1. It is improper for the District Court in a receivership case
to pass upon the wisdom and fairness of a plan of reorganization
and the rights of nonassenting creditors without definite, detailed
and authentic information.
Held that a decree of approval,
made without any trustworthy appraisal of assets, or account
showing the result of recent operations of the business; without an
accurate determination of the number of creditors, the amounts of
their respective
Page 289 U. S. 427
claims, and the extent to which collateral given or payments
made to some of them might be deemed preferences, must be reversed.
P.
289 U. S.
435.
2. The error of the District Court in not requiring such
relevant information before approving a plan of reorganization over
objections of dissenting creditors is not cured by a direction from
the Circuit Court of Appeals a year later declaring those creditors
entitled to an aliquot share of what, it may be estimated, the
property would have brought at public sale, and allowing them
recovery accordingly if assets to satisfy their claims are then
available. P.
289 U. S.
436.
54 F.2d 255 reversed.
Certiorari, 286 U.S. 537, to review the reversal of a decree
approving a plan of reorganization in a receivership case.
MR. JUSTICE BRANDEIS delivered the opinion of the Court.
This case involves the validity of the reorganization of Morris
White, Inc., pursuant to a decree of the federal court for southern
New York. The old company, a New York corporation, is said to have
been the largest manufacturer in the world of ladies' handbags and
fancy leather goods. For many years prior to 1930, the business had
been very profitable. Then, the company became financially
embarrassed, partly through cancellation of orders due to the
general depression, partly through withdrawals of large sums by
Morris White for investments in stocks and real estate. The bank
creditors intervened,
Page 289 U. S. 428
and for nearly six months prior to April 6, 1931, the business
was conducted by White under their financial supervision and
control. On that day, they caused to be brought in the name of
Coriell, a citizen of New Jersey, this suit through which the
reorganization was effected.
The bill alleged that the company's assets exceed $4,000,000 and
that its liabilities are approximately $1,000,000; that no quick
assets are available to meet liabilities immediately payable, and
that, unless a receiver is appointed, the assets will be wasted and
the business destroyed through proceedings of creditors seeking
payment. The prayers were that a receiver be appointed with power
to carry on the business, and that at the proper time, the
properties be sold for the benefit of creditors, or be returned to
the company. On the same day on which the bill was filed, the
defendant answered admitting its allegations and assenting to the
appointment of a temporary receiver. The Irving Trust Company was
appointed. The receiver employed as counsel the solicitor for the
complainant.
The receiver called promptly a meeting of the creditors, and a
committee there elected examined into the company's affairs. The
committee prepared a plan of reorganization which was submitted to
the court in the form of an offer by Lily White (wife of Morris) to
purchase all the assets. The plan (with later amendments) provided
that all the purchased assets should be transferred, subject to
existing liens, to a new corporation called the Morris White
Handbags Corporation; that all creditors of the old company having
claims not exceeding $100 be paid in cash; that the claims of
creditors having priority by law, the fees and expenses of the
receiver, the counsel fees and other expenses of the Creditors'
Committee be paid or assumed by the new company, and that all other
creditors should receive in payment of their claims 20 percent
in
Page 289 U. S. 429
unsecured notes of the new company and 80 percent in its
preferred stock. No new money was to be embarked in the enterprise
by either the Whites or others. Morris White (who had created and
managed the business and owned all of the stock of the old company
except a minority interest held by his brother, an employee) was to
agree to serve the new company for three years at a salary not
exceeding $60,000 a year. He and his wife were to have all of the
common stock and, through control of the board of directors,
substantial control of the new corporation. Accompanying the offer
was an accountants' certificate, unitemized, stating that the
liabilities shown on the books of the company as of April 6, the
date of the appointment of the temporary receiver, were
$1,072,000.30.
