Upon review of a judgment of the Circuit Court of Appeals which
reversed an order of the District Court approving a plan, certified
to it by the Interstate Commerce Commission, for reorganization of
the Chicago, Milwaukee, St. Paul & Pacific Railroad Company
under § 77 of the Bankruptcy Act,
held:
1. The Commission's conclusion that the equity of holders of the
debtor's preferred and common stock was without value, and that
Page 318 U. S. 524
they were therefore not entitled to participate in the
reorganization, was sustained by the reasons and supporting data
set forth in the Commission's report on the plan. P.
318 U. S.
536.
(a) The Commission is not required by the Act to formalize in
findings the extensive data on which it relied in the exercise of
its expert informed judgment. P.
318 U. S.
539.
(b) Nor was the Commission required to make a precise finding as
to the value of the company's properties in order to eliminate the
old stock from the plan. P.
318 U. S.
539.
(c) A finding as to the precise extent of the deficiency is not
material or germane to the finding of "no value" prescribed by
§ 77(e). P.
318 U. S.
539.
(d) If it is established that there is no reasonable probability
that the earning power of the road will be sufficient to pay prior
claims of interest and principal and leave some surplus for the
service of the stock, then the inclusion of the stock would violate
the full priority rule, incorporated in § 77 by the phrase
"fair and equitable." P.
318 U. S.
541.
2. The criteria employed by the Commission for determining the
permissible capitalization of the reorganized company were in
accord with the Act. P.
318 U. S.
539.
(a) Earning power is the primary criterion of value in
reorganization proceedings under § 77. P.
318 U. S.
540.
(b) The limited extent to which § 77(e) provides that
reproduction cost, original cost, and actual investment may be
considered indicates that these factors are relevant, as in §
77B, only so far as they bear on earning power. P.
318 U. S.
541.
3. The evidence of changed circumstances since the Commission's
approval of the plan was insufficient to require the District Court
to return the plan to the Commission for reconsideration. P.
318 U. S.
543.
Earning power in war years is not a reliable criterion for the
indefinite future. P.
318 U. S.
543.
4. The contention that the ratio of debt to stock in the
reorganized company results in unfairness to junior interests is
unsupported. P.
318 U. S.
544.
(a) The nature of the capital structure, as well as the amount
of the capitalization, is for the determination of the Commission
in its formulation of a plan which will be "compatible with the
public interest." P.
318 U. S.
544.
(b) Questions of the ratio of debt to stock, the amount of
fixed, as distinguished from contingent, interest, and the kind of
capital structure which a particular company needs to survive the
vicissitudes
Page 318 U. S. 525
of the business cycle, are by the Act reserved for the expert
judgment of the Commission, which the courts must respect. P.
318 U. S.
545.
5. There is no justification in this case for further delay in
effectuating the reorganization. P.
318 U. S.
545.
6. The effective date of a plan of reorganization under §
77 need not be the date of the filing of the petition. P.
318 U. S.
546.
Section 77 does not preclude the accrual of interest on secured
claims after the date of the filing of the petition for
reorganization.
7. The proposed modifications of the lease of the Terre Haute
properties, with the alternative of rejection of the lease in the
event of failure of acceptance of the modifications, were valid. P.
318 U. S.
549.
(a) The provisions of § 77 authorize the Commission (and
the District Court), in approving a plan of reorganization, to
condition acceptance of a lease on terms which are necessary or
appropriate to keep the fixed charges within proper limits or to do
equity between claims which arise under the lease and other claims
against the debtor. P.
318 U. S.
550.
(b) The determination of the Commission and the District Court
as to whether a lease should be rejected, or, if not, on what terms
it should be accepted, ought not to be set aside upon review,
except on a clear showing that the limits of discretion have been
exceeded. P.
318 U. S.
551.
(c) The provision of the plan that the Terre Haute lease shall
be rejected as of the date the District Court determines that the
Terre Haute bondholders have not consented to the making of a new
lease at a reduced rental is valid. P.
318 U. S.
551.
(d) In the event of rejection of the lease pursuant to a plan of
reorganization, operation subsequent to the commencement of the
proceedings and prior to the rejection need not be for the account
of the lessor. P.
318 U. S.
552.
(e) When a lease is rejected pursuant to a plan, § 77(c)(6)
may not be so applied as to give the lessor or its creditors a
disproportionate claim against the estate. P.
318 U. S.
555.
8. The findings and conclusions of the Commission and the
District Court with respect to the allocation of new securities to
the holders of General Mortgage bonds, were adequate and proper. P.
318 U. S.
555.
(a) That system mortgages should be substituted for divisional
ones was a determination which was peculiarly within the province
of the Commission to make. P.
318 U. S.
558.
(b) The treatment of the General Mortgage bonds was not
inequitable as compared with that accorded the 50-year bonds. P.
318 U. S.
562.
Page 318 U. S. 526
(c) The Commission and the District Court had before them
sufficient data from which to determine the allocation of new
securities as between holders of the General Mortgage bonds and
holders of the 50-year bonds, and it cannot be said that an
incorrect rule of law was applied in concluding that the plan was
fair and equitable as between these two classes of bondholders. P.
318 U. S.
562.
(d) The determination by the Commission and the District Court
that, so far as the holders of the General Mortgage and 50-year
bonds were concerned, the requirements of the full priority rule
were complied with is supported by the evidence. P.
318 U. S.
563.
(e) The treatment of the General Mortgage bonds, as compared
with the Milwaukee & Northern First Mortgage bonds and
Consolidated Mortgage bonds, was fair and equitable. P.
318 U. S.
563.
9. In order to give "full compensatory treatment" to senior
claimants and to appropriate to the payment of their claims the
"full value" of the property, it is not essential that a dollar
valuation be made of each old security and of each new security. P.
318 U. S.
564.
(a) A requirement that dollar values be placed on what each
security holder surrenders and on what he receives would create an
illusion of certainty where none exists, and would place an
impracticable burden on the whole reorganization process. P.
318 U. S.
565.
(b) It is sufficient that each security holder, in the order of
his priority, receives from that which is available for the
satisfaction of his claim the equitable equivalent of the rights
surrendered. P.
318 U. S.
565.
(c) Whether, in a given case, senior creditors have been made
whole or received "full compensatory treatment" rests in the
informed judgment of the Commission and the District Court on
consideration of all relevant facts. P.
318 U. S.
566.
10. The provision in the plan of reorganization for an additions
and betterments fund was proper. P.
318 U. S.
566.
11. The contention of the General Mortgage bondholders that, by
reason of the after-acquired property clause in their mortgage,
they have a first lien on so-called "pieces of lines east," the
earnings from which were credited by the Commission to the 50-year
bonds -- a claim made in both courts below but not determined --
should be resolved by the District Court. P.
318 U. S.
568.
(a) The objection cannot be treated as
de minimis. Nor
can it be concluded that the objection has been waived, or that the
claim is frivolous. P.
318 U. S.
568.
(b) The determination of what assets are subject to the payment
of the respective claims has a direct bearing on the fairness of
the plan as between two groups of bondholders. P.
318 U. S.
569.
Page 318 U. S. 527
12. Since junior interests are participating in the plan, the
Commission and the District Court should determine what the General
Mortgage bonds should receive in addition to a face amount of
inferior securities equal to the face amount of their old ones, as
equitable compensation, qualitative or quantitative, for the loss
of their senior rights. P.
318 U. S. 569.
13. The claims of the 50-year bonds as well as those of the
General Mortgage bonds require that findings be made in respect of
the matters referred to in paragraphs 11 and 12,
supra,
and final approval of the plan as it affects both groups is
dependent thereon. P.
318 U. S.
571.
14. Whether earnings segregation, severance, or contributed
traffic studies should be made is for the Commission initially to
determine. This Court is unable to say that such studies are
indispensable in this case. P.
318 U. S.
572.
15. The Commission's conclusion that no allowance should be made
in the plan for interest on the Adjustment bonds subsequent to the
date of the filing of the petition was justified. P.
318 U. S.
573.
124 F.2d 754 reversed in part.
Certiorari, 316 U.S. 659, to review the reversal of an order of
the District Court,
36 F.
Supp. 193, approving a plan formulated in proceedings under
§ 77 of the Bankruptcy Act for reorganization of the Chicago,
Milwaukee, St. Paul & Pacific Railroad Company.
Page 318 U. S. 529
MR. JUSTICE DOUGLAS delivered the opinion of the Court.
These cases are companion cases to
Ecker v. Western Pacific
R. Corp., ante, p.
318 U. S. 448, and
are here on writs of certiorari to the Circuit Court of Appeals for
the Seventh Circuit. They involve numerous questions relating to a
plan of reorganization for the Chicago, Milwaukee, St. Paul &
Pacific Railroad Co., formulated in proceedings under § 77 of
the Bankruptcy Act. 49 Stat. 911, 11 U.S.C. § 205. The plan
was approved by the Interstate Commerce Commission (239 I.C.C. 485,
240 I.C.C. 257) and certified to the District Court. After a
hearing and the taking of additional evidence, the District Court
approved the plan with certain minor modifications not material
here.
36 F. Supp.
193. The Circuit Court of Appeals reversed the order of the
District Court (124 F.2d 754) on the ground that the Commission did
not make the findings required by
Consolidated Rock Products
Co. v. DuBois, 312 U. S. 510.
The debtor filed its petition under § 77 in 1935. Hearings
on proposed plans were closed in 1938. The plan of reorganization
here in issue was approved by the Commission in 1940. It reduced
the capitalization and the fixed charges, eliminated the old stock,
and substituted system mortgages for so-called divisional
mortgages. It effective date was January 1, 1939. The total debt
(including interest accrued to December 31, 1938) was approximately
$627,000,000. In addition the debtor had $119,307,300 of preferred
stock and 1,174,060 shares of no-par value common stock
outstanding. The claims against the debtor which were dealt with by
the plan [
Footnote 1] are as
follows: the Reconstruction
Page 318 U. S. 530
Finance Corporation has a claim for loans totalling about
$12,000,000, secured as hereinafter described. There are General
Mortgage bonds outstanding in the hands of the public in the
principal amount of $138,788,000, with accrued and unpaid interest
of over $17,500,000. These bonds, bearing interest at various rates
from 3 1/2 to 4 3/4 percent, have a first lien generally on the
debtor's lines east of the Missouri River. In addition to the
amount of these bonds publicly held, $11,212,000 principal amount
are held by the Reconstruction Finance Corporation as security for
its loans. There are $8,923,000 First and Refunding bonds
outstanding, all of which are held by the Reconstruction Finance
Corporation as security for its loans and claims. These bonds have
a first lien generally on the lines west of the Missouri and a
second lien on the lines east. There are $106,395,096 principal
amount of 50-year bonds outstanding with accrued and unpaid
interest of $20,835,706. These bonds, subject only to the First and
Refunding bonds, have a prior lien on the lines west of the
Missouri, and they have a lien subordinate to the General Mortgage
and the First and Refunding bonds on the lines east. They carry
interest at the rate of 5%. There are also 5% Convertible
Adjustment bonds outstanding in a principal amount of $182,873,693,
with accrued and unpaid interest of $79,550,055. These bonds have
the most junior lien on both the lines west and east of the
Missouri River. In addition to those four main mortgages, the
debtor had assumed liability on the mortgage indebtedness of other
companies which it or its predecessor had either purchased or
leased. Among these was the Milwaukee & Northern Railroad Co.,
which had two bond issues: the First Mortgage 4 1/2s in the
principal amount outstanding of $2,117,000 and accrued and unpaid
interest of $103,204, which were secured by a first lien on 110
miles of line south of Green Bay, Wisconsin, and Consolidated
Mortgage 4 1/2s in the principal amount outstanding of $5,072,000
and accrued and unpaid interest of $247,260,
Page 318 U. S. 531
which were secured by a first lien on 286 miles of line north of
Green Bay and by a second lien on the line south of that place.
