OPINION OF THE COURT
Appellee Reading Company (“Reading”) owns 500 shares of stock in appellant Trailer Train Company (“Trailer Train”). During Reading’s reorganization proceedings under section 77 of the Bankruptcy Act of 1898 as amended (“the 1898 Act”), 11 U.S.C. § 205 (1976),
1
Reading’s trustees petitioned for an order compelling Trailer Train to repurchase the stock, convert it into debt or preferred stock, or pay dividends. The United States District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania, sitting as a reorganization court, ordered Trailer Train to repurchase the stock at book value.
See In re Reading Co.,
I
For many years prior to April 1, 1976, Reading ran an interstate railroad. On November 21, 1971, Reading entered into reorganization under section 77 of the 1898 Act. On April 1, 1976, pursuant to the Regional Rail Reorganization Act of 1973, 45 U.S.C. §§ 701-797m (1976 & Supp. V 1981), Reading conveyed its rail properties to the Consolidated Rail Corporation (“Conrad”) and discontinued all rail operations. Reading emerged from reorganization on January 1, 1981. It has not reentered the railroad business.
Trailer Train was incorporated in 1955 by the Pennsylvania Railroad and others for the sole purpose of facilitating inter-railroad “piggyback” shipments by establishing a pool of standardized railroad flat cars.
Shareholder and non-shareholder railroads in possession of Trailer Train cars must pay car hire charges set by the Trailer Train rate policy. That policy, which Trailer Train has adhered to throughout its corporate existence, is set forth as part of the Form A Car Contract:
It shall be the policy of Trailer Train to maintain per diem, mileage and other charges at the lowest level required to meet Trailer Train’s ordinary and necessary expenses, ... and to accumulate retained earnings adequate to support continued reasonable enlargement of the number of cars in the pool, to that number found to be needed. It is the intention [of Trailer Train and each of its shareholders] that the total compensation paid to Trailer Train .. . shall be no greater than consistent with the foregoing policy.
From 1956 to 1969, the aggregate car hire rates paid by shareholders for the use of Trailer Train cars were higher than the rates which those shareholders would have paid under the ICC per diem schedule had they chosen instead to use their own cars on other railroads’ lines. In 1969 the ICC changed the formula by which it calculated its per diem rates. As a result, since 1969 the aggregate car hire rates paid by most shareholders for the use of most Trailer Train equipment have been lower than the rates which those shareholders would have paid under the ICC per diem schedule.
Between 1955 and 1964 forty operating railroads bought blocks of shares in Trailer Train. Since 1964 there have been no sales of stock except through combinations or reorganizations of existing shareholders. At present thirty operating railroads, representing approximately eighty-nine percent of the mileage of class 1 railroads in the United States, now own stock in Trailer Train. The other shareholders are a diversified freight forwarding company, Reading, and the trustees of the Erie Lackawan-na Railway, which like Reading entered reorganization, conveyed its rail properties to Conrail and left the railroad business.
In 1961 Reading acquired its block of Trailer Train stock at the book value of $150,105. 2 At that time Reading signed the Form A Car Contract. In addition, Trailer Train informed Reading that
the car contract requires Trailer Train Company to set per diem and other charges on a basis that will enable the company to meet its expenses and to finance its car acquisitions without, however, yielding excessive profits to Trailer Train Company.
App. at 128. From 1961 to 1976, Reading used Trailer Train flat cars in rail service and paid car hire charges. Reading never challenged Trailer Train’s rate policy while it was an operating railroad. App. at 300-02. Indeed, while in reorganization Reading joined with the other shareholders in requesting approval of the pooling arrangement from the ICC, which endorsed Trailer Train’s financial policy.
American Rail Box Car Co.
—Pooling,
*514 When Reading transferred its rail properties to Conrail in 1976, Reading’s trustees successfully requested that its Trailer Train stock not be transferred. App. at 130-31. The trustees did so because in their view the stock “was a valuable asset of the Reading Estate which would eventually produce substantial value for its creditors and stockholders.” App. at 271-72. Since, its cessation of rail operations, however, Reading has been unable to derive any benefit from its ownership of the stock.
After offering its stock to Trailer Train for repurchase at book value, 3 Reading’s trustees tried to sell the stock but found that there was no demand for it. The trustees subsequently discussed with Trailer Train the possibility that the latter might change its dividend policy, repurchase the stock at book value, or exchange it for newly-created debt instruments reflecting Reading’s proportionate ownership. Trailer Train told Reading’s trustees that its board of directors was opposed to such changes in its policy of operations.
On February 1, 1978, Reading’s trustees filed a petition in its reorganization proceedings. The petition alleged that as a result of the Regional Rail Reorganization Act, Reading was no longer able “to profit from its membership in [Trailer Train].” App. at 12; Until that “problem” was solved, the trustees stated, they could not finalize or file a plan of reorganization. App. at 13. The trustees requested that the court order Trailer Train to negotiate a solution to the problem.
