1. The question whether a plan of reorganization is "fair and
equitable" within the meaning of § 77B of the Bankruptcy Act
is a question of law. P.
308 U. S.
114.
2. Where a plan of reorganization is not fair and equitable as a
matter of law, it cannot be approved by the court even though the
percentage of the various classes of security holders required by
§ 77B(f) for confirmation of a plan has consented.
Id.
3. The fact that a great majority of the security holders have
approved the plan is not the test of whether the plan is a fair and
equitable one.
Id.
4. Under § 77B of the Bankruptcy Act, as in equity
reorganizations, the court must use its own informed and
independent judgment in every important determination in the
administration of the proceedings. P.
308 U. S.
115.
5. Where words are employed in an Act which had at the time a
well known meaning in the law, they are used in that sense unless
the context requires the contrary.
Id.
6. It is a fixed principle, governing under § 77B of the
Bankruptcy Act as well as in equity reorganizations, that, to the
extent of their
Page 308 U. S. 107
debts, creditors are entitled to absolute priority over
stockholders against all the property of an insolvent corporation,
relative priority not being sufficient. P.
308 U. S.
115.
7. To accord the creditor his full or absolute priority against
the corporate assets where the debtor is insolvent, the
stockholder's participation must be based on a contribution in
money or in money's worth, reasonably equivalent to the
participation accorded the stockholder. Pp.
308 U. S.
115-122.
8. The amount owed bondholders by an insolvent corporation was
more than four-fold the value of its assets. A plan of
reorganization under § 77B of the Bankruptcy Act gave to the
old stockholders 23 percent of the assets and voting power in a new
company without requiring of them any fresh contribution of
capital,
held not "fair and reasonable." P.
308 U. S.
122.
Such participation by the old stockholders cannot be
justified:
(1) upon the ground that some of them possess a financial
standing and influence and can provide a continuity of management
beneficial to the bondholders (p.
308 U. S.
122); or
(2) upon the ground that, if the bondholders were to foreclose
presently, they would receive substantially less than the appraised
assets (p.
308 U. S.
123); or
(3) upon the ground that the virtual abrogation by the Plan of
an earlier agreement deferring foreclosure gave to the bondholders
a valuable consideration justifying participation by the
stockholders in the reorganization (p.
308 U. S.
124); or
(4) upon the ground that the bondholders will be aided by
maintaining the debtor as a going concern and avoiding litigation
with the old stockholders. P.
308 U. S.
129.
9. An insolvent corporation, by invoking the jurisdiction of the
District Court under § 77B of the Bankruptcy Act, necessarily
waives its right to remain in unmolested dominion and control over
the corporate property, and consequently a purported surrender, in
its plan of reorganization, of its right, under an earlier
agreement, to postpone the date when the mortgage securing its
bonds could be foreclosed, furnishes no consideration for
participation by stockholders of the corporation in the assets and
management of the new one to be formed. P.
308 U. S.
124.
10. In determining whether a plan of reorganization presented by
an insolvent corporation under § 77B of the Bankruptcy Act is
"fair and equitable" to minority bondholders, the fact that it was
previously agreed to by the requisite majorities of security
holders does not give it the force of a contract binding on the
court. P.
308 U. S.
125.
Page 308 U. S. 108
11. In proceedings under § 77B of the Bankruptcy Act,
compromise of claims is allowable in fitting circumstances, but the
District Court is not to be influenced to approve or disapprove a
plan of reorganization by threats of litigation on the part of
stockholders. P.
308 U. S.
129.
12. The criteria for exclusion or inclusion of old stockholders
in a reorganization under § 77B are the same whether the
petition be voluntary or involuntary. P.
308 U. S.
131.
13. Failure to accept a plan proposed does not force dismissal
or liquidation. Under § 77B(c)(8), the District Court may
allow time for proposal of a new plan where it does not appear that
one which is fair and equitable and in accordance with the Act
cannot be adopted, nor that all reasonable time for proposal of
such alternative plan has expired. P.
308 U. S.
131.
100 F.2d 963, reversed.
Certiorari, 307 U.S. 619, to review the affirmance of decrees of
the District Court confirming a corporate debtor's amended plan of
reorganization under § 77B of the Bankruptcy Act. 27 F. Supp.
501.
MR. JUSTICE DOUGLAS delivered the opinion of the Court.
These cases [
Footnote 1]
present the question of the conditions under which stockholders may
participate in a plan
Page 308 U. S. 109
of reorganization under § 77B, 48 Stat. 912, of the
Bankruptcy Act where the debtor corporation is insolvent both in
the equity and in the bankruptcy sense. Because of the contrariety
of tendencies in practical administration of the Act among the
circuits as illustrated by the differences between the holding
below (100 F.2d 963) and that in
Re Barclay Park Corp., 90
F.2d 595, we granted certiorari, 307 U.S. 619.
The debtor is a holding company owning all of the outstanding
shares of the capital stock (except for certain qualifying shares
held by directors) of six subsidiaries. Three of these have no
assets of value to the debtor. Two have assets of little value. The
debtor's principal asset consists of the stock of Los Angeles
Shipbuilding and Drydock Corporation, which is engaged in
shipbuilding and ship repair work in California. This subsidiary
has fixed assets of $430,000 and current assets of approximately
$400,000. This subsidiary has only current debts of a small amount,
not affected by the plan. The debtor's assets other than the stock
of its subsidiaries aggregate less than $10,000.
The debtor's liabilities [
Footnote 2] consist of principal and interest of
$3,807,071.88 on first lien mortgage bonds issued in 1924 and
maturing in 1944, secured by a trust indenture covering the fixed
assets of Los Angeles Shipbuilding and Drydock Corporation (one of
the subsidiaries) and the capital stock of all of the subsidiaries.
