Matter of C & P Gray Farms, Inc.

70 B.R. 704, 1987 Bankr. LEXIS 263
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, W.D. Missouri
DecidedJanuary 6, 1987
Docket16-30029
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 70 B.R. 704 (Matter of C & P Gray Farms, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, W.D. Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Matter of C & P Gray Farms, Inc., 70 B.R. 704, 1987 Bankr. LEXIS 263 (Mo. 1987).

Opinion

FINDINGS OF FACT AND CONCLUSIONS OF LAW SUPPORTING ORDER CONDITIONALLY CONFIRMING DEBTOR’S PLAN OF REORGANIZATION

DENNIS J. STEWART, Chief Judge.

The issue of confirmation vel non of the debtor’s, proposed plan of reorganization came on before the court for hearing on December 1, 1986. Whereupon the debtor appeared by Bruce E. Strauss, Esquire, its counsel, and the creditor John Hancock Mutual Life Insurance Company appeared by James C. Jarrett, Jr., Esquire, its counsel. In accordance with the prior orders of the court in this case, the initial and preliminary issue to be determined is that of the sufficiency of the disclosure statement.

*706 Sufficiency of the Disclosure Statement

The objecting creditor complains that the debtor’s disclosure statement does not explicitly set out the projected annual cumulative payment to all creditors under the plan. It is further suggested that this total is not clearly juxtaposed to, or compared with, the record of net income for the three years next preceding bankruptcy. Counsel for the debtor protests that the annual payments to each creditor are clearly set out and that all that is necessary to derive the cumulative annual payment to all creditors is to add up these subtotals. In the course of the hearing of December 1, 1986, counsel for the debtor orally disclosed the total annual payment to all creditors projected under the plan is $78,700. He further represented that the annual net income loss for each of the three years next preceding bankruptcy either equals or exceeds that amount. 1 This court is in basic agreement with counsel for the John Hancock Mutual Life Insurance Company that the total annual payment should be explicitly stated in the disclosure statement in such a way that it is easily comparable with the statements of net income for each of the three years next preceding bankruptcy. Under the circumstances of this case, however, the court will, to save time and unproductive effort, make the required disclosure in an order of confirmation which will be conditioned, in part, upon the absence of creditor objections within 21 days. In that manner, the creditors will receive an opportunity to object to confirmation or reject the plan on the basis of the additional disclosure.

The objecting creditor also mentioned that the recent restructuring of a certain debt was not included in the disclosure statement. Since the confirmation of the plan will, as observed above, be conditional, the court will also require a perfect and timely disclosure of the precise facts concerning the reported restructuring of the debt.

Issue of Confirmation Vel Non

Feasibility

The objecting creditor contends that the debtor’s plan of reorganization is wholly infeasible. The court consequently took evidence on this issue in the course of the hearing of December 1, 1986. The testimony of Carl Patrick Gray, as to the facts underlying the issue of feasibility, was virtually uncontradicted to the effect that the proceeds of harvest to date and the proceeds shortly expected show that debtor’s seasonal earnings are “not much off the projections.” 2 The evidence thus submitted tended to show that the debtors either presently have or will have the ability to make the payments to creditors for the first year under the plan. 3 The objecting creditor points out that the payments thus made will exhaust the debtor’s funds on hand so that there will be none remaining with which to cultivate the crops for the following season. The debtor’s rejoinder is that it has the potential for negotiating a loan with the Union State Bank at a rate of 11% interest per annum which could be repaid over the life of the plan. 4 It appears from the evidence that a sufficiently low amount would be needed that it would not be without the realm of likelihood that it could be paid back over the life of the plan. 5

The evidence on the issue of feasibility especially favors confirmation when it is considered that the debtors’ past record *707 shows that their net income has been such that it could defray the plan at bar 6 ; that they have had a shift in the character of their debts from long term to short term 7 ; and that even the objecting creditor’s expert witness describes the Grays who do the farming for the debtor corporation as “good farmers.” 8 The court therefore concludes that the evidence on the issue of feasibility warrants a holding that the debt- or should be granted an opportunity to perform the plan of reorganization which has been submitted to the court.

This is so even though the objecting creditor produced two witnesses who believed the plan to be infeasible. The first of these witnesses predicated his conclusion on certain deficiencies in the disclosure statement, the materiality of which is diminished by the evidence of an initial year’s crop proceeds which should enable the debtor to make its initial payments under the plan. 9 The other witness appeared to base his contention on the objecting creditor’s factual contention that much more interest is due than the debtor proposes to pay under the plan. 10

The Rate of Interest to be Paid to John Hancock Mutual Life Insurance Co.

The debtor contends that the objecting creditor John Hancock Mutual Life Insurance Company has a security interest in property which has a value approximately equal to the $795,400 plus six-months’ interest which the debtor owed John Hancock as of the time of filing. Accordingly, the debtor proposes to pay interest to John Hancock on the value of the property at the rate of 9% per annum, the prevailing legal rate. When there is no equity, or oversecured value, as to which § 506(b) of the Bankruptcy Code would impose the contractual rate of interest, the correct rate of interest is the market rate, which is presumed, in the absence of evidence to the contrary, to be the legal rate (9% in Missouri). 10a In this case, the note calls for interest at the rate of 11V4% per annum. There is some indication in the evidence that the objecting creditor has the wherewithal to negotiate individual loans which would bring more than 9% interest. But this court does not believe that such constitutes evidence of a rate available in a market of some cognizable commonality and breadth. Thus, this court must approve the proposal of the debtor to pay interest at the legal rate to the creditor John Hancock.

The “Best Interests of Creditors” Test

The evidence which was adduced in the hearing of December 1, 1986, purported to show only a smattering of unsecured value which would be available to creditors on straight liquidation of the debtor’s assets under chapter 7 — approxi

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
70 B.R. 704, 1987 Bankr. LEXIS 263, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/matter-of-c-p-gray-farms-inc-mowb-1987.