Technical Color & Chemical Works, Inc. v. Two Guys from Massapequa, Inc.

327 F.2d 737
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedFebruary 7, 1964
DocketNo. 143, Docket 28398
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 327 F.2d 737 (Technical Color & Chemical Works, Inc. v. Two Guys from Massapequa, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Technical Color & Chemical Works, Inc. v. Two Guys from Massapequa, Inc., 327 F.2d 737 (2d Cir. 1964).

Opinion

WATERMAN, Circuit Judge.

Appellant, a creditor in bankruptcy proceedings, seeks review of an order of the United States District Court for the Eastern District of New York, confirming a plan of arrangement filed by appellee-debtors under Chapter XI of the Bankruptcy Act, 11 U.S.C. §§ 701-799.

Appellees are two separate corporations, owned by the same principals. On January 23, 1963 appellees both filed petitions for an arrangement under Chapter XI of the Bankruptcy Act, and an oi'der was entered consolidating the two proceedings. A creditors’ committee was subsequently formed, and a majority of the committee eventually agreed upon a proposed plan of arrangement to be submitted to appellees’ unsecured creditors. Though appellant claims otherwise, the record in this case appears to support the finding of the court below that a majority of the creditors entitled to vote on the plan did approve it.

Under the approved plan, appellees’ creditors were to receive 33% per cent of their claims, with 20 per cent due upon court confirmation of the plan, and the [739]*739rest payable in five installments spaced over a period terminating on January 10, 1966. The plan was submitted to the court for confirmation and, over the vigorous objections of appellant, which moved for an order rejecting the plan, it was officially confirmed. The decision denying appellant’s motion was made solely on the basis of affidavits submitted by both sides, and after a hearing devoted primarily to a discussion of the contents of the affidavits. No real evi-dentiary hearing was held at which evidence on the issues raised by the affidavits was taken.

We feel that appellant’s objections, which are reviewed in detail later in this opinion, were entitled to a less cursory examination than they were accorded by the court below. The allegations contained in appellant’s affidavits, never really contested with any specificity by appellees and substantiated to a considerable degree by the report of the creditors’ committee, required a full evidentiary hearing before either the lower court or a referee. The refusal of the court to conduct such a hearing, thereby leaving crucial issues unresolved, constitutes reversible error.

Appellant’s objections to the plan boiled down in large part to claims that a number of unlawful and voidable transfers of assets had been made by the ap-pellees less than six weeks before the Chapter XI petitions were filed in this case. Thus, appellant claimed that there had been payments of $10,000 or more in purported salaries to the wives of ap-pellees’ principals, though admittedly the wives were not employees of appellees. A $15,000 payment was allegedly made by appellees to the estate of one of the principal’s relatives as a repayment for a loan, though no such loan had been carried on appellees’ books. Appellant also claimed that appellees had transferred certain sums to their accountants, allegedly in repayment of loans, which sums were $5,000 in excess of the loans reported on appellees’ books.

Two other transactions of this type were alleged by appellant. One transaction involved the prepayment by appellees of a $100,000 note due a bank, on which note the principals of appellees had been liable personally. The other involved allegedly inflated rental payments to another corporation owned by appellees’ principals; appellant claimed that in January of 1963 appellees paid to the commonly owned corporation $25,000 in purported rentals, thereby bringing the total of such payments to $121,651.74 for one year, even though the previously reported rental for the same premises was only $32,000 per year. Appellant also alleged that, though appellees’ books showed a total of $67,374 due to two corporations owned by appellees’ principals, no such sum was really due and owing these corporations.

If all these allegations were true and the above described transfers recoverable, appellees’ true financial situation would have been shown to be quite different from that which the creditors’ committee assumed it was when the proposed plan of arrangement was drawn up. The creditors’ committee reported that ap-pellees’ combined balance sheet showed assets of $417,112 and liabilities of $430,-650. The committee concluded that the greatest possible return to creditors could be had by adopting appellees’ proposal for payment of 33% per cent of the claims, payable partly on a deferred basis.

Appellant argues that, assuming the truth of all the above allegations, ap-pellees’ combined balance sheet should show assets of $407,100 and liabilities of $352,752, permitting repayment in full to the creditors on a deferred basis.1 [740]*740Appellant also argues that, talcing into consideration the value of the claimed voidable transfers, appellees’ realizable assets upon a prompt liquidation would be $214,651 as against liabilities of $350,-919. Thus, if appellant is correct, a liquidation of appellees’ businesses would permit payment to the creditors of approximately 60 per cent of their claims, considerably more than would be realized through the plan of arrangement confirmed by the court below.

Though it appears from the record that appellees may have made some attempt to explain some of these questionable transactions to the creditors’ committee during negotiations, the only response to these charges which appears in the record is a general denial. No attempt was made by appellees to attack with any particularity the claims made by appellant, nor, indeed, has any such explanation been called to our attention by appellees on appeal. Moreover, the report of the creditors’ committee supports, to a considerable degree, the allegations which formed the basis of appellant’s objections to the plan. The committee report noted that advances had been made to a corporation owned by appellees’ principals, that the appellees’ note on which the principals were liable had been prepaid, and that some $20,000 had been repaid on purported loans from various members of the principals' families despite the fact that appellees’ books reflected no indebtedness due. The committee, however, merely noted in its report that the appellees had offered explanations for several of the transactions,2 and added that “notwithstanding these difficulties” a majority of the committee had voted to recommend acceptance of the plan.

Even though a majority of appellees’ creditors did accept the plan, the circumstances developed through the little attention that was given below to appellant’s objections required that court approval of the plan at least be withheld until evidence could be taken with reference to the allegations made by appellant.

Section 366 of the Bankruptcy Act, 11 U.S.C. § 766, provides that even when a plan of arrangement has been approved by a majority of a debtor’s creditors, a court may not confirm the arrangement until it is satisfied that certain condi[741]*741tions have been met. The section reads as follows:

“The court shall confirm an arrangement if satisfied that—
“(1) the provisions of this chapter have been complied with;
“(2) it is for the best interests of the creditors and is feasible;

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Bluebook (online)
327 F.2d 737, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/technical-color-chemical-works-inc-v-two-guys-from-massapequa-inc-ca2-1964.