In a railroad reorganization proceeding under Section 77 of the Bankruptcy Act, 11 U.S.C.A. § 205, the appellees as mortgage trustees for bondholders filed a claim for $1,750,000 principal and about the same amount for past due interest, with an additional sum for interest on over due interest, promised in the bonds and coupons. The claim was resisted as to the interest items by the debtor, Georgia, Florida and Alabama Railroad Company and by its first preferred stockholders, who by reason of default in dividends have come into control of the Company. The stated ground of objection is that ninety percent of the bonds were obtained by the Seaboard Air Line Railroad Company in a reorganization of the Seaboard Air Line Railway Company, and that the original bondholders were paid only $750 for each $1,000 bond with nothing for accrued interest or interest on. interest; and that the purchase of these bonds for less than par was part of a plan to take over and appropriate the debtor’s entire property to the injury of the preferred stockholders. On a hearing the District Court held that the bonds owned by the Seaboard Air Line Railroad Company had been bought in the year 1944 by the receivers of the Seaboard Air Line Railway Company under orders of their court in Virginia in connection with the reorganization of that railroad; that subsequently in 1945 the present debtor asserted in the Vir
Appellants state that their appeal presents but one broad issue: Should the District Court have allowed interest on the bonds under the facts and equities of this case, in view of the decision in Vanston Bondholders Protective Committee v. Green,
The Vanston case,
Judgment affirmed.
