Wright v. City of Coral Gables

137 F.2d 192, 1943 U.S. App. LEXIS 2783
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedJuly 9, 1943
DocketNo. 10605
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 137 F.2d 192 (Wright v. City of Coral Gables) 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
Wright v. City of Coral Gables, 137 F.2d 192, 1943 U.S. App. LEXIS 2783 (5th Cir. 1943).

Opinions

HUTCHESON, Circuit Judge.

Proceeding under the authority of city ordinance No. 347, adopted March 5, 1940, authorizing its filing, the city on June 27, 1940, filed a petition in municipal bankruptcy for the avowed purpose of compelling acceptance by a few creditors who had not accepted it, and had not been settled with, of a plan which the city by ordinance No. 269 on December 23, 1936, had offered to all its creditors as a voluntary plan, and which had been carried to completion as such in 1937 by the acceptance of more than the 90 percent the plan required to make it effective.

The claim of the city was that in filing the petition in 1940, the city was but endeavoring to complete the partially completed plan of 1937, and that under the authority of Sec. 83, sub. j. of the Municipal Bankruptcy Act, 11 U.S.C.A § 403, sub. j,1 as construed in American National Bank v. City of Sanford, 5 Cir., 112 F.2d 435, and Davis v. City of Homestead, 5 Cir., 112 F.2d 438, the city had the right upon the basis of consents procured in 1940 from [193]*193the holders of its refunding bonds issued and accepted in 1937 under the voluntary-plan to compel nonconsenting creditors to accept the plan now for then. On June 27th, there were findings, that the petition complied with the act of congress as amended and that it had been filed in good faith, and orders, that the petition be filed, that a hearing be had on the matters it presented, and that the plan be made temporarily operative.

Two creditors, and only two, made substantial and persistent objection. These were Ed C. Wright & Co., a holder of unrefunded bonds, and the American National Bank of Nashville, Tennessee, a creditor of Wright & Co. and the pledgee, by an arrangement made just before the filing of the plan with knowledge that it would be filed and for the purpose of defeating it, of coupons in the amount of $84,852.50, then detached from bonds of Wright & Co. theretofore held in pledge but then delivered to it. Wright & Co. resisted the approval of the plan on several grounds. One was that the petition for composition was not filed in good faith and for the purpose of rescuing the city from an insolvent condition existing when the petition was filed, but merely for the purpose of arbitrarily forcing it to agree to the voluntary plan long since completed and abandoned. Another was that the consents of the holders of refunding bonds could not within the language and purpose of subdivision (j) be properly used against it because the plan under which they hold their bonds was not a partially but a fully completed one. A third was that the consents were obtained and given under representations which deprive them of the character of the good faith assents required' under the bankruptcy statute. Instead of the consents being procured and given because of the city’s then insolvency or inability to meet its indebtedness and pursuant to a plan by which those consenting agree in the interest of all to waive or surrender part of their debt or security, these consents were given upon the express assurance of the city that they were but formalities, that their giving would not in any manner affect the rights or interests of those consenting, and that their giving was only for the purpose of forcing the “hold-up” creditors to accept the provisions which the assenting creditors had agreed to under wholly different conditions three years before.2 While a fourth and fifth were that many of the so-called consenters [194]*194were not those who had consented in 1937 hut were those who had since purchased the refunding bonds, and that after securing 94 percent of acceptances in 1937, the city had made so many discriminatory settlements that it was impossible to claim that the original plan was now being, or could be, put into effect. The bank made the same objections and the additional objection that the plan was grossly unfair to it because it admittedly offered much more generous treatment of and provision for the principal of the bonded indebtedness than for interest as evidenced by coupons, and the bank held coupons only.

There were a reference to a master, a full hearing by him, a finding that the plan was filed in good faith, was fair and ought to be confirmed, and recommendations accordingly. Exceptions to these findings and recommendations were overruled by the court, and the interlocutory order from which this appeal comes was entered. In it the court, reciting, (1) that as of June 27, 1940, the day the petition was filed, and as of September 22, 1937, the day the plan of settlement was placed in effect by petitioner, the petitioner was insolvent and unable to meet its debts, (2) that the plan was fair, equitable and for the best interests of the creditors and did not discriminate unfairly in favor of any creditor, (3) that it complied with the provisions of law, had been accepted and approved as by law required, (4) that all amounts paid and to be paid by the petitioner for services and expenses in connection with the plan had been fully disclosed and were reasonable, (5) that the offer of the plan and its acceptances were in good faith, (6) that the petitioner was authorized by law to take all necessary action to carry it out, ordered that the plan be approved and confirmed. Among the findings by the master and the district judge were findings that the arrangement for detaching the coupons from the Wright bonds so that the bank could claim to be the holder was made for the purpose of creating a supposed equity in the bank to oppose the plan and not bona fide and in due course of business for the purpose of making the ■bank the real owner and holder thereof as pledgee.

Wright & Co., the Bank, and one Joseph Lea, who files a brief amicus curiae, but who in the trial below appeared as attorney for Wright, are here insisting that the case does not come within the evil Subdivision (j) sought to remedy, that it does not present a case where that statute can be justly applied. They point out that the voluntary plan had been accepted in 1937 under an express understanding that bankruptcy would not be resorted to, and that after it was completed by securing acceptance of at least 90 percent, the city could then go about making voluntary and preferential settlements with other creditors. They insist that the plan having been fully completed and many voluntary settlements not at all in accordance with the plan having in the three years following been negotiated and concluded, the city may not go through the pretense of filing a petition in bankruptcy for composition of debts when the only purpose and effect of it is to use the statute as a club to compel Wright to take settlements less favorable than those the city accorded to other non-consenting creditors.

Of the claim of the bank and the poor mouth it puts up as to its plight in having only coupons and thus being discriminated against in the composition in favor of the holders of the bonds from which the coupons were detached, we make short work. We need only point out, as we did in the case of Roberts,3 another willing worker for Wright, that proceedings in bankruptcy are ruled by equitable considerations and hard situations deliberately contrived as the result of planning and artifice with Wright for the purpose of blocking by an appeal to the peculiar equity of being an owner of coupons [195]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
137 F.2d 192, 1943 U.S. App. LEXIS 2783, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wright-v-city-of-coral-gables-ca5-1943.