There is also in this group a $3,000,000 amount outstanding of
First Mortgage 5s of Chicago, Milwaukee & Gary Ry. Co., with
accrued and unpaid interest of $562,500. They were secured by a
first lien on some 80 miles of portions of track around the Chicago
district.
In addition, there is $301,000 principal amount of Bellingham
Bay & British Columbia Railroad Co. First Mortgage bonds, owned
by the debtor and pledged with the Reconstruction Finance
Corporation as security for its loans. Furthermore, there are four
bond issues of the Chicago, Terre Haute & Southeastern Ry. Co.
and its subsidiaries. These are in the principal amount outstanding
of $21,929,000, are secured by liens on lines and trackage rights
in Indiana and Illinois, and carry either 4% or 5% interest. The
debtor operates the lines of the Terre Haute under a 999-year lease
executed in 1921 under which the lessee agreed to maintain and
replace equipment, pay interest on and the principal of the
lessor's bonds, and to pay specified annual expenses. [
Footnote 2] The annual rental consists
of interest on the Terre Haute bonds, taxes, and the expense of
maintaining the corporate existence of the lessor.
The plan approved by the Commission provides for two system
mortgages. One is a new First Mortgage [
Footnote 3] which
Page 318 U. S. 532
will be a first lien on all properties of the debtor, subject
only to the lien of equipment obligations, and under which
$58,923,171 principal amount of new First Mortgage 4% bonds will be
issued in the reorganization. The second is a new General Mortgage
which will be a lien on the properties of the debtor subject to the
lien of the First Mortgage, and under which two series of bonds
bearing 4 1/2% interest contingent on earnings will be issued.
Series A bonds will be issued in the principal amount of
$57,256,669 and Series B bonds, in the principal amount of
$51,422,111. The interest on both Series A and Series B bonds is
cumulative to the maximum amount at any one time of 13 1/2%, but
the interest on Series A bonds has priority to the interest on the
Series B. [
Footnote 4] The plan
provides for the issuance of $111,347,846 of 5% preferred stock and
2,131,475 1/4 shares of no-par value common stock. [
Footnote 5] As respects the Terre Haute
properties, the plan
Page 318 U. S. 533
provides for the execution of a new lease between the Terre
Haute and the new company on condition that substantially all of
the Terre Haute bondholders agree to a modification of their bonds
and mortgages. The modifications include an extension of the
maturity of the bonds, a waiver of equipment vacancies under the
existing mortgages, a provision for the abandonment of lines, and
reduction of the interest on the bonds so that there is fixed
interest of 2.75% and contingent interest of 1.5%, the payment of
the latter being subject to the same limitations as the interest on
the Series A General Mortgage bonds. In case substantially all of
the Terre Haute bondholders agree to the modifications, a new lease
will be made under which the new company will assume the payment of
the principal of, and the interest on, the modified bonds and the
corporate expenses of the Terre Haute. If substantially all of the
Terre Haute bondholders do not agree to the modifications, the
Terre Haute lease will be rejected as of the date when the court
determines that the modifications have not been approved. In case
of such disaffirmance of the lease, the plan reserves, as we
discuss hereafter, 15,837 shares of new common stock for
certain
Page 318 U. S. 534
unsecured claims and the claims which would then arise under the
lease. The plan also calls for the establishment of an additions
and betterments fund to which $2,500,000 annually would be paid.
This annual charge is placed ahead of contingent interest. It is
further provided that the board of directors may set aside certain
additional amounts for that fund after the payment of full interest
on the Series A General Mortgage bonds and the modified Terre Haute
bonds. The plan thus authorizes a capitalization of $548,533,321
for the new company, [
Footnote
6] the percentage of debt to total capitalization being 40.8.
The annual charges ahead of dividends, including fixed and
contingent interest, the mandatory payment to the additions and
betterments fund, and the sinking fund, are approximately
$12,532,528. When dividends on the new preferred stock are
included, the annual charges ahead of dividends on the common stock
are about $18,099,920.
The Commission allocated new First Mortgage bonds to the
Reconstruction Finance Corporation for 100% of its claim, after
reducing the amount of the claim by certain cash credits. We have
already noted the offer which it made to the Terre Haute
bondholders. The Milwaukee & Northern First Mortgage bonds were
to receive 70% of their claims in First Mortgage bonds and 30% in
Series A General Mortgage bonds. The Milwaukee & Northern
Consolidated Mortgage bonds were to be offered 25% of their claims
in First Mortgage bonds, 35% in
Page 318 U. S. 535
Series A and 20% in Series B General Mortgage bonds, and 20% in
preferred stock. The same participation was afforded holders of the
old General Mortgage bonds. The old 50-year bonds were to receive
15% of their claims in Series B General Mortgage bonds, 60% in
preferred stock, and 25% in common stock. The Gary First Mortgage
bonds were to receive 75% of the amount of their claims in new
preferred stock and 25% in new common. The Convertible Adjustment
bonds were allotted 1,749,492 shares of common stock for their
claim upon the mortgaged assets of the debtor. The Commission noted
that the allotment of stock, taken at $100 a share, would fail to
satisfy the claim [
Footnote 7]
of those bondholders by $55,471,653. For that portion of their
claim, the bondholders were permitted to participate with other
unsecured creditors in the debtor's free assets. 55,000 shares of
common stock were set aside as representing "a fair proportion of
the equity of the new company for the unmortgaged assets of the
debtor." Of these 55,000 shares, the Convertible Adjustment
bondholders were allotted 39,163 shares. Unsecured creditors with
claims amounting to $445,162, and the Terre Haute, in case of
rejection of the lease, were allotted the balance -- or 15,837
shares. The Commission found that "the equity of the holders of the
debtor's preferred stock and its common stock has no value," and
that therefore they were not entitled to participation in the plan
under the rule of
Case v. Los Angeles Lumber Products Co.,
308 U. S. 106.
See § 77(e).
Page 318 U. S. 536
We need not stop to discuss the respective functions of the
Commission and the District Court in respect to plans of
reorganization under § 77. That matter has been fully explored
in the
Western Pacific case,
ante, p.
318 U. S. 448.
Against the background of the conclusions there reached, we come to
the various objections to the plan, pressed on the courts below and
renewed here.
Exclusion of the Stockholders. The objections of the
debtor and the preferred stockholders are, in the main, that the
findings of the Commission are inadequate; that it did not employ
proper criteria in determining the capitalization of the new
company and in concluding that there was no equity for the
stockholders, and that, however proper the findings of the
Commission on this phase of the case may have been when made, the
earnings in 1940, 1941, and 1942 demonstrate that the earning power
of the road exceeds that which the Commission found.
In determining the permissible capitalization of the new company
and the nature of its capital structure, the Commission made an
extensive review of the properties, business, and earnings of the
debtor. It reviewed freight and total revenues, passenger revenues
and their trend, operating revenues and expenses, and maintenance
and efficiency of operation for various periods ending in 1938. It
gave consideration to estimated future taxes, emergency freight
charges, and certain wage factors. It reviewed the amount of income
available for payment of interest in each of the years from 1921 to
1938. It considered the original cost of the properties, the cost
of reproduction new, the cost of reproduction less depreciation,
and the value for ratemaking purposes -- each of which was
substantially in excess of the capitalization which it authorized.
It stated that its obligation was "to devise a plan that will serve
as a basis for the company's financial structure for the indefinite
future." It concluded that a
Page 318 U. S. 537
capitalization not exceeding $548,533,321 was "as high as can be
reasonably adopted" after consideration was given to "the past and
prospective earnings of the debtor and all other relevant facts."
It stated that the fixed interest plus the mandatory payment to the
additions and betterments fund should be kept "within the coverage
of past average earnings;" that those totals provided in the plan
would be covered 1.16 times by the average earnings from 1931 to
1935 and 1.18 times for the period from 1932 to 1936, though they
would not have been covered in 1932, 1935, and 1938. It noted that,
while the year 1939 showed an improvement in earning power, it
would regard any increase in fixed charges "as hazardous." It said
that a
"reasonable margin above fixed charges operates not only to the
advantage of the company in times of depressed earnings, but also
to the benefit of the holders of contingent interest bonds and to
the marketability of all classes of the securities."
Accordingly, it found that the limitation of fixed interest to
$4,269,654 a year was "reasonable and proper" having regard to "the
clear demands of a conservative policy in the present
reorganization and the claims and rights of the first-lien
bondholders," and that there would be "adequate coverage" of the
amount of fixed charges provided in the plan "by the probable
earnings available for the payment thereof." Furthermore, it stated
that the total debt should
"bear a proper relation to total capitalization, and such as to
make the payment of contingent interest a probability and of
dividends a reasonable prospect, at least on the preferred
stock."
It concluded that, in view of the charges ahead of the preferred
stock and the earnings record, it would be "entirely unsound" to
increase the amount of the contingent interest debt. As we have
noted, the Commission found that the present preferred and common
stock have "no value." And the District
Page 318 U. S. 538
Court affirmed that finding, as was necessary if the stock were
to be excluded from participation in the plan. [
Footnote 8] As a basis for that finding, the
Commission noted that, although the original cost and reproduction
cost was much higher than the permissible capitalization which it
authorized, the earning power of the system did not justify
inclusion of the old stock. It said that no dividends had been paid
on the stock since 1917, that estimated future "normal earnings"
were $15,894,000 a year, and that, when
"these amounts are compared with the annual interest charges on
the principal of the present debt, $23,739,000 a year, it is
evident that the earning power of the system since the period of
peak earnings (1928-1929) is entirely inadequate to cover the
principal of the debt, disregarding more than $118,000,000 of
unpaid interest."
It added that there was "no evidence whatever" to indicate that
a recovery of earning power of the peak periods was "reasonably
probable," but that it was "a remote possibility only, which may
not be utilized to support a finding," that the stock has "an
equity." It also found that,
"under all pertinent facts and considerations, the probabilities
of the property's earning sufficient to pay dividends on any
securities that could properly be represented by warrants issued
under the plan are too remote to justify provision in the plan for
such warrants,"
even though the warrants provided for their exercise on payment
of cash.
Sec. 77(d) requires the Commission, when it renders a report on
a plan of reorganization, to "state fully the reasons for its
conclusions." The summary which we have made on this phase of the
case plainly shows that the
Page 318 U. S. 539
Commission did exactly that. Its finding that the stock had no
value was definite and explicit. To require it to go further and
formalize in findings the numerous data on which it relied in the
exercise of its expert informed judgment would be to alter the
statutory scheme. Apart from the necessity of making a finding for
the exclusion of stock or any class of creditors, as provided in
§ 77(e), the mandate which Congress gave the Commission by
§ 77(d) is merely to approve a plan "that will, in its
opinion, meet with the requirements of subsections (b) and (e) of
this section, and will be compatible with the public interest."
Reasons which underlie the expert opinion which the Commission
expresses on a plan of reorganization under § 77 need not be
marshaled and labeled as findings in order to make intelligible the
Commission's conclusion or ultimate finding or to make possible the
performance on the part of the courts of the functions delegated to
them. Here, as in other situations (
Colorado v. United
States, 271 U. S. 153,
271 U. S.
166-169;
United States v. Louisiana,
290 U. S. 70,
290 U. S. 76-77;
Florida v. United States, 292 U. S.