On May 12, 1931, the District Court entered an order requiring
creditors to show cause on May 26th why that offer should not be
accepted, and to consider and act upon any other offer which might
then be made. On May 26th and 27th, hearings were held. The
receiver made no recommendation. The committee made no written
report. Its counsel, who represented also several of the bank
creditors, recommended, on its behalf, acceptance of the plan. He
stated that the committee believed, in view of Morris White's
record of achievement, that he would within a few years earn
profits sufficient to pay all the creditors amounts equal to their
existing claims, if he were permitted to resume the control and
management of the business, with the prospect of complete
ownership. The bank creditors and the larger merchandise creditors
urged acceptance of the plan. The federal and state governments
offered to agree that the taxes due them might be paid by the new
company in installments.
The receiver had made no inventory, and had not determined the
amount of the liabilities. No one had made
Page 289 U. S. 430
even an estimate of the value of the assets as of the date of
the order to show cause, or, except as stated below, as of the date
of the hearing. No figures were presented to indicate the course
and results of the business while under the informal supervision
and control of the banks, during the five months prior to the
appointment of the temporary receiver, or during the seven weeks
following his appointment. But that the bill had grossly overstated
the assets was obvious. Instead of assets exceeding $4,000,000. as
there alleged, it appeared that those available were worth at most,
a fourth of that amount. Items aggregating.$2,277,714.89 consisted
of obligations and securities of associated and subsidiary
companies which were probably worthless. The substantial assets
consisted, according to the books, of the following items:
merchandise and supplies which had cost.$1,241,208.09; bills
receivable aggregating $301,852.12, of which $251,409.42 were
pledged to the banks; machinery entered as having cost, less
depreciation, $74,265.01, and $5,614.60 cash. Based on an appraisal
made by a subcommittee shortly after the appointment of the
temporary receiver, the Creditors' Committee estimated the value of
the merchandise as of that date to be $717,000, on the basis of a
continuing business. Counsel for the receiver, estimating the value
of the merchandise as of the date of the hearing, on the basis of a
continuing business, stated that it was worth about $462,500, and
that there was cash on hand in the amount of $54,000 and unpledged
accounts receivable of $67,000. He stated that the committee
estimated the value of the merchandise, if disposed of at forced
sale, to be $357,000. Another statement was made to the effect that
the committee estimated the total value of the assets at forced
sale to be $182,000. Whether this figure included the assets
pledged to the banks was left in doubt. The court was told that
Morris White had an informal
Page 289 U. S. 431
assurance that banks would give to the new company the necessary
temporary accommodations required for working capital.
A substantial minority of the creditors objected strenuously to
the acceptance of the plan. The dissenting creditors urged, in
support of their objections, that no inventory and valuation of the
assets had been made by the receiver or under any order of the
court, and that not even the amount and character of the
liabilities had been determined by the receiver, or otherwise by
the court. They questioned whether bank creditors had not received
(while they were in substantial control of the business) unlawful
preferences. They asked that time be given for the appropriate
determination of these matters and for further investigation as to
the merits of the plan. They pointed out that, under it, the banks
were to receive notes and preferred stock to the full amount of
their claims, although they held assigned accounts as collateral.
And they protested against disposing of the assets otherwise than
for cash after public sale and without competitive bids being
sought. The committee of creditors insisted that any delay would be
disastrous, the business being seasonal.
The District Judge announced at the close of the hearing on May
27th, that he would direct the receiver to accept the Lily White
offer. An order making permanent the receivership was entered
later. On June 15, 1931, pursuant to the decree, the assets were
transferred to the Morris White Handbags Corporation. And it
entered upon the conduct of the business, although application for
allowance of an appeal had been promptly made by the National
Surety Company and other dissenting creditors. Five months later,
the Circuit Court of Appeals reversed the decree of the District
Court and remanded the cause
Page 289 U. S. 432
for further proceedings in accordance with its opinion. 54 F.2d
255, 260.
The Court of Appeals held, among other things, that creditors
who refuse to assent to a plan of reorganization have "the right to
share immediately in the proceeds of a forced sale of the
corporation's assets," and that a court of equity lacks
"power to compel a creditor of any kind to accept stocks or
promises to pay in the future in full extinguishment of his claim
without being afforded the alternative of receiving his
proportionate share of the proceeds of the conventional sale of the
property in cash."
