Wertz v. Village of Solon

148 F.2d 63, 31 Ohio Op. 414, 1945 U.S. App. LEXIS 3213
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedFebruary 26, 1945
DocketNo. 9848
StatusPublished

This text of 148 F.2d 63 (Wertz v. Village of Solon) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wertz v. Village of Solon, 148 F.2d 63, 31 Ohio Op. 414, 1945 U.S. App. LEXIS 3213 (6th Cir. 1945).

Opinion

McAllister, circuit judge.

The Village of Solon, Ohio, being in default in payments of interest and principal on its Street Improvement Bonds, a resolution was passed by the Village Council, approving a refunding plan through the exchange of 25-year bonds, to be issued pursuant to the relevant sections of the Ohio General Code §§ 2293-5p to 2293-5u, upon the receipt of consent from the holders of not less than 75% of any issue of bonds . then outstanding. The refunding bonds were to be exchanged for outstanding bonds at their face value. Interest on outstanding bonds was to be paid up to and including December 1, 1933, at the stated interest rate; but all other interest on outstanding bonds was to be can-celled. However, the plan provided that, at its option the Village could, upon receipt of consent of 51'% of its bondholders, file a petition in the federal district court, praying for a readjustment of its debts, pursuant to the Bankruptcy Act of 1938, 11 U.S.C.A. § 401 efi seq., and in such proceeding should file the plan and such amendments as might be approved in writing by the Ohio Municipal Advisory Coun-„ cil. The holders of approximately 95.5% of the outstanding bonds consented to the plan and exchanged their original bonds for the refunding bonds.

The statutes of Ohio governing the refunding of indebtedness, such as was undertaken in this case, provide, among other matters, for the re-assessment of the properties on which the original assessments were-levied to include the unpaid balance of the original assessment and any interest not cancelled pursuant to the plan. The statute also preserves the priority of lien of non-consenting bondholders, as appears from the following provision:

“In order to preserve and protect the, lien of the non-consenting bondholders, the funds collected each year on such reassessments shall be pledged first for payment of any amounts due or to become due on interest and principal on bonds of the original issue, whether matured or immatured, the holders of which have not consented, until the amount so collected equals the amount which would have been collected under the original assessment, and applicable to such bonds not refunded and in consenting to any such refunding of bonds, the consenting bondholders shall be conclusively presumed to have consented to such preference.” § 2293-5s.

In accordance with the plan, which included the above statutory provision by reference, a fund was set up by the Village for the payment of the interest and principal to the non-consenting bondholders and for the protection of their lien. It further appears that two non-consenting holders of bonds received 6'% interest in 1940, one payment being in the amount of $60, and the other, $90. The aggregate of non-consenting bondholders represented 4.51'% of the bonded indebtedness, or $18,200. Appellant wa§ one of those who did not consent to the above plan.

However, some time afterward, because of the refusal of such bondholders to consent to the plan and come in on an equal basis with the others, the Village of Solon secured the approval of the proper state authorities and filed a petition in the district court for confirmation of the plan as a composition of its indebtedness, pursuant to Chapter IX of the Bankruptcy Act of 1938, 11 U.S.C.A. § 401 et seq. The non-consenting bondholders then filed a motion to dismiss the petition; whereupon, a Special Master was appointed who, after an extensive hearing, recommended that the motion to dismiss be overruled and that the Village of Solon be authorized to carry out the proposed composition plan, under the bankruptcy statute. The district court adopted the Master’s report and confirmed the plan.

On appeal, it is contended that the district court had no jurisdiction to confh-m the plan, inasmuch as it had already been undertaken pursuant to the provisions of the Ohio statutes heretofore mentioned, and that it had been fully executed and consummated before the petition under the Bankruptcy Act was filed. It is argued that by reason of the exchange of 95.5% of the original bonds for the refunding bonds on the part of the other bondholders, in accordance with the provisions of the plan, and the setting up of a fund to pay the non-consenting bondholders, and to preserve their lien, together with the payment of the above-mentioned interest, the non-consenting bondholders thereby acquired a [65]*65vested right to the preservation of their lien, under the Ohio statute above quoted. Appellee contends that the voluntary plan had not been fully executed, and that the district court was, therefore, authorized to enter its decree by virtue of 11 U.S.C.A. § 40.3, sub. j, which provides as follows:

“The partial completion or execution of any plan of composition as outlined in any petition filed under the terms of this title by the exchange of new evidences of indebtedness under the plan for evidences of indebtedness covered by the plan, whether such partial completion or execution of such plan of composition occurred before or after the filing of said petition, shall not be construed as limiting or prohibiting the effect of this title, and the written consent of the holders of any securities outstanding as the result of any such partial completion or execution of any plan of composition shall be included as consenting creditors to such plan of composition in determining the percentage of securities affected by such plan of composition.”

The foregoing statutory provision clearly appears to have been intended to reach, and provide a remedy for, the precise situation that arose in the instant case, and authorized the filing and approval, if the conditions of the Act were met, of the voluntary plan, as a plan of composition in bankruptcy.

Nothing that was done by the Village and the consenting bondholders under the voluntary plan, gave appellant a vested right to require them to continue their consent for his benefit, in view of his failure and refusal to join therein; and if they had concluded to revoke the plan and restore the indebtedness to its original condition, appellant would have no vested right to prevent such action. The voluntary plan did not provide that it would be considered fully completed and closed after any given number of consent agreements had been secured; bondholders could still consent at the time the petition in these proceedings was filed; and nothing in the consent agreements prevented the Village and the consenting bondholders from setting the whole plan aside, as far as appellant was concerned. The Special Master and the district court found that the voluntary plan was only partly completed or executed at the time the petition in the bankruptcy proceedings was filed, and their findings are supported by the evidence. This enabled the district court to entertain the proceedings and to confirm the plan as a composition of indebtedness under 11 U.S.C.A., § 403, sub. j.

In the foregoing, we follow the reasoning of the court and the disposition of identical issues in the cases of American National Bank of Nashville, Tenn. v. City of Sanford, Fla., 5 Cir., 112 F.2d 435, and Davis et al. v. City of Homestead, Fla., 5 Cir., 112 F.2d 438. Moreover, evidence that the plan was not, and had not been fully executed prior to the filing of the petition in the bankruptcy proceedings, is found in § 2293-5p(a) of the General Code of Ohio, enacted in 1941.

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Related

American Nat. Bank of Nashville v. City of Sanford
112 F.2d 435 (Fifth Circuit, 1940)
Davis v. City of Homestead
112 F.2d 438 (Fifth Circuit, 1940)
Wright v. City of Coral Gables
137 F.2d 192 (Fifth Circuit, 1943)

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Bluebook (online)
148 F.2d 63, 31 Ohio Op. 414, 1945 U.S. App. LEXIS 3213, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wertz-v-village-of-solon-ca6-1945.