1. Section 77B of the Bankruptcy Act provides that, in
proceedings to reorganize a bankrupt corporation, the claim of a
landlord for indemnity under a covenant contained in a lease which
has been rejected by the trustee in bankruptcy
"shall be treated as a claim ranking on a parity with debts
which would be provable under § 63(a) of the Act, but shall be
limited to an amount not to exceed the rent, without acceleration,
reserved by said lease for the three years next succeeding . . .
the date of reentry of the landlord."
Held:
(1) The language being clear, its meaning cannot be affected by
resort to the legislative history. P.
299 U. S.
449.
(2) If, upon liquidation by deduction of present rental value
from the present value of rent reserved, the difference exceeds the
amount of the total rent for the three years succeeding the
landlord's reentry, the claim may be allowed only for that amount;
the surplus is not to have priority over the interests of
stockholders or to be reserved as a liability of the reorganized
corporation. P.
299 U. S.
450.
(3) Thus applied, the Act does not exceed the power to legislate
upon the subject of bankruptcies, nor violate the due process
clause of the Fifth Amendment. P.
299 U. S.
450.
2. Bankruptcy laws seek equitable distribution of the debtor's
assets amongst his creditors, and Congress, in determining what
such an equitable distribution demands, is free to establish
standards of provability and measures of allowance, regardless of
the claimant's ability to maintain an action in a court or the
measure of his recovery in such an action if maintainable. P.
299 U. S.
450.
3. As respects the exertion of the bankruptcy power, there is a
significant difference between a property interest and a contract,
since the Constitution does not forbid impairment of the
obligations of contracts under that power. P.
299 U. S.
451.
4. The Fifth Amendment does not prohibit bankruptcy legislation
affecting the creditor's remedy for enforcement of a contract
against the debtor's assets, or affecting the measure of the
creditor's participation
Page 299 U. S. 446
therein, if the statutory provisions are consonant with a fair,
reasonable, and equitable distribution of those assets. P.
299 U. S.
452.
5. The object of § 77B of the Bankruptcy Act is to extend
the bankruptcy system to the reorganization of certain types of
insolvent or embarrassed business corporations in the interests of
the public, the creditors, and the shareholders; in discharging the
claims of landlords, it admits them to participation with other
creditors on a basis deemed by Congress to be equitable, giving
them a new and more certain remedy for a limited amount, in lieu of
an old remedy inefficient and uncertain in its result. This is not
a taking of the landlord's property without due process of law. P.
299 U. S.
452.
6. The limit set upon landlords' claims cannot be regarded as an
arbitrary discrimination between them and other creditors. P.
299 U. S.
453.
7. The limit fixed upon landlords' claims cannot be regarded as
whimsical and arbitrary merely because, being general and uniform,
it cannot have the same relation in all cases to the actual losses
of different landlords. P.
299 U. S. 453.
85 F.2d 35 affirmed.
Certiorari to review the affirmance of an order of the District
Court allowing the claim of a landlord, in reorganization
proceedings under § 77B of the Bankruptcy Act, but limited to
three years' rent from date of reentry.
Page 299 U. S. 447
MR. JUSTICE ROBERTS delivered the opinion of the Court.
In this case, we are concerned with that portion of subsection
(b)(10) of § 77B of the Bankruptcy Act which limits the claim
of a landlord for indemnity under a covenant in a lease to an
amount not to exceed three years' rent.
The questions are: (1) is the claim so limited in all events and
for all purposes, or is the surplus over the specified amount,
though subordinated to the claims of other creditors, to have
priority over the interests of stockholders or to be reserved as a
liability of the reorganized corporation? (2) if the claim is
limited in all events to the named amount, is the provision
obnoxious to the Fifth Amendment of the Constitution?
The petitioners leased real estate to United Cigar Stores
Company in 1926 for a term expiring in 1946. August 29, 1932, the
company was adjudicated a voluntary bankrupt. November 14, 1932,
the trustee rejected the lease and abandoned the premises. The
following day, the petitioners reentered and terminated the
leasehold in accordance with the provisions of the lease which
contained a covenant by the lessee to indemnify them against all
loss of rent from such termination. Immediately upon adoption of
§ 77B, the bankrupt filed its petition for reorganization
thereunder, which was approved by the court.
The petitioners presented a proof of claim, measuring the injury
resulting from the termination of the leasehold by the difference
between the rental value and the value of the rent reserved for the
remainder of the term. They prayed that the amount claimed be
ranked on a parity with other provable debts to the extent of three
years' rent and, as to the balance, be subordinated to other
provable debts, but awarded priority over the claims or
interests
Page 299 U. S. 448
of the debtor's stockholders. The trustee asked that the
allowance be in an amount limited as provided by the statute.
