Appeals are taken by four separate groups of appellants from an order approving a plan of reorganization for the Chicago, Rock Island and Pacific Railway Company. On oral argument the cases were 'heard together and will be treated in one opinion because of the similarity of issues raised.
On June 7, 1933, the debtor railway company filed a petition under § 77 of thi Bankruptcy Act, 11 U.S.C.A. § 205. Because of the debtor’s low earnings in the: years immediately following the petition and the necessary delay created by the Interstate Commerce Commission in the evaluation of plans, a plan of reorganization was not approved by the Commission until July 31, 1941. This plan was certified to the District Court and on June 3, 1943, the court approved the plan except on two points, In re Chicago, R. I. & P. Ry. Co., D.C.,
Under the plan of reorganization, the capitalization of the debtor was reduced from $459,101,932 to $356,117,327. All the creditors, secured and unsecured, are provided for in varying degrees. The preferred and common stockholders do not participate in the plan because it was found that their equity was of no value. The new capitalization is divided into first mortgage bonds, second mortgage income bonds, preferred stock having a par value of $100 per share, and no par value common stock.
The appellants in 8929, the preferred stock committee, represent a group which does not participate in the plan. They contend the Interstate Commerce Commis
The Supreme Court in two recent cases, Ecker v. Western Pacific Railroad Corp.,
The appellants do not question the applicability of the cases cited, but collectively they urge reversal on the grounds of unfairness and discrimination between class allocations in the plan, and the Commission’s failure to follow legal standards in the capitalization of the reorganized company. Other contentions are advanced but, as will be shown, they are either untenable or mere divisions of the two principal allegations.
This appellant concedes that this is an entirely new matter which has never before been passed on in reorganization proceedings. The District Court in approving the modified plan overruled this objection but without explanation. We fail to find any merit in the objection. True, this is a question of interpretation, but the appellant’s interpretation is stilted and impractical. The Commission is the protagonist in a reorganization proceeding, because, as previously stated, it is the best qualified. It provides for the new capital structure and the distribution of corporate funds. In short, the Commission is allowed wide discretion in reaching its conclusions, and if its findings are supported by substantial evidence and follow legal standards they must be affirmed by the courts, Palmer v. Commonwealth of Massachusetts,
The Supreme Court has emphasized the urgency for interplay and harmony between the Commission and courts in reorganization proceedings, Palmer v. Massachusetts, supra,
The debtor seeks nothing for itself. It is in the anomalous but commendable position of arguing for others. The debtor, appropriately, does not question the valuations of the Commission. It contends, however, that the Commission erred as a matter of law when it reduced the total capitalization from $368,127,410 to $356,-117,327 in the modified plan here on review. It says that because the Commission determined the debtor’s assets at one figure, it is precluded from reconsideration unless there has been a new determination of the fair value of assets. Otherwise, the debtor argues, the fund to be divided among the creditors could be reduced indiscriminately.
In so arguing, it seems to us that the debtor overlooks the point that any determination of total capitalization by the Commission is in itself a valuation, which, concededly, is not subject to review. The court in the case of Brooks v. St. Louis-San Francisco Ry. Co., supra, was confronted with an analogous argument as to arbitrary value, and it answered with reasoning worthy of quotation. On p. 316 of 153 F.2d the court said: “It is clear that
The reason given by the Commission for the decrease of $12,010,083 in capitalization is that “The capitalization of $356,-117,327, includes equipment obligations outstanding as of January 1, 1944, and the capitalization of $368,127,410, includes such obligations outstanding as of January 1, 1942,” Supplemental Report of the Commission, May 1, 1944, 257 I. C. C. 307, 308. A provision was made for an increase in the common stock of $1,024,833 because the reduction in the amount of equipment obligations reduced the annual cash requirements of the reorganized company. The decrease in capitalization then was the result of bringing the plan up to date, for $13,034,916 in equipment obligations was to be paid off by January 1, 1944. The Commission took cognizance of an inevitable reduction. It is, therefore, not within our province to question this action by the Commission. As observed again in the Group of Institutional Investors case,
We cannot say that the Commission has acted unfairly or even indiscriminately in reducing the capitalization of the reorganized company because not only did it have the authority to reduce the capitalization, it has exercised this authority seemingly for excellent reasons. “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,” Group of Institutional Investors v. Chicago, Milwaukee, St. Paul and Pacific Railroad Co., supra,
Under the plan of reorganization as finally adopted, only the claims of the General Mortgage Bonds and the Choctaw & Memphis First Mortgage Bonds are wholly satisfied. These claims total about $91,500,000. Other secured creditors are not made whole and it is futile to contend, as the debtor does, that the remaining secured creditors are paid in full. In the Supplemental Report of the Commission, decided May 1, 1944, supra, 257 I. C. C. 318, an appendix is set out which lists the
In Brooks v. St. Louis-San Francisco Ry. Co., supra, the Commission made no provision for the general creditors and stockholders. The appeal was resolved upon the issue whether the plan of the Commission and the order of the District Court approving the plan should be reversed in order to provide for the general creditors and stockholders. As stated, the allocations were less liberal than in the instant case, and the court following the tenets of the Eclcer and Group of Institutional Investors cases, held that the action of the Commission and order of the District Court must be sustained as they were supported by substantial evidence and an application of proper legal standards.
