National Union Mortgage Corp. v. Potomac Consolidated Debenture Corp.

16 A.2d 866, 178 Md. 658, 1940 Md. LEXIS 220
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedDecember 17, 1940
Docket[Nos. 21, 22, October Term, 1940.]
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 16 A.2d 866 (National Union Mortgage Corp. v. Potomac Consolidated Debenture Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
National Union Mortgage Corp. v. Potomac Consolidated Debenture Corp., 16 A.2d 866, 178 Md. 658, 1940 Md. LEXIS 220 (Md. 1940).

Opinion

Mitchell, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

During the period preceding the nation-wide depression which broke in 1929, what were commonly known as mortgage companies sprang into existence and proved to be attractive outlets for millions of dollars then held by investors. The plan under which these companies operated was that of issuing bonds against the security of mortgages upon real and leasehold property held by them and selling these bonds to the investing public. To add to the attractiveness of the class of investments above indicated, the companies elicited the co-operation of surety corporations, to the end that the latter, for an agreed premium, would guarantee said bonds, both as to the payment of the interest accruing thereon, and the principal upon the maturity thereof.

In the course of its regular surety business, The Maryland Casualty Company (hereinafter called Maryland) was one of the surety companies which extensively engaged in the mortgage bond guaranty business, there being in 1933, the period in which the depression reached its climax, approximately 850,000,000 of mortgage company bonds outstanding, back of the security of which the guaranty of Maryland was pledged. The rapid shrinkage in the value of the property securing the mortgages and the consequent loss of income to the mortgage *662 companies resulted in the practical insolvency of many of the latter companies, and demands upon sureties for the fulfillment of their guaranties. As a result of that situation Maryland suffered and paid losses of approximately §17,000,000 on account of its mortgage guaranties, for which it received unliquidatable assets of uncertain value. In line with the general depression then existent the surety had suffered substantial losses in other branches of its business, and its guaranties upon the bonds were accordingly regarded as being of little, if any, financial value. The guarantor was therefore confronted with losses which, unless in some way averted, were, with reasonable certainty, destined to bring about its own liquidation.

The same situation, to a greater or less degree, confronted other large surety corporations, which under prosperous and favorable conditions had engaged in the business of guaranteeing mortgage bonds.

To meet this crisis, certain investment banking houses • which had been active in marketing mortgage bonds guaranteed by Maryland, as well as like bonds guaranteed by United States Fidelity & Guaranty Company (another large surety corporation in the City of Baltimore), in conjunction with the mortgage companies involved, with interests representing bondholders, and with representatives of the two surety corporations above mentioned, thereupon sought the aid of the Reconstruction Finance Corporation, a federal agency, with a view of securing such financial assistance as would enable the obligors and their sureties to formulate a refunding plan for submission to bondholders. At the incipiency of negotiations looking to an ultimate refinancing plan, the outstanding bonds guaranteed by said two surety corporations aggregated §86,461,900, and at that time these bonds were selling at from thirty to forty cents on the dollar.

The plan contemplated an offer to the holders of said bonds whereby the holders were to exchange their bonds for either:

*663 Option 1: An equal principal amount of mortgage secured bonds of a new mortgage bond company to be organized; the new bonds to mature in twenty years, and to bear interest at the average rate of 3.5 per cent, and to be guaranteed both as to principal and interest by the surety of the issue exchanged for the new bond; said bonds were to be secured primarily by pledge of the collateral trust bonds surrendered by holders accepting Option 1, or a pro rata amount of the mortgages constituting part of the security for the bonds of such issue.

Option 2: An amount of cash equal to thirty per cent of the principal amount of the bonds surrendered, plus an unsecured debenture, of a new debenture company to be organized, in an amount equal to seventy per cent of the principal of the bonds surrendered; the debentures were to mature in twenty years, to bear interest at the average rate of 4.35 per cent over the twenty year period, and were to be guaranteed by the surety as to fixed interest only.

One group of six mortgage companies, for which the plan contemplated the formation of a single debenture corporation, had outstanding $9,698,300 aggregate principal amount of bonds; and the debenture corporation, later formed in consummation of the plan for these six companies, is one of the defendants herein, Potomac Consolidated Debenture Corporation.

The plan was submitted by the refunding plan managers to the holders of said $9,698,300 mortgage bonds by circular dated June 7th, 1933, which explained the plan with detailed description of Option 1 and Option 2, and urged bondholders to deposit their bonds immediately under one or the other of said options. Of the aforesaid $9,698,300 bonds, $1,750,400 were deposited under Option 1, and $7,781,400 were deposited under Option 2. (The percentage basis thus was, Option 1, 18.1 per cent.; Option 2, 80.2 per cent.; undeposited, 1.7 per cent.)

The plan was declared effective and Potomac Consolidated Debenture Corporation was formed. It secured loans from Reconstruction Finance Corporation in the *664 amount of $2,567,862, and paid in cash, by way of thirty per cent on account, to old mortgage bonds deposited under Option 2, the sum of $2,384,420, and also paid on account of accrued interest on said bonds the sum of $177,536.85.

With reference to the plan as applied to the approximately $50,000,000 old bonds identified with the guaranty of Maryland, over 99 per cent were deposited under the refunding plan; approximately 24.5 per cent thereof were deposited under Option 1, and approximately 75.5 per cent thereof under Option 2. Pursuant to the plan, $11,524,800 principal amount of new mortgage bonds were issued to persons electing Option 1; and $26,127,430 principal amount of new debentures were issued, and $11,197,470 in cash principal was paid, to persons electing Option 2.

To effectuate the refunding plan the Reconstruction Finance Corporation first loaned the sum of $17,500,000 to the surety for its own rehabilitation and, secondly, loaned to new debenture companies, identified with the guaranty of Maryland, approximately $12,000,000; which loans were secured by a pledge of the assets of the debenture companies and the guaranties of the surety. The holders of original mortgage bonds, of the six mortgage companies comprising the group to which reference has been made, thereupon deposited those bonds with Maryland Trust Company as depository, and on June 10th, 1933, became parties to a deposit agreement entered into by and between the Potomac Consolidated Debenture Corporation, a newly created corporation (hereinafter called Potomac), Maryland Trust Company, depository, and the depositing bondholders.

The above deposit agreement fixed the terms and conditions under which bonds deposited under Option 1 were to be exchanged for new mortgage bonds, and those deposited under Option 2 for cash and new debentures.

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Bluebook (online)
16 A.2d 866, 178 Md. 658, 1940 Md. LEXIS 220, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/national-union-mortgage-corp-v-potomac-consolidated-debenture-corp-md-1940.