Delbert, Deanna and Robert Snyder (the Debtors), who own and operate a farm in Central Illinois, filed for bankruptcy pursuant to Chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code, 11 U.S.C. §§ 1101-1174. They seek approval of their amended plans of reorganization on the basis of the “new value” or “fresh capital” exception to the absolute priority rule. Farm Credit Bank of St. Louis (Farm Credit), their principal creditor, asks us to declare that the new value exception did not survive enactment of the Bankruptcy Code of 1978. The bankruptcy court and the district court held that the Debtors’ plans failed to meet the requirements of the new value exception. We affirm.
I.
The Debtors are engaged in a joint farm operation known as “Snyder Brothers.” As of June 17, 1988, the date of filing of the bankruptcy petition, they were indebted to Farm Credit in the approximate amount of $1,481,000. As security, Farm Credit had a first mortgage on 510 acres of farmland owned by the Debtors. The Debtors value the land at $581,104 and Farm Credit values it at $745,900. The Debtors owed $248,000 to Farmers Home Administration, which had a lien on the Debtors’ jointly owned machinery valued at $118,650. The Debtors also owed Alden Snyder (the father of Delbert and Robert) $126,794, which was secured by vehicles having a fair market value of $20,000. Finally, the Debtors have another unsecured creditor, Delbert Wright, who was owed $20,000 at the date of filing. The Debtors determine their total unsecured indebtedness to be $1,055,351.
The Debtors’ original plans of reorganization provided that they would retain the jointly owned farmland, Farm Credit’s secured debt would be written down to the value of the farmland, unsecured creditors would be paid ten percent of their total claims and their father would release his claims. The bankruptcy court rejected the Debtors’ original plans, finding that, while the new value exception was still viable, the father’s release of his claims did not constitute a contribution of new value.
In re Snyder,
The Debtors filed amended plans of reorganization under which the Debtors, in addition to paying unsecured creditors ten percent of their claims over a period of ten years, would contribute $30,000 (from a third party’s donation), provide use of the farm machinery free and clear of their father’s lien and pay the value of the machinery, $20,000, to unsecured creditors over five years. The bankruptcy court again denied confirmation of the plans of reorganization and ordered the Chapter 11 proceedings dismissed. Again the court held that the new value exception survived enactment of the Bankruptcy Code of 1978. The court found, however, that the $30,000 cash contribution and the $20,000 value of the machinery (from Alden Snyder’s re
*1128
lease of his lien) were inadequate to qualify for the new value exception to the absolute priority rule.
In re Snyder,
II.
The absolute priority rule can be traced at least as far back as the Supreme Court’s decision in
Northern Pacific Ry. Co. v. Boyd,
For nearly as long as the courts have enforced the absolute priority rule, they have also recognized an exception
2
to the rule for “new value” or “fresh capital.” In
Kansas City Terminal Ry. v. Central Union Trust Co.,
With the enactment of the Bankruptcy Code of 1978, courts began to face the question whether
Los Angeles Lumber’s
new value exception remained viable. The Supreme Court expressly declined to answer the question in
Ahlers,
485 U.S. at
*1129
203 n. 3,
Opponents of the continued vitality of the new value exception have pointed to the language of the 1978 Code, in particular the codification of the absolute priority rule without any explicit exception for new value.
See, e.g., Kham & Nate’s Shoes,
When Congress amends the bankruptcy laws, it does not write “on a clean slate.” Furthermore, this Court has been reluctant to accept arguments that would interpret the Code, however vague the particular language under consideration might be, to effect a major change in pre-Code practice that is not the subject of at least some discussion in the legislative history.
Dewsnup v. Timm,
— U.S. -,
In urging the elimination of the exception, a number of authorities have relied on Congress’s rejection of the Bankruptcy Commission’s proposal to modify the absolute priority rule.
See, e.g., Kham & Nate’s Shoes,
In addition, several commentators have recently argued powerfully that the new value “exception” is not an exception at all, but is consistent with the absolute priority rule as codified in § 1129(b).
See
Brief of Professor Elizabeth Warren as Amicus Curiae at 4-11,
In re Greystone III Joint Venture,
Finally, there are strong policy arguments that favor retention of the new value exception. Owners often have valuable information about the enterprise that outsiders lack, and owner participation allows this information to be put to use.