No interest has been paid on these bonds since February 1, 1929. In
1930, as a consequence of the financial embarrassment of the
debtor, a so-called voluntary reorganization was effected. To that
end, a supplement to this trust indenture was executed, pursuant to
a provision therein, with the consent of about 97% of the face
value of all
Page 308 U. S. 110
the outstanding bonds, which reduced the interest from 7 1/2% to
6% and made the interest payable only if earned. At the same time,
the old stock of the debtor was wiped out by assessment, and new
stock issued, divided into Class A and Class B, with equal voting
rights. Class A stock was issued to some of the old stockholders
who contributed $400,000 new money which was turned over to the Los
Angeles Shipbuilding and Drydock Corporation and used by it as
working capital. In consideration of this contribution, the
bondholders who agreed to the modification of the indenture
likewise released the stockholders' liability under California law
in favor of these contributors. Some Class B stock was issued to
bondholders in payment of unpaid interest coupons. [
Footnote 3] At present, there are outstanding
57,788 shares of Class A stock and 5, 112 shares of Class B
stock.
In 1937, the management prepared a plan of reorganization to
which over 80% of the bondholders and over 90% of the stock
assented. This plan of reorganization, as we shall discuss
hereafter, provided for its consummation either on the basis of
contract or in a § 77B proceeding, such election to be made by
the board of directors. In January, 1938, the directors chose the
latter course, and the debtor corporation filed a petition for
reorganization under § 77B of the Bankruptcy Act, with the
plan attached and reciting,
inter alia, that the required
percentage of security holders had consented to it. This plan as
filed was later modified by the debtor, as we point out later, in a
manner not deemed by us material
Page 308 U. S. 111
to the issues here involved. That plan as modified provides for
the formation of a new corporation, which will acquire the assets
of Los Angeles Shipbuilding and Drydock Corporation, [
Footnote 4] and which will have a capital
structure of 1,000,000 shares of authorized $1 par value voting
stock. This stock is divided into 811,375 shares of preferred and
188,625 shares of common. The preferred stock will be entitled to a
50% noncumulative dividend, after which the common stock will be
entitled to a similar dividend. Thereafter, all shares of both
classes will participate equally in dividends. The preferred stock
will receive on liquidation a preference to the amount of its par
value. Thereupon, the common will receive a similar preference.
Thereafter, all shares of both classes participate equally.
170,000 shares of preferred are reserved for sale to raise money
for rehabilitation of the yards. [
Footnote 5] 641,375 shares of the preferred are to be
issued to the bondholders, 250 shares to be exchanged for each
$1000 bond. The Class A stockholders will receive the 188,625
shares of common stock, without the payment of any subscription or
assessment. No provision is made for the old Class B stock. The
aggregate par value of the total preferred and common stock to be
issued to existing security holders is $830,000 -- an amount which
equals the going concern value of the assets of the enterprise.
The plan was assented to by approximately 92.81% of the face
amount of the bonds, 99.75% of the Class A
Page 308 U. S. 112
stock, and 90% of the Class B stock. Petitioners own $18,500
face amount of the bonds. They did not consent to the so-called
voluntary reorganization in 1930 whereby the trust indenture was
amended. And, throughout the present § 77B proceedings, they
appropriately objected that the plan was not fair and equitable to
bondholders.
The District Court found that the debtor was insolvent both in
the equity sense and in the bankruptcy sense.
24 F. Supp.
501 . The latter finding was based upon "appraisal and audit
reports." In this connection, the court found that the total value
of all assets of Los Angeles Shipbuilding and Drydock Corporation
was $830,000, those assets constituting practically all of the
assets of the debtor and of its various subsidiaries of any value
to the estate. Yet, in spite of this finding, the court, in the
orders now under review, confirmed the plan. And the court approved
it despite the fact that the old stockholders, who have no equity
in the assets of the enterprise, are given 23% of the assets and
voting power in the new company without making any fresh
contribution by way of subscription or assessment. The court,
however, justified inclusion of the stockholders in the plan (1)
because it apparently felt that the relative priorities of the
bondholders and stockholders were maintained by virtue of the
preferences accorded the stock which the bondholders were to
receive and the fact that the stock going to the bondholders
carried 77% of the voting power of all the stock presently to be
issued under the plan, and (2) because it was able to find that
they had furnished the bondholders certain "compensating
advantages" or "consideration." This so-called consideration was
stated by the District Court in substance as follows:
1. It will be an asset of value to the new company to retain the
old stockholders in the business because of "their familiarity with
the operation" of the business and their "financial standing and
influence in the community;"
Page 308 U. S. 113
and because they can provide a "continuity of management."
2. If the bondholders were able to foreclose now and liquidate
the debtor's assets, they would receive "substantially less than
the present appraised value" of the assets.
3. By reason of the so-called voluntary reorganization in 1930,
the bondholders cannot foreclose until 1944, the old stockholders
having the right to manage and control the debtor until that time.
At least the bondholders cannot now foreclose without "long and
protracted litigation" which would be "expensive and of great
injury" to the debtor. Hence, the virtual abrogation of the
agreement deferring foreclosure until 1944 was "the principal
valuable consideration" passing to the bondholders from the old
stockholders.
4. Bonding companies are unwilling to assume the risk of
becoming surety for the debtor or its principal subsidiary "because
of the outstanding bond issue." The government's construction
program will provide "valuable opportunities" to the debtor if it
is prepared to handle the business. Hence, the value to the
bondholders of maintaining the debtor "as a going concern, and of
avoiding litigation, is in excess of the value of the stock being
issued" to the old stockholders.
The Circuit Court of Appeals, in affirming the decree confirming
the plan, stated that it was not possible for it to do other than
accept these findings because of a stipulation and the state of the
record thereunder. That stipulation provided for an abbreviated
record, and stated that the dissenting bondholders intended "to
raise questions of substantive law only." But it also specified as
errors,
inter alia, the inclusion of stockholders in a
plan where they have no equity and the finding that the plan was
"fair" and "equitable." Thereby the stipulation adequately reserved
the question of law as to whether,
Page 308 U. S. 114
on these facts, the plan was fair and equitable within the
meaning of § 77B. But, in any event, a stipulation does not
foreclose legal questions.