The mortgage trustee of the Little Rock & Hot Springs Western Railroad Company (hereinafter referred to as Little Rock) is in the unique position of being the only secured creditor to reject the plan of reorganization and appeals from the order of the District Court approving it. The Little Rock line is of undeniably strategic value to the debtor. It is about fifty-five miles in length, and while the debtor through one of its subsidiaries owns and operates just twenty-two miles of the line, these twenty-two miles are the connecting link between the debtor’s southern subsidiaries and the balance of its system. The other thirty-three miles of the line are owned and operated by the Missouri Pacific system. Apparently, its mileage in the Little Rock line is as vital to the Missouri Pacific as the smaller number of miles in the same line is to the debtor, because the Commission in June, 1937, placed a reproduction cost valuation, as of December 31, 1935, of about $1,500,000 on that portion of the security of the Little Rock bonds included' in the Missouri Pacific system. At the-same time the Commission placed a reproduction cost valuation of about $694,-000 on the corresponding security for the Little Rock bonds included in the debtor’s system. The total Little Rock bond issue is $1,140,000 which investment represents a lien upon the entire line.
Under the modified plan of reorganization the Little Rock creditors receive $643,256 in cash, bonds, and stock. On a straight mileage prorate basis the lien on> the Rock Island system is $453,600. On December 21, 1945, the District Court of' Missouri approved the Commission’s plan, of reorganization for the Missouri Pacific Railroad Company,
The trustee for Little Rock contends that the allocation to its creditors under the plan of reorganization must be measured by the fair value to the debtor of that portion of the secured line which is owned by the debtor. And as the plan adopted failed to follow such a measure,.
In determining the allocation of securities for Little Rock the Commission held in its Supplemental Report of April 6, 1942, 252 I. C. C. 483, 493, that the Little Rock’s allocation could not be figured on a contributed-trafiic basis but, instead, it should be figured on a mileage prorate basis as “reflecting status as essentially a bridge line,” i. e., a line which originates or terminates little or no traffic. This finding was approved by the District Court. Thus, the question involved is whether this court believes the Commission’s finding is supported by material evidence. If we so believe, our review is at an end and we must affirm, Ecker v. Western Pacific Railroad Corp., supra,
This appellant further complains that it is illegal to provide as is done in the plan of reorganization for the “sale at not less than a fair upset price to - be fixed by the court, of all or any part of the properties of the debtors, all on such conditions and in such manner as the court may direct.” It is argued that such a severance of the Little Rock line, as this contemplates, is a piecemeal sale of an entire line which is not provided for in § 77 and consummation of such a plan would be contrary to the Fifth Amendment of the Constitution.
These objections were made before the District Court. We believe they were definitely answered below in the first opinion,
In 8938, the convertible bondholders are an unsecured creditor group. Under the modified plan they receive four shares of stock for each $1,000 bond. Such a distribution represents approximately 34% of their claims. These bondholders contend that the value of the property of the debt- or and of the securities and cash on hand is sufficient to satisfy the claims of all creditors in full. This question was disposed of in answering the debtor’s contentions and to repeat it here would be repetition. As the Commission followed legal
Appellants’ counsel, in his brief and again in oral argument, urged that the Chase National Bank as trustee for the issue of unsecured convertible bonds and the holder of collateral for loans extended to the debtor was in the exercise of a dual and conflicting role and that in the exercise of this dual role, the bank violated its position as fiduciary to the convertible bondholders by retaining or conveying to others, the property of the debtor. A consideration of the cogency of such an argument is not related to the merits of the plan of reorganization which is the question before this court. The contentions of the convertible bondholders must be denied.
The order of the District Court is affirmed.
Notes
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