This appeal
1
is frоm a declaratory judgment of the district court holding that appellant, the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, could not take by eminent domain certain railroad property in the “exclusive jurisdiction” of the district court by virtue of section 77 reorganization proceedings, 11 U.S.C. § 205, without first obtaining the consent of the Interstate Commerce Commission and the district court, neither of which had been sought. At the opening of the oral argument appellаnt waived its objections to the first of these rulings and expressly conceded the necessity of receiving the consent of the Commission. We consider, accordingly, only the other issue, except that we will observe that wе believe appellant’s concession to have been well-advised. 49 U.S.C. § 1(18). Cf. Thompson v. Texas Mexican Ry., 1946,
The property involved is owned in fee by the Boston & Providеnce Railroad, which has been in reorganization in the district court for the District of Massachusetts since 1938. At the present time a plan of reorganization has been approved by the court, In re Boston & P.R.R., D.Mass., 1966,
The district cоurt asserted the need for its consent simply and succinctly,
“Section 77(e) [st'e] of the Bankruptcy Act provides that during the pendency of the reorganization proceedings and for the purposes thereof, this court shall have exclusive jurisdiction of the debtor and its property wherever located. Under this section this court has the power to protect the property within its jurisdiction from interference by suits in other courts and the consent of this court is a jurisdictional prerequisite to the maintenance of any such action.”266 F. Supp. at 392 .
“ * * * Bankruptcy administration, including reorganization, is a paramount national function which takes precedence over сonflicting provisions of the constitution or laws of any state.”266 F.Supp. at 393 .
It is true that section 77(a) provides that the court shall have “exclusive-jurisdiction of the debtor and its property wherever located, * * * ” but the court failed, at lеast overtly, to consider the qualifying phrase, “during the pend-ency of the proceedings under this section and
for the purposes thereof,”
(emphasis ours). In view of this limitation its reference to bankruptcy as a “paramount national function” seems too easy an answer. Indeed, we have already held that where there is no sufficient purpose the bankruptcy court’s jurisdiction is not exclusive. United States v. New York, N.H. & H.R.R., 1 Cir., 1965,
In the New Haven case the property taken was a small piece of land not used for railroad purposes. No contention was made that the taking interfered with the reorganization, or shоuld not be effected. The question was whether the “exclusive possession” of the reorganization court meant that there was no independent jurisdiction in the district court of the district where the land was located. The trustеes conceded in their brief that in the reorganization court they “would not oppose the granting of permission” to have the actual trial in the local district. We held they had no such concern; that the bankruptcy еxclusivity was granted only for substantive and substantial purposes, and that none there existed. Correspondingly, the question in the case at bar is not *821 resolved by pointing to the phrase “exclusive jurisdiction,” but requires the much more difficult determination of whether it is within the purposes of section 77 that the state’s power of eminent domain be suspended, or at least made subject to the control of the court, during the pendency of the reorganizatiоn proceedings.
The Commonwealth’s concession, that it cannot proceed without ICC consent focuses scrutiny upon the separate function of the bankruptcy court. The interest of the court in any reorganization is. greater than appellant concedes, the prevention of diminution of assets and the achievement of an equitable adjustment among claimants. It has the further object of preserving the corporation as a going concern. “[T]o prevent the attainment of that object is to defeat the very end the accomplishment of which was the sole aim of the section, and thereby to render its provisions futile.” Continental Illinois Nat. Bank & Trust Co. of Chicago v. Chicago, Rock Island Ry., 1935,
Accordingly, the question comes whether the bankruptcy court’s general interest in successful reorganizations was intended by Congress to be paramount to a. state exercise of the right of eminent domain, for if not, there can be nó independent power in the court to refuse to consent. On this question appellant is able to offer no assistance, except to point out thаt its right to take property for public use is one of great importance, and not readily subordinated. City of Cincinnati v. Louisville & N.R.R., 1912,
Nor have we been able to find any legislative history casting light upon the question. We must, accordingly, approach the problem as essentially one of first impression. In so doing we are led to the conclusion that it is the state’s interest, and not that of a successful reorganization that must prevail if they are in conflict.
It is obvious, at the outset, that the state is not here in the position of a creditor. It is not seeking to enforce an existing mortgage, tax lien, Gardner v. State of New Jersey, 1947,
Under such circumstances it is difficult to imagine how giving the bankruptcy court a temporary veto would serve the “purposes” (§ 77(a)) of the reorganization. But even if, in some fashion we do not perceive, this could be thought to benefit the debtor, we must hold that it is not thе bankruptcy purpose that is paramount. Even to the extent that there is a public interest in the preservation of the going business, this economic interest is inferior to the public interest which is the basis of the state’s presсriptive rights. The present reorganization has been, as we have noted, in progress for 29 years. The possibility that a bankruptcy court could be permitted to postpone public rights for such a period is not appealing. Rather, we believe that to accept appellees’ position, apart from the protection preserved to the ICC, would not viably improve the prospects of the estate and would be broadly improvident.
The judgment of the District Court is amended by striking out the last four words thereof, “and of this Court,” and is otherwise affirmed. No costs.