5
In addition, owners may have incentives, including noneconomic incentives, to provide necessary new value that cannot be obtained elsewhere. Some of our distinguished colleagues on this Court have suggested that the creditor-consent provisions of the Code are sufficient to protect any possible benefits of owner participation, and that such participation should have no place in the cramdown situation.
Kham & Nate’s Shoes,
The Debtors ask us to hold that the new value exception remains viable under the 1978 Code, while Farm Credit asks us to *1131 hold that it has vanished. We stop short of both parties’ requests, as we did in Kham & Nate’s Shoes and Stegall, and as the Supreme Court did in Ahlers. We conclude instead that, assuming the new value exception retains its vitality, the Debtors’ proposed contribution fails to meet its requirements. We therefore again reserve the issue of the new value exception’s continued viability for another day.
In
Los Angeles Lumber
the Supreme Court declared that a qualifying new value contribution must be (1) necessary to the reorganization; (2) in the form of money or money’s worth; and (3) reasonably equivalent to the interest retained.
The Debtors first propose to obtain a release of their father’s lien on their farm machinery and to pay the creditors the value of the machinery ($20,000) over five years. This contribution, however, is not an up-front infusion of money or money’s worth. Like the promises of future labor rejected in
Los Angeles Lumber
and
Ah-lers,
and the guarantees rejected in
Kham & Nate’s Shoes,
the release of the lien “has no place in the asset column of the balance sheet of the new [entity].”
Los Angeles Lumber,
The other component of the Debtors’ proposed contribution is a $30,000 cash payment. The bankruptcy court and the district court held that the proposed payment was not substantial and therefore insufficient to qualify for the new value exception. In particular, the courts observed that the $30,000 contribution amounted to only 2.7 percent of the $1,100,-000 due unsecured creditors, and 3.3 percent of the unsecured debt owed to Farm Credit; The Debtors argue that the lower courts should not have compared the amount of the proposed contribution to the amount of unsecured debt in determining whether the contribution is substantial. Instead, they argue, to be substantial the amount contributed must be equal only to the value of the interest retained under the plan. This Court, however, has previously rejected such an interpretation of the “substantial” requirement.
Stegall,
The bankruptcy court and the district court committed no error in finding the proposed $30,000 payment not sufficiently “substantial” to qualify for the new value exception. 7 We cannot say that the determination as to whether an infusion of new capital is “substantial” will always hinge on a comparison to the total amount of unsecured debt. There is no mathematical formula for resolving the substantiality is *1132 sue, and it will depend on the circumstances of the individual case. In the instant case, where the disparity between the contribution and the unsecured debt is so extreme, we agree with the courts below that there is no need to proceed any further and that the proposed contribution is not substantial.
III.
For the foregoing reasons, the judgment of the district court is
Affirmed.
Notes
. For a tracing-back even further, to the nineteenth-century law of fraudulent transfers and equity receiverships, see Bruce A. Markell, Owners, Auctions, and Absolute Priority in Bankruptcy Reorganizations, 44 Stan.L.Rev. 69, 74-83 (1991).
. We follow common usage among authorities in referring to the new value principle as an "exception” to the absolute priority rule. As discussed below, however, some recent commentators argue that the new value principle is more accurately characterized as a corollary than an exception.
. In
Ahlers,
the Solicitor General, as
amicus curiae,
had urged the Court to hold that the 1978 Bankruptcy Code "dropped the infusion-of-new-capital exception to the absolute priority rule."
. The Fifth Circuit originally held in
Greystone III Joint Venture
that the new value exception was eliminated by the Bankruptcy Code of 1978. On rehearing, however, the panel withdrew that portion of the majority opinion (which was then incorporated into the dissenting opinion of Judge Jones). The Fifth Circuit’s self-reversal on the new value exception appears to have been based, at least in part, on
Dewsnup v. Timm,
— U.S. -,
. Professor Markell has drawn on auction theory to argue that this information may be an important reason to allow owner participation. Markell, 44 Stan.L.Rev. at 107-11; see abo Amicus Brief of Professor Warren, Greystone III Joint Venture, at 17.
. Markell, 44 Stan.L.Rev. at 106-07; Amicus Brief of Professor Warren,
Greystone III Joint Venture,
at 14;
cf. In re Met-L-Wood Corp.,
. Even assuming that the $20,000 five-year payment from the machinery’s value constitutes an up-front contribution of "money or money’s worth,” the total resulting contribution of $50,-000 is insubstantial. It would amount to just 4.5 percent of the total amount due unsecured creditors, and 5.5 percent of the amount due Farm Credit.