1,
292 U. S. 8-9), it
is the conclusion or ultimate finding of the Commission, together
with its reasons and supporting data, which are essential. Congress
has required no more. Nor was it necessary for the Commission to
make a precise finding as to the value of the road in order to
eliminate the old stock from the plan. A finding as to the precise
extent of the deficiency is not material or germane to the finding
of "no value" prescribed by § 77(e).
But it is urged that the Commission employed the incorrect
criteria for determining the permissible capitalization of the new
company. In this connection, reliance is placed on § 77(e),
which provides in part that the
"value of any property used in railroad operation shall be
determined on a basis which will give due consideration to the
earning power of the property, past, present, and prospective,
Page 318 U. S. 540
and all other relevant facts. In determining such value, only
such effect shall be given to the present cost of reproduction new
and less depreciation and original cost of the property, and the
actual investment therein, as may be required under the law of the
land, in light of its earning power and all other relevant
facts."
It is argued that, under this provision, earning power is not
the primary criterion of value, and that the Commission did not
give proper weight to original cost, reproduction cost new, or the
valuation for ratemaking purposes. We disagree. We recently stated
in
Consolidated Rock Products Co. v. DuBois, supra, in
connection with a reorganization of an industrial company, that
the
"criterion of earning capacity is the essential one if the
enterprise is to be freed from the heavy hand of past errors,
miscalculations, or disaster, and if the allocation of securities
among the various claimants is to be fair and equitable."
P.
312 U. S. 526.
That is equally applicable to a railroad reorganization. Mr.
Justice Brandeis once stated that "value is a word of many
meanings."
See Southwestern Bell Telephone Co. v. Public
Service Commission, 262 U. S. 276,
262 U. S. 310,
concurring opinion. It gathers its meaning in a particular
situation from the purpose for which a valuation is being made.
Thus, the question in a valuation for ratemaking is how much a
utility will be allowed to earn. The basic question in a valuation
for reorganization purposes is how much the enterprise in all
probability can earn. Earning power was the primary test in former
railroad reorganizations under equity receivership proceedings.
Temmer v. Denver Tramway Co., 18 F.2d 226, 229;
New
York Trust Co. v. Continental & Commercial Trust & Sav.
Bank, 26 F.2d 872, 874. The reasons why it is the appropriate
test are apparent. A basic requirement of any reorganization is the
determination of a capitalization which makes it possible not only
to respect the priorities of the various classes of claimants, but
also to give the new company a reasonable prospect for survival.
See
Page 318 U. S. 541
Commissioner Eastman dissenting, Chicago, M. & St. P.
Reorganization, 131 I.C.C. 673, 705. Only "meticulous regard for
earning capacity" (
Consolidated Rock Products Co. v. DuBois,
supra, p.
312 U. S. 525)
can afford the old security holders protection against a dilution
of their priorities, and can give the new company some safeguards
against the scourge of overcapitalization. Disregard of that method
of valuation can only bring, as stated by Judge Evans for the court
below, "a harvest of barren regrets." 124 F.2d p. 765. Certainly
there is no constitutional reason why earning power may not be
utilized as the criterion for determining value for reorganization
purposes. And it is our view that Congress, when it passed §
77, made earning power the primary criterion. The limited extent to
which § 77(e) provides that reproduction cost, original cost,
and actual investment may be considered indicates that (apart from
doubts concerning constitutional power to disregard them) such
other valuations were not deemed relevant under § 77 any more
than under § 77B "except as they may indirectly bear on
earning capacity."
Consolidated Rock Products Co. v. DuBois,
supra, p.
312 U. S. 526.
In this case, the Commission followed the statute. While it made
earning power the primary criterion, it did not disregard the other
valuations. It considered them and concluded, in substance, that
they afforded no reasonable basis for believing that the probable
earning power of the road was greater than what the Commission had
found it to be by the use of other standards. The Commission need
not do more.
The finding of the Commission, affirmed by the District Court
under § 77(e), that the stock had "no value" is supported by
evidence. The issue involved in such a determination is whether
there is a reasonable probability that the earning power of the
road will be sufficient to pay prior claims of interest and
principal and leave some surplus for the service of the stock. If
it is established that there is no reasonable probability of such
earning power,
Page 318 U. S. 542
then the inclusion of the stock would violate the full priority
rule of
Northern Pacific Ry. Co. v. Boyd, 228 U.
S. 482 -- a rule of priority incorporated in §
77(e)(1), as in § 77B and Ch. X (
Case v. Los Angeles
Lumber Products Co., supra; Marine Harbor Properties, Inc. v.
Manufacturer's Trust Co., 317 U. S. 78)
through the phrase "fair and equitable." A valuation for
reorganization purposes based on earning power requires, of course,
an appraisal of many factors which cannot be reduced to a fixed
formula. It entails a prediction of future events. Hence, "an
estimate, as distinguished from mathematical certitude, is all that
can be made."
Consolidated Rock Products Co. v. DuBois,
supra, p.
312 U. S. 526.
But, recognizing the possible margin of error in any such
prediction, we cannot say that the expert judgment of the
Commission was erroneous when made, or that the District Court was
not justified in affirming the finding of "no value."
The question of the increase in earnings since the Commission
approved the plan raises, of course, different issues. As we have
indicated in the
Western Pacific case, the power of the
District Court to receive additional evidence may aid it in
determining whether changed circumstances require that the plan be
referred back to the Commission for reconsideration. The hearings
before the Commission were closed in 1938, and its report rendered
in 1940. The hearings before the District Court were held in
September, 1940. It had before it the trustees' annual reports for
1937, 1938, and 1939, and a statement of operating revenues and
income available for fixed charges through the first half of 1940.
Similar figures were before the Circuit Court of Appeals for most
of 1941. The debtor and the preferred stockholders contend, on the
basis of those figures, that the Commission's conclusion that there
is no evidence that a "recovery of the earning power of 1928-29 is
reasonably probable" has been disproved by subsequent events. They
argue that, while the net earnings for 1928,
Page 318 U. S. 543
1929, and 1930 were $30,671,000, $29,105,000, and $17,938,000,
respectively, those for 1940 were $14,867,000, and, for 1941,
$28,939,000. And they point out that the net for 1940 was almost as
great as, and the net for 1941 was much in excess of, the estimated
$15,894,000 of net earnings for the future normal year to which the
Commission referred. They also point to the fact that, while that
estimate indicated that 12 1/2% of gross would be left for fixed
charges, that percentage for 1940 was 13%, and, for 1941,
20.6%.
We agree with the Circuit Court of Appeals that no sufficient
showing of changed circumstances has been made which requires the
District Court to return the plan to the Commission for
reconsideration. Late in 1939, the Commission had occasion to
say,
"We know from past experience that the upswing in business which
war brings is temporary, and likely to be followed by an aftermath
in which conditions may be worse than before."
53d Annual Report, p. 5. The record during the last World War is
illuminating. It shows that the Milwaukee's net operating income
rose to almost $31,000,000 in 1916, exceeded $21,500,000 in 1917,
dropped to about $4,000,000 in 1918 and to about $2,000,000 in
1919, and showed a deficit of over $14,000,000 in 1920.
See Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul Reorganization, 131
I.C.C. 673, 715. As we have noted, the Commission conceived as its
responsibility the devising of a plan which would serve "as a basis
for the company's financial structure for the indefinite future."
We cannot assume that the figures of war earnings could serve as a
reliable criterion for that "indefinite future." As some of the
bondholders point out, the bulge of war earnings
per se is
unreliable for use as a norm unless history is to be ignored, and
numerous other considerations, present here as in former periods,
make them suspect as a standard for any reasonably likely future
normal year. Among these are the great increase in taxes and in
certain costs of
Page 318 U. S. 544
operation and the decrease in water and truck competition. In
addition to the increase in tax rates, of which we cannot be
unmindful, there is the likely increase of the total tax burden
occasioned by the conversion of debt into stock. It is estimated by
certain bondholders that, by reason of this fact, a full dividend
could not be paid on the new preferred stock, and no dividend could
be paid on the new common stock even on the basis of earnings as
great as those for 1941. In view of these considerations, we cannot
say that the junior interests have carried the burden which they
properly have of showing that subsequent events make necessary a
rejection of the Commission's plan.
But it is suggested that the vice of the Commission's plan is
the formulation of a capital structure which as a result of
conversion of debt into stock so increases the impact of mounting
taxes on the company as to deprive junior interests of net earnings
which would be available for distribution to them if the ratio of
debt to stock were increased. Such a conversion of debt into stock
is said to be entirely unnecessary to the formulation of a sound
plan, and results in unfairness to junior interests. The difficulty
with that argument is that Congress has entrusted the Commission,
not the courts, with the responsibility of formulating a plan of
reorganization which "will be compatible with the public interest."
§ 77(d). The nature of the capital structure, as well as the
amount of the capitalization, is a component of "the public
interest." For the
"preservation of the transportation system and the stability of
its credit, essential to its preservation, depend not alone upon
the ability of individual carriers to meet their obligations, but
upon the ability of all to attract the investment of funds in their
securities."
See United States v. Chicago, M., St.P. & P. R.
Co., 282 U. S. 311,
282 U. S. 337
(dissenting opinion). Furthermore, Congress
Page 318 U. S. 545
has provided in § 77(b)(4) that the fixed charges
(including fixed interest on funded debt) provided in the plan
shall be
"in such an amount that, after due consideration of the probable
prospective earnings of the property in light of its earnings
experience and all other relevant facts, there shall be adequate
coverage of such fixed charges by the probable earnings available
for the payment thereof."
The ratio of debt to stock, the amount of fixed as distinguished
from contingent interest, the kind of capital structure which a
particular company needs to survive the vicissitudes of the
business cycle -- all these have been reserved by Congress for the
expert judgment and opinion of the Commission, which the courts
must respect. Nor can we conclude that there is anything in §
77 which indicates that it may be used merely as a moratorium.
Elimination of delay in railroad receivership and foreclosure
proceedings was one of the purposes of the enactment of § 77.
Continental Bank v. Chicago, R.I. & P. Ry. Co.,
294 U. S. 648,
294 U. S. 685.
Sec. 77(g), giving the District Court power to dismiss the
proceedings for "undue delay in a reasonably expeditious
reorganization," was inserted in recognition of "the necessity of
prompt action." (H.Rep. No.1283, 74th Cong., 1st Sess., p. 3.) We
cannot conclude that, in this proceeding, which already has been
pending seven years and which was before the Commission for over
four years, the interests of junior claimants have been sacrificed
for speed. The House Judiciary Committee only recently stated
[
Footnote 9] that,
"where a railroad company is so burdened with a heavy capital
structure that it is in need of thoroughgoing reorganization, it is
not in the public interest, nor even, except temporarily, in the
interest of the company itself, that such a reorganization
Page 318 U. S. 546
be postponed."
H.Rep. No. 2177, 77th Cong., 2d Sess., p. 6. No case has been
made out for further delay here.
Finally, it is argued on behalf of some of the stockholders that
the effective date of a plan promulgated under § 77 must be
the date of the filing of the petition, the theory being that
§ 77 does not permit the accrual of interest after that date.
In
Consolidated Rock Products Co. v. DuBois, we held that,
under § 77B, interest on secured claims accrued to the
effective date of the plan was entitled to the same priority as the
principal.
See 312 U.S. p.
312 U. S. 514,
note 4, p.
