Thе Modified Plan of Reorganization provides for payment of the debentures in full with interest at the rate of 5% per annum to the date of consummation. 1 The appellants contended below and reassert here that the debenture holders are entitled to interest at the rate of 6% per annum from June 1, 1941 (the maturity date by acceleration), on the principal of the debentures, and to interest at 5% per annum on 'the unpaid interest coupons attached to the debentures. Their appeals are from those portions of the orders of September 17, 1947, and October 24, 1947, which limited interest on the principal to 5% and denied any interest on the coupons. The district court wrote no opinion.
Little need be said as to the claim of 6% interest on the principal. Each debenture contains a promise to pay the principal on Mаy 1, 1952, “and to pay interest thereon in like gold coin at the rate of five per centum (5%) per annum from May 1, 1917, on presentation and surrender * * * of the annexed coupons as they severally become due, on the first days of May and November in each year, until such principal shall be paid.” Interest was not paid on May 1, 1941, the debtor’s proceeding for reorganization under Chapter X of the Chandler Act, 11 U.S.C.A. § 501 et seq., having been filed April 10, 1941. Subsequently, pursuant to court order in the reorganization proceeding, the interest instalments due May 1 and November 1, 1941, were paid. The confirmed plan now before us provides for payment of 5% interest from Nоvember 1,1941. The appellants assert that the acceleration clause in Article VII of the Trust Indenture caused all debentures to become due on June 1, 1941, and that they are entitled to the statutory rate of
6%
intеrest thereafter. Assuming without decision that the clause operated automatically, this would not render inapplicable the promise to pay interest at 5% per annum “until such principal shall be paid.” The сontractual rate was to continue until
p-ayni'cnt,
not until the debentures matured, whether by lapse of time or acceleration. To support the conclusion that the contract rate must control it is sufficient to citе In re Realty Associates Securities Corp., 2 Cir.,
The claim of interest on overdue interest coupons is less simple. The interest coupon itself says nothing about interest after its maturity. But Article VII of the Trust Indenture, which deals with the trustee’s rights and powers after default, provides that the trustee may sell the collateral and, after deducting the expensеs of sale and other charges, “the Trustee shall apply the residue of the proceeds, together with all cash held by it * * * to the payment, first, of all overdue coupons representing interest upon said debentures, in the order of their maturity, with interest thereon at the rate of five per cent, per annum, and then of the interest accrued on said debeiltures not represented by overdue coupons, and finally, of the рrincipal of all said debentures, without preference or priority as between coupons of the same date or as between debentures; * * * ” If this provision be confined, as it literally is, to the payment of intеrest on overdue coupons only if the trustee has made a sale of the collateral, it would mean that the rights of a coupon holder who himself collects an overdue coupon from the obligor are different from his rights when the trustee collects for
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him. If he collects it himself he will either get 6% interest after' maturity, on the assumption that the law of New York treats an overdue coupon like a defaulted promissory note, or, on the contrary assumption, he will get only the face of the coupon since it contains no promise to pay interest after maturity; but if the trustee collects, the obligor must pay interest on overdue coupons, assuming that the law of New York recognizes such an obligation as valid. We cannot accept such an interpretation of the contract. As we said in Realty Associates Securities Corp., 2 Cir.,
In Stewart v. Petree,
Judge Patterson was of opinion that the New York cases which declared that a promisе to pay interest on interest was against public policy were limited to agreements to pay technical compound interest and were not controlling where the agreement was for simple interest on overdue coupons. Great as is our respect for any judicial pronouncement of Judge Patterson we are compelled to differ with his view of the New York law on this subject.. As we read the cases, the courts of that state
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have used the terms “interest on interest” and “compound interest” interchangeably and have declared that either type of agreement made in advance is violative of public pоlicy. Thus, in the Williamsburgh Savings Bank case,
The Sixth Circuit case was affirmed sub nom. Vanston Bondholders Protective Committee v. Green,
The appellants’ further point that the plan of reorganization is unfair because it does not require the debtor to pay to the indenturе trustee for debenture holders the interest coupons on mortgage bonds pledged as collateral, is without merit. Since the debenture holders are to be paid in full, they have no further interest with respect to thе collateral.
The orders on appeal are affirmed.
Notes
In Knight v. Wertheim & Co., 2 Cir.,
Mr. Justice Frankfurter, in his concurring opinion in the Vanston case,
