96 F.2d 85 | 5th Cir. | 1938
The new Municipal Bankruptcy Act, §§ 81-84, approved August 16, 1937$ and found 11 U.S.C.A. §§ 401-404, was sought to be availed of by City of West Palm Beach, Fla., by a petition filed August 20, 1937. It was dismissed by the District Judge August 30, 1937, without any creditors’ meeting having been called, on the grounds that the petition showed that the plan of composition proposed thereby had been offered by the petitioner and accepted by the majority of the creditors long before the passage of the act and not pursuant to it, and that the accepting creditors had been mostly settled with pursuant to the plan by giving them new bonds and so could no longer be counted as creditors favoring the plan as a bankruptcy composition. The City appeals.
The petition contains the allegations required by section 403(a) of the act. It exhibits the proposed plan which states that it is “made as of this first day of January, 1936.” It offers new funding bonds for the City’s floating debt and new refunding bonds for its old bonds, at a reduction of 25 per cent, in principal and at lower interest rates, with long-postponed maturities. It provides that separate tax levies for interest and sinking funds for the new bonds are to be provided. The petition states that the holders of more than 90 per cent, of the City’s debt entered into this plan, and that creditors “owning not less than 51% in amount of the securities affected by the aforesaid plan, excluding such securities owned, held and controlled by petitioner have accepted said plan in writing.” But the petition alleges further that the City had passed its ordinances to put the plan into effect, had prepared and had executed the necessary funding and refunding bonds, and that they had been validated and confirmed by proper court decree on November 18, 1936; and “Said City has issued $10,031,-250 of the aforesaid refunding bonds of 1936, leaving $1,561,125 of said refunding bonds to be exchanged for $2,081,400 of said City’s old indebtedness; and has also issued $287,000 of its funding bonds of 1936, leaving $206,000 of its funding bonds to be exchanged for $274,664 of its outstanding floating debt.” The purpose of the bankruptcy thus appears to be to force the holders of the $2,081,400 of old bonds and of $274,644 of the floating debt to take the same settlement which the other creditors have taken.
Affirmed.