312 U. S. 527,
and cases cited. The definition of the terms "creditors" and
"claims" was substantially the same under § 77B(b) as it is
under § 77. We see no reason why the same result should not
obtain here.
Treatment of the Terre Haute Bonds. The treatment
accorded these bonds is attacked by the Terre Haute and
representatives of its bondholders, as well as by certain groups of
Milwaukee bondholders. The Terre Haute interests contend, in the
first place, that the plan contains no findings necessary for
determining how the sacrifices required of these bondholders shall
be distributed
inter sese. It is pointed out that the
modifications proposed by the Commission for these four classes of
bondholders are to be made regardless of the lien, security,
interest, or maturity of each and the earning power of the
respective underlying properties. Hence, it is argued that this
phase of the plan is not fair and equitable, since it does not even
attempt to preserve the respective priorities of these bond issues.
The short answer to that objection is that the Terre Haute
properties have not been treated by the Commission or the District
Court as a part of the properties of the debtor for reorganization
purposes. Nor has any question been raised or argued here as to the
power of the Commission or the District Court so to treat them. The
Commission and the District Court considered the
Page 318 U. S. 547
problem solely as one of rejection or affirmance of a lease. The
Terre Haute bondholders were, in effect, given the option to take
the Terre Haute lines back or to agree to a reduced rental. If the
Commission had authority to determine the question of rejection in
the manner indicated, and if it complied with the legal
requirements for the exercise of that authority, the modifications
which it proposed and which the District Court approved are valid.
We think they are.
In 1928, the Commission reviewed the history of the acquisition
of this property. 131 I.C.C. 653-660. It then said that the Terre
Haute was
"a distress property controlled by a committee of Chicago
bankers who wanted to liquidate and who had written the securities
off the books of their banks as losses"
(pp. 657-658); that "the terms upon which the property was
acquired were improvident, and, to that extent, adversely affected
the financial condition of the St. Paul" (p. 657), and that "the
total financial burden as of June 30, 1925, which had fallen upon
the income of the St. Paul as a result of this lease was nearly
$11,000,000." P. 656. In its present report, the Commission, after
reviewing certain earnings data, concluded that
"the earning power of the Terre Haute is sufficient to cover all
interest requirements, but this earning power is largely dependent
on a continuation of the Milwaukee's coal traffic, together with
the commercial coal traffic that accompanies it, and would be
greatly diminished if such traffic ceased."
And it added, "The present arrangement is distinctly to the
advantage of the Terre Haute." The Commission concluded, however,
that a rejection of the lease would be to the "disadvantage" of
both companies, and that some means should be provided "for
retaining the Terre Haute lines as a part of the system without
unduly jeopardizing a successful reorganization of the Milwaukee."
The Commission, on the other hand, felt that an affirmance would be
inequitable from
Page 318 U. S. 548
the point of view of the Milwaukee bondholders. The present
interest charges on the Terre Haute are about $1,023,000 a year. If
those were assumed by the new company and fixed interest charges
were kept at about $4,270,000 a year, as provided in the plan, the
amount of new first mortgage bonds which could be issued would have
to be reduced by $10,500,000. Such a reduction, said the
Commission, would mean a "substantial sacrifice" by Milwaukee
bondholders which would be "entirely inequitable." In that
connection, it also noted that, if the $21,929,000 of Terre Haute
bonds were assumed by the new company, they would constitute about
27% of the total amount of new fixed interest debt. This would mean
that the allotment of fixed interest bonds to the General Mortgage
bondholders
"could not be more than double the amount of the existing Terre
Haute bonds, whereas the mileage represented by the general
mortgage is about 18 times that of the Terre Haute, and, on the
basis of the elements of value . . . for the lines covered by the
general mortgage, about 17 times that of the Terre Haute
properties."
Those considerations of fairness constituted the primary reason
which led the Commission to reject such an "inequitable" proposal.
But there were other reasons too. The early maturities on the Terre
Haute bonds, the substantial default of the debtor under its
covenant in the lease to replace equipment, restrictions on the
abandonment of property (all of which were covered by the proposed
modifications) also played a part in the Commission's conclusion
that the lease should not be assumed by the new company. The
Commission said that its proposed modifications were
"the best that we could devise in the public interest and as
affording fair and equitable treatment to both the bondholders of
the Terre Haute and those of the debtor."
The District Court concurred with the Commission for
substantially the same reasons. The Circuit Court of Appeals said
it could not
Page 318 U. S. 549
approve that action without more specific findings. Just what
findings it thought necessary, we do not know. The Terre Haute
interests suggest that the deficiency was in the lack of any
finding that the lease was burdensome. And they add that only
leases found to be burdensome may be rejected, and that the
evidence would not support any such finding, if made.
The argument of the Terre Haute interests that only burdensome
leases may be rejected is based on certain statements of ours that
burdensome leases may be rejected (
Palmer v. Webster &
Atlas National Bank, 312 U. S. 156,
312 U. S. 163;
Philadelphia Co. v. Dipple, 312 U.
S. 168,
312 U. S. 174)
and on cases like
American Brake Shoe & Foundry Co. v. New
York Rys. Co., 278 F. 842, 844, which hold that an equity
receiver may not reject a lease when it does not appear that, "in
carrying out its affirmative obligations, the estate suffers an
actual loss, as distinguished from the obtaining of a more
profitable rental." And an extended analysis of the operations
under the lease is made to show that the lease is a valuable asset
of the estate, and that the debtor received a net financial benefit
from it in recent years. We do not need to determine, however, what
is the scope of the authority to reject leases under § 77,
either by the trustees or pursuant to a plan of reorganization. For
here, we think that the proposed modifications of the lease
contained in the plan were wholly justified. The Terre Haute
bondholders are "creditors" of the debtor, as defined in §
77(b), for they are holders of "a claim under . . . an unexpired
lease." Sec. 77(b)(5) provides not only that the plan "may" contain
provisions rejecting unexpired leases, but also that it "may
include any other appropriate provisions not inconsistent with this
section." It is also stated in subsection (b)(1) that a plan
"shall include provisions modifying or altering the rights of
creditors generally, or of any class of them, secured or unsecured,
either through
Page 318 U. S. 550
the issuance of new securities of any character or
otherwise."
In addition, § 77(b)(4), provides that the plan "shall
provide for fixed charges," including "rent for leased railroads"
in such an amount "that . . . there shall be adequate coverage of
such fixed charges by the probable earnings available for the
payment thereof." And § 77(e) requires the District Court to
be satisfied, before approving the plan, that it is "fair and
equitable," and "does not discriminate unfairly in favor of any
class of creditors." These provisions, taken together, mean to us
that the Commission (and the District Court) have the authority in
approving a plan to condition acceptance of a lease on terms which
are necessary or appropriate to keep the fixed charges within
proper limits or to do equity between claims which arise under the
lease and the other claims against the debtor. Like the question
whether a lease is burdensome (
see Meck & Masten,
Railroad Leases and Reorganization, 49 Yale L.Journ. 626, 649), one
phase of that problem is whether the lease is worth its annual
charge. A disregard in that determination of the sacrifices which
other creditors are making would be wholly incompatible with the
standards which § 77 has prescribed for reorganization plans.
At the same time, if the Commission deems it desirable to keep the
leased line in the system, it must necessarily have rather broad
discretion in providing modifications of the lease where, as here,
the lessor is not being reorganized along with the debtor. For,
under that assumption, the modification must be sufficiently
attractive to insure acceptance by the lessor or its creditors.
Thus, the question whether a lease should be rejected, and, if not,
on what terms it should be assumed, is one of business judgment.
See Mercantile Trust Co. v. Farmers' Loan & Trust Co.,
81 F. 254, 259;
Park v. New York, L.E. & W. R. Co., 57
F. 799, 802. Certainly there was ample evidence warranting the
conclusion of the Commission and the District Court that affirmance
of the
Page 318 U. S. 551
lease would be unjust from the viewpoint of other creditors. And
we could not say that the Commission, exercising its expert
judgment, and the District Court, affirming that judgment, were too
generous in the offer which is made to the Terre Haute bondholders,
or that they should have rejected the lease. We are not warranted
in upsetting those determinations on review except on a clear
showing that the limits of discretion have been exceeded. We cannot
say that here.
Finally, the Terre Haute interests object to the provisions of
the plan which state that the Terre Haute lease shall be rejected
as of the date the District Court determines that the Terre Haute
bondholders have not consented to the making of a new lease at a
reduced rental. They contend that the lessor's claim for damages
for breach of the lease must be measured as of the date on which
the proceeding was instituted. They further contend that, in the
event of rejection of a lease, operation of the leased property
subsequent to the commencement of the proceeding must be for the
account of the lessor -- the latter being liable for all losses and
being entitled to any net earnings. On the first point, they rely
on § 77(b), which provides that, in case an unexpired lease is
rejected,
"any person injured by such nonadoption or rejection shall, for
all purposes of this section, be deemed to be a creditor of the
debtor to the extent of the actual damage or injury determined in
accordance with principles obtaining in equity proceedings."
It is argued that, since this Court held that that provision
places leases "upon the same basis as executory contracts"
(
Connecticut Ry. Co. v. Palmer, 305 U.
S. 493,
305 U. S. 502)
the rule governing breaches of an executory contract
(
Pennsylvania Steel Co. v. New York City Ry. Co., 198 F.
721, 744;
Samuels v. E. F. Drew & Co., 292 F. 734,
739) must be applied here. This Court stated in the
Palmer
case, however, that the provision in § 77(b) which allows the
lessor to prove his "actual damage
Page 318 U. S. 552
or injury determined in accordance with principles obtaining in
equity proceedings" does not "refer to any rule for the measure of
damages in equity receiverships." 305 U.S. p.
305 U. S. 503.
Furthermore, as we have noted, § 77(b) provides not only that
a plan may reject unexpired leases, but also that it "may include
any other appropriate provisions not inconsistent with this
section." And § 77(b)(1), says that a plan "shall include
provisions modifying or altering the rights of creditors
generally." For the reasons which we have already stated, these
provisions give the Commission and the District Court power to
adjust the claims under the lease so as to do equity between the
various classes of creditors. Deferment of the date as of which the
lease shall be rejected is an appropriate exercise of that power.
During the § 77 proceedings, the stipulated annual rental
under the lease has been paid. In view of all the facts, no element
of injustice to the lessor is apparent by reason of the deferment
of the date as of which its damages, if any, will be measured.
For similar reasons, we conclude that, in event of rejection of
the lease, operation subsequent to the commencement of the
proceeding and prior to the rejection need not be for the account
of the lessor, so as to entitle it to any net earnings. As we have
noted, the stipulated annual rental has been paid during the §
77 proceedings. The court order authorizing the payment of interest
(which is part of the rental) stated that it should not be
construed "to preclude or conclude the Debtor in respect of its
right of election to disaffirm or discontinue" the lease. And
§ 77(b) provides that the adoption of an unexpired lease by
the trustees "shall not preclude a rejection" of it in a plan of
reorganization. Furthermore, § 77(c)(6) provides:
"If a lease of a line of railroad is rejected, and if the
lessee, with the approval of the judge, shall elect no longer to
operate the leased line, it shall be the duty of the lessor,
Page 318 U. S. 553
at the end of a period to be fixed by the judge, to begin the
operation of such line unless the judge, upon the petition of the
lessor, shall decree after hearing that it would be impracticable
and contrary to the public interest for the lessor to operate the
said line, in which event it shall be the duty of the lessee to
continue operation on or for the account of the lessor until the
abandonment of such line is authorized by the Commission in
accordance with the provisions of section 1 of the Interstate
Commerce Act as amended."