Committees representing preferred stockholders and debenture
holders objected to allowance of the claim in any amount, asserting
the petitioners could not sue on the covenant of indemnity under
the state law until the expiration of the term and, having no
presently enforceable claim under state law, had none in the
reorganization proceeding. The petitioners amended their pleading
by adding a prayer that to the extent any portion of the claim
might be held not allowable a charge be reserved against the
debtor's assets for such portion in priority to any interest
accorded stockholders.
The uncontroverted testimony is that the fair rental value for
the balance of the term is $111,545,36. The future installments of
rent to the end of the term aggregate $199,237.66. A special master
recommended that the petitioners' claim be allowed and liquidated
at the amount of the difference between present rental value and
present value of the rent reserved. He found that the sum so
ascertained would be not less than the equivalent of three years'
rent, and recommended allowance of the claim on a parity with
provable debts to the extent of three years' rent -- $44,377.55 --
and the reservation of all questions as to the balance until the
time for classification of creditors and consideration of a
reorganization plan. The District Court confirmed the master's
report, save that it decided the claim as allowed should represent
the extent of claimants' right to participate in the proceedings.
Cross-appeals were taken to the Circuit Court of Appeals, which
held that petitioners had a provable claim, that the method adopted
for the liquidation of the claim was proper, that § 77B
required limitation of allowance to a sum not in excess of the
three years' rent mentioned in the statute and that such limitation
does not take petitioners' property without due process of law
Page 299 U. S. 449
in violation of the Fifth Amendment. [
Footnote 1] We granted certiorari because of the
importance of the questions involved.
The respondent stockholders' committee does not now deny that
the petitioners have a provable claim, but joins the trustee in
support of the decision below that the allowance must be limited
for all purposes of the proceeding to three years' rent.
We have held, in
City Bank Farmers Trust Co. v. Irving Trust
Company, [
Footnote 2] that
the broad definition of creditors in § 77B gives the
petitioners a provable claim for breach of the debtor's covenant of
indemnity. The section, however, limits the amount for which such a
claim may be allowed. The relevant provision, so far as applicable
to petitioners' claim is:
"The claim of a landlord . . . for . . . indemnity under a
covenant contained in such lease shall be treated as a claim
ranking on a parity with debts which would be provable under §
63(a) of this Act, but shall be limited to an amount not to exceed
the rent, without acceleration, reserved by said lease for the
three years next succeeding . . . the date of reentry of the
landlord. . . ."
The legislative history of this provision, and the successive
alterations of its wording in both Houses of Congress and in
conference, to which we are referred, cannot affect its
interpretation, since the language of the act as adopted is clear.
The only phrase to which petitioners point in support of their
contention that the claim is to be divided into two parts, one for
an amount not exceeding three years' rent, to stand on a parity
with other provable claims, and the other, representing the
balance, to be subordinated to creditors' claims, but preferred to
the interest of stockholders, is: "shall be treated as a claim
Page 299 U. S. 450
ranking on a parity with debts which would be provable under
§ 63(a)." We need not consider the suggestion that the words
"on a parity" were left in the clause
per incuriam when
formulation of an earlier draft was altered, since, in our opinion,
their presence, however they came to be inserted, cannot overcome
the direct mandate that "the claim . . . shall be limited." We
agree, therefore, with the Circuit Court of Appeals that, if, upon
liquidation by deduction of present rental value from the present
value of rent reserved, the difference exceeds the amount of the
total rent for the three years succeeding the landlord's reentry,
the claim may be allowed only for that amount.
A more serious question is raised by the petitioners' insistence
that, thus applied, the act exceeds legislative powers granted, and
infringes personal guaranties given by the Constitution. They say
that the prescribed method will, in some instances, limit the
amount allowed to a figure less than the landlord's actual ultimate
loss, and thus partially destroy his remedy for enforcement of his
contract. The resulting violations of the Constitution, they
assert, are the transgression of the boundaries of the bankruptcy
power vested in Congress and the taking of their property without
due process.
Is the enactment in excess of the power to legislate on the
subject of bankruptcies conferred upon Congress by Article 1,
§ 8, of the Constitution? Congress evidently considered the
limitation imposed on claims of this class necessary or
advantageous to a successful reorganization, and its judgment is
conclusive upon us if the enactment is within its power.