Swift & Co. v. Hocking Valley
Ry. Co., 243 U. S. 281,
243 U. S.
289.
On that question of law, we think that the District Court erred
in confirming the plan, and that the Circuit Court of Appeals erred
in affirming that decree. We think that, as a matter of law, the
plan was not fair and equitable.
At the outset it should be stated that, where a plan is not fair
and equitable as a matter of law, it cannot be approved by the
court even though the percentage of the various classes of security
holders required by § 77B(f) for confirmation of the plan has
consented. It is clear from a reading of § 77B(f) [
Footnote 6] that the Congress has
required both that the required percentages of each class of
security holders approve the plan and that the plan be found to be
"fair and equitable." The former is not a substitute for the
latter. The court is not merely a ministerial register of the vote
of the several classes of security holders. All those interested in
the estate are entitled to the court's protection. Accordingly, the
fact that the vast majority of the security holders have approved
the plan is not the test of whether the plan is a fair and
equitable one. This is in line with the decision of this Court in
Taylor v. Standard Gas & Electric Co., 306 U.
S. 307, which reversed an order approving a plan of
reorganization under § 77B, in spite of the fact that the
requisite percentage of the various classes of
Page 308 U. S. 115
security holders had approved it, on the ground that preferred
stock of the debtor corporation was inequitably treated under the
plan. The contrary conclusion in such cases would make the judicial
determination on the issue of fairness a mere formality, and would
effectively destroy the function and the duty imposed by the
Congress on the district courts under § 77B. That function and
duty are no less here than they are in equity receivership
reorganizations, where this Court said, "Every important
determination by the court in receivership proceedings calls for an
informed, independent judgment."
National Surety Co. v.
Coriell, 289 U. S. 426,
289 U. S.
436.
Hence, in this case, the fact that 92.81% in amount of the
bonds, 99.75% of the Class A stock, and 90% of the Class B stock
have approved the plan is as immaterial on the basic issue of its
fairness as is the fact that petitioners own only $18,500 face
amount of a large bond issue.
The words "fair and equitable," as used in § 77B(f), are
words of art which, prior to the advent of § 77B, had acquired
a fixed meaning through judicial interpretations in the field of
equity receivership reorganizations. Hence, as in case of other
terms or phrases used in that section,
Duparquet Huot &
Moneuse Co. v. Evans, 297 U. S. 216, we
adhere to the familiar rule that, where words are employed in an
act which had at the time a well known meaning in the law, they are
used in that sense unless the context requires the contrary.
Keck v. United States, 172 U. S. 434,
172 U. S.
446.
In equity reorganization law, the term "fair and equitable"
included,
inter alia, the rules of law enunciated by this
Court in the familiar cases of
Railroad Co. v.
Howard, 7 Wall. 392;
Louisville Trust Co. v.
Louisville, N.A. & C. Ry. Co., 174 U.
S. 674;
Northern Pacific Ry. Co. v. Boyd,
228 U. S. 482;
Kansas City Terminal Ry. Co. v. Central Union Trust Co.,
271 U. S. 445.
These cases dealt with the precedence to be accorded
Page 308 U. S. 116
creditors over stockholders in reorganization plans. [
Footnote 7] In
Louisville Trust Co.
v. Louisville, N.A. & C. Ry. Co., supra, this Court
reaffirmed the "familiar rule" that "the stockholder's interest in
the property is subordinate to the rights of creditors. First, of
secured, and then of unsecured, creditors." And it went on to say
that
"any arrangement of the parties by which the subordinate rights
and interests of the stockholders are attempted to be secured at
the expense of the prior rights of either class of creditors comes
within judicial denunciation."
P.
174 U. S. 684.
This doctrine is the "fixed principle" according to which
Northern Pacific Ry. Co. v. Boyd, supra, decided that the
character of reorganization plans was to be evaluated. And, in the
latter case, this court added,
"If the value of the road justified the issuance of stock in
exchange for old shares, the creditors were entitled to the benefit
of that value, whether it was present or prospective, for dividends
or only for purposes of control. In either event, it was a right of
property out of which the creditors were entitled to be paid before
the stockholders could retain it for any purpose whatever."
P.
228 U. S. 508.
On the reaffirmation of this "fixed principle" of reorganization
law in
Kansas City Terminal Ry. Co. v. Central Union Trust Co.,
supra, it was said that, "to the extent of their debts,
creditors are entitled to priority over stockholders against all
the property of an insolvent corporation." P.
271 U. S.
455.
Page 308 U. S. 117
In application of this rule of full or absolute priority, this
Court recognized certain practical considerations and made it clear
that such rule did not
"require the impossible, and make it necessary to pay an
unsecured creditor in cash as a condition of stockholders retaining
an interest in the reorganized company. His interest can be
preserved by the issuance, on equitable terms, of income bonds or
preferred stock."
Northern Pacific Railway Co. v. Boyd, supra, p.
228 U. S. 508.
And this practical aspect of the problem was further amplified in
Kansas City Terminal Ry. Co. v. Central Union Trust Co.,
supra, by the statement that,
"when necessary, they [creditors] may be protected through other
arrangements, which distinctly recognize their equitable right to
be preferred to stockholders against the full value of all property
belonging to the debtor corporation, and afford each of them fair
opportunity, measured by the existing circumstances, to avail
himself of this right."
Pp.
271 U. S.
454-455. And it also recognized the necessity at times
of permitting the inclusion of stockholders on payment of
contributions, even though the debtor company was insolvent. As
stated in
Kansas City Terminal Ry. Co. v. Central Union Trust
Co., supra, p.
271 U. S.
455:
"Generally, additional funds will be essential to the success of
the undertaking, and it may be impossible to obtain them unless
stockholders are permitted to contribute and retain an interest
sufficiently valuable to move them. In such or similar cases, the
chancellor may exercise an informed discretion concerning the
practical adjustment of the several rights."