Sec. 77(c)(6) contains no express provision that, on rejection
of a lease, the operation of the property by the lessee shall be
for the account of the lessor for the period prior to the
rejection. But the Terre Haute interests seek to read into §
77 the doctrine of relation back, so that, in case of a rejection
of the lease, the lessee's operation during the entire period of
bankruptcy is for the account of the lessor, the latter being
responsible for all losses and entitled to all the net earnings.
That was the general rule governing railroad leases in equity
receivership proceedings (
see Meck, Railroad Leases and
Reorganization, 49 Yale L.Journ. 1401, 1405-1407), at least where
the receivers of the lessee made no payments of rent during the
term of their possession.
Pennsylvania Steel Co. v. New York
City Ry. Co., supra, 730-732;
American Brake Shoe &
Foundry Co. v. New York Rys. Co., 282 F. 523.
And see
United States Trust Co. v. Wabash Western Ry. Co.,
150 U. S. 287. And
there is some authority for the view that the same result follows
even though unconditional payments of rent have been made in the
interim, the theory being that the receiver must "be held to have
occupied from the beginning the same position that he ultimately
assumes."
Westinghouse Electric & Mfg. Co. v. Brooklyn
Rapid Transit Co., 6 F.2d 547, 549.
But see Second Avenue
R. Co. v. Robinson, 225 F. 734.
Cf. Sunflower Oil Co. v.
Wilson, 142 U. S. 313. But
the rule was
Page 318 U. S. 554
not a hard and fast one. It permitted exceptions based on
equitable considerations.
Westinghouse Electric & Mfg. Co.
v. Brooklyn Rapid Transit Co., supra, p. 551. So, although we
assume
arguendo that Congress incorporated the prior
equity rule into § 77(c)(6), which recognizes the necessity of
keeping a railroad in operation until the public authority permits
discontinuance (
Warren v. Palmer, 310 U.
S. 132), it does not necessarily follow that the lessor
would be entitled to the net earnings accruing prior to the
rejection, at least where the trustees have unconditionally paid
the stipulated annual rental for that period.
Cf. Palmer v.
Palmer, 104 F.2d 161. To be sure, we recognized in
Palmer
v. Webster & Atlas Nat. Bk., supra, that the trustees of a
lessee, on their rejection of the lease, operated the leased lines
for the account of the lessor, the latter being liable for losses
for the whole period. But we are here dealing with a rejection of a
lease pursuant to a plan of reorganization. And the question raised
relates to the fairness of that plan as between classes of
creditors -- one group being the Terre Haute bondholders and the
other the Milwaukee bondholders. In the event of a rejection of the
lease, the Terre Haute interests are claiming that they are
entitled not only to a return of the leased lines, to a claim
against the estate for damages, and to the stipulated annual rental
up to the date of the rejection, but also to any and all net income
from the leased property in excess of that rent. Such a claim for
net income, like a claim for rent, would be a charge against the
estate for whose payment a plan of reorganization must provide.
§ 77(e)(3). The amount of those charges, like other demands on
the cash resources of the estate or the new company, have a decided
bearing on the fairness and integrity of a plan of reorganization.
The Commission and the District Court certainly have authority to
determine whether the total amount which the lessor receives on
rejection of the lease
Page 318 U. S. 555
is fair in comparison with the sacrifices which the other
creditors make. The District Court agreed with the Commission that
it would be inequitable to give the Terre Haute interests, in the
event of a rejection, more than a return of the leased lines, an
unsecured creditor's claim for damages, and the stipulated annual
rental. We cannot say that that was not a fair equivalent of their
claim. Nor can we say that their sacrifices, as compared with the
sacrifices being made by the other Milwaukee creditors, are so
great that they should receive an additional cash payment from the
estate. Sec. 77(c)(6) and the doctrine of relation back are not to
be considered separate and apart from the other provisions of the
Act. The end product of this reorganization system is supposed to
be a fair plan. When a lease is rejected pursuant to a plan, §
77(c)(6), may not be applied so as to give the lessor or its
creditors a disproportionate claim against the estate.
General Mortgage Bonds. The objections of the corporate
trustee and of a group of these bondholders are that the allocation
of new securities under the plan violates their priority rights,
that the findings of the Commission are inadequate to sustain that
allocation of new securities, and that the additions and
betterments fund impairs their priorities.
The Circuit Court of Appeals was of the view that the plan could
not be approved, because of the absence of certain findings which
it thought were necessitated by
Consolidated Rock Products Co.
v. DuBois, supra. It concluded that the findings must include
specific values of liens to be surrendered and specific values of
securities given in exchange. In its view, this defect in the
Commission's reports permeated the whole plan except the finding of
"no value" for the stock. As we have pointed out in the
Western
Pacific case, such a view misinterprets
Consolidated Rock
Products Co. v. DuBois. In that case, the District Court had
found that the properties were
Page 318 U. S. 556
worth more than the amount of the debt, in spite of the fact
that they had been operated at a loss for a period of more than
eight years. And it admitted stockholders to participation in the
plan in the face of that fact, and also without compensating the
bondholders for their accrued interest. Furthermore, the District
Court in that case approved a distribution of new securities to
bondholders under two different mortgages without attempting to
ascertain what properties were covered by each. In addition, the
plan as approved cancelled a claim against the holding corporation
without making any finding as to its amount or validity. We held
(1) that the "criterion of earning capacity is the essential one"
in making a valuation for reorganization purposes (312 U.S. p.
312 U. S.
526); (2) that some valuation of the assets of the
holding company and of the claim against it must be made, so that
there could be a determination as to whether it, as stockholder,
was making a contribution to the new company for which it would
receive new stock; (3) that at least an "approximate ascertainment"
of the assets subject to the two mortgages must be made (312 U.S.
p.
312 U. S.
525), as a question of the fairness of the plan between
the two classes of bondholders had been raised, and (4) that, in
applying the full priority rule of the
Boyd case
(228 U.S. 482), and the
Los Angeles Lumber
Products case (308 U.S. 106), full "compensatory
provision must be made for the entire bundle of rights which the
creditors surrender." 312 U.S. p.
312 U. S. 528.
And we added (p.
312 U. S.
529)
"Practical adjustments, rather than a rigid formula, are
necessary. The method of effecting full compensation for senior
claimants will vary from case to case."
Applying these principles here, we are of the view that, except
as hereinafter noted, the findings and conclusions of the
Commission and the District Court were adequate and proper.
The objections of the General Mortgage bonds are that full
compensation was not afforded them for the loss of
Page 318 U. S. 557
their first lien position, and that, to sustain the allocation
of new securities to them, it must be determined that the new
securities had, in fact, a value representing compensation for the
priority of the old. We can put to one side at this point the
treatment of the Terre Haute bonds, at which the General Mortgage
bonds direct some of their criticism. For the reasons which we have
already stated, we cannot substitute our opinion for the business
judgment of the Commission, and say that the Terre Haute lease
should have been rejected outright, or that the Terre Haute
interests would consent to a new lease on less favorable terms than
are offered. Nor do we stop to analyze the facts warranting the
preferred treatment accorded the amply secured claim of the
Reconstruction Finance Corporation. For no argument is pressed here
that the allocation of new First Mortgage bonds for the full amount
of that claim was not warranted. Furthermore, we cannot agree with
the suggestion that the General Mortgage bonds should have been
granted a larger participation in new fixed interest securities. As
we have noted, 25% of their claims is to be satisfied with the new
First Mortgage bonds. We have already reviewed the reasons why the
Commission felt that the fixed interest charges should not exceed
about $4,270,000 a year. It should be noted at this point that the
Commission stated that it saw
"no means by which the exact present lien position of the
general mortgage bonds or the 50-year bonds can be preserved except
under a prohibitive mortgage structure."
As we have stated, the determination of the kind of capital
structure which a railroad emerging from reorganization should have
is peculiarly a question for the expert judgment of the Commission.
To give the General Mortgage bonds a larger percentage of new First
Mortgage bonds would necessitate an increase in the total fixed
interest charges of the new company. We would intrude on the
Commission's function if we undertook to
Page 318 U. S. 558
direct that any such increase be made. The same reply may be
given the contention that the Commission should not have created
new system mortgages, but should have left the 50-year bonds
secured by a separate mortgage or should have created a separate
corporation to operate the western lines which comprise the main
security for the 50-year bonds. The Commission considered and
rejected these proposals, saying that it was
"of great importance that a completely unified system be created
through the reorganization, and that the capital structure be not
complicated by numerous mortgages."
Such a determination is peculiarly one for the Commission under
§ 77. So far as the law is concerned, there is no obstacle to
the substitution of system mortgages for divisional ones. We so
held in
Consolidated Rock Products Co. v. DuBois, supra,
pp.
312 U. S.
530-531, indicating that the requirements of feasibility
and practicability may often necessitate such a course. The same
principles are applicable here.
So the problem for us on this phase of the case is whether,
within the framework of the capital structure which has been
designed, the allocation of new securities to the General Mortgage
bonds was permissible within the rule of the
Boyd and the
Consolidated Rock Products cases. On this record, that
entails primarily a consideration of the treatment accorded the
General Mortgage bonds, on the one hand, and the Milwaukee &
Northern bonds and the 50-year bonds, on the other.
As we have noted, the General Mortgage bonds are to receive 25%
of their claims in new First Mortgage bonds, 35% in Series A and
20% in Series B, new General Mortgage bonds, and 20% in preferred
stock. The same treatment is accorded the Milwaukee & Northern
Consolidated Mortgage bonds. The Milwaukee and Northern First
Mortgage bonds, however, are to receive 70% of their claims in new
First Mortgage bonds and 30% in Series A new General Mortgage
bonds. And the 50-year bonds
Page 318 U. S. 559
are to receive 15% of their claims in Series B new General
Mortgage bonds, 60% in new preferred stock, and 25% in common
stock. If the criterion of earning power be given the weight which
we think is necessary under this statutory system, the Milwaukee
& Northern First Mortgage bonds are entitled to preferred
treatment over the General Mortgage bonds and the Milwaukee &
Northern Consolidated Bonds. On the basis of system earnings for
1936, the Commission noted that income available for the Milwaukee
& Northern First Mortgage bonds was about three times interest
charges, and for the General Mortgage bonds about 1.16. In the case
of the Milwaukee & Northern Consolidated Mortgage bonds, the
interest for the same period was earned about 1.2 times. Regard for
the earning power of those respective units of property led to the
preferred treatment of the Milwaukee & Northern First Mortgage
bonds, and to the same offer's being made to the General Mortgage
bonds as was made to the Milwaukee & Northern Consolidated
Mortgage bonds. But the attack of the General Mortgage bonds is
directed, in the main, to the participation accorded the 50-year
bonds and to the inadequacy, as compared with them, of the
treatment given the General Mortgage bonds.
They point out that the Commission referred to the General
Mortgage lines as "the heart of the system;" that the interest on
these bonds has been earned with the exception of a few years since
1889; that the western lines securing the 50-year bonds are deficit
lines. In that connection, they refer to the Commission's statement
that the losses by the western lines were $142,591 in 1930 and
$1,540,808 in 1931, before payment of interest, and that,
"on any reasonable basis of allocation between the lines west
and the other parts of the system, the lines west cannot be
expected to earn any sum for the payment of interest. In years when
the system earnings approach $10,000,000,
Page 318 U. S. 560
some interest is apparently earned for the 50-year mortgage
bonds under the present capital structure, but this reflects system
operation, and does not demonstrate any earning power for the
western lines."
