Simon v. Chambless

86 F.2d 569, 1936 U.S. App. LEXIS 3790
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedDecember 1, 1936
DocketNo. 8147
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 86 F.2d 569 (Simon v. Chambless) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Simon v. Chambless, 86 F.2d 569, 1936 U.S. App. LEXIS 3790 (5th Cir. 1936).

Opinion

HUTCHESON, Circuit Judge.

Appellants throughout all of the many proceedings of which this is the climax, have been known as the Payne Committee. The order appealed from was entered in a reorganization proceeding under section 77B, Bankr.Act, as amended 11 U. S.C.A. § 207, involving the parent corporation, the Trustees System Service Corporation, Inc., and some of its wholly owned corporate subsidiaries. It found appellants and those they represent, to be creditors, to wit, noteholders, of the parent corporation, and as such allowed their claims against that corporation. It denied their claim that they were creditors of its Pennsylvania subsidiaries and entitled as such creditors to direct claims upon the funds of those subsidiaries which had been gathered into the reorganization proceedings.

The claim as put forward by appellants below and here is that as noteholders. of the parent corporation they had, by instituting and causing to be instituted court proceedings in Pennsylvania, acquired as to the Pennsylvania subsidiaries and the funds gathered in those proceedings, the standing not only of direct creditors of those corporations, but of creditors with an equitable lien giving them priority as to those funds over other creditors of the parent corporation.

The proceedings on which they rely were the filing by them in the Eastern District of Pennsylvania of six bills, praying the appointment of receivers. One brought against the parent company then in primary receivership in Illinois, sought the appointment of ancillary receivers. The other five, each brought against a Pennsylvania corporate subsidiary, sought a receivership for that subsidiary on the ground that it was not only wholly owned, but dominated and directed, by the parent, and that each of the subsidiaries was but an agency, instrumentality, or means through which the parent operated. The same persons were appointed ancillary receivers in the first suit and primary receivers in all of the others.

The Trustees System Company of Pennsylvania, one of the five corporations for which a receiver had been appointed, was also doing business in the Western District of Pennsylvania under its own name and through two other corporations, its immediate subsidiaries, the Trustees System Company of Pittsburgh, and the Trusco Company of Pittsburgh. The Eastern District receivers therefore, in their capacity as ancillary receivers of the parent corporation, immediately petitioned the District Court for the Western District of Pennsylvania for and were granted, the appointment there of ancillary receivers for the Trustees System of Pennsylvania and primary receivers for the Pittsburgh companies.

There was no opposition to and no appeal from the ancillary appointment in the Eastern District, none from the appointments in the Western District, but each of the five Eastern District corporations appealed from the decree appointing a receiver as to it. These appeals resulted in an affirmance,1 and the receivers both in the Eastern and Western Districts of Pennsylvania were proceeding with their administrations when a 77B proceeding was begun in the Northern District of Alabama. A trustee, Chambless, was appointed there, notice was given to the Pennsylvania receivers that the bankruptcy court had thereby acquired exclusive jurisdiction of each of the debtors and their properties wherever situated, and upon the application of Chambless, as separate trustee of each of the debtors, an order was made requiring the equity receivers to turn over all of their properties to him as such trustee. This order was made, however, subject to the stipulation authorized by the Alabama court that the Pennsylvania receivers should pay out of the funds before transmitting them, all properly allowed claims of creditors of the local companies. Pursuant to that stipulation, reference was-made to a special master to hear and report on these claims.

Among others propounding claims before the master as creditors of the local Pennsylvania companies were appellants. [571]*571here. They, as a committee for noteholders of the Trustees System Service Corporation, the parent corporation, propounded claims aggregating $173,200 against the subsidiary corporations claiming priority ■of payment out of the funds of those subsidiaries “by reason of a lien on and/or sequestration, of and/or application of certain funds of those corporations now in the hands of the equity receivers.” After their claims were heard before and rejected by the master, and exceptions were in the course of being filed, a further stipulation was entered into. This provided, in substance, that the funds remaining after paying all allowed clairps of local creditors should be remitted to the Alabama court, and the claims of appellants, the Payne Committee, should be tried out there without prejudice to those claims from the adverse finding of the master. In addition to the claims of appellants for $173,200 on its gold notes there have been filed and allowed in the bankruptcy proceedings against the Trustees System Service Corporation claims of other holders of its direct gold note obligations, identical with those held by the Payne Committee in the sum of $1,-872,817.96.

Two other circumstances, to which the District Judge attached considerable significance, should be mentioned. One is-that at the time the Payne Committee filed its bills of complaint in Pennsylvania, petitions in bankruptcy against the parent corporation were pending in the Northern District of Illinois. The other is that that corporation has since been adjudicated bankrupt, and the Payne Committee has claimed on the gold notes in that proceeding, with the reservation, however, that this filing of its claim there is to be without prejudice to its asserted lien or priority on the Pennsylvania funds.

The equity receivers of the Pittsburgh companies paid over to Chambless, as trustee of the parent company, their sole stockholder, $105,376.61. The equity receivers in the Eastern District paid him in the same capacity, $45,651.14, these sums, together with the other assets of the Pennsylvania companies, all their direct creditors having been paid in full, to be held by him as trustee for the parent company, subject, of course, to the payment of creditors o-f that company, including those represented by appellants.

The District Judge upon these facts (Concluded that appellants were creditors of the Trustees System Service Corporation, the parent corporation, and entitled to prove their claims and share with its other creditors equably and ratably as such. He found that they were not in law or in equity creditors of any of the subsidiary corporations, and that neither in law nor in equity did they have any claim or right to the funds of those companies, except through and in right of their claims as creditors of the parent corporation. He therefore rejected as wholly without equity their claim to priority of payment out of those funds ahead of other creditors of the parent corporation holding like obligations with them. He thought it plain that this was so as a matter of independent judgment, because at the time the Payne Committee filed its equity proceedings in Pennsylvania, equity and bankruptcy proceedings were pending against it in Illinois, and because nothing had occurred or been done in the Pennsylvania suits to give appellants any direct claims against the subsidiaries, or to raise their standing above that of other creditors holding like obligations.

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Bluebook (online)
86 F.2d 569, 1936 U.S. App. LEXIS 3790, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/simon-v-chambless-ca5-1936.