But, even so, payment of cash by the stockholders for new stock
did not itself save the plan from the rigors of the "fixed
principle" of the
Boyd case, for, in that case, the decree
was struck down where provision was not made for the unsecured
creditor, and even though the stockholders paid cash for their new
stock. Sales pursuant to such plans were void, even though there
was no fraud
Page 308 U. S. 118
in the decree.
Northern Pacific Ry. Co. v. Boyd, supra,
p.
228 U. S. 504.
As this Court there stated, p.
228 U. S.
502,
"There is no difference in principle if the contract of
reorganization, instead of being effectuated by private sale, is
consummated by a master's deed under a consent decree."
Throughout the history of equity reorganizations, this familiar
rule was properly applied in passing on objections made by various
classes of creditors that junior interests were improperly
permitted to participate in a plan, or were too liberally treated
therein. In such adjudications, the doctrine of
Northern
Pacific Ry. Co. v. Boyd, supra, and related cases was commonly
included in the phrase "fair and equitable" or its equivalent. As
we have said, the phrase became a term of art used to indicate that
a plan of reorganization fulfilled the necessary standards of
fairness. Thus, throughout the cases in this earlier chapter of
reorganization law, we find the words "equitable and fair,"
[
Footnote 8] "fair and
equitable," [
Footnote 9] fairly
and equitably treated," [
Footnote 10] "adequate and equitable," [
Footnote 11] "just, "fair, and equitable,"
[
Footnote 12] and like
phrases [
Footnote 13] used
to include the "fixed principle" of the
Boyd case, its
antecedents and
Page 308 U. S. 119
its successors. Hence, we conclude, as have other courts,
[
Footnote 14] that that
doctrine is firmly imbedded in § 77B.
We come then to the legal question of whether the plan here in
issue is fair and equitable within the meaning of that phrase as
used in § 77B.
We do not believe it is, for the following reasons. Here, the
court made a finding that the debtor is insolvent not only in the
equity sense, but also in the bankruptcy sense. Admittedly there
are assets not in excess of $900,000, while the claims of the
bondholders for principal and interest are approximately
$3,800,000. Hence, even if all of the assets were turned over to
the bondholders, they would realize less than 25 percent on their
claims. Yet, in spite of this fact, they will be required under the
plan to surrender to the stockholders 23 percent of the value of
the enterprise.
True, the relative priorities of the bondholders and the old
Class A stockholders are maintained by virtue of
Page 308 U. S. 120
the priorities accorded the preferred stock which the
bondholders are to receive. But this is not compliance with the
principle expressed in
Kansas City Terminal Ry. Co. v. Central
Union Trust Co., supra, that, "to the extent of their debts,
creditors are entitled to priority over stockholders against all
the property of an insolvent corporation," for there are not
sufficient assets to pay the bondholders the amount of their
claims. Nor does this plan recognize the "equitable right" of the
bondholders "to be preferred to stockholders against the full value
of all property belonging to the debtor corporation," within the
meaning of the rule announced in that case, since the full value of
that property is not first applied to claims of the bondholders
before the stockholders are allowed to participate. Rather it is
partially diverted for the benefit of the stockholders, even though
the bondholders would obtain less than 25% payment, if they
received it all. Under that theory, all classes of
Page 308 U. S. 121
security holders could be perpetuated in the new company even
though the assets were insufficient to pay -- in new bonds or stock
-- the amount owing senior creditors. Such a result is not
tenable.
It is, of course, clear that there are circumstances under which
stockholders may participate in a plan of reorganization of an
insolvent debtor. This Court, as we have seen, indicated as much in
Northern Pacific Ry. Co. v. Boyd, supra, and
Kansas
City Terminal Ry. Co. v. Central Union Trust Co., supra.
Especially in the latter case did this Court stress the necessity,
at times, of seeking new money "essential to the success of the
undertaking" from the old stockholders. [
Footnote 15] Where that necessity exists and the old
stockholders make a fresh contribution and receive in return a
participation reasonably equivalent to their contribution, no
objection can be made. But, if these conditions are not satisfied,
the stockholder's participation would run afoul of the ruling of
this Court in
Kansas City Terminal Ry. Co. v. Central Union
Trust Co., supra, that,
"Whenever assessments are demanded, they must be adjusted with
the purpose of according to the creditor his full right of priority
against the corporate assets, so far as possible in the
existing
Page 308 U. S. 122
circumstances."
P.
271 U. S. 456. If,
however, those conditions we have mentioned are satisfied, the
creditor cannot complain that he is not accorded "his full right of
priority against the corporate assets." If that were not the test,
then the creditor's rights could be easily diluted by inadequate
contributions by stockholders. To the extent of the inadequacy of
their contributions, the stockholders would be in precisely the
position which this Court said, in
Northern Pacific Ry. Co. v.
Boyd, supra, the stockholders there were in,
viz.,
"in the position of a mortgagor buying at his own sale." P.
228 U. S.
504.
In view of these considerations, we believe that to accord "the
creditor his full right of priority against the corporate assets"
where the debtor is insolvent, the stockholder's participation must
be based on a contribution in money or in money's worth, reasonably
equivalent in view of all the circumstances to the participation of
the stockholder.
The alleged consideration furnished by the stockholders in this
case falls far short of meeting those requirements.
1. The findings below that participation by the old Class A
stockholders will be beneficial to the bondholders because those
stockholders have "financial standing and influence in the
community" and can provide a "continuity of management" constitute
no legal justification for issuance of new stock to them. Such
items are illustrative of a host of intangibles which, if
recognized as adequate consideration for issuance of stock to
valueless junior interests, would serve as easy evasions of the
principle of full or absolute priority of
Northern Pacific Ry.