It declared that, ordinarily, dissenting creditors would be
"entitled to a public sale with competitive bidding, the assets to
be sold to the highest bidder;" that this right must be fully
protected; but that, in the case at bar, this right could be fully
protected without setting aside the sale made to the new
corporation; that the right of the dissenting creditors would be
protected
"by having an appraisal of the value of their respective claims
made before a master, to be appointed, who will take an account of
the assets and liabilities of Morris White, Inc., ascertaining the
value of the assets as if sold at a public sale;"
by the payment to them of "their proportionate share of the
price which would have been realized at such sale after deduction
of administration expenses;" and by providing that, if
"payment is not thus made in cash, the several amounts which
appellants are found entitled to may be collected by a sale of the
property transferred to the new corporation."
Pursuant to the mandate of the Circuit Court of Appeals, the
District Court entered, on February 2, 1932, a decree which ordered
that (subject to the orders to be made),
"the reorganization plan approved by it June 15, 1931, be
allowed to continue in operation, and the Morris White Handbags
Corporation be and is hereby permitted to continue in the conduct
of the business heretofore
Page 289 U. S. 433
transferred to it. . . . [
Footnote 1]"
On February 23, 1932, the dissenting creditors petitioned for a
writ of certiorari to review the decree of the Circuit Court of
Appeals entered November 23, 1931, and the writ was granted on May
12, 1932. 286 U.S. 537.
Page 289 U. S. 434
The petitioners contend that the District Court had no power to
deprive the dissenting creditors of a cash share in the assets;
that the amount of this share should have been determined by a
public sale; that the right of dissenting creditors was not
protected by the decree directing an appraisal (in 1932) of the
assets as if disposed of at public sale on June 15, 1931, and that
they were entitled to recover their claims in full. The respondents
insist that the District Court had power to compel participation in
the reorganization without the alternative of a share of the assets
in cash, and that, even if the District Court lacked that power,
the modification of the decree by the Circuit Court of Appeals gave
full protection to the rights of the dissenting creditors. We have
no occasion
Page 289 U. S. 435
to pass upon any of these contentions, [
Footnote 2] for we are of opinion that the decree
approving the plan should have been reversed in its entirety
because the procedure pursued by the District Court was
improper.
First. The nonassenting creditors were entitled to have
the plan and their objections considered in an orderly way, and to
a decree based on adequate data. The District Court had before it,
in support of the plan, only informal, inadequate, and conflicting
ex parte assertions unsupported by testimony. It undertook
to pass upon the wisdom and fairness of the plan of reorganization
and the rights of nonassenting creditors. For the proper
disposition of these questions, definite, detailed, and authentic
information was essential. Such information was wholly lacking. The
receiver submitted no facts and made no recommendations. There was
no evidence on which the court could have found even that a
majority of the unsecured creditors favored the plan. [
Footnote 3] There was
Page 289 U. S. 436
no valuation of the assets by a disinterested appraiser; no
account of the results of the operations of the business during the
five months in which it was under the control of the banks; no
account of the result of the operations under the receivership, and
no dependable schedule of liabilities of the corporation showing
the number of creditors, the amount owed to each, and the
collateral held. A trustworthy appraisal; an account showing the
result of recent operations of the business; an accurate
determination of the number of creditors, the amounts of their
respective claims, and the extent to which collateral given or
payments made to them might be deemed preferences; these were facts
which might have influenced the court in deciding whether the plan
should be approved or should be approved only upon a public sale.
The failure to require relevant data before deciding whether the
plan should be approved was not cured by the declaration of the
Circuit Court of Appeals that the dissenting creditors were
entitled to an aliquot share of what, a year later, it might be
estimated the property would have brought at a public sale, and
authorizing them to recover that amount, if assets available to
satisfy their claims were then available.
