85 F. 838 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Eastern Wisconsin | 1896
(orally). It is proper to look at the situation of this road, and the relative position of the parties with respect to their securities and claims, before proceeding to remark upon the legal aspect which the case presents.
The proceedings in behalf of the trust company to foreclose certain mortgages upon the road were commenced in the year 1893, since which time this road and its property have been under the management and in tlie possession of the receivers of the court. At the time of the publication of the plan of reorganization, the property of the road stood substantially, if not accurately, in this position: There was a first mortgage of $41,879,000; there were the underlying mortgages upon the Missouri Division of $1,815,500; and upon the Pend D’Oreille Division of $357,000, — making $44,051,500 in amount of mortgage liens superior to the mortgages sought to he foreclosed. The principal and interest to the date of the decree of the second mortgage was $23,033,-738.80; of the third mortgage, $13,606,212.70; of the consolidated mortgage, $71,643,703.63. There were also outstanding receivers’ certificates amounting to $5,000,000, which were liens upon this road prior to either of these mortgages for such amount as might remain after the application of collaterals. Without reference to the receiver’s certificates, there was a debt upon this railroad superior to any claim of the preferred or common stock, and superior to any claim of general creditors, of $152,335,155.13. The fixed charges amounted to $10,905,690. The net income under the receivership for the year 1894-95 (a fair year) was $6,015,846.62, leaving a deficit to meet the
The plan of reorganization proposed that, upon the purchase of this road upon the sale,- — -if the syndicate should become the purchaser,— there should be issued $130,000,000 of 4 per cent. 100-year gold bonds, secured by first mortgage; $00,000,000 of 3 per cent. 100-year gold bonds, secured by a second mortgage; $75,000,000 of preferred stock, and $80,000,000 of common stock; and by the plan, after payment of some small amount of cash, the holders of the first mortgage bonds assenting to the arrangement should have $1,350 in new bonds for each $1,000 of old bonds, and that amount, undoubtedly, in view of and because of the, reduction in the rate of interest. The holders of the second mortgage bonds should take 118-¿ per cent, in 4 per cent, bonds f.or the old bonds and accumulated interest, and 50 per cent, in preferred .stock. The holders of the third mortgage bonds should take 118-J per cent, in 3 per cent, bonds in lieu of the old bonds and accumulated interest, and 50 per cent, in preferred stock. The consols should receive 66-J per cent, in the 3 per cent, bonds, and 021 per cent, in preferred stock. Provision was also made for the retirement of the bonds held by the Northwest Equipment Company, and of those pledged for collateral trust notes and for dividend certificates issued under certain resolutions of the old board of directors with reference to a supposed surplus or dividend belonging to preferred stockholders. The preferred stock of the old company should receive 50 per cent, in new preferred stock, and 50 per cent, in new common stock, in consideration of the holders of it paying $10 per share. Holders of the common stock should receive 100 per cent, in new common stock upon paying $15 per share. The estimate of the plan was that, by the abatement of interest, the amount of fixed charges, now $10,905,600 annually, would be reduced to $6,052,600 annually. The property up to this time, at the best, could be relied upon to realize not to exceed $7,800,000 a year.
It is no doubt true, as ruled in Railroad Co. v. Howard, 7 Wall. 392, that the disposition of the property of a corporation among its stockholders, without providing for the payment of the debts of the corporation, is a fraud upon creditors. It, however, is essential to look at the facts of each case in order to accurately apply the principle enunciated; for, if the contention of counsel for complainant be correct, all agreements of reorganization of bankrupt corporations which fail to give all creditors of the corporation an interest in the reorganization, or which fail to satisfy the debts of the corporation, and which accord to stockholders of the old corporation upon any terms an interest in the new corporation, are inhibited by the law, and void. If such conclusion result from the decision in the Howard Case, the result must prove disastrous, uprooting past reorganizations of great magnitude, and seriously crippling, if not preventing, any future reorganization of bankrupt corporations. In the Howard Case the property of the Mississippi & Missouri Railroad Company, an insolvent corporation, was incumbered by five mortgages. The Chicago & Rock Island Railroad Company proposed to purchase of the insolvent corporation its
‘•Holders of bonds secured by mortgage, as in this case, may exact the whole amount of the bonds, principal and interest, or they may, if they see fit, accept a percentage as a compromise in full discharge of tlieir respective claims; but, whenever their lien is legally discharged, the property embraced in the mortgage, or whatever remains of it, belongs to the corporation. Conceded fact is that the property purchased of tlie railroad was sold for the considerations specified in the record, and that the mortgage bondholders discharged their lien for 84 per cent, of that amount, and that the residue of the purchase money remained in the hands of the purchaser, discharged of the lien created by the mortgages.”
There, as not here, the agreement of sale to the purchasing company was made before the foreclosure proceedings, the latter being merely incident to and in aid of the agreement of sale. It is also true that the property was incumbered beyond its value; but there, as not here, by agreement, the property of the company was to be divided among the bondholders and stockholders upon an agreed basis, the claims of the bondholders being compromised, abated, and discharged in full. Here the proposed’ plan is to take effect in tlie event of purchase under a decree of sale; and it may he assumed that the decree was entered by consent of all parties interested in furtherance of the plan of reorganization. And it may also be assumed that, upon the sale to be bad, the reorganization committee would become the purchaser; for as expressed by the supreme court in Railway Co. v. Gebhard, 109 U. S. 527, 549, 3 Sup. Ct. 371:
“X* rarely happens in the United States that foreclosures of railway mortgages are anything else than the machinery by which arrangements between the creditors and oilier parties in interest are carried into effect, and a reorganization of the affairs of tlie corporation under a new name brought about.”
