delivered the opinion of the Court.
The District Court confirmed a plan for the.composition of the debts of respondent under Ch. IX of the Bankruptcy Act (50 Stat. 653; 52 Stat. 939, 940) ,
1
The
*141
Circuit Court of Appeals affirmed that order.
The city’s composition was a refunding, plan worked out by it and its fiscal agent, 2 R. E. Crummer & Co. Pursuant to the fiscal agency contract both parties were to use their best efforts to induce the creditors to partid-pate in the plan. The city was not to pay any of the costs of the refunding, as Crummer was to defray all expenses incident to assembling the bonds, printing the refunding bonds, representing the city .in proceedings to validate the new bonds, obtaining a legal opinion approving the bonds, etc. The fiscal agency contract provided that Crummer was to be compensated for its services and reimbursed for its expenses by assessing charges against the participating bondholders. This charge was $40 for each $1000 bond; or in case the bondholders elected to sell Crummer the interest coupons, accrued to July 1, 1937, at one-third of their face amount 3 the charge was to be $20 per $1000 bond.
*142 Crurqpier solicited assents to the plan. Approximately 69% of the bondholders accepted. But for .the claims held by the Crummer interests, 4 and voted in favor of the plan, the requisite two-thircte statutory vote, however, would not have been obtained. Some of these claims had been purchased prior to the fiscal agency contract, some later. The average pricé was apparently about 50i* on the dollar. The inference seems clear that some o.f them were acquired in order to facilitate consummation . of the composition by placing- them in friendly hands. But the record does not show whether or not Crummer disclosed to the bondholders when their assents were solicited that it was a creditor as well as'the city’s, fiscal agent, the extent of the claims held by it and its affiliate, the circumstances surrounding their acquisi *143 tion, and its intent to vote those claims in favor of the plan. No such disclosure was made in the plan.
The District Court, however, found that the two-thirds of the aggregate amount of claims affected by the plan, required by § 83 (d), 11TJ. S. C. § 403 (d), for confirmation, had assented. It also found that Crummer’s. compensation was fair arid reasonable, that the plan and its acceptance were in good faith, and .that the plan was fair, equitable and for the best interests of the creditors, and did not discriminate unfairly in favor of'any creditor.
We disagree. The order of confirmation must be set aside. It cannot be said that the plan does not discriminate unfairly in favor of any creditor, that the acceptances were in good faith, that the requisite two-thirds vote of approval had been obtained.
Crummer had at least 5 three financial states in this composition: (1) the fee to be ccillected from the bondholders; (2) its speculative position in such of the interest accruals as it might acquire from the bondholders at a third of their face amount; (3) the profit which might accrue to it or its affiliate, as a result of the refunding, on bonds acquired at default prices.
The court found that the first of these items was reasonable. But it apparently deemed the others irrelevant to the inquiry.'
*144 Clearly, however,- no finding could be. made under § 83 (b), 11 U. S. C. § 403 (b), that the compensation to be received by the fiscal agent was reasonablé without passing on the worth of the aggregate of all the emoluments accruing to the Crummer interests as a result of consummation of the plan. Since that inquiry. would necessitate an appraisal of the fiscal agent’s speculative position in the plan, perhaps the definitive finding demanded by the Act could not be made. Yet that is a chance which the fiscal agent, not the bondholders, must take; for it is the,agent who is seeking the. aid of the court in obtaining one of the benefits of the Act. Moreover, to the extent that the aggregate benefits, flowing to the Crummer interests exceeded reasonable compensa^ tion for services rendered, their reward would exceed what the court could authorize under § 83 (b), 11 U. S. C.. § 403 (b). Furthermore, if any such excess benefits' would accrue to them, then the plan would run afoul of § 83 (e) (1), 11 TJ. S. C. § 403 (e) (1). For in that event the plan would discriminate unfairly , in favor of the drummer interests as creditors.
Hence the lack of that essential finding would be fatal in any case. It is especially serious here in view of the fact that without the vote of the fiscal agent the requisite two-thirds acceptance would not have been obtained. Where it ■ does not affirmatively appear that full and complete disclosure of the fiscal agent’s interests was made to the bondholders when their assents were solicited, it cannot be said that those assents were fairly obtain'ed. Cf.
Rogers
v.
Guaranty Trust Co.,
We have emphasized that full disclosure is the minimum requirement in order not to imply that it is the limit of the power and duty of the bankruptcy court in these situations.' As this Court stated in
Securities and Exchange Commission
v.