Trailer Train moved to dismiss the petition, arguing that the reorganization court lacked jurisdiction in a summary proceeding to decide the issues raised. Such issues, Trailer Train contended, had to be litigated in a plenary suit in a court of appropriate jurisdiction. On January 12,1979, the court denied Trailer Train’s motion. The court held that it had jurisdiction and ordered the parties to negotiate. App. at 23-26. On January 4, 1980, the reorganization court again rejected Trailer Train’s renewed argument that the court had no jurisdiction. In re Reading Co., 2 B.R. 719 (D.C.E.D.Pa. 1980).
After initial negotiations proved fruitless, the Reading trustees filed an amended petition requesting an order to compel Trailer Train either to purchase the stock at book value, or to convert it into interest-bearing debt instruments or dividend-paying preferred stock. Reading’s trustees subsequently filed a second amended petition in which they asserted that Trailer Train’s policies constituted a breach of fiduciary duty to Reading as a minority stockholder. The petition suggested that the court direct Trailer Train to pay dividends on the stock or to pay a share of the savings realized by pool users on account of Trailer Train’s lower car hire rates. 4
On August 11, 1982, the court below held that Trailer Train had breached its fiduciary duty to Reading, and granted Reading’s petition to compel Trailer Train to repurchase the stock at current book value.
In re Reading Co.,
II
On appeal Trailer Train argues that the district court lacked summary jurisdiction *515 as a reorganization court to hear Reading’s petition as amended. Trailer Train also disputes that it breached any fiduciary duty owed to Reading as a minority shareholder. 5
A. Jurisdiction
The court below held that it had jurisdiction to hear the trustees’ claim both as a reorganization court and as a district court sitting in diversity. We hold that the court below did not have jurisdiction to decide the claim as a reorganization court. We hold, however, that the court did have jurisdiction to decide the claim as a district court sitting in diversity, and that the court extended to Trailer Train all the procedural protections required in such a civil action.
Section 2(a)(7) of the 1898 Act invests a bankruptcy court with jurisdiction to determine controversies relating to a bankrupt’s estate. 11 U.S.C. § 11(a)(7) (1976). Section 77(a) of the 1898 Act provides that a railroad reorganization court shall “have exclusive jurisdiction of the debtor and his property wherever located.” 11 U.S.C. § 205(a) (1976). Under those sections a reorganization court has summary jurisdiction to adjudicate controversies relating to property over which it has actual or constructive possession.
Thompson v. Magnolia Petroleum Co.,
If the reorganization court lacks possession over property claimed by the trustee, it generally has no summary jurisdiction to consider the trustee’s claim if a third party asserts a bona fide and substantial claim to the property. The third party “has the right to have the merits of his claim adjudicated ‘in suits of ordinary character, with the rights and remedies incident thereto.’ ”
Cline v. Kaplan,
Reading maintains that at the time it entered reorganization it possessed the Trailer Train stock and the rights of an owner of that stock. The court below properly characterized Reading’s claimed possession as a chose in action, of which Trailer Train was the alleged obligor. A chose in action may be the “property” of the debtor within the meaning of section 77(a),
Baker v. Gold Seal Liquors, Inc.,
In this case, however, the reorganization court claimed summary jurisdiction
*516
not to secure the chose in action for the estate, but to
enforce
the chose in action and thus secure for the estate other property, the $9,830,707, held by Trailer Train when Reading entered reorganization. Such an exercise of summary jurisdiction to compel the obligor of a chose in action to perform “can proceed only on the notion that not only the obligation is property of the bankrupt, but that its performance is also such before it has been performed.”
In re Roman,
In its appearances before the court below, Trailer Train denied that the petition of the Reading trustees stated a claim against it, refused to consent to the resolution of the claim in summary proceedings, and rejected the reorganization court’s assertion of jurisdiction. Trailer Train’s argument that it had no obligation as a fiduciary to exchange Reading’s stock for other property certainly was bona fide and substantial. The. court below consequently had no jurisdiction as a reorganization court to adjudicate the trustees’ petition.
The court below, however, held that it had jurisdiction to hear the Reading’s claim not only as a reorganization court but also as a district court sitting in diversity. 6 Section 23(a) of the 1898 Act makes clear that the United States district courts have jurisdiction over controversies between trustees in bankruptcy and adverse claimants concerning property claimed by the trustees “in the same manner and to the same extent as though such [bankruptcy] proceedings had not been instituted and such controversies had been between the bankrupts and such adverse claimants.” 11 U.S.C. § 46(a) (1976). Although in this ease the trustees improperly called upon the court’s reorganization jurisdiction, their petition stated a claim over which the district court had jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1332 (1976). We therefore find that the district court had jurisdiction to hear the trustees’ claim in plenary civil proceedings.
