On November 30, 1995, this court issued an order directing NationsBank Trust Company, N.A., the Bank of New York’s predecessor as trustee of the Riders’ Fund, to solicit recommendations regarding the disposition of the Riders’ Fund and the Bebchick Fund (collectively, the “restitutionary funds”). After reviewing the recommendations, the court has decided to consolidate the Riders’ Fund and the Bebchick Fund pursuant to Article Two of the Riders’ Fund Trust Agreement,
see Democratic Cent. Comm. of the District of Columbia v. Washington Metro. Area Transit Comm’n,
I. Background
A. Regulatory Authority Over Bus Service
In 1960, Congress gave its consent to Virginia, Maryland and the District of Columbia (the “signatories”) to enter into the Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Regulation Compact (the “Compact”). Pub.L.No. 86-794, tit. I, 74 Stat. 1031,1031-35 (1960) (codified as amended at D.C. Code Ann. § 1-2411 (1992)). The Compact established the Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Commission (the “Commission”) and gave it regulatory authority over, inter alia, privately owned bus companies providing passenger transportation services in the metropolitan area. Id.
In 1966, Congress and the signatories added a third title to the Compact, establishing WMATA but expressly prohibiting it from performing, directly or through a contractor, transit service by bus. Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Authority Compact (“Title III”), Pub.L.No. 89-774, tit. Ill, art. XIII, 80' Stat.. 1324,1344 (1966)'(codified as amended at D.C. Code Ann. § 1-2431(1992)). Congress lifted this prohibition in 1972 when it amended Title III. National Capital Area Transit Act of 1972 (the “Act”), Pub.L.No. 92-517, 86 Stat. 999 (1972). The Act directed WMATA to initiate negotiations "with, among others, D.C. Transit System, Inc. (“D.C. Transit”) for the acquisition of its capital stock or its transit facilities used in connection with bus service in the Washington metropolitan area. Pub.L.No. 92-517, § 102(a), 90 Stat. -999, 1001. Since the acquisition, of the bus companies, WMATA has been exclusively responsible for the provision of trans *454 portation services by bus in the metropolitan area.
B. The Restitutionary Funds
1. The Bebchick Fund
The history of the Bebchick Fund begins in 1968 when this court set aside three Commission orders increasing D.C. Transit’s fares and ordered the company to make restitution to the bus riders in the Washington metropolitan area for excessive fares collected.
See Williams v. Washington Metro. Area Transit Comm’n,
This court assumed custody of the account containing the withheld condemnation proceeds, known as the “Bebchick Fund,” by order dated December 2, 1975. In 1979, all appeals of the restitution award became moot when D.C. Transit agreed thát the bus riders were entitled to the Bebchick Fund as restitution for excessive fares it had charged them. By 1986, all issues regarding the restitution owed the bus riders in connection with the excessive fares in this case had been settled.
See Bebchick v. Washington Metro. Area Transit Comm’n,
2. The Riders’ Fund
The Riders’ Fund was established pursuant to a compromise agreement, approved by this court’s order of February 26, 1990, wherein D.C. Transit agreed to pay $9,200,-000 in restitution into the Riders’ Fund for the benefit of bus riders.
See Democratic Cent. Comm. of the Dist. of Columbia v. Washington Metro. Area Transit Comm’n,
On November 30, 1995, this court issued an order to the trustee of the Riders’ Fund “to solicit, on behalf of the Riders’ Fund and the Bebchick Fund, ... recommendations of the plaintiffs, the Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Commission [WMATA], the District of Columbia Government, and existing organizations representing users of mass transit services in the D.C. area as to the best disposition of these assets.” In response to the trustee’s solicitation, the court received sixteen recommendations.
II. DISCUSSION
Of the many recommendations submitted to the court regarding the disposition of the restitutionary funds, none suggested giving the farepayers an opportunity to prove and collect the amounts they were overcharged by D.C. Transit. Although a proof-of-elaim procedure might usually be considered the most precise and direct method of compensation, the parties, special interest groups, and individual citizens that submitted recommendations correctly recognized that using such a procedure in this case would not be feasible. More than a quarter of a century has
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passed since D.C. Transit collected the excessive fares; identifying, locating, and notifying all those overcharged after so much time would be very difficult, if not impossible. The prohibitive cost of notification, together with the cost of distribution, would greatly reduce, or even exceed, the total amount of the funds. Even if such an opportunity were given, it is doubtful whether any of the overcharged farepayers would avail themselves of it; many would likely consider the potential of recovering a small award not worth the considerable effort of establishing a claim arising out of numerous minor transactions that occurred 25 years ago.