United States Realty &
Imp
rovement Co.,
Beyond that is the qufestion of unfair discrimination to which we have adverted. Compositions' under 'Ch. IX, like compositions under the old § 12, enviságe equality of treatment of creditors. Under , that section and its antecedents, a composition would not be confirmed where onfe creditor was- obtaining some special favor or inducement not accorded the others, whether that consideration moved from the debtor or from another.
In re Sawyer,
Fed. Cas. No. 12,395;
In re Weintrob,
Since the cause must be remanaed, there are two other matters which should be mentioned. Section 83 (d), 11 U. S. C. § 403 (d), provides that in computing the statutory two-thirds vote necessary for confirmation of a plan all claims “owned, held, or controlled” by the city shall be excluded. So far as appears, the claims held by the Crummer interests were not owned by or held for the city. Yet it is by no means clear that they were not “controlled” by the city within the meaning of the Act. Claims held by a city’s fiscal agent presumptively would ¡Seem to fall in that prohibited category. The abuse at which the Act is aimed is not. confined to those cases where the holder of the claims is an agent of the city within the strict rules of respondeat superior. Rather, the test is whether or not there is such close identity of interests between the claimant and the city that the claimant’s assent to the plan may fairly be said to be more the product of the city’s influence and to reflect more the city’s desires than an expression of an investor’s independent, business judgment. Here there was such a, close identity of interests between Crummer and the city *149 vis-á-vis the refunding as to raise grave doubts as to the propriety of allowing those claims to vote in any event. That, however, is a question for appropriate findings by the court should, another plan be presented.
Petitioner also urges that the fiscal agency contract between Crummer and the city was illegal under the decisions of the Supreme Court of Florida in
Taylor
v.
Williams,
For the reasons stated we reverse the judgment below and remand the cause to the District Court for proceedings in conformity with this opinion.
Reversed.
Notes
The Act of August 16,1937 (50 Stat. 653) under which the petition was filed expired June 30, 1940, except in respect to proceedings initi-atéd on or prior to that date. That Act, however, was amended by *141 the Act of June 28, 1940 (76th Cong. 3d Sess., c. 438, 54 Stat. 667), which, inter alia, extended for another two years the time for filing petitions.
R. E. Crummer & Co. is a Delaware corporation organized primar rily to represent clients of an affiliate (see infra, note 4) who had purchased bonds in Florida. Beginning in 1931, it had handled the debt problems of over 200 taxing units.
Under the original plan all such accrued interest coupons were to be acquired by Crummer at 33%% of the face amount, which when refunded into new bonds, would be held by it subject to purchase by the City at not exceeding 50% of the face thereof for the first six months, 60% for the succeeding six months, 70% for the next six months, and 75% for the following six months. Due to.fears of *142 illegality, the plan was modified.- As modified it provided that’com-, pensation of. the fiscal agent was to be 4% of the principal debt with the right of any creditor to sell to Crummer the interest accruals at 33%% of their face amount. In the latter event the charge against him was reduced to 2% and Crummer held the securities so obtained subject to the right of the city to acquire them at the rates.above indicated." The fiscal agent estimated that it would get substantially the same amount of money- out of the plan whichever option the bondholders elected. .
Interest accruals were to be escrowed. Proceeds of the collection of delinquent taxes were to be remitted to the escrow agent who would reduce the amount owed - by the city under the escrow by such amount as would result in the particular proceeds constituting a pro tanto payment and discharge at 50% of par during the first six months, 60%. during the next six months, 70% during the next six months, and 75% during the following six months.-
Thus in effect the interest accruals could be offset against delinquent taxes, the city being áble to retire some of its debt at'less than par if it could stimulate tax collections. The proceeds received by the 'escrow agent were to be held for the benefit of the depositors.
R. E. Crummer & Co. and Brown-Crummer Investment Co. R. E. Crummer was president' of both. A majority of the boards of both corporations was identicall The Crummer interests had acquired over a third of the claims.
There were • other emoluments for Crummer. It was granted “exclusive authority” to act for and on behalf of the city for a period of three years “in all matters connected with, or relating to, the exchange.” And in case any bonds or coupons were presented for payment or suit instituted thereon the city agreed to give • Crummer notice before any terms of settlement were agreed upon. These provisions, the fact that the Crummer interests hold large blocks of claims acquired at default prices, the likely interest of Crummer in the .accrued coupons and its strategic position all point towards future speculative possibilities which are not inconsiderable, whatever may be said of their unhealthy impact on the city and the public investors alike.