Before the court below Trailer Train protested that the invocation of summary reorganization jurisdiction would deprive it of a plenary suit in which the rules relating to pleading, discovery, and evidence would be applied. The court below assured Trailer Train that it was unimportant whether the proceeding was technically summary or plenary because the court would “proceed on the basis of notice, hearing, and all of the provisions of due process.” App. at 26. The procedural protections subsequently employed by the court 7 apparently met *517 Trailer Train’s specific concerns, for on appeal Trailer Train does not argue that it was denied any procedural right. Instead Trailer Train insists only that Reading’s claim had to be adjudicated in a plenary action separate from the reorganization proceedings.
An objection to the procedures employed at trial does not go to the jurisdiction of the court below,
In re Universal Display & Sign Co.,
where a defendant insists that he was entitled to a plenary mode of procedure not accorded him, and the appellate court finds that the proceeding, though called “summary” and commenced as such, actually had all or most of the requisites of the ordinary civil action and afforded the defendant a full hearing on the merits, the court will consider the proceedings as a plenary suit.
2 Collier ¶ 23.02, at 442 (note omitted). We have rejected the argument of other appellants that they were deprived of a plenary proceeding where in fact “[n]o essential characteristic of a plenary proceeding was lacking.”
In re Penn Central Transportation Co.,
B. Fiduciary Duty
In its petition Reading contended that the Trailer Train board of directors, acting at the behest of its majority shareholders, had breached a fiduciary duty owed to Reading and other similarly-situated minority shareholders. Reading cited as the breach of duty the board’s reaffirmation of Trailer Train’s car leasing policy, its refusal to pay dividends, and its continued reinvestment of earnings in new equipment. Reading argued that Trailer Train’s continued adherence to those policies was improper given Reading’s departure from the railroad business.
Reading’s claim must be judged under the law of Delaware, where Trailer Train is incorporated.
Thomas v. Roblin Industries,
The court below held that the operating railroads formed a majority shareholder group which dominated Trailer Train’s board of directors and controlled the corporation. The court then determined that the operating railroads used that control to perpetuate Trailer Train policies which benefited operating railroad shareholders but which also prevented Reading from obtaining any return on its stock ownership. Thus finding self-dealing, the court ruled that the board’s action had to be judged under the “intrinsic fairness” standard. The court concluded that the maintenance of Trailer Train’s policies violated that standard.
We may assume without deciding that the operating railroads formed a majority stockholder group and that they dominated Trailer Train’s board of directors. We believe, nonetheless, that Reading has failed to meet its burden of showing that the operating railroads engaged in self-dealing. We therefore hold that the business judgment rule is applicable, and that under the rule neither the majority shareholders nor Trailer Train’s directors have violated their fiduciary duty to Reading.
Self-dealing occurs when the majority shareholders cause the dominated corporation to act in such a way that the majority shareholders receive something from the corporation to the exclusion and detriment of the minority shareholders.
Sinclair Oil,
By making use of Trailer Train equipment the sole benefit of stock ownership, the board of directors has effectively permitted the company’s user-shareholders to obtain a benefit which is not available to non-users, Reading and Erie Lacka-wanna.
In its second amended petition Reading asserted that the car hire rates, to the extent they were less than the ICC per diem rates, constituted a “constructive dividend” to the operating railroads using cars from the pool.
9
Even if we assume that the
*519
difference between Trailer Train’s car hire rates and the ICC per diem rates constitutes a constructive dividend, Reading cannot characterize that pattern of dividend distribution as self-dealing if Reading and the other shareholders of Trailer Train have previously agreed to it. Under Delaware law the rights of stockholders are contractual,
Ellingwood v. Wolfs Head Oil Refining Co.,
While, ordinarily, dividends must be apportioned among the stockholders pro rata to their several holdings, “it cannot be doubted that the stockholders may, by unanimous consent, adopt and become bound to a different mode of division.” And stockholders who assent to a discriminatory arrangement may thereby be es-topped to object.
11 W. Fletcher,
Cyclopedia of the Law of Private Corporations
§ 5352 (rev. perm. ed. 1971) (notes omitted). An agreement to distribute a corporation’s dividends in the form of rebates on purchases from the corporation is valid,
Wabash Railway v. American Refrigerator Transit Co.,
In this case Reading and every other Trailer Train shareholder signed the Form A Car Contract. That contract explicitly stated that Trailer Train would charge users of pool cars the lowest possible car hire rates, and would not accumulate surplus earnings or profits from which pro rata dividends could be paid.
