By Joseph Checkler 
 

Residential Capital LLC said more than 95% of voting creditors accepted its liquidation proposal, as the company prepares to ask a judge to approve that plan.

In court Thursday, a lawyer for ResCap said that of the 1,432 votes cast, only 64 voted no to the proposal.

Morrison & Foerster LLP's Gary S. Lee, ResCap's lead lawyer, told Judge Martin Glenn of U.S. Bankruptcy Court in Manhattan that out of nearly 150 classes of creditors voting on the liquidation plan, one small class rejected it.

The hearing presaged a multiday trial set for next week over whether Judge Glenn should approve the plan, but part of the process will include Phase II of a trial between ResCap and hedge funds holding its junior unsecured notes.

Judge Glenn said he expects to rule Friday on Phase I of that trial, a fight over whether the hedge funds are entitled to interest on their notes accrued after ResCap filed for bankruptcy and whether their notes "are oversecured," which would entitle them to more money.

Judge Glenn has set aside six days on his calendar for hearings to consider the proposal. The plan is based largely on a settlement among the company, its creditors and government-controlled parent Ally Financial Inc. that calls for Ally to pay $2.1 billion to settle creditor claims but absolves it from future liabilities in the case. Mr. Lee said in court Thursday that the company continues to settle objections to its proposal.

ResCap, once one of the country's largest mortgage servicers and mortgage lenders, filed for Chapter 11 protection in May 2012 as litigation over soured mortgage securities mounted and bond payments loomed. The move was intended to help Ally, which isn't part of the bankruptcy, sever itself from those issues so it could focus on repaying the bailout it received during the financial crisis.

During its bankruptcy, ResCap struck deals to sell mortgage-servicing platforms and loan portfolios as a part of bankruptcy auctions that generated $4.5 billion in proceeds. The ResCap estate has racked up more than $430 million in fees for the professionals working on its case.

When ResCap first filed for Chapter 11, the Ally payment was set at $750 million, but it became clear very early that creditors wanted more. A court-ordered examiner's report by former U.S. Bankruptcy Court Judge Arthur J. Gonzalez concluded that while Ally didn't set up ResCap for failure, as some creditors charged, the $750 million settlement would have been too low.

If the plan is approved by Judge Glenn, creditors will receive different amounts of recovery based on which ResCap-related entity owes them money, but most unsecured creditors will receive the 36.3 cents on the dollar.

(Dow Jones Daily Bankruptcy Review covers news about distressed companies and those under bankruptcy protection. Go to http://dbr.dowjones.com)

Write to Joseph Checkler at joseph.checkler@wsj.com

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