But the problem for the Commission and the District Court was
not as simple as the General Mortgage bondholders make it appear.
The lien of the 50-year bonds embraces not only the western lines,
but also, subject to the First and Refunding Mortgage, the
leasehold interest of the debtor in the Terre Haute and stocks and
bonds of other companies, the most important of which are shares of
Indiana Harbor Belt R. Co. and most of the Terre Haute stock. There
was evidence that income from certain securities pledged under the
First & Refunding Mortgage (largely the Indiana Harbor Belt
stock) was $402,031 in 1936, and net income from the Terre Haute
during that year was $875,327 after payment of all interest
charges. Though the Commission recognized that the propriety of
crediting the 50-year mortgage with income from the Terre Haute was
doubtful because of the assumption that the First & Refunding
Mortgage would be satisfied by other earnings, it gave some weight
to those earnings in determining the participation to be accorded
the 50-year bonds. Thus, it noted that one analysis in 1935 showed
about $1,000,000 available for interest on the 50-year bonds
"on the basis of $10,263,185 of system earnings available for
fixed charges, approximately $2,000,000 of net income from the
Terre Haute, and a deficit of $500,000 on the lines west."
The Commission also reviewed another analysis showing that the
First & Refunding Mortgage lines contributed $6,249,099 of
gross revenues and $3,300,400 of net revenues to the General
Mortgage lines in 1936, and that the income for the 50-year
mortgage lines (after payment of interest on the bonds of the Terre
Haute, the Northern, the Gary, and the First & Refunding) was
about $2,000,000, while the income of the General Mortgage lines
available
Page 318 U. S. 561
for interest was approximately $6,400,000, after interest on
equipment certificates. While the Commission was critical of that
analysis, it felt that that computation deserved "careful
consideration," as the estimate of $2,000,000 was "roughly
comparable" to the other "estimate of $1,000,000 in 1935,
representing the earnings for the 50-year bonds, after payment of
all interest on the general mortgage bonds." It noted that the
analysis showing $2,000,000 available for the 50-year bonds also
indicated that, on the basis of system earnings of about
$12,300,000, all interest charges on the general mortgage bonds,
and only 38% of the interest on the 50-year bonds were earned. The
examiner had recommended that the 50-year bonds receive 10% of
their claims in Series A new General Mortgage bonds and 10% in
Series B. The Commission did not consider that treatment "to be
justified on any basis of earnings shown." It concluded that, if
the 50-year bonds were assigned a part of the new Series B bonds
only, they would begin "to share earnings with the general mortgage
bonds and Northern consolidated bonds after $9,675,000 of prior
charges." That treatment, said the Commission,
"goes far toward resolving the doubts as to the accuracy or
fairness of the allocation of earnings in favor of the 50-year
bonds, without injustice to the general mortgage bonds."
The problem in such a case is not a simple one. The contribution
which each division makes to a system is not a mere matter of
arithmetical computation. It involves an appraisal of many factors
and the exercise of an informed judgment. Furthermore, an attempt
to put precise dollar values on separate divisions of one operating
unit would be quite illusory. As the Commission recently
stated,
"The properties comprise one operating unit; a complete
separation of values would necessarily have to be based on
extensive assumptions of unprovable
Page 318 U. S. 562
validity, and any attempt at such a separation would, in the
end, serve no purpose except to present an apparent certainty in
the formulation of the plan which does not exist in fact."
St. Louis Southwestern Ry. Co. Reorganization, 252 I.C.C. 325,
361. In the present case, the Commission and the District Court
were satisfied that they had adequate data based on earning power
to make a fair allocation of new securities between the General
Mortgage bonds and the 50-year bonds. We cannot say that it was
inadequate. Sec. 77 contains no formula for the making of such an
allocation, nor for the determination of the earning power of the
entire system or parts thereof. The earnings periods to be chosen,
the methods to be employed in allocating system earnings to the
various divisions, are matters for the informed judgment of the
Commission and the Court. Nor was there a failure here, as in the
Consolidated Rock Products case, to ascertain what
properties were subject to the respective divisional mortgages.
With one minor exception to, be discussed later, that was done. So
the Commission and the Court had before them data which we cannot
say was inadequate to determine the allocation of new securities
between these two classes of bondholders. Nor can we say that the
Commission and the Court applied an incorrect rule of law in
concluding that the plan was "fair and equitable" as between the
General Mortgage bonds and the 50-year bonds. We are not dealing
here merely with a first mortgage and a second mortgage on a single
piece of property. For each of the two groups of bondholders has a
first lien on a part of the Milwaukee properties. [
Footnote 10] In case of first and second
liens on the same property
Page 318 U. S. 563
senior lienors, of course, would be entitled to receive, in case
the junior lienors participated in the plan, not only "a face
amount of inferior securities equal to the face amount of their
claims," but, in addition, "compensation for the senior rights"
which they surrendered.
Consolidated Rock Products Co. v.
DuBois, supra, p.
312 U. S. 529.
But where, as here, each group of bondholders is contributing to a
new system mortgage separate properties from old divisional
mortgages, it is necessary to fit each into the hierarchy of the
new capital structure in such a way that each will retain in
relation to the other the same position it formerly had in respect
of assets and of earnings at various levels. If that is done, each
has obtained new securities which are the equitable equivalent of
its previous rights and the full priority rule of the
Boyd
case, as applied to the rights of creditors
inter sese, is
satisfied. That rule was applied here. And the determination by the
Commission and the District Court that its requirements were
satisfied is supported by evidence. Sixty percent of the General
Mortgage bonds receives priority, as respects assets and earnings,
over the 50-year bonds, since the former receive 25% in new First
Mortgage bonds and 35% in Series A new General Mortgage bonds,
while the 50-year bonds were allotted none of those new securities.
Furthermore, the General Mortgage bonds received a larger share of
Series B bonds (20% as against 15%), a smaller share of new
preferred stock (20% as against 60%) and no common stock, as
compared with 25% by the 50-year bonds. For similar reasons, we
cannot say that the treatment of the General Mortgage bonds, as
against the Milwaukee & Northern First Mortgage bonds and
Consolidated Mortgage bonds, was not fair and equitable. No fixed
rule supplies the method for bringing two divisional mortgages into
a new capital structure so that each will retain in relation to the
other the same position it formerly had in respect of assets and of
earnings at various
Page 318 U. S. 564
levels. The question in each case is one for the informed
discretion of the Commission and the District Court. We cannot say
that that discretion has been abused here.
We would have quite a different problem if the District Court
had failed to perform the functions which § 77(e) places upon
it. But it cannot be said that there was any such failure here. The
District Court satisfied itself that the principles of priority as
applied to these facts were respected.
See 36 F.Supp. pp.
202, 203, 211, 212. Since such a determination rests in the realm
of judgment, rather than mathematics, there is an area for
disagreement. But we are not performing the functions of the
District Court under § 77(e). Our role on review is a limited
one. It is not enough to reverse the District Court that we might
have appraised the facts somewhat differently. If there is warrant
for the action of the District Court, our task on review is at an
end.
That leads to a question much discussed in this case, as in the
Western Pacific case, as to the nature and extent of the
findings necessary under § 77 in order to approve a plan as
"fair and equitable." As we have said, the finding of the
Commission, affirmed by the District Court, that the stock had "no
value" was warranted. Furthermore, the Commission's determination
of the permissible capitalization of the new company was sufficient
as a finding of the maximum reorganization values which might be
distributed among the various classes of security holders. But it
has been argued here, as in the
Western Pacific case, that
a dollar valuation must be made of each old security and of each
new security in order to give "full compensatory treatment" to
senior claimants and to appropriate to the payment of their claims
the "full value" of the property, in accord with the principles of
Consolidated Rock Products Co. v. DuBois, supra, p.
312 U. S. 529.
The rule in equity receivership cases that the creditors
Page 318 U. S. 565
were entitled to have the "value" (
Northern Pacific Ry. Co.
v. Boyd, supra, p.
228 U. S. 508)
or the "full value" (
Kansas City Terminal Ry. Co. v. Central
Union Trust Co., 271 U. S. 445,
271 U. S. 454)
of the property first appropriated to the satisfaction of their
claims never was thought to require such valuations. Nor does the
Consolidated Rock Products case or § 77 require them.
We indicated in the
Los Angeles Lumber Products case (308
U.S. p.
308 U. S.
130), that compromises, settlements, and concessions are
a normal part of the reorganization process.
And see Marine
Harbor Properties, Inc. v. Manufacturer's Trust Co., supra. We
stated in the
Consolidated Rock Products case (312 U.S. p.
312 U. S.
526), that a determination of earning power of an
enterprise "requires a prediction as to what will occur in the
future, an estimate, as distinguished from mathematical certitude."
And, in discussing the method by which creditors should receive
"full compensatory treatment" for their rights, we emphasized, as
already noted, that, "Practical adjustments, rather than a rigid
formula, are necessary."
Id., p.
312 U. S. 529.
Certainly those standards do not suggest any mathematical formula.
We recently stated in another connection that, whatever may be "the
pretenses of exactitude" in determining a dollar valuation for a
railroad property, "to claim for it "scientific" validity, is to
employ the term in its loosest sense."
Nashville, C. &
St.L. Ry. v. Browning, 310 U. S. 362,
310 U. S. 370.
That is equally true here. A requirement that dollar values be
placed on what each security holder surrenders and on what he
receives would create an illusion of certainty where none exists,
and would place an impracticable burden on the whole reorganization
process.
See Bourne, Findings of "Value" in Railroad
Reorganizations, 51 Yale L.Journ. 1057. It is sufficient that each
security holder, in the order of his priority, receives from that
which is available for the satisfaction of his claim the equitable
equivalent of the rights surrendered. That
Page 318 U. S. 566
requires a comparison of the new securities allotted to him with
the old securities which he exchanges to determine whether the new
are the equitable equivalent of the old. But that determination
cannot be made by the use of any mathematical formula. Whether, in
a given case, senior creditors have been made whole or received
"full compensatory treatment" rests in the informed judgment of the
Commission and the District Court on consideration of all relevant
facts.
The General Mortgage bondholders attack the additions and
betterments fund on the ground that it is unlawful, and results in
a dilution of their priority rights. They contend that §
77(b)(4) [
Footnote 11]
contemplates that the probable future earnings found to be
available for fixed charges shall be used to pay those charges;
that this provision of the plan reduces by $62,500,000 (the
capitalized value of $2,500,000) the amount of new bonds available
for the present underlying bonds; that additions and betterments
are a capital charge, and that the income of the road pledged to
the underlying bonds cannot be diverted for that purpose, at least
without some compensating advantage given the underlying bonds;
that the fund will enrich the junior interests at the expense of
the bondholders; that the expenditures contemplated should be
obtained from surplus earnings or from new capital raised under the
open end First Mortgage.
The Commission, in determining that an additions and betterments
fund should be set up, reviewed at some length the capital
requirements of the system. It observed that, generally,
"the expenditures for additions and
Page 318 U. S. 567
betterments have varied in proportion to earnings available for
interest. Ordinarily, with a rising trend in traffic and revenues,
the carrier would need more or better facilities."