The petitioners concede Congress has power to exclude contingent
claims from proof and allowance so long as the obligations they
represent are not extinguished by the statute. [
Footnote 3] They refer, however, to the statement
in
Louisville
Page 299 U. S. 451
Joint Stock Land Bank v. Radford, 295 U.
S. 555, that Congress has never attempted to supply a
bankrupt with capital to engage in business at the expense of his
creditors, as persuasive that a statute cannot discharge a
bankrupt's assets from liability for his debts, but can only
discharge the bankrupt from encumbrances on his future exertions.
[
Footnote 4] This principle,
they assert, the statute violates. The short answer is that the
object of bankruptcy laws is the equitable distribution of the
debtor's assets amongst his creditors, [
Footnote 5] and the validity of the challenged provision
must be tested by its appropriateness to that end. Congress, in
determining what such an equitable distribution demands, is free to
establish standards of provability and measures of allowance
regardless of the claimant's ability to maintain an action in a
court or the measure of his recovery in such an action if
maintainable. The contested provision is within the power of
Congress. The exercise of the power is, nevertheless, subject to
the commands of the Fifth Amendment. [
Footnote 6]
Does the act offend the due process guaranty by destruction of
rights conferred by the petitioners' contract? They affirm that it
does not merely by impairing those rights, but by a direct taking
pro tanto of all remedies for their enforcement, and, to
that extent, of the contract itself. Conceding they have no lien
upon, or property right in, the debtor's assets such as was the
subject of decision in
Louisville Joint Stock Land Bank v.
Radford, supra, they maintain that the Fifth Amendment assures
them some effective procedure for the enforcement of the obligation
of their contract; that the debtor's assets are a trust fund for
creditors which cannot be invaded for the benefit of stockholders.
As pointed out in the case last cited, there is, as respects the
exertion of the bankruptcy
Page 299 U. S. 452
power, a significant difference between a property interest and
a contract, since the Constitution does not forbid impairment of
the obligation of the latter. The equitable distribution of the
bankrupt's assets, or the equitable adjustment of creditors' claims
in respect of those assets, by way of reorganization may therefore
be regulated by a bankruptcy law which impairs the obligation of
the debtor's contracts. Indeed, every Bankruptcy Act avowedly works
such impairment. While, therefore, the Fifth Amendment forbids the
destruction of a contract, it does not prohibit bankruptcy
legislation affecting the creditor's remedy for its enforcement
against the debtor's assets, or the measure of the creditor's
participation therein, if the statutory provisions are consonant
with a fair, reasonable, and equitable distribution of those
assets. The law under consideration recognizes the petitioners'
claim, and permits it to share in the consideration to be
distributed in reorganization. The question is whether the remedy
is circumscribed in so unreasonable and arbitrary a way as to deny
due process.
Bankruptcy originated as a seizure of the debtor's assets for
equitable distribution amongst creditors. It was akin to a taking
in execution. The concept was subsequently broadened to embrace the
discharge of the embarrassed debtor from antecedent debts, and to
make the process available at his instance, as well as at that of
his creditors. Claims not provable, since they did not participate
in the avails of the bankrupt's assets, were not discharged, but
remained recoverable by action against the discharged bankrupt. The
object of § 77B was to extend the system to permit and
facilitate the reorganization of certain types of insolvent or
embarrassed business corporations. The theory of the legislation is
that the extension will serve the interests of the public, the
creditors, and the shareholders.
Page 299 U. S. 453
If the Bankruptcy Act was to be broadened to embrace
reorganization of corporate debtors, the wisdom of relieving them
of continuing liability for rent or under contracts of indemnity
was apparent. And if the landlords' claims were to be discharged in
the reorganization, they must be admitted to participation on an
equitable basis with other claims in shaping the reorganization and
in distribution of that which is to go to creditors pursuant to any
plan adopted. The section therefore made such claims provable. Its
legislative history attests the diverse views entertained in
Congress as to the amount for which a claim should be allowed. Only
after mature deliberation was the limit set at the amount fixed in
the act. The reasonableness of the limitation is to be determined
in the light of all circumstances Congress might properly
consider.
In
City Bank Farmers Trust Co. v. Irving Trust Co.,
ante, p.
299 U. S. 433, the
peculiar and unfortunate status of landlords' claims under the
Bankruptcy Act of 1898 is described. The tenant's bankruptcy
removed all his assets from the reach of the landlord, and left, as
the latter's only remedy, suits against an empty corporate shell or
a destitute individual. In framing the reorganization statute,
Congress obviously attempted to award landlords an equitable share
in the debtor's assets, as, in justice, it was bound to do, since
the purpose was to discharge the debtor from liability to future
suits based upon the lease. It is incorrect to say that Congress
took away all remedy under the lease. On the contrary, it gave a
new and more certain remedy for a limited amount, in lieu of an old
remedy, inefficient and uncertain in its result. This is certainly
not the taking of the landlord's property without due process.
