These appeals are from four orders in bankruptcy in the reorganization of Pru« dence Bonds Corporation under § 77B of the Bankruptcy Act, 11 U.S.C.A. .§ 207, a proceeding which has repeatedly come before this court. Three of the orders directed the distribution of the collateral,
By virtue of subdivision h of § 77B the order of confirmation discharged “the debtor from its debts and liabilities * * * except as provided in the plan or as may be reserved as aforesaid”; and it follows that no obligations remained except such as the New Company assumed. To learn what these were, we need look only at the Supplemental Trust Agreement, in which the New Company promised to pay interest only so far as the income of the collateral permitted,
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and the principal when it became due;
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and, in further confirmation of this, § 8 of Article II specifically exonerated the obligor from1 all deficiencies in interest which the income should not discharge. None of these clauses affected to deal with the claims of any of the bondholders as lienors upon the collateral; and a dispute had long since arisen between them and the Guarantor as to their relative rights as such. Section 11 of the original plan declared that the court should decide this dispute and went on to say that, if the Publicly Held Bonds were awarded priority, the Guarantor’s Bonds-should not “be entitled to receive any distributions on account of principal until all of the Publicly Held Bonds have been fully paid, redeemed, purchased or retired.” On July 21, 1937, Judge Inch decided that the Guarantor’s Bonds were “not entitled to-share in the collateral * * * on a parity” with the Publicly Held Bonds; that the Guarantor’s Bonds were “not enforcible obligations either as to principal or interest against their respective trust funds * * *, until” the Publicly Held Bonds-should “have been paid or provided for in full, both as to principal and interest heretofore accrued or hereafter accruing”; and that they should be so entitled “if and when and only after” the Publicly Held Bonds should “have been paid or provided for in full, both as to principal and interest.” The Guarantor appealed from this-order, and the Amended Plan must have been drafted before the appeal was disposed of, for it incorporated in haec verba § 11 of the original Plan. The appeal was-dismissed on January 7, 1938, by virtue of a settlement which accepted the order of July 21, 1937, so far as it fixed the terms of the subordination; and the Amended Plan was confirmed on January 18, 1938,
The order of July 21, 1937, having divided the bondholders into two groups, these were in the same relative position as though they had been secured by separate mortgages; and it would have been illegal to deny to the senior group its priority in interest, as much as it would have been to deny it its priority in principal. 4 If this proceeding had been a ■“straight bankruptcy,” the preferred group would, moreover, have been entitled to full interest until payment, provided the collateral was large enough. 5 A pledgee acquires an interest in the pledge, which is not affected by the bankruptcy, for bankruptcy is no more than a means of dis-
tributing the debtor’s general assets ratably.
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The right which he acquires is intended to be security for his claim in full, and that includes interest till payment. In Ticonic National Bank v. Sprague,
Perhaps, since the question does not seem to have been raised when the Amended Plan was confirmed and the Agreement was approved, it would be now too late to upset them, if, as matter of interpretation they plainly intended this unlawful result, although that is not too clear in the case of the Agreement. Nevertheless, in the proper interpretation of these instruments, this consideration should weigh heavily in accordance with the well established canon that, when there is a choice, a court will prefer that construction which is lawful. 11
Before resorting to the literal meaning of the words, it will be well also to consider whether there could have been a purpose in limiting the personal obligations of the New Company, and at the same time allowing full interest to the Publicly Held Bonds as lienors upon the collateral. We think that there may have been such a purpose. One of the chief aims of the reorganization, particularly in creating the New Company, was to get time to nurse along the collateral which it was hoped might recover part, perhaps much, of its original value. It was essential to this that none of the bondholders should be able to declare a default meanwhile, and that they must be content with whatever income might be realized. This the limitation of the New Company’s liability secured. It may be retorted that, although this might have accounted for the suspension of the right to interest until the due date of the bonds, it does not explain why all deficiencies in interest then existing, should be cancelled, as § 8 of Article II of the Agreement declared. But there was a possible reason for that as well. The due date of each series was 1945, but in each a majority of the Publicly Held Bonds, if they wished, might extend the maturity to 1950; and it was possible that some of the series might do so, and some might not. If the New Company were to be liable for any deficiency in interest upon the Publicly Held Bonds in a series which became due in 1945, the bondholders in that series would be able to take judgment and execution against it, and that would, or at least it might, put an end to any further efforts to conserve the collateral of those series which were to last five years longer. Moreover, if we assume that, not only as against the New Company, but as against the collateral of each series, the bonds were to become income bonds, a very unequal distribution becomes possible. It would by no means follow that, because the income from the collateral in one series had not been enough to pay the interest in full, the collateral itself would not show a surplus; indeed that is exactly what has happened in the case of the Fifth and Ninth Series. Yet, if the New. Company’s immunity from liability for all deficiencies in interest, applies as well to claims against, the collateral some of the res is released from the trust and turned over to the New Company. Quite aside from any question of its legality, this is mere spoliation of the beneficiaries of the trust, the Publicly Held Bonds; and we should not ascribe such an intent to the Plan unless the words allow us no escape.