See Market St. Ry. v. Railroad Comm’n,
In class actions, some courts have applied the equitable doctrine of cy pres to undistributed damage or settlement funds.
1
See State v. Levi Strauss & Co.,
Fluid recovery offers four approaches to the distribution of unclaimed settlement or damage funds: (1) reduction of the defendant’s prices, (2) escheat to a governmental body for either specified or general purposes, (3) establishment of á “consumer trust fund,” and (4) “claimant fund sharing.”
See Levi Strauss,
There are two forms of the governmental escheat approach: the specified or “earmarked” escheat and the general es-cheat.
Levi Strauss,
The third available approach is the establishment of a “consumer trust fund.”
Levi Strauss,
The final approach is “claimant fund sharing,” which allows class members who submit claims to divide the funds pro rata.
Levi Strauss,
In determining which of the four approaches to employ, we consider the following factors: (1) the amount of compensation to class members, (2) the proportion of the class members sharing in the recovery,
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(3) the extent to which nonclass members will benefit, and (4) the cost of the administration.
Levi Strauss,
Our initial conclusion is that we should not use the general escheat or the claimant fund sharing approaches to distribute the restitutionary funds; the former because a more precise distribution approach is available, the latter because of the notification and proof difficulties discussed earlier. After evaluating the remaining approaches, we further conclude that an earmarked es-cheat to WMATA to implement its January 19, 1996 proposal is the best method of distributing the restitutionary funds to the “next best” class, the current bus riders.
Today’s decision is not the first time this court has utilized a fluid recovery distribution approach to distribute a settlement fund consisting of D.C. Transit fare overcharges. In
Bebchick v. Public Utilities Commission,
In
Market Street Ry. Co. v. Railroad Commission,
Using WMATA to distribute the funds makes sense: it has been providing bus transportation for over twenty years; its experience in serving the intended beneficiaries of the restitutionary funds is unparalleled; it is experienced in overseeing and administering large sums of money; it has an administrative infrastructure capable of beginning distribution immediately; and because virtually all of the funds will go to the benefit of the bus riders, the cost of administering the restitutionary funds will be negligible.
Distributing the restitutionary funds' through the consumer trust fund approach would not be as effective or efficient. Any trustees the court could appoint would lack WMATA’s experience in, and knowledge of, bus transportation services. In addition, administrative costs of creating a new organization, relative to WMATA’s administrative costs, would be substantial. See Shepherd, supra, at 458 n. 43. The existing public interest groups, MetroWatch and ACT, also lack WMATA’s experience and knowledge.
Distributing the restitutionary funds through the price reduction approach would effectively deliver the funds to the current bus riders. The benefit, however, would be extremely diffused and could be difficult to administer because WMATA would have to determine the precise point the funds would be exhausted.
Two recommendations argue that the interests of WMATA conflict with the interests of the bus riders and that the restitutionary funds should not, therefore, be transferred to WMATA. We find no conflict. In its recommendation, ACT neither identifies nor describes the alleged conflict; it merely surmises that one exists from three facts: (1) the funds originated in litigation in
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which the riders were the plaintiffs and the transit operator was defendant; (2) the riders and WMATA have been represented by their own counsel; and (3) the riders’ property and awards have been segregated from those of WMATA ACT Recommendation at 3. ACT’s first assertion is incorrect; the restitutionary funds originated in litigation between the riders and the Commission, in the case of the Riders’ Fund, and the riders and the Public Utilities Commission, in the ease of the Bebehick Fund. The Commission and PUC regulated transit fares and services, balancing the riders’ interest in safe, adequate, and inexpensive public transportation with the privately-owned transit operators’ interest in a profit. The interests of the riders conflicted with those of the transit operators, but not with the interests of the Commission and PUC. Indeed, this court stated that “the Commission, in administering the [settlement fund] acts more nearly as a trustee to implement judicial directives concerning the use of the fund than in the statutory regulatory powers.”