Its conclusion was that "the increased income should properly
provide, in part for their cost." These amounts would supplement
the "cash represented by charges to depreciation, retirements, and
salvage." And the plan provides that, if the new company
establishes an "operating expense account for its roadway and
structures," the additions and betterments fund shall be paid from
the amount credited to such fund for the applicable income period
to the extent that such amount is adequate therefor. Likewise, the
additions and betterments fund is to be credited with the amount
which the new company "shall charge to operating expenses in any
year" for the "cost of any additions and betterments, properly
chargeable to capital account under the rules now in effect." Since
the Commission recently has required railroad companies generally
to establish a depreciation reserve with respect to their roadway
and structures, [
Footnote
12] the General Mortgage bonds concede that the alleged
illegality of such a fund will be rendered largely academic. But,
in any event, we see no barrier to a determination by the
Commission that expenditures which are incident to a normal and
proper operation of the road are costs or charges which should be
paid before net income is computed. Nor can we see any legal reason
why, as the Commission has determined here, those charges should
not be in part dependent on the level of earnings. The Circuit
Court of Appeals thought that there must be findings which would
support both the allowance and its amount. But, as we have pointed
out earlier, Congress has merely provided in § 77(d) that the
plan approved by the Commission must be one which "will, in its
opinion, meet the requirements
Page 318 U. S. 568
of subsections (b) and (e) of this section, and will be
compatible with the public interest." And, in its report, the
Commission is directed to "state fully the reasons for its
conclusions." We do not see where the Commission failed to meet
these requirements. The need for such a fund and its amount involve
matters of policy. The determination that a particular fund should
be constituted calls for the exercise of an expert informed
judgment. The Commission clearly has power to require that such a
fund be provided for in a plan of reorganization under § 77,
whether or not the payments to it are properly included within the
term "fixed charges" as used in § 77(b)(4). For such a fund,
like the amount of capitalization and the nature of the capital
structure, may be highly relevant to the financial integrity of the
company which emerges from reorganization and to stability and
efficiency of the transportation system.
There are, however, two objections made by the General Mortgage
bonds which we think have merit. The first of these relates to the
dispute as to the so-called "pieces of lines east." The General
Mortgage bonds contend here, as they did before the Commission,
that they have a first lien on those properties by reason of the
after acquired property clause in their mortgage. The Commission
credited the 50-year bonds with the earnings from those properties,
indicating however that the propriety of doing so was doubtful in
absence of a judicial determination of the question. some of the
General Mortgage bonds objected to the allocation before the
District Court. The District Court, however, did not undertake to
resolve the dispute. These General Mortgage bondholders likewise
raised the point before the Circuit Court of Appeals. But it was
not considered there. The objection has been renewed here but has
not been argued on the merits. We can hardly treat the matter as
de minimis as there is evidence that these properties had
a
Page 318 U. S. 569
net income of $170,100 in 1936. Nor can we conclude that the
objection has been waived, or that the claim is frivolous. Here, as
in the
Consolidated Rock Products case, the "determination
of what assets are subject to the payment of the respective claims"
(312 U.S. p.
312 U. S. 520)
has a direct bearing on the fairness of the plan as between two
groups of bondholders. The District Court should resolve the
dispute.
The second of these objections is that the General Mortgage
bonds are to receive under the plan only a face amount of inferior
securities equal to the face amount of their claims. The objection
would, of course, not be valid if claimants wholly junior to the
General Mortgage bonds were not participating in the plan. But
here, the Adjustment bonds, junior to the General Mortgage bonds,
receive a large amount of common stock under the plan for their
claim upon the mortgaged assets. [
Footnote 13] The rule of the
Boyd case "protects
the rights of senior creditors against dilution either by junior
creditors or by equity interests."
Marine Harbor Properties,
Inc. v. Manufacturer's Trust Co., supra. That view has not
been contested here. Hence, as we indicated in the
Consolidated
Rock Products case, where junior interests participate in a
plan and where the senior creditors are allotted only a face amount
of inferior securities equal to the face amount of their claims,
they "must receive, in addition, compensation for the senior rights
which they are to surrender."
312 U. S. 312
U.S. 529. And we stated that whether they should "be made whole for
the change in or loss of their seniority by an increased
participation in assets, in earnings or in control,
Page 318 U. S. 570
or in any combination thereof, will be dependent on the facts
and requirements of each case."
Id., p.
312 U. S. 529.
We felt that result was made necessary by the ruling in the
Boyd case that,
"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."
228 U.S. p.
228 U. S. 508.
We adhere to that view. Unless that principle is respected, there
will be serious invasions of the rights of senior claimants to the
benefit of junior interests. The property of one group will be
subtly appropriated to pay the claims of another while lip service
is rendered the principles of priority.
Some argument is advanced that, under this plan, the General
Mortgage bondholders do receive as against the junior interests
compensatory treatment which is adequate to make up for the
seniority rights which they are to surrender. Part of that is said
to be in the control which they obtain. It is pointed out that the
plan provides for a five-year voting trust in which the several
groups of bondholders will be represented; that thereafter the plan
protects their control by providing that the new preferred stock
(all of which is to be issued to the Milwaukee & Northern
Consolidated bonds, the Gary bonds, the General Mortgage bonds, and
the 50-year bonds) will be entitled to cumulative to elect a
majority of the board of directors during certain periods when full
dividends on the preferred have not been paid, and that the
exercise of the conversion rights of the Series B new General
Mortgage bonds, allotted to these senior bondholders, would result
in their acquisition of over 50% of both the preferred and common.
It is also argued that compensatory treatment is to be found in the
fact that the new General Mortgage bonds have sinking funds, and
are cumulative up to three years of interest, and that the new
preferred stock is participating.
Page 318 U. S. 571
But neither the Commission nor the District Court considered the
problem. As we have indicated, the question whether senior
creditors have received "full compensatory treatment" rests in the
informed judgment of the Commission and the Court. A decision on
that issue involves a consideration of the numerous investment
features of the old and new securities and a financial analysis of
many factors. Our task is ended if there is evidence to support
that informed judgment. We are not equipped to exercise it in the
first instance. Nor is it our function. Nor can we conclude that
its omission in this instance was harmless. And minorities under
§ 77, like minorities under other reorganization sections of
the Act (
Case v. Los Angeles Lumber Products Co., supra,
pp.
308 U. S.
114-115,
308 U. S.
128-129) cannot be deprived of the benefits of the
statute by reason of a waiver, acquiescence, or approval by the
other members of the class. Certainly we cannot say that the
inclusion in the new securities to be received by the General
Mortgage bonds of features normally common to them are adequate
compensation for the lost seniority. Our conclusion on the point is
that, since junior interests are participating in the plan, the
Commission and the District Court should determine what the General
Mortgage bonds should receive in addition to a face amount of
inferior securities equal to the face amount of their old ones, as
equitable compensation, qualitative or quantitative, for the loss
of their senior rights.
50-Year Bonds. The two points just discussed in
relation to the General Mortgage bonds are equally applicable to
the 50-year bonds. Final approval of the plan as it affects those
two issues cannot be made until findings are made on those two
matters.
The 50-year bonds raise other objections. We have already
considered their major objections in other connections, and they
need not be repeated. But a word should
Page 318 U. S. 572
be added in answer to their argument that the data before the
Commission as to segregated earnings was too meager to warrant a
permanent disruption of liens. They urge that the plan be remitted
to the Commission, so that the earning power of the various
component parts or mortgage divisions of the road may be determined
in light of earnings segregation studies, severance studies, and
contributed traffic studies. [
Footnote 14] These are highly technical matters.
See Meck & Masten, Railroad Leases and Reorganization,
49 Yale L.Journ. pp. 640-647. As stated above, we cannot say that
the data as to earning power of the various divisions which was
utilized by the Commission was inadequate. The earnings periods to
be selected and the methods to be employed in allocating earnings
among the various divisions are matters for the informed judgment
of the Commission and the District Court. Whether earnings
segregation, severance, or contributed traffic studies should be
made is for the Commission initially to decide in light of the
requirements of a particular case. We cannot say that those studies
are so indispensable that they should be required here. Sec.
77(c)(10) provides that the judge "may direct" the debtor or
trustees "to keep such records and accounts, in addition to the
accounts prescribed by the Commission," as will permit such a
segregation and allocation of earnings and expenses. That does not
indicate that Congress felt that the suggested studies were always
necessary.
Gary First Mortgage Bonds; Adjustment Bonds. We have
carefully considered the objections raised by these two groups.
Their objections, for the most part, are of a
Page 318 U. S. 573
kind which have been fully treated in other parts of this
opinion, and need not be elaborated. But one point raised by the
Adjustment bonds need be mentioned. As we have noted, the interest
on these bonds accrued to December 31, 1938, is over $79,000,000.
The Commission ruled that, in view of the insufficiency of the
mortgaged assets to meet the claims of the Adjustment bonds and the
inadequacy of the free assets to satisfy the deficiency, with
interest, and the unsecured claims, with interest, no allowance
should be made in the plan for interest on these bonds subsequent
to the date of the filing of the petition. For reasons we have
already stated, the conclusion of the Commission that the mortgaged
assets were insufficient to meet the bonded indebtedness was
supported by evidence. Since the distribution provided for these
bonds on the basis of their mortgage securities is less than the
principal amount of their claim, the limitation of their right to
share the unmortgaged assets ratably with the unsecured creditors
on the basis of principal and interest prior to bankruptcy only is
justified under the rule of
Ticonic National Bank v.
Sprague, 303 U. S. 406.
We have considered all other objections to the plan, and find
them without merit. But for the exceptions we have noted, we
conclude that the District Court was justified in approving the
plan, and that the Circuit Court of Appeals was in error in
reversing that judgment. Accordingly, we reverse in part and affirm
in part the judgment of the Circuit Court of Appeals, and direct
that the cause be remanded to the District Court for proceedings in
conformity with this opinion.
It is so ordered.
MR. JUSTICE JACKSON and MR. JUSTICE RUTLEDGE did not participate
in the consideration or decision of these cases.
Page 318 U. S. 574
* Together with No. 12,
Group of Institutional Investors et
al. v. Union Trust Co. et al.; No. 13,
Group of
Institutional Investors et al. v. Abrams et al.; No. 14,
Group of Institutional Investors et al. v. Orton et al.;
No. 15,
Group of Institutional Investors et al. v. Guaranty
Trust Co. of New York et al.; No. 16,
Group of
Institutional Investors et al. v. Chicago, Terre Haute &
Southeastern Ry. Co. et al.; No. 17,
Group of
Institutional Investors et al. v. United States Trust Co. of New
York, Trustee; No. 18,
Group of Institutional Investors et
al. v. Trustees of Princeton University et al.; No.19,
Group of Institutional Investors et al. v. Glines et al.,
and No. 32,
Reconstruction Finance Corp. v. Chicago, Milwaukee,
St. Paul & Pacific Railroad Co. et al., also on writs of
certiorari, 316 U.S. 659, to the Circuit Court of Appeals for the
Seventh Circuit.
[
Footnote 1]
Equipment obligations totalling $33,322,999 and a note of the
trustees for $1,184,000 were undisturbed or extended.
[
Footnote 2]
The debtor also owns 97% of the stock of the Terre Haute which
it acquired by purchase. The stock is entitled to 41,730 votes and
the holders of certain Terre Haute bonds are entitled under the
terms of the mortgage to 63,360 votes.
[
Footnote 3]
The bonds secured by this mortgage are unlimited in authorized
principal amount, and, subject to limitations and restrictions
specified in the mortgage, may be issued from time to time in
different series at various interest rates, etc. as the board of
directors and the Commission may approve. In addition to the amount
of these bonds issued in the reorganization to security holders, it
is contemplated that not exceeding $10,000,000 principal amount of
them will be issued in the reorganization to provide for
reorganization expenses, working capital, and additions and
betterments.
