Williams v. Great Lakes Terminal Warehouse Co.

87 F.2d 115, 1936 U.S. App. LEXIS 2791
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedDecember 18, 1936
DocketNos. 7380, 7390
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 87 F.2d 115 (Williams v. Great Lakes Terminal Warehouse Co.) 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
Williams v. Great Lakes Terminal Warehouse Co., 87 F.2d 115, 1936 U.S. App. LEXIS 2791 (6th Cir. 1936).

Opinion

HICKS, Circuit Judge.

These appeals grow out of the reorganization of Great Lakes Warehouse Company of Toledo, under section 77B of the Bankruptcy Act, 11 U.S.C. § 207 (11 U.S.C.A. § 207). Appellants Williams, Eversman, and Morgan, attorneys, appealed from an order denying them an allowance for professional services. Townsend and Kindleberger, attorneys, appealed from a similar order, and Pavey and Hill, styled the “Pavey Committee,” likewise appealed from an order denying its application for allowances.

The debtor was incorporated in 1927, to engage in the cold storage and warehouse business. The construction of its buildings was financed by an issue of two and one-half million dollars of first mortgage, fifteen-year, 6% per cent. Sinking Fund Gold bonds, and of $850,000 of ten-year, 7 per cent., General Mortgage Convertible Gold debentures. On March 1, 1930, it defaulted in the payment of interest upon both types of securities. Two days later the Pavey Committee was formed to represent and protect holders of first mortgage bonds. (This committee represented holders of $306,600 par value of these bonds, or about 13 per cent, of the total issue, which were placed with a trust company pursuant to a deposit agreement dated March 13, 1930. This agreement contained the following provision:

“The Committee shall have power to appoint * * * such counsel, attorneys * * * as it may deem necessary, * * * and may pay such * * * counsel, attorneys, * * * reasonable compensation for their services, and all such compensation shall be included in the expenses of the Committee; * * * it being, however, expressly understood and agreed that no action of the Committee shall pledge the individual credit of the depositors or of the members of the Committee or-impose any personal liability upon them or any of them and that the pro rata share of all expenses and obligations chargeable to any original bond or to the cash, securities and/or other property received in place or on account of it shall not exceed 5% of the par value of that 'original bond.

“ * * * No deposited bond and no property or securities of any reorganized company shall be delivered and no cash payment shall be made to the depositors entitled to receive the same until the pro rata proportion of all said expenses and obligations * * * applicable to the bonds originally deposited shall have been fully paid. * * * ”

Appellants Williams, Eversman, and Morgan make no claim for services rendered in connection with the plan of reorganization. They seek compensation for services rendered the Pavey Committee prior to July 18, 1931, or about three years before the enactment of section 77B. They insist that to secure payment there[117]*117for they are entitled to a lien upon the estate of the debtor by virtue of the final paragraph of the provision quoted and that by virtue of paragraph 7 of the plan the trustee of the debtor should be required to discharge the lien by an appropriate allowance. Their claim cannot be sustained.

Paragraph 7 is as follows: “The debt- or or its trustees shall pay or the corporation to be formed shall assume and immediately pay all of the expenses and obligations preliminary to or resulting from the debtor’s reorganization, including, but without limitation, the administration costs of this proceeding, the expense and compensation of the members of and counsel for any protective committees representing creditors, secured or unsecured or stockholders of the debtor, for their services whensoever rendered, the expenses and compensation of the reorganization manager, the expenses and compensation of the attorneys for the debtor and the expenses and compensation of the attorneys for the debtor’s trustees, all, however, as the same may be allowed or determined fair and reasonable by the court.”

We need not consider whether the deposit agreement fixed a lien upon the deposited bonds to secure appellants’ compensation. Obviously no lien was created thereby upon the estate or assets of the debtor. Further, paragraph 7 limits the compensation of counsel of any protective committee to services rendered “preliminary to or resulting from the debtor’s reorganization.” The phrase “for their services whensoever rendered” has reference to those services which are included in “the expenses and obligations preliminary to or resulting from the debtor’s reorganization” and then only such as “may be allowed or determined fair and reasonable by the court.”

We think that paragraph 7 was drawn in view of section 77B of the act (subdivision (c), 11 U.S.C.A. § 207(c), which authorizes the judge to allow reasonable compensation for services rendered “in connection with the proceeding and the plan.” It did not contemplate that counsel should be compensated out of the estate of the debtor for services rendered long prior to the passage of the act and which had no connection with the proceedings thereunder.

We find no reason to disagree with the District Judge in the denial of any allowance to the Pavey Committee. This committee was composed of Frank D. Pavey and James N. B. • Hill. Mr. Pavey was the active member of it. Substantially all the service of this committee was rendered before July, 1931, in an effort to protect the bondholders whom it represented. It commenced a suit in equity in the nature of a creditors’ bill against the debtor, the gist of which was that the debtor’s assets were being dissipated by its management, but on July 1, 1931, it dismissed this bill upon its own motion. For such services it should look for payment to those who employed it. It is illogical to say that this character of service, rendered so long before the enact•ment of section 77B, was incurred “in connection with the proceeding and the plan” of reorganization. True, the court did allow the expenses of the Pavey Committee, and from this it might be inferred that the services of the committee contributed to the plan but such inference is weakened if not entirely destroyed by the finding of the court (with which we are in accord) that they did not benefit the reorganization. About the only connection the Pavey Committee had with the plan was to approve its provisions as it was being worked out by counsel and agree to its completed form in behalf of the bondholders whom it represented.

The claim of Townsend and Kindleberger has stronger support. This firm was employed by the Pavey Committee in March, 1931, and served until November of that year; but it makes no claim for an allowance for these services. These appellants were not active again until September, 1934.

About that time a second mortgage bondholders committee, called the “Converse Committee,” was formed. This committee represented $1,902,000 face value of the first mortgage bonds, an amount slightly in excess of 66 per cent, of the total issue, which were placed with a bank pursuant to a deposit agreement. The Converse Committee was represented by two law firms, and Mr. Landis, of one of them, had active charge of the legal work of the committee and later represented the debtor. Soon after its' organization, L. E. Yeager, at the request of the Converse Committee, took charge of the management of the debtor’s business. ‘ He and Mr. Landis were instrumental in the formation of the reorganization plan and [118]*118participated actively in the court proceedings which culminated in its approval.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
87 F.2d 115, 1936 U.S. App. LEXIS 2791, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/williams-v-great-lakes-terminal-warehouse-co-ca6-1936.