-commission-ca3-1968.