Second. Every important determination by the court in
receivership proceedings calls for an informed, independent
judgment. In the case at bar, special reasons existed why the court
should have secured adequate, trustworthy information. The
proceeding was not an adversary one, and jurisdiction rested wholly
upon the consent of the defendant corporation. [
Footnote 4] The court did not have
Page 289 U. S. 437
the advice of its receiver. The creditors who approved of the
plan of reorganization appeared to be actuated in their
recommendations and desires by considerations not applicable to the
dissenting creditors. For the bank creditors, unlike the others,
were to a large extent secured by the pledge of assets and may,
moreover, have received preferences which would be held invalid if
bankruptcy proceedings were instituted. The assenting merchandise
creditors were interested not merely as creditors, but as sellers
of goods, and it appeared that at least some were far more
interested in expected profits from future sales than in possible
dividends on their existing claims. On the other hand, the
dissenting creditors, largely credit indemnity companies, were
anxious to have determined the amounts of their risks and to obtain
as promptly as possible dividends in cash.
The respondents directed attention to the proposed amendments to
the Bankruptcy Act, which have been enacted in part since the
argument, [
Footnote 5] and, as
justifying the procedure challenged, urge that those amendments
confer power on the District Courts in Bankruptcy similar to that
exercised in the case at bar. But this is not true. Those
amendments relating to compositions and extensions
Page 289 U. S. 438
for insolvent debtors make detailed provision for an inventory
by the receiver, for a schedule of liabilities, for an examination
of the debtor, and for fixing, with reference to the convenience of
the parties, a date and place for hearings upon applications for
confirmation of composition or extension proposals. [
Footnote 6]
The decree of the Circuit Court of Appeals is reversed, that of
the District Court entered February 2, 1932 vacated, and the case
is remanded to the District Court for further proceedings not
inconsistent with this opinion. We do not pass upon the scope, the
measure, or the incidence of the relief to which the petitioners
are entitled -- among other reasons, because of the following facts
brought to our attention at the argument. On April 29, 1932, the
Morris White Handbags Corporation was adjudged bankrupt. On June 6,
1932, a sale for $53,850 of all its tangible assets was confirmed
by the District Court. The Morris White Handbags Corporation, its
trustee in bankruptcy, and the purchaser at the bankruptcy sale are
not parties to the case at bar.
Reversed.
[
Footnote 1]
The decree entered February 2, 1932, modified that of June 15,
1931, as follows:
(A) It reversed the same so far as it affects the rights of the
National Surety Company and the other dissenting creditors.
(B) It provided that a special master be appointed who
shall:
(1) "Ascertain the several amounts of (their) respective
claims," among other things.
(2) "Make an appraisal of the realizable value of said claims as
of June 15, 1931" and that to this end the Special Master "shall
ascertain and report the then realizable value of said assets as if
sold at public sale, and shall also take account of the liabilities
of Morris White, Inc., as of April 6, 1931, and shall ascertain and
report which, if any, of said liabilities are entitled to priority
of payment, and shall also take an account of the obligations of
the Receiver herein and of the expenses of administration of the
estate herein incurred up to the fifteenth day of June, 1931, and
shall determine through examination of officers and/or agents of
the defendant and/or The Morris White Handbags Corporation, the
nature, quality and amount of inventory on hand as of such dates as
may be pertinent to this enquiry."
(3) "Ascertain and report the aliquot share of the assets to be
awarded and paid in cash, subject to further order of this Court,
to National Surety Company (and to the other dissenting creditors)
out of the sum ascertained to be the amount that would have been
realized for the assets of Morris White, Inc., on June 15, 1931,
had a public sale of said assets been held, after the deduction
from said sum of such portion of the obligations of the Receiver
and the expenses of administration herein as would have been
properly chargeable against the estate had the assets of Morris
White, Inc., been liquidated by sale, and the proceeds distributed
to creditors in ordinary course, and after the deduction of the
liabilities of Morris White, Inc., entitled to priority of payment;
or at the option of each of them the preferred stock and notes
heretofore offered to them, pursuant to said offer of Lily White,
may and shall in like manner be valued by said Special Master, as
of the date the reorganization plan became effective, to be awarded
and to be paid in cash to them or any of them subject to the
further order of the court; . . . "
(4) "That, pending the entry of an order of this Court upon the
report of the said Special Master and for the purpose of securing
to National Surety Company [and the other dissenting creditors]
payment by the said The Morris White Handbags Corp., pursuant to
the order herein dated June 15, 1931, of the amounts which may be
determined to be paid to them in cash upon their respective claims,
a lien is hereby imposed upon all the assets of Morris White, Inc.,
transferred to and remaining in the possession of said The Morris
White Handbags Corp. pursuant to said order dated June 15, 1931;
except that as to such of said assets as the said The Morris White
Handbags Corp. shall hereafter in good faith transfer in the
regular course of its business for fair and proper consideration,
said lien shall attach to the proceeds of such transfer or
successive transfers of such proceeds, and the said The Morris
White Handbags Corp. is hereby enjoined and restrained subject to
the further order of this Court, from transferring any of said
assets of Morris White, Inc., remaining in its possession except in
good faith in the regular course of its business and for fair and
proper consideration, unless the said The Morris White Handbags
Corp. shall file a bond or other security in such amount as may be
fixed and approved by this Court after hearing the parties in
interest; . . ."