See
Del.Code Ann. tit. 8, § 170 (1975). Reading is bound by that agreement unless it can show that its purchase of the stock and assent to the car contract were- the products of fraud, misrepresentation, or overreaching,
Esso Standard Oil Co. v. Cunningham,
Thus, whether or not the car hire rates are constructive dividends, Reading is receiving exactly that benefit from its Trailer Train stock for which it bargained. Read
*520
ing contends nonetheless that since its conveyance of its rail properties to Conrail has permanently ended its enjoyment of its right of access to the pool cars, Trailer Train has engaged in self-dealing simply by failing to recognize Reading’s change of circumstances. Reading admits, however, that its departure from the railroad business was -not attributable in any way to Trailer Train or its majority shareholders but was the result of the Regional Rail Reorganization Act. In
Getty Oil Co. v. Skelly Oil Co.,
Reading cannot show that the operating railroads received something from the corporation to its exclusion and detriment. Reading has thus failed to prove that the majority shareholders engaged in self-dealing. The court below erred, therefore, when it applied the intrinsic fairness test.
We must now apply the business judgment rule to Trailer Train’s reaffirmation of its car leasing policy, its refusal to pay dividends, and its continued reinvestment of earnings in new equipment. Each of the challenged policies can be attributed to a rational business purpose. Trailer Train’s car leasing policy, by setting the lowest possible car hire rates, presumably keeps demand for the cars high. The refusal to pay dividends could help achieve that goal by eliminating the need to raise rates to earn a surplus. The reinvestment of earnings in new equipment assumedly helps Trailer Train meet the flat car needs of its customers. Indeed, under the challenged policies Trailer Train has undergone remarkable growth. In the absence of “gross and palpable overreaching,” the decision of the Trailer Train board of directors to adhere to those policies must be upheld.
See Sinclair Oil,
Ill
We will reverse the order of the court below and remand the case for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Notes
. Under § 401(a) of the Bankruptcy Reform Act of 1978, Pub.L. No. 95-598 § 401(a) 92 Stat. 2682, the Bankruptcy Act of 1898, ch. 541, 30 Stat. 544, as amended, has been repealed. See 11 U.S.C. tables preceding § 101 (Supp. Ill 1979). The 1898 Act governs the instant case because it arose out of proceedings commenced under the 1898 Act. Pub.L. No. 95-598 § 403(a), 92 Stat. 2683; see also id. § 403(b).
. Reading’s president testified below that Reading acquired its shares in order “to obtain the additional equipment necessary to meet its customers needs.” App. at 281.
. Under ¶ 15 of the Form A Car Contract, shareholders must offer their stock to Trailer Train for repurchase at book value before they sell or otherwise dispose of the stock, or when they terminate the car contract. App. at 1034.
. Trailer Train had meanwhile retained outside consultants to study the company’s history, objectives and shareholder conflicts, including the nonuser shareholder issue. The consultants concluded that Trailer Train had always functioned much like a cooperative, that its stock was not and had never been intended to be an investment vehicle, and that benefit from stock ownership should continue to derive exclusively from use of the cars. Trailer Train then offered $1,500,000 for Reading’s stock but the trustees refused the offer. At oral argument counsel for Trailer Train informed us that its offer of $1,500,000 would remain open without regard to the outcome of this litigation.
. In addition, Trailer Train contends that, if it has breached a fiduciary duty to Reading, repurchase at book value is not a proper remedy. We need not reach that contention because of our disposition of the appeal.
. The court noted that Reading had its principal place of business in Pennsylvania, while Trailer Train was incorporated in Delaware. The disputed amount, the court rightly predicted, was more than $10,000. Finally, the court found that both Reading and Trailer Train were fully amenable to service of process in the Eastern District of Pennsylvania. App. at 26 & n. 1.
. The court allowed the parties to engage in extensive discovery, involving depositions of the parties and their expert witnesses, the exchange of interrogatories and requests for production of documents. In four days of hearings, the court received exhibits and heard both direct testimony and extensive cross-examination. The court applied the Federal Rules of Evidence, see, e.g., app. at 843-69, and both *517 counsel agreed that the case should be decided on the record developed by the parties in the instant litigation and not on the entire record in the reorganization proceedings, app. at 267-68.
. We note that Reading also retains the right to a pro rata share of the assets of Trailer Train upon its dissolution. Moreover, the rights Reading seeks, e.g., redemption on demand and compulsory dividends, are rights which no shareholder presently possesses.
. The court below apparently found Reading’s theory less than compelling, as it rejected the alleged dividends as the measure of Reading’s loss for two reasons. First, the court found that Trailer Train set its car hire rates to cover its own costs and not by reference to the ICC rates. Second, the court said that it was misleading for Reading to claim that the low prices were dividends to be shared pro rata among shareholders because “the return which each shareholder obtained was predicated [solely] upon
use
of the company’s equipment and not upon proportionate equity ownership.”