Co. v. Boyd, supra, and related cases. Such items, on facts
present here, are not adequate consideration for issuance of the
stock in question. On the facts of this case, they cannot possibly
be translated into money's worth reasonably equivalent to the
participation accorded the old stockholders. They have no place in
the asset
Page 308 U. S. 123
column of the balance sheet of the new company. They reflect
merely vague hopes or possibilities. [
Footnote 16] As such, they cannot be the basis for
issuance of stock to otherwise valueless interests. The rigorous
standards of the absolute or full priority doctrine of the
Boyd case will not permit valueless junior interests to
perpetuate their position in an enterprise on such ephemeral
grounds. [
Footnote 17]
2. The District Court's further finding that, if the bondholders
were to foreclose now, they would receive "substantially less than
the present appraised value" of the assets of the debtor
corporation is no support for inclusion of the old stockholders in
the plan. The fact that bondholders might fare worse as a result of
a foreclosure and liquidation than they would by taking a debtor's
plan under § 77B can have no relevant bearing on whether a
proposed plan is "fair and equitable" under that section.
Submission to coercion is not the application of "fair and
equitable" standards. Such a proposition would not only drastically
impair the standards of "fair and equitable" as used in § 77B;
it would pervert
Page 308 U. S. 124
the function of that Act. One of the purposes of § 77B was
to avoid the consequences to debtors and creditors of foreclosures,
liquidations, and forced sales, with their drastic deflationary
effects. [
Footnote 18] To
hold that, in a § 77B reorganization, creditors of a
hopelessly insolvent debtor may be forced to share the already
insufficient assets with stockholders because, apart from
rehabilitation under that section, they would suffer a worse fate,
would disregard the standards of "fair and equitable;" and would
result in impairment of the Act to the extent that it restored some
of the conditions which the Congress sought to ameliorate by that
remedial legislation.
3. The conclusion of the District Court that the virtual
abrogation of the agreement deferring foreclosure until 1944 ("the
principal valuable consideration" given to the bondholders by the
stockholders) justified participation by the stockholders in the
plan is likewise erroneous.
What were the rights of the bondholders under the supplemental
indenture executed in 1930, we cannot determine. That indenture is
not in the abbreviated record before us. The District Court found
that, for all practical purposes, the bondholders could not
foreclose until 1944. From the findings below, we conclude that
that followed as a consequence of making interest payable only if
earned. On this record, it does not appear whether or not there
might be other events of default -- such as nonpayment of sinking
funds -- giving bondholders or the trustee the right to foreclose
or giving bondholders or the trustee the right to accelerate the
maturity of the bonds so that suits could be brought thereon. Hence
we must assume, as the District Court found, that the bondholders
and the trustee could not take possession
Page 308 U. S. 125
of the property through foreclosure or otherwise until the
maturity of the bonds. And, as a corollary thereof, we likewise
assume that the stockholders, at least so far as the bondholders
were involved, could keep their management group in possession and
control until that time. And we assume that this right or power on
the part of the stockholders to keep possession until 1944 was for
them a thing of value, though there is no finding that the old
stock had any value, present or prospective.
But we cannot conclude that that right survived the commencement
of the proceeding under § 77B. A debtor as well as a creditor
who invokes the aid of the federal courts in reorganization or
rehabilitation under § 77B assumes all of the consequences
which flow from that jurisdiction. Once the property is in the
hands of the court, private rights as respect that
res are
subject to the superior dominion of the court, and are to be
adjudicated pursuant to the standards prescribed by the Congress.
As a result of such proceedings, the hand of all executions or
levies may be stayed. [
Footnote
19] The court acquires "exclusive jurisdiction of the debtor
and its property wherever located for the purposes of this
section." [
Footnote 20] The
court need not keep the debtor in possession, but may substitute
for the old management a trustee; or, if the old management is
retained, it operates the business
"subject at all times to the control of the judge, and to such
limitations, restrictions, terms, and conditions as the judge may
from time to time impose and prescribe. [
Footnote 21]"
Thus, while the property remains in the hands of the court, as
it does until dismissal or final decree on confirmation, the
debtor, though left in possession
Page 308 U. S. 126
by the judge, does not operate it, as it did before the filing
of the petition, unfettered and without restraint. The control of
the court is then pervasive. [
Footnote 22] Furthermore, stockholders and other junior
interests may be excluded from any plan of reorganization if the
court finds that the debtor is insolvent.
In re 620 Church
Street Building Corp., 299 U. S. 24. And,
on facts such as exist here, these junior interests must be
excluded unless they furnish adequate consideration for the
interest which they obtain in the new company. And, once the
jurisdiction of the court has been invoked, whether by the debtor
or by a creditor, that petitioner cannot withdraw and oust the
court of jurisdiction. [
Footnote
23] He invokes
Page 308 U. S. 127
that jurisdiction risking all of the disadvantages which may
flow to him as a consequence, as well as gaining all of the
benefits. One of those disadvantages, from the viewpoint of the
debtor and its stockholders, is the approval of a plan of
reorganization which eliminates them completely. [
Footnote 24] Accordingly, respondent's
assertion in this case that the major contribution of these
stockholders justifying their inclusion in the plan was the waiver
of their right to defer or put off foreclosure until 1944 --
i.e., to remain in possession -- does not stand analysis.
The right to remain in unmolested dominion and control over the
property was necessarily waived or abandoned on invoking the
jurisdiction of the federal courts in these proceedings. When that
jurisdiction attached, the court, rather than the stockholders, was
in control, with all of the powers and duties which that entailed
under § 77B. Certainly the surrender of a right thus waived is
not adequate consideration for the dilution of the bondholders'
priorities which this plan would effect.