[
Footnote 2]
The petitioners made the further contention that the court
should have ordered the case to proceed in bankruptcy, or at least
should not have permitted it to continue in equity. This question
was not before us on the writ of certiorari. The order of June 3,
1931, making the receivership permanent, recited that there was no
opposition to the order. It was affirmed by the Circuit Court of
Appeals, and certiorari was denied by this Court. 286 U.S. 553.
[
Footnote 3]
Even the number of creditors appears to have been undetermined.
The number was stated by Mr. White to be 150, in addition to 5 bank
creditors. The president of one of the creditor banks gave the
number as 150 including the banks. Counsel for Morris White, Inc.,
stated that there were 245 creditors, "not 145." Counsel for the
receiver stated that there were 193 creditors whose claims were
each less than $100. Counsel for Morris White, Inc., gave the
number of such creditors as 50 or 100. The amount represented by
the creditors' committee appears likewise to have been in doubt.
Counsel for the committee stated that it represented merchandise
claims in the amount of $178,000. Counsel for Morris White, Inc.,
stated that the committee represented merchandise claims of over
$300,000; later he gave the figure as $180,000 out of $442,000 of
merchandise claims. At the argument in this Court, it was stated
that, at the hearing before the District Court pursuant to the
mandate of the Circuit Court of Appeals, a new claim against Morris
White, Inc., in the sum of $1,025,000 was presented, and that a
rule to show cause issued.
[
Footnote 4]
Compare Harkin v. Brundage, 276 U. S.
36,
276 U. S. 52,
276 U. S. 55;
Michigan v. Michigan Trust Co., 286 U.
S. 334,
286 U. S. 345;
Municipal Financial Corp. v. Bankus Corp., 45 F.2d
902;
Kingsport Press, Inc. v. Brief English Systems,
Inc., 54 F.2d 497, 501.
[
Footnote 5]
Act of March 3, 1933, c. 204, § 1, 47 Stat. 1467.
Particular attention was called to the proposed section providing
for corporate reorganizations. This section was not enacted. It was
intended as an extension of the principle of composition
agreements
"that the views of a substantial majority of the creditors
should control the measures to be adopted for the protection and
preservation of their rights in the failing business, subject at
all times to a finding by the court that what they propose is fair
and equitable to the minority."
See Report of Attorney General on Bankruptcy Law and
Practice, Appendix to Message of the President Recommending the
Strengthening of Procedure in the Judicial System, Sen.Doc. No. 65,
72d Cong., 1st Sess., p. 90.
[
Footnote 6]
Section 74(b-g). The procedure was designed to be more rigorous
than that previously obtaining.
See Report of Attorney
General,
supra, note 5
p. 87; also, Hearings before the Subcommittees of the Committees on
the Judiciary, 72 Cong., 1st Sess., on S. 3866, p. 635 (Statement
of Lloyd Garrison, Special Assistant to the Attorney General);
id., p. 113 (Annotation to subsection (b)). The
requirements for the reorganization of railroads are more
rigorous.
Compare the recommendations of The Special Committee on
Equity Receiverships of the Association of The Bar of The City of
New York, Year Book, 1927, pp. 299-331;
id., 1930, pp.
407-411;
id., 1932, pp. 333-334, and the minority report,
id., 1930, pp. 411-422.
See also Equity Rules
IV-XI, Southern District of New York, effective July 1, 1931.