Needles v. Smith
Opinion of the Court
Pending proceedings for the foreclosure of the mortgages on the property of the Marietta & North Georgia Railway Company, certain holders of the bonds of that company and of the constituent companies out of which it was formed entered into an agreement by which .they constituted certain persons a reorganization committee, with ample powers specified in the agreement, and deposited in their hands the securities held by the parties to the reorganization agreement. Among the powers of the reorganization committee was that to employ counsel. The committee employed Hoke Smith and John T. Glenn to represent them as counsel. After this employment of counsel, the committee negotiated a loan with the Penn Mutual Life Insurance Company, of Philadelphia, to secure which loan they pledged the securities which had been deposited with them by the parties to the reorganization agreement. Subsequently to the negotiation of this loan, the Penn Mutual Life Insurance Company, of Philadelphia, became a party with the reorganization committee and others to another agreement looking to a reorganization of the railroad properties involved in the foreclosure proceedings. This last agreement purported to be made by named parties of the first, second, third, fourth, and fifth parts. Newman Erb was one of the parties of the second part. 1-Ie was also one of the parties of the fifth part, and in the fifth part was associated with John W. Hamer. As one of the parties of the second
•‘Tlie party of the third part hereto [the Penn Mutual Life Insurance Company, of Philadelphia] shall immediately upon the conveyance to the new company being made, and simultaneously with said conveyance, receive new first mortgage bonds issued under the plan of reorganization, to the amount of $(>00,000, together with such junior securities as may attach to the said first mortgage bonds under the underwriting- agreement before referred to; said bonds to be held as collateral security for its loan [$200,000], And the parties of the first part hereto [the reorganization committee], acting on behalf of the new company, covenant and agree to deliver the said bonds to the said insurance company, party of the third part, for the purpose aforesaid.”
Pursuant to tbe original reorganization agreement, and apparently pursuant to the agreement last above named (to which the Penn Mutual Life Insurance Company was party of the third part), and about six months after the day on which the latter bears date, the reorganization committee concluded an agreement with G.E. Kissel, the holder of a large block of bonds which had not been deposited with the reorganization committee, and which he had made the basis of his opposition to the plan of reorganization adopted by the committee, by which agreement the committee obtained the Kissel bonds for a consideration, a part of which was that they should pay Kissel’s attorneys, Patrick Calhoun, Alexander C. King, and Jack J. Spalding, who had represented him in Ms opposition to the plans of the committee; the agreement providing that the amount of this fee should be fixed by William T. Newman, one of the judges of the court in which the foreclosure proceedings were being conducted, and who subsequently fixed the same at the sum of $5,000. The railroad properties were sold, but were not purchased by or on behalf of the reorganization committee. As a result of this sale, the securities deposited with the reorganization committee became entitled to certain distribution, the amount of which is not sufficient to satisfy the claims of the Penn Mutual Life Insurance Company, of Philadelphia, and the claims of the appellees Hoke Smith, John T. Glenn, Patrick Calhoun, Alexander C. King, and Jack J. Spalding.
The circuit court (Hon. William T. Newman presiding) passed its decree adjudging that the attorneys’ claims on the fund were prior in right to the claim of the appellants, and, a few days thereafter, passed another decree directing that their claims be paid out of the fund in the court. The assignments of error, in four several forms, suggest that the court erred in passing these decrees. It seems to ns, after a careful examination and consideration of the matter, that there cannot be any serious question as to the priority of the claim of the attorneys Hoke Smith and John T. Glenn. The reorganization agreement contemplated, as of course it must have contemplated, not only the propriety, but the necessity, of employing counsel
Reference
- Full Case Name
- NEEDLES v. SMITH
- Status
- Published