And there is a further reason why this result necessarily
follows, if the will of the Congress as expressed in § 77B is
not to be thwarted and if the integrity of such proceedings is to
be maintained. As we have said, this plan had its origin in an
endeavor on the part of the debtor in 1937 to effect a voluntary
reorganization. A plan was proposed by the debtor which was the
same as that here involved except for the amount and nature of the
stock to be received by the bondholders. [
Footnote 25] That plan
Page 308 U. S. 128
contained two methods for its consummation. The first was by
means of an amendment to the trust indenture and a recapitalization
of the debtor, a method to be followed if the board felt that
sufficient approvals had been obtained. The second was by means of
§ 77B. Over 80% of the bondholders and over 90% of the stock
approved the original plan. Thereupon, the debtor filed its
petition in § 77B. Thereafter, the debtor filed a modification
of the plan to which the assents, here relied upon, were obtained.
[
Footnote 26] Thus,
respondent argues that, since the plan of reorganization was
entered into between the bondholders and the stockholders before
institution of the reorganization proceedings under § 77B, the
consideration flowing from the stockholders had been furnished, and
the interests of the bondholders and stockholders in the assets of
the debtor had been fixed prior to the filing of the petition. In
fact, respondent frankly insists that the stockholders' "right of
participation was secured by contract before, and as a condition
precedent to, the institution of the 77B proceedings."
But the mere statement of this proposition is its own
refutation. If the reorganization court were bound by such
conventions of the parties, it would be effectively ousted of
important duties which the Act places on it. Federal courts acting
under § 77B would be required to place their imprimatur on
plans of reorganization which disposed of the assets of a company
not in accord with the standards of "fair and equitable," but in
compliance with agreements which the required percentages of
security
Page 308 U. S. 129
holders had previously made. Such procedure would deprive
scattered and unorganized security holders of the protection which
the Congress had provided them under § 77B. The scope of the
duties and powers of the Court would be delimited by the bargain
which reorganizers had been able to make with security holders
before they asked the intercession of the court in effectuating
their plan. Minorities would have their fate decided not by the
court in application of the law of the land as prescribed in §
77B, but by the forces utilized by reorganizers in prescribing the
conditions precedent on which the benefits of the statute could be
obtained. No conditions precedent to enjoyment of the benefits of
§ 77B can be provided except by the Congress. To hold
otherwise would be to allow reorganizers to rewrite it so as to
best serve their own ends. [
Footnote 27]
4. The holding of the District Court that the value to the
bondholders of maintaining the debtor as a going concern and of
avoiding litigation with the old stockholders justifies the
inclusion of the latter in the plan is likewise erroneous. The
conclusion of the District Court that avoidance of litigation with
the stockholders gave validity to their claim for recognition in
the plan involves a misconception of the duties and
responsibilities of the court in these proceedings. Whatever might
be the strategic or nuisance value of such parties outside of
§ 77B is irrelevant to the duties of the court in confirming
or disapproving a plan under that section. In these proceedings,
there is no occasion for the court to yield to such pressures. If
the priorities of creditors which the law
Page 308 U. S. 130
protects are not to be diluted, it is the clear duty of the
court to resist all such assertions. Of course, this is not to
intimate that compromise of claims is not allowable under §
77B. There frequently will be situations involving conflicting
claims to specific assets which may, in the discretion of the
court, be more wisely settled by compromise, rather than by
litigation. Thus, ambiguities in the wording of two indentures may
make plausible the claim of one class of creditors to an exclusive
or prior right to certain assets as against the other class in
spite of the fact that the latter's claim flows from a first
mortgage. [
Footnote 28]
Close questions of interpretations of after-acquired property
clauses in mortgages, preferences in stock certificates, divisional
mortgages, and the like will give rise to honest doubts as to which
security holders have first claim to certain assets. Settlement of
such conflicting claims to the
res in the possession of
the court is a normal part of the process of reorganization. In
sanctioning such settlements, the court is not bowing to nuisance
claims; it is administering the proceedings in an economical and
practical manner. But that is not the situation here. As a result
of the filing of the petition in this case, the court, not the
stockholders, acquired exclusive dominion and control over the
estate. Hence, any strategic position occupied by the stockholders
prior to these proceedings vanished once the court invoked its
jurisdiction. Threats by stockholders of the kind here in question
are merely threats to the jurisdiction of the
Page 308 U. S. 131
court, which jurisdiction these self-same stockholders invoked
for their benefit when they caused the debtor's petition to be
filed. Consequently, these claims of the stockholders are, as we
have said, entitled to no more dignity than any claim based upon
sheer nuisance value.
In this connection, it should be observed that the finding of
the court that it was important to admit the stockholders to
participation in the plan so as to maintain the debtor as a going
concern, and thus protect the bondholders, was based upon a
misconception of its legal powers and duties. For the court assumed
that the only alternative to acceptance of this debtor's plan was a
dismissal of the proceeding or a liquidation. But this is not true.
In the first place, no special perquisites (of consequence here)
flow to stockholders by virtue of the fact that the proceedings are
instituted by a voluntary, rather than an involuntary, petition.
The criteria for exclusion or inclusion of stockholders in a plan
are precisely the same in both situations. In practice, it is not
infrequent to find proceedings which start with a debtor's petition
ending up with plans of reorganization which exclude stockholders.
Reading Hotel Corp. v. Protective Committee, 89 F.2d 53.
In the second place, failure to accept this plan does not force
dismissal or liquidation. Section 77B(c)(8) gives the court
explicit powers where "a plan of reorganization is not proposed or
accepted within such reasonable period as the judge may fix" either
to "extend such period" or to "dismiss the proceeding" or, with
exceptions not relevant here, to cause liquidation, such choice to
be made "as the interests of the creditors and stockholders may
equitably require." Accordingly, dismissal has not infrequently
been properly denied.
In re Bush Terminal Co., 84 F.2d
984. And, in this case, there has been no showing that a plan which
is not only fair and equitable, but also meets the other
Page 308 U. S. 132
requirements of the Act, cannot be adopted, nor that all
reasonable time for proposal of such alternative plans has
expired.
We therefore hold that the plan is not fair and equitable, and
that the judgment below must be and is
Reversed.
