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Creditors Group Picked in Smith Reorganization

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Times Staff Writer

A committee to represent creditors in the bankruptcy reorganization of Smith International was formally appointed Monday by the office of the U.S. trustee in Los Angeles.

Represented on the 19-member committee are some of the Irvine-based oil service company’s largest creditors, including Hughes Tool Co. of Houston, a business competitor that won a $204.6-million award in a lawsuit against Smith for patent infringement.

Earlier there had been speculation that Smith might object to Hughes serving on a creditors’ committee for fear that Hughes might become privy to Smith’s trade secrets. However, Smith so far has not formally challenged the appointment of a Hughes representative by the U.S. trustee, and an attorney for the company said Tuesday that no decision would be made until Smith receives formal notification of the committee’s makeup.

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In all, members of the Smith creditors committee represent $460 million of approximately $483.9 million of Smith liabilities. Among them are representatives of nine banking institutions--Chase Manhattan Bank (an official of which will chair the creditors committee), Amsterdam-Rotterdam Bank, Security Pacific Bank, Morgan Guarantee Trust Co., Deutsche Bank, Midland Bank, Bank Nationale de Paris, Bank of America and First Fidelity Bank of Newark, N.J.--the trustee for holders of Smith’s debentures. In all, the banks and their clients have total claims of about $250 million against Smith.

In addition, nine of Smith’s trade creditors, who claim Smith owes them $4 million, are on the newly appointed committee. They are British Steel Corp. Inc., Houston; K & B Machine, Huma, La.; Philipp Brothers Inc., Los Angeles; Earl M. Jorgensen Co., Lynwood, Calif.; Timken Co., Camden, Ohio; Robbins & Meyers, Fairfield, Calif.; Celanese Plastics & Specialties Co., Louisville, Ky.; Gulf Forge Co., Houston, and Kennametal Inc., Latrobe, Penn.

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