Williams v. Washington Metro. Area Transit Comm’n,
Mr. Bebehick opposes transferring the res-titutionary fund to WMATA “because of the inherent, and in this instance, manifest conflict of interest.” Bebehick Recommendation at 4. Like ACT, Mr. Bebehick neither identifies nor describes the conflict he alleges; unlike ACT, however, he offers no facts in support of his allegation. All he offers is a quotation that, if read in the original, warns of the conflict of interest risks in private, not public, organizations. '
Finally, both ACT and MetroWatch expressed concern that applying the funds to WMATA’s operating budget would result in a commensurate decrease in the contributions from the jurisdictions that fund WMA-TA. The conditions to which the escheat is subject should allay their concerns.
Levi Strauss,
Nearly all the recommendations submitted contained at least one suggestion on how all or part of the restitutionary funds should be specifically allocated. Although many had merit, it is not our function to supervise or dictate WMATA’s budget. It is for this reason that, once the transfer of the restitution-ary funds is accomplished, the court will no longer retain jurisdiction over this matter.
Nonetheless, to assure that the restitution-ary funds are used in a manner that most closely serves their original purposes, the escheat to WMATA is subject to the following two conditions. First, the restitutionary funds cannot be the basis for any reduction in the contributions due from the jurisdictions that fund WMATA Second, with two exceptions mentioned below, WMATA must use the funds, as it has proposed, exclusively for “the pinchase of new buses for use in the affected service area.” Letter from Polk to Bebehick of 1/19/96 at 1. As WMATA explained, purchasing new buses would provide
widespread, long-lasting and tangible benefits for the farepaying public, ... [including] improved service, increased safety, reduced operating costs, lower maintenance costs, improved environmental performance, and standard features to aid the elderly and disabled.
Id. at 2. While the . funds must be spent primarily for new buses, we recognize that WMATA will inherit responsibilities from the current Riders’ Fund trustee, the Bank of New York. Accordingly, we also authorize WMATA to use a reasonable portion of the restitutionary funds to cover the cost of (i) liquidating the real property assets in the Riders’ Fund (including the cost of such legal and real estate services as it may deem appropriate to help realize the assets’ poten *459 tial value) and (ii) prosecuting the judgment the Riders’ Fund has against D.C. Transit. 7
III. Conclusion
We conclude that the Riders’ Fund and the Bebchick Fund should be consolidated pursuant to Article Two of the Riders’ Fund Trust Agreement,
see Democratic Cent. Comm. of the Dist. of Columbia v. Washington Metro. Area Transit Comm’n,
So ordered.
Notes
. The term "cy pres” is derived from the Norman French expression cy pres comme possible, which means "as near as possible." The cy pres doctrine is a rule of construction used to preserve testamentary charitable gifts that otherwise would fail. When it becomes impossible to carry out the charitable gift as the testator intended, the doctrine allows the “next best” use of the funds to satisfy the testator’s intent "as near as possible.” Natalie A. Dejaríais, Note, The Consumer Trust Fund: A Cy Pres Solution to Undistributed Funds in Consumer Class Actions, 38 Hastings LJ. 729, 730 (1987).
. Implementing fluid recovery, also referred to as "fluid class recovery,” in federal class actions is controversial. DeJarlais,
supra
note 1, at 738
&
n. 62. In
Eisen v. Carlisle & Jacquelin,
.Action for Community Transportation (“ACT”) suggested that $3.5 million of the restitutionary fund be used to reduce the bus and rail fares between 5:30 a.m. and 6:30 a.m. from rush hour rates to non-rush hour rates. Kathleen Berkow-itz, a member of WMATA’s Elderly and Handicapped Advisory Committee and MetroAccess subcommittee, suggested in her recommendation that a part of the restitutionary funds go to subsidize those who find the MetroAccess rate a financial hardship.
. See Recommendations of Democratic Central Committee of the District of Columbia, the Black United Front, the Government of the District of Columbia (liquid assets only), Barbara Young, and WMATA.
. See Recommendations of Leonard N. Bebchick and MetroWatch.
. See Recommendation of ACT.
. The court strongly suggests that, before liquidating the real property assets of the Riders’ Fund, WMATA consult with the Bank of New York about maximizing the potential value of the property. WMATA should also make arrangements for assuming responsibility for prosecuting the judgment the Riders’ Fund has against D.C. Transit.
