Rosen v. A-H, Inc.
This text of 456 N.E.2d 477 (Rosen v. A-H, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Appeals Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
This appeal turns on the construction of a subordination clause in a 1973 convertible debenture issued by Austin Hastings Co., Inc. (the Company), to the defendant, A-H, Inc. A judge of the Superior Court held that the *127 defendant’s claim to the proceeds of a foreclosure sale was subordinated to the claims of unsecured trade creditors represented by the plaintiffs. We affirm.
The 1973 debenture was issued in exchange for an earlier debenture of the Company, given to the defendant in partial payment for the purchase by the Company of the defendant’s assets. The debenture matured in July, 1976, and its “payment and performance” were secured by the Company’s equipment. After the debenture came due and the Company was unable to meet its obligation, the defendant foreclosed. Because of claims made by representatives of the trade creditors (the plaintiffs), the proceeds of the sale ($204,221.72) were held in escrow pending the outcome of this action. The amount so held is insufficient to pay either the principal and interest due on the debenture or the sums stipulated to be owing the trade creditors ($787,838.20).
The clause in question, § 9 of the debenture, is set out in the margin. 2 Under the first portion, § 9.1, the defendant *128 as holder agreed that “the indebtedness represented by this Debenture” and the payment of principal and interest “shall be subordinate ... to trade creditors for goods sold and delivered and services rendered (‘Senior Debt’) to the end that no payment shall be made by the Company on account of the principal ... or interest . . ., as long as any Senior Debt is outstanding.”
If the clause had there ended, the rights of the parties would be beyond question; the plaintiffs would be entitled to the proceeds of the sale. An additional proviso in § 9.1, together with § 9.2, has, however, led the parties to divergent conclusions. 3
The inartful language of § 9 and the varied interpretations which can be and have been placed on it refute the defendant’s contention that there was error “in the admission *129 of evidence of the facts and circumstances of the transaction ... for the purpose of . . . explaining any uncertainty or ambiguity . . . .” Robert Indus., Inc. v. Spence, 362 Mass. 751, 753 (1973). Restatement (Second) of Contracts § 212, and comment b (1981).
Evidence at trial indicated that the method of financing the Company’s purchase of the defendant’s assets left the Company without any equity. The purpose of the subordination clause was to induce suppliers to extend credit to the Company. Without it, such credit would not have been forthcoming. 4 The proviso, relied upon by the defendant, permits certain payments by the Company. It does not purport to nullify at maturity the priority given to trade creditors in § 9.1, and no evidence suggests that such an interpretation was ever contemplated by the parties. 5 Reading the proviso in light of its purpose to enable the Company to obtain short-term financing from trade creditors despite the lack of equity shown on its balance sheet, we conclude that the payments permitted by the clause were not intended to eliminate the plaintiffs’ senior status. 6
*130 We also decline to adopt the defendant’s reading of § 9.2 so as to limit the priority of the trade creditors in § 9.1 to the defendant’s unsecured claims. The equitable considerations underlying the rule that an assignment of debt usually carries with it all liens and security, see 3 Williston, Contracts § 432A (3d ed. 1960), are applicable here. Where there is a clear subordination of debt as in § 9.1, we will not deny that provision its practical effect in the absence of specific language that priority in the security is not intended. Subordination agreements are “consistently” construed to afford substantial “practical” benefits to the debt or security interest given priority. Grise v. White, 355 Mass. 698, 704 (1969).
Such consistent construction might lead us, with some plausibility, to accept the plaintiffs’ interpretation of § 9.2, see note 3, supra. An alternative and perhaps more satisfactory solution is to recognize, as did the trial judge, that the language of § 9.2 cannot be readily reconciled with § 9.1. Where as here the “main object to be accomplished is stated in [§ 9.1],” and where “a repugnancy is found between [two clauses, § 9.1 and § 9.2,] the one which essentially requires something to be done to effect the general purpose of the contract itself is entitled to greater consideration than the other which tends to defeat a full performance, and repugnant words may be rejected in favor of a construction which makes effectual the evident purpose of the entire instrument.” Morrill & Whiton Constr. Co. v. Boston, 186 Mass. 217, 220 (1904). With this precept in mind, we give greater weight to § 9.1 than to § 9.2 and read the latter as meaning that the security interests of the defendant are recognized as prior to claims of creditors except as specifically permitted under certain specified documents and except as provided by § 9.1 of the debenture. Accordingly, we hold that the plaintiffs are entitled to priority in the proceeds.
Judgment affirmed.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
456 N.E.2d 477, 17 Mass. App. Ct. 126, 1983 Mass. App. LEXIS 1515, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rosen-v-a-h-inc-massappct-1983.