MR. JUSTICE BUTLER took no part in the consideration or
disposition of this case.
[
Footnote 1]
One involves an interlocutory order and the other a final order
confirming a plan of reorganization under § 77B of the
Bankruptcy Act.
[
Footnote 2]
Other liabilities, not material here, are $6,075.94 of current
accounts payable and $496,899.76 due the Los Angeles Shipbuilding
and Drydock Corporation.
[
Footnote 3]
A large block of Class B stock was escrowed under a management
contract with one Armes, to be delivered to him when all the bonds
were retired and the Class A stockholders were paid back their
$400,000 plus interest in the form of dividends. But this
management contract was later terminated, and the escrowed Class B
stock was returned to the debtor and cancelled. Class A stock was
preferred to Class B in the event of liquidation to the amount of
$400,000 and interest.
[
Footnote 4]
The assets of the debtor, except the capital stock of two
subsidiaries which have assets of some, though slight, value will
also be transferred to the new company. The assets of these two
subsidiaries will be liquidated, and the proceeds distributed
pro rata among bondholders. The assets of the other three
subsidiaries will also apparently be acquired by the new
company.
[
Footnote 5]
No underwriting of these funds is provided, and no disclosure is
made as to how the additional funds are to be raised.
[
Footnote 6]
It provides in part:
"After hearing such objections as may be made to the plan, the
judge shall confirm the plan if satisfied that (1) it is fair and
equitable and does not discriminate unfairly in favor of any class
of creditors or stockholders, and is feasible; (2) it complies with
the provisions of subdivision (b) of this section; (3) it has been
accepted as required by the provisions of subdivision (e), clause
(1) of this section. . . ."
[
Footnote 7]
For analyses and reviews of these cases as applied to equity
reorganizations or reorganizations under § 77B and § 77
of the Bankruptcy Act,
see Frank, Some Realistic
Reflections on Some Aspects of Corporate Reorganization, 19
Va.L.Rev. 541; Swaine, Reorganization of Corporations: Certain
Developments of the Last Decade, 27 Col.L.Rev. 901; Spaeth and
Winks, The Boyd Case and Section 77, 32 Ill.L.Rev. 769; Bonbright
and Bergeman, Two Rival Theories of Priority Rights of Security
Holders in a Corporate Reorganization, 28 Col.L.Rev. 127; Friendly,
Some Comments on the Corporate Reorganization Act, 48
Harv.L.Rev.39; 2 Gerdes on Corporate Reorganizations, §
1084.
[
Footnote 8]
Jameson v. Guaranty Trust Co. of New York, 20 F.2d 808,
815,
cert. denied, 275 U.S. 569.
[
Footnote 9]
Flershem v. National Radiator Corp., 64 F.2d 847, 852,
reversed, 290 U. S. 290 U.S.
504.
[
Footnote 10]
P. R. Walsh Tie & Timber Co. v. Missouri Pacific Ry.
Co., 280 F. 38, 44.
[
Footnote 11]
Mountain States Power Co. v. A. L. Jordan Lumber Co.,
293 F. 502, 506.
[
Footnote 12]
St. Louis-San Francisco Ry. Co. v. McElvain, 253 F.
123, 134.
See also Guaranty Trust Co. v. Missouri Pacific Ry.
Co., 238 F. 812, 816, 819.
[
Footnote 13]
Northern Pacific Ry. Co. v. Boyd, supra, spoke of a
"fair" offer to the creditor and a "just reorganization" as the
prerequisite to validity of the plan. P.
228 U. S. 508.
Kansas City Terminal Ry. Co. v. Central Union Trust Co.,
supra, said that the offer to the creditor had to be "fair and
binding." P.
271 U. S.
452.
[
Footnote 14]
See In re Day & Meyer, Murray & Young, 93 F.2d
657;
Tellier v. Franks Laundry Co., 101 F.2d 561;
In
re Philadelphia & Reading Coal & Iron Co., 105 F.2d
357;
In re New York Railways Corp., 82 F.2d 739, 744; 2
Gerdes on Corporate Reorganizations, § 1085. I intimations to
the contrary,
Downtown Investment Association v. Boston
Metropolitan Buildings, Inc., 81 F.2d 314, 323, 324;
In re
A.C. Hotel Co., 93 F.2d 841, are not tenable.
The statutory scheme of § 77B (in those respects which are
material here) is in sharp contrast to that which was provided for
compositions under former § 12. This Court said, in
Callaghan v. Reconstruction Finance Corp., 297 U.
S. 464,
297 U. S.
470:
"Reorganizations now permitted under section 77B present certain
resemblances to compositions under section 12 which have been
commented upon as supporting the constitutionality of the
reorganization provisions of section 77 or section 77B. . . . But
section 77B contemplates a procedure and results not permissible
under section 12. Reorganizations are nowhere referred to in the
statute as compositions."
Under § 12(a) (as it existed at the time § 77B was
enacted), only a "bankrupt" could offer "terms of composition to
his creditors." Under § 77B(d), plans may be proposed not only
by the debtor, but also by a designated percentage of the
creditors, or, where the debtor is not found to be insolvent, by a
specified percentage of stockholders. Section 12(d), as it then
existed, provided that the judge "shall confirm a composition if
satisfied,"
inter alia, that "it is for the best interests
of the creditors."
See Fleischmann & Devine, Inc. v. Saul
Wolfson Dry Goods Co., Inc., 299 F. 15. The "fair and
equitable" standard employed in § 77B was not then present in
§ 12. Consent by the debtor to the composition was implicit in
former § 12.
Cf. In re Bryer, 281 F. 812. But, under
§ 77B, approval of a plan by security holders who have no
equity in the enterprise is unnecessary.
In re 620 Church
Street Building Corp., 299 U. S. 24. The
general view was well expressed in
In Re Dutch Woodcraft
Shops, 14 F.
Supp. 467, 469,
"The preservation of business enterprises must not be at the
expense of creditors, and the provisions of section 77B should not
be taken advantage of to effect what, in fact, amounts to a
composition under section 12."