[
Footnote 4]
The bonds secured by this mortgage are unlimited in authorized
principal amount, and, subject to limitations and restrictions
contained in the mortgage, may be issued from time to time in
different series at various interest rates, etc., as the board of
directors and the Commission may approve. Interest on any new
series does not have priority over Series A or Series B. Bonds of
Series B are convertible into common stock at the option of the
holder at any time at the rate for each $1000 bond, of 10 shares of
common stock. Both Series A and Series B are entitled to a sinking
fund created by an annual payment out of available net income of an
amount equal to 1/2 of 1% of the aggregate principal amount of
Series A and Series B bonds authenticated and delivered.
[
Footnote 5]
The new preferred and new common stock are authorized in an
unlimited amount. Additional amounts are issuable with approval of
the Commission. The shares of preferred issuable in the
reorganization are Series A. So long as any shares of Series A are
outstanding, the consent of at least two-thirds in number of those
shares is necessary for the issuance of any additional shares of
preferred ranking either as to dividends or as to liquidation, in
priority to or on a parity with the shares of Series A. The
dividends on Series A of the preferred are noncumulative. B ut no
dividends are payable on the common unless there shall have been
paid or set apart for payment on the Series A preferred dividends
at the rate of 5% per annum for the three consecutive income
periods immediately preceding. Series A of the preferred
participates with the common to the extent of $1 a share after
dividends shall have been paid or set apart for the common at the
rate of $3.50 a share. Series A preferred has voting rights and,
voting cumulatively as a class, is entitled to elect a majority of
the board until full 5% dividends shall have been paid on the
Series A for three consecutive calendar years. Thereafter, each
share of Series A votes equally with each share of common until
full dividends have not been paid during three consecutive calendar
years, in which event the Series A again becomes entitled to elect
a majority of the board.
Each share of common stock carries one vote. Approximately
514,221 shares are reserved for the conversion of Series B General
Mortgage bonds.
[
Footnote 6]
This total includes the modified bonds of the Terre Haute,
which, though strictly not a part of the capital structure of the
new company, will be assumed by it if the terms of modification are
accepted. The total capitalization is made up of the following:
Debt -- fixed interest . . . . . . . . . . . . $108,780,470
Debt -- contingent interest. . . . . . . . . . 115,257,480
Preferred stock. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 111,347,846
No-par common stock ($100 per share) . . . . . 213,147,525
[
Footnote 7]
The Commission computed the amount of the claim by taking the
principal and interest to June 29, 1935, the date of the filing of
the petition. That amount was $230,420,853. As we discuss
hereafter, it concluded that no allowance should be made in the
plan for interest on these bonds subsequent to the date of the
filing of the petition in view of the insufficiency of the
mortgaged assets to meet the claims and the apparent inadequacy of
the free assets to satisfy the deficiency with interest.
[
Footnote 8]
Sec. 77(e) provides that it is not necessary to submit the plan
to "any class of stockholders" if the Commission
"shall have found, and the judge shall have affirmed the
finding, . . . that, at the time of the finding, the equity of such
class of stockholders has no value."
[
Footnote 9]
Respecting the new Ch. XV of the Bankruptcy Act, P.L. 747, 77th
Cong., 2d Sess., c. 610, which provides for certain voluntary
adjustments of obligations of railroads.
[
Footnote 10]
The lien of the 50-year bonds is, of course, subject to the
First & Refunding Mortgage bonds all held by the Reconstruction
Finance Corporation as security for its loan. But in view of the
adequacy of that security, the Circuit Court of Appeals recognized
that, as a practical matter, the 50-year bonds were to be
considered as having a first lien on the western lines.
[
Footnote 11]
Which provides that a plan of reorganization
"shall provide for fixed charges (including fixed interest on
funded debt, interest on unfunded debt, amortization of discount on
funded debt, and rent for leased railroads) in such an amount that
. . . there shall be adequate coverage of such fixed charges by the
probable earnings available for the payment thereof."
[
Footnote 12]
Order of June 8, 1942, effective January 1, 1943.
[
Footnote 13]
This objection obviously would not run to a participation by
junior creditors in unmortgaged assets -- against which, in this
case, 55,000 shares of common stock were reserved. Of those, the
Adjustment bonds were allotted 39,163 shares. But, as we have
noted, the Adjustment bonds were also allotted 1,749,492 shares of
new common for their claim upon the mortgaged assets of the
debtor.
[
Footnote 14]
Although the 50-year bonds and the debtor raised this point
before the Commission as early as February, 1938, and the 50-year
bonds raised it again when they filed their objections to the plan
in the District Court, neither of them attempted to submit any such
studies either in the hearings before the Commission or in the
hearings before the District Court more than two years later.
MR. JUSTICE ROBERTS.
This case presents two questions on which I feel compelled to
express my views. I have set forth in
Ecker v. Western Pacific
Railroad Corp., ante, p.
318 U. S. 448,
what I consider the respective functions of the Interstate Commerce
Commission and the district judge in respect of a plan of
reorganization formulated under § 77. It follows from what I
there said that I agree with the opinion of the Court except as
herein noted.
The two matters as to which I disagree are the provisions of the
plan respecting the lease of Chicago, Terre Haute &
Southeastern Railway Company and the allocation of securities to
the holders of General Mortgage bonds.
1. The statute deals with unexpired leases under which the
debtor is lessee. It does not provide that the lessor may be
brought into a reorganization proceeding with the debtor so that
the properties of both debtor and lessor may be reorganized as a
unit. On the contrary, all the relevant provisions contemplate the
recognition of the lessor-lessee relation, and the dealing with the
leased property in that light, and not as if it were part of the
property of the lessee. The practice in equity receiverships prior
to the adoption of § 77 permitted the affirmance or
disaffirmance of unexpired leases. That practice is perpetuated in
the reorganization statute. Prior to the formulation of a plan, the
trustee appointed by the court may disaffirm the lease. [
Footnote 2/1] He may, on the other hand,
adopt the lease. [
Footnote 2/2]
But, if he does so, his adoption is subject to reversal by a
provision in the plan providing for rejection. [
Footnote 2/3] The plan itself must, amongst other
things,
Page 318 U. S. 575
provide for the rental payment under existing leases not
rejected. [
Footnote 2/4] But the
plan may provide for rejection and, in that case, the lessor is to
be treated as a creditor with a claim for the amount of damage or
injury done by rejection. [
Footnote
2/5] What is to be done with respect to the continued operation
of a leased line upon the rejection of the lease is covered.
[
Footnote 2/6]
It is evident that Congress concluded that the old and well
recognized principles applied in equity receivership should be
substantially incorporated into § 77 so far as concerns
unexpired leases. The draftsmen of the legislation did not provide
for a case in which it would be to the interest of the reorganized
corporation to retain the leased property under a new or amended
lease stipulating for a reduced rental. But whether the omission to
confer upon the Commission and the court the power to work out such
a result arose from inadvertence or reasons of policy, or because
of a belief that power was lacking, I need not speculate. Whatever
the reason, it seems clear that such a case is not covered, and
that the only alternatives provided by the statute are
disaffirmance or affirmance. In view of the provisions of
subsection (b) as to what a plan shall or may include, I think it
is inadmissible to find authority for what the Commission has done
in this case in the concluding sentence of the first paragraph to
the effect that the plan "may include any other appropriate
provisions not inconsistent with this section." In view of the
statutory provisions to which I have referred, the features of the
plan respecting the Terre Haute lease are inconsistent with the
section. Congress did not contemplate the treatment of a lessor as
if the property it owns and leases to the debtor is part of the
property to be reorganized,
Page 318 U. S. 576
nor did it intend to put the Commission in a position of
bargaining with such a lessor for a new base.
The plan formulated by the Commission seems to me to be a
straddle between these two alternatives. The holders of bonds
secured by mortgages on the Terre Haute property are in some
aspects treated as if they were mortgage creditors of the debtor.
In other aspects, Terre Haute is treated as an arm's length
creditor with whom a bargain must be struck. The vice of this seems
apparent on this record. Whereas each class of mortgage creditors
of the debtor is afforded a participation in the securities and
probable earnings of the new company in purported compliance with
the rule of the
Case and
Rock Products decisions,
and whereas the Commission recognizes the difference in the nature
of the lien and security of the three issues of mortgage bonds of
Terre Haute, in the plan, they are all treated alike, and not
accorded positions corresponding to their respective liens and
priorities. The excuse for this is that the Commission is dealing
with a lease and fixing a rental to be paid to an outside lessor.
On the other hand, the concept of dealing with a lessor, as I read
the record, moved the Commission to propose to the lessor what it
thought would be an attractive offer in order to persuade the
lessor to accept a new lease. In this aspect, the Commission, as I
think, made the bondholders of Terre Haute, treated as a class, a
proposition which gives them an inordinately superior position to
that accorded the holders of General Mortgage bonds, and produces a
serious discrimination against the latter.
I refer to these circumstances merely to reinforce what I have
said above to the effect that it is evident Congress did not
provide for any such treatment of the rights accruing under an
unexpired lease. I am of opinion therefore that, as a matter of
law, the plan adopted by the Commission does not conform to the
standards set up by § 77 and particularly by subsection
(b).
Page 318 U. S. 577
2. Upon the facts set forth in the Commission's report, I think
it clear that the award of securities in the new corporation to the
holders of General Mortgage bonds does not comply with the rule of
absolute priority announced in the
Boyd and
Rock
Products cases. If this is true, the plan violates subsection
(e).
In conformity with what I have said in
Ecker v. Western
Pacific Railroad Corp., I think the duty rested upon the
district judge to sustain the objections of General Mortgage
bondholders, because I cannot find in the facts stated by the
Interstate Commerce Commission and those proved before the District
Court any reasonable justification for the allocation made to them
as against that made to the holders of bonds secured by the
Milwaukee & Northern Consolidated Mortgage and the Fifty Year
Mortgage, or for the treatment accorded them in comparison to that
accorded Terre Haute's bondholders. The opinion of the court treats
this question as, in effect, lying within the sound discretion of
the district judge, and refuses to review his action on the ground
that it is not evident he abused that discretion. I am of the view
that, unless we are to recant what we have heretofore said, the
rule of law as to the maintenance of the respective positions of
lienors must be enforced. Of course, that rule must be applied in
the light of the facts of each case, but I do not think the
district judge may abdicate the duty of examining those facts and
correcting what is shown to be a clear infraction of the rule.
Neither the judge nor the Commission need essay to value the
property under each mortgage, or the securities to be allocated to
the mortgagees under it, in dollars and cents. Substantial
equivalence satisfies the requirement of "fairness and equity" in
its legal sense as used in this setting. The court should, of
course, give weight to what the Commission has found,
Page 318 U. S. 578
and its reasons for its allocation, but I think that, if the
district judge had, in this case, exercised the duty which lay upon
him, he would have held that there was no substantial foundation
for the Commission's treatment of general mortgage bondholders, and
would have been bound, therefore, to disapprove the plan. As he did
not perform that duty, I think that, unless the right to come to
this court is vain, we have the duty to correct his action. I
should therefore reverse the decree below.
[
Footnote 2/1]
Sec. 77(c)(2);
Palmer v. Webster and Atlas National
Bank, 312 U. S. 156,
312 U. S.
163.
[
Footnote 2/2]
Sec. 77(b).
[
Footnote 2/3]
Id.
[
Footnote 2/4]
Id.
[
Footnote 2/5]
Id.
[
Footnote 2/6]
Sec. 77(c)(6).