After these preliminary considerations we must consider the words themselves for they are always the most important evidence of the parties’ intention. The limitation of the New Company’s obligation as to interest was indeed unconditional: the bonds were “to bear interest * * * only to the extent that the annual collections of Net Income * * * received from the Collateral * * * will suffice.” However, that did not touch the priority of the bondholders as lienors; and, as we have seen, § 11 dealt with that by declaring that the Guarantor’s Bonds were not to “be entitled to receive any distributions on account of principal,” until the Publicly Held Bonds had been “fully paid.” That phrase was at best ambiguous ; and we can see no a priori reason for
The order of July 21, 1937, was of very different import; it allowed nothing to the Guarantor’s Bonds until the Publicly Held Bonds had been “paid or provided for in full both as to principal and interest heretofore accrued or hereafter accruing.” That language clearly meant interest in full, for the original plan had already limited the liability of the Debtor to income and it would be absurd to read such explicit language as intended merely to repeat the limitation; the contrast in locution cannot be disregarded. Conceivably an argument could have been made that by the time the Amended Plan was drafted the purpose had changed, even though § 11 remained as it was; but this the chronology forbids. The Guarantor appealed from the order, and it was not until January 8, 1938 — which was after the Amended Plan had been drafted in its final form — that the appeal was settled; and the settlement explicitly accepted the terms of the order, so far as it defined priority. Even though we were to suppose that the language of § 11 standing alone would have left the matter open, this sequence of events shows that they must have been used eodem intuitu as in the order: that is, that the Plan exactly incorporated the order pro tanto. Up to that time anyway, the lien of the Publicly Held Bonds to the collateral was unabated.
As we have conceded, there is ground for saying that § 10 of Article II of the Agreement, read by itself, changed the Plan in this regard; but we think that the following is an inescapable answer to that position. After the Agreement had been drafted, it was approved without giving the Publicly Held Bonds any opportunity to withdraw from the reorganization. In so proceeding the judge relied upon the following language “of subdivision f of § 77B: “Before or after a plan is confirmed, changes and modifications * * * may be made with the approval of the judge after hearing upon notice * * * subject to the right of any creditor or stockholder who shall previously have accepted the plan to withdraw his acceptance * * * if, in the opinion of the judge, the change or modification will be materially adverse to the interest of such creditor or stockholder * * *” He approved the Agreement because he held that the changes from the Amended Plan were not “materially adverse to the interest” of the Publicly Held Bonds; and so they were not, if the priority of those bonds as beneficiaries of the trust still included the right to recover full interest. On the other hand, if § 10 took away that right, they were not only materially prejudiced, but very gravely prejudiced, and the order of approval was illegal, for the judge’s discretion was not controlling.
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Indeed, if the Agreement did make that change, we should be disposed to hold that the order approving it was open to collateral attack, unlike the order confirming the Amended Plan. We say this because the right of a creditor to withdraw when the change is “materially adverse,” seems to have been
Thus it appears that all relevant considerations conspire to demand that interpretation which the Publicly Held Bonds assert: i. e., the antecedent probabilities; the protection required for senior lienors; and the construction authoritatively placed upon the language used by the judge who authorized it. It is true that the special master in his findings of fact construed the Agreement otherwise; moreover, the findings in which he states this construction all begin with the words: “It was the intent of the parties and the fair intent and meaning of the Supplemental Trust Agreement.” But such findings have not the presumptive validity which Rule 53(e) (2), Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, 28 U.S.C.A. following section 723c, gives to a master’s findings of fact. It is not necessary to analyze the mental process by which a court imposes legal consequences upon verbal utterances; possibly, it is proper to call the result a “finding of fact.” It is enough here, that, whatever the right description, such a finding is assailable as an ordinary finding of fact is not; for appellate courts have untrammelled power to interpret written documents. 13
As we said at the outset, the conclusion we have reached disposes of all the issues raised upon the appeal. The master found that, as of August 1, 1945, the deficiency of interest due upon the Publicly Held Bonds of the Fifth Series was $411,783.18, and that the principal due was $1,077,450, making a total of $1,489,233.18. He also found that the value of the collateral — including the amount restored by the trustee — was $1,506,513.65, so that only a small surplus of about $17,000 was left to pay the principal of the Guarantor’s Bonds: $67,-200. Even though the income for the two years which have followed has been enough to pay the interest in full, there will be no surplus for anyone but the Guarantor. The figures for the Ninth Series show an even greater deficiency, for there is no possibility of any surplus whatever, not even for the Guarantor.
The order will be reversed, and the cause will be remanded for further proceedings not inconsistent with the foregoing.
Notes
2 Cir.,
§ 1(a), Article V.
§ 1(c), Article V.
Consolidated Rock Products Co. v. DuBois,
Coder v. Arts, 8 Cir.,
7 Viner’s Abridgement, 110.
207(b) (5), Title 11 U.S.O.A.
R. F. C. v. Denver & R. G.
W.
R. Co.,
§ 216(7), § 616(7), Title 11 U.S.C.A.
Hobbs v. McLean,
Downtown Investment Ass’n v. Boston Metropolitan Buildings, 1 Cir.,
Road Improvement Dist. v. Roach, 8 Cir.,