The Chandler Act, c. 10, 52 Stat. 840, 883, approved June 22,
1938, now supplants § 77B. Various substantial changes in the
provisions of § 77B have been made therein. But the standard
of "fair and equitable," as used in § 77B, remains unaltered
as one of the criteria necessary for confirmation of a plan of
reorganization. § 221(2).
[
Footnote 15]
This new money was commonly necessary in equity reorganizations
not only to provide new working capital, but also to pay dissenting
creditors.
See Weiner, Conflicting Functions of the Upset
Price in a Corporate Reorganization, 27 Col.L.Rev. 132.
Like considerations are relevant in reorganizations under §
77B. As stated by the court in
In Re Dutch Woodcraft
Shops, 14 F. Supp.
467, 471:
"Circumstances may exist where the success of an undertaking
requires that new money be furnished and where the former
stockholders are the only or most feasible source of the new
capital. In such instances, the court may recognize as fair and
equitable a plan which includes contributions of new money by
stockholders, provided it satisfactorily appears that full
recognition has been given to the value of creditors' claims
against the property."
[
Footnote 16]
On comparable facts, a like conclusion was reached in
In Re
Barclay Park Corp., 90 F.2d 595, where the court said, p.
598:
"It is argued that the stockholders represent the present
management of the hotel, and that the management is valuable, and
indeed necessary to the enterprise, and that the
manager-stockholders will 'walk out' if the proposed plan does not
go through and leave the hotel to its fate. But there is no binding
agreement on their part to remain which might afford a
justification for giving them a stock interest, and, if their
managerial skill is vital to the success of the hotel, any stock
issued to insure the continuance of their relation ought to go to
those stockholders who are of use to the enterprise and agree to
act in its behalf, and not to all stockholders as such. Indeed, the
supposed advantages of retaining the existing management seem to be
a matter of inference, if not of speculation, supported by the oral
statements of attorneys, instead of by testimony."
[
Footnote 17]
This conclusion is reemphasized here by the fact that not all of
the Class A stockholders who receive new stock are part of the
management of the debtor.
[
Footnote 18]
See H.R. Rep. No. 1409, 75th Cong., 1st Sess., p. 38,
dealing with recent amendments to the section, and H.R. Rep.
No.194, 73rd Cong., 1st Sess., p. 2, the report accompanying the
original Act.
[
Footnote 19]
Section 77B(a)(c)(10).
Cf. Continental Illinois National
Bank & Trust Co. v. Chicago, Rock Island & Pacific Ry.
Co., 294 U. S. 648.
[
Footnote 20]
Section 77B(a).
[
Footnote 21]
Section 77B(c).
[
Footnote 22]
See 1 Gerdes on Corporate Reorganizations, c. 9. These
powers embrace not only the specifically enumerated powers
contained in § 77B, but also
"all the powers, not inconsistent with this section, which a
Federal court would have had it appointed a receiver in equity of
the property of the debtor by reason of its inability to pay its
debts as they mature."
§ 77B(a). In addition, by virtue of § 77A, the
district court, as a court of bankruptcy, has original jurisdiction
in proceedings under § 77B. Illustrative of specific powers
granted by § 77B are the powers of the court to authorize
issuance of certificates (§ 77B(c)(3)), to require the filing
of schedules and reports (§ 77B(c)(4)), to direct rejection of
executory contracts (§ 77B(c)(5)), to control salaries of
officers and to approve appointments "to any office" (§
77B(c)(11)). The last subsection also provides,
"In case a trustee is not appointed, the debtor shall continue
in the possession of its property, and, if authorized by the judge,
shall operate the business thereof during such period, fixed or
indefinite, as the judge may from time to time prescribe, and shall
have all the title to and shall exercise, consistently with the
provisions of this section, all the powers of a trustee appointed
pursuant to this section, subject at all times to the control of
the judge, and to such limitations, restrictions, terms, and
conditions as the judge may from time to time impose and
prescribe."
In the instant case, the court left the debtor in possession,
allowing its officers no salaries but allowing specified salaries
to be paid to designated officers of the principal subsidiary.
[
Footnote 23]
The Act has explicit standards for dismissal (§ 77B(c)(8))
which we discuss hereafter.
[
Footnote 24]
As recognized in
In re 620 Church Street Building Corp.,
supra, § 77B(e)(1) expressly takes care of this
contingency in the provision that acceptance of the plan by a
majority of the stock "shall not be requisite to the confirmation
of the plan by any stockholder or class of stockholders (1) if the
judge shall have determined,"
inter alia, that "the debtor
is insolvent."
[
Footnote 25]
Under that plan, the new company was to have an authorized
capital of $1,000,000 consisting of 1,000,000 shares of a par value
of $1.00 per share, the bondholders getting 590,065 of the shares
and the old Class A stockholders getting 239,935 of the shares.
Shares going to the bondholders were of the same class as those
received by stockholders.
[
Footnote 26]
These assents were apparently measured by the failure of the
bondholders to withdraw their consents which had been given to the
original plan, on receiving copies of the proposed
modification.
[
Footnote 27]
Cf. Hollister v. Stewart, 111 N.Y. 644, 19 N.E. 782,
where the court struck down a voluntary reorganization which
attempted to bind minority bondholders. The court said,
"Unless railroad syndicates or committees are to be put above
the constitution, the trustees cannot set aside and change their
contract with plaintiff of their own volition without his
consent."
P. 660.
[
Footnote 28]
That would appear to be essentially the type of case involved in
In the Matter of Detroit International Bridge Co., Debtor,
30 F.Supp, 127, cited to us by the respondent and described in an
advisory report (Corporate Reorganization Release No. 9) submitted
by the Securities and Exchange Commission pursuant to § 172,
c. X of the Chandler Act. However, the action of the court, if any,
on the plan has not yet appeared in the published reports.