But we are told that, if Congress determined to admit landlords'
claims to a share in debtors' assets, it was
Page 299 U. S. 454
bound by the Fifth Amendment not to be arbitrary in the
allotment of such share, or to discriminate between landlords and
other creditors and between individual landlords. We cannot
pronounce the limit set upon petitioners' claim arbitrary or
unreasonable. It is well known that leases of business properties,
particularly retail business properties, commonly run for long
terms. The longer the term, the greater the uncertainty as to the
loss entailed by abrogation of the lease. Testimony as to present
rental value partakes largely of the character of prophesy and,
although that value is the cardinal factor in the measure of
damages for which petitioners contend, it is obvious that, since
the landlord is not bound to relet the premises for the unexpired
term of the lease, that factor may have little real bearing upon
the realities of the case. And, in any event, the possibility of
the landlord's using the premises for his own purposes, their sale,
their condemnation for public use, or their loss by foreclosure
renders an estimate of present rental value highly uncertain. Add
to this the fact that bankruptcies multiply in hard times, and that
estimates of rental value are made upon the basis of what a new
tenant will pay in an era of economic depression, and the estimate
becomes even more unreliable. Whatever courts, in the absence of a
statutory formula, might feel compelled to adopt as the measure of
damage in such a case, we cannot hold that Congress could not
reasonably find that an award of the full difference between rental
value and rent reserved for the remainder of the term smacks too
much of speculation, and that a uniform limit upon landlords'
claims will, in the long run, be fair to them, to other creditors,
and to the debtor.
The petitioners insist that the amount to which the claim must
be limited has no reasonable relation to the facts; that a sum
equal to three times the annual rent can have no relation to the
probable loss by the ending
Page 299 U. S. 455
of the leasehold. But the rent reserved, broadly speaking, has
some relationship to the value of the property and the value of a
lease thereon. What the statute does is to assure at least three
full years' rent to a landlord whose possible loss may exceed that
amount, evidently upon the theory that, with such an allowance, the
landlord stands a reasonable chance of restoring himself to as good
a position as if the lease had not been terminated.
The petitioners say that, by limiting their claim, they are put
upon a different basis from other creditors. A sufficient ground
for the distinction is that petitioners get back their property. In
other words, they have lost merely a bargain for the use of real
estate, whereas merchandise creditors, lenders, and others recover
in specie none of the property or money which passed from them to
the debtor.
Finally, it is said that the statute is whimsical and arbitrary
in that the limit fixed upon landlords' claims necessarily
represents a varying proportion of the actual loss of individual
landlords, and that this is discrimination of the most obvious
sort. If, however, the statute does not deal unfairly with the
petitioners, it does not lie in their mouths to object because
someone else, perchance, will receive a larger proportion of his
ultimate loss as the same is ascertained years hence than will the
petitioners. Congress, not unreasonably, felt that it was
necessary, in the interest of expedition of proof and allowance of
landlords' claims, which had never theretofore been permitted to
share in a bankrupt debtor's assets, to fix a reasonable limit upon
such claims. Naturally, the amount fixed cannot bear the same
relation to the ultimate loss or damage in every case. But it does
not follow that, for this reason, all effort at uniformity of
treatment of a peculiar class of claims, difficult of liquidation,
is doomed to condemnation. All the arguments which petitioners
submit would equally apply to any general and uniform formula
Page 299 U. S. 456
for the limitation of such claims which the Congress might
adopt. We are unable to say that that which Congress did select so
discriminates between individual claimants to the detriment of the
petitioners as to render it unconstitutional as to them.
The judgment is
Affirmed.
MR. JUSTICE BRANDEIS and MR. JUSTICE STONE took no part in the
consideration or decision of this case.
[
Footnote 1]
85 F.2d 35.
[
Footnote 2]
No. 260, decided this day.
[
Footnote 3]
Compare Manhattan Properties, Inc. v. Irving Trust Co.,
291 U. S. 320,
291 U. S.
332.
[
Footnote 4]
See Hanover National Bank v. Moyses, 186 U.
S. 181,
186 U. S.
188.
[
Footnote 5]
Kothe v. R. C. Taylor Trust, 280 U.
S. 224,
280 U. S. 227.
[
Footnote 6]
Louisville Joint Stock Land Bank v. Radford, supra, p.
295 U. S.
589.