So that the question is presented whether any plan of reorganization can he sustained which does not: comprehend the proteetiou of the lights of general creditors of the corporation; or, in other words, -whether bondholders have a right to agree with stockholders upon terms which may be agreed upon to give the latter an interest in the new corporal ion, without including creditors in such plan of reorganization, or at least tendering them an opportunity of joining therein. I fail to perceive any just reason why, in the absence of fraud or oppres
Gan it fairly be said that any fraud here was perpetrated upon the creditors? What was the position of the stockholders? This property was incumbered to the amount of $152,000,000. There is no allegation in this bill, nor is there information within reach of the court in the record of the foreclosure suit, which shows the actual value of this railroad property; but it is clear that, at the time of the reorganization plan, the net earnings of the road were largely insufficient to pay its fixed charges, and that there was a continual annual deficit in that respect. So that, looking at the interest of the stockholders in the Northern Pacific Company at the time this plan of reorganization was proposed, can it properly be said that the stock had any actual appreciable value? It might, under certain contingencies, have a certain market value for the purposes of control, if it could control, but certainly not with reference to the control of this property, which was within the custody of the court for the purpose of foreclosing the mortgages and protecting the creditors of the road. Under these circumstances, this reorganization agreement proposes that the stockholders might have common stock in the new company upon paying $15 a share. What would they get? If the court has accurately placed these figures, there will necessarily be, under present conditions, not more .than sufficient income to meet the net fixed charges, even under the plan of reorganization. Wrhat, then, was the hope? That business would revive; that the country would recover from the panic of 1893; and, with the revival of business, the road would be able to meet its fixed charges, and in the time to come, possibly, — though rather doubtfully, because, I think, experience has shown there are but. few, if any, roads west of the Mississippi river that have been known to pay a dividend on their common stock, — there might be realized some dividend upon the common stock. But for that possible hope, coupled, perhaps, with anticipated participation in the control of this road that might come in time, these stockholders, in order to acquire new stock, must pay $15 a share. That was not for the property of the Northern Pacific Company, but in the hope that in the future they might, in view of the possible revival of business and the growth of the country penetrated by.the railroad, realize some profit upon the new,-and recover the loss upon the old, investment; and that they have
This bill was filed by general creditors of the Northern Pacific Company to attack this decree. It alleges that this arrangement, which in the hill is termed a “conspiracy,” was made without the opportunity afforded to the general creditors to participate in the reorganization, and to have awarded to them the interest of the stockholders. In other words, it is claimed-and that is the broad claim of this hill— that when a railroad company is insolvent, and its mortgages are sought to he foreclosed, and reorganization is attempted, unless the bondholders shall take into their plan of reorganization stockholders and creditors, such a reorganization is invalid. This hill demands that this decree shall be set aside, and that it shall be adjudged that the general creditors of this company are entitled to all the rights which by the reorganization plan are given to the stockholders, and that the Court shall formulate and provide a fair plan for the distribution of the securities of any new corporation which may be formed by the bondholders or other purchasers of the property of the Northern Pacific llailroad Company pursuant to sale under any decree to be passed, and provide for just and fair execution of such agreement and distribution of securities among the various parties entitled thereto. In other words, it is suggested by this bill that, upon any,plan of reorganization, the parties in interest are not to be at liberty to contract with each other; hut that the plan of reorganization should he formulated and imposed upon the parties by a court of equity. Courts are created for the purpose of enforcing contracts which parties have made, not for the purpose of making contracts for parties. It would he more than doubtful, if power was conferred upon a court to malee a contract for parties, whether it could make as fair and just and equitable a contract as could the parties themselves.
There is another peculiar feature of this bill. The complainants come into equity asking that they be substituted to all the rights of such stockholders as assent to and participate in this plan of reorganization. . It is a familiar principle that he who comes into a court of equity -asking equity should be willing to do equity. These holders of common stock who have entered into this plan of reorganization, in order to acquire any right whatever, in order to have a possible, but remote, contingency of receiving anything in the future, were obliged to pay $15 a share for each share of stock. If the theory could he upheld that the complainants have the right to he substituted in the place of the stockholders under the plan of reorganization upon payment of the assessment of $15 a share, it is to be observed that the complainants do not even offer by their hill to nay the stockholders the sums which have been paid upon their subscription to this plan of reorganization. While it is true, as observed by counsel, that 1he market price of stock is not always a just and true criterion of its value, that the market may he inflated to-day and depressed to-morrow, and is subject to manipulation, still, it remains true that the market value, as indicated by sales, is to some extent an indication of the real value
A careful examination of this bill and of the record, in the light of the knowledge which the court has of this whole transaction, satisfies me that the bill is without equity. This conclusion renders it unnecessary for the court to consider the other questions that were argued at the bar, — whether a general creditor, not having placed his claim in judgment, could maintain such a bill as the present, or whether the contract under which the complainants claim to have become general creditors of the company was ultra vires the corporation. The motion will therefore be overruled.