205 F. 887 | 6th Cir. | 1913
This appeal is taken by the reorganization committee of the Columbus & Hocking Coal & Iron Company (hereafter called the Iron Company) from an order (made in the foreclosure suit of Central Trust Company of New York against the Iron Company) requiring the committee to pay appellee 50 per cent, of its claim in cash. The pertinent facts are these:
On January 25, 1910, under creditors’ bills, receivers were appointed over the property of the Iron Company, as well as of the Columbus-Hocking Clay & Brick Manufacturing Company (hereafter called the Brick Company); the latter company being a subsidiary of and practically owned by the Iron Company. A reorganization agreement was made between bondholders and stockholders of the Iron Company, looking to the acquisition by the committee of all the properties of the Iron Company and the organization of a new corporation. This reorganization plan contemplated the issue of $2,000,000 of bonds and $4,600,000 of common stock; the holders of the old bonds were to receive 75 per cent, thereof in' new first mortgage bonds and 50 per cent, in new common stock; and the old stockholders (on paying $10 per share) were to receive par in new first mortgage bonds “for such payment” — the old preferred stockholders to receive also par in .new common stock, and the old common stockholders 50 per cent, of par on their old stock. General creditors holding claims of $100 or under were to receive 100 per cent, in cash; claims of over $100 to be paid 50 per cent, in cash. Creditors were required to come in by October 29, 1910, in order to get the benefit of the agreement.
Appellee was a creditor of the Brick Company, and claimed a mechanic’s lien for materials furnished, and before the mortgage foreclosures, to which we are about to refer, filed its claim of such lien. After the lien was filed, appellee applied to and received from the committee a copy of the reorganization agreement. The committee was duly advised of this claim of lien and of appellee’s contention that its claim should be paid in full, instead of at 50 cents on the dollar. Negotiations between appellee and the committee were carried on from August, 1910, until some date (not appearing in the record) later than May 23, 1911, on which date (May 23d) the committee advised appellee that they had still “under consideration” the matter of appellee’s lien “and shall endeavor to reach an early decision and to inform you promptly of it.” Later the committee seems to have refused to recognize the mechanic’s lien as payable in full. It denies any obligation to pay 50 per cent, thereof, because claim therefor was not filed before October 29, 1910. Meanwhile three suits had been .instituted for the foreclosure of three separate mortgages, the first two given by the Iron Company, the third by the Brick Company. In these suits decrees were made on May 16th and May 29th respectively; the amount found due under the Iron Company’s mortgages being respectively up
Before the confirmation of the foreclosure sales appellee filed its petition, asking- leave to intervene and that the foreclosure sales be set aside, and for other and general relief. The sales were confirmed, the court retaining appellee’s claim for further consideration and additional evidence. Later the petition to intervene was denied and the order appealed from made. In its opinion under which this order was made, the court said, among other things, that:
■•The reorganization committee delayed a final answer from time to time on the ground that it was examining into the nature of such claim and was considering what, disposition must lie made of it. There was no want of diligence on the part of the íátowe-1'uller Company. The delay was due to the re< irganiza ti on committee. ’ ’
This statement of fact is abundantly sustained by the record, and sufficiently answers the committee’s contention that appellee’s exclusion from the benefits of the reorganization was due to its own laches. The general proposition that creditors who refuse to take the benefit of a reorganization agreement are cut off from all claims on the corporate assets has thus no application under the circumstances here shown. The court concluded that:
"Equity and good conscience forbid a denial of the right of this claim to participate in the distribution which the committee on reorganization rendered [tendered?] to such as might choose to come into the proposed arrangement. * * * The claimant was warranted in assuming fair treatment, and in delaying its assent to the acceptance of the 50 per cent, of its claim until the committee determined whether or not the claim would be paid in full. An adverse determination ought not to operate to a total exclusion of the claimant’s right to participate as a common creditor.”
In the court’s conclusion of the right and equity of appellee to come in under the reorganiza! ion agreement we fully concur. No question is made of the validity of appellee’s status as a creditor of the old Iron Company. That it had a right, up to October 29, 1910, to take the benefit of the reorganization agreement is clear. The assets of the Iron Company were in the hands of the court. The reorganization committee was proposing to take over all those assets, and (as stated on the argument without denial) in fact paid therefor in securities of the old company. The very fairness of the plan adopted would naturally tend to prevent other reorganization measures for the protection
We see no merit in the suggestion that the committee has been heard only on the application for leave to intervene, and that, as to the right to come in under the reorganization agreement, there has been “no pleading, no issue joined, and no hearing on the issue joined.” The committee seems to have fully presented its showing on this question. It does not appear to have asked opportunity for further showing.
The order appealed' from is affirmed, with costs.